Gentle Gaoler
Robert William Service
Being a gaoler I’m supposed To be a hard-boiled guy; Yet never prison walls enclosed A kinder soul than I: Passing my charges precious pills To end their ills. And if in gentle sleep they die, And pass to pleasant peace, No one suspects that it is I Who gave them their release: No matter what the Doctor thinks, The Warden winks. A lifer’s is a fearful fate; It wrings the heart of me. And what a saving to the State A sudden death must be! Doomed men should have the legal right To end their plight. And so my veronel they take, And bid goodbye to pain; And sleep, and never, never wake To living hell again: Oh call me curst or call me blest,— I give them rest.
Next 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : Ghosts
- Robert William Service : Gignol
- Robert William Service : Gipsy
- Robert William Service : God's Battleground
- Robert William Service : God's Grief
- Robert William Service : Gods In The Gutter
- Robert William Service : God's Skallywags
- Robert William Service : God's Vagabond
- Robert William Service : Going Home
- Robert William Service : Golden Days
Previous 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : Gangrene
- Robert William Service : Futility
- Robert William Service : Funk
- Robert William Service : Fulfilment
- Robert William Service : Frustration
- Robert William Service : Freethinker
- Robert William Service : Freedom's Fool
- Robert William Service : Four-foot Shelf
- Robert William Service : Forward
- Robert William Service : Fortitude