Lottery Ticket

Robert William Service

‘A ticket for the lottery
I’ve purchased every week,’ said she
               ‘For years a score
Though desperately poor am I,
Oh how I’ve scrimped and scraped to buy
               One chance more.

Each week I think I’ll gain the prize,
And end my sorrows and my sighs,
               For I’ll be rich;
Then nevermore I’ll eat bread dry,
With icy hands to cry and cry
               And stitch and stitch.’

’Tis true she won the premier prize;
It was of formidable size,
               Ten million francs.
I know, because the man who sold
It to her splenically told
               He got no thanks.

The lucky one was never found,
For she was snugly underground,
               And minus breath;
And with that ticket tucked away,
In some old stocking, so they say,
               She starved to death.

Index + Blog :

Poetry Archive Index | Blog : Poem of the Day