Red-tiled Roof
Robert William Service
Poets may praise a wattle thatch Doubtfully waterproof; Let me uplift my lowly latch Beneath a rose-tiled roof. Let it be gay and rich in hue, Soft bleached by burning days, Where skies ineffably are blue, And seas a golden glaze. But set me in the surly North Beneath a roof of slate, And as I sourly sally forth My heart will hum with hate; And I will brood beneath a pine Where Nature seldom smiles, Heart-longing for a starry vine And roof of ruddy tiles. For oh the South’s a bonny clime And sunshine is its life; So there I’ll finish up my time A stranger unto strife. And smoke my pipe and sit aloof From care by miles and miles, Sagaciously beneath a roof, Geranium-gay and panic proof, Of ruby tinted tiles.
Next 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : Regret
- Robert William Service : Relativity
- Robert William Service : Relax
- Robert William Service : Remorse
- Robert William Service : Repentance
- Robert William Service : Reptiles And Roses
- Robert William Service : Resignation
- Robert William Service : Resolutions
- Robert William Service : Retired
- Robert William Service : Retired Shopman
Previous 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : Raising The Flag
- Robert William Service : Ragetty Doll
- Robert William Service : Quatrains
- Robert William Service : Pullman Porter
- Robert William Service : Property
- Robert William Service : Profane Poet
- Robert William Service : Procreation
- Robert William Service : Privacy
- Robert William Service : Priscilla
- Robert William Service : Premonition