Sailor Son
Robert William Service
When you come home I’ll not be round To welcome you. They’ll take you to a grassy mound So neat and new; Where I’ll be sleeping—O so sound! The ages through. I’ll not be round to broom the hearth, To feed the chicks; And in the wee room of your birth Your bed to fix; Rose room that knew your baby mirth Your tiny tricks. I’ll not be round . . . The garden still With bees will hum; To cheerful you the throstle’s bill Will not be dumb; The rambler rose will overspill When you will come. Bird, bee and bloom, they’ll greet you all With scented sound; Yet though the joy of your footfall Will thrill the ground Your mother with her old grey shawl— Will not be round.
Next 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : Sailor's Sweetheart
- Robert William Service : Schizophrenic
- Robert William Service : Sea Change
- Robert William Service : Sea Sorcery
- Robert William Service : Second Childhood
- Robert William Service : Secretary
- Robert William Service : Security
- Robert William Service : Segregation
- Robert William Service : Self-made Man
- Robert William Service : Sensibility
Previous 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : Sacrifice
- Robert William Service : Ruins
- Robert William Service : Rover's Rest
- Robert William Service : Roulette
- Robert William Service : Rosy-kins
- Robert William Service : Rose Leaves
- Robert William Service : Room Ghost
- Robert William Service : Room 7: The Coco-fiend
- Robert William Service : Room 6: The Little Workgirl
- Robert William Service : Room 5: The Concert Singer