The Artist
Robert William Service
All day with brow of anxious thought The dictionary through, Amid a million words he sought The sole one that would do. He wandered on from pub to pub Yet never ceased to seek With burning brain and pencil stub The Word Unique. Said he: ‘I’ll nail it down or die. Oh Heaven help me, pray!’ And then a heavy car dashed by, And he was in the way. They rushed him to the hospital, And though his chance was bleak, He cried: ‘I’ll croak, but find I shall The Word Unique.’ They reckoned he was off his head, And could be it was so; For as they bent above his bed He mumbled soft and low. And then a name they heard him speak, Yet did not deem it odd . . . At last he’d found the Word Unique,— Just God.
Next 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : The Atavist
- Robert William Service : The Auction Sale
- Robert William Service : The Baldness Of Chewed-ear
- Robert William Service : The Ballad Of Blasphemous Bill
- Robert William Service : The Ballad Of Casey's Billy-goat
- Robert William Service : The Ballad Of Gum-boot Ben
- Robert William Service : The Ballad Of Hank The Finn
- Robert William Service : The Ballad Of Hard-luck Henry
- Robert William Service : The Ballad Of How Macpherson Held The Floor
- Robert William Service : The Ballad Of Lenin's Tomb
Previous 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : The Argument
- Robert William Service : The Ape And I
- Robert William Service : The Ape And God
- Robert William Service : The Answer
- Robert William Service : The Anniversary
- Robert William Service : The Alcazar
- Robert William Service : The Aftermath
- Robert William Service : The Afflicted
- Robert William Service : The Actor
- Robert William Service : The Absinthe Drinkers