The Choice
Robert William Service
. . . And then I came to Three ways, And each was mine to choose; For all of them were free ways, To take or to refuse. “Now which shall be the best way, East, West or South?” said I . . . So then I went the West way— I often wonder why. . . . And then I cam to Two ways, And each was luring me: For both of them were new ways, And I was fancy free. “Now which shall be the least way,” Said I: “to gain my goal?” And so I took the East way, With freedom in my soul. . . . And then I came to One way, And to the South it ran; Then lo! I saw this sun way Was mine since time began; My pitiless, my doom way; No other could there be, For at its end my tomb lay, And it was waiting me. . . . Poor fools! Who think you’re free.
Next 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : The Christmas Tree
- Robert William Service : The Comforter
- Robert William Service : The Contented Man
- Robert William Service : The Contrast
- Robert William Service : The Convalescent
- Robert William Service : The Coward
- Robert William Service : The Cow-juice Cure
- Robert William Service : The Cremation Of Sam Mcgee
- Robert William Service : The Cuckoo
- Robert William Service : The Damned
Previous 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : The Centenarians
- Robert William Service : The Centenarian
- Robert William Service : The Cat With Wings
- Robert William Service : The Call Of The Wild
- Robert William Service : The Call
- Robert William Service : The Buyers
- Robert William Service : The Bulls
- Robert William Service : The Bread-knife Ballad
- Robert William Service : The Boola-boola Maid
- Robert William Service : The Booby-trap