The Hat
Robert William Service
In city shop a hat I saw That to my fancy seemed to strike, I gave my wage to buy the straw, And make myself a one the like. I wore it to the village fair; Oh proud I was, though poor was I. The maids looked at me with a stare, The lads looked at me with a sigh. I wore it Sunday to the Mass. The other girls wore handkerchiefs. I saw them darkly watch and pass, With sullen smiles, with hidden griefs. And then with sobbing fear I fled, But they waylayed me on the street, And tore the hat from off my head, And trampled it beneath their feet. I sought the Church; my grief was wild, And by my mother’s grave I sat: . . . I’ve never cried for clay-cold child, As I wept for that ruined hat.
Next 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : The Headliner And The Breadliner
- Robert William Service : The Healer
- Robert William Service : The Heart Of The Sourdough
- Robert William Service : The Hearth-stone
- Robert William Service : The Hinterland
- Robert William Service : The Home-coming
- Robert William Service : The Homicide
- Robert William Service : The Host
- Robert William Service : The Idealist
- Robert William Service : The Joy Of Being Poor
Previous 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : The Harpy
- Robert William Service : The Hand
- Robert William Service : The Haggis Of Private Mcphee
- Robert William Service : The Great Recall
- Robert William Service : The Gramaphone At Fond-du-lac
- Robert William Service : The God Of Common-sense
- Robert William Service : The Goat And I
- Robert William Service : The Ghosts
- Robert William Service : The Front Tooth
- Robert William Service : The Fool