The Portrait
Robert William Service
The portrait there above my bed They tell me is a work of art; My Wife,—since twenty years she’s dead: Her going nearly broke my heart. Alas! No little ones we had To light our hearth with joy and glee; Yet as I linger lone and sad I know she’s waiting me. The picture? Sargent painted it, And it has starred in many a show. Her eyes are on me where I sit, And follow me where’er I go. She’ll smile like that when I am gone, And I am frail and oh so ill! Aye, when I’m waxen, cold and wan, Lo! She’ll be smiling still. So I have bade them slash in strips That relic of my paradise. Let flame destroy those lovely lips And char the starlight of her eyes! No human gaze shall ever see Her beauty,—stranger heart to stir: Nay, her last smile shall be for me, My last look be for her.
Next 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : The Premonition
- Robert William Service : The Pretty Lady
- Robert William Service : The Prisoner
- Robert William Service : The Prospector
- Robert William Service : The Quest
- Robert William Service : The Quitter
- Robert William Service : The Receptionist
- Robert William Service : The Reckoning
- Robert William Service : The Record
- Robert William Service : The Red Retreat
Previous 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : The Pines
- Robert William Service : The Pigeons Of St. Marks
- Robert William Service : The Pigeon Shooting
- Robert William Service : The Philistine And The Bohemian
- Robert William Service : The Philanderer
- Robert William Service : The Petit Vieux
- Robert William Service : The Pencil Seller
- Robert William Service : The Passing Of The Year
- Robert William Service : The Parting
- Robert William Service : The Parson's Son