The Thinker
Robert William Service
Of all the men I ever knew The tinkingest was Uncle Jim; If there were any chores to do We couldn’t figure much on him. He’d have a thinking job on hand, And on the rocking-chair he’d sit, And think and think to beat the band, And snap his galusus and spit. We kids regarded him with awe— His beard browned by tobacco stains, His hayseed had of faded straw The covered such a bunch of brains. When some big problem claimed his mind He’d wrestle with it for a fall; But some solution he would find, To be on hand for supper call. A mute, inglorious Einstein he, A rocking-chair philosopher; I often wondered what, maybe, His mighty meditations were. No weighty work he left behind, No words of wisdom or of wit; Yet how I see him in my mind Snap on his galusus and spit.
Next 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : The Three Bares
- Robert William Service : The Three Tommies
- Robert William Service : The Three Voices
- Robert William Service : The Trail Of Ninety-eight
- Robert William Service : The Trail Of No Return
- Robert William Service : The Tramps
- Robert William Service : The Trapper's Christmas Eve
- Robert William Service : The Trust
- Robert William Service : The Tunnel
- Robert William Service : The Twa Jocks
Previous 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : The Telegraph Operator
- Robert William Service : The Super
- Robert William Service : The Sunshine Seeks My Little Room
- Robert William Service : The Sum-up
- Robert William Service : The Summing Up
- Robert William Service : The Stretcher-bearer
- Robert William Service : The Squaw Man
- Robert William Service : The Spirit Of The Unborn Babe
- Robert William Service : The Spell Of The Yukon
- Robert William Service : The Song Of The Wage-slave