The Twins
Robert William Service
There were two brothers, John and James, And when the town went up in flames, To save the house of James dashed John, Then turned, and lo! his own was gone. And when the great World War began, To volunteer John promptly ran; And while he learned live bombs to lob, James stayed at home and—sneaked his job. John came home with a missing limb; That didn’t seem to worry him; But oh, it set his brain awhirl To find that James had—sneaked his girl! Time passed. John tried his grief to drown; To-day James owns one-half the town; His army contracts riches yield; And John? Well, search the Potter’s Field.
Next 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : The Twins Of Lucky Strike
- Robert William Service : The Under-dogs
- Robert William Service : The Undying
- Robert William Service : The Visionary
- Robert William Service : The Volunteer
- Robert William Service : The Walkers
- Robert William Service : The Wanderlust
- Robert William Service : The Wedding Ring
- Robert William Service : The Wee Shop
- Robert William Service : The Whistle Of Sandy Mcgraw
Previous 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : The Twa Jocks
- Robert William Service : The Tunnel
- Robert William Service : The Trust
- Robert William Service : The Trapper's Christmas Eve
- Robert William Service : The Tramps
- Robert William Service : The Trail Of No Return
- Robert William Service : The Trail Of Ninety-eight
- Robert William Service : The Three Voices
- Robert William Service : The Three Tommies
- Robert William Service : The Three Bares