The Widower
Robert William Service
Oh I have worn my mourning out, And on her grave the green grass grows; So I will hang each sorry clout High in the corn to scare the crows. And I will buy a peacock tie, And coat of cloth of Donegal; Then to the Farmer’s Fair I’ll hie And peek in at the Barley Ball. But though the fiddlers saw a jig I used to foot when I was wed, I’ll walk me home and feed the pig, And go a lonesome man to bed. So I will wait another year, As any decent chap would do, Till I can think without a tear Of her whose eyes were cornflower blue. Then to the Harvest Ball I’ll hie, And I will wear a flower-sprigged vest; For Maggie has a nut-brown eyes, And we will foot it with the best. And if kind-minded she should be To wife me—’tis the will if God . . . But Oh the broken heart f me For her who lies below the sod!
Next 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : The Wife
- Robert William Service : The Wildy Ones
- Robert William Service : The Wistful One
- Robert William Service : The Woman And The Angel
- Robert William Service : The Woman At The Gate
- Robert William Service : The Womb
- Robert William Service : The Wonderer
- Robert William Service : The Wood-cutter
- Robert William Service : The World's All Right
- Robert William Service : The Younger Son
Previous 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : The Widow
- Robert William Service : The Whistle Of Sandy Mcgraw
- Robert William Service : The Wee Shop
- Robert William Service : The Wedding Ring
- Robert William Service : The Wanderlust
- Robert William Service : The Walkers
- Robert William Service : The Volunteer
- Robert William Service : The Visionary
- Robert William Service : The Undying
- Robert William Service : The Under-dogs