The Wildy Ones
Robert William Service
The sheep are in the silver wood, The cows are in the broom; The goats are in the wild mountain And won’t be home by noon. My mother sang that olden tune Most every night, And to her newest she would croon By candle light; While cuddling in the velvet gloom I’d dream of cows That sought each dawn ’mid golden broom To gently browse. Or I would glimpse the silver wood, The birchen glade, Where pearly sheep in quiet mood Cropped unafraid; But how I loved in lapsing drowse The mountain wild! The goats were more than sheep and cows To one wee child. For cows and sheep are shelter-wise, And love the lea; While goats have starlight in their eyes, In cragland free . . . And now on edge of endless sleep Wryly I note How less I’m kin to kine and sheep Than rebel goat!
Next 10 Poems
- 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
- Robert William Service : The Yukoner
- Robert William Service : Three Wives
Previous 10 Poems
- Robert William Service : The Wife
- Robert William Service : The Widower
- 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