Robert W. Service. Robert W. Service

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Robert W. Service - Robert W. Service Voyageur Classics

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race that can’t stay still;

      So they break the hearts of kith and kin,

      And they roam the world at will.

      They range the field and they rove the flood,

      And they climb the mountain’s crest;

      Theirs is the curse of the gypsy blood,

      And they don’t know how to rest.

      If they just went straight they might go far;

      They are strong and brave and true;

      But they’re always tired of the things that are,

      And they want the strange and new.

      They say: “Could I find my proper groove,

      What a deep mark I would make!”

      So they chop and change, and each fresh move

      Is only a fresh mistake.

      And each forgets, as he strips and runs

      With a brilliant, fitful pace,

      It’s steady, quiet, plodding ones

      Who win in the lifelong race.

      And each forgets that his youth has fled,

      Forgets that his prime is past,

      Till he stands one day, with a hope that’s dead,

      In the glare of the truth at least.

      He has failed, he has failed; he has missed his chance;

      He has just done things by half.

      Life’s been a jolly good joke on him,

      And now is the time to laugh.

      Ha, ha! He is one of the Legion Lost;

      He was never meant to win;

      He’s a rolling stone, and it’s bred in the bone;

      He’s a man who won’t fit in.

      The Rhyme of the Remittance Man

      There’s a four-pronged buck a-swinging in the shadow of my cabin,

      And it roamed the velvet valley till today;

      But I tracked it by the river, and I trailed it in the cover,

      And I killed it on the mountain miles away.

      Now I’ve had my lazy supper, and the level sun is gleaming

      On the water where the silver salmon play;

      And I light my little corncob, and I linger, softly dreaming,

      In the twilight, of a land that’s far away.

      Far away, so faint and far, is flaming London, fevered Paris,

      That I fancy I have gained another star;

      Far away the din and hurry, far away the sin and worry,

      Far away — God knows they cannot be too far.

      Gilded galley-slaves of Mammon — how my purse-proud brothers taunt me!

      I might have been as well-to-do as they

      Had I clutched like them my chances, learned their wisdom, crushed my fancies,

      Starved my soul and gone to business every day.

      Well, the cherry bends with blossom and the vivid grass is springing,

      And the star-like lily nestles in the green;

      And the frogs their joys are singing, and my heart in tune is ringing,

      And it doesn’t matter what I might have been.

      While above the scented pine-gloom, piling heights of golden glory,

      The sun-god paints his canvas in the west,

      I can couch me deep in clover, I can listen to the story

      Of the lazy, lapping water — it is best.

      While the trout leaps in the river, and the blue grouse thrills the cover,

      And the frozen snow betrays the panther’s track,

      And the robin greets the dayspring with the rapture of a lover,

      I am happy, and I’ll nevermore go back.

      For I know I’d just be longing for the little old log cabin,

      With the morning glory clinging to the door,

      Till I loathed the city places, cursed the care on all the faces,

      Turned my back on lazar London evermore.

      So send me far from Lombard Street, and write me down a failure;

      Put a little in my purse and leave me free.

      Say: “He turned from Fortune’s offering to follow up a pale lure,

      He is one of us no longer — let him be.”

      I am one of you no longer; by the trails my feet have broken,

      The dizzy peaks I’ve scaled, the campfire’s glow;

      By the lonely seas I’ve sailed in — yea, the final word is spoken,

      I am signed and sealed to nature. Be it so.

      The Low-Down White

      This is the payday up at the mines, when the bearded brutes come down;

      There’s money to burn in the streets tonight, so I’ve sent my klooch to town,

      With a haggard face and ribband of red entwined in her hair of brown.

      And I know at the dawn she’ll come reeling home with the bottles, one, two, three —

      One for herself, to drown her shame, and two big bottles for me,

      To make me forget the thing I am and the man I used to be.

      To make me forget the brand of the dog, as I crouch in this hideous place;

      To make me forget once I kindled the light of love in a lady’s face,

      Where even the squalid Siwash now holds me a black disgrace.

      Oh,

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