Robert W. Service. Robert W. Service

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here beyond the Circle, where there’s neither right or wrong,

      I leap from life’s straitjacket, and I’m free.

      Yet ever in the far forlorn, by trails of lone desire;

      Yet ever in the dawn’s white leer of hate;

      Yet ever by the dripping kill, beside the drowsy fire,

      There comes the fierce heart-hunger for a mate.

      There comes the mad blood-clamour for a woman’s clinging hand,

      Love-humid eyes, the velvet of a breast;

      And so I sought the Bonnet-plumes, and chose from out the band

      The girl I thought the sweetest and the best.

      O wistful women I have loved before my dark disgrace!

      O women fair and rare in my home land!

      Dear ladies, if I saw you now I’d turn away my face,

      Then crawl to kiss your footprints in the sand!

      And yet — that day the rifle jammed — a wounded moose at bay —

      A roar, a charge … I faced it with my knife:

      A shot from out the willow-scrub, and there the monster lay.…

      Yes, little Laughing Eyes, you saved my life.

      The man must have the woman, and we’re all brutes more or less,

      Since first the male ape shinned the family tree;

      And yet I think I love her with a husband’s tenderness,

      And yet I know that she would die for me.

      Oh, if I left you, Laughing Eyes, and nevermore came back,

      God help you, girl! I know what you would do.…

      I see the lake wan in the moon, and from the shadow black,

      There drifts a little, empty birch canoe.

      We’re here beyond the Circle, where there’s never wrong nor right;

      We aren’t spliced according to the law;

      But by the gods I hail you on this hushed and holy night

      As the mother of my children, and my squaw.

      I see your little slender face set in the firelight glow;

      I pray that I may never make it sad;

      I hear you croon a baby song, all slumber-soft and low —

      God bless you, little Laughing Eyes! I’m glad.

      The Man Who Knew

      The Dreamer visioned Life as it may be,

      And from his dream forthright a picture grew,

      A painting all the people thronged to see,

      And joyed therein — till came the Man Who Knew,

      Saying: “’Tis bad! Why do ye gape, ye fools!

      He painteth not according to the schools.”

      The Dreamer probed Life’s mystery of woe,

      And in a book he sought to give the clue;

      The people read, and saw that it was so,

      And read again — then came the Man Who Knew,

      Saying: “Ye witless ones! this book is vile:

      It hath not got the rudiments of style.”

      Love smote the Dreamer’s lips, and silver clear

      He sang a song so sweet, so tender true,

      That all the marketplace was thrilled to hear,

      And listened rapt — till came the Man Who Knew,

      Saying: “His technique’s wrong; he singeth ill.

      Waste not your time.” The singer’s voice was still.

      And then the people roused as if from sleep,

      Crying: “What care we if it be not Art!

      Hath he not charmed us, made us laugh and weep?

      Come, let us crown him where he sits apart.”

      Then, with his picture spurned, his book unread,

      His song unsung, they found their Dreamer — dead.

From Rhymes of a Red Cross Man

      The Volunteer

      Sez I: My Country calls? Well let it call.

      I grins perlitely and declines wiv thanks.

      Go, let ’em plaster every blighted wall,

      ’Ere’s one they don’t stampede into the ranks.

      Them politicians with their greasy ways;

      Them empire-grabbers — fight for ’em? No fear!

      I’ve seen this mess a-comin’ from the days

      Of Algyserious and Aggydear:

      I’ve felt me passion rise and swell

      But … wot the ’ell, Bill? Wot the ’ell?

      Sez I: My Country? Mine? I likes their cheek.

      Me mud-bespattered by the cars they drive,

      Wot makes my measly thirty bob a week,

      And sweats red blood to keep meself alive!

      Fight for the right to slave that they may spend,

      Them in their mansions, me ’ere in my slum?

      No, let ’em fight wot’s something to defend:

      But me, I’ve nothin’ — let the Kaiser come.

      And so I cusses ’ard and well,

      But … wot the ’ell, Bill? Wot the ’ell?

      Sez I: If they would do the decent thing,

      And shield the missis and the little ’uns,

      Why, even I might shout “God save the King,”

      And

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