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Today, on November 21st, 2009, the site contains 196 poets, 8,692 poems and 7,650 comments.
Robert William Service - Old David Smail

He dreamed away his hours in school;
He sat with such an absent air,
The master reckoned him a fool,
And gave him up in dull despair.

When other lads were making hay
You'd find him loafing by the stream;
He'd take a book and slip away,
And just pretend to fish . . . and dream.

His brothers passed him in the race;
They climbed the hill and clutched the prize.
He did not seem to heed, his face
Was tranquil as the evening skies.

He lived apart, he spoke with few;
Abstractedly through life he went;
Oh, what he dreamed of no one knew,
And yet he seemed to be content.

I see him now, so old and gray,
His eyes with inward vision dim;
And though he faltered on the way,
Somehow I almost envied him.

At last beside his bed I stood:
"And is Life done so soon?" he sighed;
"It's been so rich, so full, so good,
I've loved it all . . ." -- and so he died.

Added: Feb 20 2003 | Viewed: 933 times | Comments (0)


Old David Smail - Comments and Information

Poet: Robert William Service
Poem: Old David Smail
Volume: Ballads of a Bohemian (Book 3)
Poem of the Day on:
Oct 7 2009
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