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A continuing selection of classic and contemporary poems.

The Actor

Robert Service

Enthusiastic was the crowd
     That hailed him with delight;
The wine was bright, the laughter loud
     And glorious the night.
But when at dawn he drove away
     With echo of their cheer,
To where his little daughter lay,
     Then he knew—Fear.

How strangely still the house! He crept
     On tip-toe to the bed;
And there she lay as if she slept
     With candles at her head.
Her mother died to give her birth,
     An angel child was she;
To him the dearest one on earth . . .
     How could it be?

‘O God! If she could only live,’
     He thought with bitter pain,
‘How gladly, gladly would I give
     My glory and my gain.
I have created many a part,
     And many a triumph known;
Yet here is one with breaking heart
     I play alone.’

Beside the hush of her his breath
     Came with a sobbing sigh.
He babbled: ‘Sweet, you play at death . . .
     ’Tis I who die.’
Online text © 1998-2008 Poetry X. All rights reserved.
From Rhymes for My Rags
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