Robert W. Service

Inspiration

How often have I started out
With no thought in my noodle,
And wandered here and there about,
Where fancy bade me toddle;
Till feeling faunlike in my glee
I’ve voiced some gay distiches,
Returning joyfully to tea,
A poem in my britches.
 
A—squatting on a thymy slope
With vast of sky about me,
I’ve scribbled on an envelope
The rhymes the hills would shout me;
The couplets that the trees would call,
The lays the breezes proffered . . .
Oh no, I didn’t think at all —
I took what Nature offered.
 
For that’s the way you ought to write —
Without a trace of trouble;
Be super—charged with high delight
And let the words out—bubble;
Be voice of vale and wood and stream
Without design or proem:
Then rouse from out a golden dream
To find you’ve made a poem.
 
So I’ll go forth with mind a blank,
And sea and sky will spell me;
And lolling on a thymy bank
I’ll take down what they tell me;
As Mother Nature speaks to me
Her words I’ll gaily docket,
So I’ll come singing home to tea
A poem in my pocket.

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