Where once with lads I scoffed my beer
The landlord's lass I've wed.
Now I am lord and master here;-
Thank God! the old man's dead.
I stand behind a blooming bar
With belly like a tub,
And pals say, seeing my cigar:
'Bill's wed a pub.'
I wonder now if I did well,
My freedom for to lose;
Knowing my wife is fly as hell
I mind my 'Ps' and 'Qs'.
Oh what a fuss she made because
I tweaked the barmaid's bub:
Alas! a sorry day it was
I wed a pub.
Fat landlord of the Golden Pig,
They call me 'mister' now;
And many a mug of beer I swig,
Yet don't get gay, somehow.
So farmer fellows, lean and clean
Who sweat to earn your grub,
Although you haven't got a bean:
Don't wed a pub.
At The Golden Pig
Robert Service
(1)
Poem topics: freedom, god, sorry, wife, mind, clean, master, stand, golden, Valentine's Day, I love you, I miss you, Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
Submit Spanish Translation
Submit German Translation
Submit French Translation
About At The Golden Pig
At The Golden Pig is a poem by Robert Service. This page includes the poem text, poet information, related topics, comments, and similar poems.
Write your comment about At The Golden Pig poem by Robert Service
Best Poems of Robert Service
