‘Come, see,’ said he, ‘my four-foot shelf,
A forty volume row;
And every one I wrote myself,
But that, of course, you know.’
I stared, I searched a memory dim,
For though an author too,
Somehow I’d never heard of him,–
None of his books I knew.
Said I: ‘I’d like to borrow one,
Fond memories to recall.’
Said he: ‘I’ll gladly give you some,
And autograph them all.’
And so a dozen books he brought,
And signed tome after tome:
Of course I thanked him quite a lot,
And took them home.
So now I have to read his work,
Though dry as dust it be;
No portion of it may I shirk,
Lest he should question me.
This tale is true,–although it looks
To me a bloody shame,
A guy could father forty books,
yet no one know his name.
(Robert William Service)
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Based on Topics: Name Poems, Home Poems, Work & Career Poems, Books Poems, Memory PoemsBased on Keywords: autograph, tome, four-foot