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A Song Of Suicide

Deeming that I were better dead,

"How shall I **** myself?" I said.

Thus mooning by the river Seine

I sought extinction without pain,

When on a bridge I saw a flash

Of lingerie and heard a splash . . .

So as I am a swimmer stout

I plunged and pulled the poor wretch out.

 

The female that I saved? Ah yes,

To yield the Morgue of one corpse the less,

Apart from all heroic action,

Gave me a moral satisfaction.

was she an old and withered hag,

Too tired of life to long to lag?

Ah no, she was so young and fair

I fell in love with her right there.

 

And when she took me to her attic

Her gratitude was most emphatic.

A sweet and simple girl she proved,

Distraught because the man she loved

In battle his life-blood had shed . . .

So I, too, told her of my dead,

The girl who in a garret grey

Had coughed and coughed her life away.

 

Thus as we sought our griefs to smother,

With kisses we consoled each other . . .

And there's the ending of my story;

It wasn't grim, it wasn't gory.

For comforted were hearts forlorn,

And from black sorrow joy was born:

So may our dead dears be forgiving,

And bless the rapture of the living.

r
Written by
Robert Service
1874-1958 / English
Lines·Words
32·226
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