On a recent trip to Canyonlands National Park, Druid Arch was rediscovered along with a poem by Robert Service.
This is a magnificent and awe-inspiring place. It is otherworldly and tickles a funny place in a wanderer’s heart, the same place Robert Service’s Rover plucks at…
– C.K.
The Rover by Robert Service
I
- Oh, how good it is to be
- Foot-loose and heart-free!
- Just my dog and pipe and I, underneath the vast sky;
- Trail to try and goal to win, white road and cool inn;
- Fields to lure a lad afar, clear spring and still star;
- Lilting feet that never tire, green dingle, fagot fire;
- None to hurry, none to hold, heather hill and hushed fold;
- Nature like a picture book, laughing leaf and bright brook;
- Every day a jewel bright, set serenely in the night;
- Every night a holy shrine, radiant for a day divine.
- Weathered cheek and kindly eye, let the wanderer go by.
- Woman-love and wistful heart, let the gipsy one depart.
- For the farness and the road are his glory and his goad.
- Oh, the lilt of youth and Spring! Eyes laugh and lips sing.
- Yea, but it is good to be
- Foot-loose and heart-free!
II
- Yet how good it is to come
- Home at last, home, home!
- On the clover swings the bee, overhead’s the hale tree;
- Sky of turquoise gleams through, yonder glints the lake’s blue.
- In a hammock let’s swing, weary of wandering;
- Tired of wild, uncertain lands, strange faces, faint hands.
- Has the wondrous world gone cold? Am I growing old, old?
- Grey and weary . . . let me dream, glide on the tranquil stream.
- Oh, what joyous days I’ve had, full, fervid, gay, glad!
- Yet there comes a subtile change, let the stripling rove, range.
- From sweet roving comes sweet rest, after all, home’s best.
- And if there’s a little bit of woman-love with it,
- I will count my life content, God-blest and well spent. . . .
- Oh but it is good to be
- Foot-loose and heart-free!
- Yet how good it is to come
- Home at last, home, home!
Great poem! It sounds Tolkien-esque.