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Jaloppy Joy

 Past ash cans and alley cats,
Fetid.
overflowing gutters, Leprous lines of rancid flats Where the frowsy linen flutters; With a rattle and a jar, hark! I sing a happy ditty, As I speed my Master far From the poison of the City.
Speed him to the sportive sea, Watch him walloping the briny, Light his pipe and brew his tea In a little wood that's piny; Haven him to peace of mind.
Drowsy dreams in pleasant places, Where the woman's eyes are kind, And the men have ruddy faces.
Just a jaloppy am I, But he's always been my lover, So each Sunday morn I try Youthful joy to re-discover.
For he loves the wild and free, And though he would never know it, Nature thrills him with the glee And the rapture of the poet.
He's a little invoice clerk, I'm a worn and ancient flivver; I have an asthmatic spark, He an alcoholic liver; Yet with clatter, clang and creak We are lyrical for one day; Then another loathly week, Living for another Sunday.

Poem by Robert William Service
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Book: Reflection on the Important Things