Songs of a Sourdough

by Robert Service

Paperback, 1951

Status

Available

Call number

811.52

Collection

Publication

Ernest Benn Ltd (1951), 128 pages

Description

The "common man's poet" and "Canadian Kipling" recounts tales from the Klondike gold rush in this compilation of 34 of his best verses. Poems include "The Cremation of Sam McGee," "The Call of the Wild," "The Heart of the Sourdough," "The Shooting of Dan McGrew," and other memorable storytelling verses.

User reviews

LibraryThing member ck2935
My maternal grandfather loved the poems of Robert Service. I am told that he would recite them a lot to entertainn people. His coppy of poems I beleive went to a cousin and I was unable to locate a tape of his recitaions so I just ended up buying my own copy. The poems are witty and I have a
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special place for them due to my granddaddy.
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LibraryThing member rcstokes
This is a reissue of the 1907 book published by Dodd, Mead & Company and it includes besides "The Spell of the Yukon," such poems by Robert Service as "The Shooting of Dan McGrew," "The Cremation of Sam McGee," "The Younger Son," "The Woman and the Angel," and others.
LibraryThing member MarthaL
Scarey and morbid poety to delight the senses especially those sensative to the heat or the cold.
LibraryThing member Denverbook
Many of the classic poems of Robert Service, including "The Shooting of Dan McGrew" and "The Cremation of Sam McGee"
Common man rhyming poetry; Full of humor and thoughtfulness.
LibraryThing member sageness
I find reviewing poetry really difficult, so I don't have anything particularly brilliant to say. I loved this book a lot. It's authentic Canadian pioneer days, gold rush stuff, and it's got the meter of Scottish drinking songs. I read quite a lot of it out loud -- couldn't help it, it begs to be
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sung if at all possible.

Parts are paeans to how awesome men (sic) who are strong and adventurous enough to survive life in the Yukon are and how they don't want any weaklings or cripples. Other parts are about how the Yukon will kill you, no matter how awesome you think you are. Other parts are about kissing your sweetheart goodbye and going off into the mountains for the rest of your life and all the grief you feel over causing them pain, but you're just that kind of misfit guy.

All the women are harlots or mothers...except there are like two mentions of actual wives, who are left. And there are several mentions of the ideal life with a wife and home. And there are several depictions of the Yukon itself as feminine, almost like an earth goddess -- wife and mother and lover all together.

The other thing I noticed was the poem about living in a city of Men, except they all had a Siwash girl, who was (according to the white male speaker) wracked with guilt over betraying her people by whoring herself out in such a way. Makes me very, very curious about that bit of women's history and how long ago it was taking place, what with the Yukon gold rush being way more recent than the Spanish colonial gold rush of the 16th-18th centuries.

Anyway, good poems, great window on history and culture, possibly great drinking songs for western Canadians. It probably helps to have been there, which I have, so I have no trouble imagining the scenery he's describing. It's truly awe-inspiring, and I love that he goes to the sublime, God-loving place with it so often. The land is stunning and deadly, and I can only imagine it before roads and dynamite, wandering with only a sled team and a campfire.

It reminds me of my History of the American West course. I wish there'd been more Canada in it.
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LibraryThing member Willard_Paul
My fourth grade teacher introduced me to Robert Service by reading The Cremation of Sam McGee to the class. I have been a fan of his ever since and have read most of his poetry. This book does not disappoint. It consists of 34 poems, including the Cremation of Sam McGee.
LibraryThing member datrappert
Service's poems don't exactly trip off the tongue, with their long, long lines. And some of the works in this collection are minor or even a bit embarrassing. But at his best, Service is unforgettable. "There are strange things done in the midnight sun, by the men who moil for gold." And so on. The
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book starts with several strong poems that definitely capture the feel of Canada's far North and the men who were compelled to try to make a living there. Later, it loses its cohesiveness, but it is still an enjoyable read.
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Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1907

Physical description

128 p.; 7.1 inches

ISBN

0510324215 / 9780510324216
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