The Canadian Kipling

Saturday, February 21st, 2026

David J. West recently cited a quote from a letter from Robert E. Howard to H.P. Lovecraft:

My tastes and habits are simple; I am neither erudite nor sophisticated. I prefer jazz to classical music, musical burlesque to Greek tragedy, A. Conan Doyle to Balzac, and Bob Service’s verse to Santayana’s writing, a prize fight to a lecture on art.

I had to look up Bob Service. Apparently he was “the Canadian Kipling”:

Robert William Service (16 January 1874 – 11 September 1958) was an English-born Canadian poet and writer, often called “The Bard of the Yukon” and “The Canadian Kipling”. Born in Lancashire of Scottish descent, he was a bank clerk by trade, but spent long periods travelling in the west in the United States and Canada, often in poverty. When his bank sent him to the Yukon, he was inspired by tales of the Klondike Gold Rush, and wrote two poems, “The Shooting of Dan McGrew” and “The Cremation of Sam McGee”, which showed remarkable authenticity from an author with no experience of the gold rush or mining, and enjoyed immediate popularity.

You can, of course, find his poems online. “The Shooting of Dan McGrew” should appeal to REH fans:

A bunch of the boys were whooping it up in the Malamute saloon;
The kid that handles the music-box was hitting a jag-time tune;
Back of the bar, in a solo game, sat Dangerous Dan McGrew,
And watching his luck was his light-o’-love, the lady that’s known as Lou.

When out of the night, which was fifty below, and into the din and the glare,
There stumbled a miner fresh from the creeks, dog-dirty, and loaded for bear.
He looked like a man with a foot in the grave and scarcely the strength of a louse,
Yet he tilted a poke of dust on the bar, and he called for drinks for the house.
There was none could place the stranger’s face, though we searched ourselves for a clue;
But we drank his health, and the last to drink was Dangerous Dan McGrew.

There’s men that somehow just grip your eyes, and hold them hard like a spell;
And such was he, and he looked to me like a man who had lived in hell;
With a face most hair, and the dreary stare of a dog whose day is done,
As he watered the green stuff in his glass, and the drops fell one by one.
Then I got to figgering who he was, and wondering what he’d do,
And I turned my head — and there watching him was the lady that’s known as Lou.

His eyes went rubbering round the room, and he seemed in a kind of daze,
Till at last that old piano fell in the way of his wandering gaze.
The rag-time kid was having a drink; there was no one else on the stool,
So the stranger stumbles across the room, and flops down there like a fool.
In a buckskin shirt that was glazed with dirt he sat, and I saw him sway;
Then he clutched the keys with his talon hands — my God! but that man could play.

Were you ever out in the Great Alone, when the moon was awful clear,
And the icy mountains hemmed you in with a silence you most could hear;
With only the howl of a timber wolf, and you camped there in the cold,
A half-dead thing in a stark, dead world, clean mad for the muck called gold;
While high overhead, green, yellow and red, the North Lights swept in bars? —
Then you’ve a hunch what the music meant. . . hunger and night and the stars.

And hunger not of the belly kind, that’s banished with bacon and beans,
But the gnawing hunger of lonely men for a home and all that it means;
For a fireside far from the cares that are, four walls and a roof above;
But oh! so cramful of cosy joy, and crowned with a woman’s love —
A woman dearer than all the world, and true as Heaven is true —
(God! how ghastly she looks through her rouge, — the lady that’s known as Lou.)

Then on a sudden the music changed, so soft that you scarce could hear;
But you felt that your life had been looted clean of all that it once held dear;
That someone had stolen the woman you loved; that her love was a devil’s lie;
That your guts were gone, and the best for you was to crawl away and die.
‘Twas the crowning cry of a heart’s despair, and it thrilled you through and through —
“I guess I’ll make it a spread misere”, said Dangerous Dan McGrew.

The music almost died away … then it burst like a pent-up flood;
And it seemed to say, “Repay, repay,” and my eyes were blind with blood.
The thought came back of an ancient wrong, and it stung like a frozen lash,
And the lust awoke to kill, to kill … then the music stopped with a crash,
And the stranger turned, and his eyes they burned in a most peculiar way;
In a buckskin shirt that was glazed with dirt he sat, and I saw him sway;
Then his lips went in in a kind of grin, and he spoke, and his voice was calm,
And “Boys,” says he, “you don’t know me, and none of you care a damn;
But I want to state, and my words are straight, and I’ll bet my poke they’re true,
That one of you is a hound of hell. . .and that one is Dan McGrew.”

Then I ducked my head, and the lights went out, and two guns blazed in the dark,
And a woman screamed, and the lights went up, and two men lay stiff and stark.
Pitched on his head, and pumped full of lead, was Dangerous Dan McGrew,
While the man from the creeks lay clutched to the breast of the lady that’s known as Lou.

These are the simple facts of the case, and I guess I ought to know.
They say that the stranger was crazed with “hooch,” and I’m not denying it’s so.
I’m not so wise as the lawyer guys, but strictly between us two —
The woman that kissed him and — pinched his poke — was the lady that’s known as Lou.

Comments

  1. Felix says:

    My grandmother had a “complete works of” kind of book of his poems. The WWI poems were of the same wonderful ilk as Shooting and Cremation. When we had to memorize and present a poem in Jr. High School, I chose Cremation and can still remember much of it.

    Our English text book had the *only* boring poem Service wrote. Something about the arctic sky maybe. It’s inclusion over a whole raft of great Service poems taught me something, that’s for sure.

  2. Will O. says:

    Interesting. Howard shows up in the most interesting places. If you are a Howard fan, you should check out my new biography: Robert E. Howard: The Life and Times of a Texas Author (UNT Press, 2025).

  3. Bruce says:

    Paul Fussell’s The Great War and Modern Memory mentions a British soldier who claimed to be Robert Service under an alias.

  4. Bob Sykes says:

    I am astonished you had to look up Robert Service. I suppose this reflects the death of poetry since WW II. The last refuge of the poet was popular music, but even that was replaced by Rap a generation ago.

  5. Albion says:

    There is something about what might be called the ‘Golden age of popular poetry’ — alas, long since faded — where vaudeville and radio brought poems and ballads to the attention of millions. Robert Service was one, and of course, Rudyard Kipling another who made people listen. The appeal was these poems could be remembered because they had not only rhythm but also a certain cleverness, which appealed to many. I sometimes find myself reciting parts of these poems but alas, can only recall parts of them. However I do quite well with ‘The Lion and Albert’ because I know Blackpool in the UK and the sort of people who went there. If I lived near the Yukon, Dangerous Dan McGrew might come easily to me.

  6. Isegoria says:

    I don’t remember any 20th-Century poetry being taught in school — except Robert Frost.

  7. Phileas Frogg says:

    Isegoria,

    I had a phenomenal 9th grade English teacher who introduced us to T.S. Eliot, W.B. Yeats, and W.H. Auden, and got my friends and I regularly writing short stories for fun in our spare time. Amazing woman.

    She ended up pregnant with her 2nd child, abandoned by her boyfriend (who cleared out her bank accounts before leaving), addicted to drugs, got fired and ended up homeless. Best English teacher I’ve ever seen, but life just wrecked her. I’ll always be grateful for the solid foundation she gave me.

  8. Phileas Frogg says:

    Isegoria,

    Great article, and I agree wholeheartedly with its thesis.

    Aimee was a chaotic dumpster fire in her personal life, but the rigor and discipline she imposed on us in class was nuts by modern standards. We had to memorize and give examples of over 75 literary devices, essays were edited and refined ad nauseam, and the end of the year poetry project was a bear; 12 poetic analyses, 2 pages each, 9 assigned, 3 of our own choosing, with strict guidelines and a rubric on how to undertake the writing, and one poem of our own making, also subject to the same analysis. At the time I only had my dad’s old Smith-Corona personal word processor, unlike all my friends who had computers, so it was late nights.

    She was a kind of reverse Keating now that I think about it, imposing order on us, and we loved it.

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