Hector The Collector By Shel Silverstein Poem by BEST POEMS

Hector The Collector By Shel Silverstein



Hector the Collector
Collected bits of string,
Collected dolls with broken heads
And rusty bells that would not ring.
Pieces out of picture puzzles,
Bent-up nails and ice-cream sticks,
Twists of wires, worn-out tires,
Paper bags and broken bricks.
Old chipped vases, half shoelaces,
Gatlin' guns that wouldn't shoot,
Leaky boats that wouldn't float
And stopped-up horns that wouldn't toot.
Butter knives that had no handles,
Copper keys that fit no locks,
Rings that were too small for fingers,
Dried-up leaves and patched-up socks.
Worn-out belts that had no buckles,
'Lectric trains that had no tracks,
Airplane models, broken bottles,
Three-legged chairs and cups with cracks.
Hector the Collector
Loved these things with all his soul‹
Loved them more than shining diamonds,
Loved them more than glistenin' gold.
Hector called to all the people,
'Come and share my treasure trunk! '
And all the silly sightless people
Came and looked...and called it junk.

Wednesday, February 3, 2016
Topic(s) of this poem: love
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
cottoneyedjo 05 May 2022

where did i come from where did i go most importantly where did i die

0 0 Reply
yourmom 05 May 2022

thanks for the poem i needed it for a school assignment

0 0 Reply
Cuz court 05 January 2019

Beautiful and prideful at once and thrice It was sweet to post by my Cuz thoughtful and nice🍓

0 1 Reply
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