DUNCAN CAMPBELL SCOTT

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THE FIFTEENTH OF APRIL

PALLID saffron glows the broken stubble,

Brimmed with silver lie the ruts,

Purple the ploughed hill;

Down a sluice with break and bubble

Hollow falls the rill;

Falls and spreads and searches,

Where, beyond the wood,

Starts a group of silver birches,

Bursting into blood.

Under Venus sings the vesper sparrow,

Down a path of rosy gold

Floats the slender moon;

Ringing from the rounded barrow

Rolls the robin's tune;

Lighter than the robin—hark!

Quivering silver-strong

From the field a hidden shore-lark

Shakes his sparkling song.

Now the dewy sounds begin to dwindle,

Dimmer grow the burnished rills,

Breezes creep and halt,

Soon the guardian night shall kindle

In the violet vault,

All the twinkling tapers,

Touched with steady gold,

Burning through the lawny vapors

Where they float and fold.


I RESTED on the breezy height,

In cooler shade and clearer air,

Beneath a maple tree;

Below, the mighty river took

Its sparkling shade and sheening light

Down to the sombre sea,

And clustered by the leaping brook

The roofs of white St IrÉnÉe.

The sapphire hills on either hand

Broke down upon the silver tide,

The river ran in streams,

In streams of mingled azure-grey,

With here a broken purple band,

And whorls of drab, and beams

Of shattered silver light astray,

Where far away the south shore gleams.

I walked a mile along the height

Between the flowers upon the road,

Asters and golden-rod;

And in the gardens pinks and stocks,

And gaudy poppies shaking light,

And daisies blooming near the sod,

And lowly pansies set in flocks,

With purple monkshood overawed.

And there I saw a little child,

Between the tossing golden-rod,

Coming along to me;

She was a tender little thing,

So fragile-sweet, so Mary-mild,

I thought her name Marie;

No other name methought could cling

To any one so fair as she.

And when we came at last to meet,

I spoke a simple word to her,

"Where are you going, Marie?"

She answered, and she did not smile,

But oh! her voice,—her voice so sweet,

"Down to St IrÉnÉe,"

And so passed on to walk her mile,

And left the lonely road to me.

And as the night came on apace,

With stars above the darkened hills,

I heard perpetually,

Chiming along the falling hours,

On the deep dusk that mellow phrase,

"Down to St IrÉnÉe:"

It seemed as if the stars and flowers

Should all go there with me.


O SHIP incoming from the sea

With all your cloudy tower of sail,

Dashing the water to the lee,

And leaning grandly to the gale;

The sunset pageant in the west

Has filled your canvas curves with rose,

And jewelled every toppling crest

That crashes into silver snows!

You know the joy of coming home

After long leagues to France or Spain;

You feel the clear Canadian foam

And the gulf water heave again.

Between these sombre purple hills

That cool the sunset's molten bars,

You will go on as the wind wills,

Beneath the river's roof of stars.

You will toss onward toward the lights

That spangle over the lone pier,

By hamlets glimmering on the heights,

By level islands black and clear:

You will go on beyond the tide,

Through brimming plains of olive sedge,

Through paler shallows light and wide,

The rapids piled along the ledge.

At evening off some reedy bay

You will swing slowly on your chain,

And catch the scent of dewy hay,

Soft blowing from the pleasant plain.


I HEAR the bells at eventide

Peal slowly one by one,

Near and far off they break and glide;

Across the stream float faintly beautiful

The antiphonal bells of Hull;

The day is done, done, done,

The day is done.

The dew has gathered in the flowers,

Like tears from some unconscious deep:

The swallows whirl around the towers,

The light runs out beyond the long cloud bars,

And leaves the single stars;

'Tis time for sleep, sleep, sleep,

'Tis time for sleep.

The hermit thrush begins again,—

Timorous eremite—

That song of risen tears and pain,

As if the one he loved was far away:

'Alas! another day—'

'And now Good Night, Good Night,'

'Good Night.'


OVER the field the bright air clings and tingles

In the gold sunset, while the red wind swoops;

Upon the nibbled knolls, and from the dingles,

The sheep are gathering in frightened groups.

From the wide field the laggards bleat and follow,

A drover hurls his cry and hooting laugh;

And one young swain, too glad to whoop or hollo,

Is singing wildly as he whirls his staff.

Now crowding into little groups and eddies

They swirl about and charge and try to pass;

The sheep-dog yelps and heads them off and steadies

And rounds and moulds them in a seething mass.

They stand a moment with their heads uplifted

Till the wise dog barks loudly on the flank,

They all at once roll over and are drifted

Down the small hill toward the river bank.

Covered with rusty marks and purple blotches

Around the fallen bars they flow and leap;

The wary dog stands by and keenly watches

As if he knew the name of every sheep.

Now down the road the nimble sound decreases,

The drovers cry, the dog delays and whines,

And now with twinkling feet and glimmering fleeces

They round and vanish past the dusky pines.

The drove is gone, the ruddy wind grows colder,

The singing youth puts up the heavy bars,

Beyond the pines he sees the crimson smoulder,

And catches in his eyes the early stars.


I SEE a schooner in the bay

Cutting the current into foam;

One day she flies and then one day

Comes like a swallow veering home.

I hear a water miles away

Go sobbing down the wooded glen;

One day it falls and then one day

Comes sobbing on the wind again.

Remembrance goes but will not stay;

That cry of unpermitted pain

One day departs and then one day

Comes sobbing to my heart again.


THERE is rain upon the window,

There is wind upon the tree;

The rain is slowly sobbing,

The wind is blowing free:

It bears my weary heart

To my own country.

I hear the whitethroat calling,

Hid in the hazel ring;

Deep in the misty hollows

I hear the sparrows sing;

I see the bloodroot starting,

All silvered with the spring.

I skirt the buried reed-beds,

In the starry solitude:

My snowshoes creak and whisper,

I have my ready blood.

I hear the lynx-cub yelling

In the gaunt and shaggy wood.

I hear the wolf-tongued rapid

Howl in the rocky break;

Beyond the pines at the portage

I hear the trapper wake

His En roulant ma boulÉ,

From the clear gloom of the lake.

O! take me back to the homestead,

To the great rooms warm and low,

Where the frost creeps on the casement,

When the year comes in with snow.

Give me, give me the old folk

Of the dear long ago.

Oh, land of the dusky balsam,

And the darling maple tree,

Where the cedar buds and berries,

And the pine grows strong and free!

My heart is weary and weary

For my own country.


I THOUGHT of death beside the lonely sea,

That went beyond the limit of my sight,

Seeming the image of his mastery,

The semblance of his huge and gloomy might.

But firm beneath the sea went the great earth,

With sober bulk and adamantine hold,

The water but a mantle for her girth,

That played about her splendor fold on fold.

And life seemed like this dear familiar shore,

That stretched from the wet sands' last wavy crease,

Beneath the sea's remote and sombre roar,

To inland stillness and the wilds of peace.

Death seems triumphant only here and there;

Life is the sovereign presence everywhere.


CITY about whose brow the north winds blow,

Girdled with woods and shod with river foam,

Called by a name as old as Troy or Rome,

Be great as they, but pure as thine own snow;

Rather flash up amid the auroral glow,

The Lamia city of the northern star,

Than be so hard with craft or wild with war,

Peopled with deeds remembered for their woe.

Thou art too bright for guile, too young for tears,

And thou wilt live to be too strong for Time;

For he may mock thee with his furrowed frowns,

But thou wilt grow in calm throughout the years,

Cinctured with peace and crowned with power sublime,

The maiden queen of all the towered towns.


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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