He sings for love of the season
When the days grow warm and long,
For the beautiful God-sent reason
That his breast was born for song.
THISTLE-DOWN
Beyond a ridge of pine with russet tips
The west lifts to the sun her longing lips,
Her blushes stain with gold and garnet dye
The shore, the river and the wide far sky;
Like floods of wine the waters filter through
The reeds that brush our indolent canoe.
I beach the bow where sands in shadows lie;
You hold my hand a space, then speak good-bye.
Upwinds your pathway through the yellow plumes
Of goldenrod, profuse in August blooms,
And o’er its tossing sprays you toss a kiss;
A moment more, and I see only this—
The idle paddle you so lately held,
The empty bow your pliant wrist propelled,
Some thistles purpling into violet,
Their blossoms with a thousand thorns afret,
And like a cobweb, shadowy and grey,
Far floats their down—far drifts my dream
away.
THE RIDERS OF THE PLAINS [2]
Who is it lacks the knowledge? Who are the curs
that dare
To whine and sneer that they do not fear the whelps
in the Lion’s lair?
But we of the North will answer, while life in the
North remains,
Let the curs beware lest the whelps they dare are
the Riders of the Plains;
For these are the kind whose muscle makes the power
of the Lion’s jaw,
And they keep the peace of our people and the honour
of British law.
A woman has painted a picture,—’tis
a neat little bit of art
The critics aver, and it roused up for her the love
of the big British heart.
’Tis a sketch of an English bulldog that tigers
would scarce attack,
And round and about and beneath him is painted the
Union Jack.
With its blaze of colour, and courage, its daring
in every fold,
And underneath is the title, “What we have we’ll
hold.”
’Tis a picture plain as a mirror, but the reflex
it contains
Is the counterpart of the life and heart of the Riders
of the Plains;
For like to that flag and that motto, and the power
of that bulldog’s jaw,
They keep the peace of our people and the honour of
British law.
These are the fearless fighters, whose life in the
open lies,
Who never fail on the prairie trail ’neath the
Territorial skies,
Who have laughed in the face of the bullets and the
edge of the rebels’ steel,
Who have set their ban on the lawless man with his
crime beneath their heel;
These are the men who battle the blizzards, the suns,
the rains,
These are the famed that the North has named the “Riders
of the Plains,”
And theirs is the might and the meaning and the strength
of the bulldog’s jaw,
While they keep the peace of the people and the honour
of British law.