But the men were swift to battle, swift to cross the
coastal water,
Swift to war and swift of weapon, swift
to paddle trackless miles,
Crept with stealth along the canyon, stole her from
her love and brought her
Once again unto the distant Charlotte
Isles.
But she faded, ever faded, and her eyes were ever
turning
Southward toward the Capilano, while her
voice had hushed its song,
And her riven heart repeated words that on her lips
were burning:
“Not to friend—but unto
foeman I belong.
“Give me back my Squamish lover—though
you hate, I still must love him.
“Give me back the rugged canyon
where my heart must ever be—
Where his lodge awaits my coming, and the Dream Hills
lift above him,
And the Capilano learned its song from
me.”
But through long-forgotten seasons, moons too many
to be numbered,
He yet waited by the canyon—she
called across the years,
And the soul within the river, though centuries had
slumbered,
Woke to sob a song of womanly tears.
For her little, lonely spirit sought the Capilano
canyon,
When she died among the Haidas in the
land of Totem Poles,
And you yet may hear her singing to her lover-like
companion,
If you listen to the river as it rolls.
But ’tis only when the pearl and purple smoke
is idly swinging
From the fires on Lulu Island to the hazy
mountain crest,
That the undertone of sobbing echoes through the river’s
singing,
In the Capilano canyon of the West.
[5] “The Ballad of Yaada” is the last complete poem written by the author. It was placed for publication with the “Saturday Night” of Toronto, and did not appear in print until several months after Miss Johnson’s death.
“AND HE SAID, FIGHT ON” [6]
(Tennyson)
Time and its ally, Dark Disarmament,
Have compassed me about,
Have massed their armies, and on battle bent
My forces put to rout;
But though I fight alone, and fall, and die,
Talk terms of Peace?
Not I.
They war upon my fortress, and their guns
Are shattering its walls;
My army plays the cowards’ part, and runs,
Pierced by a thousand balls;
They call for my surrender. I reply,
“Give quarter now?
Not I.”
They’ve shot my flag to ribbons, but in rents
It floats above the height;
Their ensign shall not crown my battlements
While I can stand and fight.
I fling defiance at them as I cry,
“Capitulate? Not
I.”
[6] E. Pauline Johnson died March 7th,
1913. Shortly after the
doctors told her that her illness would
be her final one, she
wrote the above poem, taking a line from
Tennyson as her theme.