The Project Gutenberg EBook of Songs of the Prairie, by Robert J. C. Stead This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org Title: Songs of the Prairie Author: Robert J. C. Stead Illustrator: Elizabeth Colborne Release Date: March 3, 2011 [EBook #35475] Language: English Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SONGS OF THE PRAIRIE *** Produced by Barbara Watson and the Online Distributed Proofreading Canada Team at http://www.pgdpcanada.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries) SONGS OF THE PRAIRIE BY ROBERT J. C. STEAD Author of "PRAIRIE BORN." New York THE PLATT & PECK CO. Copyright 1912, By The Platt & Peck Co. CONTENTS PAGE The Prairie 1 The Gramophone 4 The Plow 8 The Mothering 12 Hustlin' in My Jeans 15 The Homesteader 20 Vain Suitors 24 God's Signalman 26 Going Home 32 Just Be Glad 38 The Canadian Rockies 40 A Prairie Heroine 42 The Seer 51 The Son of Marquis Noddle 56 The Prodigals 62 The Squad of One 64 Alkali Hall 70 Prairie Born 76 "A Colonial" 81 Little Tim Trotter 84 The Vortex 86 The Old Guard 91 Kid McCann 93 Who Owns the Land? 99 A Race for Life 103 THE PRAIRIE The City? Oh, yes, the City Is a good enough place for a while, It fawns on the clever and witty, And welcomes the rich with a smile; It lavishes money as water, It boasts of its palace and hall, But the City is only the daughter-- The Prairie is mother of all! The City is all artificial, Its life is a fashion-made fraud, Its wisdom, though learned and judicial, Is far from the wisdom of God; Its hope is the hope of ambition, Its lust is the lust to acquire, And the larger it grows, its condition Sinks lower in pestilent mire. The City is cramped and congested, The haunt and the covert of crime; The Prairie is broad, unmolested, It points to the high and sublime; Where only the sky is above you And only the distance in view, With no one to jostle or shove you-- It's there a man learns to be true! Where the breeze whispers over the willows Or sighs in the dew laden grass, And the rain clouds, like big, stormy billows, Besprinkle the land as they pass; With the smudge-fire alight in the distance, The wild duck alert on the stream, Where life is a psalm of existence And opulence only a dream. Where wide as the plan of creation The Prairies stretch ever away, And beckon a broad invitation To fly to their bosom, and stay; The prairie fire smell in the gloaming-- The water-wet wind in the spring-- An empire untrod for the roaming-- Ah, this is a life for a king! When peaceful and pure as a river They lie in the light of the moon, You know that the Infinite Giver Is stringing your spirit a-tune; That life is not told in the telling, That death does not whisper adieu, And deep in your bosom up-welling, You know that the Promise is true! To those who have seen it and smelt it, To those who have loved it alone To those who have known it and felt it-- The Prairie is ever their own; And far though they wander, unwary, Far, far from the breath of the plain, A thought of the wind on the Prairie Will set their blood rushing again. Then you to the City who want it, Go, grovel its gain-glutted streets, Be one of the ciphers that haunt it, Or sit in its opulent seats; But for me, where the Prairies are reaching As far as the vision can scan-- Ah, that is the prayer and the preaching That goes to the heart of a man! THE GRAMOPHONE Where the lonely settler's shanty dots the plain, And he sighs for friends and comradeship in vain, Through the silences intense Comes a sound of eloquence Shrilling forth in steely, brazen, waxen strain-- The deep, resonant voice of Gladstone calling from the tomb, Or Ingersoll's deliverance before his brother's bier; Then a saucy someone singing, "When the daisies are in bloom," And the fife and drummers rendering "The British Grenadier." Back as far into the hills as they could get, They've a roof that turns the winter and the wet, They are grizzled but they're gay, They've a daily matinee, They are happy though they're head and ears in debt-- "I wish I had my old girl back again," "If the wind had only blown the other way," Uncertain voices join an old refrain And repeat the same performance every day. There's a Scotchman holding down a mining claim All unknown to Fortune, Influence or Fame, But a few of Harry's songs Are a solace for his wrongs And he sings them ev'ry evening in his "hame"-- "I'm courtin' Bonnie Leezy Lindsay noo," "When I get back again"--you know the lilt-- "We parted on the shore," "I'm fou', I'm fou'," "And that's the reason noo I wear the kilt." There's a son of Erin in Saskatchewan, He's at work a half an hour before the dawn, But before he goes to bunk He makes a table of his trunk And he sets his clock-work concert thereupon-- "The harp that once through Tara's halls," "St Patrick's day in the mornin'," "The last rose of summer," and Fancy recalls A glimpse of his "Kathleen Mavourneen." There's an Englishman who's living in a shack, He's a victim of the gramophone attack, With a half-a-dozen kids (He has half that many "quids") But he dances with the youngest on his back-- Though he's living in the country of the Cree The horn that hangs a fathom from his head Stretches out a thousand leagues across the sea And sings in dear old London town instead. They are far from auditorium or hall, But their minds are still a-tune to Music's call, They can hear Caruso sing, Or the bells of Shandon ring, As they smoke and count the cracks along the wall. * * * * * * * _I'm a miracle of eloquence imprisoned in the wax, I'm a mental inspiration operated by a spring, I'm a nightly consolation from Yukon to Halifax, And the ends of all creation sit and listen while I sing: I'm the Voice of all that man has sought and gained; I'm the throb of ev'ry heart that ever pained; I'm the Genesis of Fate, I'm the Soul of Love and Hate, I'm the humanly impossible attained!_ THE PLOW What power is this that stands behind the steel?-- A homely implement of blade and wheel-- Neglected by the margin of the way, And flashing back the blaze of dying day; Or dragging slow across the yellow field In silent prophecy of lavish yield, It marks the pace of innocence and toil, And taps the boundless treasure of the soil. Before you came the red man rode the plain. Untitled lord of Nature's great domain; The shaggy herds, knee deep in mellow grass; The lazy summer hours were wont to pass; The wild goose nested by the water side; The red deer roamed upon the prairie wide; The black bear trod the woods in solemn might; The lynx stole through the bushes in the night. No sound of toil was heard in all the land; No joyous laugh of voice or sharp command, No cloud of smoke from iron funnels thrown Was through the autumn hazes gently blown; No edge of steel tore up the virgin sod; No church its shining finger turned to God; No tradesman labored over bench and tool; No children chattered on their way to school. But all the land lay desolate and bare, Its wealth of plain its forest riches rare Unguessed by those who saw it through their tears, And Nature--miser of a thousand years-- Was adding still to her immense reserve That shall supply the world with brawn and nerve: But all lay silent, useless, and unused, And useless 'twas because it was unused. You came. Straightway the silent plain Grew mellow with the glow of golden grain; The axes in the solitary wood Rang out where stately oak and maple stood; The land became alive with busy din, And as the many settled, more came in; The world looked on in wonder and dismay-- The building of a nation in a day! By lake and river, rock and barren waste, A peaceful army toiled in eager haste; Ten thousand workers sweating in the sun Pressed on the task so recently begun; Their outworks every day were forced ahead-- And every day they gave their toll of dead-- Until at length the double lines of steel Received the steaming steed and whirling wheel! Where yesterday the lazy bison lay A city glitters in the sun to-day; His paths are turned to streets of wood and stone, And thousands tread the way he trod alone; The mighty hum of industry and trade Fills all the place where once he held parade, And far away the unheard river's play Makes joyous night still brighter than the day! Upon the plains a thousand towns arise, And quickly each to be a city tries; The sound of trade is heard on every hand And sturdy men rise to possess the land; Awhile they lingered, thinking it a dream, But now they flow in a resistless stream That seems to fill the prairie far and near, Yet in its vastness soon they disappear. Where once the silent red man spurned the ground A land of peace and plenty now is found, A land by Nature destined to be great, Where every man is lord of his estate; Where men may dwell together in accord, And honest toil receive its due reward; Where loyal friends and happy homes are made, And culture follows hard the feet of trade. This you have made it. Is it vain to hope The sons of such a land will climb and grope Along the undiscovered ways of life, And neither seek nor be found shunning strife, But ever, beckoned by a high ideal, Press onward, upward, till they make it real; With feet sure planted on their native sod, And will and aspirations linked with God? THE MOTHERING I had lain untrod for a million years from the line to the Arctic sea; I had dreamed strange dreams of the vast unknown, Of the lisping wind and the dancing zone Where the Northland fairies' feet had flown, And it all seemed good to me. At the close of a thousand eons of sleep came a pang that was strange to me; The pang of a new life in my breast, The swell of a vast and a vague unrest, And it thrilled my soul from East to West As it fluttered to be free. But I steeled my heart to the biped thing; of vast presumption he: He would lure my lonely thoughts away, He would sport himself on the sacred clay Where the dust of the prehistoric lay; But he scorned the soul of me. So I stretched my plains for a thousand leagues from the mountains to the sea; But he rolled them back with a steel-laid line, And he crumbled space by man's design And he filled his life with the breath of mine; But his love he gave not me. Then I called him foes from the farthest north and the snowflake fluttered free; But he took him trees I had given birth, And he delved him coal from my bowels of earth, And he laughed at me as he sat in mirth; But he cursed the cold of me. Then I cut him off from his fellow-men that his thought might turn to me; But he strung him a line of copper thread, And his fire-shod words swung overhead, By the fiend of air his thought was spread O'er hill, and plain, and lea. Then I gave him hopes he could not define and fears that he could not flee; And he heard my cry in the long, still night, In my spirit-thrall I held him tight And his blind soul-eyes craved for the light; But the light he could not see. So I held my peace till I saw him sit with children at his knee; And I sent them the sun, the wind and the rain, And the ferny slope and the flowery plain, And the wet night-smell of the growing grain; And their love they gave to me. In the last race-birth of the sons of men a travail holdeth me; But out of the night of pain and tears A new life comes with the rolling years; And I fondle the child of my hope and fears, And it seemeth good to me. HUSTLIN' IN MY JEANS Yes, I'm holdin' down the homestead here an' roughin' it a bit, It seems the only kind o' life that I was built to fit, For it's thirty years last summer since I staked my first preserve, An' I reckon on the whole I've prospered more than I deserve; An' my friends kep' naggin' at me for to quit this toil an' strife An' to settle in the city for the balance of my life, An' I ain't compelled to labor--I've cached a wad of beans-- But I'm happier when I'm hustlin' on the homestead in my jeans. I've tried to loaf an' like it an' I've tried to swell about Where the boozey run to red-eye an' the greedy run to gout, An' I've tried to wear a collar an' a fancy fly-net vest, An' I've tried to think it pleasant just to sit around an' rest; An' I've mingled with the nabobs an' hee-hawed with other guys That were just as sick as I was of a life of livin' lies; I've mingled in society an' peeked behind the scenes-- An' I'm happier when I'm hustlin' on the homestead in my jeans. Then I got the lust for roamin' an' I rummaged round the earth, An' I got a big experience an' correspondin' girth, But the more I roved an' rambled the less I cared to live, An' I only kep' on goin' cause I'd no alternative; I learned through tips an' tickets an' the jostle of the cars That I wouldn't trade a homestead for a continent in Mars; An' I bid good-bye to Fashion an' her social kings an' queens, An' I filed my second homestead an' I bought a pair of jeans. 'Course it's sometimes kind o' lonely on the prairie here alone, When the night-time settles round you an' your thoughts are all your own, An' old faces flit before you like a flock o' homin' birds An' your heart swells with emotion that no man can put in words, An' you ponder on the Why-for, the Beginnin', an' the End; An' you know the only things worth while are Family an' Friend-- From the trifles of existence your better judgment weans, An' you get the right perspective on the homestead--in your jeans. There are days the sweat-drops glisten on this sun-burned hand of mine, There are nights the joints go creakin' as I crawl to bed, at nine, But I hear the horses' stampin' and the rap of Collie's tail An' it minds me of the Eighties an' the Old Commission Trail-- Of the days we pledged our future to a land we hardly knew, An' the men whose brave beginnings made prosperity for you; There are men now worth their millions I remember in their teens, An' they made their start by hustlin' on the homestead in their jeans. There are times when most folks figure that their life has been a blank; You may be a homeless hobo or director of a bank, But the thought will catch you nappin'--catch you sometime unawares-- That your life has been a failure, and that no one really cares; That the world will roll without you till the Resurrection morn, An' that no one would have missed you if you never had been born; An' I give you my conclusion--all that livin' really means Is revealed to those who hustle on the homestead in their jeans. Some day I reckon I'll cash in an' file another claim Where the wicked cease from troublin' an' the good get in the game; Where the pews are not allotted by the fashion of your dress, An' the only thing that figures is inherent manliness-- Give me no silk-spangled horses an' no silver-plated hearse, But let some student preacher read a bit of Scripture verse, An' find a sunny hillside where the water-willow screens, An' plant me on the homestead where I hustled--in my jeans. THE HOMESTEADER Far away from the din of the city, I dwell on the prairie alone, With no one to praise or to pity, And all the broad earth for my own; The fields to allure me to labor, The shanty to shelter my sleep, A league and a half to a neighbor-- And Collie to watch if I weep. Yes, this is my place of probation, Though woefully windy and bare; I am lord of my own habitation, I mock at the meaning of care; For here, on the edge of creation, Lies, far as the vision can fling, A kingdom that's fit for a nation-- A kingdom--and I am the king! The grasses aglare in the morning With crystalline radiance shine; The dew-drops are jewels adorning, Are jewels--and the jewels are mine; The heat of the sun when it shineth, The wet of the wind when it rains, Are balm to the heart that repineth-- The Medicine Men of the plains! I follow the plow in the breaking, I tap the rich treasures of Time-- The treasure is here for the taking, And taking it isn't a crime; I ride on the rack or the reaper To harvest the fruit of my hand, And daily I know that the deeper I'm rooting my soul in the land. They say there is wealth in the doing, That royal and rich are the gains, But 'tisn't the wealth I am wooing So much as the life of the plains; For here in the latter-day morning, Where Time to Eternity clings, Midwife to a breed in the borning, I behold the Beginnings of Things! When, reckless of time and of trouble, I watch till the water fowl comes, Or, picking my steps in the stubble, I steal where the prairie hen drums; When shooting the wolf in the brushes, Or spearing the pike in the stream, Or potting the crane in the rushes-- Ambition seems only a dream. When darkness envelops creation, And shadows lie deep on the plain, I sit in my rude habitation And ponder my childhood again; Then voices come out of the distance, Far voices from over the sea, They call from the depths of existence-- I know they are calling to me! The voices of song and of motion, The voices of laughter and light, They're calling from over the ocean-- Oh, God! could I answer to-night! The voices of friend and of lover, The voices I knew in the past-- I turn to my pallet to smother The thoughts that have found me at last! * * * * * * * _Greater than the measure of the heroes of renown, He is building for the future, and no hand can hold him down; Though they count him but a common man, he holds the Outer Gate, And posterity will own him as the father of the State._ VAIN SUITORS You may tell in fondest phrases How Venetian glory raises Sunlit domes and basking marbles as her streets flow to the sea; Sing of Florence or Geneva Or the Bay of Naples; weave a Web of sentiment--but leave a Little sentiment for me. Where the warm Atlantic waters Lave your laughing sons and daughters By a hundred sunny cities where her tides flow full and free, Or on Caribbean beaches While the water pulls and reaches At your heart-strings--in your speeches Save a sentiment for me. San Francisco's golden fulgor, Catalina's horticulture, Every symphony of gladness, every gaiety there be; Every land and every nation Somewhere claim your admiration: From your meed of approbation Save your fealty to me. * * * * * * * Cloudless skies and peerless weather Link my hearts and homes together And the crisp, pure air of Winter vitalizes blood and brain; Prairie breezes softly blowing, Wheat fields' rustle--cattle lowing-- Broader visions coming--growing-- Woo, O lands, ye woo in vain! GOD'S SIGNALMAN Well, no, I'm not superstitious,--at least, I don't call it that,-- But when someone spins a creepy yarn I don't deny it flat, For a man who spends a lifetime with the throttle in his hand Is bound to have adventures that he cannot understand; I sometimes think our knowledge here is but a sorry show,-- We're only on the borderland of what there is to know. I used to think a man could know all things that could be known; That he should not acknowledge any power above his own; That, however strange the circumstance, there always is a cause That is in complete obedience to some of Nature's laws; But I couldn't shake conviction off, no matter how I tried, And I've changed my way of thinking since the night that Willie died. Yes, Willie was my little son--my greatest earthly joy-- And wife and I just kind o' seemed to dote upon the boy; When I was out on duty she would hover round the lad, And treasure up his sayings to repeat them to his dad; And every night, at lighting time, I knew that, without fail, His baby lips were praying for the man out on the rail. . . . Ah, well, for three short years we knew what such a treasure is, And we grew ever more attached to those sweet ways of his; When one day, swinging through the gate, I saw, with blanching face, My wife as pale as ashes, and a doctor in the place. . . . I tried to go in steady, but my knees were knocking hard, And the light went out of heaven as I staggered up the yard. The doctor was a friend of mine, with children of his own, But he didn't need to tell me, for a blind man would have known By the labored, quick-caught breathing, and the little burning brow, That the Visitor was ready and was waiting for him now. We sat about his bedside in silent, deep despair, And the years rolled down upon us as we faced each other there. 'Twas a little before midnight when a ring came at the bell, And the call-boy said, "Excuse me, sir, but I was sent to tell That Ninety-six is waiting, and there's no one else about; They're expecting you to take her. If you don't she can't go out." I left the answer to my wife. With lips as white as snow, She whispered, "Do your duty," and I said, "All right, I'll go." My fireman knew my trouble, and in rough-and-ready way He let me know his heart was feeling things he couldn't say; The night was dark and moonless, but the bright stars overhead Seemed to whisper to each other, "His little boy is dead." The very locomotive seemed to read my thoughts aright, And the monster sobbed in sympathy as we bulleted the night. We'd been running fast and steady till a little after two; All the passengers were fast asleep, except, perhaps, a few Who sat a-swapping stories in the smoker, when a sight Met my eyes that fairly froze my blood in terror and affright-- For there, before me, standing in the halo of the light Was a little child outlined against the blackness of the night! Oh, I could not be mistaken, I would know him anywhere, With his father's mouth and forehead, and his mother's eyes and hair, And little arms outstretched to me that seemed to coax and say, "Come, Daddy, come and kiss me, for I'm going far away." I flung the brake and throttle, and amid the hissing steam The vision grew, and waned away, and vanished as a dream! My fireman was beside me: "Your nerve is going, Jack; Let's leave the engine here and take a walk along the track. The exercise will do you good." I followed as he led, Until we reached the gorge about a hundred yards ahead: The night wind cooled my temples as we walked the bridge upon, Till we sudden stopped with a sudden gasp-- --THE CENTRE SPAN WAS GONE! * * * * * * * You may call it hallucination, as some of the others do, But I know that the Master took my boy that night at half-past two; And the prayers of a hundred passengers had been offered up in vain Had his spirit, clad in his baby dress, not stood before my train. . . . I know I cried in my window-seat, and was otherwise ill-behaved But the life that I lost was more to me than all the lives he saved. GOING HOME The village lights grew dim behind, the snow lay vast and white And silent as an icy shroud spread out upon the night; A wan moon struggled with the clouds and through the misty haze The trails that branched to left and right were tangled as a maze; The settler's horses plodded in the soft, uncertain snow; And, stealing cautiously behind, a Thing moved to and fro. The trail was little travelled, and the pale, sad, sickly light Was hindrance, rather than a help, to read the road aright; A dozen miles lay stretched between the settler and his shack: He thought of many things that night--not once of turning back. Above the crunching of the snow he heard the rising wind, But never looked--and never saw--the Thing that stole behind. The trail was lost; the horses took their way across the plain; The settler strove to hold the course, but strove, alas, in vain; The fickle wind seemed scarce to stay a moment at a place-- Now howling in a real attack, now snapping at his face; And nearing, leering, peering, in the ghastly, ghostly light, The Thing came softly after as it followed in the night. A light! a light! a welcome light gleamed friendly from afar: Oh, can it be--it cannot be--'tis surely not a star? Nay, nay, it is more warm and near, a happy farmer's home That beckons to the wanderer, "You need no longer roam." With eager hope they hastened on, and plied across the plain; As often as the horses fell they rose to plunge again. The hours moved on, the miles moved on, they followed as a dream The waning light, the dying light, of that deceitful gleam, And when at last it seemed the place must almost be in sight, The light went out! Oh, perfidy! Oh, murderous, mocking light! 'Twas well the ears grew deaf before the howling of the wind, Nor heard the ghoulish chuckle of the gloating Thing behind. The snow lay deep; the horses floundered with the heavy sleigh, Till, plunging in a sudden drift, they tore the tongue away; The sleepy driver knew it not, as through his nerveless hands His hold on life was slipping with the frozen leather bands. The night was calm and beautiful, the frost had ceased to smart. . . . _The Thing had lept upon him and was tearing at his heart!_ * * * * * * * * The room was warm and cosy, and the light was soft and low, Her presence seemed to radiate a tender, girlish glow, And when she placed her hand in his, the soft, caressing palm Was cure for every trouble, and for every pain a balm: And she whispered, "Sweet, my sweetheart, I'll be faithful, I'll be true; In the springtime, in the springtime, I will cross the sea to you." . . . A little bed was fashioned in the fitful firelight glow; A little boy was murmuring a prayer of long ago; And mother-hands upon his head, that fondled in his hair, And sense of quiet comfort and respite from every care; And a pillow white and downy, and a bed so soft and deep, And tired lips were lisping, "Now I lay me down to sleep." . . . Again the scene was changed: A flood of mellow, amber light, That filled the soul with ecstasy of infinite delight; While crystal-cadenced music tinkled through the yellow glow, The lullabies of childhood and the songs of long ago; The sea of God on every hand in silent silver lay: An atom fell: its circles spread through all eternity. * * * * * * * * The Thing was gone; its work was done; a lump of lifeless clay Sat crouching, crouching, crouching in the dawning of the day; The frozen eyeballs stared upon a wilderness of snow, And peered into the future, to the Place no man may know. A she-wolf prowled about the spot, and sniffed below the sleigh, And howled a melancholy howl, and slunk in fear away. JUST BE GLAD Feelin' kind of all run down? Mighty bad: Sick and tired o' life in town? Don't be sad: What you're needing isn't rest: Square your shoulders, raise your chest; Pack your turkey; go out West-- Just be glad! Gone astray in No-Man's-Land? Silly lad! Ought to have your carcass tanned With a gad: Should ha' kept the narrow track: Never mind, you can't go back; Things may not be quite so black-- Just be glad! Gone and blown in all your cash On a fad? Livin' now on soup and hash? Writin' Dad? Don't you do it. Here's a tip; Keep a good stiff upper lip; Needn't fall because you slip-- Just be glad! Friends refuse to help you out? Don't get mad! You would be a lazy lout If they had. Do not envy place or pelf; Praise the Lord, you've got your health; Dig in! Be a man yourself-- Just be glad! All the world may say or do, Good or bad, Isn't anything to you-- Just be glad! Though you work at book or trade, Though you work with pen or spade, Hump yourself--you'll make the grade-- Just be glad! THE CANADIAN ROCKIES (_Lines suggested in the camp of the Alpine Club of Canada, Sherbrooke Lake, B. C., August, 1911._) "I to the hills will lift mine eyes," Of old the Psalmist sung, And we who clutch the worldly prize, With Earth's distractions wrung, Still turn our fevered fancy's gaze Where snowy summits greet the day, Where Nature guards her mysteries, And Time becomes Eternity Where, changeless in eternal change, The Rockies clip the clouds, And glacial lakes and granite range Sleep, in their snowy shrouds; Where silence hushes discontent, And petty fears are lost in space, The Builder of the firmament Still meets His people, face to face! O barren cares that bitter life, O hopes unwisely dear, O fruitless fallacy and strife, O social, sham veneer!-- I to the hills will lift mine eyes, Where mantling cloud or cornice clings, To catch a glimpse of paradise, And turn again--to little things! A PRAIRIE HEROINE They were running out the try-lines, they were staking out the grade; Through the hills they had to measure, through the sloughs they had to wade; They were piercing unknown regions, they were crossing nameless streams, With the prairie for a pillow and the sky above their dreams, They were mapping unborn cities in the age-long pregnant clay: When they came upon a little mound across the right-of-way. There were violets growing on it, and a buttercup or two, That whispered of affection ever old and ever new, And a little ring of whitewashed stones, bright in the summer sun, But of marble slab or granite pile or pillar there was none; And across the sleeping prairie lay a little, low-built shack, With a garden patch before it and a wheat field at its back. "Well, boys, we'd better see him, and he hadn't ought to kick, For we'll give him time to move it if he does it pretty quick." But scarcely had the foreman spoke when straight across the farm They saw the settler coming with a rifle on his arm; Some would ha' hiked for cover but they had no place to run, But most of them decided they would stay and see the fun. The farmer was the first to speak: "I hate to interfere, And mighty glad I am to see the railway comin' near, But before you drive your pickets across this piece of land You ought to hear the story, or you will not understand: It's the story of a girl who was as true as she was brave, And all that now remains of her is in that little grave. "I didn't want to bring her when I hit the trail out West, I knew I shouldn't do it, and I did my level best To coax her not to come out for a year or two at least, But to stay and take it easy with her friends down in the East; But while I coaxed and argued I was feelin' mighty glum, And right down in my heart I kep' a-hopin' she would come. "Well, by rail and boat and saddle we got out here at last, A-livin' in the future, and forgettin' of the past; We built ourselves a little home, and in our work and care It seemed to me she always took what was the lion's share; God knows just what she suffered, but she hid it with a smile, And made out that she thought I was the only thing worth while. "She stood it through the summer and the warm, brown days of fall, And of all the voices calling her she would not hear the call; But when the winter settled with its cold, white pall of snow She seemed to whiten with it, but she thought I didn't know; She tried to keep her spirits up and laugh my fears away, But I saw her growing thin and ever weaker day by day. "At last I couldn't stand it any longer, so I said, 'I think you'd better try and spend a day or two in bed While I go for a doctor. It's only sixty miles.' She gave a little wistful look, half hidden in her smiles, And said, 'Perhaps you'd better, though I think I'll be all right When the spring comes.' . . . Well, I started out that night. "I made the trip on horseback, by the guiding Polar star And a dozen times the distance never seemed one half so far. But the doctor had gone out of town,--just where, no one could say, And a lump rose in my chest that fairly took my breath away. But I daren't stay there thinking, and my search for him was vain, So I bought some wine and brandy and I started home again. "Forgetful of my horse, I spent the whole night on the road, Till early in the morning he collapsed beneath his load; I saw the brute was done for, and although it made me cry, I hacked into his jug'lar vein and left him there to die; And then I shouldered the supplies and staggered on alone, And thinking of my wife's distress I quite forgot my own. "She must ha' watched all night for me, for in the morning grey She saw me stagger in the snow and fall beside the way And God knows how she did it--she was only skin and bone-- But she came out here and found me and dragged me home alone, And she took the precious liquor that had cost us all so dear, And poured it down this worthless hulk that's standin' blatin' here. . . . "I guess you know what happened--I lived, she passed away; I robed her in her wedding-dress and laid her in the clay; And every spring I plant the flowers that grow upon her grave, For I hold the spot as sacred as the Arimathæn's cave; And when the winter snows have come, and all is white and still, I spread a blanket on the mound to keep out frost and chill. "Folks say I've got a screw loose, that I've gone to acting queer, But I sometimes hear her speaking, and I know she's always near; And sometimes in the night I feel the pressure of her hand, And for a blessed hour I share with her the Promised Land:-- Let man or devil undertake to desecrate my dead And as sure as God's in heaven I will pump him full of lead." They were rough-and-ready railway men who stood about the spot, They were men that lied and gambled they were men that drank and fought, But some of them were sneezing, and some were coughing bad, And some were blowing noses on anything they had; And some of them were swallowing at lumps that shouldn't come, And some were swearing softly, and some were simply dumb. At last the foreman found his voice: "I guess your claim is sound; I wouldn't care to run a track across that piece of ground. . . . We'll have to change our lay-out . . . but I hope . . . we have the grace To build a fitting monument to mark that holy place; Put me down for a hundred; now, boys, how much for you?" And they answered in a chorus, "We'll see the business through." * * * * * * * The passengers upon a certain railway o'er the plain See a shining shaft of marble from the windows of the train, But they do not know the story of the girl-wife in the snow And the broken-hearted farmer with his lonely life of woe, And none of them have guessed that the deflection in the line Is the railway builders' tribute to a prairie heroine. THE SEER In the dingy dust of his deerskin tent sat the chief of a dying race, And the lake that lapt at his wigwam door threw back a frowning face, And a sightless squaw at the centre-pole crooned low in a hybrid speech, When a man of God swept round the point and landed on the beach. The heavy eyes grew bright with fire, the lips shaped to a sneer-- "Welcome, my paleface brother, what good news brings you here? Are you come with the voice of healing, with the book of your blameless breed, To soothe my soul with comfort while my body gnaws with need? "Welcome, O paleface brother; come, what have you to fear? Mayhap the redskin chieftain can teach as well as hear; And while we sing your sacred songs and breathe your mystic prayer, Who knows what inspiration may come on the ev'ning air? . . . "Listen; you are a scholar, schooled in the paleface lore: 'Tis said a dying saint may sometimes see the shining shore; That closing eyes peer far beyond the realm of mortal sight,-- Who knows but that a dying race may read the road aright? "A dying race! We know it; the land is ours no more, No more we roam the prairies as in the days of yore; The brave, free spirit that was ours is crushed and passed away, And bodies without spirits are predestined to decay. "No matter. In the summertime the flowers bloom in the grass, The startled insects flood the fields and chirrup as you pass, The birds sing in the bushes; but before the wintry blast The flowers and the insects and the little birds are past. "Yet once again the spring will come, the flowers will bloom again, And insects chirrup blithely where the former ones are lain; The white snows of the wintertime will vanish in the heat, And out-door life and color will follow their defeat. "Can the paleface read the riddle? Has he eyes to see the signs? Or thinketh he that snow will lie forever on the pines? That housed-up life can triumph for the mastery of state, Or cushioned chairs produce a race destined to dominate? "Behold, the things your hands have done, the power your arts have won-- Behold, those things shall vanish as the snow before the sun; The snow that smothered out the red--ah, hear it if you can-- Shall leave the earth as suddenly, _and leave it brown and tan_. "Hear ye a little lesson--surely ye know its worth-- Only an out-door nation can be master of the earth; Soon as ye seek your couches, soft with the spoils of trade-- See well to your outer trenches before the mines are laid! "Hear ye a little lesson--can ye the truth divine? Milk ye may mix with water, and water will mix with wine; Mix as ye may on your prairies, mix in your hope, and toil, But know in all your mixing that water won't mix with oil!" In the dingy dusk of his deerskin tent sat the chief of a dying race, And the glow of holy prophecy lit up his rugged face, And the foremost light of the setting sun fell far on an eastern land,-- _And who shall save the paleface if he will not understand?_ THE SON OF MARQUIS NODDLE He is brand-new out from England and he thinks he knows it all-- (There's a bloomin' bit o' goggle in his eye) The "colonial" that crosses him is going to get a fall-- (There's a seven-pound revolver on his thigh). He's a son of Marquis Noddle, he's a nephew of an earl, In the social swim of England he's got 'em all awhirl. He's as confident as Cæsar and as pretty as a girl-- Oh, he's out in deadly earnest, do or die. They will spot him in the cities by the cowhide on his feet-- (They were built for crushing cobblestones at 'ome) And the giddy girls will giggle when they see him on the street-- (There's a brand-new cowboy hat upon his dome). He has come from home and kindred to the land beyond the sea, To the far-famed land of plenty, to the country of the free, But he can't forget he owns it from Cape Race to Behring Sea-- He is coming just as Cæsar would to Rome. When his pile is getting slender he'll go looking for a job, (And he thinks he ought to get it, don't-cher-know) But he finds that he must mingle with the common city mob (How _can_ they think that he would stoop so low?). So he hikes him to the country, where the rustics will be proud To salute him when they meet him, and to whisper, nice and loud, "He's the son of Marquis Noddle,--you would know him in a crowd"-- They will pay him there the homage that they owe. In the little country village he will manufacture mirth-- (For it's there they take the measure of a swell) They will soon proceed to teach him that he doesn't own the earth (With a quit-claim on the sun and moon as well). They will show him that the country isn't altogether slow, And that they can travel any pace that he's a mind to go; He will be a right good fellow till they run him out of dough-- Oh, it is a tale of merriment they tell! So to keep his bones together he goes working on a farm, (Where they get up at a little after two) Where they think to take him down a peg will not do him any harm, (And they sleep when there is nothing else to do). Where they work him like a nigger nearly twenty hours a day, And they don't disguise the fact that they consider him a jay, And he eats so much and sleeps so much he isn't worth his pay-- Oh, it doesn't matter that his blood is blue. He decides to do a season as a cowboy in the West, (Where they call a man a boy until he's dead) And he tries to walk a-swagger with a military chest, (And he isn't overslept or overfed). They will set him breaking bronchos, though it's little to his mind; With many new-learned epithets he'll perforate the wind-- How can he know the boys have stuck a thistle on behind? He will end the exhibition on his head. They will fill him full of liquor that'll frizzle his inside, (In the cooler he can square it with his God). He will spend his nights in places where the _demi-monde_ reside, (In the morning he'll be minus watch and wad). They'll abuse him as a youngster, they will mock him as a man, They'll make his life a thorny path in every way they can, Till he curses his existence and the day that it began, And he wishes he was rotting in the sod. He will write long tales to England, tales of bitterness and woe, (They will print 'em in the papers over there). He will tell them pretty nearly everything he doesn't know, (And they'll take it all for gospel over there). He will tell them that the country isn't fit for gentlemen, That any who escape from it do not come back again, He is handy with his language and he wields a bitter pen-- To the truth of each assertion he would swear. He's a growler, he's a growser, he's a nuisance, he's a bum, (And the country hasn't any room for such) And they class him in the papers as "European scum," (They would rather have the Irish or the Dutch). He's the butt of every jester, he's the mark of every joke, He is wearing borrowed trousers--he has put his own in soak-- He's a useless good-for-nothing, beaten, buffeted, and broke, And of sympathy he won't get over-much. * * * * * * * In a dozen years you'll find him with a section of his own, (He had to learn his lesson at the start) With a happy wife and children he is trying to atone-- (For he loves the country now with all his heart). He's a son of dear old England, he's a hero, he's a brick; He's the kind you may annihilate but you can never lick, For he played and lost, and played and lost, and stayed and took the trick; In a world of men he'll play a manly part. THE PRODIGALS Knee-deep our prairies link the seas, Flood-full our voiceless rivers wend; We hold unturned the larder keys On which the future years depend: And shall we suffer alien throngs Usurp the land to us belongs? What though we are to fortune born And all our paths are paved with gold? We flaunt our folly up to scorn, Because we keep not what we hold: Why should we rob our right of birth To foster all the breeds of earth? We picture with unfeigned dismay Man-glutted lands of other flags, They multiply but to decay, And rot in pestilence and rags; Why hasten we to emulate These helpless tragedies of Fate? The land our children's sons will need, That land we have wide open thrown To heathen knaves of other breed And paunchy pirates of our own: We give away earth's greatest prize, And pat ourselves, and call us wise. No father he who to the slums For husband to his child would send, And no one worthy of her comes She lives a maiden to the end: Yet we have placed our virgin trust In spawn of Continental lust. If dumb we be to Reason's cries-- Our children's cause she pleads in vain-- Our outraged sons at length will rise And seize their heritage again; And fools, who prate of vested right, Will either cease to prate--or fight. The land is ours, the land will keep, And Time is nowise near its end; We hold our birthright all too cheap Its sacredness to comprehend; In after years our sons will say, "Why frittered ye the land away?" THE SQUAD OF ONE Sergeant Blue of the Mounted Police was a so-so kind of a guy; He swore a bit, and he lied a bit, and he boozed a bit on the sly; But he held the post at Snake Creek Bend for country and home and God, And he cursed the first and forgot the rest--which wasn't the least bit odd. Now the life of the North West Mounted Police breeds an all-round kind of man; A man who can jug a down-South thug when he rushes the red-eye can; A man who can pray with a dying bum or break up a range stampede-- Such are the men of the Mounted Police and such are the men they breed. The snow lay deep at the Snake Creek post and deep to east and west, And the Sergeant had made his ten-league beat and settled down to rest In his two-by-four that they called a "post," where the flag flew overhead, And he took a look at his monthly mail, and this is the note he read: "To Sergeant Blue of the Mounted Police at the post of Snake Creek Bend, From U. S. Marshal of County Blank, greetings to you, my friend, They's a team of toughs give us the slip, though they shot up a couple of blokes, And we reckon they's hid in Snake Creek Gulch and posin' as farmer folks. "They's as full of sin as a barrel of booze and as quick as a cat with a gun. So if you happen to hit their trail be first to start the fun; And send out your strongest squad of men and round them up if you can, For dead or alive we want them here. Yours truly, Jack McMann." And Sergeant Blue sat back and smiled, "Ho, here is a chance of game! Folks 'round here have been so good that life is getting tame; I know the lie of Snake Creek Gulch--where I used to set my traps-- I'll blow out there to-morrow and I'll bring them in--perhaps." Next morning Sergeant Blue, arrayed in farmer smock and jeans, In a jumper sleigh he had made himself set out for the evergreens That grow on the bank of Snake Creek Gulch by a homestead shack he knew, And a smoke curled up from the chimney-pipe to welcome Sergeant Blue. "Aha, and that looks good to me," said the Sergeant to the smoke, "For the lad that owns this homestead shack is East in his wedding-yoke; There are strangers here and I'll bet a farm against a horn of booze That they are the bums that are predestined to dangle in a noose." So he drove his horse to the shanty door and hollered a loud "Good-day," And a couple of men with fighting-irons came out beside the sleigh, And the Sergeant said, "I'm a stranger here and I've driven a weary mile; If you don't object I'll just sit down by the stove in the shack awhile." So the Sergeant sat and smoked and talked of the home he had left down East, And the cold, and the snow, and the price of land, and the life of man and beast, But all of a sudden he broke it off with, "Neighbors, take a nip? There's a horn of the best you'll find out there in my jumper, in the grip." So one of the two went out for it, and as soon as he closed the door The other one staggered back as he gazed up the nose of a forty-four, But the Sergeant wasted no words with him, "Now, fellow, you're on the rocks, And a noise as loud as a mouse from you and they'll take you out in a box." So he fastened the bracelets to his wrists and his legs with some binder-thread, And he took his knife and he took his gun and he rolled him onto the bed; And then as number two came in he said, "If you want to live, Put up your dukes and behave yourself or I'll make you into a sieve." And when he had coupled them each to each, and laid them out on the bed, "It's cold, and I guess we'd better eat before we go," he said. So he fried some pork and he warmed some beans, and he set out the best he saw, And they ate thereof, and he paid for it, according to British law. That night in the post sat Sergeant Blue with paper and pen in hand, And this is the word he wrote and signed and mailed to a foreign land: "To U. S. Marshall of County Blank, greetings I give to you; My squad has just brought in your men, and the squad was "Sergeant Blue." _There are things unguessed, there are tales untold, in the life of the great lone land, But here is a fact that the prairie-bred alone may understand, That a thousand miles in the fastness the fear of the law obtains, And the pioneers of justice were the "Riders of the Plains."_ ALKALI HALL When Lord Landseeker came out West to have a look around, And spend a little money if the right thing could be found, He hadn't breathed the prairie air more than a day or two Until he was the centre of a philanthropic crew Who sought to show His Lordship all the shortcuts to success (Though why they should have troubled, His Lordship couldn't guess, For each was losing money, as he candidly confessed, Which seemed to be a fashion with the dealers in the West). Thus His Lordship grew suspicious that his "friends" would turn him down, And he quietly bought a ticket to a little country town; But he didn't know the message that was flashed along the wire To a simple country dealer in the land of his desire; And it read: "Look out for Goggles, he'll be with you this a. m." And the crowd around the station--well, he merely smiled to them, And thought it jolly decent they'd assemble, don'tcherknow, And file along behind him as they followed, in a row. The snow had fallen softly all the calm November night, And the morning found the praires with a covering of white; But His Lordship took a citizen who "happened" in his way, And they drove into the country for the most part of the day, Until they reached a section that was flat and free from stone, And the citizen remarked about a fellow he had known Who offered thirty dollars for this section in the fall, But the owner wanted forty, or he wouldn't sell at all. Then His Lordship drove across it, and it seemed to catch his eye, And he whispered to the driver, "That's the section I will buy;" So in town they found the owner, who was very loath to sell, But he finally consented, if His Lordship wouldn't tell That the price was forty dollars by the acre; this agreed, A lawyer drew the papers and His Lordship got the deed, And he sailed across the ocean with the satisfying thought That he'd followed his own judgment in the bargain he had bought. The winter snows had vanished and the spring was growing late, When Lord Landseeker came again to view his real estate, And he drove out in a buggy to where his section lay, And his heart was very happy as he smoked along the way Till the section burst upon them, and he scarce believed his sight, For the land lay in the sunshine, flashing back a snowy white . . . . . And His Lordship stooped and felt it, and he heaved a little sigh, As the knowledge dawned upon him that his land was--_alkali!_ His Lordship did some thinking as they journeyed back to town, And his wonted happy features were o'ershadowed with a frown; But he neither crawled nor blustered, neither bluffed nor swore nor kicked, (For the men from little England never know when they are licked), But he advertised for tenders for construction on the land, And the buildings he erected were the best he could command; With a hundred rooms for students, and quarters for the staff, And the workmen often wondered what made His Lordship laugh! In the papers of Old England there appeared a little ad, For the benefit of parents whose sons were going bad; "Teach your boys the art of farming in the great Canadian West; Our instruction is unrivalled, our curriculum the best; There's a grate in every chamber and a bath in every hall, And a full dress-suited dinner every ev'ning, free to all; There is tennis, polo, marksmanship, and half the day in bed, And we make them into farmers for a hundred pounds a head." * * * * * * * His Lordship's college prospers and is crowded to the doors With "students" playing poker while the "servants" do the chores; What they do not know of farming they make up in other lines They are judges of tobacco and connoisseurs of wines; They are experts at the races and at sundry other games-- Though they couldn't tell the breeching of the harness from the hames-- Though they're far from home and kindred they occasion no alarm, _That was what their parents wanted when they sent them out to farm_. PRAIRIE BORN We have heard the night wind howling as we lay alone in bed; We have heard the grey goose honking as he journeyed overhead; We have smelt the smoke-wraith flying in the hot October wind, And have fought the fiery demon that came roaring down behind; We have seen the spent snow sifting through the key-hole of the door, And the frost-line crawling, crawling, like a snake, along the floor; We have felt the storm-fiend wrestle with the rafters in his might, And the baffled blizzard shrieking through the turmoil of the night. We have felt the April breezes warm along the plashy plains; We have mind-marked to the cadence of the falling April rains; We have heard the crash of water where the snow-fed rivers run, Seen a thousand silver lakelets lying shining in the sun; We have known the resurrection of the Springtime in the land, Heard the voice of Nature calling and the words of her command, Felt the thrill of springtime twilight and the vague, unfashioned thought That the season's birthday musters from the hopes we had forgot. We have heard the cattle lowing in the silent summer nights; We have smelt the smudge-fire fragrance--we have seen the smudge-fire lights-- We have heard the wild duck grumbling to his mate along the bank; Heard the thirsty horses snorting in the stream from which they drank; Heard the voice of Youth and Laughter in the long, slow-gloaming night; Seen the arched electric, splendor of the Great North's livid light; Read the reason of existence--felt the touch that was divine-- And in eyes that glowed responsive saw the End of God's design. We have smelt the curing wheat fields and the scent of new-mown hay; We have heard the binders clatter through the dusty autumn day; We have seen the golden stubble gleaming through the misty rain; We have seen the plow-streaks widen as they turned it down again; We have heard the threshers humming in the cool September night; We have seen their dark procession by the straw-piles' eerie light; We have heard the freight trains groaning, slipping, grinding, on the rail, And the idle trace chains jingle as they jogged along the trail. We have felt the cold of winter--cursed by those who know it not-- We have braved the blizzard's vengeance, dared its most deceptive plot; We have learned that hardy races grow from hardy circumstance, And we face a dozen dangers to attend a country dance; Though our means are nothing lavish we have always time for play, And our social life commences at the closing of the day; We have time for thought and culture, time for friendliness and friend, And we catch a broader vision as our aspirations blend. We have hopes to others foreign, aims they cannot understand, We, the "heirs of all the ages," we, the first-fruits of the land; Though we think with fond affection of the shores our fathers knew, And we honor all our brothers--for a brother's heart is true-- Though we stand with them for progress, peace, and unity, and power, Though we die with them, if need be, in our nation's darkest hour-- Still the prairies call us, call us, when all other voices fail, And the call we knew in childhood is the call that must prevail. "A COLONIAL" (_In some circles the term "colonial" is still allowed to imply inferiority and dependence._) Only a Colonial! Only a man of nerve and heart Who has spurned the ease of the life "at home," Only a man who would play his part In a new breed-birth on a distant loam; Only a man of sense and worth Who is not afraid of the ends of earth. Only a Colonial! Only a man who has cornered Fate And matched his strength with the Unattained; Only the guard at the Outer Gate, Who holds for you what he has gained, That your children, seized of a better sense, May share with him Toil's recompense. Only a Colonial! Only a man who has bridged the deep, And stained the map a British hue, Who builds an Empire while ye sleep And deeds the ownership to you. 'Tis the Viking blood which gave you birth That has driven him to the ends of earth. Only a Colonial! Wherever the flag that ye think is great Is flown to the farthest winds that blow, Wherever the colonists ye berate In their blind faith-vision onward go, Ye may find ye hearts that are British still-- In your self-conceit do ye count them nil? Only a Colonial! Rough as the bark of his forest tree His ways may seem to the fat and sleek, But ye owe your Empire to such as he, Though the hoar-frost glisten on his cheek; He has carried your flag where ye dared not go, And little ye reck of the debt ye owe. Only a Colonial! No doubt he is raw on your social laws And grates on your sense of caste and creed, But he lives too near to Facts and Cause To study heraldry and breed; And, knowing man in his primal state, He scorns the claims of the social great. Only a Colonial! The name in cheap contempt ye fling, Is not the whim of birth or chance, We well ignore the flippant sting, Or charge it to your ignorance; The colonist, and sons of his, Have made the Empire what it is. LITTLE TIM TROTTER Little Tim Trotter was born in the West, Where the prairie lies sunny and brown; Never was, surely, so welcome a guest In the stateliest halls of the town; For Little Tim Trotter was thoughtful and brave, And a lover of summer and shower, And Little Tim Trotter took less than he gave To the hearts that were under his power. Little Tim Trotter would play in the sun, Or lie in the buffalo grass, And in fancy he saw the wild buffalo run And the brave-riding Indians pass; And with eyes that were deep as the infinite blue He would picture himself at their head, For no one so young as this hunter-man knew That the herds and the riders were dead. Little Tim Trotter would lie in his bed While the fire-light played low on the floor, And strange were the thought that in Little Tim's head Played low like the fire at the door; The hopes that were his, and the wonders he knew, And the yearning he had in his heart, With the glimmering light of the future in view, And Little Tim just at the start! Little Tim Trotter has heard the long call And has answered with joy and surprise, And the thoughts and the things that are hid from us all To-day are revealed to his eyes; And he rides in the van of his buffalo herd, Or in camp with his Indians brave; But Little Tim Trotter speaks never a word Through the mound of a little green grave. THE VORTEX He farmed his own half-section and was doing fairly well; There were seasons when the yield was rather small, But he always had his living and had always stuff to sell, And a little to his credit in the fall; But he wearied of his labor and he turned a wistful eye Where the City flashed its glamour on the stranger passing by; He was sick of hogs and cattle--he was sick of barn and sty, And the City sucked him in. He was doing homestead duties--he was in his second year, And his quarter was the finest out-of-doors; He'd a neighbor in the township--and they called that pretty near, And he only had to eat and do the chores; Now he should have been contented with a kingdom of his own; He'd a fiddle and a rifle and a "bally gramophone" . . . He was sick of isolation, sick of living there alone, And the City sucked him in. He owned a little country store and traded goods for eggs; He was salesman, buyer, manager and clerk; And the farmers gathered in his shop and sat around on kegs While they smoked and wished they didn't have to work; He was tired of tasting butter that he didn't dare condemn, He was tired of narrow farmers, he was tired of serving them, And he thought him of the City, where they close at six P. M., And the City sucked him in. He ran a country paper in the town of Easy-go, And he hustled news and helped to "dis" the "dead"; He was editor and devil, he was master of the show, And the Union had no halter on his head; But he couldn't raise his circulation over twenty quires, He was tired of washing rollers, he was tired of building fires, He was tired of eulogizing men he knew were mostly liars, And the City sucked him in. He practised law and real estate and owned a house and lot; He'd a client every once-awhile or so; He drove into the country when the summer days were hot, Or in winter for a sleigh-ride in the snow; He'd enough to live in comfort and he always paid his bills, But he tired of country customs and he wanted Fashion's frills; He was sick of fire insurance, he was sick of drawing wills, And the City sucked him in. He'd a loyal congregation and his views were orthodox Though his salary was less than he was worth, He'd a personal regard for the future of his flocks, And he shared with them their sorrow and their mirth; But he longed for larger service and for bright companionship, And a stipend that would justify his wife to take a trip; And he read his resignation and he packed his little grip, And the City sucked him in. She was just a country maiden with ambitions of her own, She could wash and she could churn and she could cook, But she longed for broader vision and a bigger, better zone, And she studied all about it in a book; She'd a home and she had kindred, she'd a roof above her head, She had time for work and leisure, she'd a chance to love and wed; But they saw her leave the village--they had better seen her dead-- And the City sucked her in. Now there's one of them a millionaire and one of them in jail, And one of them is working on the street; And one is washing dishes, and one has "hit the trail," For six have drunk the sorrows of defeat; And one that's never spoken of where once she was supreme, And one--they found him floating in an eddy of the stream: They have paid the price of knowledge, they have dreamed their little dream: And the City sucked them in. THE OLD GUARD Knew you the men of the Old Guard? Men of the camp and trail; Guard of the van when Time began in the land of grass and gale, Of a sky-wide land they seized command where the mightiest prevail. Who were the men of the Old Guard? Giants of strength and will, Trained in the school of hard-luck rule and daring to die or kill; Staking their lives, and their young, and wives, on the road up Fortune's hill. Whence were the men of the Old Guard? Heroes of '82; From swamp and ledge and ocean's edge they came to see and do, And they failed at first, and the land they cursed, but they stayed and struggled through. Hope of the men of the Old Guard? Little but hope was theirs; With empty hand in an untried land they clutched at wheat and tares, And home at night by the wood-fire light was answer to their prayers. Way of the men of the Old Guard? What of their end and way? You may find their bones by the lime-white stones where the sun-dried sleugh-holes lay, For the Goddess Trade is a costly jade, and they were the ones to pay. Joy of the men of the Old Guard? The joy of the brave and true; With joy they paced where Death grimaced and his icy vapors blew, And with steady tread they bore their dead with the faith of the chosen few. What of the men of the Old Guard? Ask of the arching skies, The grass that waves on their leafy graves is lisping their lullabies, And the lives they spent are their monument and their title to Paradise. KID McCANN Where the farthest foothills flatten to a circle-sweeping plain, And the cattle lands surrender to the onward march of grain, Where the prairies stretch unbroken to the corners of the sky, And the foremost wheat fields rustle in the warm winds droning by-- There a crippled cowboy batches in the haunts of old-time herds, And the balance of the story is repeated in his words: So you never heard how I lost my leg and hobble now on a crutch? So far as the story relates to me it can't concern you much, For it's really the story of Kid McCann and the price that a girl will pay For the fellow she sets her fancy on, as only a woman may; It isn't every girl who proves her faithfulness in flames, But fellows who listen with moistened eyes speak softly of other names. Ned McCann owned the Double Star 'way back in the early days; He had come out here with a sickly wife and a kid he hoped to raise Where the climate suited the feeble-lunged, but life was scarce at its brim, Till a little mound by a prairie hill held half of the world for him; And his double love would have spoiled the child had she been like me or you, But her only thought was for her dad and the mother she scarcely knew. 'Course, she was bred to the ranges, and before she had reached her teens She could straddle a nag with the best of us and ride in her smock and jeans Till we all caved in, and she thought it fun to camp with the round-up bunch, And she shared her pillow and shared our sky and shared our pipe and lunch, And all of us mad in love with her, but she was only a kid, And she never dreamt what our feelings were, or the love-struck things we did. But even girls grow older, and, though always kind and sweet, There came a day when she realized that we were at her feet, But I had never spoken, nor anyone in the camp, When in came a foreign puncher, a thoroughbred black-leg scamp, And we who had known her since childhood saw, in our unbelieving eyes, This wily sinner setting himself to carry off the prize. Of course it couldn't be stood for, and little as I might like, It fell to my lot to intimate to him it was time to hike, Which I did in straightforward manner, in a way to be understood, And he looked at me with a sulky scowl that boded none of us good; But he did as he was ordered, to be absent before night, And we lost his form in the shadowy East as he cantered out of sight. Next day, as I rode on my cayuse, apart from the rest of the gang, I felt a sudden rip in my leg like the jab of a red-hot tang; And my horse went down below me, with my leg crushed in the clay, And over me leered that fiendish face, and he grinned, and rode away; Rode away to the eastward,--I saw him fade in the sky, And crushed and pinned from hip to heel I counted the hours to die. How long I lay I could never tell, for the hours were days to me, Till struck with sudden terror I tore at my wounded knee, For the east wind carried a smoky smell, and I read in its fiery breath That half-a-mile of sun-dried grass was all between me and death; With my hunting-knife I hacked my leg, but I couldn't cut the bone, So I set myself as best I could to face my fate alone. The fire came on like a hungry fiend on the wings of the rising wind, And I wouldn't care to tell you all the things that were in my mind; I saw the sun through the swirling smoke and the blue sky far above, And I bade good-bye to the things of earth and the dearer hopes of love; And I figured that I had closed accounts for life's uncertain span, When a smoke-blind broncho galloped up and there sat Kid McCann! There wasn't much time for talking, with the death-roll in our ears, But we sometimes live in seconds more than we could in a thousand of years, And before I could guess her meaning she had thrown herself on my face, And spread her leather jacket, which her warm hands held in place; I felt her breath in my nostrils and her fingertips in my hair, And through the roar of the burning grass I fancied I heard a prayer. 'Twas but for a moment; the flames were gone; unharmed they had passed me by; God knows why the useless are spared to live while the faithful are called to die, But the form that had sheltered me shivered, and seemed to shrivel away, And when I had raised it clear of my face I looked into lifeless clay. . . . And darkness fell, and the world was black, and the last of my reason fled, And when I came to myself again I was back at the ranch, in bed. That was back in the Eighties, and still I am living here; I built this shanty on the spot; her grave is lying near; And when at nights my nostrils sense the smoke-smell in the air I seem to feel her form again, and hear again her prayer; And then the darkness settles down and wild night-creatures cry, But stars come out in heaven and there's comfort in the sky. WHO OWNS THE LAND? Who owns the land? The Duke replied, "I own the land. My fathers died In winning it from foreign hands, They paid in red blood for their lands; Their swarthy _villeins_ bit the dust In founding the Landowners' Trust; And many generations dead Substantiate what I have said, The land belongs to us because We've had the making of the laws." Who owns the land? The Common Man Said, "Government adopts a plan By which the land is held in fee For common folks, like you an' me. The man who'd alter it's a crank; I got the transfer--in the bank-- I've little time to think about These theories silly fellows shout, I have to work to beat the band To pay the mortgage on the land." Who owns the land? The Statesman said, "The land supplies our daily bread, And raises wheat, and corn, and oats, And simple husbandmen--and votes-- The land was won at awful cost And many soldiers' lives were lost. Too bad! They're mostly silly boys Who go to battle for the noise. Here's a quotation I admire: 'The people's voice is God's desire,' And as I rule by right divine, I half suspect the land is mine." Who owns the land? The Farmer said, "What puts that question in yer head? I own it. Tuk a homestead here An' lived on it fer twenty year; I bet a new ten dollar bill That I could hold it down until I got the patent, an' I won; The land is mine, as sure's a gun. When city blokes come here to shoot, You bet, they get the icy boot! But 't made me mighty mad when that Danged railway come across the flat An' cut my homestead plumb in two, But there I wuz--what could I do? But jest set down, resigned to fate, Fer fear that they'd expropriate." Who owns the land? The Speculator Said, "Land is just an incubator In which to let your dollars hatch And, some fine morning--sell the batch." Who owns the land? The Indian Chief Said, "Ugh, the white man mucha thief! He steal my lan' because he's strong (By gar, it take him pretty long), He steal my lan', an' call it law, He turn me out, me an' my squaw; He let us die, because we not Like him, can live in one same spot; He talk so much of civilize-- He's civil--sometimes--an' he lies!" Who owns the land? The Over-Rich Said, "All these people claim to, which Is satisfactory to me, So long as they cannot agree. Let them arrange it as they will As long as some one pays the bill. The present plan is, surely, fine; _The interest, at least, is mine_." Who owns the land? In meek surprise The child said, "Like the air, and skies, And running water, flowers, and birds, And lullabies, and gentle words, And rosy sunsets, clouds, and storms, And God revealed in all His forms-- 'Tis plain the land's the right of birth Of every creature on the earth: _No man can make a grain of sand; How can he say he owns the land?_" A RACE FOR LIFE (_As related for the benefit of the New Arrival._) Yes, stranger, I hev trailed the West Since I wuz a kid on a bob-tailed nag, I hev known the old land at its best, An' packed most ev'ry kind of jag; I hev rode fer life frum a prairie fire, An' tramped fer life through a snow blockade; I hev crumpled "bad men" by the quire, But only once hev I been afraid. I hev lain alone while the red-men crep' Aroun' me in their fightin'-paint; I have soothed the widow while she wep' Because I'd made her man a saint; I hev lassooed lobsters frum the East, Till ev'ry j'int in their system shook, An' I'd never run frum man or beast Until I run frum a chinook. The chinook had his lair in Crow's Nest Pass, An' he foraged aroun' the Porcupine Hills, But he'd loafed so long that the ranchin' grass Had a wool-white cover frum the chills; An' me, like a chap that wuz not afraid Of anything with hide an' hair, Went out in a sleigh to the hills an' stayed Till the old chinook might find me there. At last, when I thought I had tempted fate Enough fer a man with a past like mine, I hitched the bronks an' struck a gait Along the slopes of the Porcupine; An' the day wuz as cold as the Polar Sea, With a nip as keen as a she-wolf fang; But frost wuz just like food to me, An' boldly over the fields I sang: _"I am the man frum the Hole in the Hills, Where the Great G. Whiliken capers 'round; I am the gent that pays the bills When they plant a greenhorn in the ground; I am the Finish of folks that think They can run a bluff on the prairie-bred, Fer I give their vitals a fatal kink When I open up with a shower of lead."_ An' the cold bit into my nose an' chin, An' drilled itself to the marrow-bone; My face wuz drawn in a frozen grin, An' my fingers rattled like lumps of stone; But my heart wuz as brave as an outlaw stag, An' I laughed though the frost cut like a knife; Till sudden I felt the hind bob drag, An' I knew I wuz in fer a race fer life. Out from his lair the sly chinook Had hunted me with his fatal breath; I dared not turn aroun' to look, Fer to strand on the hillside there wuz death; The hot wind sizzled along my back, An' the sweat stood out on my shoulder-blade, So I yelled at the team through the frozen crack The roll of the tongue in my mouth had made-- "Get out o' here; by the Polar Star, The fiend of the South is on your heels!" An' I felt the old sleigh cringe an' jar, An' fer once I prayed--fer a pair o' wheels; But the sleigh stood still as the hind bob stuck In mud that rolled to the bolster-rail; So I slipped the tongue an' cursed my luck As I straddled a bronk an' hit the trail. Well, we beat it out by half a neck, But the broncho's tail was scorched a sight, An' I wuz a blistered, parboiled wreck, An' nearly dead o' heat an' fright; An' I squatted down in a shady spot An' fanned myself with a wisp o' hay, An' the boys on the lower ranches thought They heard a voice in the chinook say: _"I am the dope that was made to feed, To fresh down-Easters just come out; They'll swallow it all in their greenhorn greed, An' send it home, beyond a doubt; I am the caricature an' bluff That is part of the play of the Western men"--_ What's that? You say you've had enough? Well, pass it on to your neighbor, then. TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE The following changes were made to the original text: Page 15: An ==> An' Page 16: an ==> an' Page 20: moring ==> morning Page 52: somtimes ==> sometimes Page 70: Lorship ==> Lordship _and_ Lorship ==> Lordship Page 87: wised ==> wished Page 92: and they were the the ones to pay. ==> and they were the ones to pay. Page 94: prarie ==> prairie Page 100: Stateman ==> Statesman Page 105: kew ==> knew There were 3 stanzas of 12 lines in the midst of poems where the rest of the stanzas are 6 lines. They have been split into 6 line stanzas. The stanzas are: Page 35: The room was warm and cosy, and the light was soft and low, Page 93: So you never heard how I lost my leg and hobble now on a crutch? Page 96: How long I lay I could never tell, for the hours were days to me, Minor variations in spelling and punctuation have been preserved. End of Project Gutenberg's Songs of the Prairie, by Robert J. C. 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