n I CANADA: cA mETRlCAL STORY. BV CHARLES CAMPBELL, A iilhnr nt thf Sen' HriiiiHiriek Prlzr Oilf "» the (Jiu'etrx Diamnml Jiihiirr, etc. TORONTO: WILLIAM BHIGGS, 19-33 RiCHJiuNu St. Wesi. ENTEhKD according to Act of the Furliameut of Canada, In tbe yeai one thouiand eight hundred and ninety aeven, by William Bbiuos, at the Department of Agriculture. DEDICATED TO THE IRlflbt Ijonorable Sir TUflilfrlO Xaurler, O.C.Ok.O,, I'REMIER OF TUB DOMINION OF CANADA, AND TO THE MEMORY OF THE LOYALISTS. I^s^=^ My song is like a brooklet's broken chords, The preludes and first lispings of a theme Which, down the ages, shall be mighty stream Whereon are argosies and glint of swords. These may not be foretold in idle words, For here must be no fabric of a dream. But high true tales of splendor that beseem The manhood that our ancestry affords. Jf then, perchance, the echo of my song. Far off across the wave-crests of the years. May wake some master-singer, clear and strong, To swell the story to the listening spheres, What ask I more of all the ages long. What ask I more, with humble, craving tears 7 msi CANADA. I. Unseal my tongue, oh, Muse ! my soul inspire, To feeble lips vouchsafe thy sacred fire, That list'ning Earth and Sea and years unrolled May catch the echoes of the story told — Though clang of arms and sigh of toil must be. Though sound of tears must follow victory — Yet shall the strain be glorious to the last, The Future flowering from the mighty Past, Till she, the Mother, through whose arms we came, Shall greet our glory with her high acclaim, Well-proved, and worthy of her ancient name ! 11. O'er all a sleeping land, in cradle green, Sunrise and moonrise, with the stars between, Keep watch and ward. The virgin winter snows Melt into murmurous music 'neath the glows Of fervent summers, and the Seasons round Shed dreams resplendent o'er that sleep profound The distant East, beyond the seas, may throb With triumph glorious, or heart-broken sob — The curtains of the Dawn close gently out. Alike, the victim's cry, the conqueror's shout. Or busy hum of peace, or clamorous rout ! III. While Earth and Time are young, so runs the tale, And fierce sea-rovers woo each favoring gale, Across the main the dauntless Vikings sweep, And find the virgin shores they do not keep. They come, — they go : their shadowy story seems As unsubstantial as an infant's dreams. The large slow years, unfilled with thought or deed. Float silent by with Time's mysterious speed ; Still sleeps the land, while yet from Heaven's full urn More than a thousand seasons flow in turn ; Moons wax and wane, and countless sunsets burn ! ^s^^-=^ IV. As steals the dawn upon the sluggish night, Scarce known, till lo ! a world is brought to light ; As steals the tender leaflet through the earth, With naught to show a forest king hath birth ; So steal, within the Ocean's hollow rim, A few mysterious shapes, white-winged and dim. The Indian, on pursuit of quarry bent, Casts a brief glance of passing wonderment. Then speeds, with noiseless foot and heart at rest, Through forest shadows, on his eager quest. Nor dreams of coming Doom on Ocean's breast ! V. For him, for his, for all his people's lore The hour of Fate is striking— soon, no more His tribes shall roam unchallenged, lords by birth Of all their glorious heritage of earth. The lake, the plain, the forest, sombre grown. Shall miss the children born and marked their own A few short years of strife, of grief, of gloom, Naught will remain, not e'en a lonely tomb. Passed like a mist before the rising day, Melted like snow where summer sunbeams play. Unsought and unremembered here for aye ! VI. White-winged as doves, no doves but eagles they, Athirst for conquest, hungry for the prey ; Their bold and lonely flight brings guerdon rare, A glorious prize, beyond their utmost prayer. For lo ! a virgin land, a new-found France, Lies coyly shrinking from their ardent glance ; Each purple cape, each curving line of shore, A hundred eager eyes with joy explore ; Storm-tossed and weary, here their haven lies, O'er this new land their Standard shall arise, This younger France, this earthly Paradise ! ^^i^^ V!T. Free from all ancient wrongs this unstained land Falls first, O France ! into thy fostering hand, While yet thy faith is pure, thy courage high, Ere conning ills have dwarfed thy destiny. Deal wisely, kindly, with thy fair estate ; Send noblest sons to guide its infant fate ; Let Law and Virtue rule thy spirits bold, And sink not Justice in the greed for gold ! So, when thine ancient foe shall take thy place. Thine olden blood may blend, by God's good grace. With hers, to glorify the future race ! tf-e Sl%:^=^ VIII. Thine ancient foe ! Already in that West Her daring sons have sought and found a rest ; Far to the South they strive, with ardor keen, To widen empire for their virgin Queen. True to their race and faith, although they roam, 'Tis but to glorify their island home — So now, beneath the setting sun, behold The lists set out, as if for tourney old ! Fair field indeed, and mighty is the stake, When two such champions must their lances break In conflict, stern and long, for Empire's sake ! *=^ IX. Saxon and Gaul their mighty task pursue, To conquer Nature with a chosen few ; O'er unknown hills, by unknown streams to press Their puny might against the wilderness ! Wild beast and wilder man their wand'rings haunt ; Death journeys, side by side, their souls to daunt ; The unseen death, — or else the dreaaful stake : No horror can their steadfast courage shake. Unknown and unnamed heroes of the past ! What guerdon did ye look for at the last, — What hope induced so stern a venture cast ? The voyageur bids farewell to his wife, And turns with unmoved heart to deadly strife ; The bold Virginian leaves his sleeping child To front night dangers from the desert wild ! Stern life, stern deeds, stern men of antique mold ! Though all unnamed in Honor's scroll of gold, Yet who more worthy, as a people's sires. To stir young hearts and kindle patriot fires ! Loyal alike to faith and king were ye. So must your children true and loyal be, T Your honor shrined in their fealty ! XI. Through Court intrigue, where idle pleasure blends, The might of France but scant assistance lends ; While still the stream of England's offspring pours To people all the intervenin.-^ shores — Men of strange faith, who fixed their daring plan 'Gainst God's decree of brotherhood for man. And deemed that Liberty alone which gave All differing thought to torture and the grave- Though lost are charity and patient grace. Yet still there dwells allegiance for a space. Till stronger grown to break the bond of race ! %^=^ XII. These deal, in fitful blow and swift retreat, With France entrenched within her northern seat ; And lend their aid with sword and torch to scar The forest-girdled hamlets, near and far. Behind they leave the widow's deep distress And helpless sorrows of the fatherless. While stern reprisal gilds the gathering gloom And lights with triumph e'en their victims' tomb ! So ebbs and flows, through full a century's flight, The bloody current of the doubtful fight. Till England wakes to prove her sternest might ! XIII. To strike, in deadly close, the mighty blow Which breaks the lofty heart that leads her foe — That heart through ceaseless strife had faltered not. Though Fortune frowned and friends his need forgot ; By sea and land he counted not the cost, His honor stainless, though his hope was lost ; Now, when the storm-cloud dark and darker grew, 'Mid foes increasing and with numbers few, — His soul at rest, and all things done he could, — In rock-bound keep he placed his brave and good, And held his breath, and bared his sword, and stood XIV. Fair dawns the golden summer o'er the land, 'Neath balmy skies the smiling flowers expand, To nested mate the bird sings festal song Of wedded love and hope, the whole day long ; Yet 'mid these happy hours of shining day Fate, Doom, and Death, unpausing, make their way Grim wielders of the gathering hosts below, Where, past the cliffs, the dancing waters go. O lonely heart ! upon thy rampart high 'Tis thine to scan with calm, unsleeping eye. The set approach of changeless Destiny ! XV. Yet seems it hopeless mortal might can win The lofty keep that shuts thy bravest in ; Sheer to the wave, at awful depth below, The trusted rock confronts the dreaded foe ! Well may a new-born hope thy spirit cheer As moon succeeds to moon with nought to fear Save fruitless blows against that rock-bound face. If, haply, valor tempt thee from thy base ; While he, great leader of that baffled host. Whose dauntless soul is known and dreaded most. With body frail, stands dying at his post ! XVI. Unknown to fear, in love with loveless Death, Must be the lofty heart that ventureth This high emprise ; nor he who leads alone, But each who follows where the first hath gone. A steep and rugged track winds up the height. Unsafe by day, a peril dread by night — In twos and threes, with hand and foot they climb. Through darkness, to their bloody trysting-time ! Hear not, ye warders of the upper air ! O God ! but grant a dying soldier's prayer To plant his foot within the foeman's lair ! XVII. 'Tis done ! Ere yet the throbbing stars have paled, The height is won, the dizzy pathway scaled : The guard, amazed, with wild and wondering eyes See men, like phantoms, from the deep arise, Whose breathless foremost leap upon the foe. To gain a respite for the friends below ; And as the morn breaks radiant o'er the land, The chosen ranks in calm formation stand ! Fair morn ! so big with fate, wherein the Past Shall melt and vanish in new landscape vast, And War and Discord fold their wings at last ! XVIII. To plead before High Heav'n their last appeal And learn the sentence which the Fates reveal, Here, on this Altar, uplift to the skies, Two nations offer solemn sacrifice ! Twin hearts, of single mold, and each content To leave this hard-fought field his monument ; To pass to glorious rest, ere set of sun, Whate'er betide, his duty nobly done — Here is no longer foe, but only friend. The Lilies and the Cross above them blend, True emblem of new life that shall not end ! ^S:^=-i XIX. And England conquers, and the strife is o'er — 'Tis hers the healing oil and wine to pour, Bind up all wounds and let large Freedom's thrill With sweet surprise a waiting people fill ; To hold their welfare as the common cause. To guard their Altar and protect their laws, — A mother true, within whose sheltering breast Each new-found son secures untroubled rest, Till gladsome hearts and deep content declare Love conquers hate, joy triumphs o'er despair, And grateful homage swells to patriot prayer ! XX. Well for the loyal faith and knightly grace That bind time-honored foes in close embrace ! Oh ! well that noble hearts can soar above All hates o'erpast, to brotherhood of love ! The Lilies and the Cross, by God entwined, Stand fast mid chaos — marvel to mankind ! For lo ! around them, locked in deadly strife. Sons of one household seek each other's life ! By grievance fired and evil counsels' sway, Unfilial fons with aliens join the fray .\nd strik? the mother, breathless and at bay ! XXI. In vain their arts to kindle hate again And break the bond of sacred trust — in vain ! With faith undimmed, though England seem to fall And France triumphant on her children call, The North stands true — while, from the mother torn, A new-made nation in the South is born ; Who vex, within their bounds, in fierce despite, All loyal hearts that shared the losing fight,— The narrow soul that marked their grandsires shown In secret charge by evil whisper blown. And wanton malice when the fight is done !