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- Ballads of a Cheechako
-
- by Robert W. Service [British-born Canadian Poet -- 1874-1958.]
-
- May 1995, [Etext 259]
-
-
- entered/proofed by A. Light, of Waxhaw <alight@cybernetics.net>
- (formerly alight@mercury.interpath.net, alight@rock.concert.net)
- Proofed by THE GAR <GLWARNER%SAMFORD.BITNET@uga.cc.uga.edu>
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-
-
-
-
- Ballads of a Cheechako
-
- by Robert W. Service [British-born Canadian Poet -- 1874-1958.]
-
-
-
-
-
-
- [Note on text: Italicized stanzas will be indented 5 spaces.
- Italicized words or phrases will be capitalised. Lines longer
- than 75 characters have been broken according to metre,
- and the continuation is indented two spaces.
- This etext was transcribed from an American 1909 edition.]
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Ballads of a Cheechako
- by
- Robert W. Service
-
- Author of "The Spell of the Yukon"
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Contents
-
-
-
- To the Man of the High North
- My rhymes are rough, and often in my rhyming
-
- Men of the High North
- Men of the High North, the wild sky is blazing;
-
- The Ballad of the Northern Lights
- One of the Down and Out--that's me. Stare at me well, ay, stare!
-
- The Ballad of the Black Fox Skin
- There was Claw-fingered Kitty and Windy Ike living the life of shame,
-
- The Ballad of Pious Pete
- I tried to refine that neighbor of mine, honest to God, I did.
-
- The Ballad of Blasphemous Bill
- I took a contract to bury the body of blasphemous Bill MacKie,
-
- The Ballad of One-Eyed Mike
- This is the tale that was told to me by the man with the crystal eye,
-
- The Ballad of the Brand
- 'Twas up in a land long famed for gold, where women were far and rare,
-
- The Ballad of Hard-Luck Henry
- Now wouldn't you expect to find a man an awful crank
-
- The Man from Eldorado
- He's the man from Eldorado, and he's just arrived in town,
-
- My Friends
- The man above was a murderer, the man below was a thief;
-
- The Prospector
- I strolled up old Bonanza, where I staked in ninety-eight,
-
- The Black Sheep
- Hark to the ewe that bore him:
-
- The Telegraph Operator
- I will not wash my face;
-
- The Wood-Cutter
- The sky is like an envelope,
-
- The Song of the Mouth-Organ
- I'm a homely little bit of tin and bone;
-
- The Trail of Ninety-Eight
- Gold! We leapt from our benches. Gold! We sprang from our stools.
-
- The Ballad of Gum-Boot Ben
- He was an old prospector with a vision bleared and dim.
-
- Clancy of the Mounted Police
- In the little Crimson Manual it's written plain and clear
-
- Lost
- "Black is the sky, but the land is white--
-
- L'Envoi
- We talked of yesteryears, of trails and treasure,
-
- --------
-
-
-
-
-
-
- To the Man of the High North
-
-
-
- My rhymes are rough, and often in my rhyming
- I've drifted, silver-sailed, on seas of dream,
- Hearing afar the bells of Elfland chiming,
- Seeing the groves of Arcadie agleam.
-
- I was the thrall of Beauty that rejoices
- From peak snow-diademed to regal star;
- Yet to mine aerie ever pierced the voices,
- The pregnant voices of the Things That Are.
-
- The Here, the Now, the vast Forlorn around us;
- The gold-delirium, the ferine strife;
- The lusts that lure us on, the hates that hound us;
- Our red rags in the patch-work quilt of Life.
-
- The nameless men who nameless rivers travel,
- And in strange valleys greet strange deaths alone;
- The grim, intrepid ones who would unravel
- The mysteries that shroud the Polar Zone.
-
- These will I sing, and if one of you linger
- Over my pages in the Long, Long Night,
- And on some lone line lay a calloused finger,
- Saying: "It's human-true--it hits me right";
- Then will I count this loving toil well spent;
- Then will I dream awhile--content, content.
-
-
-
-
- Men of the High North
-
-
-
- Men of the High North, the wild sky is blazing;
- Islands of opal float on silver seas;
- Swift splendors kindle, barbaric, amazing;
- Pale ports of amber, golden argosies.
- Ringed all around us the proud peaks are glowing;
- Fierce chiefs in council, their wigwam the sky;
- Far, far below us the big Yukon flowing,
- Like threaded quicksilver, gleams to the eye.
-
- Men of the High North, you who have known it;
- You in whose hearts its splendors have abode;
- Can you renounce it, can you disown it?
- Can you forget it, its glory and its goad?
- Where is the hardship, where is the pain of it?
- Lost in the limbo of things you've forgot;
- Only remain the guerdon and gain of it;
- Zest of the foray, and God, how you fought!
-
- You who have made good, you foreign faring;
- You money magic to far lands has whirled;
- Can you forget those days of vast daring,
- There with your soul on the Top o' the World?
- Nights when no peril could keep you awake on
- Spruce boughs you spread for your couch in the snow;
- Taste all your feasts like the beans and the bacon
- Fried at the camp-fire at forty below?
-
- Can you remember your huskies all going,
- Barking with joy and their brushes in air;
- You in your parka, glad-eyed and glowing,
- Monarch, your subjects the wolf and the bear?
- Monarch, your kingdom unravisht and gleaming;
- Mountains your throne, and a river your car;
- Crash of a bull moose to rouse you from dreaming;
- Forest your couch, and your candle a star.
-
- You who this faint day the High North is luring
- Unto her vastness, taintlessly sweet;
- You who are steel-braced, straight-lipped, enduring,
- Dreadless in danger and dire in defeat:
- Honor the High North ever and ever,
- Whether she crown you, or whether she slay;
- Suffer her fury, cherish and love her--
- He who would rule he must learn to obey.
-
- Men of the High North, fierce mountains love you;
- Proud rivers leap when you ride on their breast.
- See, the austere sky, pensive above you,
- Dons all her jewels to smile on your rest.
- Children of Freedom, scornful of frontiers,
- We who are weaklings honor your worth.
- Lords of the wilderness, Princes of Pioneers,
- Let's have a rouse that will ring round the earth.
-
-
-
-
- The Ballad of the Northern Lights
-
-
-
- One of the Down and Out--that's me. Stare at me well, ay, stare!
- Stare and shrink--say! you wouldn't think that I was a millionaire.
- Look at my face, it's crimped and gouged--one of them death-mask things;
- Don't seem the sort of man, do I, as might be the pal of kings?
- Slouching along in smelly rags, a bleary-eyed, no-good bum;
- A knight of the hollow needle, pard, spewed from the sodden slum.
- Look me all over from head to foot; how much would you think I was worth?
- A dollar? a dime? a nickel? Why, I'M THE WEALTHIEST MAN ON EARTH.
-
- No, don't you think that I'm off my base. You'll sing a different tune
- If only you'll let me spin my yarn. Come over to this saloon;
- Wet my throat--it's as dry as chalk, and seeing as how it's you,
- I'll tell the tale of a Northern trail, and so help me God, it's true.
- I'll tell of the howling wilderness and the haggard Arctic heights,
- Of a reckless vow that I made, and how I STAKED THE NORTHERN LIGHTS.
-
- Remember the year of the Big Stampede and the trail of Ninety-eight,
- When the eyes of the world were turned to the North,
- and the hearts of men elate;
- Hearts of the old dare-devil breed thrilled at the wondrous strike,
- And to every man who could hold a pan came the message, "Up and hike".
- Well, I was there with the best of them, and I knew I would not fail.
- You wouldn't believe it to see me now; but wait till you've heard my tale.
-
- You've read of the trail of Ninety-eight, but its woe no man may tell;
- It was all of a piece and a whole yard wide,
- and the name of the brand was "Hell".
- We heard the call and we staked our all; we were plungers playing blind,
- And no man cared how his neighbor fared, and no man looked behind;
- For a ruthless greed was born of need, and the weakling went to the wall,
- And a curse might avail where a prayer would fail,
- and the gold lust crazed us all.
-
- Bold were we, and they called us three the "Unholy Trinity";
- There was Ole Olson, the sailor Swede, and the Dago Kid and me.
- We were the discards of the pack, the foreloopers of Unrest,
- Reckless spirits of fierce revolt in the ferment of the West.
- We were bound to win and we revelled in the hardships of the way.
- We staked our ground and our hopes were crowned,
- and we hoisted out the pay.
- We were rich in a day beyond our dreams,
- it was gold from the grass-roots down;
- But we weren't used to such sudden wealth, and there was the siren town.
- We were crude and careless frontiersmen, with much in us of the beast;
- We could bear the famine worthily, but we lost our heads at the feast.
-
- The town looked mighty bright to us, with a bunch of dust to spend,
- And nothing was half too good them days, and everyone was our friend.
- Wining meant more than mining then, and life was a dizzy whirl,
- Gambling and dropping chunks of gold down the neck of a dance-hall girl;
- Till we went clean mad, it seems to me, and we squandered our last poke,
- And we sold our claim, and we found ourselves one bitter morning--broke.
-
- The Dago Kid he dreamed a dream of his mother's aunt who died--
- In the dawn-light dim she came to him, and she stood by his bedside,
- And she said: "Go forth to the highest North till a lonely trail ye find;
- Follow it far and trust your star, and fortune will be kind."
- But I jeered at him, and then there came the Sailor Swede to me,
- And he said: "I dreamed of my sister's son,
- who croaked at the age of three.
- From the herded dead he sneaked and said: `Seek you an Arctic trail;
- 'Tis pale and grim by the Polar rim, but seek and ye shall not fail.'"
- And lo! that night I too did dream of my mother's sister's son,
- And he said to me: "By the Arctic Sea there's a treasure to be won.
- Follow and follow a lone moose trail, till you come to a valley grim,
- On the slope of the lonely watershed that borders the Polar brim."
- Then I woke my pals, and soft we swore by the mystic Silver Flail,
- 'Twas the hand of Fate, and to-morrow straight
- we would seek the lone moose trail.
-
- We watched the groaning ice wrench free, crash on with a hollow din;
- Men of the wilderness were we, freed from the taint of sin.
- The mighty river snatched us up and it bore us swift along;
- The days were bright, and the morning light was sweet with jewelled song.
- We poled and lined up nameless streams, portaged o'er hill and plain;
- We burnt our boat to save the nails, and built our boat again;
- We guessed and groped, North, ever North, with many a twist and turn;
- We saw ablaze in the deathless days the splendid sunsets burn.
- O'er soundless lakes where the grayling makes a rush at the clumsy fly;
- By bluffs so steep that the hard-hit sheep falls sheer from out the sky;
- By lilied pools where the bull moose cools and wallows in huge content;
- By rocky lairs where the pig-eyed bears peered at our tiny tent.
- Through the black canyon's angry foam we hurled to dreamy bars,
- And round in a ring the dog-nosed peaks bayed to the mocking stars.
- Spring and summer and autumn went; the sky had a tallow gleam,
- Yet North and ever North we pressed to the land of our Golden Dream.
-
- So we came at last to a tundra vast and dark and grim and lone;
- And there was the little lone moose trail, and we knew it for our own.
- By muskeg hollow and nigger-head it wandered endlessly;
- Sorry of heart and sore of foot, weary men were we.
- The short-lived sun had a leaden glare and the darkness came too soon,
- And stationed there with a solemn stare was the pinched, anaemic moon.
- Silence and silvern solitude till it made you dumbly shrink,
- And you thought to hear with an outward ear
- the things you thought to think.
-
- Oh, it was wild and weird and wan, and ever in camp o' nights
- We would watch and watch the silver dance of the mystic Northern Lights.
- And soft they danced from the Polar sky and swept in primrose haze;
- And swift they pranced with their silver feet,
- and pierced with a blinding blaze.
- They danced a cotillion in the sky; they were rose and silver shod;
- It was not good for the eyes of man--'twas a sight for the eyes of God.
- It made us mad and strange and sad, and the gold whereof we dreamed
- Was all forgot, and our only thought was of the lights that gleamed.
-
- Oh, the tundra sponge it was golden brown, and some was a bright blood-red;
- And the reindeer moss gleamed here and there
- like the tombstones of the dead.
- And in and out and around about the little trail ran clear,
- And we hated it with a deadly hate and we feared with a deadly fear.
- And the skies of night were alive with light,
- with a throbbing, thrilling flame;
- Amber and rose and violet, opal and gold it came.
- It swept the sky like a giant scythe, it quivered back to a wedge;
- Argently bright, it cleft the night with a wavy golden edge.
- Pennants of silver waved and streamed, lazy banners unfurled;
- Sudden splendors of sabres gleamed, lightning javelins were hurled.
- There in our awe we crouched and saw with our wild, uplifted eyes
- Charge and retire the hosts of fire in the battlefield of the skies.
-
- But all things come to an end at last, and the muskeg melted away,
- And frowning down to bar our path a muddle of mountains lay.
- And a gorge sheered up in granite walls, and the moose trail crept betwixt;
- 'Twas as if the earth had gaped too far and her stony jaws were fixt.
- Then the winter fell with a sudden swoop, and the heavy clouds sagged low,
- And earth and sky were blotted out in a whirl of driving snow.
-
- We were climbing up a glacier in the neck of a mountain pass,
- When the Dago Kid slipped down and fell into a deep crevasse.
- When we got him out one leg hung limp, and his brow was wreathed with pain,
- And he says: "'Tis badly broken, boys, and I'll never walk again.
- It's death for all if ye linger here, and that's no cursed lie;
- Go on, go on while the trail is good, and leave me down to die."
- He raved and swore, but we tended him with our uncouth, clumsy care.
- The camp-fire gleamed and he gazed and dreamed
- with a fixed and curious stare.
- Then all at once he grabbed my gun and he put it to his head,
- And he says: "I'll fix it for you, boys"--them are the words he said.
-
- So we sewed him up in a canvas sack and we slung him to a tree;
- And the stars like needles stabbed our eyes, and woeful men were we.
- And on we went on our woeful way, wrapped in a daze of dream,
- And the Northern Lights in the crystal nights
- came forth with a mystic gleam.
- They danced and they danced the devil-dance over the naked snow;
- And soft they rolled like a tide upshoaled with a ceaseless ebb and flow.
- They rippled green with a wondrous sheen, they fluttered out like a fan;
- They spread with a blaze of rose-pink rays never yet seen of man.
- They writhed like a brood of angry snakes, hissing and sulphur pale;
- Then swift they changed to a dragon vast, lashing a cloven tail.
- It seemed to us, as we gazed aloft with an everlasting stare,
- The sky was a pit of bale and dread, and a monster revelled there.
-
- We climbed the rise of a hog-back range that was desolate and drear,
- When the Sailor Swede had a crazy fit, and he got to talking queer.
- He talked of his home in Oregon and the peach trees all in bloom,
- And the fern head-high, and the topaz sky, and the forest's scented gloom.
- He talked of the sins of his misspent life, and then he seemed to brood,
- And I watched him there like a fox a hare, for I knew it was not good.
- And sure enough in the dim dawn-light I missed him from the tent,
- And a fresh trail broke through the crusted snow,
- and I knew not where it went.
- But I followed it o'er the seamless waste, and I found him at shut of day,
- Naked there as a new-born babe--so I left him where he lay.
-
- Day after day was sinister, and I fought fierce-eyed despair,
- And I clung to life, and I struggled on, I knew not why nor where.
- I packed my grub in short relays, and I cowered down in my tent,
- And the world around was purged of sound like a frozen continent.
- Day after day was dark as death, but ever and ever at nights,
- With a brilliancy that grew and grew, blazed up the Northern Lights.
-
- They rolled around with a soundless sound like softly bruised silk;
- They poured into the bowl of the sky with the gentle flow of milk.
- In eager, pulsing violet their wheeling chariots came,
- Or they poised above the Polar rim like a coronal of flame.
- From depths of darkness fathomless their lancing rays were hurled,
- Like the all-combining search-lights of the navies of the world.
- There on the roof-pole of the world as one bewitched I gazed,
- And howled and grovelled like a beast as the awful splendors blazed.
- My eyes were seared, yet thralled I peered
- through the parka hood nigh blind;
- But I staggered on to the lights that shone, and never I looked behind.
-
- There is a mountain round and low that lies by the Polar rim,
- And I climbed its height in a whirl of light,
- and I peered o'er its jagged brim;
- And there in a crater deep and vast, ungained, unguessed of men,
- The mystery of the Arctic world was flashed into my ken.
- For there these poor dim eyes of mine beheld the sight of sights--
- That hollow ring was the source and spring of the mystic Northern Lights.
-
- Then I staked that place from crown to base, and I hit the homeward trail.
- Ah, God! it was good, though my eyes were blurred,
- and I crawled like a sickly snail.
- In that vast white world where the silent sky
- communes with the silent snow,
- In hunger and cold and misery I wandered to and fro.
- But the Lord took pity on my pain, and He led me to the sea,
- And some ice-bound whalers heard my moan, and they fed and sheltered me.
- They fed the feeble scarecrow thing that stumbled out of the wild
- With the ravaged face of a mask of death
- and the wandering wits of a child--
- A craven, cowering bag of bones that once had been a man.
- They tended me and they brought me back to the world, and here I am.
-
- Some say that the Northern Lights are the glare of the Arctic ice and snow;
- And some that it's electricity, and nobody seems to know.
- But I'll tell you now--and if I lie, may my lips be stricken dumb--
- It's a MINE, a mine of the precious stuff that men call radium.
- I'ts a million dollars a pound, they say,
- and there's tons and tons in sight.
- You can see it gleam in a golden stream in the solitudes of night.
- And it's mine, all mine--and say! if you have a hundred plunks to spare,
- I'll let you have the chance of your life, I'll sell you a quarter share.
- You turn it down? Well, I'll make it ten, seeing as you are my friend.
- Nothing doing? Say! don't be hard--have you got a dollar to lend?
- Just a dollar to help me out, I know you'll treat me white;
- I'll do as much for you some day . . . God bless you, sir; good-night.
-
-
-
-
- The Ballad of the Black Fox Skin
-
-
-
- There was Claw-fingered Kitty and Windy Ike living the life of shame,
- When unto them in the Long, Long Night came the man-who-had-no-name;
- Bearing his prize of a black fox pelt, out of the Wild he came.
-
- His cheeks were blanched as the flume-head foam
- when the brown spring freshets flow;
- Deep in their dark, sin-calcined pits were his sombre eyes aglow;
- They knew him far for the fitful man who spat forth blood on the snow.
-
- "Did ever you see such a skin?" quoth he;
- "there's nought in the world so fine--
- Such fullness of fur as black as the night,
- such lustre, such size, such shine;
- It's life to a one-lunged man like me; it's London, it's women, it's wine.
-
- "The Moose-hides called it the devil-fox, and swore that no man could kill;
- That he who hunted it, soon or late, must surely suffer some ill;
- But I laughed at them and their old squaw-tales.
- Ha! Ha! I'm laughing still.
-
- "For look ye, the skin--it's as smooth as sin,
- and black as the core of the Pit.
- By gun or by trap, whatever the hap, I swore I would capture it;
- By star and by star afield and afar, I hunted and would not quit.
-
- "For the devil-fox, it was swift and sly, and it seemed to fleer at me;
- I would wake in fright by the camp-fire light, hearing its evil glee;
- Into my dream its eyes would gleam, and its shadow would I see.
-
- "It sniffed and ran from the ptarmigan I had poisoned to excess;
- Unharmed it sped from my wrathful lead ('twas as if I shot by guess);
- Yet it came by night in the stark moonlight to mock at my weariness.
-
- "I tracked it up where the mountains hunch like the vertebrae of the world;
- I tracked it down to the death-still pits where the avalanche is hurled;
- From the glooms to the sacerdotal snows,
- where the carded clouds are curled.
-
- "From the vastitudes where the world protrudes
- through clouds like seas up-shoaled,
- I held its track till it led me back to the land I had left of old--
- The land I had looted many moons. I was weary and sick and cold.
-
- "I was sick, soul-sick, of the futile chase, and there and then I swore
- The foul fiend fox might scathless go, for I would hunt no more;
- Then I rubbed mine eyes in a vast surprise--it stood by my cabin door.
-
- "A rifle raised in the wraith-like gloom, and a vengeful shot that sped;
- A howl that would thrill a cream-faced corpse--
- and the demon fox lay dead. . . .
- Yet there was never a sign of wound, and never a drop he bled.
-
- "So that was the end of the great black fox,
- and here is the prize I've won;
- And now for a drink to cheer me up--I've mushed since the early sun;
- We'll drink a toast to the sorry ghost of the fox whose race is run."
-
-
- II.
-
- Now Claw-fingered Kitty and Windy Ike, bad as the worst were they;
- In their road-house down by the river-trail
- they waited and watched for prey;
- With wine and song they joyed night long, and they slept like swine by day.
-
- For things were done in the Midnight Sun that no tongue will ever tell;
- And men there be who walk earth-free, but whose names are writ in hell--
- Are writ in flames with the guilty names of Fournier and Labelle.
-
- Put not your trust in a poke of dust would ye sleep the sleep of sin;
- For there be those who would rob your clothes ere yet the dawn comes in;
- And a prize likewise in a woman's eyes is a peerless black fox skin.
-
- Put your faith in the mountain cat if you lie within his lair;
- Trust the fangs of the mother-wolf, and the claws of the lead-ripped bear;
- But oh, of the wiles and the gold-tooth smiles
- of a dance-hall wench beware!
-
- Wherefore it was beyond all laws that lusts of man restrain,
- A man drank deep and sank to sleep never to wake again;
- And the Yukon swallowed through a hole the cold corpse of the slain.
-
-
- III.
-
- The black fox skin a shadow cast from the roof nigh to the floor;
- And sleek it seemed and soft it gleamed, and the woman stroked it o'er;
- And the man stood by with a brooding eye, and gnashed his teeth and swore.
-
- When thieves and thugs fall out and fight there's fell arrears to pay;
- And soon or late sin meets its fate, and so it fell one day
- That Claw-fingered Kitty and Windy Ike fanged up like dogs at bay.
-
- "The skin is mine, all mine," she cried; "I did the deed alone."
- "It's share and share with a guilt-yoked pair",
- he hissed in a pregnant tone;
- And so they snarled like malamutes over a mildewed bone.
-
- And so they fought, by fear untaught, till haply it befell
- One dawn of day she slipped away to Dawson town to sell
- The fruit of sin, this black fox skin that had made their lives a hell.
-
- She slipped away as still he lay, she clutched the wondrous fur;
- Her pulses beat, her foot was fleet, her fear was as a spur;
- She laughed with glee, she did not see him rise and follow her.
-
- The bluffs uprear and grimly peer far over Dawson town;
- They see its lights a blaze o' nights and harshly they look down;
- They mock the plan and plot of man with grim, ironic frown.
-
- The trail was steep; 'twas at the time when swiftly sinks the snow;
- All honey-combed, the river ice was rotting down below;
- The river chafed beneath its rind with many a mighty throe.
-
- And up the swift and oozy drift a woman climbed in fear,
- Clutching to her a black fox fur as if she held it dear;
- And hard she pressed it to her breast--then Windy Ike drew near.
-
- She made no moan--her heart was stone--she read his smiling face,
- And like a dream flashed all her life's dark horror and disgrace;
- A moment only--with a snarl he hurled her into space.
-
- She rolled for nigh an hundred feet; she bounded like a ball;
- From crag to crag she carromed down through snow and timber fall; . . .
- A hole gaped in the river ice; the spray flashed--that was all.
-
- A bird sang for the joy of spring, so piercing sweet and frail;
- And blinding bright the land was dight in gay and glittering mail;
- And with a wondrous black fox skin a man slid down the trail.
-
-
- IV.
-
- A wedge-faced man there was who ran along the river bank,
- Who stumbled through each drift and slough, and ever slipped and sank,
- And ever cursed his Maker's name, and ever "hooch" he drank.
-
- He travelled like a hunted thing, hard harried, sore distrest;
- The old grandmother moon crept out from her cloud-quilted nest;
- The aged mountains mocked at him in their primeval rest.
-
- Grim shadows diapered the snow; the air was strangely mild;
- The valley's girth was dumb with mirth, the laughter of the wild;
- The still, sardonic laughter of an ogre o'er a child.
-
- The river writhed beneath the ice; it groaned like one in pain,
- And yawning chasms opened wide, and closed and yawned again;
- And sheets of silver heaved on high until they split in twain.
-
- From out the road-house by the trail they saw a man afar
- Make for the narrow river-reach where the swift cross-currents are;
- Where, frail and worn, the ice is torn and the angry waters jar.
-
- But they did not see him crash and sink into the icy flow;
- They did not see him clinging there, gripped by the undertow,
- Clawing with bleeding finger-nails at the jagged ice and snow.
-
- They found a note beside the hole where he had stumbled in:
- "Here met his fate by evil luck a man who lived in sin,
- And to the one who loves me least I leave this black fox skin."
-
- And strange it is; for, though they searched the river all around,
- No trace or sign of black fox skin was ever after found;
- Though one man said he saw the tread of HOOFS deep in the ground.
-
-
-
-
- The Ballad of Pious Pete
-
- "The North has got him." --Yukonism.
-
-
-
- I tried to refine that neighbor of mine, honest to God, I did.
- I grieved for his fate, and early and late I watched over him like a kid.
- I gave him excuse, I bore his abuse in every way that I could;
- I swore to prevail; I camped on his trail;
- I plotted and planned for his good.
- By day and by night I strove in men's sight to gather him into the fold,
- With precept and prayer, with hope and despair,
- in hunger and hardship and cold.
- I followed him into Gehennas of sin, I sat where the sirens sit;
- In the shade of the Pole, for the sake of his soul,
- I strove with the powers of the Pit.
- I shadowed him down to the scrofulous town;
- I dragged him from dissolute brawls;
- But I killed the galoot when he started to shoot electricity into my walls.
-
- God knows what I did he should seek to be rid
- of one who would save him from shame.
- God knows what I bore that night when he swore
- and bade me make tracks from his claim.
- I started to tell of the horrors of hell,
- when sudden his eyes lit like coals;
- And "Chuck it," says he, "don't persecute me
- with your cant and your saving of souls."
- I'll swear I was mild as I'd be with a child,
- but he called me the son of a slut;
- And, grabbing his gun with a leap and a run,
- he threatened my face with the butt.
- So what could I do (I leave it to you)? With curses he harried me forth;
- Then he was alone, and I was alone, and over us menaced the North.
-
- Our cabins were near; I could see, I could hear;
- but between us there rippled the creek;
- And all summer through, with a rancor that grew,
- he would pass me and never would speak.
- Then a shuddery breath like the coming of Death
- crept down from the peaks far away;
- The water was still; the twilight was chill; the sky was a tatter of gray.
- Swift came the Big Cold, and opal and gold the lights of the witches arose;
- The frost-tyrant clinched, and the valley was cinched
- by the stark and cadaverous snows.
- The trees were like lace where the star-beams could chase,
- each leaf was a jewel agleam.
- The soft white hush lapped the Northland and wrapped
- us round in a crystalline dream;
- So still I could hear quite loud in my ear
- the swish of the pinions of time;
- So bright I could see, as plain as could be,
- the wings of God's angels ashine.
-
- As I read in the Book I would oftentimes look
- to that cabin just over the creek.
- Ah me, it was sad and evil and bad, two neighbors who never would speak!
- I knew that full well like a devil in hell
- he was hatching out, early and late,
- A system to bear through the frost-spangled air
- the warm, crimson waves of his hate.
- I only could peer and shudder and fear--'twas ever so ghastly and still;
- But I knew over there in his lonely despair
- he was plotting me terrible ill.
- I knew that he nursed a malice accurst,
- like the blast of a winnowing flame;
- I pleaded aloud for a shield, for a shroud--Oh, God! then calamity came.
-
- Mad! If I'm mad then you too are mad; but it's all in the point of view.
- If you'd looked at them things gallivantin' on wings,
- all purple and green and blue;
- If you'd noticed them twist, as they mounted and hissed
- like scorpions dim in the dark;
- If you'd seen them rebound with a horrible sound,
- and spitefully spitting a spark;
- If you'd watched IT with dread, as it hissed by your bed,
- that thing with the feelers that crawls--
- You'd have settled the brute that attempted to shoot
- electricity into your walls.
-
- Oh, some they were blue, and they slithered right through;
- they were silent and squashy and round;
- And some they were green; they were wriggly and lean;
- they writhed with so hateful a sound.
- My blood seemed to freeze; I fell on my knees;
- my face was a white splash of dread.
- Oh, the Green and the Blue, they were gruesome to view;
- but the worst of them all were the Red.
- They came through the door, they came through the floor,
- they came through the moss-creviced logs.
- They were savage and dire; they were whiskered with fire;
- they bickered like malamute dogs.
- They ravined in rings like iniquitous things;
- they gulped down the Green and the Blue.
- I crinkled with fear whene'er they drew near,
- and nearer and nearer they drew.
-
- And then came the crown of Horror's grim crown,
- the monster so loathsomely red.
- Each eye was a pin that shot out and in, as, squidlike, it oozed to my bed;
- So softly it crept with feelers that swept
- and quivered like fine copper wire;
- Its belly was white with a sulphurous light,
- it jaws were a-drooling with fire.
- It came and it came; I could breathe of its flame,
- but never a wink could I look.
- I thrust in its maw the Fount of the Law; I fended it off with the Book.
- I was weak--oh, so weak--but I thrilled at its shriek,
- as wildly it fled in the night;
- And deathlike I lay till the dawn of the day.
- (Was ever so welcome the light?)
-
- I loaded my gun at the rise of the sun; to his cabin so softly I slunk.
- My neighbor was there in the frost-freighted air,
- all wrapped in a robe in his bunk.
- It muffled his moans; it outlined his bones, as feebly he twisted about;
- His gums were so black, and his lips seemed to crack,
- and his teeth all were loosening out.
- 'Twas a death's head that peered through the tangle of beard;
- 'twas a face I will never forget;
- Sunk eyes full of woe, and they troubled me so
- with their pleadings and anguish, and yet
- As I rested my gaze in a misty amaze on the scurvy-degenerate wreck,
- I thought of the Things with the dragon-fly wings,
- then laid I my gun on his neck.
- He gave out a cry that was faint as a sigh, like a perishing malamute,
- And he says unto me, "I'm converted," says he;
- "for Christ's sake, Peter, don't shoot!"
-
- * * * * *
-
- They're taking me out with an escort about, and under a sergeant's care;
- I am humbled indeed, for I'm 'cuffed to a Swede
- that thinks he's a millionaire.
- But it's all Gospel true what I'm telling to you--
- up there where the Shadow falls--
- That I settled Sam Noot when he started to shoot electricity into my walls.
-
-
-
-
- The Ballad of Blasphemous Bill
-
-
-
- I took a contract to bury the body of blasphemous Bill MacKie,
- Whenever, wherever or whatsoever the manner of death he die--
- Whether he die in the light o' day or under the peak-faced moon;
- In cabin or dance-hall, camp or dive, mucklucks or patent shoon;
- On velvet tundra or virgin peak, by glacier, drift or draw;
- In muskeg hollow or canyon gloom, by avalanche, fang or claw;
- By battle, murder or sudden wealth, by pestilence, hooch or lead--
- I swore on the Book I would follow and look till I found my tombless dead.
-
- For Bill was a dainty kind of cuss, and his mind was mighty sot
- On a dinky patch with flowers and grass in a civilized bone-yard lot.
- And where he died or how he died, it didn't matter a damn
- So long as he had a grave with frills and a tombstone "epigram".
- So I promised him, and he paid the price in good cheechako coin
- (Which the same I blowed in that very night down in the Tenderloin).
- Then I painted a three-foot slab of pine: "Here lies poor Bill MacKie",
- And I hung it up on my cabin wall and I waited for Bill to die.
-
- Years passed away, and at last one day came a squaw with a story strange,
- Of a long-deserted line of traps 'way back of the Bighorn range;
- Of a little hut by the great divide, and a white man stiff and still,
- Lying there by his lonesome self, and I figured it must be Bill.
- So I thought of the contract I'd made with him,
- and I took down from the shelf
- The swell black box with the silver plate he'd picked out for hisself;
- And I packed it full of grub and "hooch", and I slung it on the sleigh;
- Then I harnessed up my team of dogs and was off at dawn of day.
-
- You know what it's like in the Yukon wild when it's sixty-nine below;
- When the ice-worms wriggle their purple heads
- through the crust of the pale blue snow;
- When the pine-trees crack like little guns in the silence of the wood,
- And the icicles hang down like tusks under the parka hood;
- When the stove-pipe smoke breaks sudden off, and the sky is weirdly lit,
- And the careless feel of a bit of steel burns like a red-hot spit;
- When the mercury is a frozen ball, and the frost-fiend stalks to kill--
- Well, it was just like that that day when I set out to look for Bill.
-
- Oh, the awful hush that seemed to crush me down on every hand,
- As I blundered blind with a trail to find
- through that blank and bitter land;
- Half dazed, half crazed in the winter wild,
- with its grim heart-breaking woes,
- And the ruthless strife for a grip on life that only the sourdough knows!
- North by the compass, North I pressed; river and peak and plain
- Passed like a dream I slept to lose and I waked to dream again.
-
- River and plain and mighty peak--and who could stand unawed?
- As their summits blazed, he could stand undazed
- at the foot of the throne of God.
- North, aye, North, through a land accurst, shunned by the scouring brutes,
- And all I heard was my own harsh word and the whine of the malamutes,
- Till at last I came to a cabin squat, built in the side of a hill,
- And I burst in the door, and there on the floor, frozen to death, lay Bill.
-
- Ice, white ice, like a winding-sheet, sheathing each smoke-grimed wall;
- Ice on the stove-pipe, ice on the bed, ice gleaming over all;
- Sparkling ice on the dead man's chest, glittering ice in his hair,
- Ice on his fingers, ice in his heart, ice in his glassy stare;
- Hard as a log and trussed like a frog, with his arms and legs outspread.
- I gazed at the coffin I'd brought for him,
- and I gazed at the gruesome dead,
- And at last I spoke: "Bill liked his joke; but still, goldarn his eyes,
- A man had ought to consider his mates in the way he goes and dies."
-
- Have you ever stood in an Arctic hut in the shadow of the Pole,
- With a little coffin six by three and a grief you can't control?
- Have you ever sat by a frozen corpse that looks at you with a grin,
- And that seems to say: "You may try all day, but you'll never jam me in"?
- I'm not a man of the quitting kind, but I never felt so blue
- As I sat there gazing at that stiff and studying what I'd do.
- Then I rose and I kicked off the husky dogs that were nosing round about,
- And I lit a roaring fire in the stove, and I started to thaw Bill out.
-
- Well, I thawed and thawed for thirteen days, but it didn't seem no good;
- His arms and legs stuck out like pegs, as if they was made of wood.
- Till at last I said: "It ain't no use--he's froze too hard to thaw;
- He's obstinate, and he won't lie straight, so I guess I got to--SAW."
- So I sawed off poor Bill's arms and legs, and I laid him snug and straight
- In the little coffin he picked hisself, with the dinky silver plate;
- And I came nigh near to shedding a tear as I nailed him safely down;
- Then I stowed him away in my Yukon sleigh, and I started back to town.
-
- So I buried him as the contract was in a narrow grave and deep,
- And there he's waiting the Great Clean-up,
- when the Judgment sluice-heads sweep;
- And I smoke my pipe and I meditate in the light of the Midnight Sun,
- And sometimes I wonder if they WAS, the awful things I done.
- And as I sit and the parson talks, expounding of the Law,
- I often think of poor old Bill--AND HOW HARD HE WAS TO SAW.
-
-
-
-
- The Ballad of One-Eyed Mike
-
-
-
- This is the tale that was told to me by the man with the crystal eye,
- As I smoked my pipe in the camp-fire light,
- and the Glories swept the sky;
- As the Northlights gleamed and curved and streamed,
- and the bottle of "hooch" was dry.
-
- A man once aimed that my life be shamed, and wrought me a deathly wrong;
- I vowed one day I would well repay, but the heft of his hate was strong.
- He thonged me East and he thonged me West; he harried me back and forth,
- Till I fled in fright from his peerless spite
- to the bleak, bald-headed North.
-
- And there I lay, and for many a day I hatched plan after plan,
- For a golden haul of the wherewithal to crush and to kill my man;
- And there I strove, and there I clove through the drift of icy streams;
- And there I fought, and there I sought for the pay-streak of my dreams.
-
- So twenty years, with their hopes and fears and smiles and tears and such,
- Went by and left me long bereft of hope of the Midas touch;
- About as fat as a chancel rat, and lo! despite my will,
- In the weary fight I had clean lost sight of the man I sought to kill.
-
- 'Twas so far away, that evil day when I prayed to the Prince of Gloom
- For the savage strength and the sullen length of life to work his doom.
- Nor sign nor word had I seen or heard, and it happed so long ago;
- My youth was gone and my memory wan, and I willed it even so.
-
- It fell one night in the waning light by the Yukon's oily flow,
- I smoked and sat as I marvelled at the sky's port-winey glow;
- Till it paled away to an absinthe gray, and the river seemed to shrink,
- All wobbly flakes and wriggling snakes and goblin eyes a-wink.
-
- 'Twas weird to see and it 'wildered me in a queer, hypnotic dream,
- Till I saw a spot like an inky blot come floating down the stream;
- It bobbed and swung; it sheered and hung; it romped round in a ring;
- It seemed to play in a tricksome way; it sure was a merry thing.
-
- In freakish flights strange oily lights came fluttering round its head,
- Like butterflies of a monster size--then I knew it for the Dead.
- Its face was rubbed and slicked and scrubbed as smooth as a shaven pate;
- In the silver snakes that the water makes it gleamed like a dinner-plate.
-
- It gurgled near, and clear and clear and large and large it grew;
- It stood upright in a ring of light and it looked me through and through.
- It weltered round with a woozy sound, and ere I could retreat,
- With the witless roll of a sodden soul it wantoned to my feet.
-
- And here I swear by this Cross I wear, I heard that "floater" say:
- "I am the man from whom you ran, the man you sought to slay.
- That you may note and gaze and gloat, and say `Revenge is sweet',
- In the grit and grime of the river's slime I am rotting at your feet.
-
- "The ill we rue we must e'en undo, though it rive us bone from bone;
- So it came about that I sought you out, for I prayed I might atone.
- I did you wrong, and for long and long I sought where you might live;
- And now you're found, though I'm dead and drowned, I beg you to forgive."
-
- So sad it seemed, and its cheek-bones gleamed,
- and its fingers flicked the shore;
- And it lapped and lay in a weary way, and its hands met to implore;
- That I gently said: "Poor, restless dead, I would never work you woe;
- Though the wrong you rue you can ne'er undo, I forgave you long ago."
-
- Then, wonder-wise, I rubbed my eyes and I woke from a horrid dream.
- The moon rode high in the naked sky, and something bobbed in the stream.
- It held my sight in a patch of light, and then it sheered from the shore;
- It dipped and sank by a hollow bank, and I never saw it more.
-
- This was the tale he told to me, that man so warped and gray,
- Ere he slept and dreamed, and the camp-fire gleamed
- in his eye in a wolfish way--
- That crystal eye that raked the sky in the weird Auroral ray.
-
-
-
-
- The Ballad of the Brand
-
-
-
- 'Twas up in a land long famed for gold, where women were far and rare,
- Tellus, the smith, had taken to wife a maiden amazingly fair;
- Tellus, the brawny worker in iron, hairy and heavy of hand,
- Saw her and loved her and bore her away from the tribe of a Southern land;
- Deeming her worthy to queen his home and mother him little ones,
- That the name of Tellus, the master smith, might live in his stalwart sons.
-
- Now there was little of law in the land, and evil doings were rife,
- And every man who joyed in his home guarded the fame of his wife;
- For there were those of the silver tongue and the honeyed art to beguile,
- Who would cozen the heart from a woman's breast
- and damn her soul with a smile.
- And there were women too quick to heed a look or a whispered word,
- And once in a while a man was slain, and the ire of the King was stirred;
- So far and wide he proclaimed his wrath, and this was the law he willed:
- "That whosoever killeth a man, even shall he be killed."
-
- Now Tellus, the smith, he trusted his wife; his heart was empty of fear.
- High on the hill was the gleam of their hearth, a beacon of love and cheer.
- High on the hill they builded their bower,
- where the broom and the bracken meet;
- Under a grave of oaks it was, hushed and drowsily sweet.
- Here he enshrined her, his dearest saint, his idol, the light of his eye;
- Her kisses rested upon his lips as brushes a butterfly.
- The weight of her arms around his neck was light as the thistle down;
- And sweetly she studied to win his smile, and gently she mocked his frown.
- And when at the close of the dusty day his clangorous toil was done,
- She hastened to meet him down the way all lit by the amber sun.
-
- Their dove-cot gleamed in the golden light, a temple of stainless love;
- Like the hanging cup of a big blue flower was the topaz sky above.
- The roses and lilies yearned to her,
- as swift through their throng she pressed;
- A little white, fragile, fluttering thing
- that lay like a child on his breast.
- Then the heart of Tellus, the smith, was proud,
- and sang for the joy of life,
- And there in the bronzing summertide he thanked the gods for his wife.
-
- Now there was one called Philo, a scribe, a man of exquisite grace,
- Carved like the god Apollo in limb, fair as Adonis in face;
- Eager and winning in manner, full of such radiant charm,
- Womenkind fought for his favor and loved to their uttermost harm.
- Such was his craft and his knowledge, such was his skill at the game,
- Never was woman could flout him, so be he plotted her shame.
- And so he drank deep of pleasure, and then it fell on a day
- He gazed on the wife of Tellus and marked her out for his prey.
-
- Tellus, the smith, was merry, and the time of the year it was June,
- So he said to his stalwart helpers: "Shut down the forge at noon.
- Go ye and joy in the sunshine, rest in the coolth of the grove,
- Drift on the dreamy river, every man with his love."
- Then to himself: "Oh, Beloved, sweet will be your surprise;
- To-day will we sport like children, laugh in each other's eyes;
- Weave gay garlands of poppies, crown each other with flowers,
- Pull plump carp from the lilies, rifle the ferny bowers.
- To-day with feasting and gladness the wine of Cyprus will flow;
- To-day is the day we were wedded only a twelvemonth ago."
-
- The larks trilled high in the heavens; his heart was lyric with joy;
- He plucked a posy of lilies; he sped like a love-sick boy.
- He stole up the velvety pathway--his cottage was sunsteeped and still;
- Vines honeysuckled the window; softly he peeped o'er the sill.
- The lilies dropped from his fingers; devils were choking his breath;
- Rigid with horror, he stiffened; ghastly his face was as death.
- Like a nun whose faith in the Virgin is met with a prurient jibe,
- He shrank--'twas the wife of his bosom in the arms of Philo, the scribe.
-
- Tellus went back to his smithy; he reeled like a drunken man;
- His heart was riven with anguish; his brain was brooding a plan.
- Straight to his anvil he hurried; started his furnace aglow;
- Heated his iron and shaped it with savage and masterful blow.
- Sparks showered over and round him; swiftly under his hand
- There at last it was finished--a hideous and infamous Brand.
-
- That night the wife of his bosom, the light of joy in her eyes,
- Kissed him with words of rapture; but he knew that her words were lies.
- Never was she so beguiling, never so merry of speech
- (For passion ripens a woman as the sunshine ripens a peach).
- He clenched his teeth into silence; he yielded up to her lure,
- Though he knew that her breasts were heaving from the fire of her paramour.
- "To-morrow," he said, "to-morrow"--he wove her hair in a strand,
- Twisted it round his fingers and smiled as he thought of the Brand.
-
- The morrow was come, and Tellus swiftly stole up the hill.
- Butterflies drowsed in the noon-heat; coverts were sunsteeped and still.
- Softly he padded the pathway unto the porch, and within
- Heard he the low laugh of dalliance, heard he the rapture of sin.
- Knew he her eyes were mystic with light that no man should see,
- No man kindle and joy in, no man on earth save he.
- And never for him would it kindle. The bloodlust surged in his brain;
- Through the senseless stone could he see them, wanton and warily fain.
- Horrible! Heaven he sought for, gained it and gloried and fell--
- Oh, it was sudden--headlong into the nethermost hell. . . .
-
- Was this he, Tellus, this marble? Tellus . . . not dreaming a dream?
- Ah! sharp-edged as a javelin, was that a woman's scream?
- Was it a door that shattered, shell-like, under his blow?
- Was it his saint, that strumpet, dishevelled and cowering low?
- Was it her lover, that wild thing, that twisted and gouged and tore?
- Was it a man he was crushing, whose head he beat on the floor?
- Laughing the while at its weakness, till sudden he stayed his hand--
- Through the red ring of his madness flamed the thought of the Brand.
-
- Then bound he the naked Philo with thongs that cut in the flesh,
- And the wife of his bosom, fear-frantic, he gagged with a silken mesh,
- Choking her screams into silence; bound her down by the hair;
- Dragged her lover unto her under her frenzied stare.
- In the heat of the hearth-fire embers he heated the hideous Brand;
- Twisting her fingers open, he forced its haft in her hand.
- He pressed it downward and downward; she felt the living flesh sear;
- She saw the throe of her lover; she heard the scream of his fear.
- Once, twice and thrice he forced her, heedless of prayer and shriek--
- Once on the forehead of Philo, twice in the soft of his cheek.
- Then (for the thing was finished) he said to the woman: "See
- How you have branded your lover! Now will I let him go free."
- He severed the thongs that bound him, laughing: "Revenge is sweet",
- And Philo, sobbing in anguish, feebly rose to his feet.
- The man who was fair as Apollo, god-like in woman's sight,
- Hideous now as a satyr, fled to the pity of night.
-
- Then came they before the Judgment Seat,
- and thus spoke the Lord of the Land:
- "He who seeketh his neighbor's wife
- shall suffer the doom of the Brand.
- Brutish and bold on his brow be it stamped,
- deep in his cheek let it sear,
- That every man may look on his shame, and shudder and sicken and fear.
- He shall hear their mock in the market-place,
- their fleering jibe at the feast;
- He shall seek the caves and the shroud of night,
- and the fellowship of the beast.
- Outcast forever from homes of men, far and far shall he roam.
- Such be the doom, sadder than death, of him who shameth a home."
-
-
-
-
- The Ballad of Hard-Luck Henry
-
-
-
- Now wouldn't you expect to find a man an awful crank
- That's staked out nigh three hundred claims, and every one a blank;
- That's followed every fool stampede, and seen the rise and fall
- Of camps where men got gold in chunks and he got none at all;
- That's prospected a bit of ground and sold it for a song
- To see it yield a fortune to some fool that came along;
- That's sunk a dozen bed-rock holes, and not a speck in sight,
- Yet sees them take a million from the claims to left and right?
- Now aren't things like that enough to drive a man to booze?
- But Hard-Luck Smith was hoodoo-proof--he knew the way to lose.
-
- 'Twas in the fall of nineteen four--leap-year I've heard them say--
- When Hard-Luck came to Hunker Creek and took a hillside lay.
- And lo! as if to make amends for all the futile past,
- Late in the year he struck it rich, the real pay-streak at last.
- The riffles of his sluicing-box were choked with speckled earth,
- And night and day he worked that lay for all that he was worth.
- And when in chill December's gloom his lucky lease expired,
- He found that he had made a stake as big as he desired.
-
- One day while meditating on the waywardness of fate,
- He felt the ache of lonely man to find a fitting mate;
- A petticoated pard to cheer his solitary life,
- A woman with soft, soothing ways, a confidant, a wife.
- And while he cooked his supper on his little Yukon stove,
- He wished that he had staked a claim in Love's rich treasure-trove;
- When suddenly he paused and held aloft a Yukon egg,
- For there in pencilled letters was the magic name of Peg.
-
- You know these Yukon eggs of ours--some pink, some green, some blue--
- A dollar per, assorted tints, assorted flavors too.
- The supercilious cheechako might designate them high,
- But one acquires a taste for them and likes them by-and-by.
- Well, Hard-Luck Henry took this egg and held it to the light,
- And there was more faint pencilling that sorely taxed his sight.
- At last he made it out, and then the legend ran like this--
- "Will Klondike miner write to Peg, Plumhollow, Squashville, Wis.?"
-
- That night he got to thinking of this far-off, unknown fair;
- It seemed so sort of opportune, an answer to his prayer.
- She flitted sweetly through his dreams, she haunted him by day,
- She smiled through clouds of nicotine, she cheered his weary way.
- At last he yielded to the spell; his course of love he set--
- Wisconsin his objective point; his object, Margaret.
-
- With every mile of sea and land his longing grew and grew.
- He practised all his pretty words, and these, I fear, were few.
- At last, one frosty evening, with a cold chill down his spine,
- He found himself before her house, the threshold of the shrine.
- His courage flickered to a spark, then glowed with sudden flame--
- He knocked; he heard a welcome word; she came--his goddess came.
- Oh, she was fair as any flower, and huskily he spoke:
- "I'm all the way from Klondike, with a mighty heavy poke.
- I'm looking for a lassie, one whose Christian name is Peg,
- Who sought a Klondike miner, and who wrote it on an egg."
-
- The lassie gazed at him a space, her cheeks grew rosy red;
- She gazed at him with tear-bright eyes, then tenderly she said:
- "Yes, lonely Klondike miner, it is true my name is Peg.
- It's also true I longed for you and wrote it on an egg.
- My heart went out to someone in that land of night and cold;
- But oh, I fear that Yukon egg must have been mighty old.
- I waited long, I hoped and feared; you should have come before;
- I've been a wedded woman now for eighteen months or more.
- I'm sorry, since you've come so far, you ain't the one that wins;
- But won't you take a step inside--I'LL LET YOU SEE THE TWINS."
-
-
-
-
- The Man from Eldorado
-
-
-
- He's the man from Eldorado, and he's just arrived in town,
- In moccasins and oily buckskin shirt.
- He's gaunt as any Indian, and pretty nigh as brown;
- He's greasy, and he smells of sweat and dirt.
- He sports a crop of whiskers that would shame a healthy hog;
- Hard work has racked his joints and stooped his back;
- He slops along the sidewalk followed by his yellow dog,
- But he's got a bunch of gold-dust in his sack.
-
- He seems a little wistful as he blinks at all the lights,
- And maybe he is thinking of his claim
- And the dark and dwarfish cabin where he lay and dreamed at nights,
- (Thank God, he'll never see the place again!)
- Where he lived on tinned tomatoes, beef embalmed and sourdough bread,
- On rusty beans and bacon furred with mould;
- His stomach's out of kilter and his system full of lead,
- But it's over, and his poke is full of gold.
-
- He has panted at the windlass, he has loaded in the drift,
- He has pounded at the face of oozy clay;
- He has taxed himself to sickness, dark and damp and double shift,
- He has labored like a demon night and day.
- And now, praise God, it's over, and he seems to breathe again
- Of new-mown hay, the warm, wet, friendly loam;
- He sees a snowy orchard in a green and dimpling plain,
- And a little vine-clad cottage, and it's--Home.
-
-
- II.
-
- He's the man from Eldorado, and he's had a bite and sup,
- And he's met in with a drouthy friend or two;
- He's cached away his gold-dust, but he's sort of bucking up,
- So he's kept enough to-night to see him through.
- His eye is bright and genial, his tongue no longer lags;
- His heart is brimming o'er with joy and mirth;
- He may be far from savory, he may be clad in rags,
- But to-night he feels as if he owns the earth.
-
- Says he: "Boys, here is where the shaggy North and I will shake;
- I thought I'd never manage to get free.
- I kept on making misses; but at last I've got my stake;
- There's no more thawing frozen muck for me.
- I am going to God's Country, where I'll live the simple life;
- I'll buy a bit of land and make a start;
- I'll carve a little homestead, and I'll win a little wife,
- And raise ten little kids to cheer my heart."
-
- They signified their sympathy by crowding to the bar;
- They bellied up three deep and drank his health.
- He shed a radiant smile around and smoked a rank cigar;
- They wished him honor, happiness and wealth.
- They drank unto his wife to be--that unsuspecting maid;
- They drank unto his children half a score;
- And when they got through drinking very tenderly they laid
- The man from Eldorado on the floor.
-
-
- III.
-
- He's the man from Eldorado, and he's only starting in
- To cultivate a thousand-dollar jag.
- His poke is full of gold-dust and his heart is full of sin,
- And he's dancing with a girl called Muckluck Mag.
- She's as light as any fairy; she's as pretty as a peach;
- She's mistress of the witchcraft to beguile;
- There's sunshine in her manner, there is music in her speech,
- And there's concentrated honey in her smile.
-
- Oh, the fever of the dance-hall and the glitter and the shine,
- The beauty, and the jewels, and the whirl,
- The madness of the music, the rapture of the wine,
- The languorous allurement of a girl!
- She is like a lost madonna; he is gaunt, unkempt and grim;
- But she fondles him and gazes in his eyes;
- Her kisses seek his heavy lips, and soon it seems to him
- He has staked a little claim in Paradise.
-
- "Who's for a juicy two-step?" cries the master of the floor;
- The music throbs with soft, seductive beat.
- There's glitter, gilt and gladness; there are pretty girls galore;
- There's a woolly man with moccasins on feet.
- They know they've got him going; he is buying wine for all;
- They crowd around as buzzards at a feast,
- Then when his poke is empty they boost him from the hall,
- And spurn him in the gutter like a beast.
-
- He's the man from Eldorado, and he's painting red the town;
- Behind he leaves a trail of yellow dust;
- In a whirl of senseless riot he is ramping up and down;
- There's nothing checks his madness and his lust.
- And soon the word is passed around--it travels like a flame;
- They fight to clutch his hand and call him friend,
- The chevaliers of lost repute, the dames of sorry fame;
- Then comes the grim awakening--the end.
-
-
- IV.
-
- He's the man from Eldorado, and he gives a grand affair;
- There's feasting, dancing, wine without restraint.
- The smooth Beau Brummels of the bar, the faro men, are there;
- The tinhorns and purveyors of red paint;
- The sleek and painted women, their predacious eyes aglow--
- Sure Klondike City never saw the like;
- Then Muckluck Mag proposed the toast, "The giver of the show,
- The livest sport that ever hit the pike."
-
- The "live one" rises to his feet; he stammers to reply--
- And then there comes before his muddled brain
- A vision of green vastitudes beneath an April sky,
- And clover pastures drenched with silver rain.
- He knows that it can never be, that he is down and out;
- Life leers at him with foul and fetid breath;
- And then amid the revelry, the song and cheer and shout,
- He suddenly grows grim and cold as death.
-
- He grips the table tensely, and he says: "Dear friends of mine,
- I've let you dip your fingers in my purse;
- I've crammed you at my table, and I've drowned you in my wine,
- And I've little left to give you but--my curse.
- I've failed supremely in my plans; it's rather late to whine;
- My poke is mighty weasened up and small.
- I thank you each for coming here; the happiness is mine--
- And now, you thieves and harlots, take it all."
-
- He twists the thong from off his poke; he swings it o'er his head;
- The nuggets fall around their feet like grain.
- They rattle over roof and wall; they scatter, roll and spread;
- The dust is like a shower of golden rain.
- The guests a moment stand aghast, then grovel on the floor;
- They fight, and snarl, and claw, like beasts of prey;
- And then, as everybody grabbed and everybody swore,
- The man from Eldorado slipped away.
-
-
- V.
-
- He's the man from Eldorado, and they found him stiff and dead,
- Half covered by the freezing ooze and dirt.
- A clotted Colt was in his hand, a hole was in his head,
- And he wore an old and oily buckskin shirt.
- His eyes were fixed and horrible, as one who hails the end;
- The frost had set him rigid as a log;
- And there, half lying on his breast, his last and only friend,
- There crouched and whined a mangy yellow dog.
-
-
-
-
- My Friends
-
-
-
- The man above was a murderer, the man below was a thief;
- And I lay there in the bunk between, ailing beyond belief;
- A weary armful of skin and bone, wasted with pain and grief.
-
- My feet were froze, and the lifeless toes were purple and green and gray;
- The little flesh that clung to my bones,
- you could punch it in holes like clay;
- The skin on my gums was a sullen black, and slowly peeling away.
-
- I was sure enough in a direful fix, and often I wondered why
- They did not take the chance that was left and leave me alone to die,
- Or finish me off with a dose of dope--so utterly lost was I.
-
- But no; they brewed me the green-spruce tea,
- and nursed me there like a child;
- And the homicide he was good to me, and bathed my sores and smiled;
- And the thief he starved that I might be fed,
- and his eyes were kind and mild.
-
- Yet they were woefully wicked men, and often at night in pain
- I heard the murderer speak of his deed and dream it over again;
- I heard the poor thief sorrowing for the dead self he had slain.
-
- I'll never forget that bitter dawn, so evil, askew and gray,
- When they wrapped me round in the skins of beasts
- and they bore me to a sleigh,
- And we started out with the nearest post an hundred miles away.
-
- I'll never forget the trail they broke, with its tense, unuttered woe;
- And the crunch, crunch, crunch as their snowshoes sank
- through the crust of the hollow snow;
- And my breath would fail, and every beat of my heart was like a blow.
-
- And oftentimes I would die the death, yet wake up to life anew;
- The sun would be all ablaze on the waste, and the sky a blighting blue,
- And the tears would rise in my snow-blind eyes
- and furrow my cheeks like dew.
-
- And the camps we made when their strength outplayed
- and the day was pinched and wan;
- And oh, the joy of that blessed halt, and how I did dread the dawn;
- And how I hated the weary men who rose and dragged me on.
-
- And oh, how I begged to rest, to rest--the snow was so sweet a shroud;
- And oh, how I cried when they urged me on, cried and cursed them aloud;
- Yet on they strained, all racked and pained,
- and sorely their backs were bowed.
-
- And then it was all like a lurid dream, and I prayed for a swift release
- From the ruthless ones who would not leave me to die alone in peace;
- Till I wakened up and I found myself at the post of the Mounted Police.
-
- And there was my friend the murderer, and there was my friend the thief,
- With bracelets of steel around their wrists, and wicked beyond belief:
- But when they come to God's judgment seat--may I be allowed the brief.
-
-
-
-
- The Prospector
-
-
-
- I strolled up old Bonanza, where I staked in ninety-eight,
- A-purpose to revisit the old claim.
- I kept thinking mighty sadly of the funny ways of Fate,
- And the lads who once were with me in the game.
- Poor boys, they're down-and-outers, and there's scarcely one to-day
- Can show a dozen colors in his poke;
- And me, I'm still prospecting, old and battered, gaunt and gray,
- And I'm looking for a grub-stake, and I'm broke.
-
- I strolled up old Bonanza. The same old moon looked down;
- The same old landmarks seemed to yearn to me;
- But the cabins all were silent, and the flat, once like a town,
- Was mighty still and lonesome-like to see.
- There were piles and piles of tailings where we toiled with pick and pan,
- And turning round a bend I heard a roar,
- And there a giant gold-ship of the very newest plan
- Was tearing chunks of pay-dirt from the shore.
-
- It wallowed in its water-bed; it burrowed, heaved and swung;
- It gnawed its way ahead with grunts and sighs;
- Its bill of fare was rock and sand; the tailings were its dung;
- It glared around with fierce electric eyes.
- Full fifty buckets crammed its maw; it bellowed out for more;
- It looked like some great monster in the gloom.
- With two to feed its sateless greed, it worked for seven score,
- And I sighed: "Ah, old-time miner, here's your doom!"
-
- The idle windlass turns to rust; the sagging sluice-box falls;
- The holes you digged are water to the brim;
- Your little sod-roofed cabins with the snugly moss-chinked walls
- Are deathly now and mouldering and dim.
- The battle-field is silent where of old you fought it out;
- The claims you fiercely won are lost and sold;
- But there's a little army that they'll never put to rout--
- The men who simply live to seek the gold.
-
- The men who can't remember when they learned to swing a pack,
- Or in what lawless land the quest began;
- The solitary seeker with his grub-stake on his back,
- The restless buccaneer of pick and pan.
- On the mesas of the Southland, on the tundras of the North,
- You will find us, changed in face but still the same;
- And it isn't need, it isn't greed that sends us faring forth--
- It's the fever, it's the glory of the game.
-
- For once you've panned the speckled sand and seen the bonny dust,
- Its peerless brightness blinds you like a spell;
- It's little else you care about; you go because you must,
- And you feel that you could follow it to hell.
- You'd follow it in hunger, and you'd follow it in cold;
- You'd follow it in solitude and pain;
- And when you're stiff and battened down let someone whisper "Gold",
- You're lief to rise and follow it again.
-
- Yet look you, if I find the stuff it's just like so much dirt;
- I fling it to the four winds like a child.
- It's wine and painted women and the things that do me hurt,
- Till I crawl back, beggared, broken, to the Wild.
- Till I crawl back, sapped and sodden, to my grub-stake and my tent--
- There's a city, there's an army (hear them shout).
- There's the gold in millions, millions, but I haven't got a cent;
- And oh, it's me, it's me that found it out.
-
- It was my dream that made it good, my dream that made me go
- To lands of dread and death disprized of man;
- But oh, I've known a glory that their hearts will never know,
- When I picked the first big nugget from my pan.
- It's still my dream, my dauntless dream, that drives me forth once more
- To seek and starve and suffer in the Vast;
- That heaps my heart with eager hope, that glimmers on before--
- My dream that will uplift me to the last.
-
- Perhaps I am stark crazy, but there's none of you too sane;
- It's just a little matter of degree.
- My hobby is to hunt out gold; it's fortressed in my brain;
- It's life and love and wife and home to me.
- And I'll strike it, yes, I'll strike it; I've a hunch I cannot fail;
- I've a vision, I've a prompting, I've a call;
- I hear the hoarse stampeding of an army on my trail,
- To the last, the greatest gold camp of them all.
-
- Beyond the shark-tooth ranges sawing savage at the sky
- There's a lowering land no white man ever struck;
- There's gold, there's gold in millions, and I'll find it if I die,
- And I'm going there once more to try my luck.
- Maybe I'll fail--what matter? It's a mandate, it's a vow;
- And when in lands of dreariness and dread
- You seek the last lone frontier, far beyond your frontiers now,
- You will find the old prospector, silent, dead.
-
- You will find a tattered tent-pole with a ragged robe below it;
- You will find a rusted gold-pan on the sod;
- You will find the claim I'm seeking,
- with my bones as stakes to show it;
- But I've sought the last Recorder, and He's--God.
-
-
-
-
- The Black Sheep
-
- "The aristocratic ne'er-do-well in Canada frequently finds his way
- into the ranks of the Royal North-West Mounted Police." --Extract.
-
-
-
- Hark to the ewe that bore him:
- "What has muddied the strain?
- Never his brothers before him
- Showed the hint of a stain."
- Hark to the tups and wethers;
- Hark to the old gray ram:
- "We're all of us white, but he's black as night,
- And he'll never be worth a damn."
-
- I'm up on the bally wood-pile at the back of the barracks yard;
- "A damned disgrace to the force, sir", with a comrade standing guard;
- Making the bluff I'm busy, doing my six months hard.
-
- "Six months hard and dismissed, sir." Isn't that rather hell?
- And all because of the liquor laws and the wiles of a native belle--
- Some "hooch" I gave to a siwash brave who swore that he wouldn't tell.
-
- At least they SAY that I did it. It's so in the town report.
- All that I can recall is a night of revel and sport,
- When I woke with a "head" in the guard-room,
- and they dragged me sick into court.
-
- And the O. C. said: "You are guilty", and I said never a word;
- For, hang it, you see I couldn't--I didn't know WHAT had occurred,
- And, under the circumstances, denial would be absurd.
-
- But the one that cooked my bacon was Grubbe, of the City Patrol.
- He fagged for my room at Eton, and didn't I devil his soul!
- And now he is getting even, landing me down in the hole.
-
- Plugging away on the wood-pile; doing chores round the square.
- There goes an officer's lady--gives me a haughty stare--
- Me that's an earl's own nephew--that is the hardest to bear.
-
- To think of the poor old mater awaiting her prodigal son.
- Tho' I broke her heart with my folly, I was always the white-haired one.
- (That fatted calf that they're cooking will surely be overdone.)
-
- I'll go back and yarn to the Bishop; I'll dance with the village belle;
- I'll hand round tea to the ladies, and everything will be well.
- Where I have been won't matter; what I have seen I won't tell.
-
- I'll soar to their ken like a comet. They'll see me with never a stain;
- But will they reform me? --far from it. We pay for our pleasure with pain;
- But the dog will return to his vomit, the hog to his wallow again.
-
- I've chewed on the rind of creation, and bitter I've tasted the same;
- Stacked up against hell and damnation, I've managed to stay in the game;
- I've had my moments of sorrow; I've had my seasons of shame.
-
- That's past; when one's nature's a cracked one,
- it's too jolly hard to mend.
- So long as the road is level, so long as I've cash to spend.
- I'm bound to go to the devil, and it's all the same in the end.
-
- The bugle is sounding for stables; the men troop off through the gloom;
- An orderly laying the tables sings in the bright mess-room.
- (I'll wash in the prison bucket, and brush with the prison broom.)
-
- I'll lie in my cell and listen; I'll wish that I couldn't hear
- The laugh and the chaff of the fellows swigging the canteen beer;
- The nasal tone of the gramophone playing "The Bandolier".
-
- And it seems to me, though it's misty, that night of the flowing bowl,
- That the man who potlatched the whiskey and landed me into the hole
- WAS GRUBBE, THAT UNMERCIFUL BOUNDER, GRUBBE, OF THE CITY PATROL.
-
-
-
-
- The Telegraph Operator
-
-
-
- I will not wash my face;
- I will not brush my hair;
- I "pig" around the place--
- There's nobody to care.
- Nothing but rock and tree;
- Nothing but wood and stone,
- Oh, God, it's hell to be
- Alone, alone, alone!
-
- Snow-peaks and deep-gashed draws
- Corral me in a ring.
- I feel as if I was
- The only living thing
- On all this blighted earth;
- And so I frowst and shrink,
- And crouching by my hearth
- I hear the thoughts I think.
-
- I think of all I miss--
- The boys I used to know;
- The girls I used to kiss;
- The coin I used to blow:
- The bars I used to haunt;
- The racket and the row;
- The beers I didn't want
- (I wish I had 'em now).
-
- Day after day the same,
- Only a little worse;
- No one to grouch or blame--
- Oh, for a loving curse!
- Oh, in the night I fear,
- Haunted by nameless things,
- Just for a voice to cheer,
- Just for a hand that clings!
-
- Faintly as from a star
- Voices come o'er the line;
- Voices of ghosts afar,
- Not in this world of mine;
- Lives in whose loom I grope;
- Words in whose weft I hear
- Eager the thrill of hope,
- Awful the chill of fear.
-
- I'm thinking out aloud;
- I reckon that is bad;
- (The snow is like a shroud)--
- Maybe I'm going mad.
- Say! wouldn't that be tough?
- This awful hush that hugs
- And chokes one is enough
- To make a man go "bugs".
-
- There's not a thing to do;
- I cannot sleep at night;
- No wonder I'm so blue;
- Oh, for a friendly fight!
- The din and rush of strife;
- A music-hall aglow;
- A crowd, a city, life--
- Dear God, I miss it so!
-
- Here, you have moped enough!
- Brace up and play the game!
- But say, it's awful tough--
- Day after day the same
- (I've said that twice, I bet).
- Well, there's not much to say.
- I wish I had a pet,
- Or something I could play.
-
- Cheer up! don't get so glum
- And sick of everything;
- The worst is yet to come;
- God help you till the Spring.
- God shield you from the Fear;
- Teach you to laugh, not moan.
- Ha! ha! it sounds so queer--
- Alone, alone, alone!
-
-
-
-
- The Wood-Cutter
-
-
-
- The sky is like an envelope,
- One of those blue official things;
- And, sealing it, to mock our hope,
- The moon, a silver wafer, clings.
- What shall we find when death gives leave
- To read--our sentence or reprieve?
-
- I'm holding it down on God's scrap-pile, up on the fag-end of earth;
- O'er me a menace of mountains, a river that grits at my feet;
- Face to face with my soul-self, weighing my life at its worth;
- Wondering what I was made for, here in my last retreat.
-
- Last! Ah, yes, it's the finish. Have ever you heard a man cry?
- (Sobs that rake him and rend him, right from the base of the chest.)
- That's how I've cried, oh, so often; and now that my tears are dry,
- I sit in the desolate quiet and wait for the infinite Rest.
-
- Rest! Well, it's restful around me; it's quiet clean to the core.
- The mountains pose in their ermine, in golden the hills are clad;
- The big, blue, silt-freighted Yukon seethes by my cabin door,
- And I think it's only the river that keeps me from going mad.
-
- By day it's a ruthless monster, a callous, insatiate thing,
- With oily bubble and eddy, with sudden swirling of breast;
- By night it's a writhing Titan, sullenly murmuring,
- Ever and ever goaded, and ever crying for rest.
-
- It cries for its human tribute, but me it will never drown.
- I've learned the lore of my river; my river obeys me well.
- I hew and I launch my cordwood, and raft it to Dawson town,
- Where wood means wine and women, and, incidentally, hell.
-
- Hell and the anguish thereafter. Here as I sit alone
- I'd give the life I have left me to lighten some load of care:
- (The bitterest part of the bitter is being denied to atone;
- Lips that have mocked at Heaven lend themselves ill to prayer.)
-
- Impotent as a beetle pierced on the needle of Fate;
- A wretch in a cosmic death-cell, peaks for my prison bars;
- 'Whelmed by a world stupendous, lonely and listless I wait,
- Drowned in a sea of silence, strewn with confetti of stars.
-
- See! from far up the valley a rapier pierces the night,
- The white search-ray of a steamer. Swiftly, serenely it nears;
- A proud, white, alien presence, a glittering galley of light,
- Confident-poised, triumphant, freighted with hopes and fears.
-
- I look as one looks on a vision; I see it pulsating by;
- I glimpse joy-radiant faces; I hear the thresh of the wheel.
- Hoof-like my heart beats a moment; then silence swoops from the sky.
- Darkness is piled upon darkness. God only knows how I feel.
-
- Maybe you've seen me sometimes; maybe you've pitied me then--
- The lonely waif of the wood-camp, here by my cabin door.
- Some day you'll look and see not; futile and outcast of men,
- I shall be far from your pity, resting forevermore.
-
- My life was a problem in ciphers, a weary and profitless sum.
- Slipshod and stupid I worked it, dazed by negation and doubt.
- Ciphers the total confronts me. Oh, Death, with thy moistened thumb,
- Stoop like a petulant schoolboy, wipe me forever out!
-
-
-
-
- The Song of the Mouth-Organ
-
- (With apologies to the singer of the "Song of the Banjo".)
-
-
-
- I'm a homely little bit of tin and bone;
- I'm beloved by the Legion of the Lost;
- I haven't got a "vox humana" tone,
- And a dime or two will satisfy my cost.
- I don't attempt your high-falutin' flights;
- I am more or less uncertain on the key;
- But I tell you, boys, there's lots and lots of nights
- When you've taken mighty comfort out of me.
-
- I weigh an ounce or two, and I'm so small
- You can pack me in the pocket of your vest;
- And when at night so wearily you crawl
- Into your bunk and stretch your limbs to rest,
- You take me out and play me soft and low,
- The simple songs that trouble your heartstrings;
- The tunes you used to fancy long ago,
- Before you made a rotten mess of things.
-
- Then a dreamy look will come into your eyes,
- And you break off in the middle of a note;
- And then, with just the dreariest of sighs,
- You drop me in the pocket of your coat.
- But somehow I have bucked you up a bit;
- And, as you turn around and face the wall,
- You don't feel quite so spineless and unfit--
- You're not so bad a fellow after all.
-
- Do you recollect the bitter Arctic night;
- Your camp beside the canyon on the trail;
- Your tent a tiny square of orange light;
- The moon above consumptive-like and pale;
- Your supper cooked, your little stove aglow;
- You tired, but snug and happy as a child?
- Then 'twas "Turkey in the Straw" till your lips were nearly raw,
- And you hurled your bold defiance at the Wild.
-
- Do you recollect the flashing, lashing pain;
- The gulf of humid blackness overhead;
- The lightning making rapiers of the rain;
- The cattle-horns like candles of the dead
- You sitting on your bronco there alone,
- In your slicker, saddle-sore and sick with cold?
- Do you think the silent herd did not hear "The Mocking Bird",
- Or relish "Silver Threads among the Gold"?
-
- Do you recollect the wild Magellan coast;
- The head-winds and the icy, roaring seas;
- The nights you thought that everything was lost;
- The days you toiled in water to your knees;
- The frozen ratlines shrieking in the gale;
- The hissing steeps and gulfs of livid foam:
- When you cheered your messmates nine with "Ben Bolt" and "Clementine",
- And "Dixie Land" and "Seeing Nellie Home"?
-
- Let the jammy banjo voice the Younger Son,
- Who waits for his remittance to arrive;
- I represent the grimy, gritty one,
- Who sweats his bones to keep himself alive;
- Who's up against the real thing from his birth;
- Whose heritage is hard and bitter toil;
- I voice the weary, smeary ones of earth,
- The helots of the sea and of the soil.
-
- I'm the Steinway of strange mischief and mischance;
- I'm the Stradivarius of blank defeat;
- In the down-world, when the devil leads the dance,
- I am simply and symbolically meet;
- I'm the irrepressive spirit of mankind;
- I'm the small boy playing knuckle down with Death;
- At the end of all things known, where God's rubbish-heap is thrown,
- I shrill impudent triumph at a breath.
-
- I'm a humble little bit of tin and horn;
- I'm a byword, I'm a plaything, I'm a jest;
- The virtuoso looks on me with scorn;
- But there's times when I am better than the best.
- Ask the stoker and the sailor of the sea;
- Ask the mucker and the hewer of the pine;
- Ask the herder of the plain, ask the gleaner of the grain--
- There's a lowly, loving kingdom--and it's mine.
-
-
-
-
- The Trail of Ninety-Eight
-
-
-
- I.
-
- Gold! We leapt from our benches. Gold! We sprang from our stools.
- Gold! We wheeled in the furrow, fired with the faith of fools.
- Fearless, unfound, unfitted, far from the night and the cold,
- Heard we the clarion summons, followed the master-lure--Gold!
-
- Men from the sands of the Sunland; men from the woods of the West;
- Men from the farms and the cities, into the Northland we pressed.
- Graybeards and striplings and women, good men and bad men and bold,
- Leaving our homes and our loved ones, crying exultantly--"Gold!"
-
- Never was seen such an army, pitiful, futile, unfit;
- Never was seen such a spirit, manifold courage and grit.
- Never has been such a cohort under one banner unrolled
- As surged to the ragged-edged Arctic, urged by the arch-tempter--Gold.
-
- "Farewell!" we cried to our dearests; little we cared for their tears.
- "Farewell!" we cried to the humdrum and the yoke of the hireling years;
- Just like a pack of school-boys, and the big crowd cheered us good-bye.
- Never were hearts so uplifted, never were hopes so high.
-
- The spectral shores flitted past us, and every whirl of the screw
- Hurled us nearer to fortune, and ever we planned what we'd do--
- Do with the gold when we got it--big, shiny nuggets like plums,
- There in the sand of the river, gouging it out with our thumbs.
-
- And one man wanted a castle, another a racing stud;
- A third would cruise in a palace yacht like a red-necked prince of blood.
- And so we dreamed and we vaunted, millionaires to a man,
- Leaping to wealth in our visions long ere the trail began.
-
-
- II.
-
- We landed in wind-swept Skagway. We joined the weltering mass,
- Clamoring over their outfits, waiting to climb the Pass.
- We tightened our girths and our pack-straps; we linked on the Human Chain,
- Struggling up to the summit, where every step was a pain.
-
- Gone was the joy of our faces, grim and haggard and pale;
- The heedless mirth of the shipboard was changed to the care of the trail.
- We flung ourselves in the struggle, packing our grub in relays,
- Step by step to the summit in the bale of the winter days.
-
- Floundering deep in the sump-holes, stumbling out again;
- Crying with cold and weakness, crazy with fear and pain.
- Then from the depths of our travail, ere our spirits were broke,
- Grim, tenacious and savage, the lust of the trail awoke.
-
- "Klondike or bust!" rang the slogan; every man for his own.
- Oh, how we flogged the horses, staggering skin and bone!
- Oh, how we cursed their weakness, anguish they could not tell,
- Breaking their hearts in our passion, lashing them on till they fell!
-
- For grub meant gold to our thinking, and all that could walk must pack;
- The sheep for the shambles stumbled, each with a load on its back;
- And even the swine were burdened, and grunted and squealed and rolled,
- And men went mad in the moment, huskily clamoring "Gold!"
-
- Oh, we were brutes and devils, goaded by lust and fear!
- Our eyes were strained to the summit; the weaklings dropped to the rear,
- Falling in heaps by the trail-side, heart-broken, limp and wan;
- But the gaps closed up in an instant, and heedless the chain went on.
-
- Never will I forget it, there on the mountain face,
- Antlike, men with their burdens, clinging in icy space;
- Dogged, determined and dauntless, cruel and callous and cold,
- Cursing, blaspheming, reviling, and ever that battle-cry--"Gold!"
-
- Thus toiled we, the army of fortune, in hunger and hope and despair,
- Till glacier, mountain and forest vanished, and, radiantly fair,
- There at our feet lay Lake Bennett, and down to its welcome we ran:
- The trail of the land was over, the trail of the water began.
-
-
- III.
-
- We built our boats and we launched them. Never has been such a fleet;
- A packing-case for a bottom, a mackinaw for a sheet.
- Shapeless, grotesque, lopsided, flimsy, makeshift and crude,
- Each man after his fashion builded as best he could.
-
- Each man worked like a demon, as prow to rudder we raced;
- The winds of the Wild cried "Hurry!" the voice of the waters, "Haste!"
- We hated those driving before us; we dreaded those pressing behind;
- We cursed the slow current that bore us; we prayed to the God of the wind.
-
- Spring! and the hillsides flourished, vivid in jewelled green;
- Spring! and our hearts' blood nourished envy and hatred and spleen.
- Little cared we for the Spring-birth; much cared we to get on--
- Stake in the Great White Channel, stake ere the best be gone.
-
- The greed of the gold possessed us; pity and love were forgot;
- Covetous visions obsessed us; brother with brother fought.
- Partner with partner wrangled, each one claiming his due;
- Wrangled and halved their outfits, sawing their boats in two.
-
- Thuswise we voyaged Lake Bennett, Tagish, then Windy Arm,
- Sinister, savage and baleful, boding us hate and harm.
- Many a scow was shattered there on that iron shore;
- Many a heart was broken straining at sweep and oar.
-
- We roused Lake Marsh with a chorus, we drifted many a mile;
- There was the canyon before us--cave-like its dark defile;
- The shores swept faster and faster; the river narrowed to wrath;
- Waters that hissed disaster reared upright in our path.
-
- Beneath us the green tumult churning, above us the cavernous gloom;
- Around us, swift twisting and turning, the black, sullen walls of a tomb.
- We spun like a chip in a mill-race; our hearts hammered under the test;
- Then--oh, the relief on each chill face!--we soared into sunlight and rest.
-
- Hand sought for hand on the instant. Cried we, "Our troubles are o'er!"
- Then, like a rumble of thunder, heard we a canorous roar.
- Leaping and boiling and seething, saw we a cauldron afume;
- There was the rage of the rapids, there was the menace of doom.
-
- The river springs like a racer, sweeps through a gash in the rock;
- Buts at the boulder-ribbed bottom, staggers and rears at the shock;
- Leaps like a terrified monster, writhes in its fury and pain;
- Then with the crash of a demon springs to the onset again.
-
- Dared we that ravening terror; heard we its din in our ears;
- Called on the Gods of our fathers, juggled forlorn with our fears;
- Sank to our waists in its fury, tossed to the sky like a fleece;
- Then, when our dread was the greatest, crashed into safety and peace.
-
- But what of the others that followed, losing their boats by the score?
- Well could we see them and hear them, strung down that desolate shore.
- What of the poor souls that perished? Little of them shall be said--
- On to the Golden Valley, pause not to bury the dead.
-
- Then there were days of drifting, breezes soft as a sigh;
- Night trailed her robe of jewels over the floor of the sky.
- The moonlit stream was a python, silver, sinuous, vast,
- That writhed on a shroud of velvet--well, it was done at last.
-
- There were the tents of Dawson, there the scar of the slide;
- Swiftly we poled o'er the shallows, swiftly leapt o'er the side.
- Fires fringed the mouth of Bonanza; sunset gilded the dome;
- The test of the trail was over--thank God, thank God, we were Home!
-
-
-
-
- The Ballad of Gum-Boot Ben
-
-
-
- He was an old prospector with a vision bleared and dim.
- He asked me for a grubstake, and the same I gave to him.
- He hinted of a hidden trove, and when I made so bold
- To question his veracity, this is the tale he told.
-
- "I do not seek the copper streak, nor yet the yellow dust;
- I am not fain for sake of gain to irk the frozen crust;
- Let fellows gross find gilded dross, far other is my mark;
- Oh, gentle youth, this is the truth--I go to seek the Ark.
-
- "I prospected the Pelly bed, I prospected the White;
- The Nordenscold for love of gold I piked from morn till night;
- Afar and near for many a year I led the wild stampede,
- Until I guessed that all my quest was vanity and greed.
-
- "Then came I to a land I knew no man had ever seen,
- A haggard land, forlornly spanned by mountains lank and lean;
- The nitchies said 'twas full of dread, of smoke and fiery breath,
- And no man dare put foot in there for fear of pain and death.
-
- "But I was made all unafraid, so, careless and alone,
- Day after day I made my way into that land unknown;
- Night after night by camp-fire light I crouched in lonely thought;
- Oh, gentle youth, this is the truth--I knew not what I sought.
-
- "I rose at dawn; I wandered on. 'Tis somewhat fine and grand
- To be alone and hold your own in God's vast awesome land;
- Come woe or weal, 'tis fine to feel a hundred miles between
- The trails you dare and pathways where the feet of men have been.
-
- "And so it fell on me a spell of wander-lust was cast.
- The land was still and strange and chill, and cavernous and vast;
- And sad and dead, and dull as lead, the valleys sought the snows;
- And far and wide on every side the ashen peaks arose.
-
- "The moon was like a silent spike that pierced the sky right through;
- The small stars popped and winked and hopped in vastitudes of blue;
- And unto me for company came creatures of the shade,
- And formed in rings and whispered things that made me half afraid.
-
- "And strange though be, 'twas borne on me that land had lived of old,
- And men had crept and slain and slept where now they toiled for gold;
- Through jungles dim the mammoth grim had sought the oozy fen,
- And on his track, all bent of back, had crawled the hairy men.
-
- "And furthermore, strange deeds of yore in this dead place were done.
- They haunted me, as wild and free I roamed from sun to sun;
- Until I came where sudden flame uplit a terraced height,
- A regnant peak that seemed to seek the coronal of night.
-
- "I scaled the peak; my heart was weak, yet on and on I pressed.
- Skyward I strained until I gained its dazzling silver crest;
- And there I found, with all around a world supine and stark,
- Swept clean of snow, a flat plateau, and on it lay--the Ark.
-
- "Yes, there, I knew, by two and two the beasts did disembark,
- And so in haste I ran and traced in letters on the Ark
- My human name--Ben Smith's the same. And now I want to float
- A syndicate to haul and freight to town that noble boat."
-
- I met him later in a bar and made a gay remark
- Anent an ancient miner and an option on the Ark.
- He gazed at me reproachfully, as only topers can;
- But what he said I can't repeat--he was a bad old man.
-
-
-
-
- Clancy of the Mounted Police
-
-
-
- In the little Crimson Manual it's written plain and clear
- That who would wear the scarlet coat shall say good-bye to fear;
- Shall be a guardian of the right, a sleuth-hound of the trail--
- In the little Crimson Manual there's no such word as "fail"--
- Shall follow on though heavens fall, or hell's top-turrets freeze,
- Half round the world, if need there be, on bleeding hands and knees.
- It's duty, duty, first and last, the Crimson Manual saith;
- The Scarlet Rider makes reply: "It's duty--to the death."
- And so they sweep the solitudes, free men from all the earth;
- And so they sentinel the woods, the wilds that know their worth;
- And so they scour the startled plains and mock at hurt and pain,
- And read their Crimson Manual, and find their duty plain.
- Knights of the lists of unrenown, born of the frontier's need,
- Disdainful of the spoken word, exultant in the deed;
- Unconscious heroes of the waste, proud players of the game,
- Props of the power behind the throne, upholders of the name:
- For thus the Great White Chief hath said, "In all my lands be peace",
- And to maintain his word he gave his West the Scarlet Police.
-
- Livid-lipped was the valley, still as the grave of God;
- Misty shadows of mountain thinned into mists of cloud;
- Corpselike and stark was the land, with a quiet that crushed and awed,
- And the stars of the weird sub-arctic glimmered over its shroud.
-
- Deep in the trench of the valley two men stationed the Post,
- Seymour and Clancy the reckless, fresh from the long patrol;
- Seymour, the sergeant, and Clancy--Clancy who made his boast
- He could cinch like a bronco the Northland,
- and cling to the prongs of the Pole.
-
- Two lone men on detachment, standing for law on the trail;
- Undismayed in the vastness, wise with the wisdom of old--
- Out of the night hailed a half-breed telling a pitiful tale,
- "White man starving and crazy on the banks of the Nordenscold."
-
- Up sprang the red-haired Clancy, lean and eager of eye;
- Loaded the long toboggan, strapped each dog at its post;
- Whirled his lash at the leader; then, with a whoop and a cry,
- Into the Great White Silence faded away like a ghost.
-
- The clouds were a misty shadow, the hills were a shadowy mist;
- Sunless, voiceless and pulseless, the day was a dream of woe;
- Through the ice-rifts the river smoked and bubbled and hissed;
- Behind was a trail fresh broken, in front the untrodden snow.
-
- Ahead of the dogs ploughed Clancy, haloed by steaming breath;
- Through peril of open water, through ache of insensate cold;
- Up rivers wantonly winding in a land affianced to death,
- Till he came to a cowering cabin on the banks of the Nordenscold.
-
- Then Clancy loosed his revolver, and he strode through the open door;
- And there was the man he sought for, crouching beside the fire;
- The hair of his beard was singeing, the frost on his back was hoar,
- And ever he crooned and chanted as if he never would tire:--
-
- "I panned and I panned in the shiny sand,
- and I sniped on the river bar;
- But I know, I know, that it's down below
- that the golden treasures are;
- So I'll wait and wait till the floods abate,
- and I'll sink a shaft once more,
- And I'd like to bet that I'll go home yet
- with a brass band playing before."
-
- He was nigh as thin as a sliver, and he whined like a Moose-hide cur;
- So Clancy clothed him and nursed him as a mother nurses a child;
- Lifted him on the toboggan, wrapped him in robes of fur,
- Then with the dogs sore straining started to face the Wild.
-
- Said the Wild, "I will crush this Clancy, so fearless and insolent;
- For him will I loose my fury, and blind and buffet and beat;
- Pile up my snows to stay him; then when his strength is spent,
- Leap on him from my ambush and crush him under my feet.
-
- "Him will I ring with my silence, compass him with my cold;
- Closer and closer clutch him unto mine icy breast;
- Buffet him with my blizzards, deep in my snows enfold,
- Claiming his life as my tribute, giving my wolves the rest."
-
- Clancy crawled through the vastness; o'er him the hate of the Wild;
- Full on his face fell the blizzard; cheering his huskies he ran;
- Fighting, fierce-hearted and tireless, snows that drifted and piled,
- With ever and ever behind him singing the crazy man.
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- "Sing hey, sing ho, for the ice and snow,
- And a heart that's ever merry;
- Let us trim and square with a lover's care
- (For why should a man be sorry?)
- A grave deep, deep, with the moon a-peep,
- A grave in the frozen mould.
- Sing hey, sing ho, for the winds that blow,
- And a grave deep down in the ice and snow,
- A grave in the land of gold."
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- Day after day of darkness, the whirl of the seething snows;
- Day after day of blindness, the swoop of the stinging blast;
- On through a blur of fury the swing of staggering blows;
- On through a world of turmoil, empty, inane and vast.
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- Night with its writhing storm-whirl, night despairingly black;
- Night with its hours of terror, numb and endlessly long;
- Night with its weary waiting, fighting the shadows back,
- And ever the crouching madman singing his crazy song.
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- Cold with its creeping terror, cold with its sudden clinch;
- Cold so utter you wonder if 'twill ever again be warm;
- Clancy grinned as he shuddered, "Surely it isn't a cinch
- Being wet-nurse to a looney in the teeth of an arctic storm."
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- The blizzard passed and the dawn broke, knife-edged and crystal clear;
- The sky was a blue-domed iceberg, sunshine outlawed away;
- Ever by snowslide and ice-rip haunted and hovered the Fear;
- Ever the Wild malignant poised and panted to slay.
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- The lead-dog freezes in harness--cut him out of the team!
- The lung of the wheel-dog's bleeding--shoot him and let him lie!
- On and on with the others--lash them until they scream!
- "Pull for your lives, you devils! On! To halt is to die."
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- There in the frozen vastness Clancy fought with his foes;
- The ache of the stiffened fingers, the cut of the snowshoe thong;
- Cheeks black-raw through the hood-flap, eyes that tingled and closed,
- And ever to urge and cheer him quavered the madman's song.
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- Colder it grew and colder, till the last heat left the earth,
- And there in the great stark stillness the bale fires glinted and gleamed,
- And the Wild all around exulted and shook with a devilish mirth,
- And life was far and forgotten, the ghost of a joy once dreamed.
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- Death! And one who defied it, a man of the Mounted Police;
- Fought it there to a standstill long after hope was gone;
- Grinned through his bitter anguish, fought without let or cease,
- Suffering, straining, striving, stumbling, struggling on.
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- Till the dogs lay down in their traces, and rose and staggered and fell;
- Till the eyes of him dimmed with shadows,
- and the trail was so hard to see;
- Till the Wild howled out triumphant, and the world was a frozen hell--
- Then said Constable Clancy: "I guess that it's up to me."
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- Far down the trail they saw him,
- and his hands they were blanched like bone;
- His face was a blackened horror, from his eyelids the salt rheum ran;
- His feet he was lifting strangely, as if they were made of stone,
- But safe in his arms and sleeping he carried the crazy man.
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- So Clancy got into Barracks, and the boys made rather a scene;
- And the O. C. called him a hero, and was nice as a man could be;
- But Clancy gazed down his trousers at the place where his toes had been,
- And then he howled like a husky, and sang in a shaky key:
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- "When I go back to the old love that's true to the finger-tips,
- I'll say: `Here's bushels of gold, love,'
- and I'll kiss my girl on the lips;
- `It's yours to have and to hold, love.'
- It's the proud, proud boy I'll be,
- When I go back to the old love that's waited so long for me."
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- Lost
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- "Black is the sky, but the land is white--
- (O the wind, the snow and the storm!)--
- Father, where is our boy to-night?
- Pray to God he is safe and warm."
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- "Mother, mother, why should you fear?
- Safe is he, and the Arctic moon
- Over his cabin shines so clear--
- Rest and sleep, 'twill be morning soon."
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- "It's getting dark awful sudden. Say, this is mighty queer!
- Where in the world have I got to? It's still and black as a tomb.
- I reckoned the camp was yonder, I figured the trail was here--
- Nothing! Just draw and valley packed with quiet and gloom;
- Snow that comes down like feathers, thick and gobby and gray;
- Night that looks spiteful ugly--seems that I've lost my way.
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- "The cold's got an edge like a jackknife--it must be forty below;
- Leastways that's what it seems like--it cuts so fierce to the bone.
- The wind's getting real ferocious; it's heaving and whirling the snow;
- It shrieks with a howl of fury, it dies away to a moan;
- Its arms sweep round like a banshee's, swift and icily white,
- And buffet and blind and beat me. Lord! it's a hell of a night.
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- "I'm all tangled up in a blizzard. There's only one thing to do--
- Keep on moving and moving; it's death, it's death if I rest.
- Oh, God! if I see the morning, if only I struggle through,
- I'll say the prayers I've forgotten since I lay on my mother's breast.
- I seem going round in a circle; maybe the camp is near.
- Say! did somebody holler? Was it a light I saw?
- Or was it only a notion? I'll shout, and maybe they'll hear--
- No! the wind only drowns me--shout till my throat is raw.
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- "The boys are all round the camp-fire wondering when I'll be back.
- They'll soon be starting to seek me; they'll scarcely wait for the light.
- What will they find, I wonder, when they come to the end of my track--
- A hand stuck out of a snowdrift, frozen and stiff and white.
- That's what they'll strike, I reckon; that's how they'll find their pard,
- A pie-faced corpse in a snowbank--curse you, don't be a fool!
- Play the game to the finish; bet on your very last card;
- Nerve yourself for the struggle. Oh, you coward, keep cool!
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- I'm going to lick this blizzard; I'm going to live the night.
- It can't down me with its bluster--I'm not the kind to be beat.
- On hands and knees will I buck it; with every breath will I fight;
- It's life, it's life that I fight for--never it seemed so sweet.
- I know that my face is frozen; my hands are numblike and dead;
- But oh, my feet keep a-moving, heavy and hard and slow;
- They're trying to kill me, kill me, the night that's black overhead,
- The wind that cuts like a razor, the whipcord lash of the snow.
- Keep a-moving, a-moving; don't, don't stumble, you fool!
- Curse this snow that's a-piling a-purpose to block my way.
- It's heavy as gold in the rocker, it's white and fleecy as wool;
- It's soft as a bed of feathers, it's warm as a stack of hay.
- Curse on my feet that slip so, my poor tired, stumbling feet--
- I guess they're a job for the surgeon, they feel so queerlike to lift--
- I'll rest them just for a moment--oh, but to rest is sweet!
- The awful wind cannot get me, deep, deep down in the drift."
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- "Father, a bitter cry I heard,
- Out of the night so dark and wild.
- Why is my heart so strangely stirred?
- 'Twas like the voice of our erring child."
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- "Mother, mother, you only heard
- A waterfowl in the locked lagoon--
- Out of the night a wounded bird--
- Rest and sleep, 'twill be morning soon."
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- Who is it talks of sleeping? I'll swear that somebody shook
- Me hard by the arm for a moment, but how on earth could it be?
- See how my feet are moving--awfully funny they look--
- Moving as if they belonged to a someone that wasn't me.
- The wind down the night's long alley bowls me down like a pin;
- I stagger and fall and stagger, crawl arm-deep in the snow.
- Beaten back to my corner, how can I hope to win?
- And there is the blizzard waiting to give me the knockout blow.
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- Oh, I'm so warm and sleepy! No more hunger and pain.
- Just to rest for a moment; was ever rest such a joy?
- Ha! what was that? I'll swear it, somebody shook me again;
- Somebody seemed to whisper: "Fight to the last, my boy."
- Fight! That's right, I must struggle. I know that to rest means death;
- Death, but then what does death mean? --ease from a world of strife.
- Life has been none too pleasant; yet with my failing breath
- Still and still must I struggle, fight for the gift of life.
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- Seems that I must be dreaming! Here is the old home trail;
- Yonder a light is gleaming; oh, I know it so well!
- The air is scented with clover; the cattle wait by the rail;
- Father is through with the milking; there goes the supper-bell.
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- * * * * *
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- Mother, your boy is crying, out in the night and cold;
- Let me in and forgive me, I'll never be bad any more:
- I'm, oh, so sick and so sorry: please, dear mother, don't scold--
- It's just your boy, and he wants you. . . . Mother, open the door. . . .
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- "Father, father, I saw a face
- Pressed just now to the window-pane!
- Oh, it gazed for a moment's space,
- Wild and wan, and was gone again!"
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- "Mother, mother, you saw the snow
- Drifted down from the maple tree
- (Oh, the wind that is sobbing so!
- Weary and worn and old are we)--
- Only the snow and a wounded loon--
- Rest and sleep, 'twill be morning soon."
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- L'Envoi
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- We talked of yesteryears, of trails and treasure,
- Of men who played the game and lost or won;
- Of mad stampedes, of toil beyond all measure,
- Of camp-fire comfort when the day was done.
- We talked of sullen nights by moon-dogs haunted,
- Of bird and beast and tree, of rod and gun;
- Of boat and tent, of hunting-trip enchanted
- Beneath the wonder of the midnight sun;
- Of bloody-footed dogs that gnawed the traces,
- Of prisoned seas, wind-lashed and winter-locked;
- The ice-gray dawn was pale upon our faces,
- Yet still we filled the cup and still we talked.
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- The city street was dimmed. We saw the glitter
- Of moon-picked brilliants on the virgin snow,
- And down the drifted canyon heard the bitter,
- Relentless slogan of the winds of woe.
- The city was forgot, and, parka-skirted,
- We trod that leagueless land that once we knew;
- We saw stream past, down valleys glacier-girted,
- The wolf-worn legions of the caribou.
- We smoked our pipes, o'er scenes of triumph dwelling;
- Of deeds of daring, dire defeats, we talked;
- And other tales that lost not in the telling,
- Ere to our beds uncertainly we walked.
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- And so, dear friends, in gentler valleys roaming,
- Perhaps, when on my printed page you look,
- Your fancies by the firelight may go homing
- To that lone land that haply you forsook.
- And if perchance you hear the silence calling,
- The frozen music of star-yearning heights,
- Or, dreaming, see the seines of silver trawling
- Across the sky's abyss on vasty nights,
- You may recall that sweep of savage splendor,
- That land that measures each man at his worth,
- And feel in memory, half fierce, half tender,
- The brotherhood of men that know the North.
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- End of this Project Gutenberg Etext of Ballads of a Cheechako
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