Popular Posts

Labels

Showing posts with label Sir Charles G. D. Roberts (1860-1943). Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sir Charles G. D. Roberts (1860-1943). Show all posts

Sunday, 14 April 2013

Spring Breaks in Foam-Sir Charles G. D. Roberts (1860-1943)

Spring breaks in foam
Along the blackthorn bough.
Whitethroat and goldenwing
Are mating now.
With green buds in the copse
And gold bloom in the sun
Earth is one ecstasy
Of life begun.
And in my heart
Spring breaks in glad surprise
As the long frosts of the long years melt
At your dear eyes.

Burnt Lands-Sir Charles G. D. Roberts (1860-1943)

On other fields and other scenes the morn
Laughs from her blue,--but not such fields are these,
Where comes no cheer of summer leaves and bees,
And no shade mitigates the day's white scorn.
These serious acres vast groves adorn;
Bur giant trunks, bleak shapes that once were trees,
Tower naked, unassuaged of rain or breeze,
Their stern grey isolation grimly borne.

The months roll over them, and mark no change
But when spring stirs, or autumn stills, the year,
Perchance some phantom leafage rustles faint
Through their parched dreams,--some old-time notes
ring strange,
When in his slender treble, far and clear,
Reiterates the rain-bird his complaint.

The Squatter-Sir Charles G. D. Roberts (1860-1943)


Round the lone clearing
Clearly the whitethroats call
Across the marge of dusk and dewfall's coolness.


Far up in the empty
Amber and apple-green sky
A night-hawk swoops, and twangs her silver chord.

No winds astir,
But the poplar boughs breathe softly
And the smoke of a dying brush-fire stings the air.

The spired, dark spruces
Crowd up to the snake fence, breathless,
Expectant till the rising of the moon.

In the wet alders,
Where the cold brook flows murmuring,
The red cow drinks--the cow-bell sounds tonk tonk.
*********           ********          ********   ******
From his cabin door
The squatter lounges forth,
Sniffs the damp air, and scans the sky for rain.

He has made his meal,--
Fat bacon, and buckwheat cakes,
And ruddy-brown molasses from Barbados.

His chores all done,
He seats himself on the door-sill,
And slowly fills his pipe, and smokes, and dreams.

He sees his axe
Leaning against the birch logs.
The fresh white chips are scattered over the yard.

He hears his old horse
nosing the hay, in the log barn
Roofed with poles and sheathed with sheets of birch-
     bark.

Beyond the barn
He sees his buckwheat patch.
Its pink-white bloom pale-gleaming through
     twilight.

Its honeyed fragrance
Breathes to his nostrils, mingled
With the tang of the brush-fire smoke, thinly ascending.

Deepens the dusk.
The whitethroats are hushed; and the night-hawk
Drops down from the sky and hunts the low-flying
     night-moths.
*****  *****  *****  *****  *****  *****  *****
The squatter is dreaming.
Vaguely he plans how, come winter,
He'll chop out another field, just over the brook.

He'll build a new barn
Next year, a barn with a haymow,
No more to leave his good hay outside in a stack.
He rises and stretches
Goes in and closes the door,
And lights his lamp on the table beside the window.
The light shines forth.
It lights up the wide-strewn chips.
For a moment it catches the dog darting after a rabbit.
I lights up the lean face
Of the squatter as he sits reading,
Knitting his brow as he spells out a month-old paper.
*****  *****  *****  *****  *****  *****  *****
Slowly the moon,
Humped, crooked, red, remote
Rises, tangled and scrawled behind the spruce tops.

Higher she rises,--
Grows rounder, and smaller and white,
And sails up the empty sky high over the spruce-tops.

She washes in silver
illusively clear, the log barn,
The lop-sided stack by the barn, and the slumbering 
     cabin.
She floods in the window,--
And the squatter stirs in his bunk,
On his mattress stuffed with green fir-tips, balsamy
     scented.
*****  *****  *****  *****  *****  *****  *****
From the dark of the forest
The horned owl hoots, and is still.
Startled, the silence descends, and broods once more
     on the clearing.

The Clearing-Sir Charles G. D. Roberts (1860-1943)

Stumps and harsh rocks, and prostrate trunks all
charred
And gnarled roots naked to the sun and rain,--
They seem in their grim stillness to complain,
And by their plaint the evenings peace is jarred.
These ragged acres fire and the axe have scarred,
And many summers not assuaged their pain.
In vain the pink and saffron light, in vain
The pale dew on the hillocks stripped and marred!

But here and there the waste is touched with cheer
Where spreads the fire-weed like a crimson flood
And venturous plumes of goldenrod appear;
And round the blackened fence the great boughs lean
With comfort; and across the solitude
The hermits holy transport peals serene

Monday, 16 November 2009

The Native-Sir Charles G. D. Roberts (1860-1943)

Rocks, I am one with you
Sea, I am yours.
Your rages come and go,
Your strength endures.

Passion may burn and fade;
Pain surge and cease.
My still soul rests unchanged
Through storm and peace.

Fir-tree beaten by wind,
Sombre, austere,
Your sap is in my veins
O kinsmen dear,

Your fibres rude and true
My sinews feed--
Sprung of the same bleak earth,
The same rough seed.

The tempest harries us.
I raves and dies'
And wild limbs rest again
Under wide skies.

Grass, that the salt hath scourged,
Dauntless and grey,
Through the harsh season chide
your scant array,

Year by year you return
To conquer fate,
the clean life nourishing you
Makes me, too, great.

O rocks, O fir-tree brave,
O grass and sea!
Your strength is mine, and you
Endure with me