GOING NORTH
I
WHITE PORCHES |
|
Just as we left the avenue
I saw a golden butterfly
Flutter against the windshield.
I felt the motor take the breeze,
As gaily as a yacht might do
|
5 |
Upon some tidal river of the seas.
We sailed abroad grey asphalt
Out past the red brick houses,
And fringy, ragged outskirts
To where the fields begin. |
10 |
And Pickering, Whitby, Oshawa,
Flashed by like friendly postscripts
Of the Town’s lengthy scroll,
With dusty little detours,
And cobblestone communities |
15 |
To break the highway’s hundred miles
Of river-like content.
We smiled at sleepy Main Streets,
And joyous village gardens,
And sprawling crimson orchards, |
20 |
Heavy with ripened fruit.
Each mile or two a butterfly
Danced near the blazing windshield,
‘The same gold butterfly!’ we said,
‘And the same village street!” |
25 |
We passed a hundred porches,
Ancient and modern porches, [page 83]
And some of them were white ones,
And those we valued most.
Many a bed of phlox we passed, |
30 |
Lilac and pink and white,
And they were gardens of delight
Along our asphalt river-front,
Sheer gardens of delight.
We loved all purple calicoes |
35 |
On cheerful, ambling women,
Their morning work already done,
Sauntering through a mile of sun
Up to the general store.
Sometimes they sat on porches, |
40 |
Narrow but shining porches,
Serenely shelling peas.
‘Just what is life,’ we wondered,
‘For those who sit contented
Throughout the magic summer |
45 |
On these pale country porches,
Patching—knitting—talking—
Serenely shelling peas?’ |
|
II
GREY WILLOWS |
|
Then we turned north.
A railway train rushed by us;
|
50 |
The blue-bloused engineer
Hung from his stifling cab,
Waving a careless hand.
And in a moment we had lost
All trace of shining porches |
55 |
And sleepy village streets. [page 84]
This was a thinner world
Of smaller, leaner orchards;
Taller, barer houses;
Drier, keener air. |
60 |
Here and there grey willows,
With an eerie whisper,
Bent above a narrow stream
That languidly slipped by.
And over us the noon-day sky |
65 |
Turned brazen. Stark tree trunks
Showed where bush fires had run;
Charred columns of lost forests
Dried by the sun into fantastic shapes.
This narrow stream, |
70 |
Unnursed by tree-held snow,
Dwarfed by the fires, fifty years ago
Would have raced by us foaming,
Even in summer, through a world of green—
A lost green world of butterflies and fern, |
75 |
And soft anemones in spring;
But now at every jagged, ugly turn
Only a brush heap where the woods had been.
The very soil is scorched—
Scorched the brown ferns |
80 |
Descended from the ones that long ago
Were licked into a burning wind of flame.
Poor, narrow, little stream,
Bereft of that green dream
That holds the snow! . . . |
85 |
There was a bit of rock a mile ago,
The preface of the North. [page 85] |
|
III
BUSH ROAD |
|
A soft swamp road,
For forty miles through bracken and through fern,
Smooth as a snake,
|
90 |
With turn on twisted turn—
Yet, as it wrinkled on its way,
The softly-yielding earth that overlay its granite
Seemed to say
That once the lumber trails ran here, |
95 |
And once the voyageur
Sang as he paddled down the foaming stream,
And once the woodmen came,
Great gangs of woodmen
With the axe and spike, |
100 |
Who set up rude encampments.
Then, to hoarse shouts and orders,
To laughter and to oaths,
To roaring fires at night and whiskey-haunted songs,
The soft green forest fell. |
105 |
It died robustly as it lived,
And had its will of singing and of strife,
An ardent, powerful, various sort of life
That held within itself a better fate
Than this of late— |
110 |
A trail up to the playground of the North,
A bracken-haunted, snaky road,
A soft surprise to strangers, a delight. [page 86] |
|
IV
PAINTED ROCK |
|
Then the North took us,
Forced us through rocky walls,
|
115 |
Tore at our tires,
Gave us no inch of earth
Upon our steady climb.
Yet even here, beside the cruel road,
Were scraggy plots of farm, |
120 |
And wood-piles neatly stacked,
And shacks, and gloomy faces.
Then an acre of more fertile land,
Pine trees and woods,
And suddenly, like a blue cup held high, |
125 |
The lake Mazinawa. . .
All silence, silence, silence—
Dark colours filling the blue cup.
And, like a purple stain against the sunset,
The great rock of Mazinawa, |
130 |
Sacred to Indian tribes how long ago!
A thousand years ago?
What is there left to know!
It looms up larger than I dreamed;
Roadways of rock |
135 |
And canyons full of light;
Niched balconies for pines bent all one way;
Small birds in flight,
Dashing against the dark
Of that vast rocky flank, |
140 |
Whose sides of iron seams,
Laid under golden lichen, [page 87]
Have been a place of dreams
And of brute sacrifice.
What if it has a power to draw us near |
145 |
As in the days of fear?
When from the rocklands of the Georgian Bay
Or through the bush roads whence we came to-day,
But then on foot, soft-padding all the way,
Or in the war canoes |
150 |
They crowded to this small blue lake of theirs
And an old shrine . . .
What are we floating towards
In this small, low canoe?
A naked, ceremonial singing past |
155 |
Seems to reach out and whisper. [page 88] |
|
[back to Contents]
|