The White Canoe, and Other Verse cover

The White Canoe, and Other Verse

by Alan Sullivan

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About This Book

Leather Binding on Spine and Corners with Golden leaf printing on spine. This book is printed in black & white, Sewing binding for longer life, where the book block is actually sewn (smythe sewn/section sewn) with thread before binding which results in a more durable type of binding. Reprinted in 2022 with the help of original edition published long back 1891. As this book is reprinted from a very old book, there could be some missing or flawed pages. If it is multi vo Resized as per current standards. We expect that you will understand our compulsion with such books. 38 The white canoe, and other verse by Alan Sullivan 1891 Alan Sullivan

17

Chapters

~204 min

Est. Listening Time

English

Language

0

The White Canoe And other Verse

BY ALAN SULLIVAN

TORONTO: THE J. E. BRYANT CO. (LTD.) 1891.

The White Canoe

And other Verse.

The White Canoe.

There's a whisper of life in the grey dead trees, And a murmuring wash on the shore, And a breath of the South in the loitering breeze, To tell that a winter is o'er. While free, at last, from its fetters of ice The river is clear and blue, And cries with a tremulous quivering voice For the launch of the White Canoe.

Oh, gently the ripples will kiss her side, And tenderly bear her on; For she is the wandering phantom bride Of the river she rests upon; She is loved with a love that cannot forget, A passion so strong and true, That never a billow has risen yet To peril the White Canoe.

So come when the moon is enthroned in the sky, And the echoes are sweet and low, And Nature is full of the mystery That none but her children know; Come, taste of the rest that the weary crave, But is only revealed to a few: When there's trouble on shore, there's peace on the wave, Afloat in the White Canoe.

A Vision.

To-night, sweetheart, when all about me lay In shadow deep the wood, I felt my soul within me reel and sway And pulse my sluggish blood, As when along a quiet land-locked bay Swells some resistless flood.

My spirit leapt from out its earthly prison, Higher and ever higher, Until it reached those barriers Elysian Where the eternal fire Creates one great impassable division Twixt us and our desire.

Up, till it left the regions of the night, Of sorrow and of fear, Emerging into that soft mellow light, That radiance pure and clear, Where Love reigns all supreme, and all is bright If only Love be near.

There through sweet meadows, on by brimming streams, Wandered my soul at will, And saw such forms as haunt our loveliest dreams And, waking, haunt us still; Voices like music, smiles like sunny beams Lost in a rippling rill.

But ah! my soul saw one supremely fair, One form the most divine, One face enhaloed all with golden hair, In beauty most benign, Surpassing all the perfect beauty there: Heart of my heart, 'twas thine!

My soul went forth, but all grew strange and dim— Meadow and stream were gone— I heard a sound as of a far-off hymn By night winds softly blown; Then all around me seemed to sink and swim, And I am here alone.

A Question.

Pale Moon, whose tranquil orb resplendent sails The ethereal main; thy curved prow For ever braving the celestial gales, Serene and slow:

Myriads of Stars, that ever dot the blue Great vault of heaven: eyes that keep Eternal watch, unshaken, strong, and true, Yet never sleep:

Ye southern Zephyrs, redolent with balm Of myrtle, orange, and the rose; Blowing from islands where the fronded palm In beauty grows:

Wind of the North, whose trumpet voice can shake The shuddering echoes of the cave; Storm-born, blast-driven; thou, whose breath doth make The mighty wave:

Perpetual Fire, whose never-dying flame Consumes the glowing heart of earth, Until a wide destruction shall proclaim A second birth:

Tell me, oh! mighty concourse, have ye seen In all this great infinity Of worlds unborn and planets that have been, A place for me?

Confession, Creed, and Prayer.

Silent around me a cathedral dim, Still throbbing with the echoes of a hymn, Lifted its ghostly arches, great and grim;

Slowly the worshippers had filed away; Untenanted the vacant cloisters lay; As even followed on the steps of day;

But one remained, who bent his reverent head Where graven figures slumber with the dead, And spake with faltering accents, and he said:

"Light, light, more light; Great Father, give me light; I cannot see my way, so dark the night; My finite heart shrinks from the infinite.

"Anon the shadow lifts: my straining eyes One moment see that which before me lies; This fades, and new-born hope within me dies.

"I looked for sunshine, yet there cometh rain; My sweetest pleasure turneth into pain: I would sink back to nothingness again.

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