Jump to content

Canada, and Other Poems/Appeal

From Wikisource
For works with similar titles, see Appeal.
Canada, and Other Poems (1891)
by John Frederic Herbin
Appeal
4763664Canada, and Other Poems — Appeal1891John Frederic Herbin

Appeal.
———

CANADIANS I raise aloft your country's flag,Nor low to earth, nor lifeless see it drag.Up! till each sign in gentle winds unread,Meets breezes strong, and every fold is spread.Its place is high, above the feeble gustThat dims its color with a servile dust.Among the storms, there see it proudly moveThe emblem of your country and your love—Where all its noble length becomes unfurledBy winds that shake the proudest of the world.Then will the nations read upon its face,Whatever, once, their country and their race,One hope and one ambition closely tieThis people to a common destiny.A bond of kindred makes your pulses beat,Frank, Saxon, Kelt, with triple force and heat;Your veins no longer separate currents run,Your hearts now animate and beat as one.Oh noble land and nation! growing strong,One sky and flag is yours, whatever tongue.To hold and crown your rampart and your hallWith zeal and valour, needs the strength of all.My countrymen, your fathers' valiant swords,Their kings' decrees, their sages' golden words,The world through cycles down have ruled and led—A rich inheritance comes from the dead.Their wisdom and their light are for your hand,Blessed with the rule of this most fruitful land.Thick years will come, sprung from the seed you sow;And for those harvest-days that quickly flow,The nation walks a-field casting the seedOf worth and power, the future's urgent need. The sun of progress shines; and day full blest. And loud with labor from the east and west,Hangs over you. Across the western sea,Mankind new-born obeyed its destiny,Wandering westward like a current's trend;In Canada the roadway hath its end.The marching centuries of tribe and raceAround the earth, on this find halting-place.Toward either coast the ocean currents glide;Upon their waves your sailors homeward ride.No mimic ships are yours, the keels are deep;Your sons are brave when angry waters leap.A man is this whose axe doth clear the ground;And where he smites the forest tumbles round.This is a warrior, the first to bleed,The foremost in the rank of noble deed.At helm, with axe, before the foemen's guns,You live and die your fathers' worthy sons.Proud of your flag, see! how your praises swingIt straight and clear, to nations heralding.