Canadian Singers and Their Songs/Wilson MacDonald
WILSON MACDONALD
AUTHOR OF "THE SONG OF THE PRAIRIE LAND AND OTHER POEMS."
A Song to the Singers.
Should you descend the stairway of old time,
And search the webbed wine cellars of the years,
The breaking of each vessel of sweet rhyme
Will make most merry music for thine ears.
No time is dead that gave the world a song
The larger hours were wet with music’s flagon,
And half the garlands of the brave belong
To runes that calmed the courage of the dragon
•
The clouds that flowed o’er robust Rome have found
Another prop to lean on than her stone
But in the heart of music still abound
Sweet traces of her tragic poet’s tone
And yonder tower that crowds the ampler air
Shall dream in dust before my rhyming story.
Let those who build arise where eagles dare
I’ll mount, on this white page, to surer glory.
•
What arrow ever pierced a traitors crown
That winged not out from some fair singer’s heart?
What courage on the ramparts of a town
But fired its vigor with our choric art?
Tomorrow one shall ride the steel–lipped way,
Or fold his arms when mast and helm are sinking,
Who wandered by the muses rill to–day
And roused his valor at my fountain drinking.
Vancouver, BCWilson Macdonald.
Dec. 23rd 1913