IN CAMP AT JUNIPER COVE

By Gilbert Parker

A little brown sparrow came tripping

Across the green grass at my feet;

A kingfisher poised, and was peering

Where current and calm water meet;

The clouds hung in passionless clusters

Above the green hills of the south;

A bobolink fluttered to leeward

With a twinkle of bells in its mouth.

Ah, the morning was silver with glory

As I lay by my tent on the shore;

And the soft air was drunken with odours,

And my soul lifted up to adore.

Is there wonder I took me to dreaming

Of the gardens of Greece and old Rome,

Of the fair watered meadows of Ida,

And the hills where the gods made their home?

Of the Argonauts sung to by Sirens,

Of Andromache, Helen of Troy,

Of Proserpine, Iphigenia,

And the Fates that build up and destroy?

Of the phantom isle, green Theresea,

And the Naiads and Dryads that give

To the soul of the poet, the dreamer,

The visions of fancy that live

In the lives and the language of mortals

Unconscious, but sure as the sea,

And that make for great losses repayment

To wandering singers like me?

But a little brown sparrow came tripping

Across the green grass at my feet;

And a kingfisher poised, and was peering

Where current and calm water meet;

And Alice, sweet Alice, my neighbour,

Stands musing beneath the pine tree;

And her look says — “I have a lover

Who sails on the turbulent sea:

Does he dream as I dream night and daytime

Of a face that is tender and true;

Will he come to me e'en as he left me?”

Yes, Alice, sweet Alice, for you,

Is the sunlight, and not the drear shadow,

The gentle and fortunate peace:

But he who thus revels in rhyming

Has shadows that never shall cease.