On Mount Royal

By Frank Oliver Call

I climb its sides when the day grows old

And its mighty shadow falls deep and wide,

And over the gleam of the sunset's gold

The darkness creeps like a rising tide;

And higher and higher up rocky height,

Past oaks that are gnarled by the winter's blast,

I climb till a marvellous vision of light

Breaks forth on my wondering sight at last.

Dome and spire of house of prayer,

Convent cloister gloomy and gray,

Street and market and bridge lie there

In the golden gleam of the dying day.

Yet here on the silent mountain crest

There echoes a moan and a smothered roar

From the tide of life in its strange unrest,

As it beats below on a barren shore.