The Birth Of The Land

By Pat O Cotter

For a thousand years the Devil crouched

  On the white hot flags of hell:

For a thousand years the Devil cursed

  The imps that had chained him well;

For a thousand years the Devil sulked

  And planned with his hell-trained brain

Of the things he'd do, when his term was thru,

  And freed from the blistering chain.

He'd even the score with the men of earth,

  And give them back pain for pain,

For all of the days he had felt the blaze

  And the sear of the galling chain.

And it came to pass when his time was up

  And hell's gates were opened wide

That all hell rang, and the clinkered imps sang

  When the Devil passed Outside.

"I have served my time," the Devil said

  As he halted by heaven's gate;

I have sweated in hell for a thousand years

  And each year was a year of hate.

I have framed my plans for a thousand years,

  I have worked out the details well

Now I'd have a place near the human race

  As a sort of a prep school for hell.

The sons of men, on the earth below

  Have scarcely a chance to sin,

Churched, belled and gowned, they mope around

  By precept, all sealed in;

There is never a sin for lust of flesh

  Nor sin for a man struck blow,

And the red blood crime of the olden time

  Has passed with the long ago.

Hell's motley crew is scarce worth coal

  When they come to the thing called death;

They squat on the coals with the real damned souls

  And listen with bated breath,

To the tales of the earth, when the world was new,

When a man had to fight for his own,

When he took his wife at the risk of his life

  And killed for a half-baked bone.

Now I'd build a place where a man might sin

  For the sake of his own desires;

Make his the cause, and his the laws,

  And the penalty, mine own fires;

Hast a place on earth to breed such men

  Each for his own deeds blamed?

If you'll give me a place, I'll breed a race

  That hell may not be shamed.

The God King sighed as he searched the plat

  And the map of the earth below;

I have given a place for every race

  In the belt from snow to snow.

I have given a home to each bird and beast

  For even the fox has its hole,

I have given all land to the sons of man

  And I've builded a home for his soul.

In the seven days that I toiled below

  When I builded the seas and lands,

There was much to do, and I didn't get thru

  And one place unfinished stands.

It's the part of my work that I really regret,

  For I know it's the worst of the lot,

It's known down below as The Land of the Snow,

  Or, The Country that God forgot.

It stands apart by the Northern Pole,

  Unfinished, forgotten, alone,

And no man's hand has won this land,

  And no man calls it his own.

The country is made up of odds and ends,

  Unfinished mountain, and swamp and lake,

Stuff that couldn't be used when the earth was fused;

  If you want it, it's yours to take.

"I'll take this plot," the Devil quoth,

  "For I like your description well,

Yes, I'll take this place and I'll mould a race

  That will be a credit to hell."

Then he whistled an imp from the uttermost part

  And they dropped as the comets whirled

Past the white baked stars, past Venus and Mars

  To the unfinished part of the world.

He landed at last on Denali's crest

  And he gazed on his acres wide--

Barren and bleak, from each mountain peak

  And swamp to the Arctic's tide.

The Devil grinned as he stood and gazed

  Said he, "This is just what I need,

It's the place of my plan, for the downfall of man

  Where I'll change his ambition to greed."

Then he summoned the legions of hell to his side

  Named an arch imp to straw boss each crew.

Tho they gibbered and cursed, each one did the worst

  With the jobs Satan gave them to do.

They tumbled the mountains high up, and on end,

  Piled glaciers where streams ought to be,

And swamp land was placed in the desolate waste

  That stretched from the hills to the sea.

They shook down all hell for a climate to fit,

  But they couldn't get suited in hell,

So they took the worst parts and with devilish arts

  They built one that suited them well.

They laid out muck swamps where the water lies dead

  Bred mosquitoes and moose flies and gnats

Put the brown bear that kills on the barren brown hills

  And with quill pigs infested the flats.

They shut off the sun for full half of the year,

  Made each glacier a blizzard blown trap,

They strung out volcanoes half way to Japan

  Each one with a hair trigger cap.

They planned for the coast line a system of storms

  Each equipped with a ninety mile breath

And then spread o'er it all the fog that men call

  The North Coast mantle of death.

Then knowing full well that man would not go

  To a Land so forlorn to behold,

He salted the hillsides and some of the streams

  With nuggets and traces of gold.

He tinted the hills with a green copper ledge

  And covered the valleys with game,

All this for a lure, then the Devil felt sure

  That the white man would fall for the same.

      *      *      *      *      *

THE LAND

The lure of the little known places

  Still calls, as it called to your sires;

The longing for wide open spaces,

  The perfume of evening camp fires;

The hunting for treasure unfound yet

  The knocking at fortune's own gate;

The doing of deeds for the joy that it breeds

  Were all used by the Devil as bait.

The summers besprinkled with sunshine,

  The hillsides a riot of bloom

With meadows a color shot grandeur

  And valleys as still as a tomb.

With mountains of cloud-encased beauty

  Or with stars shining down on it all

It's the trails we don't know that call us to go

  And no wonder man heeded the call.

The winters, the trails all unbroken,

  The far fields that beckon and call;

The song of the frost on the runners

  And the Northern Lights high over all;

The trees in the bend of the river,

  The streams that nobody has spanned;

The whisper of gold, the story half told,

  All this by the Devil was planned.

When the trap of the Devil was ready

  Widespread went the whisper of gold,

And the white men stampeded like cattle,

  There never was tie that could hold.

The first mad rush to the Northland

  When the scum from the four ends of earth

Came in with a rush, a scramble, a crush

  Like scrap in a fusing pot hurled.

They came all untaught and not ready,

  Spurred on in the mad rush for gold;

They died here unsung and uncared for

  Of famine, and scurvy and cold.

They had the same laws as the wolf pack,

  Stay up, for you die if you fail,

And the paths to the Northern placers

  Are marked by their graves on the trail.

The towns that they started were plague spots

  With brothels and dance halls aglare,

With cribs, faro banks and roulette wheels

  And phonographs adding their blare.

All traps for the young and unwary,

  All builded to help with his fall,

Never dealer was fair, never game on the square

  For the Devil presided o'er all.

Nick fiendishly grinned when he saw his work

  And he chuckled with devilish glee--

"When it comes to making an up-to-date hell

  They've sure got to hand it to me.

For every ten souls that come in to this land

  There's nine of them headed for hell

With never a fight, the percentage is right,

  And my prep school is doing quite well."

      *      *      *      *      *

Thus for a time he ruled this land

  Where few might venture forth,

For never a man-made law held good

  From Dixon's Entrance north.

He held this land in his claw tipped grip,

  And he took his pay in souls,

Theirs was the blame, for they played his game,

  And they paid for it on hell's coals.

But the Devil lost when the law came in,

  Or the men who made the laws,

The gambling hall and the dance hall went

  And the Devil was forced to pause.

For the life in the land develops men,

  Men of an alien breed,

A new made lot, that couldn't be bought,

  And strangers to graft or greed.

They loosed the land from the Devil's grip,

  They pierced the hills with their trails,

They flagged the rocks at the harbor's mouth,

  They paved the way for the rails.

They builded a school where the dance hall stood

  And they brought in their children and wives;

They gave their all to the new land's call

  And some of them gave their lives.

Now the pimp and the brothel have passed away

  And the gambling hall is a dream;

A railroad train now follows the trail

  Where we followed a nine-dog team.

A thousand stamps now sing their song

  Where we panned on the gold shot ledge,

And a picture show now marks the line

  That once was the frontier's edge.

The milch cows graze where the brown bear roamed

  And a saw mill sings its lay

On a bar in the Yukon River

  Where we panned one summer day.

They are raising wheat where the bull moose grazed

  In the summers of long ago,

It seems kind of strange when we note the change,

  But we'd rather have it so.

      *      *      *      *      *

Yet, sometimes we dream as we camp at night

  In the bend of the river's flow

Of the land that was, of the land we knew

  In the days of the long ago.

The wild free land that bred the men

  Who fought with might and main

And took this land from the Devil's hand,

  And we'd like to see it again,