Augustin S. Macdonald, comp. A Collection of Verse by California Poets. 1914.
By Rufus SteeleThe Spirit of California
I
I am Puck lacking Oberon’s ban;
When the lotus is ripe, hark my Pandean pipe
For I’m Peter the godchild of Pan.
I am Iris, my brush is a rainbow;
Endymion awakened am I;
In the breast of the tree Hamadryad I be—
With Sequoia I tickle the sky!
Ah, Calypso, less potent thy lute!
And men come to seize and lean strip my trees,
For I’m nectar that sweetens the fruit.
My breath have I blown on the melon:
When the honey bee, laden, starts home
I follow his tracks, leave my kiss on his wax:
The poppy I’ve sprinkled with chrome.
And I laugh at the reaper’s sure tread—
The sheaves are alined, it is me they would bind:
I am soul of the grain, I am bread.
In autumn men seek me in vineyards;
The purple which lures them is mine—
“The capture is nigh; quick, the press!” is their cry:
I am blood of the grape, I am wine.
I am balm that exhales from Health’s cave:
Consumed in each kernel, I live on eternal,
I am Master of Life, I’m its Slave.
From the battlements of the Sierra
The Pandean pipe I swing free,
And my far-floating tune, in the stillness of noon,
Weaves a spell from the peaks to the sea.