Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Americas: Vol. XXX. 1876–79.
Lake St. Francis
By Charles Sangster (18221893)N
The lake receives us on its tranquil breast
With sweetest smiles of welcome. As a rill
Enters a valley with a lightsome zest,
After it leaves some mountain tarn, oppressed
With its wild journey ere it finds the plain,
So hail we Lake St. Francis. Love might rest
Among these isles where many a savage train
Trampled the flowers of peace, and strewed them on the main.
These nooks of quiet beauty. Here and there
An isle of shade upon a sea of glass
Floats lightly as a breath of summer air;
Verdurous points and openings so fair
’T were vain to search the misty Dreamland o’er
For such a vision as could well compare
With the broad landscape strewn from shore to shore,
That like a dear face grows in beauty more and more.
No threatening rapid rolls its vengeful way,
The ever-shifting panorama charms
And soothes the soul like an entrancing lay.
Along the shores the restless poplars stray,
Like woodland outposts watching through the night;
Yon grove of pine englooms each starry ray
And sleeps in darkest shadow; and the white
And spectral tombstones mark the graveyard’s hallowed site.
To loom like purple clouds, and a stray sail,
Like a white condor, flits across our beam,
Inviting truant breeze and loitering gale
From odorous wood and flower-besprinkled vale;
The murmurs of the isles past which we glide
Are soothing as an Oriental tale
Flung by some tuneful Hafiz far and wide,
As through the dreamy maze we dash with native pride.
One frail canoe where once the tribes in all
Their savage greatness sent their startling cry
Along their countless fleets. Thus at the call
Of Destiny whole races rise and fall;
Whole states and empires like those tribes have passed
To swell the grim historic carnival.
We, too, the puppets of to-day, that vast
And solemn masquerade must gravely join at last.
O’er all the flashing lake,—a world of calm,
Fair as the fairest picture of romance.
Night’s awful splendor thrills us like a psalm.
High and erect, and heavenward as a palm,
Our thoughts and hopes ascend. Is it not well
That we should feel at times the heavenly balm
Of contemplation soothe us like a spell?
As these too-witching scenes our grosser yearnings quell.
Arrayed as with a glory, pointing to
Vast heights of promise, where the summer lands
Rise like great hopes upon man’s spirit-view.
It warns life’s toiling pilgrim to eschew
The rocks and shoals on which too many wrecks
Of noble hearts, all searching for the true,
Have sunk in utter ruin. Man may vex
His thoughts to find out God; his searchings but perplex
One grain of faith is worth a sheaf of search.
On, love! to-night we cannot think of rest,
Past the dim islands where the silvery birch
Gleams like a shepherd’s crook. Yonder, the church
Lights us to Lancaster. And now the wide,
Wide lake, we wander over, soon to lurch
And roll and toss, as down the stream we glide,
Light as a feather on the stormy ocean-tide.