The Oxford Book of Canadian Verse
QuebecJohn Campbell, Duke of Argyll (18451914)
O
Majestic as thy memories great,
Where mountain-floods and forests mate
The grandeur of the glorious dreams,
Born of the hero-hearts who died
In founding here an empire’s pride.
Hath paced thy streets, thy terrace way;
From rampart sod or bastion grey
Hath marked thy sea-like river greet
The bright and peopled banks which shine
In front of the far mountain’s line;
Thy glittering roofs below, the play
Of currents where the ships entwine
Their spars, or laden pass away.
Past guarded gates to trumpet sound,
Along the devious ways that wound
O’er drawbridges, through moats, and showed
The vast St. Lawrence flowing, belt
The Orleans Isle, and seaward melt;
Then by old walls with cannon crowned,
Down stair-like streets, to where we felt
The soft winds blown o’er meadow ground.
And Learning from Laval looks down,
And quiet convents grace the town;
There, swift to meet the battle-shock,
Montcalm rushed on; and eddying back
Red slaughter marked the bridge’s track;
See now the shores with lumber brown,
And girt with happy lands which lack
No loveliness of summer’s crown.
With purple lilacs, poplars tall,
Where flits the yellow-bird, and fall
The deep eave-shadows. There, when tilled
The peasant’s field or garden bed,
He rests content if o’er his head,
From silver spires, the church bells call
To gorgeous shrines, and prayers that gild
The simple hopes and lives of all.