To the Man of the High North
My rhymes are rough,
and often in my rhyming
I’ve drifted,
silver-sailed, on seas of dream,
Hearing afar the bells
of Elfland chiming,
Seeing the groves
of Arcadie agleam.
I was the thrall of
Beauty that rejoices
From peak snow-diademed
to regal star;
Yet to mine aerie ever
pierced the voices,
The pregnant voices
of the Things That Are.
The Here, the Now, the
vast Forlorn around us;
The gold-delirium,
the ferine strife;
The lusts that lure
us on, the hates that hound us;
Our red rags in
the patch-work quilt of Life.
The nameless men who
nameless rivers travel,
And in strange
valleys greet strange deaths alone;
The grim, intrepid ones
who would unravel
The mysteries
that shroud the Polar Zone.
These will I sing, and
if one of you linger
Over my pages
in the Long, Long Night,
And on some lone line
lay a calloused finger,
Saying:
“It’s human-true it hits me
right”;
Then will I count this
loving toil well spent;
Then will I dream awhile content,
content.