Page:History of Oregon Literature.djvu/289

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.
MINNIE MYRTLE MILLER
257
Let him sing of the homeless hero
Who loitered around your base,
When man, in a spacious freedom,
Lived for the camp and the chase ;
Sing of the lengthened pack trains
That wound through thy solitudes—
Of their songs that never echoed
In the wilderness of other woods.

Up high on the rounded summit
A still white cover is spread,
And a frozen cloud hangs over,
Still and stark as the dead;
On yon point the trees bend over
And crouch from the tyrannous wind,
Till he sighs in the valley repentful
And wails, "peccavi, I sinned!"
In the depths a stillness is waiting —
A slumberous stillness that fills
The air with a dull oppression,
And the heart with icy thrills.

Sing of a weary miner,
Who long, long years ago
Traversed these lonesome gulches
And climbed to a summit of snow ;
In the dead and lonely silence
He lighted his red camp-fire,
And it warmed the heart of the forest,
Reaching up higher and higher,
And the gray side of the mountain
Comes forth like a scenic show,
With a group of pantomime shadows
Wandering to and fro;

And the sound of the sea comes to him
Like thunders of distant cars;
The brook leaps up from the canyon
And catches the listless stars;