Robert W. Service. Robert W. Service

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left us on the veldt-side, but we felt we couldn’t stop

      On this, our England’s crowning festal day;

      We’re the men of Magersfontein, we’re the men of Spion Kop,

      Colenso — we’re the men who had to pay.

      We’re the men who paid the blood-price. Shall the grave be all our gain?

      You owe us. Long and heavy is the score.

      Then cheer us for our glory now, and cheer us for our pain,

      And cheer us as ye never cheered before.”

      The folks were white and stricken, and each tongue seemed weighted with lead;

      Each heart was clutched in hollow hand of ice;

      And every eye was staring at the horror of the dead,

      The pity of the men who paid the price.

      They were come, were come to mock us, in the first flush of our peace;

      Through writhing lips their teeth were all agleam;

      They were coming in their thousands — oh, would they never cease!

      I closed my eyes, and then — it was a dream.

      There was triumph, triumph, triumph down the scarlet gleaming street;

      The town was mad; a man was like a boy.

      A thousand flags were flaming where the sky and city meet;

      A thousand bells were thundering the joy.

      There was music, mirth and sunshine; but some eyes shone with regret;

      And while we stun with cheers our homing braves,

      O God, in Thy great mercy, let us nevermore forget

      The graves they left behind, the bitter graves.

From Ballads of a Cheechako

      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 the 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 patchwork 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.

      The Ballad of the Black Fox Skin

       I

      There was Claw-fingered Kitty and Windy Ike living the life of shame,

      When unto them in the Long, Long Night came the man-who-had-no-name;

      Bearing his prize of a black fox pelt, out of the Wild he came.

      His cheeks were blanched as the flume-head foam when the brown spring freshets flow;

      Deep in their dark, sin-calcined pits were his sombre eyes aglow;

      They knew him far for the fitful man who spat forth blood on the snow.

      “Did ever you see such a skin?” quoth he; “there’s nought in the world so fine —

      Such fullness of fur as black as the night, such lustre, such size, such shine;

      It’s life to a one-lunged man like me; it’s London, it’s women, it’s wine.

      “The Moose-hides called it the devil-fox, and swore that no man could kill;

      That he who hunted it, soon or late, must surely suffer some ill;

      But I laughed at them and their old squaw-tales. Ha! Ha! I’m laughing still.

      “For look ye, the skin — it’s as smooth as sin, and black as the core of the Pit.

      By gun or by trap, whatever the hap, I swore I would capture it;

      By star and by star afield and afar, I hunted and would not quit.

      “For the devil-fox, it was swift and sly, and it seemed to fleer at me;

      I would wake in fright by the campfire light hearing its evil glee;

      Into my dream its eyes would gleam, and its shadow would I see.

      “It sniffed and ran from the ptarmigan I had poisoned to excess;

      Unharmed it sped from my wrathful lead (’twas as if I shot by guess);

      Yet it came by night in the stark moonlight to mock at my weariness.

      “I tracked it up where the mountains hunch like the vertebrae of the world;

      I tracked it down to the death-still pits where the avalanche is hurled;

      From the glooms to the sacerdotal snows, where the carded clouds are curled.

      “From the vastitudes where the world protrudes through clouds like seas up-shoaled,

      I held its track till it led me back to the land I had left of old —

      The land I had looted many moons. I was weary and sick and cold.

      “I was sick, soul-sick, of the futile chase, and there and then I swore

      The

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