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aming eye It shone beneath night's heavy pall; Then high above the loon's lone cry Afar we heard the spirit call; It called us from the other shore. Ah, Jean will never hear it more! I could not seize or hold him back, For while the light burned pale and blue, A heavy hand from out the black Held me beside my own canoe, And ere I stirred, the other barque Had silent sped into the dark. Adown the river's drifting tide To where the wild, mad rapids run, Past pine-trees towering on each side His frail canoe had drifted on; He did not look to left or right But gazed upon that hell-born light. And ever swifter with the flow He drifted where the rapids play, His eyes still on that awful glow; Ah, God! my life seemed snatched away! I saw a gleam far up the sky And heard the echo of a cry. There's a spirit in the rapid, calling, calling through the night, There's a gleam upon the water, burning pale and burning bright. Woe to him who hears the calling! Woe to him who sees the light! The Snowdrift The snowflakes fell on a mountain peak, Where the rocks were bare and the winds were bleak, And at first they clung to the mountain's breast, But soon they fell from its lofty crest, And stained and soiled was the new-born snow When it reached the valley far down below. But up on the height one drift alone Still firmly clung to the rugged stone, And men in the gloomy vale below Looked up and gazed on the shining snow, And their darkened souls drank in the light From the gleaming snow on the mountain height. Unstained by the grime of the earthly vale, Its white breast firm in the strongest gale, It bravely clung to its lofty height And gleamed afar with its glorious light, Till kissed by the sun and the summer rain, It rose in mist to the skies again. On Mount Royal I climb its sides when the day grows old And its mighty shadow falls deep and wide, And over the gleam of the sunset's gold The darkness creeps like a rising tide; And higher and higher up rocky height, Past oaks that are gnarled by the winter's blast, I climb till a marvellous vision of light Breaks forth on my wondering sight at last. Dome and spire of house of prayer, Convent cloister gloomy and gray, Street and market and bridge lie the
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