Title: Carols of Canada, Etc., Etc.
Author: E. S. MacLeod
Release date: March 2, 2017 [eBook #54271]
Language: English
Credits: E-text prepared by Larry B. Harrison, Brian Wilsden, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
Note: | Images of the original pages are available through Internet Archive. See https://archive.org/details/carolsofcanadaet00maclrich |
Charlottetown, P. E. I.
Printed by John Coombs, Queen Street
1893
Entered according to Act of Parliament, in the year 1893,
By Elizabeth S. MacLeod,
In the Office of the Minister of Agriculture.
To
The Honourable
Sir Donald A. Smith,
K. C. M. G., LL. D.
These Carols of Canada, etc., etc.,
are
Most Respectfully Inscribed.
In sending forth these gleanings from the later compositions of my few leisure hours, I take the opportunity of thanking most sincerely those many friends who have so generously subscribed for the work. Not only has their kind appreciation caused me to realize that I am no longer a stranger in a strange land, but also, that I possess the whole-souled sympathy of not a few, in this the country of my adoption.
Many are the tender memories which unite me to the olden land: a land for ever hallowed as the quiet resting-place of the lovèd dead, and the once happy home of a love-encircled childhood. Still, I cannot but deplore the many evils existing therein; more especially that evil of a system which places the greater number at the mercy of the fewer—the debasing system of extensive landlordism; a system which may have suited in those former periods when kingdoms and positions were mainly dependent upon force of arms, but for which there can be no plausible apology in this progressive, and pretentiously humanizing age; and if any words of mine shall induce the tyrant-crushed and woe-oppressed of other climes to raise their eyes towards the setting sun, and to seek a home in this Canada,—this God-appointed haven, these words shall not have been penned in vain.
I cherish the utmost faith in the future of Canada—faith which leads me to look beyond my little day and view her, with ample resources still developing, with invitations of welcome still extended, a full-grown nation of intelligent, enterprising and generous-souled people, more glorious by far than the world-renowned empires of the past; a nation unfettered from bigotry of sect, envy of position, and clannishness of clime; a nation whose belief is in the eternal fatherhood of God, and the universal brotherhood of humanity; a nation whose every act of every day life is the pure and lofty exponent of a Christly Christianity, and in whose healthy moral atmosphere vice with its attendant train of evils cannot exist; a nation upon which, over all its boundless pasture lands and by its many sounding shores, the sun of Freedom shines, and the honest, earnest worshipper bendeth never a humble knee save to fair Freedom's God.
E. S. MACLEOD.
Charlottetown, Nov. 1893.
Page. | |
Carols of Canada: | |
Canada | 3 |
The Founding of Montreal | 5 |
The Huntsman | 7 |
Cape Le Force | 9 |
Sister St. Thomas | 14 |
The Message | 20 |
His Offering | 21 |
Louisburg, 1745 | 22 |
The Woods and The Sea | 24 |
The Gate | 26 |
The Hiding-place | 29 |
A Christmas Memory | 31 |
The Immigrant's Appeal | 33 |
The Queen's Jubilee | 34 |
Point Prim | 38 |
Orwell Bay | 39 |
Going Abroad | 41 |
The Student | 42 |
The Pioneer | 46 |
The Olden Flag | 53 |
Idylls of the Year: | |
The Old Year and the New | 57 |
Spring | 60 |
Summer | 62 |
Autumn | 63 |
Winter | 64 |
Easter | 65 |
Thanksgiving | 66 |
Christmas Eve | 67 |
Christmas | 70 |
The Siege of Quebec | 73 |
Personal: | |
Our Queen | 91 |
Princess of Wales | 92 |
Prince George | 94 |
Gladstone | 95 |
Sir J. A. Macdonald | 96 |
Hon. Alex. Mackenzie | 97 |
In Memoriam | 98 |
Bishop MacIntyre | 99 |
Bishop Brooks | 101 |
After Many Years | 102 |
Tennyson | 102 [viii] |
Spurgeon | 104 |
Beecher | 105 |
Alleluia | 107 |
"Three Years" | 108 |
The Evening Star | 109 |
Rhymes of Ancient Rome: | |
Horatius, B.C., 650 | 113 |
Pyrrhus, B.C., 280 | 116 |
Marius, B.C., 86 | 118 |
Brutus, B.C., 42 | 122 |
Marcus Curtius | 125 |
Crawfurd Castle | 131 |
Songs of Scotia: | |
The Scotch Gathering | 141 |
Skye | 143 |
Bonnie Dundee | 143 |
The Heatherbell | 147 |
Bonnier | 148 |
The Doctor's Fee | 149 |
The Vision | 153 |
Loch Katrine | 154 |
Content | 156 |
Miscellaneous: | |
Columbus | 161 |
Time and Eternity | 163 |
The Tree | 164 |
The Shipwreck | 167 |
De Profundis | 168 |
Eclipse of the Moon | 169 |
Erin's Address to Freedom | 170 |
The Gift | 172 |
Ever Faithful | 172 |
The Hired Boy | 173 |
Laurels | 178 |
St. Patrick's Day | 179 |
To the Poet | 181 |
To The Ocean | 182 |
The Orange | 183 |
St. Andrew's Day | 184 |
Good Bye and Good Night | 187 |
The Rose | 188 |
Home from School | 189 |
To H. M. S. "Blake" | 191 |
Retrospect | 192 |
Notes | 197 |
CAROLS OF CANADA.
I.
II.
Inside the new oped lazar-house,III.
Still raged the dreaded pestilence,IV.
Just then a messenger was hailed;"Unbridled appetite was followed by deadly fever, and before
Spring 1200 of Peperell's men filled graves in the conquered soil."
I.
II.
Now harmony striketh a tender chordIII.
Vanished that picture of glorious youth,IDYLLS OF THE YEAR.
THE OLD.
THE NEW.
And turn, with heart of hope, to hailI.
II.
III.
THE SIEGE OF QUEBEC.
I.
PRELUDE.
II.
THE BOMBARDMENT.
III.
THE BATTLE.
IV.
THE SURRENDER.
PERSONAL.
RHYMES OF ANCIENT ROME.
CRAWFURD CASTLE.
I.
II.
"Dear Cousin Ida! on this day I crave thy special grace!"SONGS OF SCOTIA.
MISCELLANEOUS.
I.
II.
"Only your hired boy! yet nurtured in wealth,III.
"You took him home. Ah what record of shame!IV.
Ponder life's teachings; con each of them well;I.
II.
And yet—tis passing sad that rhyme,III.
Earth's glamour fails, it cannot marII.
"Drifting of smoke wreath, darting of flame;III.
"Deep murmurs from out of the frowning skies;IV.
"A young mother sat on a vessel's deck,V.
"Name it not chance; No! in earliest youthVI.
Intently I listened, but scant my reply;FINIS.
"Skilled Nurses." Page 16.—
When the epidemic of small-pox visited Charlottetown in the year 1885, three nuns from the City Hospital volunteered their professional services. The generous offer was at first refused, but afterwards gladly accepted. Sister St. Thomas never recovered from the effects of her labours in the improvised Hospital; she died in Montreal the following Spring.
"Whose skill and courage." Page 19.
—Dr. Richard Johnson, Health Officer, distinguished himself by unremitting devotion to his arduous duties; and also, along with Dr. Warburton, attended all cases in the city; while Dr. J. T. Jenkins, with his son, Dr. S.R. Jenkins, were in constant attendance at the Hospital. Notable also were Mayor H. Beer, and clergymen Carruthers, O'Meara and MacIntyre.
"The Hiding-place." Page 29.—
Incidents in the career of the much beloved and widely lamented Bishop MacIntyre.
"In Memoriam." Page 98.—
In memory of the pious and charitable Mrs. M. M. T. Hodgson, daughter of the late Hon. J. Brecken, and wife of the Hon. Edward J. Hodgson, Master of the Rolls of P. E. Island, Canada; who died on the 19th October, 1889.
"The heroes of Skye." Page 143.—
During the Peninsular war the small island of Skye sent out, to fight the battles of Great Britain, no fewer than ten thousand men, many of whom arose to highest positions in the army.
"Two frigates." Page 153.—
When the descendants of many of those brave soldiers lately rebelled against landlord tyranny, warships were despatched to Skye, to intimidate the oppressed.
"Bonnie, braw Dundee." Page 145.—
Graeme of Claverhouse, created for his military services, Viscount Dundee; noted as an able General, but held in detestation as the cruel persecutor of the Scotch Covenanters.
"The Macneill." Page 142.—
Archd. MacNeill, Esq., long the President, and ever an ardent supporter of the Caledonian Club.
"The spirit which rose." Page 180.—
Daniel O'Connell, the Irish Liberator.
"Who dignifieth, etc." Page 186.—
Hon. Senator A. A. Macdonald, for some time Member of the Legislative Council, and one of the delegates to the Quebec Conference anent Confederation. Elevated to the position of Lieutenant-Governor of Prince Edward Island, 1884; since, in 1891, appointed to the Senatorship. For the last fifteen years the honoured Chief of the Caledonian Club.
"H. M. S. Blake." Page 191.—
H. M. S. Blake, Admiral Sir John Hopkins, anchored in Charlottetown Harbour, 18th August, 1893.
"Abegweit." Page 191.—
Home on the Wave—Indian name for P. E. Island.
"Port La Joie." Page 192.—
Former name of Charlottetown.
Transcriber's Note.
1. Silently corrected simple spelling, grammar, and typographical errors.
2. Retained anachronistic and non-standard spellings as printed.
3. Text references have been linked to the "Notes" at the end of the book.