Time for me to resurrect my favourite seasonal poem, the somewhat - TopicsExpress



          

Time for me to resurrect my favourite seasonal poem, the somewhat cheesy but to me delightful Song of the Ski by Canadian poet Wilson Pugsley MacDonald. THE SONG OF THE SKI Norse am I when the first snow falls; Norse am I till the ice departs. The fare for which my spirit calls Is blood from a hundred Viking hearts. The curved wind wraps me like a cloak; The pines blow out their ghostly smoke. I’m high on the hill and ready to go- A wingless bird in a world of snow: Yet I’ll ride the air With a dauntless dare That only a child of the north can know. The bravest ski has a cautious heart And moves like a tortoise at the start, But when it tastes the tang of the air It leaps away like a frightened hare. The day is gloomy, the curtains half-drawn, And light is stunted as at the dawn; But my foot is sure and my arm is brawn, I poise on the hill and I wave adieu, My curving skis are firm and true, The slim wood quickens, the air takes fire And sings to me like a gypsy’s lyre. Swifter and swifter grows my flight: The dark pines ease the unending white. The lean, cold birches, as I go by, Are like blurred etchings against the sky. One am I for a moment’s joy With the falling star and the plunging bird. The world is swift as an Arab boy; The world is sweet as a woman’s word. Never came such a pure delight To a bacchanal or a sybarite: Swifter and swifter grows my flight And glad am I as I near the leap, That the snow is fresh and the banks are deep. Swifter and swifter on I fare, And soon I’ll float with the birds on air. The speed is blinding; I’m over the ridge, Spanning space on a phantom bridge. The drifts await me; I float, I fall: The world leaps like a lunging carp. I land erect and the tired winds drawl A lazy rune on a broken harp. Child of the roofless world am I; Not of those hibernating drones Who fear the grey of a winter sky And the shrieking wind’s ironic tones, Who shuffle cards in a cloud of smoke Or crawl like frozen flies at chess, Or gossip all day with meddling folk In collar of starch and a choking dress. Come, ye maids of the vanity-box, Come, ye men of the stifling air: The white wind waits at your door and knocks; The white snow calls you everywhere, Come, ye lads of the lounge and chair, And gird your feet with the valiant skis And mount the steed of the winter air And hold the reins of the winter breeze. Lord of the mountains dark with pine! Lord of the fields of smoking snow! Grant to this vagrant heart of mine A path of wood where my feet may go, And a roofless world to my journey’s end, And a cask of wind for my cup of wine, And yellow gold of the sun to spend, And at night the stars in endless line, And after it all the hand of a friend— The hand of a trusted friend in mine.
Posted on: Wed, 14 Jan 2015 21:51:19 +0000

Trending Topics



Recently Viewed Topics




© 2015