It surely is no secret that one of my most favourite places is "Algonquin Park."
Many years ago I happened upon this poem, written by Marjory Pickthall and was taken aback by the mood it creates, so much like what one might feel when camping on the shores of Misty Lake or any of the hundreds of lakes we have visited there.
The poem is Marjory's, the title is mine.
Misty
Lake
WiND-SILVERED
willows hedge the stream,
And
all within is hushed and cool.
The water, in an endless dream,
Goes sliding down from pool to pool.
And every pool a sapphire is,
From shadowy deep to sunlit edge,
Ribboned around with irises
And cleft with emerald spears of sedge.
O, every morn the winds are stilled,
The sunlight falls in amber bars.
O, every night the pools are filled
With silver brede of shaken stars.
O, every morn the sparrow flings
His elfin trills athwart the hush,
And here unseen at eve there sings
One crystal-throated hermit-thrush.
The water, in an endless dream,
Goes sliding down from pool to pool.
And every pool a sapphire is,
From shadowy deep to sunlit edge,
Ribboned around with irises
And cleft with emerald spears of sedge.
O, every morn the winds are stilled,
The sunlight falls in amber bars.
O, every night the pools are filled
With silver brede of shaken stars.
O, every morn the sparrow flings
His elfin trills athwart the hush,
And here unseen at eve there sings
One crystal-throated hermit-thrush.
Marjory
Pickthall
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