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<h2> CANADA </h2>
<p>Canada, the blest—the free!<br/>
With prophetic glance, I see<br/>
Visions of thy future glory,<br/>
Giving to the world's great story<br/>
A page, with mighty meaning fraught,<br/>
That asks a wider range of thought.<br/>
Borne onward on the wings of Time,<br/>
I trace thy future course sublime;<br/>
And feel my anxious lot grow bright,<br/>
While musing on the glorious sight;—<br/>
My heart rejoicing bounds with glee<br/>
To hail thy noble destiny!<br/>
<br/>
Even now thy sons inherit<br/>
All thy British mother's spirit.<br/>
Ah! no child of bondage thou;<br/>
With her blessing on thy brow,<br/>
And her deathless, old renown<br/>
Circling thee with freedom's crown,<br/>
And her love within thy heart,<br/>
Well may'st thou perform thy part,<br/>
And to coming years proclaim<br/>
Thou art worthy of her name.<br/>
Home of the homeless!—friend to all<br/>
Who suffer on this earthly ball!<br/>
On thy bosom sickly care<br/>
Quite forgets her squalid lair;<br/>
Gaunt famine, ghastly poverty<br/>
Before thy gracious aspect fly,<br/>
And hopes long crush'd, grow bright again,<br/>
And, smiling, point to hill and plain.<br/>
<br/>
By thy winter's stainless snow,<br/>
Starry heavens of purer glow,<br/>
Glorious summers, fervid, bright,<br/>
Basking in one blaze of light;<br/>
By thy fair, salubrious clime;<br/>
By thy scenery sublime;<br/>
By thy mountains, streams, and woods;<br/>
By thy everlasting floods;<br/>
If greatness dwells beneath the skies,<br/>
Thou to greatness shalt arise!<br/>
<br/>
Nations old, and empires vast,<br/>
From the earth had darkly pass'd<br/>
Ere rose the fair auspicious morn<br/>
When thou, the last, not least, wast born.<br/>
Through the desert solitude<br/>
Of trackless waters, forests rude,<br/>
Thy guardian angel sent a cry<br/>
All jubilant of victory!<br/>
“Joy,” she cried, “to th' untill'd earth,<br/>
Let her joy in a mighty birth,—<br/>
Night from the land has pass'd away,<br/>
The desert basks in noon of day.<br/>
Joy, to the sullen wilderness,<br/>
I come, her gloomy shades to bless,<br/>
To bid the bear and wild-cat yield<br/>
Their savage haunts to town and field.<br/>
Joy, to stout hearts and willing hands,<br/>
That win a right to these broad lands,<br/>
And reap the fruit of honest toil,<br/>
Lords of the rich, abundant soil.<br/>
<br/>
“Joy, to the sons of want, who groan<br/>
In lands that cannot feed their own;<br/>
And seek, in stern, determined mood,<br/>
Homes in the land of lake and wood,<br/>
And leave their hearts' young hopes behind,<br/>
Friends in this distant world to find;<br/>
Led by that God, who from His throne<br/>
Regards the poor man's stifled moan.<br/>
Like one awaken'd from the dead,<br/>
The peasant lifts his drooping head,<br/>
Nerves his strong heart and sunburnt hand,<br/>
To win a potion of the land,<br/>
That glooms before him far and wide<br/>
In frowning woods and surging tide<br/>
No more oppress'd, no more a slave,<br/>
Here freedom dwells beyond the wave.<br/>
<br/>
“Joy, to those hardy sires who bore<br/>
The day's first heat—their toils are o'er;<br/>
Rude fathers of this rising land,<br/>
Theirs was a mission truly grand.<br/>
Brave peasants whom the Father, God,<br/>
Sent to reclaim the stubborn sod;<br/>
Well they perform'd their task, and won<br/>
Altar and hearth for the woodman's son.<br/>
Joy, to Canada's unborn heirs,<br/>
A deathless heritage is theirs;<br/>
For, sway'd by wise and holy laws,<br/>
Its voice shall aid the world's great cause,<br/>
Shall plead the rights of man, and claim<br/>
For humble worth an honest name;<br/>
Shall show the peasant-born can be,<br/>
When call'd to action, great and free.<br/>
Like fire, within the flint conceal'd,<br/>
By stern necessity reveal'd,<br/>
Kindles to life the stupid sod,<br/>
Image of perfect man and God.<br/>
<br/>
“Joy, to thy unborn sons, for they<br/>
Shall hail a brighter, purer day;<br/>
When peace and Christian brotherhood<br/>
Shall form a stronger tie than blood—<br/>
And commerce, freed from tax and chain,<br/>
Shall build a bridge o'er earth and main;<br/>
And man shall prize the wealth of mind,<br/>
The greatest blessing to mankind;<br/>
True Christians, both in word and deed,<br/>
Ready in virtue's cause to bleed,<br/>
Against a world combined to stand,<br/>
And guard the honour of the land.<br/>
Joy, to the earth, when this shall be,<br/>
Time verges on eternity.”<br/></p>
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