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My English Letter

Topics: classic

When each white moon, her lantern idly swinging,         Comes out to join the star night-watching band,     Across the grey-green sea, a ship is bringing         For me a letter, from the Motherland.     Naught would I care to live in quaint old Britain,         These wilder shores are dearer far to me,     Yet when I read the words that hand has written,         The parent sod more precious seems to be.     Within that folded note I catch the savour         Of climes that make the Motherland so fair,     Although I never knew the blessed favour         That surely lies in breathing English air.     Imagination's brush before me fleeing,         Paints English pictures, though my longing eyes     Have never known the blessedness of seeing         The blue that lines the arch of English skies.     And yet my letter brings the scenes I covet,         Framed in the salt sea winds, aye more in dreams     I almost see the face that bent above it,         I almost touch that hand, so near it seems.     Near, for the very grey-green sea that dashes         'Round these Canadian coasts, rolls out once more     To Eastward, and the same Atlantic splashes         Her wild white spray on England's distant shore.     Near, for the same young moon so idly swinging         Her threadlike crescent bends the selfsame smile     On that old land from whence a ship is bringing         My message from the transatlantic Isle.     Thus loves my heart that far old country better,         Because of those dear words that always come,     With love enfolded in each English letter         That drifts into my sun-kissed Western home.

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"When each white moon, her lantern idly swinging,..."

Emily Pauline Johnson's contribution to classic is further solidified by the brilliance found in "My English Letter"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

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