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Helen M. (Helen Mar) Johnson

—­Poems, p. 9.

RURAL SCENES.

THE WALK IN JUNE.

A walk in June, in early June,
  Our sweet Canadian June—­
When every tree is all in leaf,
  And every bird in tune;
When laughing rills leap down the hills
  And through the meadows play,
Inviting to their verdant banks
  The old, the young, the gay.

When not a cloud is in the sky,
  Nor shadow on the lake
Save what the trees that line the shore
  And little islands make,—­
When every nook where’er we look,
  Is bright with dewy flowers,
And violets are thickly strewn
  As though they fell in showers.

How sweetly on the balmy air
  The children’s voices ring! 
And even I renew my youth
  With each returning spring. 
Oh, we may keep a fresh young heart
  Though outward beauty fade,
If we but cherish there a love
  For all that God has made.

I do not call a happy man
  The man that’s rich or great;
Nor him, who stands with folded hands
  And says, “It is my fate!”
But he is blest who cheerfully
  Endures or does his part,
And looks on earth, and sea, and sky
  With an adoring heart.

He wanders by the pebbly beach. 
  And by the summer brook,
And thoughtfully he turns the leaves
  Of Nature’s blessed book. 
In forest shade, on hill, in vale,
  Where’er he walks abroad,
There goes an humble worshipper—­
  A lover of his God.

The cares that trouble other men
  For him have little weight;
He values glory at its worth,
  Nor cringes to the great. 
His simple pleasures never fail,
  Nor make his nature cold,—­
And though the years may come and go,
  He never can be old.

You call the picture overdrawn—­
  But such a man I know;
Whose presence, like the morning sun,
  Dispels each cloud of woe. 
And trustingly I cling to him
  As only true love can,—­
My comforter, protector, guide,—­
  My love, thou art the man!

And you are teaching me to look
  On nature with your eyes;
The pleasant change within my heart
  Each day I realize. 
The world is brighter now to me,
  A holier thing is life. 
Than even on that happy day
  When first you called me wife.

The trifles that perplexed me then
  Now leave my spirit calm,—­
An for the deeper woes of life
  I have a healing balm. 
I see the hand of God in all,
  I know that he is just;
And where I cannot understand
  I’ve learned to wait and trust.

Oh, I remember well the day—­
  ’Twas in the month of June,
When every tree was all in leaf,
  And every bird in tune,—­
We walked together, arm in arm,
  As we are walking now,
But I was young, and Time had left
  No traces on your brow.

I listened with a strange delight
  To every word you said,
And then to hide the burning tears
  I turned away my head. 
I dared not trifle with your love,
  Though till that magic hour
I had not cared for aching hearts
  If they but owned my power.

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Canadian Wild Flowers from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.

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