Edna Dean Proctor

  • The Winds that once the Argo bore
      Have died by Neptune’s ruined shrines,
    And her hull is the drift of the deep-sea floor,
      Though shaped of Pelion’s tallest pines.
    You may seek her crew on every isle
      Fair in the foam of Ægean seas,
    But out of...

  • A Granite cliff on either shore,
      A highway poised in air;
    Above, the wheels of traffic roar,
      Below, the fleets sail fair;—
    And in and out forevermore,
    The surging tides of ocean pour,
    And past the towers the white gulls soar,
      And...

  • Now summer finds her perfect prime;
      Sweet blows the wind from western calms;
    On every bower red roses climb;
      The meadows sleep in mingled balms.
    Nor stream, nor bank the wayside by,
      But lilies float and daisies throng;
    Nor space of blue and...

  • We are the Ancient People;
      Our father is the Sun;
    Our mother, the Earth, where the mountains tower
      And the rivers seaward run;
    The stars are the children of the sky,
      The red men of the plain;
    And ages over us both had rolled
      Before...