<h3 id="Calgary_Station">Calgary Station</h3>
<p>DAZZLED by sun and drugged by space they wait,<br/>
These homeless peoples, at our prairie gate;<br/>
Dumb with the awe of those whom fate has hurled,<br/>
Breathless, upon the threshold of a world!</p>
<p>From near-horizoned, little lands they come,<br/>
From barren country-side and deathly slum,<br/>
From bleakest wastes, from lands of aching drouth,<br/>
From grape-hung valleys of the smiling South,<br/>
From chains and prisons, ay, from horrid fear,<br/>
(Mark you the furtive eye, the listening ear!)<br/>
And all amazed and silent, scared and shy—<br/>
An alien group beneath an alien sky!</p>
<p>See—on that bench beside the busy door—<br/>
There sleeps a Roman born: upon the floor<br/>
His wife, dark-haired and handsome, takes her rest,<br/>
Their black-eyed baby tugging at her breast.<br/>
Her hands lie still. Her brooding glances roam<br/>
Above the pushing crowd to her far home,<br/>
And slow she smiles to think how fine ’twill be<br/>
When they (so rich!) return to Italy.</p>
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<p>Yonder, with stolid face and tragic eye,<br/>
Sits a lone Russian; as we pass him by<br/>
He neither stirs nor looks; his inner gaze<br/>
Sees not the future fair, but, troubled, strays<br/>
To the dark land he left but can’t forget,<br/>
Whose bonds, though broken, hold him prisoner yet.</p>
<p>Here is a Pole—a worker; though so slim<br/>
His muscle is of steel—no fear for him;<br/>
He is the breed which conquers; he is nerved<br/>
To fight and fight again. Too long he served,<br/>
Man of a subject race! His fierce, blue eye<br/>
Roams like a homing eagle o’er the sky,<br/>
So limitless, so deep! for such as he<br/>
Life has no higher bliss than to be free.</p>
<p>This little Englishman with jaunty air<br/>
And tweed cap perched awry on close-trimmed hair—<br/>
He, with his faded wife and noisy band,<br/>
Has come from Home to seek a promised land—<br/>
He feels himself aggrieved, for no one said<br/>
That things would be so big and so—outspread!<br/>
He thinks of London with a pang of grief;<br/>
His wife is sobbing in her handkerchief.<br/>
But all his children stare with eager eyes.<br/>
This is their land. Already they surmise<br/>
Their heritage, their chance to live and grow,<br/>
Won for them by their fathers, long ago!</p>
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<p>Another generation, and this Scot,<br/>
Whose longing for the hills is ne’er forgot,<br/>
Shall rear a son whose eye will never be<br/>
Dim with a craving for that distant sea,<br/>
Those barren rocks, that heather’s purple glow—<br/>
The ache, the burn that only exiles know!</p>
<p>This Irishman, who, when he sees the Green,<br/>
Turns that his shaking lips may not be seen,<br/>
He, too, shall bear a son who, blythe and gay,<br/>
Sings the old songs but in a cheerier way!<br/>
Who has the love, without the anguish sharp,<br/>
For Erin dreamingly by her golden harp!</p>
<p>All these and many others, patient, wait<br/>
Before our ever-open prairie gate<br/>
And, filing through with laughter or with tears,<br/>
Take what their hands can glean of fruitful years.<br/>
Here some find home who knew not home before;<br/>
Here some seek peace and some wage glorious war.<br/>
Here some who lived in night see morning dawn<br/>
And some drop out and let the rest go on.<br/>
And of them all the years take toll; they pass<br/>
As shadows flit above the prairie grass.</p>
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<p>From every land they come to know but one—<br/>
The kindly earth that hides them from the sun—<br/>
But, in their places, children live, and they<br/>
Turn with glad faces to a common day.<br/>
Of every land, they too, but one land claim—<br/>
The land that gives them place and hope and name—<br/>
Canadians, they, and proud and glad to be<br/>
A part of Canada’s sure destiny!<br/>
What if within their hearts deep memories hide<br/>
Of lands their fathers grieved for, till they died?<br/>
The bitterness is gone and in its stead<br/>
New understanding and new hopes are bred,<br/>
With wider vision which may show the world<br/>
Its cannon dumb, its battle-flags close furled!<br/>
—Dreams? We may dream indeed, with heart elate,<br/>
While a new Nation clamors at our gate!</p>
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