From the
Canadian Camp Menu , 1922
Poem by:
Frank H. Oastler M.D.
Dedicated to
the Canadian Camp
“Outdoors”
Oh, give me
a bit of the great outdoors
Is all that
I ask of you,
Where I may
do whatever I like
And like
whatever I do.
Where the
sky is the boundary up above
And the
earth is the measure below,
And the
trail starts on where the sun comes up
And ends
where the sun sinks low.
Where the
wind blows sweet as a baby’s breath,
And the sun
shines bright as its eyes,
And the
showers come and the showers go
As the tears
when the little one cries.
And the
brook runs merrily through the glade,
Singing its
gladdening song,
And the pine
trees murmur their soothing sighs,
Still
bearing that song along.
Yes, carry
me back to the lake’s white shores,
With its
deer and its lily pad,
Where the
loon calls out ‘mid the moonbeams bright
Through the
mist on the waters sad.
Let me hear
once more the elk’s far cry
As it sweeps
through the forest deep,
Where
silence hangs as over the dead
At rest in
eternal sleep.
I’ll pitch
my tent by some lonesome pine,
By the
rippling water’s edge,
With the
great outdoors as my garden,
And the
willows ‘round as my hedge.
And,
surrounded by pretty flowers
That perfume
the gentle breeze,
I’ll idle
away the whole long day
In the shade
of my old pine trees.
And I’ll
watch on yonder mountain
The colors
change with the day,
And I’ll
follow each shadow a-creeping
So silently
over the way.
And then
give thanks to the God above
And in
gratitude I’ll pause,
And I’ll
love, not hate, each care that comes
In that
great big home – Outdoors.
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