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Marguerite; or, The Isle of Demons and Other Poems cover

Marguerite; or, The Isle of Demons and Other Poems

Chapter 40: THOMAS D’ARCY McGEE.
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About This Book

A varied collection of lyric and narrative verse centered on a long romantic legend about a woman’s ordeal on a haunted island and its personal and moral aftermath, accompanied by shorter sonnets, ballads, and occasional pieces. Many poems draw on Canadian history and local scenes, offering meditative nature writing, urban sketches of Montreal and Ottawa life, winter and carnival scenes, elegies and civic tributes, and moral or humorous vignettes about everyday people. Themes of love, exile, faith, memory, and social concern recur across diverse forms and voices, blending personal reflection with regional colour and historic atmosphere.

THOMAS D’ARCY McGEE.

(April 7th, 1868.)

There is mourning to-day in the halls of the great, And homes of the people of lowly estate. A deed has been done which o’ershadows the heart With a darkness and horror that will not depart.— The Poet and Statesman lies cold in his gore, His eloquent accents will thrill us no more: No more, with our hearts to all charities strung, Shall we listen to catch the sweet sounds of his tongue. That tongue, whose enchantment could hold us in thrall Will never more gladden the close, crowded hall; But the light of his genius will shine o’er the land, And his fame, like Mount Royal, forever shall stand, For his thoughts were the lights of our northern sky, And the soul’s spoken melody never can die. O God! could no virtue, no pity restrain The wretch who has sown such a harvest of pain? What though on the scaffold he die for the deed That causes fond hearts, like his victim, to bleed? A million such lives no atonement can make For the star that is quenched, for the sorrows that shake Our trust in the highest and holiest plan, Our faith in the ultimate goodness of man.