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

Marguerite; or, The Isle of Demons and Other Poems

Chapter 43: BOOKS.
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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.

BOOKS.

In books I find companionship, they are My household gods, and naught shall wholly bar Their voices from me; from their precious pages I quaff the immortality of ages. They are the spirits of the dead, not dumb, From ancient tombs and monuments they come To hold communion with the living; they, While nations perish and the world grows gray, Their regal power and pristine beauty keep, Despite the havoc, and inglorious sleep Of centuries that bore a crimson hue,— Despite the flames which they have travelled through, Unscathed they hold their sceptres, meek they bear These royal dignities;—like light and air They enter, silver-shod, the humblest door, And breathe their benedictions on the poor. Ye avatars, true saviours of the world, Round whom the hopes of wisest souls are curled, Be mine through life, in pain, or pleasure, mine! If near me still your pleasant faces shine The skies may lower—upon my thorny path The heavens may pour their cataracts of wrath, I need not falter, need not hold my breath, Nor tremble at the menaces of Death.