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The trail of the swinging lanterns

Chapter 20: LINES TO QUEEN QUINTE
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About This Book

A collection of pen sketches and essays that examine railway transportation from practical, historical and personal perspectives. It blends technical descriptions of lines and engineering challenges with short biographies of railway personnel, anecdotal episodes, company rivalries and celebratory events, interspersed with occasional verse and informal chronologies. The pieces emphasize operations, methods and daily life on the rails, the camaraderie among workers and the evolution of systems and equipment, offering both reminiscence and reportage aimed at preserving memories and practical details of an era in transport.

Green are the hills when far away,
And Youth in leash craves Manhood’s sway:
Placid the waters that wash the sands,
The sky is blue o’er distant lands.
Yet phantom castles—springtime dreams,
Dissolve like foam on woodland streams,
As Fancy—chastened by breath of Time,
Reasons in prose and not in rhyme:
Yearning ceases—behold at home
The glories pictured by they who roam.
Rimmed with vesture of verdant green,
Basks Quinte Bay—perennial queen:
Matron—a seer—she spans full years
Of promise, hardship, wreckage, tears.
From pre-historic days of yore
Her scroll is writ with mystic lore.
O’er her breast stole birchen craft
Burdened with Redskin, bows and shaft;
Swiftly stalking widgeon and deer
Or Paleface tiller settled near.
Champlain and Franklin sensed her spell,
As did good priest with book and bell.
Soldier, trapper and creaking stage
Have seen Dame Quinte lashed in rage,
But seldom doth she portend ill,
Her mood is tranquil, coaxing, still.
Who hath not felt her soft caress,
Limpid, seductive as maiden’s tress,
Who hath skimmed her foaming crest
With spreading sheet at her behest,
And doth not sing throughout his days
Of this real gem amongst the bays.
Ensconced in a setting of green and gold,
She is ever young to young and old:
Could her waters speak as they flow along, 
“Forget me not” would be their song.