UP IN MAINE

A hero in leggings, he volunteered

—When the treacherous ice lay black as loam

In the melting spring—to risk his life

And bring to others the news from home.

He bore the mail for the lumber camp,

The missives for many an anxious man

Who toiled for the ones he loved so well,

In the wilds of the far Socatean.

He’d fingered each as he studied the names

And sorted the letters with kindly care;

While with honest heart of a friend he guessed

At the news that the precious notes might

hear.

There was one for Kane, and the last had said

That his little girl was sorely ill—

Poor man, he had worried the whole long week!

—And here was one for the Bluenose-Will,

Who had left a sweetheart to come to Maine,

And had looked for a line in a homesick way;

And here were a couple from Henry’s wife,

—And one bore “Forward without delay!”

A tiny message to “Pa John Booth”

Had a cross to show where a rousing smack

Had been pressed on the paper; and here, alas,

Was a letter fringed with a sombre black.

Freighted with sorrow or bringing the smiles,

Fresh from the homes so far away,

He tucked them all in his coon-skin cap

And breasted the sleet of the dreary day.

No one knew how it came about,

No man witnessed the fight for breath,

When the cruel clutch of the great black lake

Reached up and dragged him down to death.

But we always knew that his fiercest strength

Was spent in the supreme flash of life

When he, poor wanderer, thought alone

Of the news for others from home and wife.

For, as far on the edge of the broken ice

As his arm could reach, when he sank and

died,

We found the worn old coon-skin cap

With the letters carefully tucked inside.