Ah! river named of France, let reason judge,
My silver-mounted implement to thee,
If I am greatly blameable to grudge,
My only pencil left,— unhappy me!
Far off, like misadventure chanced before,
And then I lost a gift of love; but see
What thou hast done by robbing me once more.
Unfurnish'd — but my trifling now is o'er —
I think of her whose hand the token gave,
When last I left my native Albion's shore,
In happiest hope since yielded to the grave.
Full many a hundred lines her gift has traced;
Not all, I dare to hope, are wholly waste.
George Jehoshaphat Mountain (1789–1863) Canada (born England but moved to Canada aged 14)
Source: All Poetry
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