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Canadian
Born
by
Emily Pauline Johnson
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Beyond
the Blue
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Speak
of you, sir? You bet he did. Ben Fields was far
too sound
To go back on a fellow just because he weren’t
around.
Why, sir, he thought a lot of you, and only three
months back
Says he, “The Squire will some time come a-snuffing
out our track
And give us the surprise.” And so I got to
thinking then
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That
any day you might drop down on Rove, and me, and
Ben.
And now you’ve come for nothing, for the lad
has left us two,
And six long weeks ago, sir, he went up beyond the
blue.
Who’s Rove? Oh, he’s the collie, and
the only thing on earth
That I will ever love again. Why, Squire, that dog
is worth [Page 9]
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More
than you ever handled, and that’s quite a
piece, I know.
Ah, there the beggar is!—come here, you scalawag!
and show
Your broken leg all bandaged up. Yes, sir, it’s
pretty sore;
I did it,—curse me,—and I think I feel
the pain far more
Than him, for somehow I just feel as if I’d
been untrue
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To what
my brother said before he went beyond the blue.
You see, the day before he died he says to me, “Say,
Ned,
Be sure you take good care of poor old Rover when
I’m dead,
And maybe he will cheer your lonesome hours up a
bit,
And when he takes to you just see that you’re
deserving it.”
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Well,
Squire, it wasn’t any use. I tried, but couldn’t
get
The friendship of that collie, for I needed it,
you bet. [Page 10]
I might as well have tried to get the moon to help
me through,
For Rover’s heart had gone with Ben, ’way
up beyond the blue.
He never seemed to take to me, nor follow me about,
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For
all I coaxed and petted, for my heart was starving
out
For want of some companionship,—I thought,
if only he
Would lick my hand or come and put his head aside
my knee,
Perhaps his touch would scatter something of the
gloom away.
But all alone I had to live until there came a day
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When,
tired of the battle, as you’d have tired too,
I wished to heaven I’d gone with Ben, ’way
up beyond the blue.
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. .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
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One
morning I took out Ben’s gun, and thought
I’d hunt all day,
And started through the clearing for the bush that
forward lay, [Page 11]
When something made me look around—I scarce
believed my mind—
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But,
sure enough, the dog was following right close behind.
A feeling first of joy, and then a sharper, greater
one
Of anger came, at knowing ’twas not me, but
Ben’s old gun,
That Rove was after,—well, sir, I just don’t
mind telling you,
But I forgot that moment Ben was up beyond the blue.
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Perhaps it was but jealousy—perhaps it was
despair,—
But I just struck him with the gun and broke the
bone right there;
And then—my very throat seemed choked, for
he began to whine
With pain—God knows how tenderly I took that
dog of mine
Up in my arms, and tore my old red necktie into
bands
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To
bind the broken leg, while there he lay and licked
my hands; [Page 12]
And though I cursed my soul, it was the brightest
day I knew,
Or even cared to live, since Ben went up beyond
the blue.
I tell you, Squire, I nursed him just as gently
as could be,
And now I’m all the world to him, and he’s
the world to me.
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Look,
sir, at that big, noble soul, right in his faithful
eyes,
The square, forgiving honesty that deep down in
them lies.
Eh, Squire? What’s that you say? He’s
got no soul? I tell you, then,
He’s grander and he’s better than the
mass of what’s called men;
And I guess he stands a better chance than many
of us do
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Of
seeing Ben some day again, ’way up beyond
the blue.
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