THE WHITE CANOE

THE WHITE CANOE

THERE'S a whisper of life in the gray dead trees,And a murmuring wash on the shore,And a breath of the south in the loitering breeze,To tell that a winter is o'er.While, free at last from its fetters of ice,The river is clear and blue,And cries with a tremulous, quivering voiceFor the launch of the White Canoe.Oh, gently the ripples will kiss her side,And tenderly bear her on;For she is the wandering phantom brideOf the river she rests upon;She is loved with a love than cannot forget,A passion so strong and trueThat never a billow has risen yetTo peril the White Canoe.So come when the moon is enthroned in the sky,And the echoes are sweet and low,And Nature is full of the mysteryThat none but her children know.Come, taste of the rest that the weary crave,But is only revealed to a few:When there's trouble on shore, there's peace on the wave,Afloat in the White Canoe.

THERE'S a whisper of life in the gray dead trees,And a murmuring wash on the shore,And a breath of the south in the loitering breeze,To tell that a winter is o'er.While, free at last from its fetters of ice,The river is clear and blue,And cries with a tremulous, quivering voiceFor the launch of the White Canoe.Oh, gently the ripples will kiss her side,And tenderly bear her on;For she is the wandering phantom brideOf the river she rests upon;She is loved with a love than cannot forget,A passion so strong and trueThat never a billow has risen yetTo peril the White Canoe.So come when the moon is enthroned in the sky,And the echoes are sweet and low,And Nature is full of the mysteryThat none but her children know.Come, taste of the rest that the weary crave,But is only revealed to a few:When there's trouble on shore, there's peace on the wave,Afloat in the White Canoe.

THERE'S a whisper of life in the gray dead trees,And a murmuring wash on the shore,And a breath of the south in the loitering breeze,To tell that a winter is o'er.While, free at last from its fetters of ice,The river is clear and blue,And cries with a tremulous, quivering voiceFor the launch of the White Canoe.

THERE'S a whisper of life in the gray dead trees,

And a murmuring wash on the shore,

And a breath of the south in the loitering breeze,

To tell that a winter is o'er.

While, free at last from its fetters of ice,

The river is clear and blue,

And cries with a tremulous, quivering voice

For the launch of the White Canoe.

Oh, gently the ripples will kiss her side,And tenderly bear her on;For she is the wandering phantom brideOf the river she rests upon;She is loved with a love than cannot forget,A passion so strong and trueThat never a billow has risen yetTo peril the White Canoe.

Oh, gently the ripples will kiss her side,

And tenderly bear her on;

For she is the wandering phantom bride

Of the river she rests upon;

She is loved with a love than cannot forget,

A passion so strong and true

That never a billow has risen yet

To peril the White Canoe.

So come when the moon is enthroned in the sky,And the echoes are sweet and low,And Nature is full of the mysteryThat none but her children know.Come, taste of the rest that the weary crave,But is only revealed to a few:When there's trouble on shore, there's peace on the wave,Afloat in the White Canoe.

So come when the moon is enthroned in the sky,

And the echoes are sweet and low,

And Nature is full of the mystery

That none but her children know.

Come, taste of the rest that the weary crave,

But is only revealed to a few:

When there's trouble on shore, there's peace on the wave,

Afloat in the White Canoe.


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