The Walker of the Snow

Charles Dawson Shanly 1931 (Dublin) – 1875 (Florida)



Speed on, speed on, good master!
The camp lies far away;
We must cross the haunted valley
Before the close of day.

How the snow-blight came upon me
I will tell you as we go,—
The blight of the Shadow-hunter,
Who walks the midnight snow.

To the cold December heaven
Came the pale moon and the stars,
As the yellow sun was sinking
Behind the purple bars.

The snow was deeply drifted
Upon the ridges drear,
That lay for miles around me
And the camp for which we steer.

’T was silent on the hillside,
And by the solemn wood
No sound of life or motion
To break the solitude,

Save the wailing of the moose-bird
With a plaintive note and low,
And the skating of the red leaf
Upon the frozen snow.

And said I,—“Though dark is falling,
And far the camp must be,
Yet my heart it would be lightsome,
If I had but company.”

And then I sang and shouted,
Keeping measure, as I sped,
To the harp-twang of the snow-shoe
As it sprang beneath my tread;

Nor far into the valley
Had I dipped upon my way,
When a dusky figure joined me,
In a capuchon of gray,

Bending upon the snow-shoes,
With a long and limber stride;
And I hailed the dusky stranger,
As we travelled side by side.

But no token of communion
Gave he by word or look,
And the fear-chill fell upon me
At the crossing of the brook.

For I saw by the sickly moonlight,
As I followed, bending low,
That the walking of the stranger
Left no footmarks on the snow.

Then the fear-chill gathered o’er me,
Like a shroud around me cast,
As I sank upon the snow-drift
Where the Shadow-hunter passed.

And the otter-trappers found me,
Before the break of day,
With my dark hair blanched and whitened
As the snow in which I lay.

But they spoke not as they raised me;
For they knew that in the night
I had seen the Shadow-hunter,
And had withered in his blight.

Sancta Maria speed us!
The sun is falling low,—
Before us lies the valley
Of the Walker of the Snow!

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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

1:50 min read
156

Quick analysis:

Scheme ABCB CDAD EFGF HACX IXEX XDXD GCXC HJXJ CBCB XIAI EKCK LDAD CMXM CBHB CLAL XDCD
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 1,912
Words 369
Stanzas 16
Stanza Lengths 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4

Charles Dawson Shanly

Charles Dawson Shanly was an Irish-born poet, artist and ballad writer who emigrated to Canada and then moved on to America where he remained until he died in 1875. He built a reputation as a poet with a graceful, charming style while living the quiet life of a modest gentleman. He never married. He was born on the 9th March 1811 in Dublin, the son of a member of the Irish bar. The family moved at least twice during Charles’s early years and he received a home education from an appointed family tutor by the name of Reverend Henry Carpenter. He also attended school in Waterford and then went on to Trinity College in Dublin. His BA course was interrupted for a year due to the need to attend his ailing brother, William, who was suffering from tuberculosis in the Cornish town of Penzance. Following his brother’s death, Charles returned to Trinity and completed his BA. Following this he was engaged as a civil servant with the Board of Public Works. His enthusiasm though lay in writing and, in 1849, he took up the editorship of a satirical magazine called Punch in Canada. His contribution of poetry, cartoons and articles was substantial and he continued with it until 1850. Seven years later he resigned from the Board of Works and moved to New York where he decided that journalism was his preferred career path. He wrote for a number of publications including the Atlantic Monthly and was instrumental in the creation of a witty journal, published weekly called Vanity Fair. Shanly soon became editor and contributed a series of articles poking fun at the US Army military tactics of General William Hardee during the Civil War. The series was called Hardee Made Easy. Charles Dawson Shanly died on the 15th April 1875, aged 64. His body was taken to the family estate in Ontario for burial. more…

All Charles Dawson Shanly poems | Charles Dawson Shanly Books

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