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Vintage Colorado Poetry / Poem of the Week / June 5, 2006
With school just out, a poem of long ago California serves as a timely reminder not to forget about reading this summer, be it children reading to themselves or parents to them at bedtime. 
Dickens in Camp
by
Bret Harte


Above the pines the moon was slowly drifting,
         The river sang below ;
The dim Sierras, far beyond, uplifting
         Their minarets of snow.

The roaring camp-fire, with rude humor, painted
         The ruddy tints of health
On haggard face and form that drooped and fainted
         In the fierce race for wealth ;

Till one arose, and from his pack's scant treasure
         A hoarded volume drew,
And cards were dropped from hands of listless
             leisure
         To hear the tale anew ;

And then, while round them shadows gathered
             faster,
         And as the firelight fell,
He read aloud the book wherein the Master
         Had writ of "Little Nell."

Perhaps 't was boyish fancy, --- for the reader
         Was youngest of them all, ---
But, as he read, from clustering pine and cedar
         A silence seemed to fall ;

The fir-trees, gathering closer in the shadows,
         Listened in every spray,
While the whole camp, with "Nell" on English
             meadows,
         Wandered and lost their way.

And so in mountain solitudes --- o'ertaken
         As by some spell divine ---
Their cares dropped from them like the needles
            shaken
         From the gusty pine.   

Lost is the camp, and wasted all its fire :
         And he who wrought that spell ? ---
Ah, towering pine and stately Kentish spire,
         Ye have one tale to tell !

Lost is that camp ! but let its fragrant story
         Blend with the breath that thrills
With hop-vines' incense all the pensive glory
         That fills the Kentish hills.

And on that grave where English oak and holly
         And laurel wreaths intwine,
Deem it not all a too presumptuous folly,---
         This spray of Western pine !


July, 1870.   
                                 
                       

From:
Poems by Bret Harte.
Boston: Osgood and Co.,
1871.