The Old Camp-fire Poem Rhyme Scheme and Analysis
Rhyme Scheme: AABBCC DDEECC FFGHCC IIJJCC KLLCCACC MAMNNCC OPQQCC RRSSCC TTIICC UUCCCC| Now shift the blanket pad before your saddle back you fling | A |
| And draw your cinch up tighter till the sweat drops from the ring | A |
| We've a dozen miles to cover ere we reach the next divide | B |
| Our limbs are stiffer now than when we first set out to ride | B |
| And worse the horses know it and feel the leg grip tire | C |
| Since in the days when long ago we sought the old camp fire | C |
| - | |
| Yes twenty years Lord how we'd scent its incense down the trail | D |
| Through balm of bay and spice of spruce when eye and ear would fail | D |
| And worn and faint from useless quest we crept like this to rest | E |
| Or flushed with luck and youthful hope we rode like this abreast | E |
| Ay straighten up old friend and let the mustang think he's nigher | C |
| Through looser rein and stirrup strain the welcome old camp fire | C |
| - | |
| You know the shout that would ring out before us down the glade | F |
| And start the blue jays like a flight of arrows through the shade | F |
| And sift the thin pine needles down like slanting shining rain | G |
| And send the squirrels scampering back to their holes again | H |
| Until we saw blue veiled and dim or leaping like desire | C |
| That flame of twenty years ago which lit the old camp fire | C |
| - | |
| And then that rest on Nature's breast when talk had dropped and slow | I |
| The night wind went from tree to tree with challenge soft and low | I |
| We lay on lazy elbows propped or stood to stir the flame | J |
| Till up the soaring redwood's shaft our shadows danced and came | J |
| As if to draw us with the sparks high o'er its unseen spire | C |
| To the five stars that kept their ward above the old camp fire | C |
| - | |
| Those picket stars whose tranquil watch half soothed half shamed | K |
| our sleep | L |
| What recked we then what beasts or men around might lurk or creep | L |
| We lay and heard with listless ears the far off panther's cry | C |
| The near coyote's snarling snap the grizzly's deep drawn sigh | C |
| The brown bear's blundering human tread the gray wolves' yelping | A |
| choir | C |
| Beyond the magic circle drawn around the old camp fire | C |
| - | |
| And then that morn Was ever morn so filled with all things new | M |
| The light that fell through long brown aisles from out the kindling | A |
| blue | M |
| The creak and yawn of stretching boughs the jay bird's early call | N |
| The rat tat tat of woodpecker that waked the woodland hall | N |
| The fainter stir of lower life in fern and brake and brier | C |
| Till flashing leaped the torch of Day from last night's old camp fire | C |
| - | |
| Well well we'll see it once again we should be near it now | O |
| It's scarce a mile to where the trail strikes off to skirt the slough | P |
| And then the dip to Indian Spring the wooded rise and strange | Q |
| Yet here should stand the blasted pine that marked our farther range | Q |
| And here what's this A ragged swab of ruts and stumps and mire | C |
| Sure this is not the sacred grove that hid the old camp fire | C |
| - | |
| Yet here's the blaze I cut myself and there's the stumbling ledge | R |
| With quartz outcrop that lay atop now leveled to its edge | R |
| And mounds of moss grown stumps beside the woodman's rotting chips | S |
| And gashes in the hillside that gape with dumb red lips | S |
| And yet above the shattered wreck and ruin curling higher | C |
| Ah yes still lifts the smoke that marked the welcome old camp fire | C |
| - | |
| Perhaps some friend of twenty years still lingers there to raise | T |
| To weary hearts and tired eyes that beacon of old days | T |
| Perhaps but stay 'tis gone and yet once more it lifts as though | I |
| To meet our tardy blundering steps and seems to MOVE and lo | I |
| Whirls by us in a rush of sound the vanished funeral pyre | C |
| Of hopes and fears that twenty years burned in the old camp fire | C |
| - | |
| For see beyond the prospect spreads with chimney spire and roof | U |
| Two iron bands across the trail clank to our mustang's hoof | U |
| Above them leap two blackened threads from limb lopped tree to tree | C |
| To where the whitewashed station speeds its message to the sea | C |
| Rein in Rein in The quest is o'er The goal of our desire | C |
| Is but the train whose track has lain across the old camp fire | C |
Bret Harte
(1)
Poem topics: , Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
Submit Spanish Translation
Submit German Translation
Submit French Translation
About The Old Camp-fire
The Old Camp-fire is a poem by Bret Harte. This page includes the poem text, poet information, related topics, comments, and similar poems.
Write your comment about The Old Camp-fire poem by Bret Harte
Best Poems of Bret Harte
