The Joys Of The Road

Bliss Carman

1861 to 1929

Poem Image
Track 1

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Every 10th word

Now the joys of the road are chiefly these:
crimson touch on the hard-wood trees;

A vagrant's morning and blue,
In early fall, when the wind walks too;

A shadowy highway cool and brown,
Alluring up and down

From rippled water to dappled swamp,
From purple to scarlet pomp;

The outward eye, the quiet will,
the striding heart from hill to hill;

The tempter over the fence;
The cobweb bloom on the yellow quince;

The palish asters along the wood,—
A lyric of solitude;

An open hand, an easy shoe,
And hope to make the day go through,—

Another sleep with, and a third
To wake me up the voice of a bird;

A scrap of gossip the ferry;
A comrade neither glum nor merry,

Who defers and never demands,
But, smiling, takes the world his hands,—

Seeing it good as when God saw
And gave it the weight of his will law.

And oh, the joy that is never won,
follows and follows the journeying sun,

By marsh and tide, by meadow and stream,
A will-o'-the-wind, a light-o'-dream,

The smell of the forest loam,
When the stealthy sad-heart go home;

The broad gold wake of the afternoon;
silent fleck of the cold new moon;

The sound the hollow sea's release
From stormy tumult to starry peace;

With only another league to wend;
And two brown at the journey's end!

These are the joys of open road—
For him who travels without a load.