Mapping Indigenous Poetry of North America, 1830-1924

"The Cattle Country" by E. Pauline Johnson

Up the dusk-enfolded prairie,
    Foot-falls, soft and sly,
Velvet cushioned, wild and wary,
    Then—the coyote's cry. 
    
Rush of hoofs, and roar and rattle,
    Beasts of blood and breed, 
Twenty thousand frightened cattle,    
    Then—the wild stampede. 
    
Pliant lasso circling wider 
    In the frenzied flight— 
Loping horse and cursing rider, 
    Plunging through the night. 
    
Rim of dawn the darkness losing
    Trail of blackened soil; 
Perfume of the sage brush oozing
    On the air like oil. 
    
Foothills to the Rockies lifting
    Brown, and blue, and green,
Warm Alberta sunlight drifting
    Over leagues between. 
    
That's the country of the ranges,
    Plain and prairie land,
And the God who never changes
    Holds it in His hand. 

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