dots-menu
×

Home  »  A Collection of Verse by California Poets  »  Just California

Augustin S. Macdonald, comp. A Collection of Verse by California Poets. 1914.

By John S. McGroarty

Just California

’TWIXT the seas and the deserts,

’Twixt the wastes and the waves,

Between the sands of buried lands

And the ocean’s coral caves,

It lies not East nor West,

But like a scroll unfurled,

Where the hand of God hath hung it,

Down the middle of the world.

It lies where God hath spread it,

In the gladness of his eyes,

Like a flame of jeweled tapestry

Beneath His shining skies,

With the green of woven meadows,

And the hills in golden chains,

The light of leaping rivers,

And the flash of poppied plains.

Days rise that gleam in glory,

Days die with sunset’s breeze,

While from Cathay that was of old

Sail countless argosies;

Morns break again in splendor

O’er the giant, new-born West,

But of all the lands God fashioned,

’Tis this land is the best.

Sun and dews that kiss it,

Balmy winds that blow,

The stars in clustered diadems

Upon its peaks of snow;

The mighty mountains o’er it,

Below, the white seas swirled—

Just California stretching down

The middle of the world.