University of Virginia Library

HUNT THE SQUIRREL.

It was Atle of Vermeland
In Winter used to go
A-hunting up in the pine-forest,
With snow-shoes, sledge, and bow.
Soon his sledge with the soft fine furs
Was heaped up heavily,
Enough to warm old Winter with,
And a wealthy man was he.
When just as he was going back home,
He looked up into a Tree;
There sat a merry brown Squirrel, that seemed
To say—“You can't shoot me!”
And he twinkled all over temptingly,
To the tip of his tail a-curl!
His humour was arch as the look may be
Of a would-be-wooed sweet Girl,
That makes the Lover follow her, follow her,
All his life up-caught,
A-dreaming on with sleeping wings,
High in the heaven of thought.

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Atle he left his sledge and furs;
All day his arrows rung,—
The Squirrel went leaping from bough to bough,—
Only himself they stung.
He hunted far in the dark forest,
Till died the last day-gleams;
Then wearily laid him down to rest,
And hunted it through his dreams.
All night long the snow fell fast,
And covered his snug fur-store;
Long, long did he strain his eyes,
But never found it more.
Home came Atle of Vermeland,
No Squirrel! No furs for the mart!
Empty head brought empty hand;
Both a very full heart.
Ah, many a one hunts the Squirrel,
In merry or mournful truth;
Until the gathering snows of age
Cover the treasures of Youth.
Deeper into the forest dark
The Squirrel will dance all day;
'Till eyes go blind and miss their mark,
And hearts will lose their way.
My Boy! if you should ever espy
This Squirrel up in the tree,
With a dancing devil in its eye,
Just let the Squirrel be!