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            <title>A Tragedy of the Wheat Fields</title>
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               <resp>Transcriber</resp>
               <name ref="pers:SC1">Sijia Cheng</name>
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               <name ref="pers:SC1">Sijia Cheng</name>
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                     <bibl xml:id="bibl25"><author><name ref="pers:WE1">O.W.</name></author>. <title level="a">A Tragedy of the Wheat Fields</title>. ms., <date when="1922">1922</date>. <distributor ref="org:WERFonds">Winnifred Eaton Reeve
                     Fonds</distributor>, <idno>3.1</idno>. </bibl>
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                        <p>Original at University of Calgary in Winnifred Eaton Reeve Fonds</p>
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      <body>
        
         <head>A Tragedy of the Wheat Fields</head>
         <opener> <byline>by <name key="O. W" ref="pers:WE1">O. W</name>.</byline></opener>
         
         <div>
            <lg>
               <l>Over the fields of rippling gold,</l>
               <l>Bright the Alberta sun</l>
               <l>Lingered above the ripening grain,</l>
               <l>The farmer’s work, well done.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg>
               <l>Thick as a forest, <choice>
                  <sic>smoothe</sic>
                  <corr>smooth</corr>
               </choice>and strong,</l>
               <l>Stood the marvellous wheat,</l>
               <l>Restlessly stirring and seeming to sway</l>
               <l>Under the summer heat.</l>
            
            </lg>
            <lg>
               <l>Wide spreading fields to the skyline stretched,</l>
               <l>Over a prairie clean,</l>
               <l>Ne’er such a crop in all of the years,</l>
               <l>Had come to this land, I ween.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg>
               <l>Bent was her back and gray was her head,</l>
               <l>Rough her hands and chaffed,</l>
               <l>But she looked at the wheat and her eyes were bright,</l>
               <l>As she softly, proudly laughed.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg>
               <l>Out in the fields the binder whirled;</l>
               <l>The harvest had just begun.</l>
               <l>Like music, the grind of the blithe, sharp blades,</l>
               <l>Whistling under that sun.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg>
               <l>Suddenly out of a bright, blue sky,</l>
               <l>Like an evil sprite, there sprung</l>
               <l>A great black hand, that shut out the sun,</l>
               <l>And over the fields it hung.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg>
               <l>Still and suspended in the sky,</l>
               <l>The black cloud paused apace,</l>
               <l>And then with fury, its fingers spread,</l>
               <l>In a vast vindictive race.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg>
               <l>Down spat the hail, in a biting storm,</l>
               <l>Bullets of ice and snow,</l>
               <l>And over the trembling, shaking wheat,</l>
               <l>The frozen rocks plunged low.</l>
            </lg>
            
            <lg>
               <l>Shivering and trapped the sensitive grain,</l>
               <l>Cringed and crouched to the ground,</l>
               <l>While the storm hissed over the slender stalks,</l>
               <l>And covered them in a mound.</l>
            </lg>
            
            <lg>
               <l>Oh! never was crop more gracious or strong,</l>
               <l>Or work that was better done</l>
               <l>Than under that false and smiling sky</l>
               <l>And bright Alberta sun.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg>
               <l>And now in the fields where the grain had been</l>
               <pb n="2"/>
               <l>But now in the fields where the grain had been</l> 
               <l>Only stubble and stalk;</l>
               <l>A barren field, bare, bleak and dry,</l>
               <l>A bitter waste and mock.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg>
               <l>Her man rode in from the harvest fields,</l>
               <l>Tired, haggard and grey.</l>
               <l>He tried to smile, as he patted her back,</l>
               <l>In his rough yet tender way.</l>
            </lg>
            <lg>
               <l>But her hands went out with a mothering cry,</l>
               <l>As she drew his head to her breast,</l>
               <l>And she said with a smile that was <choice>
                  <sic>saddeer</sic>
                  <corr>sadder</corr>
                  </choice>than tears:</l>
               <l><q><choice><sic>Lets</sic>
                  <corr>Let’s</corr>
                 
                  
               </choice>pretend it was for the best!</q></l>
               
            </lg>
           
         </div>
         <closer>
            Calgary 1922.
         </closer>
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