Northwest Passage

**Stan Rogers **

Ah for just one time I would take the Northwest Passage[^17]
To find the hand of Franklin[^18] reaching for the Beaufort Sea
Tracing one warm line, through a land so wide and ravaged.[^19]
And make a Northwest Passage to the sea

Westward through the Davis Strait ‘tis there ‘twas said to lie
The sea route to the western coast for which so many died
Come seeking gold and glory, leaving weathered broken bones
And a long forgotten lonely cairn of stones

Three centuries thereafter, I take passage overland
In the footsteps of brave Kelso[^20], where his sea of flowers began
Watching cities rise before me, then behind me sink again
This tardiest explorer driving hard across the plain

And through the night, behind the wheel, the mileage clicking west
I think upon MacKenzie[^21], David Thompson[^22] and the rest
Who cracked the mountain ramparts and did show a path for me
To race the roaring Fraser to the sea

How then am I so different from the first men through this way?
Like them I left a settled life, I threw it all away
To seek a Northwest Passage at the call of many men
To find there but the road back home again