Rob Rolfe is Poet Laureate of the city of Owen Sound, Ontario, located on the shores of Lake Huron (Georgian Bay). Rob wrote this poem while reading Songs Upon the Rivers by Robert Foxcurran, Michel Bouchard and Sébastien Malette. Michael Smith, of the Great Lakes Métis Council, read the poem at the Louis Riel Day celebration organized by the local Métis organization. Louis Riel, leader of the Métis of North America, was hanged at the North West Mounted Police barracks in Regina by the Canadian Government under Prime Minister John A. Macdonald on November 16, 1885.
a ship came into
owen sound
the crowd gave it
a loud ovation
word was out
they’d laid
to rest riel’s half-
breed nation
john macdonald
had a dream
of cart and travois
swept away
soon the buffalo
were gone
into the west there
came a train
****
no one knows
for certain
as the noose was
firmly tied
if those french
fishermen
wept when louis
riel died
the trees are like
a métis sash
red green orange
interwoven
the high bluffs
offer shelter
log cabins stand
below them
© Rob Rolfe
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