The Princess Pat’s

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  A touch of the plain and the prairie,
  A bit of the Motherland, too;
  A strain of the fur-trapper wary,
  A blend of the old and the new;
  A bit of the pioneer splendor
  That opened the wilderness' flats,
  A touch of the home-lover, tender,
  You'll find in the boys they call Pat's.

  The glory and grace of the maple,
  The strength that is born of the wheat,
  The pride of a stock that is staple,
  The bronze of a midsummer heat;
  A blending of wisdom and daring,
  The best of a new land, and that's
  The regiment gallantly bearing
  The neat little title of Pat's.

  A bit of the man who has neighbored
  With mountains and forests and streams,
  A touch of the man who has labored
  To model and fashion his dreams;
  The strength of an age of clean living,
  Of right-minded fatherly chats,
  The best that a land could be giving
  Is there in the breasts of the Pat's.

© Edgar Albert Guest