Poems (Cook)/They all belong to me

THEY ALL BELONG TO ME.
There are riches without measureScatter'd thickly o'er the land;There are heaps and heaps of treasure,Bright, beautiful, and grand; There are forests, there are mountains,There are meadows, there are rills,Forming everlasting fountainsIn the bosoms of the hills;There are birds and there are flowers,The fairest things that be—And these great and joyous dowers,Oh! "they all belong to me."
There are golden acres bendingIn the light of harvest rays,There are garland-branches blendingWith the breath of June's sweet days;There are pasture grasses blowingIn the dewy moorland shade,There are herds of cattle lowingIn the midst of bloom and blade;There are noble elms that quiver,As the gale comes full and free,There are alders by the river,And "they all belong to me."
I care not who may reckonThe wheat piled up in sacks,Nor who has power to beckonThe woodman with his axe;I care not who holds leasesOf the upland or the dell,Nor who may count the fleecesWhen the flocks are fit to sell.While there's beauty none can barterIn the greensward and the tree;Claim who will, by seal and charter,Yet they all belong to me."
There's the thick and dingled coverWhere the hare and pheasant play,There are sheets of rosy clover,There are hedges crown'd with May;There are vines all dark and gushing,There are orchards ripe and red,There are herds of wild deer crushingThe heath-bells as they tread.And ye, who count in moneyThe value these may be,Your hives but hold my honey,For "they all belong to me."
Ye cannot shut the tree in,Ye cannot hide the hills,Ye cannot wall the sea in,Ye cannot choke, the rills;The corn will only nestleIn the broad arms of the sky,The clover crop must wrestleWith the common wind, or die.And while these stores of treasureAre spread where I may see,By God's high, bounteous pleasure,"They all belong to me."
What care I for the profitThe stricken stem may yield?I have the shadow of itWhile upright in the field.What reck I of the richesThe mill-stream gathers fast,While I bask in shady niches,And see the brook go past? What reck I who has titleTo the widest lands that be?They are mine, without requital,God gave them all to me.
Oh! privilege and blessing,To find I ever own,What great ones, in possessing,Imagine theirs alone!Oh glory to the Maker,Who gave such boon to hold,Who made me free partakerWhere others buy with gold!For while the woods and mountainsStand up where I can see,While God unlocks the fountains,"They all belong to me!"