
In July 1906, L.M. Montgomery published the poem "Down in the Pastures" in The Farm Journal, a journal devoted to the farm, orchard, garden, poultry and household economy. The journal's motto was "Practical not Fancy Farming."
Here is a digitized image of the poem scanned from microfilm available at Archive.org:

Here is the full text of the poem:
DOWN IN THE PASTURES
BY L. M. MONTGOMERY
Down in the pastures, remote and cool,
In the wine-like sweetness of summer air,
Leaf murmurs that wandered to and fro,
A bluebird, perched on a picket gray,
Its virgin lips to the calm blue air
By some subtle instinct of joy was stirred,
O, it was sweet on this summer day
Till the haunting music of each deep tone
To forget the meaning of selfish strife
Reference:
Montgomery, L.M. (1906, July). Down in the Pastures. The Farm Journal. 30(7): 234. Retrieved from: https://archive.org/details/sim_farm-journal_1906-07_30_7/page/234/mode/2up
Created October 30, 2022.
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