[27][Illustration: Top Branch]
[29]THE VERSEMAKERS.Justnow and then when evenings creepWith languid feet to meet the sea,The days go by to sleep their sleepWith all the pasteternity—When earth takes on the wondrous hueFar shed from arcs beyond our ken,We weave a vagrant verse or two,Just now and then.Just now and then, ere shadows fallAcross the threshold of the door,And restless hands upon the wallRetrace Ambition’s creed nomore—Apart from cankered strife and stressThat urge the stumbling feet of men,We scrawl a verselet purposeless,Just now and then.Just now and then, though time glides onFrom scene to scene, from year to year,Till every “Cloth of Gold” is gone,Till every leaf is brown and sere,Life’s picture holds no glinting sheen,We seek the inky shrine againTo paint our landscape gold and green,Just now and then.[30]Just now and then a lilting thoughtMay break the reign of monotoneThat claims our camp to hold its court,That claims our chair to hold its throne.Thrice welcome, then! on silent wing,The friends who come from hill or glenTo overthrow life’s tyrant king,Just now and then.Just now and then, when skies are clear,And winter evenings wilt and wane,Beside the glowing hearth we hearThe echo of some oldrefrain—Some half-remembered distant dreamThat calls the rhymer’s halting penTo mend a broken rhythmic themeJust now and then.[Decoration: Black Swan][31]DREAMS.Away!Away!Let sluggards stayThe sluggish ruck within,While Beauty standsWith outstretched handsTo welcome those who win!And gems divineAnd wealth and wineAre strewn upon the board,Where life and loveGo hand and glove,Like slaves before their lord!The motors fly,The ships go by,The tram-cars whizz andwhirr—I see them passAs in a glass,Where dim-limned shadows stir:I long to hailSome friendly sailEreallthe throng bepast—Then failure’s senseAnd indolenceReach down and hold me fast.[32]Away! Away!To act to-day!The victor’s creed isNow—A cloudless brain,An easy rein,A firm hand on the plough!Aside is flungThe pall that hungFrom damned Inaction’smast ...Then half-thought themesAnd dreamer’s dreamsReach down ... and hold me fast.[Illustration: Man seated at desk][33]TILL DAY IS DONE.Whatdoes it matterThough wealth pass by,Where follies flatterAnd red lipslie—Though cloud shades darkenThe spring-time sheen,And dull threads mingleLife’s woofbetween—Which winds blow whitherO’er land andsea—What does it matterTo you and me?Here at the door ofOur Peace-thatched cotCosmea nods, andForget-me-notSeems to say fromIts eyes of blue,“Life is fairestWhere hearts are true!”[34]And far beyond, whereThe world is wide,Where wrecked lives drift onAn ebbing tide,There is a garlandA queen may wear,Of sweet boroniaAnd maidenhair.Never grey thyme, orA spray of rueTarnish the garlandI’ve twined for you!Let love-fires light, inEach fragrant gemA setting fair forYour diadem!What though its petalsMay, one by one,Pale grow and pass withThe mid-day’ssun—Though velvet fingersAt midnight’s hushShall paint your tressesWith silveredbrush—Though shadows creep, andThe earth grows wan,Our love will lastAs the years roll on![35]With hand in hand, withOur hearts that beatTime to the musicOf twinklingfeet—Wrapped in a dream thatWill live and lastInto the nightWhen the day ispast—Though sails be set forThe shorelesssea—What will it matterTo you and me?[Decoration: Man with swag walking away][36]TO YOU.I loveyou, Sweetheart! better far than all;And still will love, with love that makes or mars,When round my head eternal curtains fall,And sleep shall close the eyelids of the stars:Though all the houris of celestial barsShould lure me on with eyes of liquid light,Joined to the wondrous music of guitars,Withoutyouthere, my blood were cold and white!Beyond that phase of something some call deathI want to love you always, just asnow—To feel my cheek fanned by your clover breath,And feel your hand press sometimes on my brow:I would not turn one instant from the plough,But follow on from starry fence to fence,And question not the whither, whence, or how,Withyouas earnest of God’s providence!And when at last my evening glooms and greys,And when, at last, my last sun westward dips,And I go out upon dim, unknown waysWhere men are borne on heavenly spirit-ships,I’ll watch and wait their oft-returning trips,Hoping for you to step upon the quay,That I may clasp you heart to heart with me,And kiss you ...thus... upon your rose-red lips![37]THE GOSPEL OF SHIRK.Thestrenuous rhymer appals me to-nightWith the pitch of his strenuous songThat shrieks for the god or the goddess of Right!Or that lashes the legions of WrongWith a vicious and venomousthong—By Crumbs!With a knotted and merciless thong!He points, with the pointer of arrogant rhyme,To the pathway of Wealth and Renown,Where weary fools falter and fall, as they climbTo their Goal, that so grimly looks downFrom its gloomy and sinistercrown—Ah me!From its blasted and desolate crown!And still, on the stretch of the moon-silvered sand,With the ripple of waves on the barThere comes, from a point jutting down from the land,A discordant Voice, echoing far:“Steer your boat, steer your boat for a star!”There you are!And the Voice is quite sure of the star![38]And to-night, dear Eileen! in our cockle-shell ship,To our star that is constant and true,We will float on the stream where the willow-boughs dip’Neath a sky that is wondrously blue,And a myriad eyes twinklethrough—All for you!And for me, while I live loving you!Let earnest men answer the crack of the whip,With their shibbolethed bannersaflap—On the fur-covered planks of our cockle-shell ship,As I lie with my head on your lap,I do not care one Commonwealth rapWhat may hap!Not — one — blooming — young — Commonwealth — rap!Let other hands delve ’mid the garbage and grime,And let other lips puff till theyblaze—Oh! ’tis weary work marching when fools beat thetime—But ’tis easy to drift and to lazeAll our nights and our jubilant days,Sweet Eileen!All our nights, starry nights, and our days![39]UNDER THE HEEL OF FATE.Staywe here as the crowd goes by,Twining along thestreet—Listless steps and a half-breathed sigh;Laughter and twinkling feet:Care-worn faces where Time has setPathos in every line:Budding Hope with a deadRegret—Rue and roses and mignonetteBunched in a queer design!One is clad in a purple gown;One in a skirt of grey;Brushing past where the lights beat down,Following each her way:One is marked by a barefoot son;One by a florid beau,Tangled still was the skein shespun—She who slept when the day wasdone ...Say—was it ordered so?See who comes with the drunkard’s gaitOut from the taproom door!He was born to a man’s estate,White to his inmost core:Few were turned from the Master’s handFit to compare withJim ...Now by the world despised and banned,Clear as day shows the damning brandDestiny placed on him![40]Fools may prate of a will that’s free,Else of their strength and brain:Know they not that the jarrah treeOnly splits with the grain?Think they not that a man denies,Or takes his faith ontrust—Not from the words of the foolish wise,Not from the vision of sightlesseyes—But just because hemust!So pass they, while the music plays,Tramping to God knows where:Some goal His in the outer hazeWaiting the pilgrims there;But if, as preachers aver, it bePart of some changeless planTyped in the shop of Eternity,Never a sentence, my friends, did weWrite for the play of “Man”![41]DREAMING THE DREAM OF LIFE.A figfor the world and its carping cares,Its worry and wear andfret—A fig for the poppies that passion wears,Fast followed by dull regret:A fig for the glitter, and gilt, and gaudThat’s won in a tawdry strife,Filling the world with the clash ofswords—Marring the sweetest of human chordsBorn in the valleys where dreamers wait,Dreaming the dream of Life.If I own no love for the arts that mouldThe minds and the souls of men,There lurks no charm in the miser’s gold,Or the heft of the writer’s pen.I wear no frown for the clod below,No cringe for the clown above;For I tread but the path where the roses blow,And I pin one bud to her breast of snow,And I weave a glorious wreath to crownMy goddess of Peace and Love.[42]Her liquid eyes are a hazel greyAnd her lips are ruby red,And the dusk of the night and the light of dayIn the depths of her glance are wed.The old world hustles on eager feet,And its songs are the songs of strife,But we stand aside from the glare and heatAnd we draw the curtain of Love’sretreat—This dainty spirit of youth and IDreaming the dream of Life.A fig for the warrior’s crown of fame!For the faithless world’s caress!A fig for the poet’s or painter’s nameWhose haven is nothingness!A fig for the transient light divineThat halos some godlike head!For the Spring-time breaks and the stars all shine,And the world goes round for this wife ofmine ...Oh, the spirit of languorous love will liveWhen the spirit of strife is dead![Decoration: Man leading camel][43]A GLIMPSE OF SUMMER.Whilethe world’s a-bustleOn the upwardgrade—Straining brain and muscle,Plying pen andspade—Let us go a-dreaming,With your haira-streaming ...Cupid lies a-scheming’Neath the mulga shade.How the rabble clattersAs it hurries by!Chasing Passion’s tatters,Sighing Passion’s sigh.Soft airs, sandal-scented,Fan us: golden-tinted,Like a landscape minted,Plain and hill-top lie.Willy-willies whirlingPlay for me and you,Curling up, and curling,Till they reach the blue:Like a giant sweeping,Creeping on, and creeping’Mongst the trees, a-sleepingMid-day’s languor through.[44]Bell-bird notes are swellingUpward from the glade;Lovelorn swains are tellingLove-tales worn and frayed:Let them strain their tether!You and I togetherNever wilt a feather,Lolling in the shade.Earnest souls, or sighing,Death has ever paid!See pale Effort lyingRue- and wreath-arrayed!Come then, Jean, a-dreaming,With your haira-streaming ...Cupid lies a-scheming’Neath the mulga shade.[Decoration: Mining equipment][45]THE END OF THE EPISODE.Thereis no need to say Good-bye,And weep;There is no call on us for tear or sigh.Men say: “Just as ye sow, so shall ye reap.”Is that, think you, a lie?Now fate points out our different ways,And soWe leave the spot where glamour clothed thedays—Leave for those duller worlds that lie below,With something like amaze.No use to curse: whatever crossedOur way:No need for words: when hearts are tempest-tossed—But those alone may know the cost, who pay,And bankrupt, pay the cost.[46]THE GOLDEN AGE.Thenlife was youngAnd roses hungIn gay festoons from star to star,And o’er the farmA silvered charm,The moonlight, flooded full andfar—The moonlight, telling wondrous talesOf things that are not, and that are.How strange the thrallAround it all!The subtle flapping of a wing!You plainly hearEach wheaten spearUnto its neighbour whispering,And almost catch their secrets,too—Those kindred children of the Spring!And, watching so,The branches throwFantastic shadows on the grass:How quaint and clearTheir lines appear!A woven way where fanciespass—Those secret bairns, that come to most,And live and breathe—but die—alas![47]No longer chimesThe gold of rhymesThat would make music, ay or nay!I number stillThe month, at will,Clare gave to me a lilacspray ...’Tis dead and withered now—how long?An age, a year, or yesterday.Thus rhyme and sprayHave turned to clay,While Discord plays on life’sguitar ...’Twere wise and meetTo book a seat,A cushioned seat, in Daphne’s car,While bright eyes shine, and roses twineIn gay festoons from star to star![Decoration: Gold mining camp][48]AT PARTING.I sitbeside you, this last afternoon,And watch the sunset’s change from gold to grey,That mirrors well my life of yesterdayWhere shadows, born of twilight, fell so soon.And yet, you seemed so womanly andtrue—I never guessed “’Twas but to kill the time!”For I, who dwelt in Passion’s summer clime,Played for a life that centred all in you.I’ve spun no webs, as money-spiders spin,Nor stacked the shining shekels row on row;And yet I have one plea—I love you so!And fatuously dreamed that love might win.For me this old world smiled when you were by;Life’s circles spread their limits wider yet;There came no grey train-bearers of regretTo grace the triumph of hypocrisy.My heart throbbed to the rustle of your dress;My soul drank in each message of your eyes;For Love, they say, is all our paradise,And wanting Love, this life were nothingness.But ere we part—O girl grownworldly-wise!—I place one glory-rose amid your hair,And kiss your lips, with something of despair:For, Dear, I love you yet—and yet despise.[49]THE LEADEN HOOF.What use to puff a blackened fireGrown emberless within the grate?What use to twang a damaged lyreThat’s only half articulate?What use for dumbDesire to thumbThe leaves of a curriculumWhen other men matriculate?’Tis vain to plan a fabric gayWith tangled warp and brokenwoof—Just listen for a moment, pray,—A magpie singing on theroof—Just hear, and thenThrow down the pen:The songs and wings of common menAre anchored to a leaden hoof.And yet, are other days, that bearNo weight of pessimisticsin—A laurel leaf for me to wear,A thought to stir, a smile to win;And o’er the seaThere comes to meThe echo of a symphonyThat sets the smiling world a-spin.[50]Now carmine-hued are Renée’s lips,A thousand gleams light life’s oldwine—I tremble to the finger tipsTo breathe devotion at her shrine;But while I write,Some blasting lightReveals my rose an ashen whiteThat crumbles in these hands of mine.What use to fret a halting brainWhile inspiration holds aloof?And hark! the voice bursts forth again,—A magpie singing on theroof—Just hear, and thenThrow down the pen:The songs and wings of common menAre tethered to a leaden hoof.[Decoration: Mining with a windsail][51]THE PILGRIMAGE.Formany a year we wanderedover hill and dale and mountain,For ever pressing onwardtill we’re nearly worn and old:Searching for some spot Elysianwhere the poets’ crystal fountainSings its songs of calm contentmentin a valley draped with gold:Where the flowers bloom for ever’neath the sun’s life-giving kisses,But never droop ’neath thirsty skiesor feel the winter’s chill:Where roses wreath an arbourwhere no fatal adder hisses,And the promise of our youthful dreamsour later days fulfil.Then the purple flush of morningthrilled our careless hearts with pleasure,And the sunbeams shooting downwardwith our spirit shared their glow:Once every bell and buttercupthat blossomed was atreasure—In those days that we have dreamed of,in the misty long-ago.[52]But the joys of life would pall uponthe heart that they for ever,Unbroken by a shadow,lit with one eternal glare;And the bonds of love are strengthenedby the thought that they may sever,And are hallowed in the memoryof lives and loves that were.The ropes of sand that bound usthen appeared so deftly wovenThat we noticed not each single grainthe breezes swept away,Nor underneath the robe of Beauty,silken-cased, the clovenHoof of Time, that swept the garlandsinto ruin and decay.[Decoration: Horse-powered mining]
Justnow and then when evenings creepWith languid feet to meet the sea,The days go by to sleep their sleepWith all the pasteternity—When earth takes on the wondrous hueFar shed from arcs beyond our ken,We weave a vagrant verse or two,Just now and then.Just now and then, ere shadows fallAcross the threshold of the door,And restless hands upon the wallRetrace Ambition’s creed nomore—Apart from cankered strife and stressThat urge the stumbling feet of men,We scrawl a verselet purposeless,Just now and then.Just now and then, though time glides onFrom scene to scene, from year to year,Till every “Cloth of Gold” is gone,Till every leaf is brown and sere,Life’s picture holds no glinting sheen,We seek the inky shrine againTo paint our landscape gold and green,Just now and then.[30]Just now and then a lilting thoughtMay break the reign of monotoneThat claims our camp to hold its court,That claims our chair to hold its throne.Thrice welcome, then! on silent wing,The friends who come from hill or glenTo overthrow life’s tyrant king,Just now and then.Just now and then, when skies are clear,And winter evenings wilt and wane,Beside the glowing hearth we hearThe echo of some oldrefrain—Some half-remembered distant dreamThat calls the rhymer’s halting penTo mend a broken rhythmic themeJust now and then.
Justnow and then when evenings creepWith languid feet to meet the sea,The days go by to sleep their sleepWith all the pasteternity—When earth takes on the wondrous hueFar shed from arcs beyond our ken,We weave a vagrant verse or two,Just now and then.Just now and then, ere shadows fallAcross the threshold of the door,And restless hands upon the wallRetrace Ambition’s creed nomore—Apart from cankered strife and stressThat urge the stumbling feet of men,We scrawl a verselet purposeless,Just now and then.Just now and then, though time glides onFrom scene to scene, from year to year,Till every “Cloth of Gold” is gone,Till every leaf is brown and sere,Life’s picture holds no glinting sheen,We seek the inky shrine againTo paint our landscape gold and green,Just now and then.[30]Just now and then a lilting thoughtMay break the reign of monotoneThat claims our camp to hold its court,That claims our chair to hold its throne.Thrice welcome, then! on silent wing,The friends who come from hill or glenTo overthrow life’s tyrant king,Just now and then.Just now and then, when skies are clear,And winter evenings wilt and wane,Beside the glowing hearth we hearThe echo of some oldrefrain—Some half-remembered distant dreamThat calls the rhymer’s halting penTo mend a broken rhythmic themeJust now and then.
Justnow and then when evenings creepWith languid feet to meet the sea,The days go by to sleep their sleepWith all the pasteternity—When earth takes on the wondrous hueFar shed from arcs beyond our ken,We weave a vagrant verse or two,Just now and then.
Justnow and then when evenings creep
With languid feet to meet the sea,
The days go by to sleep their sleep
With all the pasteternity—
When earth takes on the wondrous hue
Far shed from arcs beyond our ken,
We weave a vagrant verse or two,
Just now and then.
Just now and then, ere shadows fallAcross the threshold of the door,And restless hands upon the wallRetrace Ambition’s creed nomore—Apart from cankered strife and stressThat urge the stumbling feet of men,We scrawl a verselet purposeless,Just now and then.
Just now and then, ere shadows fall
Across the threshold of the door,
And restless hands upon the wall
Retrace Ambition’s creed nomore—
Apart from cankered strife and stress
That urge the stumbling feet of men,
We scrawl a verselet purposeless,
Just now and then.
Just now and then, though time glides onFrom scene to scene, from year to year,Till every “Cloth of Gold” is gone,Till every leaf is brown and sere,Life’s picture holds no glinting sheen,We seek the inky shrine againTo paint our landscape gold and green,Just now and then.
Just now and then, though time glides on
From scene to scene, from year to year,
Till every “Cloth of Gold” is gone,
Till every leaf is brown and sere,
Life’s picture holds no glinting sheen,
We seek the inky shrine again
To paint our landscape gold and green,
Just now and then.
[30]Just now and then a lilting thoughtMay break the reign of monotoneThat claims our camp to hold its court,That claims our chair to hold its throne.Thrice welcome, then! on silent wing,The friends who come from hill or glenTo overthrow life’s tyrant king,Just now and then.
[30]Just now and then a lilting thought
May break the reign of monotone
That claims our camp to hold its court,
That claims our chair to hold its throne.
Thrice welcome, then! on silent wing,
The friends who come from hill or glen
To overthrow life’s tyrant king,
Just now and then.
Just now and then, when skies are clear,And winter evenings wilt and wane,Beside the glowing hearth we hearThe echo of some oldrefrain—Some half-remembered distant dreamThat calls the rhymer’s halting penTo mend a broken rhythmic themeJust now and then.
Just now and then, when skies are clear,
And winter evenings wilt and wane,
Beside the glowing hearth we hear
The echo of some oldrefrain—
Some half-remembered distant dream
That calls the rhymer’s halting pen
To mend a broken rhythmic theme
Just now and then.
[Decoration: Black Swan]
Away!Away!Let sluggards stayThe sluggish ruck within,While Beauty standsWith outstretched handsTo welcome those who win!And gems divineAnd wealth and wineAre strewn upon the board,Where life and loveGo hand and glove,Like slaves before their lord!The motors fly,The ships go by,The tram-cars whizz andwhirr—I see them passAs in a glass,Where dim-limned shadows stir:I long to hailSome friendly sailEreallthe throng bepast—Then failure’s senseAnd indolenceReach down and hold me fast.[32]Away! Away!To act to-day!The victor’s creed isNow—A cloudless brain,An easy rein,A firm hand on the plough!Aside is flungThe pall that hungFrom damned Inaction’smast ...Then half-thought themesAnd dreamer’s dreamsReach down ... and hold me fast.
Away!Away!Let sluggards stayThe sluggish ruck within,While Beauty standsWith outstretched handsTo welcome those who win!And gems divineAnd wealth and wineAre strewn upon the board,Where life and loveGo hand and glove,Like slaves before their lord!The motors fly,The ships go by,The tram-cars whizz andwhirr—I see them passAs in a glass,Where dim-limned shadows stir:I long to hailSome friendly sailEreallthe throng bepast—Then failure’s senseAnd indolenceReach down and hold me fast.[32]Away! Away!To act to-day!The victor’s creed isNow—A cloudless brain,An easy rein,A firm hand on the plough!Aside is flungThe pall that hungFrom damned Inaction’smast ...Then half-thought themesAnd dreamer’s dreamsReach down ... and hold me fast.
Away!Away!Let sluggards stayThe sluggish ruck within,While Beauty standsWith outstretched handsTo welcome those who win!And gems divineAnd wealth and wineAre strewn upon the board,Where life and loveGo hand and glove,Like slaves before their lord!
Away!Away!
Let sluggards stay
The sluggish ruck within,
While Beauty stands
With outstretched hands
To welcome those who win!
And gems divine
And wealth and wine
Are strewn upon the board,
Where life and love
Go hand and glove,
Like slaves before their lord!
The motors fly,The ships go by,The tram-cars whizz andwhirr—I see them passAs in a glass,Where dim-limned shadows stir:I long to hailSome friendly sailEreallthe throng bepast—Then failure’s senseAnd indolenceReach down and hold me fast.
The motors fly,
The ships go by,
The tram-cars whizz andwhirr—
I see them pass
As in a glass,
Where dim-limned shadows stir:
I long to hail
Some friendly sail
Ereallthe throng bepast—
Then failure’s sense
And indolence
Reach down and hold me fast.
[32]Away! Away!To act to-day!The victor’s creed isNow—A cloudless brain,An easy rein,A firm hand on the plough!Aside is flungThe pall that hungFrom damned Inaction’smast ...Then half-thought themesAnd dreamer’s dreamsReach down ... and hold me fast.
[32]Away! Away!
To act to-day!
The victor’s creed isNow—
A cloudless brain,
An easy rein,
A firm hand on the plough!
Aside is flung
The pall that hung
From damned Inaction’smast ...
Then half-thought themes
And dreamer’s dreams
Reach down ... and hold me fast.
[Illustration: Man seated at desk]
Whatdoes it matterThough wealth pass by,Where follies flatterAnd red lipslie—Though cloud shades darkenThe spring-time sheen,And dull threads mingleLife’s woofbetween—Which winds blow whitherO’er land andsea—What does it matterTo you and me?Here at the door ofOur Peace-thatched cotCosmea nods, andForget-me-notSeems to say fromIts eyes of blue,“Life is fairestWhere hearts are true!”[34]And far beyond, whereThe world is wide,Where wrecked lives drift onAn ebbing tide,There is a garlandA queen may wear,Of sweet boroniaAnd maidenhair.Never grey thyme, orA spray of rueTarnish the garlandI’ve twined for you!Let love-fires light, inEach fragrant gemA setting fair forYour diadem!What though its petalsMay, one by one,Pale grow and pass withThe mid-day’ssun—Though velvet fingersAt midnight’s hushShall paint your tressesWith silveredbrush—Though shadows creep, andThe earth grows wan,Our love will lastAs the years roll on![35]With hand in hand, withOur hearts that beatTime to the musicOf twinklingfeet—Wrapped in a dream thatWill live and lastInto the nightWhen the day ispast—Though sails be set forThe shorelesssea—What will it matterTo you and me?
Whatdoes it matterThough wealth pass by,Where follies flatterAnd red lipslie—Though cloud shades darkenThe spring-time sheen,And dull threads mingleLife’s woofbetween—Which winds blow whitherO’er land andsea—What does it matterTo you and me?Here at the door ofOur Peace-thatched cotCosmea nods, andForget-me-notSeems to say fromIts eyes of blue,“Life is fairestWhere hearts are true!”[34]And far beyond, whereThe world is wide,Where wrecked lives drift onAn ebbing tide,There is a garlandA queen may wear,Of sweet boroniaAnd maidenhair.Never grey thyme, orA spray of rueTarnish the garlandI’ve twined for you!Let love-fires light, inEach fragrant gemA setting fair forYour diadem!What though its petalsMay, one by one,Pale grow and pass withThe mid-day’ssun—Though velvet fingersAt midnight’s hushShall paint your tressesWith silveredbrush—Though shadows creep, andThe earth grows wan,Our love will lastAs the years roll on![35]With hand in hand, withOur hearts that beatTime to the musicOf twinklingfeet—Wrapped in a dream thatWill live and lastInto the nightWhen the day ispast—Though sails be set forThe shorelesssea—What will it matterTo you and me?
Whatdoes it matterThough wealth pass by,Where follies flatterAnd red lipslie—Though cloud shades darkenThe spring-time sheen,And dull threads mingleLife’s woofbetween—Which winds blow whitherO’er land andsea—What does it matterTo you and me?
Whatdoes it matter
Though wealth pass by,
Where follies flatter
And red lipslie—
Though cloud shades darken
The spring-time sheen,
And dull threads mingle
Life’s woofbetween—
Which winds blow whither
O’er land andsea—
What does it matter
To you and me?
Here at the door ofOur Peace-thatched cotCosmea nods, andForget-me-notSeems to say fromIts eyes of blue,“Life is fairestWhere hearts are true!”
Here at the door of
Our Peace-thatched cot
Cosmea nods, and
Forget-me-not
Seems to say from
Its eyes of blue,
“Life is fairest
Where hearts are true!”
[34]And far beyond, whereThe world is wide,Where wrecked lives drift onAn ebbing tide,There is a garlandA queen may wear,Of sweet boroniaAnd maidenhair.Never grey thyme, orA spray of rueTarnish the garlandI’ve twined for you!Let love-fires light, inEach fragrant gemA setting fair forYour diadem!
[34]And far beyond, where
The world is wide,
Where wrecked lives drift on
An ebbing tide,
There is a garland
A queen may wear,
Of sweet boronia
And maidenhair.
Never grey thyme, or
A spray of rue
Tarnish the garland
I’ve twined for you!
Let love-fires light, in
Each fragrant gem
A setting fair for
Your diadem!
What though its petalsMay, one by one,Pale grow and pass withThe mid-day’ssun—Though velvet fingersAt midnight’s hushShall paint your tressesWith silveredbrush—Though shadows creep, andThe earth grows wan,Our love will lastAs the years roll on!
What though its petals
May, one by one,
Pale grow and pass with
The mid-day’ssun—
Though velvet fingers
At midnight’s hush
Shall paint your tresses
With silveredbrush—
Though shadows creep, and
The earth grows wan,
Our love will last
As the years roll on!
[35]With hand in hand, withOur hearts that beatTime to the musicOf twinklingfeet—Wrapped in a dream thatWill live and lastInto the nightWhen the day ispast—Though sails be set forThe shorelesssea—What will it matterTo you and me?
[35]With hand in hand, with
Our hearts that beat
Time to the music
Of twinklingfeet—
Wrapped in a dream that
Will live and last
Into the night
When the day ispast—
Though sails be set for
The shorelesssea—
What will it matter
To you and me?
[Decoration: Man with swag walking away]
I loveyou, Sweetheart! better far than all;And still will love, with love that makes or mars,When round my head eternal curtains fall,And sleep shall close the eyelids of the stars:Though all the houris of celestial barsShould lure me on with eyes of liquid light,Joined to the wondrous music of guitars,Withoutyouthere, my blood were cold and white!Beyond that phase of something some call deathI want to love you always, just asnow—To feel my cheek fanned by your clover breath,And feel your hand press sometimes on my brow:I would not turn one instant from the plough,But follow on from starry fence to fence,And question not the whither, whence, or how,Withyouas earnest of God’s providence!And when at last my evening glooms and greys,And when, at last, my last sun westward dips,And I go out upon dim, unknown waysWhere men are borne on heavenly spirit-ships,I’ll watch and wait their oft-returning trips,Hoping for you to step upon the quay,That I may clasp you heart to heart with me,And kiss you ...thus... upon your rose-red lips!
I loveyou, Sweetheart! better far than all;And still will love, with love that makes or mars,When round my head eternal curtains fall,And sleep shall close the eyelids of the stars:Though all the houris of celestial barsShould lure me on with eyes of liquid light,Joined to the wondrous music of guitars,Withoutyouthere, my blood were cold and white!Beyond that phase of something some call deathI want to love you always, just asnow—To feel my cheek fanned by your clover breath,And feel your hand press sometimes on my brow:I would not turn one instant from the plough,But follow on from starry fence to fence,And question not the whither, whence, or how,Withyouas earnest of God’s providence!And when at last my evening glooms and greys,And when, at last, my last sun westward dips,And I go out upon dim, unknown waysWhere men are borne on heavenly spirit-ships,I’ll watch and wait their oft-returning trips,Hoping for you to step upon the quay,That I may clasp you heart to heart with me,And kiss you ...thus... upon your rose-red lips!
I loveyou, Sweetheart! better far than all;And still will love, with love that makes or mars,When round my head eternal curtains fall,And sleep shall close the eyelids of the stars:Though all the houris of celestial barsShould lure me on with eyes of liquid light,Joined to the wondrous music of guitars,Withoutyouthere, my blood were cold and white!
I loveyou, Sweetheart! better far than all;
And still will love, with love that makes or mars,
When round my head eternal curtains fall,
And sleep shall close the eyelids of the stars:
Though all the houris of celestial bars
Should lure me on with eyes of liquid light,
Joined to the wondrous music of guitars,
Withoutyouthere, my blood were cold and white!
Beyond that phase of something some call deathI want to love you always, just asnow—To feel my cheek fanned by your clover breath,And feel your hand press sometimes on my brow:I would not turn one instant from the plough,But follow on from starry fence to fence,And question not the whither, whence, or how,Withyouas earnest of God’s providence!
Beyond that phase of something some call death
I want to love you always, just asnow—
To feel my cheek fanned by your clover breath,
And feel your hand press sometimes on my brow:
I would not turn one instant from the plough,
But follow on from starry fence to fence,
And question not the whither, whence, or how,
Withyouas earnest of God’s providence!
And when at last my evening glooms and greys,And when, at last, my last sun westward dips,And I go out upon dim, unknown waysWhere men are borne on heavenly spirit-ships,I’ll watch and wait their oft-returning trips,Hoping for you to step upon the quay,That I may clasp you heart to heart with me,And kiss you ...thus... upon your rose-red lips!
And when at last my evening glooms and greys,
And when, at last, my last sun westward dips,
And I go out upon dim, unknown ways
Where men are borne on heavenly spirit-ships,
I’ll watch and wait their oft-returning trips,
Hoping for you to step upon the quay,
That I may clasp you heart to heart with me,
And kiss you ...thus... upon your rose-red lips!
Thestrenuous rhymer appals me to-nightWith the pitch of his strenuous songThat shrieks for the god or the goddess of Right!Or that lashes the legions of WrongWith a vicious and venomousthong—By Crumbs!With a knotted and merciless thong!He points, with the pointer of arrogant rhyme,To the pathway of Wealth and Renown,Where weary fools falter and fall, as they climbTo their Goal, that so grimly looks downFrom its gloomy and sinistercrown—Ah me!From its blasted and desolate crown!And still, on the stretch of the moon-silvered sand,With the ripple of waves on the barThere comes, from a point jutting down from the land,A discordant Voice, echoing far:“Steer your boat, steer your boat for a star!”There you are!And the Voice is quite sure of the star![38]And to-night, dear Eileen! in our cockle-shell ship,To our star that is constant and true,We will float on the stream where the willow-boughs dip’Neath a sky that is wondrously blue,And a myriad eyes twinklethrough—All for you!And for me, while I live loving you!Let earnest men answer the crack of the whip,With their shibbolethed bannersaflap—On the fur-covered planks of our cockle-shell ship,As I lie with my head on your lap,I do not care one Commonwealth rapWhat may hap!Not — one — blooming — young — Commonwealth — rap!Let other hands delve ’mid the garbage and grime,And let other lips puff till theyblaze—Oh! ’tis weary work marching when fools beat thetime—But ’tis easy to drift and to lazeAll our nights and our jubilant days,Sweet Eileen!All our nights, starry nights, and our days!
Thestrenuous rhymer appals me to-nightWith the pitch of his strenuous songThat shrieks for the god or the goddess of Right!Or that lashes the legions of WrongWith a vicious and venomousthong—By Crumbs!With a knotted and merciless thong!He points, with the pointer of arrogant rhyme,To the pathway of Wealth and Renown,Where weary fools falter and fall, as they climbTo their Goal, that so grimly looks downFrom its gloomy and sinistercrown—Ah me!From its blasted and desolate crown!And still, on the stretch of the moon-silvered sand,With the ripple of waves on the barThere comes, from a point jutting down from the land,A discordant Voice, echoing far:“Steer your boat, steer your boat for a star!”There you are!And the Voice is quite sure of the star![38]And to-night, dear Eileen! in our cockle-shell ship,To our star that is constant and true,We will float on the stream where the willow-boughs dip’Neath a sky that is wondrously blue,And a myriad eyes twinklethrough—All for you!And for me, while I live loving you!Let earnest men answer the crack of the whip,With their shibbolethed bannersaflap—On the fur-covered planks of our cockle-shell ship,As I lie with my head on your lap,I do not care one Commonwealth rapWhat may hap!Not — one — blooming — young — Commonwealth — rap!Let other hands delve ’mid the garbage and grime,And let other lips puff till theyblaze—Oh! ’tis weary work marching when fools beat thetime—But ’tis easy to drift and to lazeAll our nights and our jubilant days,Sweet Eileen!All our nights, starry nights, and our days!
Thestrenuous rhymer appals me to-nightWith the pitch of his strenuous songThat shrieks for the god or the goddess of Right!Or that lashes the legions of WrongWith a vicious and venomousthong—By Crumbs!With a knotted and merciless thong!
Thestrenuous rhymer appals me to-night
With the pitch of his strenuous song
That shrieks for the god or the goddess of Right!
Or that lashes the legions of Wrong
With a vicious and venomousthong—
By Crumbs!
With a knotted and merciless thong!
He points, with the pointer of arrogant rhyme,To the pathway of Wealth and Renown,Where weary fools falter and fall, as they climbTo their Goal, that so grimly looks downFrom its gloomy and sinistercrown—Ah me!From its blasted and desolate crown!
He points, with the pointer of arrogant rhyme,
To the pathway of Wealth and Renown,
Where weary fools falter and fall, as they climb
To their Goal, that so grimly looks down
From its gloomy and sinistercrown—
Ah me!
From its blasted and desolate crown!
And still, on the stretch of the moon-silvered sand,With the ripple of waves on the barThere comes, from a point jutting down from the land,A discordant Voice, echoing far:“Steer your boat, steer your boat for a star!”There you are!And the Voice is quite sure of the star!
And still, on the stretch of the moon-silvered sand,
With the ripple of waves on the bar
There comes, from a point jutting down from the land,
A discordant Voice, echoing far:
“Steer your boat, steer your boat for a star!”
There you are!
And the Voice is quite sure of the star!
[38]And to-night, dear Eileen! in our cockle-shell ship,To our star that is constant and true,We will float on the stream where the willow-boughs dip’Neath a sky that is wondrously blue,And a myriad eyes twinklethrough—All for you!And for me, while I live loving you!
[38]And to-night, dear Eileen! in our cockle-shell ship,
To our star that is constant and true,
We will float on the stream where the willow-boughs dip
’Neath a sky that is wondrously blue,
And a myriad eyes twinklethrough—
All for you!
And for me, while I live loving you!
Let earnest men answer the crack of the whip,With their shibbolethed bannersaflap—On the fur-covered planks of our cockle-shell ship,As I lie with my head on your lap,I do not care one Commonwealth rapWhat may hap!Not — one — blooming — young — Commonwealth — rap!
Let earnest men answer the crack of the whip,
With their shibbolethed bannersaflap—
On the fur-covered planks of our cockle-shell ship,
As I lie with my head on your lap,
I do not care one Commonwealth rap
What may hap!
Not — one — blooming — young — Commonwealth — rap!
Let other hands delve ’mid the garbage and grime,And let other lips puff till theyblaze—Oh! ’tis weary work marching when fools beat thetime—But ’tis easy to drift and to lazeAll our nights and our jubilant days,Sweet Eileen!All our nights, starry nights, and our days!
Let other hands delve ’mid the garbage and grime,
And let other lips puff till theyblaze—
Oh! ’tis weary work marching when fools beat thetime—
But ’tis easy to drift and to laze
All our nights and our jubilant days,
Sweet Eileen!
All our nights, starry nights, and our days!
Staywe here as the crowd goes by,Twining along thestreet—Listless steps and a half-breathed sigh;Laughter and twinkling feet:Care-worn faces where Time has setPathos in every line:Budding Hope with a deadRegret—Rue and roses and mignonetteBunched in a queer design!One is clad in a purple gown;One in a skirt of grey;Brushing past where the lights beat down,Following each her way:One is marked by a barefoot son;One by a florid beau,Tangled still was the skein shespun—She who slept when the day wasdone ...Say—was it ordered so?See who comes with the drunkard’s gaitOut from the taproom door!He was born to a man’s estate,White to his inmost core:Few were turned from the Master’s handFit to compare withJim ...Now by the world despised and banned,Clear as day shows the damning brandDestiny placed on him![40]Fools may prate of a will that’s free,Else of their strength and brain:Know they not that the jarrah treeOnly splits with the grain?Think they not that a man denies,Or takes his faith ontrust—Not from the words of the foolish wise,Not from the vision of sightlesseyes—But just because hemust!So pass they, while the music plays,Tramping to God knows where:Some goal His in the outer hazeWaiting the pilgrims there;But if, as preachers aver, it bePart of some changeless planTyped in the shop of Eternity,Never a sentence, my friends, did weWrite for the play of “Man”!
Staywe here as the crowd goes by,Twining along thestreet—Listless steps and a half-breathed sigh;Laughter and twinkling feet:Care-worn faces where Time has setPathos in every line:Budding Hope with a deadRegret—Rue and roses and mignonetteBunched in a queer design!One is clad in a purple gown;One in a skirt of grey;Brushing past where the lights beat down,Following each her way:One is marked by a barefoot son;One by a florid beau,Tangled still was the skein shespun—She who slept when the day wasdone ...Say—was it ordered so?See who comes with the drunkard’s gaitOut from the taproom door!He was born to a man’s estate,White to his inmost core:Few were turned from the Master’s handFit to compare withJim ...Now by the world despised and banned,Clear as day shows the damning brandDestiny placed on him![40]Fools may prate of a will that’s free,Else of their strength and brain:Know they not that the jarrah treeOnly splits with the grain?Think they not that a man denies,Or takes his faith ontrust—Not from the words of the foolish wise,Not from the vision of sightlesseyes—But just because hemust!So pass they, while the music plays,Tramping to God knows where:Some goal His in the outer hazeWaiting the pilgrims there;But if, as preachers aver, it bePart of some changeless planTyped in the shop of Eternity,Never a sentence, my friends, did weWrite for the play of “Man”!
Staywe here as the crowd goes by,Twining along thestreet—Listless steps and a half-breathed sigh;Laughter and twinkling feet:Care-worn faces where Time has setPathos in every line:Budding Hope with a deadRegret—Rue and roses and mignonetteBunched in a queer design!
Staywe here as the crowd goes by,
Twining along thestreet—
Listless steps and a half-breathed sigh;
Laughter and twinkling feet:
Care-worn faces where Time has set
Pathos in every line:
Budding Hope with a deadRegret—
Rue and roses and mignonette
Bunched in a queer design!
One is clad in a purple gown;One in a skirt of grey;Brushing past where the lights beat down,Following each her way:One is marked by a barefoot son;One by a florid beau,Tangled still was the skein shespun—She who slept when the day wasdone ...Say—was it ordered so?
One is clad in a purple gown;
One in a skirt of grey;
Brushing past where the lights beat down,
Following each her way:
One is marked by a barefoot son;
One by a florid beau,
Tangled still was the skein shespun—
She who slept when the day wasdone ...
Say—was it ordered so?
See who comes with the drunkard’s gaitOut from the taproom door!He was born to a man’s estate,White to his inmost core:Few were turned from the Master’s handFit to compare withJim ...Now by the world despised and banned,Clear as day shows the damning brandDestiny placed on him!
See who comes with the drunkard’s gait
Out from the taproom door!
He was born to a man’s estate,
White to his inmost core:
Few were turned from the Master’s hand
Fit to compare withJim ...
Now by the world despised and banned,
Clear as day shows the damning brand
Destiny placed on him!
[40]Fools may prate of a will that’s free,Else of their strength and brain:Know they not that the jarrah treeOnly splits with the grain?Think they not that a man denies,Or takes his faith ontrust—Not from the words of the foolish wise,Not from the vision of sightlesseyes—But just because hemust!
[40]Fools may prate of a will that’s free,
Else of their strength and brain:
Know they not that the jarrah tree
Only splits with the grain?
Think they not that a man denies,
Or takes his faith ontrust—
Not from the words of the foolish wise,
Not from the vision of sightlesseyes—
But just because hemust!
So pass they, while the music plays,Tramping to God knows where:Some goal His in the outer hazeWaiting the pilgrims there;But if, as preachers aver, it bePart of some changeless planTyped in the shop of Eternity,Never a sentence, my friends, did weWrite for the play of “Man”!
So pass they, while the music plays,
Tramping to God knows where:
Some goal His in the outer haze
Waiting the pilgrims there;
But if, as preachers aver, it be
Part of some changeless plan
Typed in the shop of Eternity,
Never a sentence, my friends, did we
Write for the play of “Man”!
A figfor the world and its carping cares,Its worry and wear andfret—A fig for the poppies that passion wears,Fast followed by dull regret:A fig for the glitter, and gilt, and gaudThat’s won in a tawdry strife,Filling the world with the clash ofswords—Marring the sweetest of human chordsBorn in the valleys where dreamers wait,Dreaming the dream of Life.If I own no love for the arts that mouldThe minds and the souls of men,There lurks no charm in the miser’s gold,Or the heft of the writer’s pen.I wear no frown for the clod below,No cringe for the clown above;For I tread but the path where the roses blow,And I pin one bud to her breast of snow,And I weave a glorious wreath to crownMy goddess of Peace and Love.[42]Her liquid eyes are a hazel greyAnd her lips are ruby red,And the dusk of the night and the light of dayIn the depths of her glance are wed.The old world hustles on eager feet,And its songs are the songs of strife,But we stand aside from the glare and heatAnd we draw the curtain of Love’sretreat—This dainty spirit of youth and IDreaming the dream of Life.A fig for the warrior’s crown of fame!For the faithless world’s caress!A fig for the poet’s or painter’s nameWhose haven is nothingness!A fig for the transient light divineThat halos some godlike head!For the Spring-time breaks and the stars all shine,And the world goes round for this wife ofmine ...Oh, the spirit of languorous love will liveWhen the spirit of strife is dead!
A figfor the world and its carping cares,Its worry and wear andfret—A fig for the poppies that passion wears,Fast followed by dull regret:A fig for the glitter, and gilt, and gaudThat’s won in a tawdry strife,Filling the world with the clash ofswords—Marring the sweetest of human chordsBorn in the valleys where dreamers wait,Dreaming the dream of Life.If I own no love for the arts that mouldThe minds and the souls of men,There lurks no charm in the miser’s gold,Or the heft of the writer’s pen.I wear no frown for the clod below,No cringe for the clown above;For I tread but the path where the roses blow,And I pin one bud to her breast of snow,And I weave a glorious wreath to crownMy goddess of Peace and Love.[42]Her liquid eyes are a hazel greyAnd her lips are ruby red,And the dusk of the night and the light of dayIn the depths of her glance are wed.The old world hustles on eager feet,And its songs are the songs of strife,But we stand aside from the glare and heatAnd we draw the curtain of Love’sretreat—This dainty spirit of youth and IDreaming the dream of Life.A fig for the warrior’s crown of fame!For the faithless world’s caress!A fig for the poet’s or painter’s nameWhose haven is nothingness!A fig for the transient light divineThat halos some godlike head!For the Spring-time breaks and the stars all shine,And the world goes round for this wife ofmine ...Oh, the spirit of languorous love will liveWhen the spirit of strife is dead!
A figfor the world and its carping cares,Its worry and wear andfret—A fig for the poppies that passion wears,Fast followed by dull regret:A fig for the glitter, and gilt, and gaudThat’s won in a tawdry strife,Filling the world with the clash ofswords—Marring the sweetest of human chordsBorn in the valleys where dreamers wait,Dreaming the dream of Life.
A figfor the world and its carping cares,
Its worry and wear andfret—
A fig for the poppies that passion wears,
Fast followed by dull regret:
A fig for the glitter, and gilt, and gaud
That’s won in a tawdry strife,
Filling the world with the clash ofswords—
Marring the sweetest of human chords
Born in the valleys where dreamers wait,
Dreaming the dream of Life.
If I own no love for the arts that mouldThe minds and the souls of men,There lurks no charm in the miser’s gold,Or the heft of the writer’s pen.I wear no frown for the clod below,No cringe for the clown above;For I tread but the path where the roses blow,And I pin one bud to her breast of snow,And I weave a glorious wreath to crownMy goddess of Peace and Love.
If I own no love for the arts that mould
The minds and the souls of men,
There lurks no charm in the miser’s gold,
Or the heft of the writer’s pen.
I wear no frown for the clod below,
No cringe for the clown above;
For I tread but the path where the roses blow,
And I pin one bud to her breast of snow,
And I weave a glorious wreath to crown
My goddess of Peace and Love.
[42]Her liquid eyes are a hazel greyAnd her lips are ruby red,And the dusk of the night and the light of dayIn the depths of her glance are wed.The old world hustles on eager feet,And its songs are the songs of strife,But we stand aside from the glare and heatAnd we draw the curtain of Love’sretreat—This dainty spirit of youth and IDreaming the dream of Life.
[42]Her liquid eyes are a hazel grey
And her lips are ruby red,
And the dusk of the night and the light of day
In the depths of her glance are wed.
The old world hustles on eager feet,
And its songs are the songs of strife,
But we stand aside from the glare and heat
And we draw the curtain of Love’sretreat—
This dainty spirit of youth and I
Dreaming the dream of Life.
A fig for the warrior’s crown of fame!For the faithless world’s caress!A fig for the poet’s or painter’s nameWhose haven is nothingness!A fig for the transient light divineThat halos some godlike head!For the Spring-time breaks and the stars all shine,And the world goes round for this wife ofmine ...Oh, the spirit of languorous love will liveWhen the spirit of strife is dead!
A fig for the warrior’s crown of fame!
For the faithless world’s caress!
A fig for the poet’s or painter’s name
Whose haven is nothingness!
A fig for the transient light divine
That halos some godlike head!
For the Spring-time breaks and the stars all shine,
And the world goes round for this wife ofmine ...
Oh, the spirit of languorous love will live
When the spirit of strife is dead!
[Decoration: Man leading camel]
Whilethe world’s a-bustleOn the upwardgrade—Straining brain and muscle,Plying pen andspade—Let us go a-dreaming,With your haira-streaming ...Cupid lies a-scheming’Neath the mulga shade.How the rabble clattersAs it hurries by!Chasing Passion’s tatters,Sighing Passion’s sigh.Soft airs, sandal-scented,Fan us: golden-tinted,Like a landscape minted,Plain and hill-top lie.Willy-willies whirlingPlay for me and you,Curling up, and curling,Till they reach the blue:Like a giant sweeping,Creeping on, and creeping’Mongst the trees, a-sleepingMid-day’s languor through.[44]Bell-bird notes are swellingUpward from the glade;Lovelorn swains are tellingLove-tales worn and frayed:Let them strain their tether!You and I togetherNever wilt a feather,Lolling in the shade.Earnest souls, or sighing,Death has ever paid!See pale Effort lyingRue- and wreath-arrayed!Come then, Jean, a-dreaming,With your haira-streaming ...Cupid lies a-scheming’Neath the mulga shade.
Whilethe world’s a-bustleOn the upwardgrade—Straining brain and muscle,Plying pen andspade—Let us go a-dreaming,With your haira-streaming ...Cupid lies a-scheming’Neath the mulga shade.How the rabble clattersAs it hurries by!Chasing Passion’s tatters,Sighing Passion’s sigh.Soft airs, sandal-scented,Fan us: golden-tinted,Like a landscape minted,Plain and hill-top lie.Willy-willies whirlingPlay for me and you,Curling up, and curling,Till they reach the blue:Like a giant sweeping,Creeping on, and creeping’Mongst the trees, a-sleepingMid-day’s languor through.[44]Bell-bird notes are swellingUpward from the glade;Lovelorn swains are tellingLove-tales worn and frayed:Let them strain their tether!You and I togetherNever wilt a feather,Lolling in the shade.Earnest souls, or sighing,Death has ever paid!See pale Effort lyingRue- and wreath-arrayed!Come then, Jean, a-dreaming,With your haira-streaming ...Cupid lies a-scheming’Neath the mulga shade.
Whilethe world’s a-bustleOn the upwardgrade—Straining brain and muscle,Plying pen andspade—Let us go a-dreaming,With your haira-streaming ...Cupid lies a-scheming’Neath the mulga shade.
Whilethe world’s a-bustle
On the upwardgrade—
Straining brain and muscle,
Plying pen andspade—
Let us go a-dreaming,
With your haira-streaming ...
Cupid lies a-scheming
’Neath the mulga shade.
How the rabble clattersAs it hurries by!Chasing Passion’s tatters,Sighing Passion’s sigh.Soft airs, sandal-scented,Fan us: golden-tinted,Like a landscape minted,Plain and hill-top lie.
How the rabble clatters
As it hurries by!
Chasing Passion’s tatters,
Sighing Passion’s sigh.
Soft airs, sandal-scented,
Fan us: golden-tinted,
Like a landscape minted,
Plain and hill-top lie.
Willy-willies whirlingPlay for me and you,Curling up, and curling,Till they reach the blue:Like a giant sweeping,Creeping on, and creeping’Mongst the trees, a-sleepingMid-day’s languor through.
Willy-willies whirling
Play for me and you,
Curling up, and curling,
Till they reach the blue:
Like a giant sweeping,
Creeping on, and creeping
’Mongst the trees, a-sleeping
Mid-day’s languor through.
[44]Bell-bird notes are swellingUpward from the glade;Lovelorn swains are tellingLove-tales worn and frayed:Let them strain their tether!You and I togetherNever wilt a feather,Lolling in the shade.
[44]Bell-bird notes are swelling
Upward from the glade;
Lovelorn swains are telling
Love-tales worn and frayed:
Let them strain their tether!
You and I together
Never wilt a feather,
Lolling in the shade.
Earnest souls, or sighing,Death has ever paid!See pale Effort lyingRue- and wreath-arrayed!Come then, Jean, a-dreaming,With your haira-streaming ...Cupid lies a-scheming’Neath the mulga shade.
Earnest souls, or sighing,
Death has ever paid!
See pale Effort lying
Rue- and wreath-arrayed!
Come then, Jean, a-dreaming,
With your haira-streaming ...
Cupid lies a-scheming
’Neath the mulga shade.
[Decoration: Mining equipment]
Thereis no need to say Good-bye,And weep;There is no call on us for tear or sigh.Men say: “Just as ye sow, so shall ye reap.”Is that, think you, a lie?Now fate points out our different ways,And soWe leave the spot where glamour clothed thedays—Leave for those duller worlds that lie below,With something like amaze.No use to curse: whatever crossedOur way:No need for words: when hearts are tempest-tossed—But those alone may know the cost, who pay,And bankrupt, pay the cost.
Thereis no need to say Good-bye,And weep;There is no call on us for tear or sigh.Men say: “Just as ye sow, so shall ye reap.”Is that, think you, a lie?Now fate points out our different ways,And soWe leave the spot where glamour clothed thedays—Leave for those duller worlds that lie below,With something like amaze.No use to curse: whatever crossedOur way:No need for words: when hearts are tempest-tossed—But those alone may know the cost, who pay,And bankrupt, pay the cost.
Thereis no need to say Good-bye,And weep;There is no call on us for tear or sigh.Men say: “Just as ye sow, so shall ye reap.”Is that, think you, a lie?
Thereis no need to say Good-bye,
And weep;
There is no call on us for tear or sigh.
Men say: “Just as ye sow, so shall ye reap.”
Is that, think you, a lie?
Now fate points out our different ways,And soWe leave the spot where glamour clothed thedays—Leave for those duller worlds that lie below,With something like amaze.
Now fate points out our different ways,
And so
We leave the spot where glamour clothed thedays—
Leave for those duller worlds that lie below,
With something like amaze.
No use to curse: whatever crossedOur way:No need for words: when hearts are tempest-tossed—But those alone may know the cost, who pay,And bankrupt, pay the cost.
No use to curse: whatever crossed
Our way:
No need for words: when hearts are tempest-tossed—
But those alone may know the cost, who pay,
And bankrupt, pay the cost.
Thenlife was youngAnd roses hungIn gay festoons from star to star,And o’er the farmA silvered charm,The moonlight, flooded full andfar—The moonlight, telling wondrous talesOf things that are not, and that are.How strange the thrallAround it all!The subtle flapping of a wing!You plainly hearEach wheaten spearUnto its neighbour whispering,And almost catch their secrets,too—Those kindred children of the Spring!And, watching so,The branches throwFantastic shadows on the grass:How quaint and clearTheir lines appear!A woven way where fanciespass—Those secret bairns, that come to most,And live and breathe—but die—alas![47]No longer chimesThe gold of rhymesThat would make music, ay or nay!I number stillThe month, at will,Clare gave to me a lilacspray ...’Tis dead and withered now—how long?An age, a year, or yesterday.Thus rhyme and sprayHave turned to clay,While Discord plays on life’sguitar ...’Twere wise and meetTo book a seat,A cushioned seat, in Daphne’s car,While bright eyes shine, and roses twineIn gay festoons from star to star!
Thenlife was youngAnd roses hungIn gay festoons from star to star,And o’er the farmA silvered charm,The moonlight, flooded full andfar—The moonlight, telling wondrous talesOf things that are not, and that are.How strange the thrallAround it all!The subtle flapping of a wing!You plainly hearEach wheaten spearUnto its neighbour whispering,And almost catch their secrets,too—Those kindred children of the Spring!And, watching so,The branches throwFantastic shadows on the grass:How quaint and clearTheir lines appear!A woven way where fanciespass—Those secret bairns, that come to most,And live and breathe—but die—alas![47]No longer chimesThe gold of rhymesThat would make music, ay or nay!I number stillThe month, at will,Clare gave to me a lilacspray ...’Tis dead and withered now—how long?An age, a year, or yesterday.Thus rhyme and sprayHave turned to clay,While Discord plays on life’sguitar ...’Twere wise and meetTo book a seat,A cushioned seat, in Daphne’s car,While bright eyes shine, and roses twineIn gay festoons from star to star!
Thenlife was youngAnd roses hungIn gay festoons from star to star,And o’er the farmA silvered charm,The moonlight, flooded full andfar—The moonlight, telling wondrous talesOf things that are not, and that are.
Thenlife was young
And roses hung
In gay festoons from star to star,
And o’er the farm
A silvered charm,
The moonlight, flooded full andfar—
The moonlight, telling wondrous tales
Of things that are not, and that are.
How strange the thrallAround it all!The subtle flapping of a wing!You plainly hearEach wheaten spearUnto its neighbour whispering,And almost catch their secrets,too—Those kindred children of the Spring!
How strange the thrall
Around it all!
The subtle flapping of a wing!
You plainly hear
Each wheaten spear
Unto its neighbour whispering,
And almost catch their secrets,too—
Those kindred children of the Spring!
And, watching so,The branches throwFantastic shadows on the grass:How quaint and clearTheir lines appear!A woven way where fanciespass—Those secret bairns, that come to most,And live and breathe—but die—alas!
And, watching so,
The branches throw
Fantastic shadows on the grass:
How quaint and clear
Their lines appear!
A woven way where fanciespass—
Those secret bairns, that come to most,
And live and breathe—but die—alas!
[47]No longer chimesThe gold of rhymesThat would make music, ay or nay!I number stillThe month, at will,Clare gave to me a lilacspray ...’Tis dead and withered now—how long?An age, a year, or yesterday.
[47]No longer chimes
The gold of rhymes
That would make music, ay or nay!
I number still
The month, at will,
Clare gave to me a lilacspray ...
’Tis dead and withered now—how long?
An age, a year, or yesterday.
Thus rhyme and sprayHave turned to clay,While Discord plays on life’sguitar ...’Twere wise and meetTo book a seat,A cushioned seat, in Daphne’s car,While bright eyes shine, and roses twineIn gay festoons from star to star!
Thus rhyme and spray
Have turned to clay,
While Discord plays on life’sguitar ...
’Twere wise and meet
To book a seat,
A cushioned seat, in Daphne’s car,
While bright eyes shine, and roses twine
In gay festoons from star to star!
[Decoration: Gold mining camp]
I sitbeside you, this last afternoon,And watch the sunset’s change from gold to grey,That mirrors well my life of yesterdayWhere shadows, born of twilight, fell so soon.And yet, you seemed so womanly andtrue—I never guessed “’Twas but to kill the time!”For I, who dwelt in Passion’s summer clime,Played for a life that centred all in you.I’ve spun no webs, as money-spiders spin,Nor stacked the shining shekels row on row;And yet I have one plea—I love you so!And fatuously dreamed that love might win.For me this old world smiled when you were by;Life’s circles spread their limits wider yet;There came no grey train-bearers of regretTo grace the triumph of hypocrisy.My heart throbbed to the rustle of your dress;My soul drank in each message of your eyes;For Love, they say, is all our paradise,And wanting Love, this life were nothingness.But ere we part—O girl grownworldly-wise!—I place one glory-rose amid your hair,And kiss your lips, with something of despair:For, Dear, I love you yet—and yet despise.
I sitbeside you, this last afternoon,And watch the sunset’s change from gold to grey,That mirrors well my life of yesterdayWhere shadows, born of twilight, fell so soon.And yet, you seemed so womanly andtrue—I never guessed “’Twas but to kill the time!”For I, who dwelt in Passion’s summer clime,Played for a life that centred all in you.I’ve spun no webs, as money-spiders spin,Nor stacked the shining shekels row on row;And yet I have one plea—I love you so!And fatuously dreamed that love might win.For me this old world smiled when you were by;Life’s circles spread their limits wider yet;There came no grey train-bearers of regretTo grace the triumph of hypocrisy.My heart throbbed to the rustle of your dress;My soul drank in each message of your eyes;For Love, they say, is all our paradise,And wanting Love, this life were nothingness.But ere we part—O girl grownworldly-wise!—I place one glory-rose amid your hair,And kiss your lips, with something of despair:For, Dear, I love you yet—and yet despise.
I sitbeside you, this last afternoon,And watch the sunset’s change from gold to grey,That mirrors well my life of yesterdayWhere shadows, born of twilight, fell so soon.
I sitbeside you, this last afternoon,
And watch the sunset’s change from gold to grey,
That mirrors well my life of yesterday
Where shadows, born of twilight, fell so soon.
And yet, you seemed so womanly andtrue—I never guessed “’Twas but to kill the time!”For I, who dwelt in Passion’s summer clime,Played for a life that centred all in you.
And yet, you seemed so womanly andtrue—
I never guessed “’Twas but to kill the time!”
For I, who dwelt in Passion’s summer clime,
Played for a life that centred all in you.
I’ve spun no webs, as money-spiders spin,Nor stacked the shining shekels row on row;And yet I have one plea—I love you so!And fatuously dreamed that love might win.
I’ve spun no webs, as money-spiders spin,
Nor stacked the shining shekels row on row;
And yet I have one plea—I love you so!
And fatuously dreamed that love might win.
For me this old world smiled when you were by;Life’s circles spread their limits wider yet;There came no grey train-bearers of regretTo grace the triumph of hypocrisy.
For me this old world smiled when you were by;
Life’s circles spread their limits wider yet;
There came no grey train-bearers of regret
To grace the triumph of hypocrisy.
My heart throbbed to the rustle of your dress;My soul drank in each message of your eyes;For Love, they say, is all our paradise,And wanting Love, this life were nothingness.
My heart throbbed to the rustle of your dress;
My soul drank in each message of your eyes;
For Love, they say, is all our paradise,
And wanting Love, this life were nothingness.
But ere we part—O girl grownworldly-wise!—I place one glory-rose amid your hair,And kiss your lips, with something of despair:For, Dear, I love you yet—and yet despise.
But ere we part—O girl grownworldly-wise!—
I place one glory-rose amid your hair,
And kiss your lips, with something of despair:
For, Dear, I love you yet—and yet despise.
What use to puff a blackened fireGrown emberless within the grate?What use to twang a damaged lyreThat’s only half articulate?What use for dumbDesire to thumbThe leaves of a curriculumWhen other men matriculate?’Tis vain to plan a fabric gayWith tangled warp and brokenwoof—Just listen for a moment, pray,—A magpie singing on theroof—Just hear, and thenThrow down the pen:The songs and wings of common menAre anchored to a leaden hoof.And yet, are other days, that bearNo weight of pessimisticsin—A laurel leaf for me to wear,A thought to stir, a smile to win;And o’er the seaThere comes to meThe echo of a symphonyThat sets the smiling world a-spin.[50]Now carmine-hued are Renée’s lips,A thousand gleams light life’s oldwine—I tremble to the finger tipsTo breathe devotion at her shrine;But while I write,Some blasting lightReveals my rose an ashen whiteThat crumbles in these hands of mine.What use to fret a halting brainWhile inspiration holds aloof?And hark! the voice bursts forth again,—A magpie singing on theroof—Just hear, and thenThrow down the pen:The songs and wings of common menAre tethered to a leaden hoof.
What use to puff a blackened fireGrown emberless within the grate?What use to twang a damaged lyreThat’s only half articulate?What use for dumbDesire to thumbThe leaves of a curriculumWhen other men matriculate?’Tis vain to plan a fabric gayWith tangled warp and brokenwoof—Just listen for a moment, pray,—A magpie singing on theroof—Just hear, and thenThrow down the pen:The songs and wings of common menAre anchored to a leaden hoof.And yet, are other days, that bearNo weight of pessimisticsin—A laurel leaf for me to wear,A thought to stir, a smile to win;And o’er the seaThere comes to meThe echo of a symphonyThat sets the smiling world a-spin.[50]Now carmine-hued are Renée’s lips,A thousand gleams light life’s oldwine—I tremble to the finger tipsTo breathe devotion at her shrine;But while I write,Some blasting lightReveals my rose an ashen whiteThat crumbles in these hands of mine.What use to fret a halting brainWhile inspiration holds aloof?And hark! the voice bursts forth again,—A magpie singing on theroof—Just hear, and thenThrow down the pen:The songs and wings of common menAre tethered to a leaden hoof.
What use to puff a blackened fireGrown emberless within the grate?What use to twang a damaged lyreThat’s only half articulate?What use for dumbDesire to thumbThe leaves of a curriculumWhen other men matriculate?
What use to puff a blackened fire
Grown emberless within the grate?
What use to twang a damaged lyre
That’s only half articulate?
What use for dumb
Desire to thumb
The leaves of a curriculum
When other men matriculate?
’Tis vain to plan a fabric gayWith tangled warp and brokenwoof—Just listen for a moment, pray,—A magpie singing on theroof—Just hear, and thenThrow down the pen:The songs and wings of common menAre anchored to a leaden hoof.
’Tis vain to plan a fabric gay
With tangled warp and brokenwoof—
Just listen for a moment, pray,
—A magpie singing on theroof—
Just hear, and then
Throw down the pen:
The songs and wings of common men
Are anchored to a leaden hoof.
And yet, are other days, that bearNo weight of pessimisticsin—A laurel leaf for me to wear,A thought to stir, a smile to win;And o’er the seaThere comes to meThe echo of a symphonyThat sets the smiling world a-spin.
And yet, are other days, that bear
No weight of pessimisticsin—
A laurel leaf for me to wear,
A thought to stir, a smile to win;
And o’er the sea
There comes to me
The echo of a symphony
That sets the smiling world a-spin.
[50]Now carmine-hued are Renée’s lips,A thousand gleams light life’s oldwine—I tremble to the finger tipsTo breathe devotion at her shrine;But while I write,Some blasting lightReveals my rose an ashen whiteThat crumbles in these hands of mine.
[50]Now carmine-hued are Renée’s lips,
A thousand gleams light life’s oldwine—
I tremble to the finger tips
To breathe devotion at her shrine;
But while I write,
Some blasting light
Reveals my rose an ashen white
That crumbles in these hands of mine.
What use to fret a halting brainWhile inspiration holds aloof?And hark! the voice bursts forth again,—A magpie singing on theroof—Just hear, and thenThrow down the pen:The songs and wings of common menAre tethered to a leaden hoof.
What use to fret a halting brain
While inspiration holds aloof?
And hark! the voice bursts forth again,
—A magpie singing on theroof—
Just hear, and then
Throw down the pen:
The songs and wings of common men
Are tethered to a leaden hoof.
[Decoration: Mining with a windsail]
Formany a year we wanderedover hill and dale and mountain,For ever pressing onwardtill we’re nearly worn and old:Searching for some spot Elysianwhere the poets’ crystal fountainSings its songs of calm contentmentin a valley draped with gold:Where the flowers bloom for ever’neath the sun’s life-giving kisses,But never droop ’neath thirsty skiesor feel the winter’s chill:Where roses wreath an arbourwhere no fatal adder hisses,And the promise of our youthful dreamsour later days fulfil.Then the purple flush of morningthrilled our careless hearts with pleasure,And the sunbeams shooting downwardwith our spirit shared their glow:Once every bell and buttercupthat blossomed was atreasure—In those days that we have dreamed of,in the misty long-ago.[52]But the joys of life would pall uponthe heart that they for ever,Unbroken by a shadow,lit with one eternal glare;And the bonds of love are strengthenedby the thought that they may sever,And are hallowed in the memoryof lives and loves that were.The ropes of sand that bound usthen appeared so deftly wovenThat we noticed not each single grainthe breezes swept away,Nor underneath the robe of Beauty,silken-cased, the clovenHoof of Time, that swept the garlandsinto ruin and decay.
Formany a year we wanderedover hill and dale and mountain,For ever pressing onwardtill we’re nearly worn and old:Searching for some spot Elysianwhere the poets’ crystal fountainSings its songs of calm contentmentin a valley draped with gold:Where the flowers bloom for ever’neath the sun’s life-giving kisses,But never droop ’neath thirsty skiesor feel the winter’s chill:Where roses wreath an arbourwhere no fatal adder hisses,And the promise of our youthful dreamsour later days fulfil.Then the purple flush of morningthrilled our careless hearts with pleasure,And the sunbeams shooting downwardwith our spirit shared their glow:Once every bell and buttercupthat blossomed was atreasure—In those days that we have dreamed of,in the misty long-ago.[52]But the joys of life would pall uponthe heart that they for ever,Unbroken by a shadow,lit with one eternal glare;And the bonds of love are strengthenedby the thought that they may sever,And are hallowed in the memoryof lives and loves that were.The ropes of sand that bound usthen appeared so deftly wovenThat we noticed not each single grainthe breezes swept away,Nor underneath the robe of Beauty,silken-cased, the clovenHoof of Time, that swept the garlandsinto ruin and decay.
Formany a year we wanderedover hill and dale and mountain,For ever pressing onwardtill we’re nearly worn and old:Searching for some spot Elysianwhere the poets’ crystal fountainSings its songs of calm contentmentin a valley draped with gold:
Formany a year we wandered
over hill and dale and mountain,
For ever pressing onward
till we’re nearly worn and old:
Searching for some spot Elysian
where the poets’ crystal fountain
Sings its songs of calm contentment
in a valley draped with gold:
Where the flowers bloom for ever’neath the sun’s life-giving kisses,But never droop ’neath thirsty skiesor feel the winter’s chill:Where roses wreath an arbourwhere no fatal adder hisses,And the promise of our youthful dreamsour later days fulfil.
Where the flowers bloom for ever
’neath the sun’s life-giving kisses,
But never droop ’neath thirsty skies
or feel the winter’s chill:
Where roses wreath an arbour
where no fatal adder hisses,
And the promise of our youthful dreams
our later days fulfil.
Then the purple flush of morningthrilled our careless hearts with pleasure,And the sunbeams shooting downwardwith our spirit shared their glow:Once every bell and buttercupthat blossomed was atreasure—In those days that we have dreamed of,in the misty long-ago.
Then the purple flush of morning
thrilled our careless hearts with pleasure,
And the sunbeams shooting downward
with our spirit shared their glow:
Once every bell and buttercup
that blossomed was atreasure—
In those days that we have dreamed of,
in the misty long-ago.
[52]But the joys of life would pall uponthe heart that they for ever,Unbroken by a shadow,lit with one eternal glare;And the bonds of love are strengthenedby the thought that they may sever,And are hallowed in the memoryof lives and loves that were.
[52]But the joys of life would pall upon
the heart that they for ever,
Unbroken by a shadow,
lit with one eternal glare;
And the bonds of love are strengthened
by the thought that they may sever,
And are hallowed in the memory
of lives and loves that were.
The ropes of sand that bound usthen appeared so deftly wovenThat we noticed not each single grainthe breezes swept away,Nor underneath the robe of Beauty,silken-cased, the clovenHoof of Time, that swept the garlandsinto ruin and decay.
The ropes of sand that bound us
then appeared so deftly woven
That we noticed not each single grain
the breezes swept away,
Nor underneath the robe of Beauty,
silken-cased, the cloven
Hoof of Time, that swept the garlands
into ruin and decay.
[Decoration: Horse-powered mining]