The harp we love hath a royal burst!Its strings are mighty forest trees;And branches, swaying to and fro,Are fingers sounding symphonies.The harp we love hath a solemn sound!And rocks amongst the shallow seasAre strings from which the rolling wavesDraw forth their stirring harmonies.The harp we love hath a low sweet voice!Its strings are in the bosom deep,And Love will press those hidden chordsWhen all the baser passions sleep.
I loiter by this surging sea,Here, by this surging, sooming sea,Here, by this wailing, wild-faced sea,Dreaming through the dreamy night;Yearning for a strange delight!Will it ever, ever, ever fly to me,By this surging sea,By this surging, sooming sea,By this wailing, wild-faced sea?I know some gentle spirit lives,Some loving, lonely spirit lives,Some melancholy spirit lives,Walking o'er the earth for me,Searching round the world for me!Will she ever, ever, ever hither come?Where the waters roam,Where the sobbing waters roam!Where the raving waters roam!All worn and wasted by the storms,All gapped and fractured by the storms,All split and splintered by the storms,Overhead the caverns groan,Gloomy, ghastly caverns groan!—Will she ever, ever, ever fill this heart?Peace, O longing heart!Peace, O longing, beating heart!Peace, O beating, weary heart!
The rain-clouds have gone to the deep—The East like a furnace doth glow;And the day-spring is flooding the steep,And sheening the landscape below.Oh, ye who are gifted with soulsThat delight in the music of birds,Come forth where the scattered mist rolls,And listen to eloquent words!Oh, ye who are fond of the sport,And would travel yon wilderness through,Gather—each to his place—for a life-stirring chase,In the wake of the wild Kangaroo!Gather—each to his place—For a life-stirring chaseIn the wake of the wild Kangaroo!Beyond the wide rents of the fog,The trees are illumined with gold;And the bark of the shepherd's brave dogShoots away from the sheltering fold.Down the depths of yon rock-border'd glade,A torrent goes foaming along;And the blind-owls retire into shade,And the bell-bird beginneth its song.By the side of that yawning abyss,Where the vapours are hurrying to,We will merrily pass, looking down to the grassFor the tracks of the wild Kangaroo!We will merrily pass,Looking down to the grassFor the tracks of the wild Kangaroo.Ho, brothers, away to the woods;Euroka hath clambered the hill;But the morning there seldom intrudes,Where the night-shadows slumber on still.We will roam o'er these forest-lands wild,And thread the dark masses of vines,Where the winds, like the voice of a child,Are singing aloft in the pines.We must keep down the glee of our hounds;We muststealthrough the glittering dew;And the breezes shall sleep as we cautiously creepTo the haunts of the wild Kangaroo.And the breezes shall sleep,As we cautiously creepTo the haunts of the wild Kangaroo.When we pass through a stillness like deathThe swamp fowl and timorous quail,Like the leaves in a hurricane's breath,Will start from their nests in the vale;And the forester,* snuffing the air,Will bound from his covert so dark,While we follow along in the rear,As arrows speed on to their mark!Then the swift hounds shall bring him to bay,And we'll send forth a hearty halloo,As we gather them all to be in at the fall—At the death of the wild Kangaroo!As we gather them allTo be in at the fall—At the death of the wild Kangaroo!—* The Kangaroo.—
Too cold, O my brother, too cold for my wifeIs the Beauty you showed me this morning:Nor yet have I found the sweet dream of my life,And good-bye to the sneering and scorning.Would you have me cast down in the dark of her frown,Like others who bend at her shrine;And would barter their souls for a statue-like face,And a heart that can never be mine?That can never be theirs nor mine.Go after her, look at her, kneel at her feet,And mimic the lover romantic;I have hated deceit, and she misses the treatOf driving me hopelessly frantic!Now watch her, as deep in her carriage she lies,And love her, my friend, if you dare!She would wither your life with her beautiful eyes,And strangle your soul with her hair!With a mesh of her splendid hair.
Let me talk of years evanished, let me harp upon the timeWhen we trod these sands together, in our boyhood's golden prime;Let me lift again the curtain, while I gaze upon the past,As the sailor glances homewards, watching from the topmost mast.Here we rested on the grasses, in the glorious summer hours,When the waters hurried seaward, fringed with ferns and forest flowers;When our youthful eyes, rejoicing, saw the sunlight round the sprayIn a rainbow-wreath of splendour, glittering underneath the day;Sunlight flashing past the billows, falling cliffs and crags among,Clothing hopeful friendship basking on the shores of Wollongong.Echoes of departed voices, whispers from forgotten dreams,Come across my spirit, like the murmurs of melodious streams.Here we both have wandered nightly, when the moonshine cold and paleShimmer'd on the cone of Keira, sloping down the sleeping vale;When the mournful waves came sobbing, sobbing on the furrowed shore,Like to lone hearts weeping over loved ones they shall see no more;While the silver ripples, stealing past the shells and slimy stones,Broke beneath the caverns, dying, one by one, in muffled moans;As the fragrant wood-winds roaming, with a fitful cadence sung'Mid the ghostly branches belting round the shores of Wollongong.Lovely faces flit before us, friendly forms around us stand;Gleams of well-remembered gladness trip along the yellow sand.Here the gold-green waters glistened underneath our dreaming gaze,As the lights of Heaven slanted down the pallid ether haze;Here the mossy rock-pool, like to one that stirs himself in sleep,Trembled every moment at the roaring of the restless deep;While the stately vessels swooping to the breezes fair and free,Passed away like sheeted spectres, fading down the distant sea;And our wakened fancies sparkled, and our soul-born thoughts we strungInto joyous lyrics, singing with the waves of Wollongong.Low-breathed strains of sweetest music float about my raptured ears;Angel-eyes are glancing at me hopeful smiles and happy tears.Merry feet go scaling up the old and thunder-shattered steeps,And the billows clamber after, and the surge to ocean leaps,Scattered into fruitless showers, falling where the breakers roll,Baffled like the aspirations of a proud ambitious soul.Far off sounds of silvery laughter through the hollow caverns ring,While my heart leaps up to catch reviving pleasure on the wing;And the years come trooping backward, and we both again are young,Walking side by side upon the lovely shores of Wollongong.Fleeting dreams and idle fancies! Lo, the gloomy after AgeCreepeth, like an angry shadow, over life's eventful stage!Joy is but a mocking phantom, throwing out its glitter brief—Short-lived as the western sunbeam dying from the cedar leaf.Here we linger, lonely-hearted, musing over visions fled,While the sickly twilight withers from the arches overhead.Semblance of a bliss delusive are those dull, receding rays;Semblance of the faint reflection left to us of other days;Days of vernal hope and gladness, hours when the blossoms sprungRound the feet of blithesome ramblers by the shores of Wollongong.
Through many a fragrant cedar groveA darkened water moans;And there pale Memory stood with LoveAmongst the moss-green stones.The shimmering sunlight fell and kissedThe grasstree's golden sheaves;But we were troubled with a mistOf music in the leaves.One passed us, like a sudden gleam;Her face was deadly fair."Oh, go," we said, "you homeless DreamOf Ella's shining hair!"We halt, like one with tired wings,And we would fain forgetThat there are tempting, maddening thingsToo high to clutch at yet!"Though seven Springs have filled the WoodWith pleasant hints and signs,Since faltering feet went forth and stoodWith Death amongst the pines."From point to point unwittinglyWe wish to clamber still,Till we have light enough to seeThe summits of the hill."O do not cry, my sister dear,"Said beaming Hope to Love,"Though we have been so troubled hereThe Land is calm above;"Beyond the regions of the stormWe'll find the golden gates,Where, all the day, a radiant Form,Our Ella, sits and waits."And Memory murmured: "She was oneOf God's own darlings lent;And Angels wept that she had gone,And wondered why she went."I know they came, and talked to her,Through every garden breeze,About eternal Hills of Myrrh,And quiet Jasper Seas."For her the Earth contained no charms;All things were strange and wild;And I believe a Seraph's armsCaught up the sainted Child."And Love looked round, and said: "Oh, youThat sit by Beulah's streams,Shake on this thirsty life the dewWhich brings immortal dreams!"Ah! turn to us, and greet us oftWith looks of pitying balm,And hints of heaven, in whispers soft,To make our troubles calm."My Ella with the shining hair,Behold, these many years,We've held up wearied hands in prayer;And groped about in tears."But Hope sings on: "Beyond the stormWe'll find the golden gatesWhere, all the day, a radiant Form,Our Ella, sits and waits."
(The Squatters' Song)
From the runs of the Narran, wide-dotted with sheep,And loud with the lowing of cattle,We speed for a land where the strange forests sleepAnd the hidden creeks bubble and brattle!Now call on the horses, and leave the blind coursesAnd sources of rivers that all of us know;For, crossing the ridges, and passing the ledges,And running up gorges, we'll come to the vergesOf gullies where waters eternally flow.Oh! the herds they will rush down the spurs of the hillTo feed on the grasses so cool and so sweet;And I think that my life with delight will stand stillWhen we halt with the pleasant Barcoo at our feet.Good-bye to the Barwon, and brigalow scrubs,Adieu to the Culgoa ranges,But look for the mulga and salt-bitten shrubs,Though the face of the forest-land changes.The leagues we may travel down beds of hot gravel,And clay-crusted reaches where moisture hath been,While searching for waters, may vex us and thwart us,Yet who would be quailing, or fainting, or failing?Not you, who are men of the Narran, I ween!When we leave the dry channels away to the south,And reach the far plains we are journeying to,We will cry, though our lips may be glued with the drouth,Hip, hip, and hurrah for the pleasant Barcoo!
Wild-eyed woodlands, here I rest me, underneath the gaunt and ghastly trees;Underneath fantastic-fronted caverns crammed with many a muffled breeze.Far away from dusky towns and cities twinkling with the feet of men;Listening to a sound of mellow music fleeting down the gusty glen;Sitting by a rapid torrent, with the broken sunset in my face;By a rapid, roaring torrent, tumbling through a dark and lonely place!And I hear the bells beyond the forest, and the voice of distant streams;And a flood of swelling singing, wafting round a world of ruined dreams.Like to one who watches daylight dying from a lofty mountain spire,When the autumn splendour scatters like a gust of faintly-gleaming fire;So the silent spirit looketh through a mist of faded smiles and tears,While across it stealeth all the sad and sweet divinity of years—All the scenes of shine and shadow; light and darkness sleeping side by sideWhen my heart was wedded to existence, as a bridegroom to his bride:While I travelled gaily onward with the vapours crowding in my wake,Deeming that the Present hid the glory where the promised Morn would break.Like to one who, by the waters standing, marks the reeling ocean waveMoaning, hide his head all torn and shivered underneath his lonely cave,So the soul within me glances at the tides of Purpose where they creep,Dashed to fragments by the yawning ridges circling Life's tempestuous Deep!Oh! the tattered leaves are dropping, dropping round me like a fall of rain;While the dust of many a broken aspiration sweeps my troubled brain;With the yearnings after Beauty, and the longings to be good and great;And the thoughts of catching Fortune, flying on the tardy wings of Fate.Bells, beyond the forest chiming, where is all the inspiration nowThat was wont to flush my forehead, and to chase the pallor from my brow?Did I not, amongst these thickets, weave my thoughts and passions into rhyme,Trusting that the words were golden, hoping for the praise of after-time?Where have all those fancies fled to? Can the fond delusion linger still,When the Evening withers o'er me, and the night is creeping up the hill?If the years of strength have left me, and my life begins to fail and fade,Who will learn my simple ballads; who will stay to sing the songs I've made?Bells, beyond the forest ringing, lo, I hasten to the world again;For the sun has smote the empty windows, and the day is on the wane!Hear I not a dreamy echo, soughing through the rafters of the tree;Like a sound of stormy rivers, or the ravings of a restless sea?Should I loiter here to listen, while this fitful wind is on the wing?No, the heart of Time is sobbing, and my spirit is a withered thing!Let the rapid torrents tumble, let the woodlands whistle in the blast;Mighty minstrels sing behind me, but the promise of my youth is past.
Alone—alone!With a heart like a stone,She maketh her moanAt the feet of the trees,With her face on her knees,And her hair streaming over;Wildly, and wildly, and wildly;For she misses the tracks of her lover!Do you hear her, Ulmarra?Oh, where are the tracks of her lover?Go by—go by!They have told her a lie,Who said he was nigh,In the white-cedar glen—In the camps of his men:And she sitteth there weeping—Weeping, and weeping, and weeping,For the face of a warrior sleeping!Do you hear her, Ulmarra?Oh! where is her warrior sleeping?A dream! a dream!That they saw a bright gleamThrough the dusk boughs stream,Where wild bees dwell,And a tomahawk fell,In moons which have faded;Faded, and faded, and faded,From woods where a chieftain lies shaded!Do you hear her, Ulmarra?Oh! where doth her chieftain lie shaded?Bewail! bewail!Who whispered a tale,That they heard on the gale,Through the dark and the cold,The voice of the bold;And a boomerang flying;Flying, and flying, and flying?Ah! her heart it is wasted with crying—Do you hear her, Ulmarra?Oh! her heart it is wasted with crying!
Rolling through the gloomy gorges, comes the roaring southern blast,With a sound of torrents flying, like a routed army, past,And, beneath the shaggy forelands, strange fantastic forms of surfFly, like wild hounds, at the darkness, crouching over sea and earth;Swooping round the sunken caverns, with an aggravated roar;Falling where the waters tumble foaming on a screaming shore!In a night like this we parted. Eyes were wet though speech was low,And our thoughts were all in mourning for the dear, dead Long Ago!In a night like this we parted. Hearts were sad though they were young,And you left me very lonely, dark-haired Maid of Gerringong.Said my darling, looking at me, through the radiance of her tears:"Many changes, O my loved One, we will meet in after years;Changes like to sudden sunbursts flashing down a rainy steep—Changes like to swift-winged shadows falling on a moony deep!And they are so cheerless sometimes, leaving, when they pass us by,Deepening dolours on the sweet, sad face of our Humanity.But you'll hope, and fail and faint not, with that heart so warm and true,Watching for the coming Morning, that will flood the World for you;Listening through a thirsty silence, till the low winds bear alongEager footfalls—pleasant voices," said the Maid of Gerringong.Said my darling, when the wind came sobbing wildly round the eaves:"Oh, the Purpose scattered from me, like the withered autumn leaves!Oh, the wreck of Love's ambition! Oh, the fond and full beliefThat I yet should hear them hail you in your land a God-made chief!In the loud day they may slumber, but my thoughts will not be stillWhen the weary world is sleeping, and the moon is on the hill;Then your form will bend above me, then your voice will rise and fall,Though I turn and hide in darkness, with my face against the wall,And my Soul must rise and listen while those homeless memories throngMoaning in the night for shelter," said the Maid of Gerringong.Ay, she passed away and left me! Rising through the dusk of tears,Came a vision of that parting every day for many years!Every day, though she had told me not to court the strange sweet pain,Something whispered—something led me to our olden haunts again:And I used to wander nightly, by the surges and the ships,Harping on those last fond accents that had trembled from her lips:Till a vessel crossed the waters, and I heard a stranger say,"One you loved has died in silence with her dear face turned away."Oh! the eyes that flash upon me, and the voice that comes along—Oh! my light, my life, my darling dark-haired Maid of Gerringong.. . . . .Some one saith, "Oh, you that mock at Passion with a worldly whine,Would you change the face of Nature—would you limit God's design?Hide for shame from well-raised clamour, moderate fools who would be wise;Hide for shame—the World will hoot you! Love is Love, and never dies"And another asketh, doubting that my brother speaks the truth,"Can we love in age as fondly as we did in days of youth?Will dead faces always haunt us, in the time of faltering breath?Shall we yearn, and we so feeble?" Ay, for Love is Love in Death.Oh! the Faith with sure foundation!—let the Ages roll along,You are mine, and mine for ever, dark-haired Maid of Gerringong.Last night, dear, I dreamt about you, and I thought that far from menWe were walking, both together, in a fragrant seaside glen;Down where we could hear the surges wailing round the castled cliffs,Down where we could see the sunset reddening on the distant skiffs;There a fall of mountain waters tumbled through the knotted bowersBright with rainbow colours reeling on the purple forest flowers.And we rested on the benches of a cavern old and hoar;And I whispered, "this is surely her I loved in days of yore!False he was who brought sad tidings! Why were you away so long,When you knew who waited for you, dark-haired Maid of Gerringong?"Did the strangers come around you, in the far-off foreign land?Did they lead you out of sorrow, with kind face and loving hand?Had they pleasant ways to court you—had they silver words to bind?Had they souls more fond and loyal than the soul you left behind?Do not think I blame you, dear one! Ah! my heart is gushing o'erWith the sudden joy and wonder, thus to see your face once more.Happy is the chance which joins us after long, long years of pain:And, oh, blessed was whatever sent you back to me again!Now our pleasure will be real—now our hopes again are young:Now we'll climb Life's brightest summits, dark-haired Maid of Gerringong."In the sound of many footfalls, did you falter with regretFor a step which used to gladden in the time so vivid yet?When they left you in the night-hours, did you lie awake like me,With the thoughts of what we had been—what we never more could be?Ah! you look but do not answer while I halt and question here,Wondering why I am so happy, doubting that you are so near.Sure these eyes with love are blinded, for your form is waxing faint;And a dreamy splendour crowns it, like the halo round a saint!When I talk of what we will be, and new aspirations throng,Why are you so sadly silent, dark-haired Maid of Gerringong?"But she faded into sunset, and the sunset passed from sight;And I followed madly after, through the misty, moony night,Crying, "do not leave me lonely! Life has been so cold and drear,You are all that God has left me, and I want you to be near!Do not leave me in the darkness! I have walked a weary way,Listening for your truant footsteps—turn and stay, my darling, stay!"But she came not though I waited, watching through a splendid haze,Where the lovely Phantom halted ere she vanished from my gaze.Then I thought that rain was falling, for there rose a stormy song,And I woke in gloom and tempest, dark-haired Maid of Gerringong!
Like a beautiful face looking ever at meA pure bright moon cometh over the sea;And I stand on the crags, and hear the fallsGo tumbling down, through the black river-walls;And the heart of the gorge is rent with the cryOf the pent-up winds in their agony!You are far from me, dear, where I watch and wait,Like a weary bird for a long-lost mate,And my life is as dull as the sluggish streamFeeling its way through a world of dream;For here is a waste of darkness and fear,And I call and I call, but no one will hear!O darling of mine, do you ever yearnFor a something lost, which will never return?O darling of mine, on the grave of dead Hours,Do you feel, like me, for a handful of flowers?Through the glens of the Past, do you wander along,Like a restless ghost that hath done a wrong?And, lying alone, do you look from the drouthOf a thirsty Life with a pleading mouth?When the rain's on the roof, and the gales are abroad,Do you wash with your tears the feet of your God?Oh! I know you do, and he sitteth alone,Your wounded Love, while you mourn and moan—Oh! I know you do, and he never will leapFrom his silence with smiles, while you weep—and weep!Your coolness shake down, ye gathered green leaves,For my spirit is faint with the love that it grieves!Is there aught on the summit, O yearner through Night,Aught on the summit which looks like the light;When my soul is a-wearied and lone in the land,Groping around will it touch a kind hand?There are chasms between us as black as a pall,But bring us together, O God over all!And let me cast from me these fetters of Fear,When I hear the glad singing of Faith so near;For I know by the cheeks, which are pallid and wet,And a listening life we shall mingle yet!Oh! then I will turn to those eloquent eyes,And clasp thee close, with a sweet surprise;And a guest will go in by the heart's holy door,And the chambers of Love shall be left no more.
Hear ye not the waters beating where the rapid rivers, meetingWith the winds above them fleeting, hurry to the distant seas,And a smothered sound of singing from old Ocean upwards springing,Sending hollow echoes ringing like a wailing on the breeze?For the tempest round us brewing, cometh with the clouds pursuing,And the bright Day, like a ruin, crumbles from the mournful trees.When the thunder ceases pealing, and the stars up heaven are stealing,And the Moon above us wheeling throws her pleasant glances round,From our homes we boldly sally 'neath the trysting tree to rally,For a night-hunt up the valley, with our brothers and the hound!Through a wild-eyed Forest, staring at the light above it glaring,We will travel, little caring for the dangers where we bound.Twisted boughs shall tremble o'er us, hollow woods shall moan before us,And the torrents like a chorus down the gorges dark shall sing;And the vines shall shake and shiver, and the startled grasses quiver,Like the reeds beside a river in the gusty days of Spring;While we forward haste delighted, through a region seldom lighted—Souls impatient, hearts excited—like a wind upon the wing!Oh! the solemn tones of Ocean, like the language of devotion,Or a voice of deep emotion, wander round the evening scene.Oh! the ragged shadows cluster where, my brothers, we must musterEre the warm moon lends her lustre to the cedars darkly green;And the lights like flowers shall blossom, in high Heaven's kindly bosom,While we hunt the wild opossum, underneath its leafy screen;Underneath the woven bowers, where the gloomy night-hawk cowers,Through a lapse of dreamy hours, in a stirless solitude!And the hound—that close beside us still will stay whate'er betide us—Through a 'wildering waste shall guide us—through a maze where few intrude,Till the game is chased to cover, till the stirring sport is over,Till we bound, each happy rover, homeward down the laughing wood.Oh, the joy in wandering thither, when fond friends are all togetherAnd our souls are like the weather—cloudless, clear and fresh and free!Let the sailor sing the story of the ancient ocean's glory,Forests golden, mountains hoary—can he look and love like we?Sordid worldling, haunt thy city with that heart so hard and gritty!There are those who turn with pity when they turn to think of thee!
In the depths of a Forest secluded and wild,The night voices whisper in passionate numbers;And I'm leaning again, as I did when a child,O'er the grave where my father so quietly slumbers.The years have rolled by with a thundering soundBut I knew, O ye woodlands, affection would know it,And the spot which I stand on is sanctified groundBy the love that I bear to him sleeping below it.Oh! well may the winds with a saddening moanGo fitfully over the branches so dreary;And well may I kneel by the time-shattered stone,And rejoice that a rest has been found for the weary.
I would sit at your feet for long days,To hear the sweet Muse of the WildSpeak out through the sad and the passionate laysOf her first and her favourite Child.I would sit at your feet, for my soulDelights in the solitudes free;And I stand where the creeks and the cataracts rollWhensoever I listen to thee!I would sit at your feet, for I loveBy the gulches and torrents to roam;And I long in this city for woodland and grove,And the peace of a wild forest home.I would sit at your feet, and we'd dwellOn the scenes of a long-vanished time,While your thoughts into music would surge and would swellLike a breeze of our beautiful clime.I would sit at your feet, for I know,Though the World in the Present be blind,That the amaranth blossoms of Promise will blowWhen the Ages have left you behind.I would sit at your feet, for I feelI am one of a glorious bandThat ever will own you and hold you their Chief,And a Monarch of Song in the land!
And they shook their sweetness out in their sleep,On the brink of that beautiful stream,But it wandered along with a wearisome songLike a lover that walks in a dream:So the roses blewWhen the winds went through,In the moonlight so white and so still;But the river it beatAll night at the feetOf a cold and flinty hill—Of a hard and senseless hill!I said, "We have often showered our lovesUpon something as dry as the dust;And the faith that is crost, and the hearts that are lost—Oh! how can we wittingly trust?Like the stream which flows,And wails as it goes,Through the moonlight so white and so still,To beat and to beatAll night at the feetOf a cold and flinty hill—Of a hard and senseless hill?"River, I stay where the sweet roses blow,And drink of their pleasant perfumes!Oh, why do you moan, in this wide world alone,When so much affection here blooms?The winds wax faint,And the Moon like a SaintGlides over the woodlands so white and so still!But you beat and you beatAll night at the feetOf that cold and flinty hill—Of that hard and senseless hill!"
(A Fragment)
Set your face toward the darkness—tell of deserts weird and wide,Where unshaken woods are huddled, and low, languid waters glide;Turn and tell of deserts lonely, lying pathless, deep and vast,Where in utter silence ever Time seems slowly breathing past—Silence only broken when the sun is flecked with cloudy bars,Or when tropic squalls come hurtling underneath the sultry stars!Deserts thorny, hot and thirsty, where the feet of men are strange,And eternal Nature sleeps in solitudes which know no change.Weakened with their lengthened labours, past long plains of stone and sand,Down those trackless wilds they wandered, travellers from a far-off land,Seeking now to join their brothers, struggling on with faltering feet,For a glorious work was finished, and a noble task complete.And they dreamt of welcome faces—dreamt that soon unto their earsFriendly greetings would be thronging, with a nation's well-earned cheers;Since their courage never failed them, but with high, unflinching soulEach was pressing forward, hoping, trusting all should reach the goal.. . . . .Though he rallied in the morning, long before the close of dayHe had sunk, the worn-out hero, fainting, dying by the way!But with Death he wrestled hardly; three times rising from the sod,Yet a little further onward o'er the weary waste he trod.Facing Fate with heart undaunted, still the chief would totter onTill the evening closed about him—till the strength to move was gone;Then he penned his latest writings, and, before his life was spent,Gave the records to his comrade—gave the watch he said was lent—Gave them with his last commandments, charging him that night to stayAnd to let him lie unburied when the soul had passed away.Through that night he uttered little, rambling were the words he spoke:And he turned and died in silence, when the tardy morning broke.Many memories come together whilst in sight of death we dwell,Much of sweet and sad reflection through the weary mind must well.As those long hours glided past him, till the east with light was fraught,Who may know the mournful secret—who can tell us what he thought?Very lone and very wretched was the brave man left behind,Wandering over leagues of waste-land, seeking, hoping help to find;Sleeping in deserted wurleys, fearful many nightfalls throughLest unfriendly hands should rob him of his hoard of wild nardoo.. . . . .Ere he reached their old encampment—ere the well-known spot was gained,Something nerved him—something whispered that his other chief remained.So he searched for food to give him, trusting they might both surviveTill the aid so long expected from the cities should arrive;So he searched for food and took it to the gunyah where he foundSilence broken by his footfalls—death and darkness on the ground.Weak and wearied with his journey, there the lone survivor stooped,And the disappointment bowed him and his heart with sadness drooped,And he rose and raked a hollow with his wasted, feeble hands,Where he took and hid the hero, in the rushes and the sands;But he, like a brother, laid him out of reach of wind and rain,And for many days he sojourned near him on that wild-faced plain;Whilst he stayed beside the ruin, whilst he lingered with the dead,Oh! he must have sat in shadow, gloomy as the tears he shed.. . . . .Where our noble Burke was lying—where his sad companion stood,Came the natives of the forest—came the wild men of the wood;Down they looked, and saw the stranger—he who there in quiet slept—Down they knelt, and o'er the chieftain bitterly they moaned and wept:Bitterly they mourned to see him all uncovered to the blast—All uncovered to the tempest as it wailed and whistled past;And they shrouded him with bushes, so in death that he might lie,Like a warrior of their nation, sheltered from the stormy sky.. . . . .Ye must rise and sing their praises, O ye bards with souls of fire,For the people's voice shall echo through the wailings of your lyre;And we'll welcome back their comrade, though our eyes with tears be blindAt the thoughts of promise perished, and the shadow left behind;Now the leaves are bleaching round them—now the gales above them glide,But the end was all accomplished, and their fame is far and wide.Though this fadeless glory cannot hide a grateful nation's grief,And their laurels have been blended with the gloomy cypress leaf.Let them rest where they have laboured! but, my country, mourn and moan;We must build with human sorrow grander monuments than stone.Let them rest, for oh! remember, that in long hereafter timeSons of Science oft shall wander o'er that solitary clime!Cities bright shall rise about it, Age and Beauty there shall stray,And the fathers of the people, pointing to the graves, shall say:"Here they fell, the glorious martyrs! when these plains were woodlands deep;Here a friend, a brother, laid them; here the wild men came to weep."
(Inscribed to Madame Lucy Escott.)
As you glided and glided before us that time,A mystical, magical maiden,We fancied we looked on a face from the climeWhere the poets have builded their Aidenn!And oh, the sweet shadows! And oh, the warm gleamsWhich lay on the land of our beautiful dreams,While we walked by the margins of musical streamsAnd heard your wild warbling around us!We forgot what we were when we stood with the treesNear the banks of those silvery waters;As ever in fragments they came on the breeze,The songs of old Rhine and his daughters!And then you would pass with those radiant eyesWhich flashed like a light in the tropical skies—And ah! the bright thoughts that would sparkle and riseWhile we heard your wild warbling around us.Will you ever fly back to this city of oursWith your harp and your voice and your beauty?God knows we rejoice when we meet with such flowersOn the hard road of Life and of Duty!Oh! come as you did, with that face and that tone,For we wistfully look to the hours which have flown,And long for a glimpse of the gladness that shoneWhen we heard your wild warbling around us.
Like drifts of balm from cedared glens, those darling memories come,With soft low songs, and dear old tales, familiar to our home.Then breathe again that faint refrain, so tender, sad, and true,My soul turns round with listening eyes unto the harp and you!The fragments of a broken Past are floating down the tide,And she comes gleaming through the dark, my love, my life, my bride!Oh! sit and sing—I know her well, that phantom deadly fairWith large surprise, and sudden sighs, and streaming midnight hair!I know her well, for face to face we stood amongst the sheaves,Our voices mingling with a mist of music in the leaves!I know her well, for hand in hand we walked beside the sea,And heard the huddling waters boom beneath this old Figtree.God help the man that goes abroad amongst the windy pines,And wanders, like a gloomy bat, where never morning shines!That steals about amidst the rout of broken stones and graves,When round the cliffs the merry skiffs go scudding through the waves;When, down the bay, the children play, and scamper on the sand,And Life and Mirth illume the Earth, and Beauty fills the Land!God help the man! He only hears and fears the sleepless criesOf smitten Love—of homeless Love and moaning Memories.Oh! when a rhyme of olden time is sung by one so dear,I feel again the sweetest pain I've known for many a year;And from a deep, dull sea of sleep faint fancies come to me,And I forget how lone we sit beneath this old Figtree.
Gloomy cliffs, so worn and wasted with the washing of the waves,Are ye not like giant tombstones round those lonely ocean graves?Are ye not the sad memorials, telling of a mighty grief—Dark with records ground and lettered into caverned rock and reef?Oh! ye show them, and I know them, and my thoughts in mourning goDown amongst your sunless chasms, deep into the surf below!Oh! ye bear them, and declare them, and o'er every cleft and scar,I have wept for dear dead brothers perished in the lost Dunbar!Ye smitten—ye battered,And splintered and shatteredCliffs of the Sea!Restless waves, so dim with dreams of sudden storms and gusty surge,Roaring like a gathered whirlwind reeling round a mountain verge,Were ye not like loosened maniacs, in the night when Beauty paleCalled upon her God, beseeching through the uproar of the gale?Were ye not like maddened demons while young children faint with fearCried and cried and cried for succour, and no helping hand was near?Oh, the sorrow of the morrow!—lamentations near and far!—Oh, the sobs for dear dead sisters perished in the lost Dunbar!—Ye ruthless, unsated,And hateful, and hatedWaves of the Sea!Ay, we stooped and moaned in darkness—eyes might strain and hearts might plead,For their darlings crying wildly, they would never rise nor heed!Ay, we yearned into their faces looking for the life in vain,Wailing like to children blinded with a mist of sudden pain!Dear hands clenched, and dear eyes rigid in a stern and stony stare,Dear lips white from past affliction, dead to all our mad despair,Ah, the groaning and the moaning—ah, the thoughts which rise in tearsWhen we turn to all those loved ones, looking backward five long years!The fathers and mothers,The sisters and brothersDrowned at Sea!