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JAMES  DALLY 

OLD  AND  RARE  BOOKS 

Oatlands,  Tasmania 
Telephone  Oatlands  90 


LEAVES   FEOM 


AUSTRALIA!  FOEESTS. 


HENRY    KENDALL. 


MELBOURNE: 
GEORGE    ROBERTSON,    69    ELIZABETH    STREET, 

MDCCCLXIX, 


' 


MELBOURNE  : 

WALKER,     MAY    AND    CO.,     PRINTERS, 
99    B9URKE   STREET    WEST, 


DEDICATION. 


To  her,  who,  cast  with  me  in  trying  days, 

Stood  in  the  place  of  health,  and  power,  and  praise  ;- 

Who,  when  I  thought  all  light  was  out,  became 

A  lamp  of  hope  that  put  my  fears  to  shame ; — 

Who  faced  for  love's  sole  sake  the  life  austere 

That  waits  upon  the  man  of  letters  here  ; — 

Who,  unawares,  her  deep  affection  showed, 

By  many  a\^ojj^hingj{ittle\wifely  mode ; — 

Whose  spirit  self-denying,  dear,  divine, 

Its  sorrows  hid,  so  it  might  lessen  mine, — 

To  her,  my  bright  best  friend,  1  dedicate 

This  book  of  songs.     'Twill  help  to  compensate 

For  much  neglect.     The  act,  if  not  the  rhyme, 

Will  touch  her  heart  and  lead  her  to  the  time 

Of  trials  past.     That  which  is  most  intense 

Within  these  leaves  is  of  her  influence  ; 

And  if  aught  here  is  sweetened  with  a  tone 

Sincere,  like  love,  it  came  of  love  alone. 


2200572 


CONTENTS. 


PAGE 

PREFATORY  SONNETS 1 

THE   HUT   BY   THE   BLACK   SWAMP      .  .             .  .             .  .             .  .  3 

",           SEPTEMBER   IN   AUSTRALIA      .  .             .  .             .  .             . .             . .  7 

GHOST   GLEN     .  .             .  .             . .             . .             . .             .  .             . .  10 

DAPHNE               13 

THE   WARRIGAL              .  .             .  .             . .             .  .             .  .             .  .  16 

EUROCLYDON                    .  .             .  .             . .             . .             . .             .  .  19 

ARALUEN            . .             . .             . .             .  .             . .             .  .             .  .  24 

AT    EUROMA 28 

ILLA  GREEK       .  .             .  .             .  .             . .             .  .             . .             . .  30 

MOSS   ON  A   WALL 33 

CAMPASPE           . .             .  .             . .             . .             . .             .  .             .  .  36 

ON  A   CATTLE   TRACK 39 

TO   DAMASCUS  . .               42 

BELL    BIRDS      . .             .  .             .  .             .  .             . .             .  .             . .  45 

A   DEATH   IN  THE   BUSH            . .             . .             .  .            .  .             . .  48 

A   SPANISH  LOVE  SONG              .  .             . .            . .             . .             . .  58 

THE  LAST  OF  HIS   TRIBE            .  .             .  .            . .            . .             . .  60 

ARAKOON             .  .              .  .              .  .             .  .              .  .             .  .             . .  62 

THE  VOYAGE  OF  TELEGONUS 65 


Vlll  CONTESTS. 

PAGE 

SITTING  BY  THE  FIRE                 74 

CLEONE                 .  .             . .             .  .             .  .             . .             .  .             .  .  76 

CHARLES  HARPUR         .  .             .  .             .  .             .  .             .  .             . .  78 

GOD  HELP  OUR  MEN  AT  SEA                    81 

COOGEE                 . .             . .             . .             . .             . .             . .             . .  83 

OGYGE8                87 

BY  THE  SEA 92 

SONG  OP  THE  CATTLE  HUNTERS        93 

KING  SAUL  AT  GILBOA           95 

IN  THE  VALLEY          101 

TWELVE  SONNETS        ..         ..         ..         ..         ..         ..  103 

SUTHERLAND'S  GRAVE          ..         ..         ..         ..         ..  115 

SYRINX           118 

ON  THE  PAROO           121 

FAITH  IN  GOD            125 

MOUNTAIN  MOSS         127 

THE  GLEN  OF  ARRAWATTA     .  .         .  .         .  .         .  .         .  .  130 

EUTERPE             139 

ELLEN  RAY        .  .             . .             .  .             .  .             . .             .  .             .  .  143 

AT  DUSK              . .             . .             . .             . .             . .             . .             . .  145 

SAFI 148 

DANIEL  HENRY  DENIEHY 153 

MEROPE               156 

AFTER  THE  HUNT 160 

ROSE  LORRAINE              161 


I  PUEPOSED  once  to  take  my  pen  and  write 
Not  songs  like  some  tormented  and  awry 
With  Passion,  but  a  cunning  harmony 
Of  words  and  music  caught  from  glen  and  height, 
And  lucid  colours  born  of  woodland  light, 

And  shining  places  where  the  sea-streams  lie ; 
But  this  was  when  the  heat  of  youth  glowed  white, 

AndjSinceJ've  put  the  faded  purpose  by. 
I  have  no  faultless  fruits  to  offer  you 

Who  read  this  book  ;  but  certain  syllables 

Herein  are  borrowed  from  unfooted  dells, 
And  secret  hollows  dear  to  noontide  dew  ; 
And  these  at  least,  though  far  between  and  few, 

May  catch  the  sense  like  subtle  forest  spells. 


II. 

So  take  these  kindly,  even  though  there  be 
Some  notes  that  unto  other  lyres  belong  : 
Stray  echoes  from  the  elder  sons  of  Song ; 

And  think  how  from  its  neighbouring,  native  sea 

The  pensive  shell  doth  borrow  melody. 
I  would  not  do  the  lordly  masters  wrong, 
By  filching  fair  words  from  the  shining  throng 

Whose  music  haunts  me,  as  the  wind  a  tree ! 
Lo,  when  a  stranger,  in  soft  Syrian  glooms 

Shot  through  with  sunset,  treads  the  cedar  dells, 

And  hears  the  breezy  ring  of  elfin  bells 

Far  down   by  where    the    white-haired   cataract 
booms, 

He,  faint  with  sweetness  caught  from  forest  smells, 
Bears  thence,  unwitting,  plunder  of  perfumes. 


LEAVES    FROM    AUSTRALIAN 
FORESTS, 


THE  HUT  BY  THE  BLACK  SWAMP. 

Now  comes  the  fierce  North-Easter,  bound 
About  with  cloud  and  racks  of  rain  ; 

And  dry  dead  leaves  go  whirling  round 
In  rings  of  dust,  and  sigh  like  Pain 
Across  the  plain. 

Now  Twilight,  with  a  shadowy  hand 
Of  wild  dominionship,  doth  keep 

Strong  hold  of  hollow  straits  of  land  ; 
And  watery  sounds  are  loud  and  deep 
By  gap  and  steep. 


THE  HUT  BY  THE  BLACK  SWAMP. 

Keen  fitful  gusts  that  fly  before 

The  wings  of  Storm  when  Day  hath  shut 
Its  eyes  on  mountains,  flaw  by  flaw, 

Fleet  down  by  whistling  boxtree-but 
Against  the  Hut. 

And  ringed  and  girt  with  lurid  pomp 
Far  eastern  cliff's  start  up  and  take 

Thick  steaming  vapours  from  a  swamp 
That  lieth  like  a  great  blind  lake 
Of  face  opaque. 

The  moss  that  like  a  tender  grief 
About  an  English  ruin  clings — 

What  time  the  wan  autumnal  leaf 
Faints  after  many  wanderings 
On  windy  wings — 

That  gracious  growth  whose  quiet  green 

Is  as  a  love  in  days  austere, 
"Was  never  seen — hath  never  been 

On  slab  or  roof,  deserted  here 
For  many  a  year. 

Nor  comes  the  bird  whose  speech  is  song — 
Whose  songs  are  silvery  syllables 

That  unto  glimmering  woods  belong, 
And  deep  meandering  mountain-dells 
By  yellow  wells. 


THE  HUT  BY  THE  BLACK  SWAMP. 

But  rather  here  the  wild  dog  halts, 

And  lifts  the  paw,  and  looks,  and  howls  ; 

And  here,  in  ruined  forest-vaults, 

Abide  dim,  dark,  death-featured  owls, 
Like  monks  in  cowls. 

Across  this  Hut  the  nettle  runs  ; 

And  livid  adders  make  their  lair 
In  corners  dank  from  lack  of  suns  ; 

And  out  of  fetid  furrows  stare 
The  growths  that  scare. 

Here  Summer's  grasp  of  fire  is  laid 
On  bark  and  slabs  that  rot  and  breed 

Squat  ugly  things  of  deadly  shade — 
The  scorpion,  and  the  spiteful  seed 
Of  centipede. 

Unhallowed  thunders  harsh  and  dry, 
And  flaming  noontides  mute  with  heat, 

Beneath  the  breathless,  brazen  sky, 
Upon  these  rifted  rafters  beat 
With  torrid  feet. 

And  night  by  night,  the  fitful  gale 
Doth  carry  past  the  bittern's  boom, 

The  dingo's  yell,  the  plover's  wail, 

While  lumbering  shadows  start,  and  loom, 
And  hiss  through  gloom. 


THE  HUT  BY  THE  BLACK  SWAMP. 

No  sign  of  grace — no  hope  of  green, 
Cool-blossomed  seasons  marks  the  spot  •;. 

But,  chained  to  iron  doom,  I  ween, 
Tis  left,  like  skeleton,  to  rot 
Where  ruth  is  not. 

For  on  this  Hut  hath  Murder  writ 
With  bloody  fingers  hellish  things  ; 

And  God  will  never  visit  it 

With  flower  or  leaf  of  sweet-faced  Springs,, 
Or  gentle  wings. 


SEPTEMBER  IN  AUSTRALIA.. 

GrEET  Winter  hath  gone,  like  a  wearisome  guest, 

And,  behold,  for  repayment, 
September  comes  in  with  the  wind  of  the  West, 

And  the  Spring  in  her  raiment ! 
The  ways  of  the  frost  have  been  filled  of  the  flowers 

While  the  forest  discovers 
Wild  wings  with  the  halo  of  hyaline  hours, 

And  a  music  of  lovers. 

September,  the  maid  with  the  swift,  silver  feet ! 

She  glides,  and  she  graces 
The  valleys  of  coolness,  the  slopes  of  the  heat, 

With  her  blossomy  traces. 
Sweet  month  with  a  mouth  that  is  made  of  a  rose, 

She  lightens  and  lingers 
In  spots  where  the  harp  of  the  evening  glows, 

Attuned  by  her  fingers. 


8  SEPTEMBER  IN  AUSTRALIA. 

The  stream  from  its  home  in  the  hollow  hill  slips 

In  a  darling  old  fashion ; 
And  the  day  goeth  down  with  a  song  on  its  lips, 

Whose  key-note  is  passion. 
Far  out  in  the  fierce  bitter  front  of  the  sea, 

I  stand  and  remember 
Dead  things  that  were  brothers  and  sisters  of  thee, 

Resplendent  September. 

The  West,  when  it  blows  at  the  fall  of  the  noon, 

And  beats  on  the  beaches, 
Is  filled  with  a  tender  and  tremulous  tune 

That  touches  and  teaches : 
The  stories  of  Youth,  of  the  burden  of  Time, 

And  the  death  of  Devotion, 

Come  back  with  the  wind,  and  are  themes  of  the 
rhyme, 

In  the  waves  of  the  ocean. 

We,  having  a  secret  to  others  unknown, 

In  the  cool  mountain-mosses, 
May  whisper  together,  September,  alone 

Of  our  loves  and  our  losses. 
One  word  for  her  beauty,  and  one  for  the  grace 

She  gave  to  the  hours  ; 
And  then  we  may  kiss  her,  and  suffer  her  face 

To  sleep  with  the  flowers. 


SEPTEMBER  IN  AUSTRALIA. 

High  places  that  knew  of  the  gold  and  the  white 

On  the  forehead  of  Morning, 
Now  darken  and  quake,  and  the  steps  of  the  Night 

Are  heavy  with  warning  ! 
Her  voice  in  the  distance  is  lofty  and  loud, 

Through  the  echoing  gorges  ; 
She  hath  hidden  her  eyes  in  a  mantle  of  cloud, 

And  her  feet  in  the  surges  ! 


On  the  tops  of  the  hills  ;  on  the  turreted  cones — 

Chief  temples  of  thunder — 
The  gale,  like  a  ghost,  in  the  middle  watch  moans, 

Gliding  over  and  under. 
The  sea,  flying  white  through  the  rack  and  the  rain, 

Leapeth  wild  at  the  forelands  ; 
And  the  plover,  whose  cry  is  like  passion  with  pain, 

Complains  in  the  moorlands. 


O,  season  of  changes — of  shadow  and  shine — 

September  the  splendid ! 
My  song  hath  no  music  to  mingle  with  thine, 

And  its  burden  is  ended  : 
But  thou,  being  born  of  the  winds  and  the  sun, 

By  mountain,  by  river, 
May  lighten  and  listen,  and  loiter  and  run, 

With  thy  voices  for  ever. 


GHOST  GLEN. 

"  SHTJT  your  ears,  stranger,  or,  turn  from  Ghost  Glen 

now, 
For  the  paths  are  grown  over;   untrodden  by  men 

now — 
Shut  your  ears,  stranger!"    saith  the  grey  mother, 

crooning 
Her  sorcery  Eunic,  when  sets  the  half  moon  in  ! 

To-night  the  North-Easter  goes  travelling  slowly, 
But  it  never  stoops  down  to  that  Hollow  unholy — 
To-night  it  rolls  loud  on  the  ridges  red-litten, 
But  it  cannot  abide  in  that  Forest  sin-smitten ! 

For  over  the  pitfall  the  moondew  is  thawing, 
And,  with  never  a  body,  two  shadows  stand  sawing  T 
The  wraiths  of  two  sawyers  (step  under  and  under) , 
Who  did  a  foul  murder,  and  were  blackened  with 
thunder ! 


GHOST  GLEN.  11 

Whenever  the  storm-wind  comes  driven  and  driving, 
Through  the  blood-spattered  timber  you  may  see  the 

saw  striving — 

You  may  see  the  saw  heaving,  and  falling,  and  heaving, 
Whenever  the  sea-creek  is  chafing  and  grieving ! 

And  across  a  burnt  body,  as  black  as  an  adder, 
Sits  the  sprite  of  a  sheep-dog ! — was  ever  sight  sadder! 
For  as  the  dry  thunder  splits  louder  and  faster, 
This  sprite  of  a  sheep-dog  howls  for  his  master ! 

"  Oh!  count  your  beads  deftly,"  saith  the  grey  mother, 

crooning 

Her  sorcery  Runic,  when  sets  the  half  moon  in  ! 
And  well  may  she  mutter,  for  the  dark  hollow  laughter 
You  will  hear  in  the  sawpits,  and  the  bloody  logs  after  f 

Ay,  count  your  beads  deftly,  and  keep  your  ways  wary, 
For  the  sake  of  the  Saviour  and  sweet  Mother  Mary  I 
Pray  for  your  peace  in  these  perilous  places, 
And  pray  for  the  laying  of  horrible  faces ! 

One  starts  with  a  forehead  wrinkled  and  livid, 

Aghast  at  the  lightnings  sudden  and  vivid  ! 

One  telleth  with  curses   the  gold  that   they   drew 

there 
(Ah!  cross  your  breast   humbly)    from   him   whom 

they  slew  there ! 


12  GHOST  GLEN. 

The    stranger    who     came     from     the    loved — the 

romantic 

Island  that  sleeps  on  the  moaning  Atlantic ; 
Leaving  behind  him  a  patient  home  yearning 
For  the  steps  in  the  distance,  never  returning ; — 

"Who  was  left  in  the  Forest,  shrunken,  and  starkly 
Burnt  by  his  slayers  (so  men  have  said  darkly)  : 
With  the  half-crazy  sheep-dog,  who  cowered  beside 

there 
And  yelled  at  the  silence,  and  marvelled,  and  died 

there ! 

Tea,  cross  your  breast  humbly,  and  hold  your  breath 

tightly, 

Or  fly  for  your  life  from  those  shadows  unsightly  ; 
From  the  set  staring  features  (cold,  and  so  young 

too!) 
And  the  death  on  the  lips  that  a  mother  hath  clung  to. 

I  tell  you,  the  Bushman  is  braver  than  most  men, 
Who  even  in  daylight  doth  go  through  the  Ghost  Glen! 
Although  in  that  Hollow,  unholy  and  lonely, 
He  sees  the  dank  sawpits  and  bloody  logs  only ! 


DAPHNE. 

DAPHNE  !  Ladon's  daughter,  Daphne  !  Set  thyself  in 
silver  light, 

Take  thy  thoughts  of  fairest  texture,  weave  them  into 
words  of  white — 

"Weave  the  rhyme  of  rose-lipped  Daphne,  nymph  of 
wooded  stream  and  shade, 

Flying  love  of  bright  Apollo, — fleeting  type  of  fault- 
less maid ! 

She,  when  followed  from  the  forelands  by  the  lord  of 
lyre  and  lute, 

Sped  towards  far-singing  waters,  past  deep  gardens 
flushed  with  fruit ; 

Took  the  path  against  Peneus,  panted  by  its  yellow 
banks  ; 

Turned,  and  looked,  and  flew  the  faster  through  grey- 
tufted  thicket  ranks  ; 

Flashed  amongst  high  flowered  sedges  :  leaped  across 
the  brook,  and  ran 

Down  to  where  the  fourfold  shadows  of  a  nether 
glade  began ; 


14  DAPHNE. 

There  she  dropped,  like  falling  Hesper,  heavy  hair  of 

radiant  head 
Hiding  all   the  young   abundance    of  her  beauty's 

white  and  red. 


Came  the  yellow-tressed  Par-darter — came  the  god 

whose  feet  are  fire, 
On  his  lips  the  name  of  Daphne,  in  his  eyes  a  great 

desire ; 
Fond,  full  lips  of  lord  and  lover,  sad  because  of  suit 

denied ; 
Clear,   grey   eyes    made  keen  by  passion,  panting, 

pained,  unsatisfied. 
Here  he  turned,  and  there  he  halted,  now  he  paused, 

and  now  he  flew, 
Swifter  than  his  sister's  arrows,  through  soft  dells  of 

dreamy  dew. 
Yext  with  gleams  of  Ladon's  daughter,  dashed  along 

the  son  of  Jove, 
Fast  upon  flower-trammelled  Daphne  fleeting  on  from 

grove  to  grove ; 
Flights  of  seawind  hard  behind  him,  breaths  of  bleak 

and  whistling  straits  ; 
Drifts  of  driving  cloud  above  him,  like  a  troop  of 

fierce-eyed  fates  ! 
So  he  reached  the  water-shallows ;  then  he  stayed  his 

steps,  and  heard 


DAPHNE.  15 

Daphne   drop   upon  the  grasses,  fluttering  like   a 
wounded  bird. 


Was  there  help  for  Ladon's  daughter  ?     Saturn's  son 

is  high  and  j  ust : 

Did  he  come  between  her  beauty  and  the  fierce  Far- 
darter's  lust  ? 
As  she  lay,  the  helpless  maiden,  caught  and  bound  in 

fast  eclipse, 
Did  the  lips  of  god  drain  pleasure  from  her  sweet  and 

swooning  lips  ? 
Now  that  these  and   all  Love's  treasures  blushed, 

before  the  spoiler,  bare, 
Was  the  wrong  that  shall  be  nameless  done,  and  seen, 

and  suffered  there  ? 
No  !  for  Zeus  is  King  and  Father.     Weary  nymph 

and  fiery  god, 
Bend  the  knee  alike  before  him — he  is  kind,  and  he 

is  lord ! 
Therefore  sing  how  clear-browed  Pallas — Pallas, friend 

of  prayerful  maid, 
Lifted  dazzling  Daphne  lightly,  bore  her  down  the 

breathless  glade, 
Did  the  thing  that  Zeus  commanded  :  so  it  came  to 

pass  that  he 
Who  had  chased  a  white-armed  virgin,  caught  at  her, 

and  clasped  a  tree. 


THE    WAEBIGAL.* 

THEOTTGH  forest  boles  the  stormwind  rolls, 

Vext  of  the  sea-driven  rain, 
And  up  in  the  clift,  through  many  a  rift, 

The  voices  of  torrents  complain. 
The  sad  marsh-fowl  and  the  lonely  owl 

Are  heard  in  the  fog-wreaths  grey, 
"When  the  Warrigal  wakes,  and  listens,  and  takes 

To  the  woods  that  shelter  the  prey. 

In  the  gully-deeps,  the  blind  creek  sleeps ; 

And  the  silver,  showery,  moon 
Glides  over  the  hills,  and  floats,  and  fills, 

And  dreams  in  the  dark  lagoon ; 
While  halting  hard  by  the  station  yard, 

Aghast  at  the  hut-flame  nigh, 
The  "Warrigal  yells,  and  the  flats  and  fells 

Are  loud  with  his  dismal  cry. 

*  The  Wild  Dog. 


THE  WAKBIGAL.  17 

On  the  topmost  peak  of  mountains  bleak, 

The  south  wind  sobs,  and  strays 
Through  moaning  pine,  and  turpentine, 

And  the  rippling  runnel  ways  ; 
And  strong  streams  flow,  and  great  mists  go, 

Where  the  Warrigal  starts  to  hear 
The  watch-dog's  bark  break  sharp  in  the  dark, 

And  flees  like  a  phantom  of  Fear  ! 


The  swifb  rains  beat,  and  the  thunders  fleet 

On  the  wings  of  the  fiery  gale, 
And  down  in  the  glen  of  pool  and  fen, 

The  wild  gums  whistle  and  wail, 
As  over  the  plains,  and  past  the  chains 

Of  waterholes  glimmering  deep, 
The  "Warrigal  flies  from  the  Shepherd's  cries, 

And  the  clamour  of  dogs  and  sheep. 


The  "Warrigal's  lair  is  pent  in  bare 

Black  rocks  at  the  gorge's  mouth  : 
It  is  set  in  ways  where  Summer  strays 

With  the  sprites  of  flame  and  drouth ; 
But  when  the  heights  are  touched  with  lights 

Of  hoarfrost,  sleet,  and  shine, 
His  bed  is  made  of  the  dearl  grass-blade 

And  the  leaves  of  the  windy  pine. 


18  THE  WABBIGAL. 

He  roves  through  the  lands  of  sultry  sands, 

He  hunts  in  the  iron  range, 
Untamed  as  surge  of  the  far  sea  verge, 

And  fierce  and  fickle  and  strange. 
The  white  man's  track  and  the  haunts  of  the  black 

He  shuns,  and  shudders  to  see  ; 
For  his  joy  he  tastes  in  lonely  wastes 

Where  his  mates  are  torrent  and  tree. 


EUKOCLYDON. 

ON  the  storm-cloven  Cape 
The  bitter  waves  roll 
With  the  bergs  of  the  Pole, 

And  the  darks  and  the  damps  of  the  Northern  Sea : 
For  the  storm-cloven  Cape 
Is  an  alien  Shape 

With  a  fearful  face  ;  and  it  moans,  and  it  stands 
Outside  all  lands 
Everlastingly ! 


When  the  fruits  of  the  year 

Have  been  gathered  in  Spain ; 
And  the  Indian  rain 
Is  rich  on  the  evergreen  lands  of  the  Sun ; 


20  EUEOCLTDON. 

There  comes  to  this  Cape — 
To  this  alien  Shape, 

As  the  waters  beat  in  and  the  echoes  troop  forth. 
The  Wind  of  the  North, 
Euroclydon!  ?C 


And  the  wilted  thy.me,- 
And  the  patches  past 
Of  the  nettles  cast 

In  the  drift  of  the  rift,  and  the  broken  rime, 
Are  tumbled  and  blown 
To  every  zone 

With  the  famished  glede,  and  the  plovers  thinned 
By  this  fourfold  Wind — 
This  Wind  sublime ! 


On  the  wrinkled  hills 
By  starts  and  fits 
The  wild  Moon  sits ; 
And  the  rindles  fill,  and  flash,  and  fall 
In  the  way  of  her  light, 
Through  the  straitened  night, 

When  the  sea-heralds  clamour,  and  elves  of  the  war 
In  the  torrents  afar, 
Hold  festival ! 


EUROCLYDOIf.  21 

From  ridge  to  ridge 
The  polar  fires 
On  the  naked  spires 
With  a  foreign  splendour,  flit  and  flow  ; 
And  clough  and  cave 
And  architrave, 

Have  a  blood-coloured  glamour  on  roof  and  on  wall, 
Like  a  nether  hall 
In  the  hells  below ! 


The  dead  dry  lips 

Of  the  ledges,  split 
By  the  thunder  fit 

And  the  stress  of  the  sprites  of  the  forked  flame, 
Anon  break  out 
With  a  shriek  and  a  shout, 
Like  a  hard  bitter  laughter  cracked  and  thin 
Prom  a  ghost  with  a  sin 
Too  dark  for  a  name ! 


And,  all  thro'  the  year, 
The  fierce  seas  run 
From  sun  to  sun, 
Across  the  face  of  a  vacant  world  ! 


22  ETJROCLYDON. 

And  the  Wind  flies  forth 
From  the  wild  white  North, 
That  shivers  and  harries  the  heart  of  things, 
And  shapes  with  its  wings 
A  Chaos  uphurled ! 


Like  one  who  sees 
A  rebel  light 
In  the  thick  of  the  night, 

As  he  stumbles  and  staggers  on  summits  afar — 
"Who  looks  to  it  still, 
Up  hill  and  hill, 

"With  a  steadfast  hope  (though  the  ways  be  deep, 
And  rough,  and  steep), 
Like  a  steadfast  star ; 


So  I,  that  stand 

On  the  outermost  peaks 
Of  peril,  with  cheeks 
Blue  with  the  salts  of  a  frosty  Sea, 
Have  learnt  to  wait 
"With  an  eye  elate 

And  a  heart  intent,  for  the  fuller  blaze 
Of  the  Beauty  that  rays 
Like  a  glimpse  for  me- 


EUEOCLYDOTT.  23 

Of  the  Beauty  that  grows 
"Whenever  I  hear 
The  Winds  of  Fear 

From  the  tops  and  the  bases  of  barrenness  call : 
And  the  duplicate  lore 
Which  I  learn  evermore, 

Is  of  Harmony  filling  and  rounding  the  Storm, 
And  the  marvellous  Form 
That  governs  all ! 


AEALUEN. 

BITER,  myrtle-rimmed,  and  set 
Deep  amongst  unfooted  dells — 

Daughter  of  grey  hills  of  wet, 
Born  by  mossed  and  yellow  wells- 


Now  that  soft  September  lays 
Tender  hands  on  thee  and  thine, 

Let  me  think  of  blue-eyed  days, 

Star-like  flowers,  and  leaves  of  shine  ! 


Cities  soil  the  life  with  rust :      ;  .£,  [at 
Water-banks  are  cool  and  sweet : 

Kiver,  tired  of  noise  and  dust 
Here  I  come  to  rest  mv  feet. 


AEALUEN.  25 

Now  the  month  from  shade  to  sun 

Fleets  and  sings  supremest  songs, 
Now  the  wilful  woodwinds  run 

Through  the  tangled  cedar  throngs. 


Here  are  cushioned  tufts  and  turns 
Where  the  sumptuous  noontide  lies. 

Here  are  seen  by  flags  and  ferns 
Summer's  large  luxurious  eyes. 


On  this  spot  wan  "Winter  casts 
Eyes  of  ruth,  and  spares  its  green 

From  his  bitter  seanursed  blasts, 
Spears  of  rain  and  hailstones  keen. 


Eather  here  abideth  Spring, 

Lady  of  a  lovely  land, 
Dear  to  leaf  and  fluttering  wing, 

Deep  in  blooms — by  breezes  fanned. 


Faithful  friend  beyond  the  main — 

Friend  that  Time  nor  Change  makes  cold- 

Now,  like  ghosts,  return  again 
Pallid  perished  days  of  old. 


26  ARALTJEN. 

Ah,  the  days — the  old,  old  theme 
Never  stale,  but  never  new, 

Floating,  like  a  pleasant  dream, 
Back  to  me  and  back  to  you. 


Since  we  rested  on  these  slopes, 
Seasons  fierce  have  beaten  down 

Ardent  loves  and  blossoming  hopes — 
Loves  that  lift,  and  hopes  that  crown. 


But,  believe  me,  still  mine  eyes 
Often  fill  with  light  that  springs 

Prom  divinity,  which  lies 
Ever  at  the  heart  of  things. 


Solace  do  I  sometimes  find 

Where  you  used  to  hear  with  me 

Songs  of  stream  and  forest- wind, 
Tones  of  wave  and  harp-like  tree. 


Araluen !  home  of  dreams  ! 

Fairer  for  its  flowerful  glade 
Than  the  face  of  Persian  streams, 

Or  the  slopes  of  Syrian  shade. 


ABALTTEN.  27" 

"Why  should  I  still  love  it  so  ? 

Friend  and  brother  far  away, 
Ask  the  winds  that  come  and  go, 

What  hath  brought  me  here  to-day. 


Evermore  of  you  I  think, 

When  the  leaves  begin  to  fall, 

Where  our  river  breaks  its  brink, 
And  a  rest  is  over  all. 


Evermore  in  quiet  lands, 

Friend  of  mine  beyond  the  sea, 
Memory  comes  with  cunning  hands, 

Stays,  and  paints  your  face  for  me. 


AT  EUROMA. 

THEY  built  his  mound  of  the  rough  red  ground, 

By  the  dip  of  a  desert  dell, 
Where  all  things  sweet  are  killed  by  the  heat, 

And  scattered  o'er  flat  and  fell. 
In  a  burning  zone  they  left  him  alone, 

Past  the  uttermost  western  plain ; 
And  the  nightfall  dim  heard  his  funeral  hymn 

In  the  voices  of  wind  and  rain. 

The  songs  austere  of  the  forests  drear, 

And  the  echoes  of  clift  and  cave, 
When  the  dark  is  keen  where  the  storm  hath  been, 

Fleet  over  the  far-away  grave. 
And  through  the  days  when  the  torrid  rays 

Strike  down  on  a  coppery  gloom, 
Some  spirit  grieves  in  the  perished  leaves 

Whose  theme  is  that  desolate  tomb. 


AT  EUEOMA.  2 

No  human  foot,  or  paw  of  brute, 

Halts  now  where  the  stranger  sleeps  ; 
But  cloud  and  star  his  fellows  are, 

And  the  rain  that  sobs  and  weeps. 
The  dingo  yells  by  the  far  iron  fells, 

The  plover  is  loud  in  the  range, 
But  they  never  come  near  to  the  slumberer  here, 

Whose  rest  is  a  rest  without  change. 

Ah !  in  his  life,  had  he  mother  or  wife, 

To  wait  for  his  step  on  the  floor  ? 
Did  Beauty  wax  dim  while  watching  for  him 

Who  passed  through  the  threshold  no  more  ? 
Doth  it  trouble  his  head  ?    He  is  one  with  the  dead 

He  lies  by  the  alien  streams  ; 
And  sweeter  than  sleep  is  death  that  is  deep 

And  unvexed  by  the  lordship  of  dreams. 


ILLA  CEEEK. 

A  STEONG  sea-wind  flies  up  and  sings 
Across  the  blown-wet  border, 

Whose  stormy  echo  runs  and  rings 
Like  bells  in  wild  disorder. 


Fierce  breath  hath  vext  the  foreland's  face, 
It  glistens,  glooms,  and  glistens  ; 

But  deep  within  this  quiet  place 
Sweet  Ilia  lies  and  listens. 


Sweet  Ilia  of  the  shining  sands, 

She  sleeps  in  shady  hollows 
"Where  August  flits  with  flowerful  hands 

And  silver  Summer  follows. 


ILLA  GREEK.  31 


Far  up  the  naked  hills  is  heard 
A  noise  of  many  waters ; 

But  green-haired  Ilia  lies  unstirred 
Amongst  her  star-like  daughters. 


The  tempest  pent  in  rcoaning  ways 
Awakes  the  shepherd  yonder ; 

But  Ilia  dreams,  unknown  to  days 
"Whose  wings  are  wind  and  thunder. 


Here  fairy  hands  and  floral  feet 
Are  brought  by  bright  October  ; 

Here  stained  with  grapes,  and  smit  with  heat, 
Comes  Autumn  sweet  and  sober. 


Here  lovers  rest,  what  time  the  red 
And  yellow  colours  mingle, 

And  Daylight  droops  with  dying  head 
Beyond  the  western  dingle. 


And  here,  from  month  to  mouth,  the  time 
Is  kissed  by  Peace  and  Pleasure, 

While  Nature  sings  her  woodland  rhyme 
And  hoards  her  woodland  treasure. 


32  ILLA  CEEEK. 

Ah,  Ilia  Creek  !  ere  Evening  spreads 
Her  wings  o'er  towns  unshaded, 

How  oft  we  seek  thy  mossy  beds 
To  lave  our  foreheads  faded ! 

For,  let  me  whisper,  then  we  find 
The  strength  that  lives,  nor  falters, 

In  wood  and  water,  waste  and  wind, 
And  hidden  mountain  altars. 


MOSS  ON  A  WALL. 

DIM  dreams  it  hath  of  singing  ways, 
Of  far-off  woodland  water-heads, 

And  shining  ends  of  April  days 
Amongst  the  yellow  runnel  beds. 


Stoop  closer  to  the  ruined  wall, 
Wherein  the  wilful  wilding  sleeps, 

As  if  its  home  were  waterfall 

By  dripping  clefts  and  shadowy  steeps  I 


A  little  waif,  whose  beauty  takes 
A  touching  tone,  because  it  dwells 

So  far  away  from  mountain  lakes, 
And  lily  leaves,  and  lightening  fells. 


34  MO  S3  ON  A  WALL. 

Deep  hidden  in  delicious  floss 

It  nestles,  sister,  from  the  heat : 
A  gracious  growth  of  tender  moss, 

"Whose  nights  are  soft,  whose  days  are  sweet. 


Swift  gleams  across  its  petals  run, 

With  winds  that  hum  a  pleasant  tune  : 

Serene  surprises  of  the  sun, 

And  whispers  from  the  lips  of  ]S"oon. 


The  evening-coloured  apple-trees 
Are  faint  with  July's  frosty  breath  ; 

But  lo,  this  stranger  getteth  ease 

And  shines  amidst  the  strays  of  Death  ! 


And  at  the  turning  of  the  year, 
When  August  wanders  in  the  cold, 

The  raiment  of  the  nursling  here 

Is  rich  with  green  and  glad  with  gold. 


O,  friend  of  mine,  to  one  whose  eyes 
Are  vext  because  of  alien  things, 

For  ever  in  the  wall  moss  lies 

The  peace  of  hills  and  hidden  springs. 


MOSS  ON  A  WALL.  35 

From  faithless  lips  and  fickle  lights 

The  tired  pilgrim  sets  his  face, 
And  thinketh  here  of  sounds  and  sights 

In  many  a  lovely  forest-place. 


And  when  by  sudden  fits  and  starts 
The  sunset  on  the  moss  doth  burn, 

He  often  dreams,  and  lo,  the  marts 
And  streets  are  changed  to  dells  of  fern ! 


For,  let  me  say,  the  wilding  placed 

By  hands  unseen  amongst  these  stones, 

Eestores  a  Past  by  Time  effaced, 
Lost  loves  and  long-forgotten  tones  ! 


As  sometimes  songs  and  scenes  of  old 
Come  faintly  unto  you  and  me, 

When  winds  are  wailing  in  the  cold, 
And  rains  are  sobbing  on  the  sea. 


CAMPASPE. 


TTJBN  from  the  ways  of  this  "Woman  !    Campaspe  we 

call  her  by  name — 
She  is  fairer  than  flowers  of  the  fire — she  is  brighter 

than  brightness  of  flame. 
As  a  song  that  strikes  swift  to  the  heart  with  the 

beat  of  the  blood  of  the  South, 
And  a  light  and  a  leap  and  a  smart,  is  the  play  of  her 

perilous  mouth. 
Her  eyes  are  as  splendours  that  break  in  the  rain  at 

the  set  of  the  sun, 
But  turn  from  the  steps  of  Campaspe — a  Woman  to 

look  at  and  shun  ! 

Dost    thou  know  of  the  cunning  of  Beauty  ?   take 

heed  to  thyself  and  beware 
Of  the  trap  in  the  droop  in  the  raiment — the  snare 

in  the  folds  of  the  hair  ! 


CAMPASPE.  37 

She  is  fulgent  in  flashes  of  pearl,  the  breeze  with  her 

breathing  is  sweet, 
But  fly  from  the  face  of  the  girl — there  is  death  in 

the  fall  of  her  feet ! 
Is   she  maiden  or  marvel  of  marble?    O   rather  a 

tigress  at  wait 
To  pounce  on  thy  soul  for  her  pastime — a  leopard  for 

love  or  for  hate. 


Woman  of  shadow  and  furnace  !  she  biteth  her  lips 

to  restrain 
Speech  that  springs  out  when  she  sleepeth,  by  the 

stirs  and  the  starts  of  her  pain. 
As  music  half-shapen  of  sorrow,  with  its  wants  and 

its  infinite  wail, 
Is  the  voice  of  Campaspe,  the  beauty  at  bay  with  her 

passion  dead-pale. 
Go  out  from  the  courts  of  her  loving,  nor  tempt  the 

fierce  dance  of  desire 
Where  thy  life  would  be  shrivelled  like  stubble  in 

the  stress  and  the  fervour  of  fire  ! 


I  know  of  one,  gentle  as  moonlight — she  is  sad  as 

the  shine  of  the  moon, 
But  touching  the  ways  of  her  eyes  are  :    she  comes 

to  my  soul  like  a  tune — 


38  CAMPASPE. 

Like  a  tune  that  is  filled  with  faint  voices   of  the 

loved  and  the  lost  and  the  lone, 
Doth  this  stranger  abide  with  my  silence  :    like  a 

tune  with  a  tremulous  tone. 
The  leopard,  we  call  her,  Campaspe !  I  pluck  at  a 

rose  and  I  stir 
To  think  of  this  sweet-hearted  maiden — what  name 

is  too  tender  for  her  ? 


ON  A  CATTLE  TBACK. 

"WHEEE  the  strength  of  dry  thunder  splits  hill-rocks 
asunder, 

And  the  shouts  of  the  desert-wind  break, 
By  the  gullies  of  deepness,  and  ridges  of  steepness, 

Lo,  the  cattle-track  twists  like  a  snake ! 
Like  a  sea  of  dead  embers  burnt  white  by  Decembers, 

A  plain  to  the  left  of  it  lies  ; 
And  six  fleeting  horses  dash  down  the  creek-courses, 

With  the  terror  of  thirst  in  their  eyes. 

The  false  strength  of  fever,  that  deadly  deceiver, 

Gives  foot  to  each  famishing  beast ; 
And  over  lands  rotten,  by  rain-winds  forgotten, 

The  mirage  gleams  out  in  the  east. 
Ah  !  the  waters  are  hidden,  from  riders  and  ridden, 

In  a  stream  where  the  cattle-track  dips ; 
And  Death  on  their  faces  is  scoring  fierce  traces, 

And  the  drouth  is  a  fire  on  their  lips. 


40  ON  A  CATTLE  TRACK. 

It  is  far  to  the  Station,  and  gaunt  Desolation 

Is  a  spectre  that  glooms  in  the  way  ; 
Like  a  red  smoke  the  air  is,  like  a  hell-light  its  glare  is, 

And  as  flame  are  the  feet  of  the  day. 
The  wastes,  are  like  metal  that  forges  unsettle 

When  the  heat  of  the  furnace  is  white  ; 
And  the  cool  breeze  that  bloweth  when  an  English 
sun  goeth, 

Is  unknown  to  the  wild  Desert  Night. 

A  cry  of  distress  there  !  a  horseman  the  less  there  ! 

The  mock-  waters  shine  like  a  moon  ! 
It  is   "speed,   and   speed  faster  from  this  hole  of 

disaster, 
"  And  hurrah  for  yon  God-sent  lagoon." 

a  devil  deceive  them  ?    Ah,  now  let  us  leave 


"We  are  burctgn^d  in  life  with  the  sad  ; 
Our  portion  is  troubleT^nic^oy  ^s  a  bubble  ; 
And  the  gladdest  is  never  too^glad. 

From  the  pale  tracts  of  peril,  past  mountain  heads 

sterile, 

To  a  sweet  river  shadowed  with  reeds 
Where   Summer   steps  lightly,   and  Winter   beams 

brightly, 
The  hoof-rutted  cattle-track  leads. 


ON  A  CATTLE  TRACK.  41 

There  soft  is  the  moonlight,  and  tender  the  noonlight ; 

There  fiery  things  falter  and  fall  ; 
And  there,  may  be  seen,  now,  the  gold  and  the  green, 
now, 

And  the  wings  of  a  peace  over  all. 

Hush,  bittern  and  plover !  Go,  wind,  to  thy  cover 

Away  by  the  snow- smitten  Pole  ! 
The  rotten  leaf  falleth,  the  forest  rain  calleth  ; 

And  what  is  the  end  of  the  whole  ? 
Some  men  are  successful  after  seasons  distressful, 

[Now,  masters,  the  drift  of  my  tale] 
But  the  brink  of  salvation  is  a  lair  of  damnation 

For  others  who  struggle,  yet  fail. 


TO  DAMASCUS. 

WHERE  the  sinister  sun  of  the  Syrians  beat 

On  the  brittle  bright  stubble, 

And  the  camels  fell  back  from  the  swords  of  the  heat, 
Came  Saul  with  a  fire  in  the  soles  of  his  feet, 

And  a  forehead  of  trouble. 


And  terrified  faces  to  left  and  to  right, 

Before  and  behind  him, 

Fled  away  with  the  speed  of  a  maddening  fright, 
To  the  cloughs  of  the  bat,  and  the  chasms  of  night, 
Each  hoping  the  zealot  would  fail  in  his  flight 

To  find  him  and  bind  him. 


TO  DAMASCUS.  4$ 

For,  behold  you,  the  strong  man  of   Tarsus  came 

down 

"With  breathings  of  slaughter, 

From  the  priests  of  the  city,  the  chiefs  of  the  town, 
(The  lords  with  the  sword,  and  the  sires  with  the- 

gown), 

To  harry  the  Christians,  and  trample,  and  drown, 
And  waste  them  like  water. 

He  was  ever  a  fighter,  this  son  of  the  Jews — 

A  fighter  in  earnest ; 
And  the  Lord  took  delight  in  the  strength  of  his 

thews, 

For  He  knew  he  was  one  of  the  few  He  could  choose 
To  fight  out  His  battles,  and  carry  His  news 
Of  a  marvellous  Truth  through  the  dark,  and  the 

dews, 
And  the  desert-lands  furnaced ! 


He  knew  he  was  one  of  the  few  He  could  take 

For  His  Mission  supernal ; 
"Whose  feet  would  not  falter,  whose  limbs  would  not 

ache, 
Through  the  waterless   lands  of  the  thorn  and  the 

snake, 

And  the  ways  of  the  wild — bearing  up  for  the  sake 
Of  a  Beauty  eternal. 


44  TO  DAMASCUS. 

And  therefore  the  road  to  Damascus  was  burned 

With  a  swift,  sudden  brightness  ; 
While  Saul,  with  his  face  in  the  bitter  dust,  learned 
Of  the  sin  which  he  did,  ere  he  tumbled,  and  turned 

Aghast  at  God's  whiteness ! 

Of  the  sin  which  he  did,  ere  he  covered  his  head 

From  the  strange  revelation. 
But,  thereafter,  you  know  of  the  life  that  he  led  ; 
How  he  preached  to  the  peoples,  and  suffered,  and  sped 
With  the  wonderful  words  which  his  Master  had  said, 

From  nation  to  nation. 

Now  would  we  be  like  him,  who  suffer  and  see, 

If  the  Chooser  should  choose  us  ! 
For  I  tell  you,  brave  brothers,  whoever  you  be, 
It  is  right,  till  all  learn  to  look  further,  and  see, 

That  our  Master  should  use  us  ! 

It  is  right,  till  all  learn  to  discover  and  class, 

That  our  Master  should  task  us  : 
For  now  we  may  judge  of  the  Truth  through  a  glass  ; 
And  the  road  over  which  they  must  evermore  pass, 
Who  would  think  for  the  many,  and  fight  for  the 

mass,  • 

Is  the  road  to  Damascus. 

> 


BELL  BIKDS. 

BY  channels  of  coolness  the  echoes  are  calling, 
And  down  the  dim  gorges  I  hear  the  creek  falling  : 
It  lives  in  the  mountain  where  moss  and  the  sedges 
Touch  with  their  beauty  the  banks  and  the  ledges. 
Through  breaks  of  the  cedar  and  sycamore  bowers 
Struggles  the  light  that  is  love  to  the  flowers  ; 
And,  softer  than  slumber,  and  sweeter  than  singing, 
The  notes  of  the  bell-birds  are  running  and  ringing. 


The  silver-voiced  bell-birds,  the  darlings  of  daytime ! 
They  sing  in  September  their  songs  of  the  May-time; 
When  shadows  wax   strong,  and  the  thunder-bolts 

hurtle, 
They  hide  with  their  fear  in  the  leaves  of  the  myrtle ; 


46  BELL  BIEDS. 

When  rain  and  the  sunbeams  shine  mingled  together, 
They  start  up  like  fairies  that  follow  fair  weather  ; 
And  straightway  the  hues  of  their  feathers  unfolden 
Are  the  green  and  the    purple,   the  blue  and  the 
golden. 


October,  the  maiden  of  bright  yellow  tresses, 
Loiters  for  love  in  these  cool  wildernesses ; 
Loiters,  knee-deep,  in  the  grasses,  to  listen, 
Where  dripping    rocks    gleam  and  the  leafy  pools 

glisten : 

Then  is  the  time  when  the  water-moons  splendid 
Break  with  their  gold,  and  are  scattered  or  blended 
Over  the  creeks,  till  the  woodlands  have  warning 
Of  songs  of  the  bell-bird  and  wings  of  the  Morning. 


Welcome  as  waters  unkissed  by  the  summers 
Are  the  voices  of  bell-birds  to  thirsty  far-comers. 
When  fiery  December  sets  foot  in  the  forest, 
And  the  need  of  the  wayfarer  presses  the  sorest, 
Pent  in  the  ridges  for  ever  and  ever 
The  bell-birds  direct  him  to  spring  and  to  river, 
With  ring  and  with  ripple,  like  runnels  whose  torrents 
Are  toned  by  the  pebbles  and  leaves  in  the  currents. 


BELL  BIEDS.  47 

Often  I  sit,  looking  back  to  a  childhood, 

Mixt  with  the  sights  and  the  sounds  of  the  wildwood, 

Longing  for  power  and  the  sweetness  to  fashion, 

Lyrics  with  beats  like  the  heart-beats  of  Passion  ; — 

Songs  interwoven  of  lights  and  of  laughters 

Borrowed  from  bell-birds  in  far  forest-rafters  ; 

So  I  might  keep  in  the  city  and  alleys 

The  beauty  and  strength  of  the  deep  mountain  valleys : 

Charming  to  slumber  the  pain  of  my  losses 

With  glimpses  of  creeks  and  a  vision  of  mosses. 


A  DEATH  IN  THE  BUSH. 

THE  hut  was.  built  of  bark  and  shrunken  slabs 
That  wore  the  marks  of  many  rains,  and  showed 
Dry  flaws,  wherein  had  crept  and  nestled  rot. 
Moreover,  round  the  bases  of  the  bark 
Were  left  the  tracks  of  flying  forest-fires, 
As  you  may  see  them  on  the  lower  bole 
Of  every  elder  of  the  native  woods. 

For,  ere  the  early  settlers  caine  and  stocked 
These  wilds  with  sheep  and  kine,  the  grasses  grew 
So  that  they  took  the  passing  pilgrim  in, 
And  whelmed  him,  like  a  running  sea,  from  sight. 

And  therefore,  through  the  fiercer  summer  months, 
"While  all  the  swamps  were  rotten — while  the  flats 
Were  baked  and  broken ;  when  the  clayey  rifts 


A  DEATH  TK  THE  BUSH.  49 

Yawned  wide,  half-choked  with  drifted  herbage  past, 
Spontaneous  flames  would  burst  from  thence,  and  race 
Across  the  prairies  all  day  long. 

At  night 

The  winds  were  up,  and  then  with  fourfold  speed, 
A  harsh  gigantic  growth  of  smoke  and  fire 
Would  roar  along  the  bottoms,  in  the  wake 
Of  fainting  flocks  of  parrots,  wallaroos, 
And  'wildered  wild  things,  scattering  right  and  left, 
For  safety  vague,  throughout  the  general  gloom. 

Anon,  the  nearer  hill-side  growing  trees 
Would  take  the  surges  ;  thus,  from  bough  to  bough, 
Was  borne  the  flaming  terror !     Bole  and  spire, 
Bank  after  rank,  now  pillared,  ringed,  and  rolled 
In  blinding  blaze,  stood  out  against  the  dead 
Down-smothered  dark,  for  fifty  leagues  away. 

For  fifty  leagues  !  and  when  the  winds  were  strong, 
For  fifty  more  !     But,  in  the  olden  time, 
These  fires  were  counted  as  the  harbingers 
Of  life-essential  storms ;  since  out  of  smoke 
And  heat  there  came  across  the  midnight  ways 
Abundant  comfort,  with  upgathered  clouds, 
And  runnels  babbling  of  a  plenteous  fall. 


50  A  DEATH  IN  THE  BUSH. 

So  comes  the  Southern  gale  at  evenfall 

(The  swift  "  brickfielder"  of  the  local  folk) 

About  the  streets  of  Sydney,  when  the  dust 

Lies  burnt  on  glaring  windows,  and  the  men 

Look  forth  from  doors  of  drouth,  and  drink  the  change 

With  thirsty  haste  and  that  most  thankful  cry 

Of,  "  here  it  is — the  cool,  bright,  blessed  rain !  " 

The  hut,  I  say,  was  built  of  bark  and  slabs, 
And  stood,  the  centre  of  a  clearing,  hemmed 
By  hurdle-yards,  and  ancients  of  the  blacks  : 
These  moped  about  their  lazy  fires,  and  sang 
Wild  ditties  of  the  old  days,  with  a  sound 
Of  sorrow,  like  an  everlasting  wind, 
Which  mingled  with  the  echoes  of  the  noon, 
And  moaned  amongst  the  noises  of  the  night. 

From  thence  a  cattle-track,  with  link  to  link, 
Ran  off  against  the  fishpools,  to  the  gap, 
Which  sets  you  face  to  face  with  gleaming  miles 
Of  broad  Orara,  winding  in  amongst 
Black,  barren  ridges,  where  the  nether  spurs 
Are  fenced  about  by  cotton-scrub,  and  grass 
Blue-bitten  with  the  salt  of  many  droughts. 

'Twas  here  the  shepherd  housed  him  every  night, 
And  faced  the  prospect  like  a  patient  soul ; 


A  DEATH  IN  THE  BUSH.  51 

Borne  up  by  some  vague  hope  of  better  days, 
And  G-od's  fine  blessing  in  his  faithful  wife  ; 
Until  the  humour  of  his  malady 
Took  cunning  changes  from  the  good  to  bad, 
And  laid  him  lastly  on  a  bed  of  death. 

Two  months  thereafter,  when  the  summer  heat 

Had  roused  the  serpent  from  his  rotten  lair, 

And  made  a  noise  of  locusts  in  the  boughs, 

It  came  to  this,  that,  as  the  blood-red  sun 

Of  one  fierce  day  of  many  slanted  down 

Obliquely  past  the  nether  jags  of  peaks 

And  gulfs  of  mist,  the  tardy  night  came  vexed 

By  belted  clouds,  and  scuds  that  wheeled  and  whirled 

To  left  and  right  about  the  brazen  clifts 

Of  ridges,  rigid  with  a  leaden  gloom. 

Then  took  the  cattle  to  the  forest  camps 

With  vacant  terror,  and  the  hustled  sheep 

Stood  dumb  against  the  hurdles,  even  like 

A  fallen  patch  of  shadowed  mountain  snow ; 

And  ever  through  the  curlew's  call  afar 

The  storm  grew  on,  while  round  the  stinted  slabs 

Sharp  snaps  and  hisses  came,  and  went,  and  came, 

The  huddled  tokens  of  a  mighty  blast 

Which  ran  with  an  exceeding  bitter  cry 

Across  the  tumbled  fragments  of  the  hills, 

And  through  the  sluices  of  the  gorge  and  glen. 


52 


A  DEATH  IN  THE  BUSH. 


So,  therefore,  all  about  tlie  shepherd's  hut 
That  space  was  mute,  save  when  the  fastened  dog, 
"Without  a  kennel,  caught  a  passing  glimpse 
Of  firelight  moving  through  the  lighted  chinks ; 
For  then  he  knew  the  hints  of  warmth  within, 
And  stood,  and  set  his  great  pathetic  eyes, 
In  wind  and  wet,  imploring  to  be  loosed. 

Not  often  now  the  watcher  left  the  couch 
Of  him  she  watched  ;  since,  in  his  fitful  sleep, 
His  lips  would  stir  to  wayward  themes,  and  close 
"With  bodeful  catches.     Once  she  moved  away, 
Half-deafened  by  terrific  claps,  and  stooped, 
And  looked  without ;  to  see  a  pillar  dim 
Of  gathered  gusts  and  fiery  rain. 

Anon, 

The  sick  man  woke,  and,  startled  by  the  noise, 
Stared  round  the  room,  with  dull  delirious  sight, 
At  this  wild  thing  and  that ;  for,  through  his  eyes, 
The  place  took  fearful  shapes,  and  fever  showed 
Strange  crosswise  lights  about  his  pillow-head. 
He,  catching  there  at  some  phantasmic  help, 
Sat  upright  on  the  bolster,  with  a  cry 
Of,  "  "Where  is  Jesus  ?— it  is  bitter  cold !  " 
And  then,  because  the  thundercalls  outside 
"Were  mixed  for  him  with  slanders  of  the  Past, 


A  DEATH  IN  THE  BUSH.  53 

He  called  his  weeping  wife  by  name,  and  said, 
4t  Come  closer,  darling  !  we  shall  speed  away 
Across  the  seas,  and  seek  some  mountain  home, 
Shut  in  from  liars,  and  the  wicked  words 
That  track  us  day  and  nidit,  and  night  and  day." 

So  waned  the  sad  refrain.  And  those  poor  lips, 
Whose  latest  phrases  were  for  peace,  grew  mute, 
And  into  everlasting  silence  passed. 


As  fares  a  swimmer  who  hath  lost  his  breath 
In  'wildering  seas  afar  from  any  help — 
Who,  fronting  Death,  can  never  realise 
The  dreadful  Presence,  but  is  prone  to  clutch 
At  every  weed  upon  the  weltering  wave  ; 
So  fared  the  watcher,  poring  o'er  the  last 
Of  him  she  loved,  with  dazed  and  stupid  stare  ; 
Half  conscious  of  the  sudden  loss  and  lack 
Of  all  that  bound  her  life,  but  yet  without 
The  power  to  take  her  mighty  sorrow  in. 

Then  came  a  patch  or  two  of  starry  sky  ; 
And  through  a  reef  of  cloven  thunder-cloud 
The  soft  Moon  looked  :  a  patient  face  beyond 
The  fierce  impatient  shadows  of  the  slopes, 
And  the  harsh  voices  of  the  broken  hills  ! 


54  A  DEATH  IN  THE  BTTSH. 

A  patient  face,  and  one  which  came  and  wrought 
A  lovely  silence  like  a  silver  mist 
Across  the  rainy  relics  of  the  storm. 

For  in  the  breaks  and  pauses  of  her  light 
The  gale  died  out  in  gusts ;  yet,  evermore 
About  the  roof-tree,  on  the  dripping  eaves, 
The  damp  wind  loitered ;  and  a  fitful  drift 
Sloped  through  the  silent  curtains,  and  athwart 
The  dead. 

There,  when  the  glare  had  dropped  behind 
A  mighty  ridge  of  gloom,  the  woman  turned 
And  sat  in  darkness  face  to  face  with  God, 
And  said — "  I  know,"  she  said,  "  that  Thou  art  wise  -r 
That  when  we  build  and  hope,  and  hope  and  build, 
And  see  our  best  'things  fall,  it  comes  to  pass 
For  evermore  that  we  must  turn  to  Thee ! 
And  therefore  now,  because  I  cannot  find 
The  faintest  token  of  Divinity 
In  this  my  latest  sorrow,  let  Thy  light 
Inform  mine  eyes,  so  I  may  learn  to  look 
On  something  past  the  sight  which  shuts,  and  blinds,. 
And  seems  to  drive  me  wholly,  Lord,  from  Thee." 

Now  waned  the  moon  beyond  complaining  depths  ; 
And,  as  the  dawn  looked  forth  from  showery  woods 
(Whereon  had  dropt  a  hint  of  red  and  gold), 


A  DEATH  IN"  THE  BUSH.  55 

There  went  about  the  crooked  cavern-eaves 
Low  flute-like  echoes  with  a  noise  of  wings 
And  waters  flying  down  far-hidden  fells. 
Then  might  be  seen  the  solitary  owl, 
Perched  in  the  clefts  ;  scared  at  the  coming  light, 
And  staring  outward  (like  a  sea-shelled  thing 
Chased  to  his  cover  by  some  bright  fierce  foe) 
As  at  a  monster  in  the  middle  waste. 


At  last  the  great  kingfisher  came  and  called 
Across  the  hollows  loud  with  early  whips, 
And  lighted,  laughing,  on  the  shepherd's  hut, 
And  roused  the  widow  from  a  swoon  like  death. 


This  day,  and  after  it  was  noised  abroad, 

By  blacks,  and  straggling  horsemen  on  the  roads, 

That  he  was  dead  "  who  had  been  sick  so  long," 

There  flocked  a  troop  from  far-surrounding  runs 

To  see  their  neighbour  and  to  bury  him. 

And  men  who  had  forgotten  how  to  cry 

(Rough  flinty  fellows  of  the  native  bush) 

Now  learned  the  bitter  way,  beholding  there 

The  wasted  shadow  of  an  iron  frame 

Brought  down  so  low  by  years  of  fearful  pain  ; 

And  marking,  too,  the  woman's  gentle  face, 

And  all  the  pathos  in  her  moaned  reply 

Of  "  masters,  we  have  lived  in  better  days." 


56  A  DEATH  IN  THE  BUSH. 

Oue  stooped — a  stockman  from  the  nearer  hills — 
To  loose  his  wallet-strings,  from  whence  he  took 
'A  bag  of  tea,  and  laid  it  on  her  lap  ; 
Then,  sobbing,  "  God  will  help  you,  missus,  yet," 
He  sought  his  horse  with  most  bewildered  eyes, 
And,  spurring  swiftly,  galloped  down  the  glen. 

"Where  black  Orara  nightly  chafes  his  brink, 

Midway  between  lamenting  lines  of  oak 

And  Warra's  gap,  the  shepherd's  grave  was  built. 

And  there  the  wild-dog  pauses,  in  the  midst 

Of  moonless  watches :  howling  through  the  gloom 

At  hopeless  shadows  flitting  to  and  fro, 

What  time  the  East  Wind  hums  his  darkest  hymn, 

And  raius  beat  heavy  on  the  ruined  leaf. 

There,  while  the  Autumn  in  the  cedar  trees 
Sat  cooped  about  by  cloudy  evergreens, 
The  widow  sojourned  on  the  silent  road, 
And  mutely  faced  the  barren  mound,  and  plucked 
A  straggling  shrub  from  thence,  and  passed  away, 
Heart-broken  on  to  Sydney  ;  where  she  took 
Her  passage,  in  an  English  vessel  bound 
To  London,  for  her  home  of  other  years. 

At  rest !     Not  near,  with  Sorrow  on  his  grave, 
And  roses  quickened  into  beauty — wrapt 
In  all  the  pathos  of  perennial  bloom  ; 


A  DEATH  IN  THE  BUSH.  57 

But  far  from  these,  beneath  the  fretful  clay 
Of  lands  within  the  lone  perpetual  cry 
Of  hermit  plovers  and  the  night-like  oaks, 
All  moaning  for  the  peace  which  never  comes. 

At  rest !     And  she  who  sits  and  waits  behind 

Is  in  the  shadows ;  but  her  faith  is  sure, 

And  one  fine  promise  of  the  coming  days 

Is  breaking,  like  a  blessed  morning,  far 

On  hills  "  that  slope  through  darkness  up  to  Q-od." 


A  SPANISH  LOVE  SONG. 

FBOM  Andalusian  gardens 

I  bring  the  rose  and  rue, 
And  leaves  of  subtle  odour, 

To  weave  a  gift  for  you. 
You'll  know  the  reason  wherefore 

The  sad  is  with  the  sweet ! 
My  flowers  may  lie,  as  I  would, 

A  carpet  for  your  feet. 

The  heart — the  heart  is  constant ! 

It  holds  its  secret,  Dear ! 
"But  often  in  the  night  time 

I  keep  awake  for  fear. 
I  have  no  hope  to  whisper, 

I  have  no  prayer  to  send, 
God  save  you  from  such  passion  ! 

God  help  you  from  such  end ! 


A  SPANISH  LOVE  SONG.  59* 

You  first,  you  last,  you  false  love  I 

In  dreams  your  lips  I  kiss, 
And  thus  I  greet  your  Shadow, 

"  Take  this,  and  this,  and  this !  'r 
When  dews  are  on  the  casement, 

And  winds  are  in  the  pine, 
I  have  you  close  beside  me — 

In  sleep  your  mouth  is  mine- 

I  never  see  you  elsewhere ; 

You  never  think  of  me ; 
But  fired  with  fever  for  you 

Content  I  am  to  be. 
You  will  not  turn,  my  Darling, 

Nor  answer  when  I  call ; 
But  yours  are  soul  and  body 

And  love  of  mine  and  all ! 

You  splendid  Spaniard !  listen — 

My  passion  leaps  to  flame 
For  neck,  and  cheek,  and  dimple, 

And  cunning  shades  of  shame  t 
I  tell  you,  I  would  gladly 

Give  Hell  myself  to  keep, 
To  cling  to,  half  a  moment, 

The  lips  I  taste  in  sleep. 


THE  LAST  OF  HIS  TEIBE. 

HE  crouches,  and  buries  his  face  on  his  knees, 

And  hides  in  the  dark  of  his  hair  ; 
For  he  cannot  look  up  to  the  storm-smitten  trees, 

Or  think  of  the  loneliness  there : 
Of  the  loss  and  the  loneliness  there. 

The  wallaroos  grope  through  the  tufts  of  the  grass, 

And  turn  to  their  covers  for  fear  ; 
But  he  sits  in  the  ashes  and  lets  them  pass 

Where  the  boomerangs  sleep  with  the  spear : 
"With  the  nullah,  the  sling,  and  the  spear. 

TJloola,  behold  him  !  The  thunder  that  breaks 

On  the  tops  of  the  rocks  with  the  rain, 
And  the  wind  which  drives  up  with  the  salt  of  the 

lakes, 

Have  made  him  a  hunter  again : 
A  hunter  and  fisher  again. 


THE  LAST  OF  HIS  TRIBE.  61 

For  his  eyes  have  been  full  with  a  smouldering  thought; 

But  he  dreams  of  the  hunts  of  yore, 
And  of  foes  that  he  sought,  and  of  fights  that  he 

fought 

With  those  who  will  battle  no  more  : 
"Who  will  go  to  the  battle  no  more. 

It  is  well  that  the  water  which  tumbles  and  fills 

Goes  moaning  and  moaning  along ; 
For  an  echo  rolls  out  from  the  sides  of  the  hills, 

And  he  starts  at  a  wonderful  song  : 
At  the  sounds  of  a  wonderful  song. 

And  he  sees,  through  the  rents  of  the  scattering  fogs, 

The  corrobboree  warlike  and  grim, 
And  the  lubra  who  sat  by  the  fire  on  the  logs, 

To  watch,  like  a  mourner,  for  him  : 
Like  a  mother  and  mourner,  for  him. 

"Will  he  go  in  his  sleep  from  these  desolate  lands, 

Like  a  chief,  to  the  rest  of  his  race, 
"With  the  honey-voiced  woman  who  beckons,  and 

stands, 

And  gleams  like  a  Dream  in  his  face — 
Like  a  marvellous  Dream  in  his  face  ? 


AEAKOON. 

Lo,  in  storms,  the  triple-headed 

Hill,  whose  dreaded 
Bases  battle  with  the  seas, 
Looms  across  fierce  widths  of  fleeting 

"Waters  beating 
Evermore  on  roaring  leas  ! 

Arakoon,  the  black,  the  lonely ! 

Housed  with  only 

•Cloud  and  rain-wind,  mist  and  damp  : 
Round  whose  foam-drenched  feet,  and  nether 

Depths,  together 
Sullen  sprites  of  thunder  tramp  ! 


AEAKOOF.  63 

There  the  East  hums  loud  and  surly, 

Late  and  early, 

Through  the  chasms  and  the  caves  ; 
And  across  the  naked  verges 

Leap  the  surges ! 
White  and  wailing  waifs  of  waves. 

Day  by  day,  the  sea-fogs  gathered — 

Tempest-fathered — 
Pitch  their  tents  on  yonder  peak ! 
Yellow  drifts  and  fragments,  lying 

Where  the  flying 
Torrents  chafe  the  cloven  creek  ! 

And  at  nightfall,  when  the  driven 

Bolts  of  heaven 

Smite  the  rock  and  break  the  bluff, 
Thither  troop  the  elves  whose  home  is 

Where  the  foam  is, 
And  the  echo,  and  the  clough. 

Ever  girt  about  with  noises, 

Stormy  voices, 

And  the  salt  breath  of  the  strait, 
Stands  the  steadfast  Mountain  Giant, 

Grim,  reliant, 
Dark  as  Death,  and  firm  as  Fate  ! 


64  AEAKOON. 

So  when  trouble  treads,  like  thunder, 

"Weak  men  under — 

Treads,  and  breaks  the  thews  of  these — 
Set  thyself  to  bear  it  bravely, 

Greatly,  gravely, 
Like  the  hill  in  yonder  seas  : 

Since  the  wrestling,  and  endurance 

Give  assurance 
To  the  faint  at  bay  with  pain, 
That  no  soul  to  strong  Endeavour 

Toked  for  ever, 
"Works  against  the  tide  in  vain. 


THE  VOYAGE  OF  TELEGONTJS. 

ILL  fares  itjwith  the  man  whose  lips  are  set 

To  bitter  themes  and  words  that  spite  the  gods  : 

For,  seeing  how  the  son  of  Saturn  sways 

With  eyes  and  ears  for  all,  this  one  shall  halt 

As  on  hard  hurtful  hills  ;  his  days  shall  know 

The  plaintive  front  of  Sorrow  ;  level  looks 

AVith  cries  ill-favoured  shall  be  dealt  to  him ; 

And  this  shall  be  that  he  may  think  of  peace 

As  one  might  think  of  alienated  lips 

Of  sweetness  touched  for  once  in  kind  warm  dreamy. 

Tea,  fathers  of  the  high  and  holy  face, 

This  soul  thus  sinning  shall  have  cause  to  sob 

"  Ah,  ah,"  for  sleep,  and  space  enough  to  learn 

The  wan  wild  Hyrie's  aggregated  song 

That  starts  the  dwellers  in  distorted  heights, 


66  THE  TOTAGE  OF  TELEGONUS. 

With  all  the  meaning  of  perpetual  sighs 
Heard  in  the  mountained  deserts  of  the  world, 
And  where  the  green-haired  waters  glide  between 
The  thin  lank  weeds  and  mallows  of  the  marsh. 


But  thou  to  whom  these  things  are  like  to  shapes 

That  come  of  darkness — thou  whose  life  slips  past 

Regarding  rather  these  with  mute  fast  mouth — 

Hear  none  the  less  how  fleet  Telegonus, 

The  brass-clad  hunter,  first  took  oar  and  smote 

Swift  eastward-going  seas,  with  face  direct 

For  narrowing  channels  and  the  twofold  coasts 

Past  Colchis  and  the  fierce  Symplegades 

And  utmost  islands  washed  by  streams  unknown. 

For  in  a  time  when  Phasis  whitened  wide 
And  drove  with  violent  waters  blown  of  wind 
Against  the  bare  salt  limits  of  the  land, 
It  came  to  pass  that,  joined  with  Cytheraea, 
The  black-browed  Ares,  chafing  for  the  wrong 
Ulysses  did  him  on  the  plains  of  Troy, 
Set  heart  against  the  king ;  and  when  the  storms 
Sang  high  in  thunder  and  the  Thracian  rain, 
The  god  bethought  him  of  a  pale-mouthed  priest 
Of  Thebae,  kin  to  ancient  Chariclo, 
And  of  an  omen  which  the  prophet  gave 
That  touched  on  Death  and  grief  to  Ithaca ; 


THE  YOYAGE  OF  TELEGONUS.  67 

Then,  knowing  how  a  heavy-handed  fate 
Had  laid  itself  on  Circe's  brass-clad  son, 
He  pricked  the  hunter  with  a  lust  that  turned 
All  thoughts  to  travel  and  the  seas  remote  ; 
But  chiefly  now  he  stirred  Telegonus 
To  longings  for  his  father's  exiled  face, 
And  dreams  of  rest  and  honey-hearted  love, 
And  quiet  death  with  much  of  funeral  flame 
Far  in  the  mountains  of  a  favoured  land 
Beyond  the  wars  and  wailings  of  the  waves. 


So  past  the  ridges  where  the  coast  abrupt 
Dips  greyly  westward,  Circe's  strong-armed  son 
Swept  down  the  foam  of  sharp-divided  straits 
And  faced  the  stress  of  opening  seas.     Sheer  out 
The  vessel  drave  ;  but  three  long  moons  the  gale 
Moaned  round ;    and  swift   strong   streams   of  fire 

revealed 

The  labouring  rowers  and  the  lightening  surf, 
Pale  watchers  deafened  of  sonorous  storm, 
And  dripping  decks  and  rents  of  ruined  sails. 
Yea,  when  the  hollow  ocean-driven  ship 
Wheeled  sideways,  like  a  chariot  cloven  through 
In  hard  hot  battle,  and  the  night  came  up 
Against  strange  headlands  lying  East  and  North, 
Behold  a  black  wild  wind  with  death  to  all 
Ran  shoreward,  charged  with  flame  and  thunder-smoke, 


68  THE  VOYAGE  OF  TELEGOXUS. 

Which  blew  the  waters  into  wastes  of  white 

And  broke  the  bark,  as  lightning  breaks  the  pine  ; 

Whereat  the  sea  in  fearful  circles  shewed 

Unpitied  faces  turned  from  Zeus  and  light, 

Wan  swimmers  wasted  with  their  agony, 

And  hopeless  eyes  and  moaning  mouths  of  men. 

But  one  held  by  the  fragments  of  the  wreck, 

And  Ares  knew  him  for  Telegonus, 

Whom  heavy-handed  Fate  had  chained  to  deeds 

Of  dreadful  note  with  sin  beyond  a  name. 

So,  seeing  this,  the  black-browed  lord  of  war, 

Arrayed  about  by  Jove's  authentic  light, 

Shot  down  amongst  the  shattered  clouds  and  called 

With  mighty  strain,  betwixt  the  gaps  of  storm, 

"  Oceanus,  Oceanus  !  "  whereat 

The  surf  sprang  white,  as  when  a  keel  divides 

The  gleaming  centre  of  a  gathered  wave  ; 

And,  ringed  with  flakes  of  splendid  fire  of  foam, 

The  son  of  Terra  rose  halfway  and  blew 

The  triple  trumpet  of  the  water-gods, 

At  which  great  winds  fell  back  and  all  the  sea 

Grew  dumb,  as  on  the  land  a  war-feast  breaks 

When  deep  sleep  falls  upon  the  souls  of  men. 

Then  Ares  of  the  night-like  brow  made  known 

The  brass-clad  hunter  of  the  facile  feet 

Hard  clinging  to  the  slippery  logs  of  pine, 

And  told  the  omen  to  the  hoary  god 

That  touched  on  Death  and  grief  to  Ithaca  ; 


THE  VOYAGE  OF  TELEGOXUS.  G9 

Wherefore  Oceanus  with  help  of  hand 
Bore  by  the  chin  the  warrior  of  the  North, 
A  moaning  mass,  across  the  shallowing  surge, 
And  cast  him  on  the  rocks  of  alien  shores 
Against  a  wintry  morning  shot  with  storm. 


Hear  also  thou  how  mighty  gods  sustain 

The  men  set  out  to  work  the  ends  of  Fate 

Which  fill  the  world  with  tales  of  many  tears, 

And  vex  the  sad  face  of  Humanity : 

Six  days  and  nights  the  brass-clad  chief  abode 

Pent  up  in  caverns  by  the  straightening  seas, 

And  fed  on  ferns  and  limpets  ;  but  the  dawn 

Before  the  strong  sun  of  the  seventh,  brought 

A  fume  of  fire  and  smells  of  savoury  meat, 

And  much  rejoicing,  as  from  neighbouring  feasts  ; 

At  which  the  hunter,  seized  with  sudden  lust, 

Sprang  up  the  crags,  and,  like  a  dream  of  Fear, 

Leapt,  shouting,  at  a  huddled  host  of  hinds 

Amongst  the  fragments  of  their  steaming  food  ; 

And,  as  the  hoarse  wood-wind  in  Autumn  sweeps 

To  every  zone  the  hissing  latter  leaves, 

So,  fleet  Telegonus,  by  dint  of  spear 

And  strain  of  thunderous  voice,  did  scatter  these 

East,  South,  and  North  :  'twas  then  the  chief  had  rest, 

Hard  by  the  outer  coast  of  Ithaca, 

Unknown  to  him  who  ate  the  spoil  and  slept. 


70  THE  VOYAGE  OF  TELEGONTTS. 

Nor  stayed  he  Land  thereafter ;  but,  when  noon 

Burned  dead  on  misty  hills  of  stunted  fir, 

This  man  shook  slumber  from  his  limbs,  and  sped 

Against  hoar  beaches  and  the  kindled  cliffs 

Of  falling  waters  ;  these  he  waded  through, 

Beholding  past  the  forests  of  the  West 

A  break  of  light,  and  homes  of  many  men, 

And  shining  corn,  and  flowers,  and  fruits  of  flowers  ; 

Tea,  seeing  these,  the  facile-footed  chief 

Grasped  by  the  knot  the  huge  ^Esean  lance, 

And  fell  upon  the  farmers  ;  wherefore  they 

Left  hoe  and  plough,  and  crouched  in  heights  remote 

Companioned  with  the  grey-winged  fogs  ;  but  he 

Made  waste   their   fields    and    throve    upon    their 

toil- 
As  throve  the  boar,  the  fierce  four-footed  curse 
"Which  Artemis  did  raise  in  Calydon 
To  make  stern  mouths  wax  white  with  foreign  fear, 
All  in  the  wild  beginning  of  the  World. 


So  one  went  down  and  told  Laertes'  son 

Of  what  the  brass-clad  stranger  from  the  straits 

Had  worked  in  Ithaca  :  whereat  the  King 

Rose,  like  a  god,  and  called  his  mighty  heir, 

Telemachus,  the  wisest  of  the  wise  ; 

And  these  two,  having  counsel,  strode  without, 

And  armed  them  with  the  arms  of  warlike  days — 


THE  YOYAGE  OF  TELEGCXNTS.  71 

The  helm,  the  javelin,  and  the  sun-like  shield, 

And  glancing  greaves  and  quivering  stars  of  steel ! 

Tea,  stern  Ulysses,  rusted  not  with  rest, 

But  dread  as  Ares,  gleaming  on  his  car 

Gave  out  the  reins  ;  and  straightway  all  the  lands 

"Were  struck  by  noise  of  steed  and  shouts  of  men, 

And  furious  dust,  and  splendid  wheels  of  flame. 

Meanwhile  the  hunter  (starting  from  a  sleep 

In  which  the  pieces  of  a  broken  dream 

Had  shown  him  Circe  with  most  tearful  face), 

Caught  at  his  spear,  and  stood,  like  one  at  bay 

"When  Summer  brings  about  Arcadian  horns 

And  headlong  horses  mixt  with  maddened  hounds  ; 

Then  huge  Ulysses,  like  a  fire  of  fight, 

Sprang  sideways  on  the  flying  car,  and  drave 

Full  at  the  brass-clad  warrior  of  the  North 

His  massive  spear  ;  but  fleet  Telegonus 

Stooped  from  the  death,  but  heard  the  speedy  lance 

Sing  like  a  thin  wind  through  the  steaming  air ; 

Yet  he,  dismayed  not  by  the  dreadful  foe — 

Unknown  to  him — dealt  out  his  strength,  and  aimed 

A  strenuous  stroke  at  great  Laertes'  son, 

"Which  missed  the  shield,  but  bit  through  flesh  and 

bone, 
And  drank  the  blood,  and  dragged  the  soul  from 

thence ! 

So  fell  the  King !  and  one  cried,  "  Ithaca  ! 
Ah,  Ithaca  !  "  and  turned  his  face  and  wept. 


72  THE  YOTAGE  OF  TELEGONUS. 

Then  came  another — wise  Telemachus — 
Who  knelt  beside  the  man  of  many  days 
And  pored  upon  the  face  ;  but  lo,  the  life 
"Was  like  bright  water  spilt  in  sands  of  thirst, 
A  wasted  splendour  swiftly  drawn  away. 
Yet  held  he  by  the  dead  :  he  heeded  not 
The  moaning  warrior  who  had  learnt  his  sin — 
Who  waited  now,  like  one  in  lairs  of  pain, 
Apart  with  darkness  hungry  for  his  fate  ; 
For,  had  not  wise  Telemachus  the  lore 
Which  makes  the  pale-mouthed  seer  content  to  sleep 
Amidst  the  desolations  of  the  world  ? 
So  therefore  he  who  knew  Telegonus, 
The  child  of  Circe  by  Laertes'  son, 
Was  set  to  be  a  scourge  of  Zeus,  smote  not 
But  rather  sat  with  moody  eyes,  and  mused, 
And  watched  the  dead.      For  who  may  brave  the 
gods? 


Yet,  0  my  fathers,  when  the  people  came, 
And  brought  the  holy  oils  and  perfect  fire, 
And  built  the  pile,  and  sang  the  tales  of  Troy — 
Of  desperate  travels  in  the  olden  time, 
By  shadowy  mountains  and  the  roaring  sea, 
Near  windy  sands  and  past  the  Thracian  snows — 
The  man  who  crossed  them  all  to  see  his  sire, 
And  had  a  loyal  heart  to  give  the  King, 


THE  VOYAGE  OP  TELEGONUS.  73 

Instead  of  blows — this  man  did  little  more 

Than  moan  outside  the  fume  of  funeral  rites, 

All  in  a  rushing  twilight  full  of  rain, 

And  clap  his  palms  for  sharper  pains  than  swords. 

Yea,  when  the  night  broke  out  against  the  flame, 

And  lonely  noises  loitered  in  the  fens, 

This  man  nor  stirred  nor  slept,  but  lay  at  wait, 

With  fastened  mouth.   For  who  may  brave  the  gods  ? 


SITTING  BY  THE  FIBE. 

AH  !  the  solace  in  the  sitt  ing, 

Sitting  by  the  fire, 
When  the  wind  without  is  calling 
And  the  fourfold  clouds  are  falling,. 
With  the  rain-racks  intermitting, 

Over  slope  and  spire. 
Ah  !  the  solace  in  the  sitting, 

Sitting  by  the  fire. 

Then,  and  then,  a  man  may  ponder, 

Sitting  by  the  fire, 
Over  fair  far  days,  and  faces 
Shining  in  sweet-coloured  places 
Ere  the  thunder  broke  asunder 

Life  and  dear  Desire. 
Thus,  and  thus,  a  man  may  ponder,. 

Sitting  by  the  fire. 


SITTING  BY  THE  PIBE.  75 

Waifs  of  song  pursue,  perplex  me, 

Sitting  by  the  fire  : 
Just  a  note,  and  lo,  the  change  then ! 
Like  a  child,  I  turn  and  range  then, 
Till  a  shadow  starts  to  vex  me — 

Passion's  wasted  pyre. 
So  do  songs  pursue,  perplex  me, 

Sitting  by  the  fire. 

Night  by  night — the  old,  old  story — 

Sitting  by  the  fire, 

Night  by  night,  the  dead  leaves  grieve  me : 
Ah  !  the  touch  when  youth  shall  leave  me, 
Like  my  fathers,  shrunken,  hoary, 

With  the  years  that  tire. 
Night  by  night — that  old,  old,  story, 

Sitting  by  the  fire. 

Sing  for  slumber,  sister  Clara, 

Sitting  by  the  fire. 
I  could  hide  my  head  and  sleep  now, 
Far  from  those  who  laugh  and  weep  now,. 
Like  a  trammelled,  faint  wayfarer, 

'Neath  yon  mountain-spire. 
Sing  for  slumber,  sister  Clara, 

Sitting  by  the  fire. 


CLEONE. 

SING  her  a  song  of  the  sun  : 

Eill  it  with  tones  of  the  stream, — 
Echoes  of  waters  that  run 

Glad  with  the  gladdening  gleam. 
Let  it  be  sweeter  than  rain, 

Lit  by  a  tropical  moon  : 
Light  in  the  words  of  the  strain, 

Love  in  the  ways  of  the  tune. 

Softer  than  seasons  of  sleep  : 

Dearer  than  life  at  its  best ! 
Oive  her  a  ballad  to  keep, 

Wove  of  the  passionate  West : 
Oive  it  and  say  of  the  hours — 

"  Haunted  and  hallowed  of  thee, 
Flower-like  woman  of  flowers, 

What  shall  the  end  of  them  be  ?  " 


CLEOKE.  77 

You  that  have  loved  her  so  much, 

Loved  her  asleep  and  awake, 
Trembled  because  of  her  touch, 

What  have  you  said  for  her  sake  P 
Far  in  the  falls  of  the  day, 

Down  in  the  meadows  of  myrrhr 
What  has  she  left  you  to  say 

Filled  with  the  beauty  of  her  r 

Take  her  the  best  of  your  thoughts, 

Let  them  be  gentle  and  grave, 
Say,  "  I  have  come  to  thy  courts, 

Maiden,  with  all  that  I  have." 
So  she  may  turn  with  her  sweet 

Face  to  your  love  and  to  you, 
Learning  the  way  to  repeat 

Words  that  are  brighter  than  dew. 


CHAELES  HAEPUE. 

WHERE  Harpur  lies,  the  rainy  streams, 
And  wet  hill-heads,  and  hollows  weeping, 

Are  swift  with  wind,  and  white  with  gleams, 
And  hoarse  with  sounds  of  storms  unsleeping. 

Fit  grave  it  is  for  one  whose  song 

"Was  tuned  by  tones  he  caught  from  torrents, 
And  filled  with  mountain-breaths,  and  strong 

"Wild  notes  of  falling  forest-currents. 

So  let  him  sleep  !  the  rugged  hymns 
And  broken  lights  of  woods  above  him  ! 

And  let  me  sing  how  Sorrow  dims 

The  eyes  of  those  that  used  to  love  him. 


CHAELES  HABPUB.  79 

As  April  in  the  wilted  wold 

Turns  faded  eyes  on  splendours  waning, 
"What  time  the  latter  leaves  are  old, 

And  ruin  strikes  the  strays  remaining ; 

So  we  that  knew  this  singer  dead, 

Whose  hands  attuned  the  Harp  Australian, 

May  set  the  face  and  bow  the  head, 
And  mourn  his  fate  and  fortunes  alien. 

The  burden  of  a  perished  faith 

Went  sighing  through  his  speech  of  sweetness, 
With  human  hints  of  Time  and  Death, 

And  subtle  notes  of  incompleteness. 

But  when  the  fiery  power  of  Youth 

Had  passed  away  and  left  him  nameless, 

Serene  as  Light,  and  strong  as  Truth, 
He  lived  his  life  untired  and  tameless. 

And,  far  and  free,  this  man  of  men 
With  wintry  hair  and  wasted  feature, 

Had  fellowship  with  gorge  and  glen, 

And  learned  the  loves  and  runes  of  Nature. 

Strange  words  of  wind,  and  rhymes  of  rain, 
And  whispers  from  the  inland  fountains, 

Are  mingled  in  his  various  strain 

With  leafy  breaths  of  piny  mountains. 


80  CHAELES  UARPUR. 

But,  as  the  under-currents  sigh 

Beneath  the  surface  of  a  river, 
The  music  of  Humanity 

Dwells  in  his  forest-psalms  for  ever. 

No  soul  was  he  to  sit  on  heights 

And  live  with  rocks  apart  and  scornful  : 

Delights  of  men  were  his  delights, 

And  common  troubles  made  him  mournfuL 

The  flying  forms  of  unknown  powers 

"With  lofty  wonder  caught  and  filled  him  ; 

But  there  were  days  of  gracious  hours 

When  sights  and  sounds  familiar  thrilled  him. 

The  pathos  worn  by  wayside  things, 
The  passion  found  in  simple  faces, 

Struck  deeper  than  the  life  of  springs 

Or  strength  of  storms  and  sea-swept  places. 

But  now  he  sleeps,  the  tired  bard, 
The  deepest  sleep  ;  and  lo,  I  proffer 

These  tender  leaves  of  my  regard 
With  hands  that  falter  as  they  offer. 


GOD  HELP  OUE  MEN  AT  SEA. 

THE  wild  night  comes  like  an  owl  to  its  lair  ; 

The  black  clouds  follow  fast ; 
And  the  sun-gleams  die  and  the  lightnings  glare, 
And  the  ships  go  heaving  past,  past,  past — 
The  ships  go  heaving  past ! 

Bar  the  doors,  and  higher,  higher 
Pile  the  faggots  on  the  fire  ! 
Now  abroad  by  many  a  light 
Empty  seats  there  are  to-night ; 
Empty  seats  that  none  may  fill, 
For  the  storm  grows  louder  still ! 
How  it  surges  and  swells  through  the  gorges  and 

dells, 

Under  the  ledges  and  over  the  lea, 
Where  a  watery  sound  goeth  moaning  around. 
God  help  our  men  at  sea  ! 

Oh  !  never  a  tempest  blew  on  the  shore, 

But  that  some  heart  did  moan 
For  a  darling  voice  it  would  hear  no  more, 

And  a  face  that  had  left  it  lone,  lone,  lone — 

A  face  that  had  left  it  lone  ! 


82  GOD  HELP  OUR  MEN  AT  SEA. 

I  am  watching  by  a  pane 
Darkened  with  the  gusty  rain ; 
Watching  through^  mist  of  tears, 
Sad  with  thoughts  of  other  years  : 
For  a  brother  I  did  miss 
In  a  stormy  time  like  this. 
Ah !    the  torrent  howls  past,   like  a  fiend  on   the 

blast, 

Under  the  ledges  and  over  the  lea ; 
And  the  pent  waters  gleam,   and  the  wild  surges 
scream ! 

God  help  our  men  at  sea  ! 

Ah,  Lord,  they  may  grope  through  the  dark  to  find 

Thy  hand  within  the  gale  ; 
And  cries  may  rise  on  the  wings  of  the  wind 
From  mariners  weary  and  pale,  pale,  pale — 
From  mariners  weary  and  pale  ! 

'Tis  a  fearful  thing  to  know, 
While  the  storm-winds  loudly  blow, 
That  a  man  can  sometimes  come 
Too  near  to  his  father's  home  ; 
So  that  he  shall  kneel  and  say, 
"  Lord,  I  would  be  far  away  !" 
Ho  !  the  hurricanes  roar  round  a  dangerous  shore, 

Under  the  ledges  and  over  the  lea  ; 
And  there  twinkles  a  light  on  the  billows  so  white — 
God  help  our  men  at  sea  ! 


COOGEE. 

SESTG  the  song  of  wave-worn  Coogee — Coogee  in  the 
distance  white 

"With  its  jags  and  points  disrupted,  gaps  and  fractures 
fringed  with  light ! 

Haunt  of  gledes  and  restless  plovers  of  the  melan- 
choly wail 

Ever  lending  deeper  pathos  to  the  melancholy  gale. 

There,  my  brothers,  down  the  fissures,  chasms  deep 
and  wan  and  wild, 

Grows  the  sea-bloom,  one  that  blushes  like  a  shrink- 
ing fair  blind  child ; 

And  amongst  the  oozing  forelands  many  a  glad  green 
rock-vine  runs, 

Getting  ease  on  earthy  ledges  sheltered  from  Decem- 
ber suns. 

Often,  when  a  gusty  morning,  rising  cold  and  gray 

and  strange, 
Lifts  its  face  from  watery  spaces,  vistas   full   with. 

cloudy  change ; 


84  COOGEE. 

Bearing  up  a  gloomy  burden  which  anon  begins  to> 

wane, 
Fading  in  the  sudden  shadow  of  a  dark  determined 

rain ; 
Do   I   seek   an   eastern   window,    so   to   watch   the 

breakers  beat 
Bound  the  steadfast  crags  of  Coogee,  dim  with  drifts 

of  driving  sleet : 
Hearing  hollow  mournful  noises  sweeping   down  a 

solemn  shore 
"While  the  grim  sea-caves  are  tideless  and  the  storm. 

strives  at  their  core. 


Often  when  the  floating  vapours  fill  the  silent  autumn 

leas, 
Dreamy  memories  fall  like    moonlight    over   silver 

sleeping  seas, 
Youth  and  I  and  Love  together ! — other  times  and 

other  themes 
Come  to  me  unsung,  unwept  for,  through  the  faded 

evening  gleams : 
Come  to  me  and  touch  me  mutely — I  that  looked 

and  longed  so  well, 
Shall  I  look  and  yet  forget  them  ?  who  may  know  or 

who  foretell  ? 
Though  the  southern  wind  roams,  shadowed  with  its 

immemorial  grief, 


COOGEE.  85 

Where  the  frosty  wings  of  Winter  leave  their  white- 
ness on  the  leaf  ? 

Friend  of  mine  beyond  the  waters,  here  and  here 

these  perished  days 
Haunt  me  with  their  sweet  dead  faces  and  their  old 

divided  ways. 
You  that  helped  and  you  that  loved  me,  take  this 

song  and  when  you  read 
i*et    the  lost    things   come    about    you,    set  your 

thoughts  and  hear  and  heed : 
Time  has  laid  his  burden  on  us  :   we  who  wear  our 

manhood  now — 
We  would  be  the  boys  we  Ttave  been,  free  of  heart 

and  bright  of  brow — 
Be  the  boys  for  just  an  hour,  with  the  splendour 

and  the  speech 
-Of  thy  lights  and  thunders,  Coogee,  flying  up  thy 

gleaming  beach ! 

Heart's  desire  and  heart's  division  !  who  would  come 

and  say  to  me 
With  the  eyes  of  far-off  friendship,  "You  are  as 

you  used  to  be"? 
^Something  glad  and    good  has  left  me  here   with 

sickening  discontent, 
Tired  of  looking,  neither  knowing,  what  it  was  or 

where  it  went. 


86  COOGEE. 

So  it  is  this  sight  of  Coogee,  shining  in  the  morning; 

dew, 
Sets  me  stumbling  through  dim  summers  once  on  fire 

with  youth  and  you. 
Summers  pale  as  southern  evenings  when  the  year 

has  lost  its  power, 
And  the  wasted  face  of  April  weeps  above  the  withered 

flower. 

Not  that  seasons  bring  no  solace — not  that  time  lacksr 
light  and  rest ; 

But  the  old  things  were  the  dearest,  and  the  old  loves- 
seem  the  best. 

"We  that  start  at  songs  familiar — we  that  tremble  at  a 
tone, 

Floating  down  the  ways  of  music,  like  a  sigh  of  sweet- 
ness flown, 

We  can  never  feel  the  freshness — never  find  again  the 
mood 

Left  amongst  fair-featured  places  brightened  of  our 
brotherhood ; 

This,  and  this,  we  have  to  think  of,  when  the  night  is 
over  all, 

And  the  woods  begin  to  perish,  and  the  rains  begin  to 
faU. 


OGYGES. 

out,  swift-footed  leaders  of  the  horns, 
And  draw  strong  breath,  and  fill  the  hollowy  cliff 
With  shocks  of  clamour, — let  the  chasm  take 
The  noise  of  many  trumpets,  lest  the  hunt 
Should  die  across  the  dim  Aonian  hills, 
Nor  break  through  thunder  and  the  surf- white  care 
That  hems  about  the  old-eyed  Ogyges 
And  bars  the  sea-wind,  rain- wind,  and  the  sea  ! 

Much  fierce  delight  hath  old-eyed  Ogyges 

[A  hairless  shadow  in  a  lion's  skin] 

In  tumult,  and  the  gleam  of  flying  spears, 

And  wild  beasts  vexed  to  death ;  "  for,"  sayeth  he, 

"  Here  lying  broken,  do  I  count  the  days 

For  very  trouble ;  being  like  the  tree — 

The  many- wintered  father  of  the  trunks 


88  GOTOES. 

On  yonder  ridges  :  wherefore  it  is  well 
To  feel  the  dead  blood  kindling  in  my  veins 
At  sound  of  boar  or  battle ;  yea  to  find 
A  sudden  stir,  like  life,  about  my  feet, 
And  tingling  pulses  through  this  frame  of  mine 
What  time  the  cold  clear  day  spring,  like  a  bird 
Afar  off,  settles  on  the  frost-bound  peaks, 
And  all  the  deep  blue  gorges,  darkening  down, 
Are  filled  with  men  and  dogs  and  furious  dust !  " 

So  in  the  time  whereof  thou  weetest  well — 

The  melancholy  morning  of  the  World — 

He  mopes  or  mumbles,  sleeps  or  shouts  for  glee, 

And  shakes  his  sides — a  cavern-hutted  King  ! 

But  when  the  ouzel  in  the  gaps  at  eve 

Doth  pipe  her  dreary  ditty  to  the  surge 

All  tumbling  in  the  soft  green  level  light, 

He  sits  as  quiet  as  a  thick-mossed  rock, 

And  dreameth  in  his  cold  old  savage  way 

Of  gliding  barges  on  the  wine-dark  waves, 

And  glowing  shapes,  and  sweeter  things  than  sleep  , 

But  chiefly,  while  the  restless  twofold  bat 

Groes  flapping  round  the  rainy  eaves  above, 

Where  one  broad  opening  letteth  in  the  moon, 

He  starteth,  thinking  of  that  gray -haired  man, 

His  sire :  then  oftentimes  the  white-armed  child 

Of  thunder-bearing  Jove,  young  Thebe,  comes 

And  droops  above  him  with  her  short  sweet  sighs 


OGTGES.  89 

For  Love  distraught — for  dear  Love's  faded  sake 
That  weeps  and  sings  and  weeps  itself  to  death 
Because  of  casual  eyes,  and  lips  of  frost, 
And  careless  mutterings,  and  most  weary  years. 

Bethink  you,  doth  the  wan  ^Egyptian  count 

This  passion,  wasting  like  an  unfed  flame, 

Of  any  worth  now ;  seeing  that  his  thighs 

Are  shrunken  to  a  span ;  and  that  the  blood 

"Which  used  to  spin  tumultuous  down  his  sides 

Of  life  in  leaping  moments  of  desire, 

Is  drying  like  a  thin  and  sluggish  stream 

In  withered  channels — think  you,  doth  he  pause 

For  golden  Thebe  and  her  red  young  mouth  ? 

Ah,  golden  Thebe — Thebe,  weeping  there, 

Like  some  sweet  wood-nymph  wailing  for  a  rock, 

If  Octis  with  the  Apollonian  face — 

That  fair-haired  prophet  of  the  sun  and  stars — 

Could  take  a  mist  and  dip  it  in  the  West 

To  clothe  thy  limbs  of  shine  about  with  shine 

And  all  the  wonder  of  the  amethyst, 

He'd  do  it — kneeling  like  a  slave  for  thee ! 

If  he  could  find  a  dream  to  comfort  thee, 

He'd  bring  it :  thinking  little  of  his  lore, 

But  marvelling  greatly  at  those  eyes  of  thine. 

Tea,  if  the  Shepherd  waiting  for  thy  steps, 

Pent  down  amongst  the  dank  black-weeded  rims, 


90  OGTGES. 

Could  shed  his  life  like  rain  about  thy  feet, 
He'd  count  it  sweetness  past  all  sweets  of  love- 
To  die  by  thee — his  life's  end  in  thy  sight. 

O  but  he  loves  the  hunt,  doth  Ogyges ! 

And  therefore  should  we  blow  the  horn  for  him  : 

He,  sitting  mumbling  in  his  surf- white  cave 

With  helpless  feet  and  alienated  eyes, 

Should  hear  the  noises  nathless  dawn  by  dawn 

"Which  send  him  wandering  swiftly  through  the  day* 

When  like  a  springing  cataract  he  leapt 

Prom  crag  to  crag,  the  strongest  in  the  chase 

To  spear  the  lion,  leopard,  or  the  boar ! 

O  but  he  loves  the  hunt ;  and,  while  the  shouts 

Of  mighty  winds  are  in  this  mountained  World, 

Behold  the  white  bleak  woodman,  Winter,  halts 

And  bends  to  him  across  a  beard  of  snow 

For  wonder  ;  seeing  Summer  in  his  looks 

Because  of  dogs  and  calls  from  throats  of  hair 

All  in  the  savage  hills  of  Hyria ! 

And,  through  the  yellow  evenings  of  the  year, 

What  time  September  shows  her  mooned  front 

And  poppies  burnt  to  blackness  droop  for  drouthr 

The  dear  Demeter,  splashed  from  heel  to  thigh 

With  spinning  vine-blood,  often  stoops  to  him 

To  crush  the  grape  against  his  wrinkled  lips 

Which  sets  him  dreaming  of  the  thickening  wolves 

In  darkness,  and  the  sound  of  moaning  seas. 


OGTGES.  91 

So  with  the  blustering  tempest  doth  he  find 

A  stormy  fellowship  :  for  when  the  North 

Comes  reeling  downwards  with  a  breath  like  spears, 

Where  Dryope  the  lonely  sits  all  night 

And  holds  her  sorrow  crushed  betwixt  her  palms, 

He  thinketh  mostly  of  that  time  of  times 

When  Zeus  the  Thunderer — broadly-blazing  King — 

Like  some  wild  comet  beautiful  but  fierce, 

Leapt  out  of  cloud  and  fire  and  smote  the  tops 

Of  black  Ogygia  with  his  red  right  hand, 

At  which  great  fragments  tumbled  to  the  Deeps — 

The  mighty  fragments  of  a  mountain-land — 

And  all  the  World  became  an  awful  Sea ! 


But,  being  tired,  the  hairless  Ogyges 
Best  loveth  night  and  dim  forgetfulness ! 
"  For,"  sayeth  he,  "  to  look  for  sleep  is  good 
When  every  sleep  is  as  a  sleep  of  death 
To  men  who  live,  yet  know  not  why  they  live, 
Nor  how  they  live  !  I  have  no  thought  to  tell 
The  people  when  this  time  of  mine  began ; 
But  forest  after  forest  grows  and  falls, 
And  rock  by  rock  is  wasted  with  the  rime, 
While  I  sit  on  and  Avait  the  end  of  all ; 
Here  taking  every  footstep  for  a  sign ; 
An  ancient  shadow  whiter  than  th'e  foam  !  " 


BY    THE    SEA. 

THE  caves  of  the  sea  have  been  troubled  to-day 

"With  the  water  which  whitens,  and  widens,  and 

fills; 
And  a  boat  with  our  brother  was  driven  away 

By  a  wind  that  came  down  from  the  tops  of  the  hills. 
Behold  I  have  seen  on  the  threshold  again 

A  face  in  a  dazzle  of  hair  ! 
Do  you  know  that  she  watches  the  rain,  and  the  main, 

And  the  waves  which  are  moaning  there  ? 
Ah,  moaning  and  moaning  there ! 

Now  turn  from  your  casements,  and  fasten  your  doors, 

And  cover  your  faces,  and  pray,  if  you  can ; 
There  are  wails  in  the  wind,  there  are  sighs  on  the 
shores, 

And  alas,  for  the  fate  of  a  storm-beaten  man  ! 
Oh,  dark  falls  the  night  on  the  rain-rutted  verge, 

So  sad  with  the  sound  of  the  foam ! 
Oh,  wild  is  the  sweep  and  the  swirl  of  the  surge; 

And  his  boat  may  never  come  home  ! 
Ah,  never  and  never  come  home! 


SONG  OF  THE  CATTLE-HUNTEBS. 

WHILE  the  morning  light  beams  on  the  fern-matted 

streams, 

And  the  water-pools  flash  in  its  glow, 
Down  the  ridges  we  fly,  with  a  loud  ringing  cry — 

Down  the  ridges  and  gullies  we  go  ! 
And  the  cattle  we  hunt,  they  are  racing  in  front, 

With  a  roar  like  the  thunder  of  waves  ; 
As  the  beat  and  the  beat  of  our  swift  horses'  feet 
Start  the  echoes  away  from  their  caves  ! 
As  the  beat  and  the  beat 
Of  our  swift  horses'  feet 
Start  the  echoes  away  from  their  caves  L 

Like  a  wintery  shore  that  the  waters  ride  o'er, 
All  the  lowlands  are  filling  with  sound ; 

For  swiftly  we  gain  where  the  herds  on  the  plain, 
Like  a  tempest,  are  tearing  the  ground  ! 


34  SONG  OP  THE  CATTLE-HUNTERS. 

And  we'll  follow  them  hard  to  the  rails  of  the  yard, 

Over  gulches  and  mountain-tops  grey, 
Where  the  beat  and  the  beat  of  our  swift  horses* 

feet 
Will  die  with  the  echoes  away ! 

Where  the  beat  and  the  beat 
Of  our  swift  horses'  feet 
Will  die  with  the  echoes  away  ! 


KING  SAUL  AT  GILBOA. 

noise  of  battle  and  the  dust  of  fray, 
Half-hid  in  fog,  the  gloomy  mountain  lay  ; 
But  Succoth's  watchers  from  their  outer  fields 
Saw  fits  of  flame  and  gleams  of  clashing  shields 
For  where  the  yellow  river  draws  its  spring 
The  hosts  of  Israel  travelled  thundering ! 
There,  beating  like  the  storm  that  sweeps  to  sea 
Across  the  reefs  of  chafing  Galilee, 
The  car  of  Abner  and  the  sword  of  Saul 
Drave  Gaza  down  Gilboa's  southern  wall ; 
But  swift  and  sure  the  spears  of  Ekron  flew, 
Till  peak  and  slope  were  drenched  with  bloody  dew ! 
"  Shout,  Timnath,  shout ! "  the  blazing  leaders  cried, 
And  hurled  the  stone,  and  dashed  the  stave  aside : 
"  Shout,  Timnath,  shout !     Let  Hazor  hold  the  height, 
Bend  the  long  bow  and  break  the  lords  of  fight !" 
From  every  hand  the  swarthy  strangers  sprang, 
Chief  leaped  on  chief,  with  buckler  buckler  rang ! 
The  flower  of  armies !  set  in  Syrian  heat, 
The  ridges  clamoured  under  labouring  feet ; 


90  KING  SATJL  AT  GILBOA. 

Nor  stayed  the  warriors  till  from  Salim's  road 
The  crescent  horns  of  Abner's  squadrons  glowed. 
Then,  like  a  shooting  splendour  on  the  wing, 
The  strong-armed  son  of  Kish  came  thundering  ; 
And  as  in  Autumn's  fall,  when  woods  are  bare, 
Two  adverse  tempests  meet  in  middle  air, 
So  Saul  and  Achish,  grim  with  heat  and  hate, 
Met  by  the  brooks  and  shook  the  scales  of  Fate  -r 
For  now  the  struggle  swayed,  and,  firm  as  rocks 
Against  the  storm- wind  of  the  equinox, 
The  rallied  lords  of  Judah  stood  and  bore 
All  day  the  fiery  tides  of  fourfold  war. 


But  he  that  fasted  in  the  secret  cave, 
And  called  up  Samuel  from  the  quiet  grave, 
And  stood  with  darkness  and  the  mantled  ghosts- 
A  bitter  night  on  shrill  Samarian  coasts, 
Knew  well  the  end :  of  how  the  futile  sword 
Of  Israel  would  be  broken  by  the  Lord ; 
How  Grath  would  triumph  Avith  the  tawny  line 
That  bend  the  knee  at  Dagon's  brittle  shrine  ; 
And  how  the  race  of  Kish  would  fall  to  wreck 
Because  of  vengeance  stayed  at  Amalek ; 
Yet  strove  the  sunlike  king,  nor  rested  hand 
Till  yellow  evening  filled  the  level  land ; 
Then  Judah  reeled  before  a  biting  hail 
Of  sudden  arrows  shot  from  Akor's  vale, 


KING  SAUL  AT  GILBOA.  97 

"Where  Libnah,  lapped  in  blood  from  thigh  to  heel, 

Drew  the  tense  string  and  pierced  the  quivering  steel. 

There  fell  the  sons  of  Saul,  and,  man  by  man, 

The  chiefs  of  Israel  up  to  Jonathan ; 

And,  while  swift  Achish  stooped  and  caught  the  spoil, 

Ten  chosen  archers  red  with  sanguine  toil 

Sped  after  Saul,  who,  faint  and  sick  and  sore 

With  many  wounds,  had  left  the  thick  of  war  : 

He,  like  a  baffled  bull  by  hunters  prest, 

Turned  sharp  about  and  faced  the  flooded  west, 

And  saw  the  star-like  spears  and  moony  spokes 

Grleam  from  the  rocks  and  lighten  through  the  oaks  ; 

A  sea  of  splendour !     How  the  chariots  rolled 

On  wheels  of  blinding  brightness  manifold ! 

While  stumbling  over  spike  and  spine  and  spur 

Of  sultry  lands,  escaped  the  son  of  Ner 

With  smitten  men  !     At  this  the  front  of  Saul 

Grew  darker  than  a  blasted  tower  wall ; 

And  seeing  how  there  crouched  upon  his  right 

Aghast  with  fear  a  black  Amalekite, 

He  called  and  said,  "  I  pray  thee,  man  of  pain, 

Red  from  the  scourge,  and  recent  from  the  chair, 

Set  thou  thy  face  to  mine  and  stoutly  stand 

With  yonder  bloody  sword-hilt  in  thine  hand 

And  fall  upon  me."     But  the  faltering  hind 

Stood  trembling  like  a  willow  in  the  wind. 

Then  further,  Saul :  "  Lest  Ashdod's  vaunting  hosts 

Should  bear  me  captive  to  their  bleak-blown  coasts, 


98  KINO  SAUL  AT  GUI/BOA. 

I  pray  thee,  smite  me  :  seeing  peace  has  fled, 
And  rest  lies  wholly  with  the  quiet  dead." 
At  this  a  flood  of  sunset  broke,  and  smote 
Keen  blazing  sapphires  round  a  kingly  throat, 
Touched  arm  and  shoulder,  glittered  in  the  crest, 
And  made  swift  starlights  on  a  jewelled  breast ! 
So,  starting  forward  like  a  loosened  hound, 
The  stranger   clutched  the   sword   and  wheeled  it 

round, 

And  struck  the  Lord's  Anointed !     Fierce  and  fleet, 
Philistia  came  with  shouts  and  clattering  feet ; 
By  gaping  gorges  and  by  rough  defile, 
Dark  Ashdod  beat  across  a  dusty  mile  ; 
Hot  Hazor's  bowmen  toiled  from  spire  to  spire  ; 
And  Gath  sprang  upwards  like  a  gust  of  fire ! 
On  either  side  did  Libnah's  lords  appear ; 
And  brass-clad  Timnath  thundered  in  the  rear ! 
"  Mark,  Achish,  mark ! " — South-west  and  south  there 

sped 

A  dabbled  hireling  from  the  dreadful  dead ! 
"  Mark,  Achish,  mark !  " — The  mighty  front  of  Saul, 
Great  in  his  life  and  god-like  in  his  fall ! 
This  was  the  arm  that  broke  Philistia's  pride 
Where  Kishon  chafes  his  seaward-going  tide ! 
This  was  the  sword  that  smote  till  set  of  sun 
Red  Gath  from  Michmash  unto  Ajalon ! 
Low  in  the  dust.     And  Israel  scattered  far ! 
And  dead  the  trumps,  and  crushed  the  hoofs  of  war  ! 


KING  SAUL  AT  GILBOA.  99 

So  fell  the  king !  as  it  was  said  by  liim 
"Who  hid  his  forehead  in  a  mantle  dim 
At  bleak  Endor,  what  time  unholy  rites 
Yext  the  long  sleep  of  still  Samarian  heights : 
For  bowed  to  earth  before  the  hoary  Priest 
Did  he  of  Kish  withstand  the  smoking  feast, 
To  fast,  in  darkness  and  in  sackcloth  rolled, 
And  house  with  wild  things  in  the  biting  cold ; 
Because  of  sharpness  lent  to  Gaza's  sword, 
And  Judah  widowed  by  the  angry  Lord. 

So  Silence  came  !     As  when  the  outer  verge 

Of  Carmel  takes  the  white  and  whistling  surge, 

Hoarse  hollow  noises  fill  the  caves  and  roar 

Along  the  margins  of  the  echoing  shore, 

Thus  War  had  thundered  !     But  as  Evening  breaks 

Across  the  silver  of  Assyrian  lakes, 

When  reapers  rest,  and  through  the  level  red 

Of  sunset,  peace  like  holy  oil  is  shed, 

Thus  Silence  fell ;  but  Israel's  daughters  crept 

Outside  their  thresholds,  waited,  watched,  and  wept. 

Then  they  that  dwell  beyond  the  flats  and  fens 
Of  sullen  Jordan,  and  in  gelid  glens 
Of  Jabesh-Gilead,  chosen  chiefs  and  few, 
Around  their  loins  the  hasty  girdle  drew, 
And  faced  the  forests  huddled  fold  on  fold, 
And  dells  of  glimmering  greenness  manifold, 


100  KING  SAUL  AT  GILBOA. 

What  time  Orion  in  the  west  did  set 

A  shining  foot  on  hills  of  wind  and  wet : 

These  journeyed  nightly  till  they  reached  the  capes 

Where  Ashdod  revelled  over  heated  grapes  ; 

And,  while  the  feast  was  loud  and  scouts  were  turned, 

From  Saul's  bound  body  cord  by  cord  they  burned, 

And  bore  the  king  athwart  the  place  of  tombs, 

And  hasted  eastward  through  the  tufted  glooms ; 

Nor  broke  the  cake,  nor  stayed  the  step  till  Morn 

Shot  over  Debir's  cones  and  crags  forlorn ! 

From  Jabesh  then  the  weeping  virgins  came  ; 
In  Jabesh  then  they  built  the  funeral  flame  ; 
With  costly  woods  they  piled  the  lordly  pyre, 
Brought  yellow  oils  and  fed  the  perfect  fire  ; 
While  round  the  crescent  stately  Elders  spread 
The  flashing  armour  of  the  mighty  dead, 
With  crown  and  spear,  and  all  the  trophies  won 
From  many  wars  by  Israel's  dreadful  Son. 
Thence,  when  the  feet  of  Evening  paused  and  stood 
On  shadowy  mountains  and  the  roaring  flood 
(As  through  a  rushing  twilight  full  of  rain 
The  weak  Moon  looked  athwart  Gadara's  plain), 
The  younger  warriors  bore  the  urn,  and  broke 
The  humid  turf  about  a  wintering  oak, 
And  buried  Saul ;  and,  fasting,  went  their  ways, 
And  hid  their  faces  seven  nights  and  days. 


IN  THE  VALLEY. 

SAID  the  yellow-haired  Spirit  of  Spring 

To  the  white-footed  Spirit  of  Snow, 
"  On  the  wings  of  the  tempest  take  wing, 

And  leave  me  the  valleys,  and  go." 
And,  straightway,  the  streams  were  unchained, 

And  the  frost-fettered  torrents  broke  free, 
And  the  strength  of  the  winter-wind  waned 

In  the  dawn  of  a  light  on  the  sea. 

Then  a  morning-breeze  followed  and  fell, 

And  the  woods  were  alive  and  astir 
With  the  pulse  of  a  song  in  the  dell, 

And  a  whisper  of  day  in  the  fir. 
Swift  rings  of  sweet  water  were  rolled 

Down  the  ways  where  the  lily -leaves  grew, 
And  the  green,  and  the  white,  and  the  gold, 

Were  wedded  with  purple  and  blue. 


102  IN  THE  TALLET. 

But  the  lips  of  the  flower  of  the  rose 

Said,  "  where  is  the  ending  hereof  ? 
Is  it  sweet  with  you,  life,  at  the  close  ? 

Is  it  sad  to  be  emptied  of  love  ?  " 
And  the  voice  of  the  flower  of  the  peach 

"Was  tender  and  touching  in  tone, 
"  When  each  has  been  grafted  on  each, 

It  is  sorrow  to  live  on  alone." 

Then  the  leaves  of  the  flower  of  the  vine 

Said,  "  what  will  there  be  in  the  day 
When  the  reapers  are  red  with  my  wine, 

And  the  forests  are  yellow  and  grey  ?  " 
And  the  tremulous  flower  of  the  quince 

Made  answer,  "  three  seasons  ago 
My  sisters  were  star-like,  but  since, 

Their  graves  have  been  made  in  the  snow.'" 

Then  the  whispering  flower  of  the  fern 

Said,  "  who  will  be  sad  at  the  death, 
When  Summer  blows  over  the  burn, 

With  the  fierceness  of  fire  in  her  breath  ?  " 
And  the  mouth  of  the  flower  of  the  sedge 

Was  opened  to  murmur  and  sigh, 
"  Sweet  wind-breaths  that  pause  at  the  edge 

Of  the  nightfall,  and  falter,  and  die." 


TWELVE     SONNETS. 


i. 

A  MOUNTAIN  SPEING. 

PEACE  hath  an  altar  there.     The  sounding  feet 

Of  thunder,  and  the  Vildering  wings  of  rain, 
Against  fire-rifted  summits  flash  and  beat, 

And  through  grey  upper  gorges  swoop  and  strain  ; 

But  round  that  hallowed  mountain-spring  remain, 
Tear  after  year,  the  days  of  tender  heat, 
And  gracious  nights  whose  lips  with  flowers  are  sweet, 

And  filtered  lights,  and  lutes  of  soft  refrain. 
A  still  bright  pool.     To  men  I  may  not  tell 

The  secret  that  its  heart  of  water  knows — 

The  story  of  a  loved  and  lost  repose ; 
Yet  this  I  say  to  cliff",  and  close-leaved  dell : 
A  fitful  Spirit  haunts  yon  limpid  well, 

Whose  likeness  is  the  faithless  face  of  Eose. 


104  SONNETS. 


II. 

LAUKA. 

IF  Laura — lady  of  the  flower-soft  face — 

Should  light  upon  these  verses,  she  may  take 
The  tenderest  line,  and  through  its  pulses  trace 

What  man  can  suffer  for  a  woman's  sake. 

For  in  the  nights  that  burn,  the  days  that  break, 
A  thin  pale  Figure  stands  in  Passion's  place  ; 
And  Peace  comes  not,  nor  yet  the  perished  grace 

Of  Youth  to  keep  old  faiths  and  fires  awake. 
Ah,  marvellous  maid!  Life  sobs,  and  sighing  saith, 

"  She  left  me,  fleeting  like  a  fluttered  dove  ; 
But  I  would  have  a  moment  of  her  breath, 

So  I  might  taste  the  sweetest  sense  thereof, 

And  catch  from  blossoming,  honeyed  lips  of  love 
Some  faint,  some  fair,  some  dim  delicious  death/' 


SONNETS.  105 


III. 

BY  A  EIVEK. 

BUT  red  ripe  mouth  and  brown  luxurious  eyes 

Of  her  I  love,  by  all  your  sweetness  shed 
In  far  fair  days,  on  one  whose  memory  flies 

To  faithless  lights  and  gracious  speech  gainsaid, 

I  pray  you,  when  yon  river-path  I  tread, 
Make  with  the  woodlands  some  soft  compromise 
Lest  they  should  vex  me  into  fruitless  sighs 

With  visions  of  a  woman's  gleaming  head ! 
For  every  green  and  golden-hearted  thing 

That  gathers  beauty  in  that  shining  place 
Beloved  of  beams  and  wooed  by  wind  and  wing, 

Is  rife  with  glimpses  of  her  marvellous  face ; 
And  in  the  whispers  of  the  lips  of  Spring 

The  music  of  her  lute-like  voice  I  trace. 


106  SONNETS. 


IV. 

ATTILA. 

WHAT  though  his  feet  were  shod  with  sharp  fierce 
flame, 

And  Death  and  Ruin  were  his  daily  squires, 
The  Scythian  helped  by  Heaven's  thunders  came  : 

The  time  was  ripe  for  G-od's  avenging  fires. 

Lo,  loose  lewd  trulls  and  lean  luxurious  liars 
Had  brought  the  fair  fine  face  of  Rome  to  shame 
And  made  her  one  with  sins  beyond  a  name — 

That  queenly  daughter  of  imperial  sires  ! 
The  blood  of  elders  like  the  blood  of  sheep 

Was  dashed  across  the  circus !     Once,  while  din, 
And  dust,  and  lightnings,  and  a  daggled  heap 
Of  beast-slain  men  made  lords  with  laughter  leap, 

Night  fell,  with  rain.     The  Earth  so  sick  of  sin 
Had  turned  her  face  into  the  dark  to  weep. 


SONNETS.  107 


T. 

A    EEWABD. 

BECAUSE  a  steadfast  flame  of  clear  intent 

Gave  force  and  beauty  to  full-actioned  life ; 
Because  his  way  was  one  of  firm  ascent, 

"Whose  stepping-stones  were  hewn  of  change  and 
strife  ; 

Because  as  husband  loveth  noble  wife, 
He  loved  fair  Truth ;  because  the  thing  he  meant 
To  do,  that  thing  he  did,  nor  paused,  nor  bent, 

In  face  of  poor  and  pale  conclusions  ;  yea, 
Because  of  this,  how  fares  the  Leader  dead  ? 

What  kind  of  mourners  weep  for  him  to-day  ? 
What  golden  shroud  is  at  his  funeral  spread  ? 

Upon  his  brow  what  leaves  of  laurel,  say  ? 

About  his  breast  is  tied  a  sackcloth  grey, 
And  knots  of  thorns  deface  his  lordly  head. 


108  S05TNETS. 


VI. 

TO  


A  HANDMAID  to  the  Genius  of  thy  Song 

Is  sweet  fair  Scholarship.     'Tis  she  supplies 

The  fiery  Spirit  of  the  passioned  eyes 
With  subtle  syllables  whose  notes  belong 

To  some  chief  source  of  perfect  melodies. 
And,  glancing  through  a  laurelled  lordly  throng 

Of  shining  singers,  lo,  my  vision  flies 
To  "William  Shakespeare !  he  it  is  whose  strong 

Full  flute-like  music  haunts  thy  stately  Verse. 
A  worthy  Levite  of  his  court  thou  art ! 

One  sent  amongst  us  to  defeat  the  curse 
That  binds  us  to  the  Actual.     Tea,  thy  part, 
O  lute-voiced  lover,  is  to  lull  the  heart 

Of  love  repelled :  its  darkness  to  disperse. 


SONNETS.  109 


VII. 

THE  STANZA  OF  CHILDE  HAEOLD. 

WHO  framed  the  stanza  of  Childe  Harold  ?     He 
It  was  who,  halting  on  a  stormy  shore, 
Knew  well  the  lofty  Voice  which  evermore 

In  grand  distress  doth  haunt  the  sleepless  sea 
With  solemn  sounds  !     And  as  each  wave  did  roll 
Till  one  came  up,  the  mightiest  of  the  whole, 

To  sweep  and  surge  across  a  vacant  lea, 

Wild  words  were  wedded  to  wild  melody  ! 
This  Poet  must  have  had  a  speechless  sense 
Of  some  dead  Summer's  boundless  affluence  ! 

Else,  whither  can  we  trace  the  passioned  lore 

Of  Beauty,  steeping  to  the  very  core 

His  royal  Verse  ?     And  that  rare  light  which  lies 
About  it  like  a  Sunset  in  the  skies  ? 


110 


SONNETS. 


Till. 

A  LIVING  POET. 

HE  knows  the  sweet  vexation  in  the  strife 

Of  Love  with  Time,  this  Bard  who  fain  would  stray 
To  fairer  place  beyond  the  storms  of  Life, 
With  astral  faces  near  him  day  by  day. 
In  deep-mossed  dells  the  mellow  waters  flow 
Which  best  he  loves ;  for  there  the  echoes,  rife 
With  rich  suggestions  of  his  Long  Ago, 

Astarte  !  pass  with  thee.     And,  far  away, 
Dear  Southern  Seasons  haunt  the  dreamy  eye  : 
Spring,  flower-zoned,  and  Summer,  warbling  low 
In  tasselled  corn,  alternate  come  and  go  ; 
While  gipsy  Autumn,  splashed  from  heel  to  thigh 
With  vine-blood,  treads  the  leaves ;  and,  halting  nigh, 
Wild  Winter  bends  across  a  beard  of  snow. 


SONNETS.  Ill 


IX. 

DANTE  AND  VERGIL. 

WHEN  lost  Francesca  sobbed  her  broken  tale 

Of  Love,  and  Sin,  and  boundless  Agony  ; 
"While  that  wan  Spirit  by  her  side  did  wail 

And  bite  his  lips  for  utter  misery — 

The  Grief  which  could  not  speak,  nor  hear,  nor 

see ; 

So  tender  grew  the  superhuman  face 
Of  one  who  listened,  that  a  mighty  trace 

Of  superhuman  Woe  gave  way,  and  pale, 
The  sudden  light  upstruggled  to  its  place ; 

While  all  his  limbs  began  to  faint  and  fail 
With  such  excess  of  Pity !     But,  behind, 

The  Roman  Virgil  stood — the  calm,  the  wise — 

With  not  a  shadow  in  his  regal  eyes, 
A  stately  type  of  all  his  stately  kind  ! 


112  SONNETS. 


I. 

BEST. 

SOMETIMES  we  feel  so  spent  for  want  of  rest, 
"We  have  no  thought  beyond.     I  know  to-day, 
When  tired  of  bitter  lips  and  dull  delay 
With  faithless  words,  I  cast  mine  eyes  upon 
The  shadows  of  a  distant  mountain-crest, 
And  said,  "  That  hill  must  hide  within  its  breast 
Some  secret  glen  secluded  from  the  sun. 

O,  mother  Nature  !  would  that  I  could  run 
Outside  to  thee,  and,  like  a  wearied  guest 

Half  blind  with  lamps  and  sick  of  feasting,  lay 
An  aching  head  on  thee.     Then  down  the  streams 
The  moon  might    swim ;    and  I  should  feel    her 

grace, 

While  soft  winds  blew  the  sorrows  from  my  face 
So  quiet  in  the  fellowship  of  dreams." 


SOXXETS.  113 


XI. 

AFTEK  PASTING. 

tell  what  clian'ge  hath  come  to  you 

To  vex  your  splendid  hair.      I  only  know 
One  Grief :  the  Passion  left  betwixt  us  two, 

Like  some  forsaken  watchfire,  burneth  low. 

'Tis  sad  to  turn  and  find  it  dying  so 
Without  a  hope  of  resurrection !     Yet, 

0  radiant  face  that  found  me  tired  and  lone, 
I  shall  not  for  the  dear  dead  Past  forget 

The  sweetest  looks  of  all  the  Summers  gone. 
Ah  !  Time  hath  made  familiar  wild  K-egret ; 

For  now  the  leaves  are  white  in  last  year's  bowers  ; 
And  now  doth  sob  along  the  ruined  leas 
The  homeless  storm  from  saddened  southern  seas, 

While  March  sits  weeping  over  withered  flowers. 


114  SONNETS. 


XII. 

ALFEED  TENNYSON. 

THE  silvery  dimness  of  a  happy  dream 

I've   known   of   late.    •  Methought  where  Byron 
moans, 

Like  some  wild  gulf  in  melancholy  zones, 
I  passed  tear-blinded !     Once  a  lurid  gleam 

Of  stormy  sunset  loitered  on  the  sea 
While,  travelling  troubled,  like  a  straitened  stream, 

The  voice  of  Shelley  died  away  from  me! 

Still  sore  at  heart  I  reached  a  lake-lit  lea ; 
And   then,  the    green- mossed    glades  with  many  a 

grove 
Where  lies  the  calm  which  Wordsworth  used  to  love  ; 

And  lastly,  Locksley  Hall !  from  whence  did  rise 
A  haunting  Song  that  blew,  and  breathed,  and  blew, 
With  rare  delights :  'twas  there  I  woke  and  knew 

The  sumptuous  comfort  left  in  drowsy  eyes. 


SUTHEBLAND'S  GBAVE. 

\_Tliejlrst  white  man  buried  in  Australia.] 

ALL  night  long  the  sea  out  yonder — all  night  long  the 

wailful  sea, 
Vext  of  winds   and  many  thunders,  seeketh    rest 

unceasingly  ! 
Seeketh  rest  in  dens   of  tempest  where,   like    one 

distraught  with  pain, 
Shouts  the  wild-eyed  sprite,  Confusion:  seeketh  rest, 

and  moans  in  vain  ! 
Ah,  but  you  should  hear  it  calling,  calling  when  the 

haggard  sky 
Takes  the   darks    and    damps   of  Winter  with  the 

mournful  marsh-fowls'  cry ; 
Even  while  the  strong,  swift  torrents  from  the  rainy 

ridges  come 
Leaping    down    and    breaking    backwards — million 

coloured  shapes  of  foam  ! 


116  SITTHEELAND'S  GEAVE. 

Then,  and  then,  the  sea  out  yonder  chiefly  looketh 

for  the  boon 
Portioned  to  the  pleasant  valleys,  and  the  grave  sweet 

summer  moon : 
Boon  of  Peace,  the   still,  the  saintly,  spirit  of  the 

dewdells  deep — 
Yellow  dells,  and  hollows  haunted  by  the  soft  dim 

dreams  of  sleep. 


All    night   long  the  flying  water  breaks  upon  the 

stubborn  rocks — 
Ooze-filled  forelands  burnt  and  blackened,  smit  and 

scarred  with  lightning  shocks  ; 
But  above  the  tender  sea-thrift — but     beyond  the 

flowering  fern, 
Euns  a  little   pathway    westward — pathway  quaint 

with  turn  on  turn — 
Westward  trending,  thus  it  leads  to  shelving  shores 

and  slopes  of  mist : 
Sleeping  shores,  and  glassy  bays  of  green  and  gold 

and  amethyst ! 
There    tread    gently — gently,    pilgrim ;     there    with 

thoughtful  eyes  look  round  ; 
Cross  thy  breast  and  bless  the  silence  :  lo,  the  place 

is  holy  ground ! 

Holy  ground  for  ever,  stranger !     All  the  quiet  silver 
lights 


SUTHEBLAND'S  GRAVE.  117 

Dropping  from  the  starry  heavens  through  the  soft 

Australian  nights — 
Dropping  on  those  lone  grave-grasses — come  serene, 

unbroken,  clear, 
Like  the  love  of  God  the  Father,  falling,  falling,  year 

by  year ! 
Tea,  and  like  a  Voice  supernal,  there  the  daily  wind 

doth  blow 
In  the  leaves  above  the  Sailor  buried  ninety  years 

ago. 


STEINX. 

A  HEAP  of  low  dark  rocky  coast 
Unknown  to  foot  or  feather ! 

A  sea-voice  moaning  like  a  ghost ; 
And  fits  of  fiery  weather  ! 


The  flying  Syrinx  turned  and  sped 
By  dim  mysterious  hollows, 

"Where  night  is  black,  and  day  is  red, 
And  frost  the  fire-wind  follows  ! 


Strong  heavy  footfalls  in  the  wake, 
Came  up  with  flights  of  water  : 

The  gods  were  mournful  for  the  sake 
Of  Ladon's  lovely  daughter. 


SYRINX.  119 

For  when  she  came  to  spike  and  spine, 

Where  reef  and  river  gather, 
Her  feet  were  sore  with  shell  and  chine ; 

She  could  not  travel  farther. 


Across  a  naked  strait  of  land, 

Blown  sleet  and  surge  were  humming  ; 
But  trammelled  with  the  shifting  sand, 

She  heard  the  monster  coming  ! 


A  thing  of  hoofs,  and  horns,  and  lust ! 

A  gaunt  goat-footed  stranger  ! 
She  bowed  her  body  in  the  dust, 

And  called  on  Zeus  to  change  her. 


And  called  on  Hermes  fair  and  fleet, 
And  her  of  hounds  and  quiver, 

To  hide  her  in  the  thickets  sweet 
That  sighed  above  the  river. 


So  He  that  sits  on  naming  wheels, 
And  rules  the  sea  and  thunder, 

Caught  up  the  satyr  by  the  heels, 
And  tore  his  skirts  in  sunder. 


120  SYEINX. 

While  Areas  of  tlie  glittering  plumes 
Took  Ladon's  daughter  lightly, 

And  set  her  in  the  gracious  glooms 
That  mix  with  moon-mist  nightly. 


And  touched  her  lips  with  wild-flower  wine ; 

And  changed  her  body  slowly, 
Till  in  soft  reeds  of  song  and  shine 

Her  life  was  hidden  wholly. 


ON  THE  PAEOO. 

As  when  the  strong  stream  of  a  wintering  sea 

Eolls  round  our  coast,  with  bodeful  breaks  of  storm, 

And  swift  salt  rain,  and  bitter  wind  that  saith 

"Wild  things  and  woeful  of  the  White  South  Land 

Alone  with  God  and  Silence  in  the  cold  — 

As  when  this  cometh,  men  from  dripping  doors 

Look  forth,  and  shudder  for  the  mariners 

Abroad,  so  we  for  absent  brothers  looked 

In  days  of  drought,  and  when  the  flying  floods 

Swept  boundless  :  roaring  down  the  bald,  black,  plains 

Beyond  the  farthest  spur  of  western  hills. 


where  the  Barwan  cuts  a  rotten  land, 
Or  lies  unshaken,  like  a  great  blind  creek, 
Between  hot  mouldering  banks,  it  came  to  this, 
All  in  a  time  of  short  and  thirsty  sighs, 
That  thirty  rainless  months  had  left  the  pools 
And  grass  as  dry  as  ashes  :  then  it  was 
Our  kinsman  started  for  the  lone  Paroo, 


122  ON  THE  PAEOO. 

Erom  point  to  point,  with  patient  strivings,  sheer 
Across  the  horrors  of  the  windless  downs, 
Blue-gleaming  like  a  sea  of  molten  steel. 

But  never  drought  had  broke  them  :  never  flood 
Had  quenched  them :  they  with  mighty  youth  and 

health, 

And  thews  and  sinews  knotted  like  the  trees — 
They,  like  the  children  of  the  native  woods, 
Could  stem  the  strenuous  waters,  or  outlive 
The  crimson  days  and  dull  dead  nights  of  thirst 
Like  camels !  yet  of  what  avail  was  strength 
Alone  to  them — though  it  was  like  the  rocks 
On  stormy  mountains — in  the  bloody  time 
When  fierce  sleep  caught  them  in  the  camps  at  rest, 
And  violent  darkness  gripped  the  life  in  them 
And  whelmed  them,  as  an  eagle  unawares 
Is  whelmed  and  slaughtered  in  a  sudden  snare. 

All  murdered  by  the  blacks !  smit  while  they  lay 
In  silver  dreams,  and  with  the  far  faint  fall 
Of  many  waters  breaking  on  their  sleep ! 
Tea,  in  the  tracts  unknown  of  any  man 
Save  savages — the  dim-discovered  ways 
Of  footless  silence  or  unhappy  winds — 
The  wild  men  came  upon  them,  like  a  fire 
Of  desert  thunder ;  and  the  fine  firm  lips 


ON  THE  PAEOO.  123 

That  touched  a  mother's  lips  a  year  before, 
And  hands  that  knew  a  dearer  hand  than  life, 
Were  hewn  like  sacrifice  before  the  stars, 
And  left  with  hooting  owls,  and  blowing  clouds, 
And  falling  leaves,  and  solitary  wings  ! 

Ay,  you  may  see  their  graves — you  who  have  toiled.. 
And  tripped,  and  thirsted,  like  these  men  of  ours  ; 
For  verily  I  say  that  not  so  deep 
Their  bones  are  that  the  scattered  drift  and  dust 
Of  gusty  days  will  never  leave  them  bare. 
O  dear,  dead,  bleaching  bones !  I  know  of  those 
"Who  have  the  wild  strong  will  to  go  and  sit 
Outside  all  things  with  you,  and  keep  the  ways 
Aloof  from  bats,  and  snakes,  and  trampling  feet 
That  smite  your  peace  and  theirs — who  have  the  heart- 
Without  the  lusty  limbs  to  face  the  fire, 
And  moonless  midnights,  and  to  be  indeed, 
For  very  sorrow,  like  a  moaning  wind 
In  wint'ry  forests  with  perpetual  rain. 

Because  of  this — because  of  sisters  left 

With  desperate  purpose  and  dishevelled  hair, 

And  broken  breath,  and  sweetness  quenched  in  tears — 

Because  of  swifter  silver  for  the  head, 

And  furrows  for  the  face — because  of  these 

That  should  have  come  with  Age,  that  come  with  Pain,. 


124  ON  THE  PAEOO. 

O  Master  !  Father !  sitting  where  our  eyes 
Are  tired  of  looking,  say  for  once  are  we — 
Are  toe  to  set  our  lips  with  weary  smiles 
Before  the  bitterness  of  Life  and  Death, 
And  call  it  honey,  while  we  bear  away 
A  taste  like  wormwood  ? 

Turn  thyself,  and  sing — 
Sing,  Son  of  Sorrow  !     Is  there  any  gain 
For  breaking  of  the  loins,  for  melting  eyes, 
And  knees  as  weak  as  water  ?  any  peace, 
Or  hope,  for  casual  b-reath,  and  labouring  lips, 
For  clapping  of  the  palms,  and  sharper  sighs 
Than  frost ;  or  any  light  to  come  for  those 
Who  stand  and  mumble  in  the  alien  streets 
"With  heads  as  grey  as  Winter  ?  any  balm 
For  pleading  women,  and  the  love  that  knows 
Of  nothing  left  to  love  ? 

They  sleep  a  sleep 

Unknown  of  dreams,  these  darling  friends  of  ours. 
And  we  who  taste  the  core  of  many  tales 
Of  tribulation — we  whose  lives  are  salt 
With  tears  indeed — we  therefore  hide  our  eyes 
And  weep  in  secret  lest  our  grief  should  risk 
The  rest  that  hath  no  hurt  from  daily  racks 
Of  fiery  clouds  and  immemorial  rains. 


FAITH  IN  GOD. 

HAVE  faith  in  God.     For  whosoever  lists 
To  calm  conviction  in  these  days  of  strife, 

Will  learn  that  in  this  steadfast  stand  exists 
The  scholarship  severe  of  human  life — 

This  face  to  face  with  Doubt !  I  know  how  strong 
His  thews  must  be  who  fights,  and  falls,  and  bears, 

By  sleepless  nights,  and  vigils  lone  and  long, 

And  many  a  woeful  wraith  of  wrestling  prayers ; 

Yet  trust  in  Him !  not  in  an  old  Man  throned 
With  thunders  on  an  everlasting  cloud, 

But  in  that  awful  Entity,  enzoned 

By  no  wild  wraths  nor  bitter  homage  loud. 

When  from  the  summits  of  some  sudden  steep 
Of  Speculation,  you  have  strength  to  turn 

To  things  too  boundless  for  the  broken  sweep 
Of  finite  comprehension,  wait  and  learn 


126  FAITH  IN  GOD. 

That  G-od  hath  been  "  His  own  interpreter  " 
From  first  to  last ; — so  you  will  understand 

The  tribe  who  best  succeed  when  men  most  err 
To  suck  through  fogs  the  fatness   of  the  land. 

One  thing  is  surer  than  the  autumn  tints 
We  saw  last  week  in  yonder  river  bend, 

That  all  our  poor  expression  helps  and  hints, 
However  vaguely,  to  the  solemn  end 

That  G-od  is  Truth.     And  if  our  dim  ideal 

Fall  short  of  fact — so  short  that  we  must  weep, 

Why  shape  specific  sorrows,  though  the  real 
Be  not  the  song  which  erewhile  made  us  sleep  ? 

Hemember,  Truth  draws  upward !     This,  to  us, 
Of  steady  happiness  should  be  a  cause 

Beyond  the  diiferential  calculus, 

Or  Kant's  dull  dogmas  and  mechanic  laws. 

A  man  is  manliest  when  he  wisely  knows 
How  vain  it  is  to  halt,  and  pule,  and  pine, 

Whilst  under  every  mystery  haply  flows 
The  finest  issue  of  a  love  divine. 


MOUNTAIN  MOSS. 

IT  lies  amongst  the  sleeping  stones, 
Far  down  the  hidden  mountain-glade ; 

And  past  its  brink  the  torrent  moans 
For  ever  in  a  dreamy  shade  : 


A  little  patch  of  dark-green  moss, 
Whose  softness  grew  of  quiet  ways, 

(With  all  its  deep,  delicious  floss,) 
In  slumb'rous  suns  of  summer  days. 


You  know  the  place  ?     With  pleasant  tints 
The  broken  sunset  lights  the  bowers  ; 

And  then  the  woods  are  full  with  hints 
Of  distant,  dear,  voluptuous  flowers ! 


128  MOUNTAIN  MOSS. 

'Tis  often  now  the  pilgrim  turns 
A  faded  face  towards  that  seat, 

And  cools  his  brow  amongst  the  ferns : 
The  runnel  dabbling  at  his  feet. 


There  fierce  December  seldom  goes, 

With  scorching  step,  and  dust,  and  drouth 

But,  soft  and  low,  October  blows 
Sweet  odours  from  her  dewy  mouth. 


And  Autumn,  like  a  gipsy  bold, 

Doth  gather  near  it  grapes  and  grain, 

Ere  "Winter  comes,  the  woodman  old, 
To  lop  the  leaves  in  wind  and  rain. 


0,  greenest  moss  of  mountain  glen, 
The  face  of  Eose  is  known  to  thee  ; 

But  we  shall  never  share  with  men 
A  knowledge  dear  to  Love  and  me  ! 


For  are  they  not  between  us  saved, 
The  words  my  darling  used  to  say  ; 

"What  time  the  western  waters  laved 
The  forehead  of  the  fainting  Day ! 


MOUNTAIN  MOSS.  129 

Cool  comfort  had  we  on  your  breast 

"While  yet  the  fervid  Noon  burned  mute 

O'er  barley  field  and  barren  crest, 

And  leagues  of  gardens  flushed  with  fruit. 


Oh  !  sweet  and  low,  we  whispered  so  ; 

And  sucked  the  pulp  of  plum  and  peach  : 
But  it  was  many  years  ago, 

When  each,  you  know,  was  loved  of  each. 


THE  GLEN   OF  AKKAWATTA. 

A  SKY  of  wind !     And  while  these  fitful  gusts 

Are  beating  round  the  windows  in  the  cold, 

"With  sullen  sobs  of  rain,  behold  I  shape 

A  Settler's  story  of  the  wild  old  times  : 

One  told  by  camp-fires  when  the  station-drays 

"Were  housed  and  hidden,  forty  years  ago  ; 

While  swarthy  drivers  smoked  their  pipe?,  and  drew, 

And  crowded  round  the  friendly-gleaming  flame 

That  lured  the  dingo  howling  from  his  caves 

And  brought  sharp  sudden  feet  about  the  brakes. 

A  tale  of  Love  and  Death.     And  shall  I  say 

•/ 

A  tale  of  Love  in  Death ;  for  all  the  patient  eyes 
That  gathered  darkness,  watching  for  a  son 
And  brother,  never  dreaming  of  the  fate — 
The  fearful  fate  he  met  alone,  unknown, 
Within  the  ruthless  Australasian  wastes  ? 


THE  GLEN  OF  AKRAWATTA.  131 

Tor,  in  a  far-off  sultry  Summer  rimmed 
"With  thunder-cloud  and  red  with  forest-fires, 
All  day,  by  ways  uncouth  and  ledges  rude, 
The  wild  men  held  upon  a  stranger's  trail 
Which  ran  against  the  rivers  and  athwart 
The  gorges  of  the  deep  blue  western  hills. 

And  when  a  cloudy  sunset,  like  the  flame 
In  windy  evenings  on  the  Plains  of  Thirst 
Beyond  the  dead  banks  of  the  far  Barcoo, 
Lay  heavy  down  the  topmost  peaks,  they  came 
"With  pent-in  breath  and  stealthy  steps,  and  crouched, 
Like  snakes,  amongst  the  grasses,  till  the  Xight 
Had  covered  face  from  face  and  thrown  the  gloom 
Of  many  shadows  on  the  front  of  things. 

There,  in  the  shelter  of  a  nameless  glen 

Fenced  round  by  cedars  and  the  tangled  growths 

Of  blackwood  stained  with  brown  and  shot  with  grey, 

The  jaded  white-man  built  his  fire,  and  turned 

His  horse  adrift  amongst  the  water-pools 

That  trickled  underneath  the  yellow  leaves 

And  made  a  pleasant  murmur,  ]ike  the  brooks 

Of  England  through  the  sweet  autumnal  noons. 

Then  after  he  had  slaked  his  thirst,  and  used 
The  forest-fare,  for  which  a  healthful  day 
Of  mountain-life  had  brought  a  zest,  he  took 


132  TKE  GLEN  OF  AUBAWATTA. 

His  axe,  and  shaped  with  boughs  and  wattle-forks 
A  wurley,  fashioned  like  a  bushman's  roof: 
The  door  brought  out  athwart  the  strenuous  flame 
The  back  thatched  in  against  a  rising  wind. 

And,  while  the  sturdy  hatchet  filled  the  clifts 
With  sounds  unknown,  the  immemorial  haunts 
Of  echoes  sent  their  lonely  dwellers  forth 
Who  lived  a  life  of  wonder :  flying  round 
And  round  the  glen — what  time  the  kangaroo 
Leapt  from  his  lair  and  huddled  with  the  bats — 
Far-scattering  down  the  wildly  startled  fells. 
Then  came  the  doleful  owl ;  and  evermore 
The  bleak  morass  gave  out  the  bittern's  call ; 
The  plover's  cry ;  and  many  a  fitful  wail 
Of  chilly  omen,  falling  on  the  ear 
Like  those  cold  flaws  of  wind  that  come  and  go 
An  hour  before  the  break  of  day. 

Anon 

The  stranger  held  from  toil,  and,  settling  down, 
He  drew  rough  solace  from  his  well-filled  pipe 
And  smoked  into  the  night :  revolving  there 
The  primal  questions  of  a  squatter's  life  ; 
For  in  the  flats,  a  short  day's  journey  past 
His  present  camp,  his  station  yards  were  kept 
AVith  many  a  lodge  and  paddock  jutting  forth 


THE  GLEN  OF  ARBAWATTA.  133 

Across  the  heart  of  unnamed  prairie-lands, 
Now  loud  with  bleating  and  the  cattle  bells 
And  misty  with  the  hut-fire's  daily  smoke. 

Wide  spreading  flats,  and  western  spurs  of  hills 

That  dipped  to  plains  of  dim  perpetual  blue ; 

Bold  summits  set  against  the  thunder-heaps  ; 

And  slopes  be-hacked  and  crushed  by  battling  kine  ! 

"Where  now  the  furious  tumult  of  their  feet 

Gives  back  the  dust  and  up  from  glen  and  brake 

Evokes  fierce  clamour,  and  becomes  indeed 

A  token  of  the  squatter's  daring  life, 

Which  growing  inland — growing  year  by  year, 

Doth  set  us  thinking  in  these  latter  days, 

And  makes  one  ponder  of  the  lonely  lands 

Beyond  the  lonely  tracks  of  Burke  and  Wills,        * 

Where,  when  the  wandering  Stuart  fixed  his  camps 

In  central  wastes  afar  from  any  home 

Or  haunt  of  man,  and  in  the  changeless  midst 

Of  sullen  deserts  and  the  footless  miles 

Of  sultry  silence,  all  the  ways  about 

Grew  strangely  vocal  and  a  marvellous  noise 

Became  the  wonder  of  the  waxing  glooms. 

Now,  after  Darkness,  like  a  mighty  spell 
Amongst  the  hills  and  dim  dispeopled  dells, 
Had  brought  a  stillness  to  the  soul  of  things, 
It  came  to  pass  that,  from  the  secret  depths 


134  THE  GLEN  OF  AEBAWATTA. 

Of  dripping  gorges,  many  a  runnel-voice 

Came,  mellowed  with  the  silence,  and  remained 

About  the  caves,  a  sweet  though  alien  sound : 

Now  rising  ever,  like  a  fervent  flute 

In  moony  evenings,  when  the  theme  is  love  : 

Now  falling,  as  ye  hear  the  Sunday  bells 

"While  hastening  fieldward  from  the  gleaming  town. 

Then  fell  a  softer  mood  ;  and  Memory  paused 
With  faithful  Love,  amidst  the  sainted  shrines 
Of  Youth  and  Passion  in  the  valleys  past 
Of  dear  delights  which  never  grow  again. 
And  if  the  stranger  (who  had  left  behind 
Far  anxious  homesteads  in  a  wave-swept  isle 
To  face  a  fierce  sea-circle  day  by  day, 
And  hear  at  night  the  dark  Atlantic's  moan) 
Now  took  a  hope  and  planned  a  swift  return, 
"With  wealth  and  health  and  with  a  youth  unspent, 
To  those  sweet  ones  that  stayed  with  "Want  at  homer 
Say  who  shall  blame  him — though  the  years  are  long, 
And  Life  is  hard,  and  waiting  makes  the  heart  grow 
old? 

Thus  passed  the  time  until  the  Moon  serene 
Stood  over  high  dominion  like  a  dream 
Of  Peace :  within  the  white-transfigured  woods  ; 
And  o'er  the  vast  dew-dripping  wilderness 
Of  slopes  illumined  with  her  silent  fires. 


THE  GLEN  Oi'  AREAWATTA.  135 

Then  far  beyond  the  home  of  pale  red  leaves 

And  silver  sluices,  and  the  shining  stems 

Of  runnel-blooms,  the  dreamy  wanderer  saw, 

The  wilder  for  the  vision  of  the  Moon, 

Stark  desolations  and  a  waste  of  plain 

All  smit  by  flame  and  broken  with  the  storms  : 

Black  ghosts  of  trees,  and  sapless  trunks  that  stood 

Harsh  hollow  channels  of  the  fiery  noise 

Which  ran  from  bole  to  bole  a  year  before, 

And  grew  with  ruin,  and  was  like,  indeed, 

The  roar  of  mighty  winds  with  wintering  streams 

That  foam  about  the  limits  of  the  land, 

And  mix  their  swiftness  with  the  flying  seas. 

Now,  when  the  man  had  turned  his  face  about 
To  take  his  rest,  behold  the  gem-like  eyes 
Of  ambushed  wild  things  stared  from  bole  and  brake 
"With  dumb  amaze  and  faint-recurring  glance, 
And  fear  anon  that  drove  them  down  the  brush ; 
While  from  his  den  the  dingo,  like  a  scout 
In  sheltered  ways,  crept  out  and  cowered  near 
To  sniff  the  tokens  of  the  stranger's  feast 
And  marvel  at  the  shadows  of  the  flame. 

Thereafter  grew  the  wind  ;  and  chafing  depths 
In  distant  waters  sent  a  troubled  cry 
Across  the  slumb'rous  Eorest ;  and  the  chill 
Of  coming  rain  was  on  the  sleeper's  brow, 


136  THE  GLEN  OP  ABEAWATTA. 

When,  flat  as  reptiles  hutted  in  the  scrub, 
A  deadly  crescent  crawled  to  where  he  lay — 
A  band  of  fierce  fantastic  savages 
That,  starting  naked  round  the  faded  fire, 
With  sudden  spears  and  swift  terrific  yells, 
Came  bounding  wildly  at  the  white  man's  head, 
And  faced  him,  staring  like  a  dream  of  Hell ! 

Here  let  me  pass  !     I  would  not  stay  to  tell 

Of  hopeless  struggles  under  crushing  blows  ; 

Of  how  the  surging  fiends  with  thickening  strokes 

Howled  round  the  Stranger   till  they   drained  his 

strength ; 

How  Love  and  Life  stood  face  to  face  with  Hate 
And  Death  ;  and  then  how  Death  was  left  alone 
With  Mght  and  Silence  in  the  sobbing  rains. 

So,  after  many  moons,  the  searchers  found 
The  body  mouldering  in  the  mouldering  dell 
Amidst  the  fungi  and  the  bleaching  leaves, 
And  buried  it ;  and  raised  a  stony  mound 
Which  took  the  mosses :  then  the  place  became 
The  haunt  of  fearful  legends,  and  the  lair 
Of  bats  and  adders. 

There  he  lies  and  sleeps 

From  year  to  year :  in  soft  Australian  nights  ; 
And  through  the  furnaced  noons  ;  and  in  the  times 


THE  GLEX  OF  ABBAWATTA.  137 

Of  wind  and  wet !  yet  never  mourner  comes 
To  drop  upon  that  grave  the  Christian's  tear 
Or  pluck  the  foul  dank  weeds  of  death  away. 


But  while  the  English  Autumn  filled  her  lap 

With  faded  gold,  and  while  the  reapers  cooled 

Their  flame-red  faces  in  the  clover  grass, 

They  looked  for  him  at  home ;  and  when  the  frost 

Had  made  a  silence  in  the  morning  lanes, 

And  cooped  the  farmers  by  December  fires, 

They  looked  for  him  at  home :  and  through  the  days 

"Which  brought  about  the  million-coloured  Spring 

"With  moon-like  splendours  in  the  garden  plots, 

They  looked  for  him  at  home  :  while  Summer  danced, 

A  shining  singer,  through  the  tasselled  corn, 

They  looked  for  him  at  home.     From  sun  to  sun 

They  waited.     Season  after  season  went, 

And  Memory  wept  upon  the  lonely  moors, 

And  Hope  grew  voiceless,  -and  the  watchers  passed, 

Like  shadows,  one  by  one,  away. 

And  he, 

Whose  fate  was  hidden  under  forest  leaves, 
And  in  the  darkness  of  untrodden  dells, 
Became  a  marvel.     Often  by  the  hearths 
In  winter  nights,  and  when  the  wind  was  wild 
Outside  the  casements,  children  heard  the  tale 


138  THE  GLEN  OF  ABBAWATTA. 

Of  how  he  left  their  native  vales  behind 
(Where  he  had  been  a  child  himself)  to  shape- 
New  fortunes  for  his  father's  fallen  house  ; 
Of  how  he  struggled — how  his  name  became, 
By  fine  devotion  and  unselfish  zeal, 
A  name  of  beauty  in  a  selfish  land  ; 
And  then,  of  how  the  aching  hours  went  by, 
With  patient  listeners  praying  for  the  step 
Which  never  crossed  the  floor  again.     So  passed 
The  tale  to  children  ;  but  the  bitter  end 
[Remained  a  wonder,  like  the  unknown  grave 
Alone  with  God  and  Silence  in  the  hills. 


EUTEEPE. 

CHILI>  of  Light,  the  bright,  the  birdlike !  wilt  thou 

float  and  float  to  me 
Pacing  winds,  and  sleets,  and  waters,  flying  glimpses 

of  the  sea  ? 
Down  amongst  the  hills  of  tempest  where  the  elves 

of  tumult  roam — 
Blown  wet  shadows  of  the  summits,  dim  sonorous 

•  "sprites  of  foam? 
Here,  and  here,  my  days  are  wasted,  shorn  of  leaf,. 

and  stript  of  fruit : 
Vexed  because  of  speech  half-spoken,  Maiden  with 

the  marvellous  lute  ! 
Vexed  because  of  songs  half-shapen,  smit  with  fire,, 

and  mixed  with  pain  : 


140  EUTERPE. 

Part  of  thee,  and  part  of  Sorrow,  like  a  sunset  pale 

with  rain. 
Child  of  Light,  the  bright,  the  bird-like  !  wilt  thou 

float  and  float  to  me 
Eacing  winds,  and  sleets,  and  waters,  flying  glimpses 

of  the  sea  ? 


All  night  long,  in  fluent  pauses,  falling  far,  but  full, 

but  fine, 
Faultless  friend  of  flowers  and  fountains,  do  I  hear 

that  voice  of  thine. 
All  night  long,  amidst  the  burden  of  the  lordly  storm, 

that  sings 
High  above  the  tumbled  forelands,  fleet   and  fierce 

with  thunderings ! 
Then,  and  then,  my  love,  Euterpe,  lips  of  life  replete 

with  dreams 
Murmur  for  thy  sweet  sharp  fragments  dying  down 

Lethean  streams : 
Murmur   for   thy  mouth's   marred  music,   splendid 

hints  that  burn  and  break 
Heavy  with  excess  of  beauty :  murmur  for  thy  music's 

sake. 
All  night  long  in  fluent  pauses,  falling  far,  but  full, 

but  fine, 
Faultless  friend  of  flowers  and  fountains,  do  I  hear 

that  voice  of  thine. 


EUTEKPE.  141 

In  the  yellow  flame  of  evening,  sound  of  thee  doth 

come  and  go 
Through  the  noises  of  the  river  and  the  drifting  of 

the  snow : 
In  the  yellow  flame  of  evening — at  the  setting  of  the 

day — 
Sound  that  lightens,  falls,  and  lightens,  flickers,  faints, 

and  fades  away. 
I  am  famished  of  thy  silence — broken  for  the  tender 

note 
Caught    with    its  surpassing    passion — caught  and 

strangled  in  thy  throat ! 
We  have  nought  to  help  thy  trouble — nought  for 

that  which  lieth  mute 
On  the  harpstring  and  the  lutestring  and  the  spirit 

of  the  lute. 
In  the  yellow  flame  of  evening  sound  of  thee  doth 

come  and  go 
Through  the  noises  of  the  river  and  the  drifting  of 

the  snow. 


Daughter  of  the  dead  red  summers !  men  that  laugh 

and  men  that  weep, 
Call  thee  Music — shall  I  follow,  choose  their  name, 

and  turn,  and  sleep  ? 
"What  thou  art,  behold,  I  know  not ;  but  thy  honey 

slakes  and  slays 


142  EUTEBPE. 

Half  the  want  which  whitens  manhood  in  the  stress 

of  alien  days ! 
Even  as  a  wondrous  woman  struck  with  love  and 

great  desire 
Hast  thou  been  to  me,  Euterpe  !  half  of  tears  and 

half  of  fire. 
But  thy  joy  is  swift  and  fitful;  and  a  subtle  sense  of 

pain 
Sighs   through   thy  melodious  breathing,  takes  the 

rapture  from  thy  strain. 
Daughter  of  the  dead  red  summers  !  men  that  laugh 

and  men  that  weep, 
Call  thee  Music — shall  I  follow,  choose  their  name 

and  turn,  and  sleep  ? 


ELLEN  RAY. 

A  QUIET  song  for  Ellen — 

The  patient  Ellen  Ray, 
A  dreamer  in  the  nightfall, 

A  watcher  in  the  day. 
The  wedded  of  the  sailor 

Who  keeps  so  far  away  : 
A  shadow  on  his  forehead 

For  patient  Ellen  Ray. 

When  autumn  winds  were  driving 

Across  the  chafing  bay, 
He  said  the  words  of  anger 

That  wasted  Ellen  Eay : 
He  said  the  words  of  anger 

And  went  his  bitter  way  : 
Her  dower  was  the  darkness — 

The  patient  Ellen  Ray. 


144  ELLEN  EAT. 

Your  comfort  is  a  phantom, 

My  patient  Ellen  Bay  ; 
You  house  it  in  the  night-time 

It  fronts  you  in  the  day ; 
And  when  the  moon  is  very  low 

And  when  the  lights  are  grey, 
You  sit  and  hug  a  sorry  hope, 

My  patient  Ellen  Ray  ! 

You  sit  and  hug  a  sorry  hope — 

Yet  who  will  dare  to  say, 
The  sweetness  of  October 

Is  not  for  Ellen  Say  ? 
The  bearer  of  a  burden 

Must  rest  at  fall  of  day  ; 
And  you  have  borne  a  heavy  one, 

My  patient  Ellen  Bay. 


AT  DUSK. 

AT  dusk,  like  flowers  that  shun  the  day, 

Shy  thoughts  from  dim  recesses  break,. 
And  plead  for  words  I  dare  not  say 
For  your  sweet  sake. 


My  early  love !  my  first,  my  last ! 

Mistakes  have  been  that  both  must  rue, 
But  all  the  passion  of  the  past 
Survives  for  you. 


The  tender  message  Hope  might  send, 
Sinks  fainting  at  the  lips  of  speech  ; 
For,  are  you  lover — are  you  friend, 
That  I  would  reach  ? 

L 


146  AT  DUSK. 

How  much  to-night  I'd  give  to  win 

A  banished  peace — an  old  repose  ! 
But  here  I  sit,  and  sigh,  and  sin 
When  no  one  knows. 


The  stern,  the  steadfast  reticence 

Which  made  the  dearest  phrases  halt, 
And  checked  a  first  and  finest  sense, 
Was  not  my  fault. 


I  held  my  words  because  there  grew 

About  my  life  persistent  pride  ; 
And  you  were  loved  who  never  knew 
What  love  could  hide. 


This  purpose  filled  my  soul  like  flame 

To  win  you  wealth,  and  take  the  place 
Where  care  is  not,  or  any  shame 
To  vex  your  face. 


I  said,  "  till  then  my  heart  must  keep 

Its  secret  safe  and  unconfest ;" 
And  days  and  nights  unknown  to  sleep 
The  vow  attest. 


AT  DLTSK.  147 

Yet,  O  my  Sweet,  it  seems  so  long 

Since  you  were  near,  and  fates  retard 
The  sequel  of  a  struggle  strong, 
And  Life  is  hard  ! 


Too  hard  when  one  is  left  alone 
To  wrestle  Passion,  never  free 
To  turn  and  say  to  you,  "  My  own, 
Come  home  to  me." 


SAFI. 

STRONG  pinions  bore  Safi,  the  Dreamer, 
Through  the  dazzle  and  whirl  of  a  race  ; 

And  the  Earth,  raying  up  in  confusion, 
Like  a  sea  thundered  under  his  face  ! 


And  the  Earth  raying  up  in  confusion 
Passed  flying  and  flying  afar, 

Till  it  dropped  like  a  moon  into  silence, 
And  waned  from  a  moon  to  a  star. 


Was  it  light — was  it  shadow  he  followed 
That  he  swept  through  those  desperate  tracts 

With  his  hair  beating  back  on  his  shoulders 
Like  the  tops  of  the  wind-hackled  flax  ? 


SAPI.  149 

*'  I  come,"  murmured  Safi  the  Dreamer, 

"  I  come,  but  thou  fliest  before  ! 
But  thy  way  hath  the  breath  of  the  honey, 

And  the  scent  of  the  myrrh  evermore." 

His  eyes  were  the  eyes  of  a  watcher 

Held  on  by  luxurious  faith, 
And  his  lips  were  the  lips  of  a  longer 

Amazed  with  the  beauty  of  Death. 

"  For  ever  and  ever,"  he  murmured, 
"  My  love  for  the  sweetness  with  thee, 

Do  I  follow  thy  footsteps,"  said  Safi, 
"  Like  the  wind  on  a  measureless  sea." 


And,  fronting  the  furthermost  spaces, 
He  kept  through  the  distances  dim, 

Till  the  days,  and  the  years,  and  the  cycles, 
"Were  lost  and  forgotten  by  him. 


AVTien  he  came  to  the  silver  star-portals, 
The  Queen  of  that  wonderful  place 

Looked  forth  from  her  towers  resplendent, 
And  started,  and  dreamed  in  his  face. 


150  SAFI. 

And  one  said,  "  this  is  Safi  the  Only, 

Who  lived  in  a  planet  below, 
And  housed  him  apart  from  his  fellows, 

A  million  of  ages  ago. 

"  He  erred,  if  he  suifers,  to  clutch  at 

High  lights  from  the  wood  and  the  street  ; 

Not  caring  to  see  how  his  brothers 

Were  content  with  the  things  at  their  feet." 


But  she  whispered  "  Ah,  turn  to  the  Stranger 
He  looks  like  a  lord  of  the  land ; 

For  his  eyes  are  the  eyes  of  an  angel, 

And  the  thought  on  his  forehead  is  grand  I 

"  Is  there  never  a  peace  for  the  sinner 
Whose  sin  is  in  this  that  he  mars 

The  light  of  his  worship  of  Beauty, 
Forgetting  the  flower  for  the  stars  ?  " 


"  Behold  him,  my  Sister  immortal, 

And  doubt  that  he  knoweth  his  shame, 

Who  raves  in  the  shadow  for  sweetness, 
And  gloats  on  the  ghost  of  a  flame  ! 


SAFI.  151 

"  His  sin  is  his  sin,  if  he  suffers, 

Who  wilfully  straitened  the  Truth  ; 

And  his  doom  is  his  doom,  if  he  follows 
A  lie  without  sorrow  or  ruth." 


And  another  from  uttermost  verges 

Ran  out  with  a  terrible  voice — 
"  Let  him  go — it  is  well  that  he  goeth 

Though  he  break  with  the  lot  of  his  choice." 


"  I  come,"  murmured  Safi  the  Dreamer, 
"  I  come,  but  thou  fliest  before  ! 

But  thy  way  hath  the  breath  of  the  honey, 
And  the  scent  of  the  myrrh  evermore." 


"  My  Queen,"  said  the  first  of  the  Voices, 
"  He  hunteth  a  perilous  wraith, 

Arrayed  with  voluptuous  fancies 
And  ringed  with  tyrannical  faith. 


152  SAFI. 

"  Wound  up  in  the  heart  of  his  error 
He  must  sweep  through  the  silences  dire, 

Like  one  in  the  dark  of  a  desert 
Allured  by  fallacious  fire." 


And  she  faltered,  and  asked,  like  a  doubter, 
"  When  he  hangs  on  those  Spaces  sublime 

With  the  Terror  that  knoweth  no  limit, 
And  holdeth  no  record  of  Time, — 


"  Forgotten  of  God  and  the  demons- 
Will  he  keep  to  his  fancy  amain  ? 

Can  he  live  for  that  horrible  Chaos 
Of  flame  and  perpetual  rain  ?  " 


But  an  answer  as  soft  as  a  prayer 
Fell  down  from  a  high  hidden  Land, 

And  the  words  were  the  words  of  a  language 
Which  none  but  the  gods  understand. 


MEMOEIAM. 


DANIEL  HENET  DENIEHT. 

TAKE  the  harp,  but  very  softly  for  our  brother  touch 

the  strings  : 
Wind  and  wood  shall  help  to  wail  him,  waves  and 

mournful  mountain-springs. 
Take  the  harp,  but  very  softly,  for  the  friend  who 

grew  so  old 
Through  the  hours  we  would  not  hear  of — nights  we 

would  not  fain  behold  ! 
Other  voices,  sweeter  voices,  shall  lament  him  year 

by  year, 
Though  the  morning  finds  us  lonely,  though  we  sit 

and  marvel  here : 
Marvel  much  while  Summer  cometh  trammelled  with 

November  wheat, 


154  DANIEL  HENRY  DENIEHT. 

Gold  about  her  forehead  gleaming,  green  and  gold 
about  her  feet ; 

Tea,  and  while  the  land  is  dark  with  plover,  gull,, 
and  gloomy  glede, 

Where  the  cold  swift  songs  of  Winter  fill  the  inter- 
lucent  reed. 


Tet  my  harp,  and  0,  my  fathers,   never   look  for 

Sorrow's  lay, 
Making  life  a  mighty  darkness  in  the  patient  noon 

of  day  ; 
Since  he  resteth  whom  we   loved   so,   out    beyond 

these  fleeting  seas, 
Blowing  clouds,  and  restless  regions  paved  with  old 

perplexities, 
In  a  land  where  thunder  breaks  not,  in    a    place 

unknown  of  snow, 
Where  the  rain  is  mute  for  ever,    where  the  wild 

winds  never  go : 
Home  of    far- forgotten    phantoms — genii     of    our 

peaceful  prime, 
Shining  by  perpetual  waters  past  the  ways  of  Change 

and  Time  : 
Haven    of  the   harried    spirit,  where    it    folds    its 

wearied  wings, 
Turns  its  face  and  sleeps  a  sleep  with  deep  forget- 

fulness  of  things. 


DANIEL  HENRY  DENIEHY. 

His  should  be  a  grave  by  mountains,  in  a  cool  and 

thick-mossed  lea, 
"With,  the  lone  creek  falling  past  it — falling  ever  to 

the  sea. 
His  should  be  a  grave  by  waters,  by  a  bright  and 

broad  lagoon, 

Making  steadfast  splendours  hallowed  of  the  quiet- 
shining  moon. 
There  the  elves  of  many  forests — wandering  winds 

and  flying  lights — 
Born  of  green,  of  happy  mornings,  dear  to  yellow 

summer  nights, 
Full  of  dole  for  him  that  loved  them,   then  might 

halt,  and  then  might  go, 
Finding   fathers    of   the  people   to    their    children 

speaking  low — 
Speaking  low  of  one  who,  failing,  suffered  all  the 

poet's  pain, 
Dying  with  the  dead  leaves  round  him — hopes  which 

never  grow  again. 


MEEOPE. 

FAB  in  the  ways  of  the  hyaline  wastes — in  the  face 

of  the  splendid 
Six  of  the  sisters — the  star-dowered  sisters  ineffably 

bright, 
Merope  sitteth,  the  shadow-like  wife  of  a  monarch 

unfriended 
Of  Ades — of  Orcus,  the  fierce,  the  implacable  god 

of  the  night. 
Merope — fugitive  Merope!  lost  to   thyself  and  thy 

lover, 
•Cast,  like  a  dream,  out  of  thought,  with  the  moons 

which  have  passed  into  sleep, 
What   shall  avail  thee  ?     Alcyone's  tears,   or  the 

sight  to  discover 
Of  Sisyphus  pallid  for  thee  by  the  blue,  bitter,  lights 

of  the  deep  ? 


MEEOPE.  157 

Pallid,  but  patient  for  sorrow  ?     0,  thou  of  the  fire 

and  the  water, 
Half  with  the  flame  of  the  sunset  and  kin  to  the 

streams  of  the  sea, 
Hast  thou  the  songs  of  old  times  for  desire  of  thy 

dark-featured  daughter, 
Sweet  with    the  lips  of  thy  yearning,    O  JEthra : 

with  tokens  of  thee  ? 
Songs  that  would  lull  her,  like  kisses  forgotten  of 

silence  where  speech  was 
Less  than  the  silence  that  bound  it  as  Passion  is 

bound  by  a  ban  ; 
Seeing  we  know  of  thee,  Mother,  we  turning  and 

hearing  how  each  was 
Wrapt  in  the  other  ere  Merope  faltered  and  fell  for 

a  man? 
Mortal    she    clave    to,    forgetting    her    birthright, 

forgetting  the  lordlike 
Sons  of  the  Many-winged  Father,  and  chiefs  of  the 

plume  and  the  star, 
Therefore,  because  that  her  sin  was  the  grief  of  the 

grand  and  the  godlike, 
Sitteth  thy  child  than  a  morning-moon  bleaker,  the 

faded,  and  far. 
Ringed  with  the  flowerlike  Six  of  the  Seven,  arrayed 

and  anointed 
Ever  with  beautiful  pity,  she  watches,  she  weeps,  and 

she  wanes, 


158  MEEOPE. 

Blind  as  a  flame  on  the  hills  of  the  Winter  in  hours 

appointed 
For  the  life  of   the   foam    and   the   thunder — the 

strength  of  the  imminent  rains. 
Who  hath  a  portion,  Alcyone,  like  her  ?     Asterope, 

fairer 
Than  sunset  on  snow,  and  beloved  of  all  brightness, 

say  what  is  there  left 
Sadder  and  paler  then  Pleione's  daughter  disconsolate 

bearer 
Of  trouble  that  smites  like  a  sword  of  the  gods  to 

the  break  of  the  heft  ? 
Demeter,  and  Dryope,  known  to  the  forests,  the  falls, 

and  the  fountains, 
Yearly,  because  of  their  walking,  and  wailing,  and 

wringing  of  hands, 
Are  they  as  one  with  this  woman?    or  Hyrie  wild 

in  the  mountains, 
Breaking  her  heart  in  the  frosts  and  the  fires  of  the 

uttermost  lands  ? 
Ihese  have  their  bitterness.     This,  for  Persephone, 

that,  for  (Echalian 
Homes,  and  the  lights  of  a  kindness  blown  out  with 

the  stress  of  her  shame : 
One  for  her  child,  and  one  for  her  sin;   but  thou 

above  all  art  an  alien, 
Girt  with  the  halos  that  vex  thee,  and  wrapt  in  a 

grief  beyond  name. 


MEROPE.  159 

Yet  sayeth  Sisyphus — Sisyphus,  stricken  and  chained 

of  the  Minioned 
Kings  of  great  darkness,  and  trodden  in  dust  by  the 

feet  of  the  fates, 
•"  Sweet  are  the  ways  of  thy  watching,  and  pallid  and 

perished  and  pinioned, 
Moon  amongst  maidens,  I  leap  for  thy  love  like  a 

god  at  the  gates — 
Leap  for  the  dreams  of  a  rose  of  the  heavens,  and 

beat  at  the  portals 
Paved  with  the  pain  of  unsatisfied  pleadings  for  thee 

and  for  thine, 
But  Zeus  is  immutable  Master,  and  these  are  the 

walls  the  Immortals 
Build  for  our  sighing,  and  who  may  set  lips  at  the 

lords  and  repine  ? 
Therefore,"  he  saith,  "  I  am  sick  for  thee,  Merope, 

faint  for  the  tender 
Touch  of  thy  mouth,  and  the  eyes  like  the  lights  of 

an  altar  to  me  ; 
But  lo,   thou   art  far,   and  thy  face  is  a  still  and 

a  sorrowful  splendour ! 
And  the  storm  is  abroad  with  the  rain  on  the  perilous 

straits  of  the  sea." 


AFTEE    THE    HUNT. 

UNDEENEATH  the  windy  mountain  walls 

Eorth  we  rode,  an  eager  band, 
By  the  surges,  and  the  verges,  and  the  gorges. 

Till  the  night  was  on  the  land — 

On  the  hazy,  mazy  land ! 
Par  away  the  bounding  prey 

Leapt  across  the  ruts  and  logs, 
But  we  galloped,  galloped,  galloped  on, 

Till  we  heard  the  yapping  of  the  dogs  ! 

The  yapping  and  the  yelping  of  the  dogs. 

Oh  !  it  was  a  madly  merry  day 

"We  shall  not  so  soon  forget, 
And  the  edges,  and  the  ledges,  and  the  ridges, 

Haunt  us  with  their  echoes  yet — 

Echoes,  echoes,  echoes  yet ! 
While  the  moon  is  on  the  hill 

Gleaming  through  the  streaming  fogs, 
Don't  you  gallop,  gallop,  gallop  still  ? 

Don't  you  hear  the  yapping  of  the  dogs — 
The  yapping  and  the  yelping  of  the  dogs  ? 


EOSE    LOEEAINE. 

SWEET  water-moons,  blown  into  lights 

Of  flying  gold  on  pool  and  creek, 
And  many  sounds,  and  many  sights, 

Of  younger  days,  are  back  this  week. 
I  cannot  say  I  sought  to  face, 

Or  greatly  cared  to  cross  again, 
The  subtle  spirit  of  the  place 

Whose  life  is  mixed  with  Eose  Lorraine. 


What  though  her  voice  rings  clearly  through 

A  nightly  dream  I  gladly  keep, 
No  wish  have  I  to  start  anew 

Heart-fountains  that  have  ceased  to  leap. 
Here,  face  to  face  with  different  days, 

And  later  things  that  plead  for  love, 
It  would  be  worse  than  wrong  to  raise 

A  phantom  far  too  fain  to  move. 


162  ROSE  LOEEAINE. 

But,  Eose  Lorraine — ah,  Bose  Lorraine, 

I'll  whisper  now  where  no  one  hears. 
If  you  should  chance  to  meet  again 

The  man  you  kissed  in  soft  dead  years, 
Just  say  for  once  "  he  suffered  much," 

And  add  to  this  "  his  fate  was  worst 
Because  of  me,  my  voice,  my  touch," — 

There  is  no  passion  like  the  first ! 


If  I  that  breathe  your  slow  sweet  name 

As  one  breathes  low  notes  on  a  flute, 
Have  vext  your  peace  with  word  of  blame, 

The  phrase  is  dead — the  lips  are  mute. 
Yet  when  I  turn  towards  the  wall, 

In  stormy  nights,  in  times  of  rain, 
I  often  wish  you  could  recall 

Tour  tender  speeches,  Eose  Lorraine. 


Because,  you  see,  I  thought  them  true, 

And  did  not  count  you  self-deceived, 
And  gave  myself  in  all  to  you, 

And  looked  on  Love  as  Life  achieved. 
Then  came  the  bitter,  sudden  change, 

The  fastened  lips,  the  dumb  despair  : 
The  first  few  weeks  were  very  strange, 

And  long,  and  sad,  and  hard  to  bear. 


ROSE  LORRAINE.  163 

No  woman  lives  with  power  to  burst 

My  passion's  bonds,  and  set  me  free  ; 
For  Rose  is  last  where  Rose  was  first, 

And  only  Rose  is  fair  to  me. 
The  faintest  memory  of  her  face, 

The  wilful  face  that  hurt  me  so, 
Is  followed  by  a  fiery  trace 

That  Rose  Lorraine  must  never  know. 


I  keep  a  faded  ribbon  string 

You  used  to  wear  about  your  throat ; 
And  of  this  pale,  this  perished  thing, 

I  think  I  know  the  threads  by  rote. 
God  help  such  love !  To  touch  your  hand, 

To  loiter  where  your  feet  might  fall, 
You  marvellous  girl,  my  soul  would  stand 

The  worst  of  hell — its  fires  and  all ! 


THE  END. 


WALKER,  MAY  ANI>  Co.,  PRINTERS,  99  BOURKE  STREET  WIST.