n A.lC.M'ol.^ 5\nT1 Cornell University Library PR 9598.036S6 Songs of the south; 3 1924 013 247 790 The original of tliis bool< is in tine Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924013247790 SOME PRESS NOTICES OF THE FIRST SERIES. The Spectator: "These are songs of considerable promise, being evidently the work of a young man with great love of beauty and not a little gift for expression. They are all Australian, and full of the vividness and hopes of Australian anticipations, as well as of the wild Australian scenery. . . . The verse is all buoyant." — Aug. 29^, 1891. The Saturday Review : " These songs are melodious, fresh in sentiment, and show good workmanship. . . . The poet's senti- ment is true and unforced. . . In ' A Pioneer ' and ' Oceanus ' Mr. O'Hara reveals a singing voice that is both clear and strong, uniniluenced by contemporary Enghsh poetry." — Sept. 26th, 1891. The 'World : " We welcome the advent of a new Australian poet in Mr. John Bernard O'Hara. He sings chiefly of the beauties of his native land, and of a few of the leading scenes in the brief but eventful history of Australasia; and it is melodious singing." — Sept. yith, 1 89 1. The Speaker : " Mr. O'Hara's ' Songs of the South ' comes from the land where spring begins in our autumn. His first poetic efforts (as he tells us himself) are full of promise. For the form there is a felicitous use of several measures and a plenitude of poetic expression ; and for the matter, as becomes a young poet, sunrise and sunset, and the sights and sounds of woodland and bush, supply him with ever-changing pictures and thoughts. . . . But he strikes a note of pathos in ' A Memory,' and his ' Cattle Drovers ' keeps close to every-day life. . . . There is every pro- spect of a rich harvest in the fulness of time." — Sept. 26th, 1891. The Naticnal Observer : " The ' Ode to Aurora ' is passionate, restrained, and of a captivating motion." — Sept. ^th, 1891. The Review of Reviews : " A volume of Australian verse full of promise." The Literary World : " Sings with much spirit of the beauties of Australia," SONGS OF THE SOUTH. Second Series. ^n^ ■I'l^ A,t(3^63« SIR JOHN MADD;EN, LL.D., CHIEF JUSTICE OF VICTORIA, AS A VERY SLIGHT BUT SINCERE TOKEN OF ADMIRATION FOR HIS EXALTED CHARACTER, RESPECT FOR HIS PROFOUND LEARNING AND GRATITUDE FOR HIS FRIENDSHIP, THIS VOLUME IS RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED. CONTENTS. PAGE PRELUDE . . ... .13 THE RETURN OF PERSEPHONE .15 THE magpies' home FLIGHT . . , . . I9 AN OLD HUT . . . . 22 IN MEMORIAM WHITTIER . 25 TO A LADY PHYSICIAN . , ■ 3° TO A SUMMER CLOUD . . ... 32 AT LORNE ... 34 THE BELL-BIRD . . . . 38 A DEAD FOREST . . . 40 RESIGNATION .... . -43 ODE TO THE NORTH WIND . . , -45 lo CONTENTS. PAGE CAPTAIN COOK 4^ DISCORDANCE .... .... 5° RECONCILIATION . 52 IN MEMORY OF GEORGE HIGINBOTHAM . . . -54 MAIDENHAIR FERN 58 UNDINE ... . . . . . 6o ON THE NINETY-MILE BEACH 63 A. L. GORDON . . . .... 66 nature's LESSONS 68 WHERE SLEEP THE DEAD JO THE WIND OF THE VERNAL EQUINOX . . . -72 A LEGEND OF ROSES 74 A FAREWELL 76 A RIDE SEAWARDS 78 AN AUSTRALIAN ANTHEM 81 SONG DREAMS .... > ... 83 NOORONGONG 84 THE CRISIS 87 AN ANSWER TO WILLIAM WATSON'S " LAST WORD : TO THE COLONIES " gO CONTENTS. n PAGE PIONEERS 91 TO ORMOND College 92 TO W. J. MEADEN 93 TO e. b. loughran 94 THE COMMON WAY 95 ON THE DEARTH OF NOBLENESS 96 IN SYDNEY HARBOUR . . .... 97 THE WILD WHITE MAN : AN AUSTRALIAN TALE loi SONGS OF THE SOUTH. PRELUDE. Sweet songs of dead singers still scatheless of time, Our lips your wild honey Hath touched ; lo ! the musical murmuf of rhyme The Southland makes sunny. Stray notes of strange echoes, that glide through weird change, From woodlands that cover The dingo afar on the wind-ringing range, On the lowlands the plover ! Fresh flowers, if no fruits, of faint music 1 bring From a land whose romances Are strange as the desolate forests that sing Songs tuned to wild fancies, — '3 14 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. Songs born of the gloom, of the deserts where gape The drought-smitten levels, Where never one wind from the stormiest cape A rose-height dishevels. Then gather these flower-songs with kindness, nor note If no summer's completeness Has lent them the hues and the fragrance that float From the masters ol sweetness ! But thou, O my land ! — at thy wild woodland shrine. On thy singer's young altar, I place with pure love these new blossoms of mine With hands that still falter. THE RETURN OF PERSEPHONE. She comes by the ways flower-paven, Green ways of the old sweet earth, And the fields by the sharp share graven, Are rich with a bright new birth ; She comes, and the skies grow sunny, And the songs of the streams grow clear. And drunk with their sweet wild honey Flowers sway in the yellow year. Though the ways ot the woods wax sweeter, She loiters and lingers not. Till she looks on her loved Demeter — What glow has the glad earth got? So wrapt in her dreams she passes By ways that her graces greet, On the dews of the long lush grasses A trace of her fairy feet ! IS SONGS OF THE SOUTH. Gold crowned are the high gold places That flash on her dreaming eyes. And bright as the flush of her face is Rich blooms in the dells arise; And slipped from their shining sluices The scents of the wild flowers flee Over all the land of Eleusis, Forerunning Persephone. » « * * » Ah ! strange were the years now olden Whose chime was the slow tides' chime, When gods from their high seats golden Came down in the dawn of Time ; The music and mirth of mortals Rose higher than Ida's crown, And drew from their careless portals The gifts of the old gods down. Then trailed from the grove's green trellis First fruits of the vagrant vine. Nor vain, in her dreaming, Hellas Heard sounds of a lute divine. Saw nymphs as the leaves unnumbered. Saw feet of the dancing fauns, The place where the great god slumbered Noon-steeped on the piny lawns. THE RETURN OF PERSEPHONE. 17 They roamed, the old gods, they mingled With men, and their hearts grew warm ; Lips touched, and their bright cheeks tingled With press of the panting storm ; They loved, but their love was daedal Who lived the old life and free ; One gift that they gave was fatal, Beloved Persephone ! ^ ^ Tf^ % ^ But now are the old myths ended. Threadbare are the old Creeds worn : From paganish roots ascended A tree that has richly borne ; Not now is Jehovah dreaming High throned in a selfish ease — Nay, Love, through all life is beaming. Transfused through all entities ! Not now by a Naiad river Men list to a luring song, For yoked to a grand endeavour Are the great years rolled along ; And thought from its alpine portal Looks down on a world-wide strife, The seeking for truths immortal. The longing for purer life. 2 i8 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. Lo ! rises from out illusion, Like plants from the clamorous weeds, Humanity's golden fusion From babel of jarring Creeds, As flowers when the spring infuses New life into lawn and lea. As rose o'er the land of Eleusis Beloved Persephone. THE MAGPIES' HOME FLIGHT. Now twilight scatters from her hand The shadows faintly falling, And far I hear along the land The grey-plumed plover calling: With hues half stolen from the night They come while day is dying, By twos and threes in broken flight, The magpies homeward flying. With brave black wings against the sky Their homeward flight slow urging. Wing-weary to the homestead nigh The noisy crowd is surging, Where the dark brotherhood of gums Above the home roofs whisper. As tangled in their star-proof plumes Lie captive winds at vesper. 19 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. And now upon the rosy fall The day has dipped and darkened, To evening's sweet and restful call The weary swain has hearkened ; And still the thick'ning glooms they breast With dusky vans outplying: I watch them east, I watch them west, The magpies homeward flying. Lo ! deep amid the wrangling leaves They take the night's caressing ; Contentment's note of sweetness heaves Its sigh of rest, night blessing ; And dipped in gloom they sink, they fade. They melt into the shadows. Lost atomies whose music made The joy of morning meadows ! Rest, weary wings, the day is done, Sweet after toil is slumber ! We too must sleep at set of sun In nests that know not number : The ghost of twilight holds our hand And guides us unreturning Beyond the schemes of passion planned. Beyond the world's harsh spurning. THE MAGPIES' HOME FLIGHT. And happy who, when summer gleams Of love and joy have perished, Can unregretful wake the dreams That youth and fancy cherished, Can see too o'er the fading land From Hope's irradiant portal The beckoning of an angel hand, Immortal to a mortal. AN OLD HUT. By a lonely swamp where the wild swan settles, Under the range the old hut lies, Ringed by a wild where the wasted petals Of dawn are shed in the eastern skies ; Far and wide o'er the blossomless grasses Thistles and thorns have their own wild way. For never the sound of, a footfall passes Day by day. Yet the spring sheds blossoms around the ruin. The pale pink hues of the wild-briar rose, The wild rose wasted by winds that blew in The wattle bloom that the sun-god knows ; But few are the flowers and the scents that wither Ere the winds rush forth with a stolen bloom For flower and scent in the weeds together Find one tomb. 22 AN OLD HUT. 23 Here vain is the strife of the seasons ever To lose no right of their old sweet reign, The wild weeds wither, the wild winds sever The blossoms and blooms, but they come again With a heart of cheer and a face that gladdens. If aught can gladden the desolate day, Where a lonely spirit grieves and saddens The place alway. The sentinel cranes in the sedgy hollows Are fearless here of a human guest, In the windy roof the glancing swallows Revel in seasons of summer rest. Out from the forest where blossom is never Cometh the sound of the dingo nigh, From the weird low lands by the reedy river The curlew's cry. Here night by night on the range the plover's Cry rings bleak as a lonely wind On" a shipless sea, where the day discovers Lone wan waves on the waters blind ; And night by night like a muffled mourner Silence sits on the desolate gloom, By the rotting stretcher that fills one corner Of one old room. SONGS OF THE SOUTH. Yet here in the seasons of old loud laughter And' music and mirth the glad winds fraught, Men took no thought of the quick hereafter In a world where delight through change was wrought ; They are mirthless now ! for the wind that wanders Moaning its pain for the old time fled Over their graves the lost leaf squanders, Over the dead. And year by year the old ruin crumbles. Friend of the sad forsaken days, Soon to be taken of Time that tumbles Down the pride of our works and ways. Soon to be choked of the thorns and thistles, The wild rank weeds on the crannied wall, Where death awakes in the wind that whistles Over all. IN MEMORIAM— WHITTIER. I. The dark year wanes. The bright months sweetly bring Back to the ilow'ry South the minstrel year ; Life quickens with the rapture of the spring, And woods awake with sounds of vernal cheer. But ah ! they bring not back to us again The voice whose notes of Freedom clearer rang Than music loud of Spring's reiterant strain, Notes sweet as ever Morning singer sang. The blossom of his life is withered now Whose living perfume lingers through the night ; He sleeps in liquid slumber on whose brow Fame, faultless fame, set its supernal light. Yea, sleep is his, and all we know of sleep, The sudden joy of that diviner birth Whose mighty consummation is the deep Strong love that stirs the pulses of the earth. 25 26 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. For if beyond this life be purest bliss, And joys that breathe of happiness divine, And perfect peace more deep than slumber is, Where souls in undecaying beauty shine. Where grief is not, nor touch of ebbless time, Where no sense quickens save in joys that live Immortal, as the harmonies sublime The spheres in perfect diapason give, There surely none before the throne of Him More stainless stands, while hearkening to the roll Concordant of the raptured Seraphim Hymning the advent of his sinless soul ; There surely none who waked a deeper faith In goodness, and the human love which fills Our hearts with hope that fearless looks on death, Though girdled with circumfluence of ills. For standing on life's tempest-shaken shore He kept his faith unbroken through the night Of dark despair, while leading evermore Man's struggling spirit upward to the light. IN MEMORIAM—WHITTIER. 27 And while the mighty morning rose and sang — The mighty morn of duty — none the less For him the voice of Nature loudly rang, And glowed her deep ambrosial loveliness. And now the mother holds him to her breast Where dreamlessly the sleeping singer lies, While folded in the raiment of white rest He wears th' inviolate vesture of the skies. O deathless poet of the weeping West ! O brave forerunner, sweet is thy release ! God gives to thee the shining gift of rest. Who gave to men the perfect gift of peace. II. Sleep, gently sleep, and we who linger here In darkness from thy perfect life will take A sweeter note of comfort ! O'er the year The dewy blooms of spring in beauty break ; Yet Nature, flushed with radiance of flower. And sweet with resonance of wind and wave, Strews not to-day his bier with vernal dower, Nor glows around the quiet of his grave. 28 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. Ah, no ! the Northern year falls leaf by leaf- — Him too she takes, ripe fruit of autumn bland, And influent the ebbless wave of grief Rolls sobbing o'er the loud lamenting land. While Nature lacks the sweet interpreter, The child she held with rapture to her breast. Whose love-enkindled spirit sang with her The songs of all things beautiful and best ; Whose clear voice rang unbated where the din Of life made loud the beating heart of day. Waxed strenuous with eager strength to win Truth trampled down in life's beliefless way. He saw with clearer eyes the flawless love That filled the universe, while round him fell The discord of rebellious sects that move The hinges of the jarring gates of hell. He saw proud Freedom stripped of all her pride, Too frail to lift the burden of a flower, Saw Slavery ubiquitously ride Triumphant on the topmost wave of power ; IN MEMORIAM—WHITTIER. 29 And with a voice whose trumpet note was clear He made his day a scorn of hate and lies, — The prophet of a dark despairing year, He saw beyond the fringes of the skies. For him the light of duty ever cleft The darkness with the splendour of its flame ; Truth's low reveille called to right and left, And Faith a living fact to him became. And when the hydra-headed fiends of wrong Departed, and old errors drooped and died, Truth blessed her brave hierophant of song. Fame crowned him who had fought on Free- dom's side. And now the silence gathers o'er his head ; Yea, o'er his head the silence gathers now : Eternal rest !^ — for down among the dead He slumbers with the laurel on his brow. September, 1892. TO A LADY PHYSICIAN. (INSCRIBED TO MY SISTER.) Let others seek the light that shines In love's unclouded eyes, As bright as dawn's when dancing winds' Wide besom sweeps the skies ; But thee a purer light will guide Through peril and through pain Across a world of sorrow wide To God's eternal gain. Ah ! never holier call than thine To mortal yet was given ! — A message beautiful, divine. On angel wings from heaven ! What though thy way be dark, thy spring Of life by woe be spanned, Go forth to bless where suffering Awaits thy healing hand ! 3° TO A LADY PHYSICIAN. 31 Thy voice as soft as seraph's song Will fall where sickness pines, Thy woman's pity be more strong Than wine of mountain winds. The blessings of thy tenderness, Thy patience and thy trust, The flowers of purest happiness Will scatter on life's dust. And death will wait with gentler hands To break earth's holiest ties Where'er thy presence sweetly stands, The woman in thine eyes. While sorrow by the lonely hearth Shall bless thee for thy balm. When love that looked too long on earth Has reached th' eternal calm. TO A SUMMER CLOUD. O RESTLESS cloud ! how fleetingly you move Across the summer blue ; The arid earth is longing for your love, Is yearning now for you. The viewless winds are calling, " Come, O come ! No longer idly roam. Back to the pondering ranges dim and dumb, Back to your ancient home ! " And ever for that low voice of the wind. Leaving the languid grass. Leaving the hopeless meadows far behind, To the deep hills you pass. Where darkness and the melancholy winds Wake deep prophetic tones, And the red serpent of the lightning twines Around the cloudy cones. TO A SUMMER CLOUD. 33 Ah ! stay awhile ; the misty peaks can spare The bounty of your rain : The music of the mountain stream is there, But here the arid plain. Ah ! here the blessings of your silver showers Will glad the thirsty earth, Revive the spirit of the grieving flowers, And fill the lands with mirth. And once again the glory of the green Will flash from meadows cool, And for the dusty hollow rifts be seen The welcome amber pool. O restless cloud ! with longings wild and vain We too would reach the height, Unhelping pass along the lowly plain, And lose for darkness light ! And leaving souls that yearn for help, as flowers For love of light and sun, Would seek the higher hills to find our powers And purposes undone ! AT LORNE. No sound from the sea for a token Of life on the sea-green floor, And the plumes of the wind lie broken, And the wave lies dead on the shore, Discrowned of its pride ere discrowning The shores of their shells new-born. Where thy sentinel cliffs stand frowning, O loveliest Lome ! In a world where the winds are powerless I stand in a dawn of dreams, By the fields of the green sea flowerless Of foam and the white sea-streams. No sail in the golden glory Of dawn on the dumb wide deep. On wastes that as time are hoary And sleepier than sleep. 34 AT LORNE. 35 Is it weary — the sea? Does it hunger For rest that we crave as boon ? Does it yearn as when years were younger For the love of the luring moon ? Is it changed ? Has old Time that assuages Our griefs for the loves that have ilown Since the mystical dawn of the ages Made softer its moan ? Do we pass like the shadows and leave it Immutable, marvellous, still? Will time that takes all things receive it Fulfilled of its uttermost will, When earth and the burdens that fraught her Ride loose on the storm-steeds that flee No more o'er the wastes of the water. The widths of the sea ? Here, under the cliffs that are ringing With sound of the sea-mew's flight. The pink to the gold weed clinging Gleams out on the gladdened sight ; And down where the shore lines shimmer With tints of the wide pure morn Lost gems of thy sea-gods glimmer, O loveliest Lome ! 3fi SONGS OF THE SOUTH. Thy rocks in their pools imprison White drifts, and the wave's rich gold, And the sea-weed red as the risen Day-dawn with its rose unrolled, And the locks of the brown kelp falling With the falling and rising tides, Or swayed when the wave outcalling On the grey rock rides. Now a sound, and the waves make forward On the shimmering wet sea-sand. And a wind on its wing bears shoreward A sign to the listening land ; There is song in the sound it utters And the music of laughter low. And the heart of the glad land flutters Where the sea winds blow. Now a note of the wind, and the hollows Are filled with the flights of foam, And the wave in its triumph follows Where the feet of the fresh winds roam, — Now the beauty of life and the raptures That rise in the loveliness born From the glory that gladdens and captures Our spirits at Lome ! AT LORNE. 37 You are voiceful, O deep ! Do you fashion A song we interpret in vain ? Is there naught in your power and passion ? Is your moaning the voicing of pain ? — Nay ; a voice that is deeper and sweeter Than the depths of the measureless sea I hear in the music and metre And moaning of thee. The voice of the Spirit that kindles The life that outliveth the sun, And the glory, O sea, that dwindles When thou and the earth are as one ; When no longer the sound of thy voice is, And ringed by a region of love The life that is lent us rejoices Immortal above. THE BELL-BIRD. We heard the wild swan's organ note, The wild swan northward flying, And said, " What sweeter echoes float Of echoes faintly dying ? " The plover's challenge wild and shrill Came o'er the shining shallows, And now embushed the waters spill Through haunts the bell-bird hallows. What cared we if the magpie's throat A wild waste chorus drifted While loud and clear the bell-bird's note The wind of summer lifted ! It filled with sound the tinkling dells, It rose in rapturous gushes With melody more sweet than swells From throats of English thrushes. 38 THE BELL-BIRD. 39 Ring, sudden bells of birds, for dear Your notes to leafy covers. Your carols of the yellow year In haunts where springtide hovers ! Ring, forest bells ! your mission fill For all the fiery summer, — To hidden stream and ferny rill To guide the thirsty comer. Ah ! oft methinks some sweet Undine Thou art, my bell-bird bonnie. Thou hidden minstrel of the green Unhiving song's rich honey! Some echo of God's summertide That fills in Song's completeness The chancel of the forest wide With hints of Sabbath sweetness. A DEAD FOREST. A FOREST dead ! a solitude Of gaunt and hoary gums, Where never wild bird rears her brood, Where never wild bee hums. They stood in ghostly grim array With white arms thrown aghast, Weird Titans of a vanished day, Grim spectres of the past : The winds that woke the forest psalms. Low songs from whisp'ring lips. Lay still within the shroudless arms Of those dead eucalypts. Beneath no beauty of wild ferns. No tender mosses grew. No waterfalls from green old urns That forest dipped in dew. That worn and wasted lonely land Where haply whistling spears 40 A DEAD FOREST 41 Sped glancing from a dusky hand Back in the dead old years, That solitude where hapless fate With death was left to mourn, — So wan it was, so desolate, So wasted and forlorn ! And yet they tell that once the wind To music here was wed, Made lutes of lordly boughs and thinned The green leaves of the dead ; That here the plover came and went. The wild bjse hummed at noon, The curlew's lonely life was spent From moon to waning moon, The white-winged ibis sought the rim Of yonder pool unstirred. And here the wild swan used to swim. The warrigal was heard. Now flower of beauty never grows Where once the shining spring Kissed lover-like the wild-briar rose. Set blossoms bourgeoning ; The sounds that filled the leafy wold With summers of delight, 42 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. The music and the bloom of old Have passed into the night. And now the bunyip only walks Beside the choked lagoon What time its fringe of whisp'ring stalks Is silvered with the moon. O wasted wood ! for thee no springs Are glad with green and gold, No beauty of the old time clings Around the ruined wold ; Earth yields no more her liquid store, Clouds weep for thee in vain, Thy face that laughed to gold of yore Will never smile again ! Dead forest, o'er thee shadows rise, Winds moan upon the height. The stormy message of the skies. The voices of the night ! RESIGNATION. If I am girt by wind of stormy wings And ruin of red lightning on the sea Of life, whose shore is filled with murmurings Of that great life to be, I will not be rebellious through my trust In Thee, and Thy fulfilment of a day, When the soul severed from its prison dust Shall seek its homeward way. Yet every day more timorous it grows. Though nearing no Nirvana, but the bliss Of days without desire, of deep repose, Of joys that clasp and kiss. Even if my days were brighter in the lands Than when the East with light is all aflood^ When dawn has slain the darkness and his. hands Are rosy with her blood, 43 44 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. I would not say, " Behold my happiness ! " Knowing full well that grief and searing pain Are the strong ministers that rise to bless And make us whole again; That from the ruin of the storm we win The after-brightness wonderfully blent With darkness ; and that Sorrow's discipline Shapes life to calm content ; That he is wisest who will strive to be Little of earth, where hopes are shadows cold, Who, missing not God's meaning here, shall see The dark clouds backward rolled. ODE TO THE NORTH WIND. Wind, who art the bringer Of the heat that slays, Though for thee no singer Ever woke sweet lays, Though the woods bear token Of thy heart's desire, All disbranched and broken By thy feet of fire, Wind of summer blowing With unbated breath. Where no green thing growing Brooks thee, wind of death. Where no verdure changes With a face of cheer Rugged stony ranges Half the fiery year, 4S 46 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. Now for thee, fierce comer, Song's wild wings arise. Born of tropic summer Under rainless skies. Where dread drought discloses Wild waste tracks as red As a ruin of roses In a roseland shed ! Healing as sweet pity. Thou wilt drive away From the noisome city The mephitic day : Down the fetid alleys Blows thy fiery breath, — Shield against the sallies Of disease and death. Let the West wind whisper To the nodding flowers. And breathe low at vesper To the dreaming bowers ; Let him, lazy lover. Kiss the languid sea While the skies above her Blush unceasingly. ODE TO THE NORTH WIND. 47 Let the salt South measure Widths of white-haired seas, Rich with ozone treasure For his votaries. Let the East upspringing Crisp the sloping lawn, Voiceful with the singing. Thrilling birth of dawn ! Thou a nobler message Bearest on thy way, Every word a presage Of a purer day. Every sound a herald Of thy cleansing breath In the ways imperilled Of the wings of Death. CAPTAIN COOK. O'ER waves that rolled in wild unrest The dauntless sailor came, And land and sea conspiring blest The seed-time of his fame. And drifted down the alien straits He saw in dreams sublime The lands swing wide their golden gates To meet the march of Time. He saw the vision of the years In glory bright unfurled ; The vanward march of pioneers Across a waiting world ; The rudiments of empire set To Nature's harmonies, Where ling'ring spring and summer met Above the laughing seas. CAPTAIN COOK. 49 Great Captain, o'er the misty sweep Of years we still discern Thy brave Endeavour of the deep The mystic waters churn, The rapture of that radiant time Which through thy triumph rolled. And bless thee for thy faith sublime In those brave days of old ! O, still be ours through mighty years The glory of thy name. And far be that dead year which bears No flower of all thy fame ! DISCORDANCE. In spring's reiterate way the wind distilled The forest sweets with low elusive laughter, And from its mouth blew fragrances that filled The meadow lands thereafter. It seemed the richest radiance of spring Concentred in this day of sweet October, That flowery field and sky conspired to bring Magnificence to robe her. I said, " This day is perfect. Never day Was beautiful as this with all the graces It giveth to the golden hours away In yellow-hearted places." But suddenly a thin voice full of woe In half-articulate tones of gentle pleading Broke in upon the glory and the glow Of loveliness exceeding. 5° DISCORDANCE. 51 One false note in the diapason grand The symphonies of choral music blended : How suddenly the glory of the land Irrevocably ended ! RECONCILIATION. Here, take my hand ! We who were friends, Shall we diverge on separate ways? — To one great goal our pathway tends. One evening all our days. Ah ! sweeter far when we shall meet At eventide beside the goal. As friends of old to fondly greet. Soul rushing unto soul ; And not with sad averted gaze From eyes that half with yearning look. While memory paints the dear old days When we together took With sounding oars the tide of time ; And strengthened in divided power Sought fairy isles where dreams sublime Lorded the golden hour. 52 ■RECONCILIATION. S3 So take my hand, for ah ! too rare Are friends to drift apart in strife : Whom reason guides should make "forbear I " One maxim of his life. IN MEMORY OF GEORGE HIGINBOTHAM (late chief justice of victoria). I. Or ere the season plumes one vagrant wing, Unvext by visitation of decay, From the old year in triumph let us wring One tributary day. And on his grave — the grave of him that died Girt thick with shining honour as with steel In the old year — ah ! softly side by side In reverence let us kneel, And place one rose of our regard which gleams Still splendour-lit from that dead year which drew Far from us to the empery of dreams A soul, great-hearted, true, — 54 IN MEMORY OF GEORGE HIGINBOTHAM. 55 A soul that shone as heavens clear of cloud, With steadfast flame and starlike in the sky Of duty, though ambition thundered loud As Boanerges' cry. II. Yes, he is gone, of all our greatest chief, — A second bridal weds his mighty soul To the immortals. Nevermore shall grief Awake him, or a murmurous people's cry! Forth faring he hath reached the last great goal. He is not dead ! Children of darkness die. For him her fadeless scroll Fame shall outspread ; And while the mighty seasons onward roll Mem'ry shall guard the dead. III. Now who shall wear the livery of the lost Of all the swarming host. And feel the influence of every hour A talisman for power? He stood upon the mountain height of thought. Keen searching through each hollow scheme and plan. 56 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. Yet to a life of noble action brought Faith in his fellow-man : The maxims of the free he kept Still undebased by servile deeds, And where the weeds of falsehood crept He sowed of truth the seeds. IV. Duty his watchword who for ever saw Men struggling blindly on a beaten way Through human hate and multitudinous lies, Unheeding of the one great perfect law Leading their spirits upward to the day, Up to the imperturbable great skies. He saw beyond his age ; he firmly set His steps beyond the barriers of his time : The golden sense of right which fails us yet He held. Ah, woe ! the dreaming autumn prime Paid him no golden debt. V. No craft of statesmen made his spacious hour Large with the hope of power ; Spurning the venal crew, unto his land A bribeless spirit gave he for a dower, IN MEMORY OF GEORGE HIGINBOTHAM. 57 A white unsullied hand. Our Anakim of right! — his scorn Made shivering intrigue quail And cower low-beaten like wide widths of corn What time bears down the gale. And so he kept supreme above deceit And all the little littleness of men, Steadfast as billow-smitten rocks that greet The roaring cohorts of the ocean when Storms smite the sea, and the loud winds again In fourfold onsets meet. VI. Farewell I no perishable fame is thine ; For progress in her ever-during song Shall keep thy name ; and duty, the sublime. Shall hold thee mighty in her deathless throng ; And as the soaring aeons sweep along The stainless record of thy noble life Shall quicken to great strife. December s^si MAIDENHAIR FERN. Out of this sweet midsummer morn A glad low wind dishevels A waste of bloom, gold widths of corn, And on the river revels. A wild young waif, enchantment, fills The woodlands wide with pleasure, While Nature hangs upon the hills Her sylvan-bannered treasure. By waving slopes our pathway trailed. Flower-led in sweet recesses Whose fragrant chalices exhaled Wine-breaths of wildernesses. And now a sudden forest turn, When lo ! our search was ended. For with the range's ruder fern Our maidenhair was blended. S8 MAIDENHAIR FERN. 59 How sweet and tenderly it grew, A wilding charm displaying, As half it feared the winds that blew. And half the waves astraying ! A gentle life that frailest seemed Of waifs the woodland cherished, Yet all a summertide it gleamed While stronger growth had perished. What strength was here, what subtle charms The tender leaves were hiding ; What love encircling in its arms The beauty here abiding ! Is Nature on this mountain wall The stronger life unheeding ? Doth greater love more tender fall Where frailer life lies pleading? Believe it not ! — One purpose vast Runs through His wide creation, That maketh sure when time is past Beyond the stars our station. With sweet sufficiency it gives To all its equal healing. And prophesies of love that lives Beyond its rich revealing. UNDINE. Soulless nymph, so legends say, Spirit of the waterway. River haunter who will be Gifted with mortality. With a soul immortal, pure. When she weds with man and shares Evermore life's crescent cares And the sorrows that endure. And for ever doth she pine For that gift of grace divine. Prescient of the bliss to be, Heaven's immutability ; Of the glories that await After trial, after woe, All the millions here below Battened in the holds of fate. 60 UNDINE. 6 1 Vain life's sweetest gift if she Soulless sinks into the sea Of oblivion, unblest By the vision brightest, best !— Better far the stormy strife, Better ceaseless buffeting Of the waves and winds that ring Round the iron shores of life. Not from darkness are we come. Climbers to Elysium, Not to nothingness and gloom Leads the pathway of the tomb ; Never struggle yet was vain, — He who planted tare and weed Sowed the dominating seed. The imperishable grain. Therefore somewhere shall we be Dowered with immortality. When the shell of life is shed Passionless and cold and dead. Yea, in ampler day will shine Friend by friend, for evermore Sharers on a glorious shore Of the love that makes divine. 6z SONGS OF THE SOUTH. And the nymph Undine meseems Typifies our human dreams, Aspirations, and desires Of the spirit that aspires Ever upward to the light From the darkness filled with throti Of the doubts that seek repose, Groping in the girdling night. ON THE NINETY-MILE BEACH. No lonelier coast where the echoing sound Of water is wild in its roar, No lonelier land where the rollers resound, Where solitude infinite, awful, profound, Impends on the limitless shore. Where man may not measure the limits of peace. Of days unfulfilled of desire. Of wind and of wave, and the spirit's release, Afar from the hoarding and striving that cease Not here till Time kindle his pyre. All seasons are glad in this land unpossest Of all save the guests of the year — The clouds and the rain and the wind without rest. The notes of the birds that know never a nest By the waters reverberant here. 63 64 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. Ah ! here, where the musical note of the swan Far inland is heard on the breeze, From rivers her squadrons are anchored upon, From islands and lakes where the waters are wan And bitter and salt as the sea's, — The sea that has never a rest, where no aisles Of forest are fain of her shore. Yet glad in the wide indivisible smiles Of dawn on the deep when the morning beguiles With splendour her luminous floor. And scarcely subdued when the waters in chime Yearn westward with sense of eclipse. Ere rise o'er the rampire of darkness sublime The sentinel fires that are scatheless of time. Nor fed by the breath of man's lips. The feet of the month of the South, of September, Ring sweet on the ridges they roam. Till the beaches are glad with the joys they remember When strengths of the summer discrown and dismember Sea-meadows of flowers of the foam. ON THE NINETY-MILE BEACH. 65 When storm-winds, inglorious awhile, are asleep On ways that are paved as with gold, And lulled for a season have captured and keep Delight like a spirit enchained, till the deep Laughs landwards with waters unrolled. Delight in a world where the wind and the wave Are lovely as leagues of the strand, — Ah ! here, where all sorrows and griefs have a grave, Where life in its loneliness utter is slave Of Delight that is lord of the land. A. L. GORDON. Upon our ears the music of his song Fell, and the winds that locked their lips too long Quickened to life, and every tuneful height Took form and colour in resplendent light As he, the sovereign poet of our clime, Wedded his soul to Nature's cosmic rhyme. And from the marriage musical rose clear And sweet such sounds as rippled Rydal Mere. Now is the great voice mute, the music still. And his last twilight settled on the hill ! — Nay, not his last ! Let wind and wave and flower Share the brief blessing of the fading hour, Its perishable splendour, — but for him Time's solemn twilight only will make dim The fame that shines from glory's living page. Smiles on oblivion and outruns its age. 66 A. L. GORDON. 67 For he is one of the illustrious choir, The wreathed line of the Mseonian sire, That sing for ever while the heart of time Beats to the music of the spheres sublime ; Yea, sing for ever where, high laurelled peers. They heed no loud laudation of the years Swelling above the tumult and the strife. The lust of living that unmaketh life. NATURE'S LESSONS. In countless ways she doth unfold Her love through passing hours, By gifts of tender green and gold, By jewelled fruits and flowers. For us she swings her golden gates Apart that all may cull Her bounties held in rich estates Of wild lands beautiful. She holds within her shining hands The gift that beautifies. The joy that fills the radiant lands With lives of glad surprise. She droops with autumn-time to warn With symbols of decay ; But prophesies of good unborn In winter's stormier way. 68 NATURES LESSONS. With buds and flowers her newer birth Puts human griefs to scorn, With verdure of the happy earth And springing of the corn. And so with leaf and spray of spring She draws her symbols clear, To teach the good of suffering, The hopes that vanquish fear. The rich return our lives unfold Beyond the riper years, — Yea, prophesies in smiles of gold The triumph of our tears. WHERE SLEEP THE DEAD. I. They sleep upon the ocean's slimy floor In awful majesty alone, The waters roll above them evermore The sea's perpetual moan : Is theirs a rest beneath the sleepless tides That mock the old moon-haunted earth With that low cry of one with whom abides Sorrow from his sad birth ? II. They slumber in their graves in forests old, Wind-haunted hollows for a tomb, Where moaning wilds to weeping skies unfold Their awful gulfs of gloom : 70 WHERE SLEEP THE DEAD. 71 Is theirs a rest beneath the forest pines That wail to every breeze that brings The first note of the storm for whom the winds Unplume their ruffled wings ? III. They sleep in cities where the ceaseless hum Of life no instant ever wanes, Where the slow tides of being go and come Freighted with groans and pains : Is theirs a rest where noisy waves of wan Worn life for ever restless roll, The tread of myriads marching blindly on To no ideal goal ? IV. Ah, yes ! in sea, on land, they soundly sleep ; They hear no more life's mighty din, — As the last age, so too the next, as deep In sloughs of sloth and sin ; But they are heedless as the shrouding sod. Drinking no more life's bitter wine. Drunken with perfect slumber ! — O my God, The dead are truly Thine ! THE WIND OF THE VERNAL EQUINOX. Blow, wind, thou herald of a sweeter morning ! Wave wide thy wings : for me, With joy I hear thy cohorts wild forewarning What time they storm the sea. Blow, wind, unto thy rugged voice I hearken Beneath the low grey arch ; What though the skies of sunny spring-time darken Over thy wild dread march ; What though the censers of the flowers are swinging With unseen hands in prayer Against thee, wind, thy stormy challenge flinging Upon the voiceful air, I hail thee as a gladsome waif that wanders Over a laughing land, Over a world where sweet September squanders Gold from her golden hand. 72 THE WIND OF THE VERNAL EQUINOX. 73 For from thy wings a hint of light and gladness Is shaken as perfume ; The winter wanes, the season's note of sadness Dies with the dying gloom. And in the pauses of thy winds, for token Of light that speaketh loud, Flowers waken from their day-dreams thunder- broken Beneath the driving cloud. There in green haunts of spring-time's wild dominions Lit by diviner spheres The soul is borne on mem'ry's shining pinions Back to its sinless years. Blow then with music over wold and meadow, Toss wide thy waving locks, Sweep from the skies the stormy season's shadow. Wind of the Equinox ! A LEGEND OF ROSES. Daily she stole from out her palace door To seek with gifts the ghettos of the poor, To save with bounty of her kindly hand The dying in her famine-stricken land. Lone secret ways she sought as one abhorred, For he whom she looked up to as her lord, Through idle rumours sown of evil seed, Forbade on pain of death the holy deed. But to her soul still pure and virginal Came as a voice divine the heavenly call ; And still she stood for pity's sake each day. One of God's angels where the Shadow lay. So once, when dusk had dimmed the Western flame, Out of her halls with store of food she came ; But scarce had passed the garden's flowery space, When lo ! her lord rose wrathful in her face, 74 A LEGEND OF ROSES. 7S And fiercely cried, "What hast thou, woman, here ? " But she, all pallid with a white-faced fear: " Red roses in this basket, sire, I bring, A gift to one who lies in suffering." Whereat he tore apart the frail white lid, To bare the secret bounty that she hid ; And lo ! she saw a sudden swift surprise Gather a glancing wonder in his eyes. And there, great marvel, to her wild amaze. Red roses were unfolded to his gaze ! While soft as song she heard a voice above : " God never fails the creature of His love ! " A FAREWELL. Across the wide unwintered skies, The wizard world of blue, The light of Summer sweetly lies, Of summertide for you. By phantom breaths the woods are fanned, By phantom winds the day; No more to this November land The desolate skies show grey. Yet while the seasons come and go, Glad souls with joy to fill, For thee the changeless Summer glow, For me the Winter still. Yea, Winter through the changing year. While alien paths we tread, Though dips again the rolling sphere Where Summer's glow is shed. 76 A FAREWELL. 77 Thy way is bright with bloom of flowers, For thee the roses blow : Far other fields than rosy hours A sweeter gift will know, When Autumn buds beneath thy feet Are dreaming Summer sings. And silver rivers run to greet The voice they vow is Spring's. So part we ! — when the gulf of youth Shall widen more and more, And love-dreams lack the guise of truth On mem'ry's misty shore, Mayhap the thought of thee shall stand A star in skies of grey, A lamp in mem'ry's twilight land To cheer my lonely way. A RIDE SEAWARDS. But the leagues of the land were lovely, the heart of the day divine, As we rode by the honeyed meadows and drank of the mountain wine, And the day took heart from the heavens, and the heavens took heart from day. And the miles were ablaze with blossom, and a hundred colours lay On headland and peak and forest ; and ever there grew and grew The sense of the dim sweet depths that were blue as the heavens were blue, The sense of the sea we saw not, divine as the heights may be, And sweet as a keen south wind sent forth from the live strong sea. And we rode from the valley reluctant, for sweet was it there to rest. Clad round with the bloom that was golden as stores of the wild bees' nest, 78 A RIDE SEAWARDS. 79 Girt round with the murmur of water that bab- bled and bickered and fell Wherever the lightwood brightened the walls of the winding dell, ^ Wherever the scent of the wattle, flung out where the miles were long. Came swift on us, mixt with a chorus, wild, waste, from a world of song, While ever with music that lightened the hollows and heights that morn The song of the glad sweet sea on the wings of the wind was borne. And we rode over long green ranges, loose- reined, to the far green height. And there in its glory and splendour supreme on our eager sight The rapturous waste of the waters, the tremulous world of the sea. And the wind with a heart that was heaven, and whose soul was the minstrelsy Of the waves that broke on the headlands, gusty with salt and spray. And the stern grey bluffs that shouldered the strengths of the tides away ! 8o SONGS OF THE SOUTH. And we gazed and we wished that morning, dream-bound in a glorious gaze, That time might stay for a season the wheels of the rolling days. For a day was born triumphant and keen in its might to slay The thoughts of the restless rolling, the din of the world's wild way, Whose light on the breezy headlands, on the grey rocks dim as a dream, On the widths of the sunlit waters, was perfect as song supreme. And we said, " Though the years are many and darkness has clothed them round. This hour is of God's own giving, this gift of a day gold-crowned. The crown of our toil and striving, where sweet to the yearning sight The infinite sea in its grandeur speaks loud to the lordly height." AN AUSTRALIAN ANTHEM. Eternal Spirit, who hast led From shores where sleep the mighty dead Our fathers with Thy guiding hand In safety to this morning land, To Thee with radiant hope we bend : Guide Thou Australia, Father, Friend ! In wisdom's ways O lead us still. Submissive to Thy holy will ! Be Faith and Hope and Charity The links that bind from sea to sea The children of this goodly state, Heirs to a still more glorious fate. O give to us the gifts of Peace, The teeming flocks, the years' increase, The glad gold widths of waving corn Outpoured from Plenty's flowing horn, — Those bounties shed from Nature's hand When Freedom rules a smiling land ! 8i 6 82 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. And grant us prophet-heroes strong To stand for faith, to trample wrong. To shed the light of love and hope Where sin and error blindly grope. And draw around us and above The symbols of Thy perfect love! Yea, guide us that our land may grow Upon no conquered nation's woe, But mighty by that love which shone Resplendent through Thy sinless Son !— To Thee with radiant hope we bend. Guide Thou Australia, Father, Friend ! SONG— DREAMS. Ere upon my golden dreams Breaks the daylight, come to me Visions glad with gladd'ning gleams Of delight and love and thee ; And a voice from dreamland calls, Voice of sweetest music born, Till across my slumber falls The reveille of the morn. Ah ! the sadness, when the gleam Of that vision dies from me : Down the pathways of my dream Do I follow, follow thee Borne afar on phantom wing, Till the night sets to the sea. Till again in slumbers cling Round my spirit dreams of thee. 83 NOORONGONG. Rein your horses in, my comrades, underneath the length'ning shades Ere the, evening frames a purple fringing for the distant glades ; Rein your horses, for a beauty undiscovered, still unsung. Lies before you in this valley nestling mountain peaks among. Let the grey old bards of Tempe wake a wide world song of praise, Bright'ning like a shining river down the grand heroic days, Sweeter than all themes of singers, of far sound- ing sons of song, Is this radiant land that greets you, is this vale of Noorongong. Never have your eyes beheld yet, never may your eyes behold In our far-off singing seasons, lands so glad with green and gold ; 84 NOORONGONG. 85 For behold, it lies a splendour past all visions of our dreams, Lies a glory hymned of only by the winds and woods and streams. Radiant with leaf and blossom laughing to the blushing skies. When the morning meets the mountain with a kiss of glad surprise, When the dawning flashing golden flames the rosy range along Kindling into life's keen rapture all this land of Noorongong. Ah ! but when the evening folds it and the calm of sunset steals Noiseless with a ghost of vapour over all the quiet fields. When the herds are slowly winding over leagues of waving grass, And the wild cranes seek the sedges, and the wild swans homeward pass, Then, my comrades, surely islands, Happy Islands of the Blest, Hold no region more enchanting, hold no sweeter realm of rest 86 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. In their bright sea-cinctured glory, where nor winds nor waves wax strong, Than this river-haunted valley, than this vale of Noorongong ! Gaze, my comrades, for this glory will not wholly pass away : Mem'ry will recall these spaces in some far-off other day. In the crowded city, maybe, we will turn with wistful eyes To the dim vague misty mountains where the cool green channel lies, — Yea, will turn as fancy wanders over happy scenes of old. Slowly wanders till it leads us to this land of green and gold ; Then, my comrades, 'mid the tumult of the crowded city's throng Will descend like dews of morning memories of Noorongong. THE CRISIS. She lies so still and quiet, angels calling Will surely not disturb her dreamy rest ; The rich blooms from the roses long are falling, And lo ! her cheek is pallid as her breast. All day a silence dark and deep and holy Has fallen on the happy-hearted farm ; All day the mellow winds are melancholy. As nature sinks in griefs encircling arm. Ah ! do they miss the breezy tresses swinging That shook their golden sunlight to the day, The rose-red lips with music ever singing. Blue eyes wherein the summer dreaming lay ? The ploughshare lies above the furrow broken, The idle team has slumbered all a day, And round about the homestead is the token Of grief that nevermore may fly away. 87 88 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. No sound is heard save from the sleepy meadows The kine are calling loud ; the bleating sheep Make voice upon the hillsides where the shadows Have kissed the gulfs of green to vestal sleep. She is so young to die ! we who are older, We who have passed the portals wide of woe, While hearkening to the smile of pleasure colder Than petals of white roses of the snow. Why should we wish, though spring is only touching Her life with all the beauty of its grace. To call her back into the fierce wild clutching Of love illusive, standing face to face With sorrow and the pain for ever ringing The streams of life that darken as they flow, Yea, darken though a little they go singing Through valleys where the summer seems aglow ? But ah ! she lies so still a selfish sorrow Has folded us within its dark embrace, To dream will grief be mightier on the morrow, To shudder at the awful angel's face. THE CRISIS. 89 What care we for the glow more bright than levin That floods the palace gates of Paradise, The awful light of the eternal heaven That dawns apace in those angelic eyes ? To us the glory of the golden portal Shines cold and drear and lustreless and dim ; For ah ! we still would wish her to be mortal, And throb with love and life in every limb. AN ANSWER TO WILLIAM WATSON'S "LAST WORD: TO THE COLONIES." For thy brave words of wisdom and of cheer, Strong singer of the music-cradled North, We whose brave fathers went from Britain forth Back in the day-dawn of a wild old year Send thanks. O never may thine England fear That we, born, bred of British stock, shall fail. Should the Colossus of the North assail. Nay, we thy far compatriots are here Ready, aye, ready. Let the word be said, And we, the sons of sires that shook the world, Will rise for her, the mother of our might ! — We who, when on the sands of Egypt bled Our kinsmen in the smoke of battle furled, For England faced the desert and the night ! 90 PIONEERS. Wild wastes of wildest seas by winds upcurled, The Cape of Storms to bar their dauntless way, Strange perils at the portals of our bay When first the flag of England was unfurled ; And now the strength of Britons boldly hurled Against dark battlements of wilds that lay In dim magnificence from Time's first day ; And lo ! the cosmic thrill of a new world ! What words august for those brave hearts of old. What song supreme to shrine their deathless deeds, What monumental memory to rear? — Sufficeth they will live in sons as bold That still shall scatter o'er the world the seeds Whose harvest swells from ripening year to year. 91 TO ORMOND COLLEGE. Even as a sovereign eagle on some height Which dawn has ringed with radiance rich and bland, Sublime, august, in glorious youth you stand With eyes enkindled of the day's first flight, And heavenward gaze beyond the shadow of night And ignorance. At thy supreme command Leaps the broad light of knowledge on the land. Keen to outburn the sun-god's living light ; Nor less than thine his glory who first led Thy feet that shine through days, nor cold nor dead For us who love his worth. Grey time may rear A pyre for passion and dead hopes, but we Hold higher than all the love that casts out fear, And deep as death's irremeable sea. 92 TO W. J. MEADEN. I KNOW not if the absence of desire Hath wholly won thee from the beaten way, Or if thine eyes have sought the heights alway Where, loving truth, the happiest aspire ; I know not if upon pale passion's pyre Are set the bygone hopes of some sweet day, Whose ghost thy life has haunted. This I say, " Thy life is nobleness ! " What praise is higher ? For nobleness is that great light which throws A ringing radiance round our darkened days, A glory that redeems our fallen state ; For it begets all virtue, and it glows More glorious than imperishable bays. Untouched beyond insuperable fate. 93 TO E. B. LOUGHRAN (on receiving a volume of his poems). It came to me ere Autumn's glory fled And April heard the singing voice of May, Not sweeter than your own; the golden day Dipped westward all forgotten as I read ; Night rose, and all the dreamy day was dead, And star by star a silver sister kissed In the hushed deep ; and still with you a tryst I kept, till lo ! the winged hour was wed To midnight, and the poet's feast was done ! But in my brain the ringing harmonies Of tender verses held me fast, as one That music-bound by ocean slumb'ring lies, And knows not for delight what hour has run. So sweet is all the night 'Neath Austral Skies. 94 THE COMMON WAY. Once standing in the silent place of tombs, Awed by the evening stillness, I saw pass Across the mounds of greenly growing grass A maiden in the flush of life's first blooms ; Then spake I, " Fear'st thou not the gathering glooms Here, where a ghostly silence haunts the day ? " " Nay," said she smiling ; " 'tis my only way ; For yonder, see, the glimmering homestead looms." Then thought I on our common lot — how all The moving throng of sad humanity. To reach the haven of life's perfect bliss. Must pass adown the paths where shadows fall, Through death unto that sweet society Where unifying love for ever is. 95 ON THE DEARTH OF NOBLENESS. How rare is nobleness ; methinks our age Of gain and greed has crushed the morning sense Of life. The brick-walled slaves of pounds and pence But build for Time a worthless heritage ! For darkness is man's portion should he wage War with his better angels for the sake Of soulless happiness, and never take To heart this lesson from sweet Nature's page : — Be steadfast in the purpose that is pure ; Be truthful, hedged around by many lies ; Be noble in a world of much deceit, Then will thy station as a star's be sure Within the light of God's compassionate eyes. Where dowered with grace we touch the Saviour's feet. 96 IN SYDNEY HARBOUR. (to f. f.) Do you remember yet the summer days You made twice happy, O dear girl, for me When sailing down the old wind-haunted bays. Our dreamland was the blue impulsive sea ! Ah ! then the birds of sweet enthralment sang A little space within my heaven of blue. While choral music of the wild sea rang With rapture of delight for me and you : Still sweet the radiant summers come and go. And love illumes the seasons as of old. And down the harbour bays the glad winds blow Where blue widths of the ocean are unrolled ; But ah ! what dreams are mine of that dead year ? What shadows of the phantom past appear? 97 THE WILD WHITE MAN. 99 THE WILD WHITE MAN:' AN AUSTRALIAN TALE. INTRODUCTION. Land of my birth, my boyhood's hours, Most dear to Mem'ry's hallowed bowers. Where childhood's sunny day took wing, Unbodied, perishable thing! Thou mighty cradle of dead years, Rocked by your rugged pioneers What time those fearless elders dared The stormy terrors of the Cape, A world of varied perils shared This plastic world to shape ; ' The following poem is founded on historical facts, bear- ing on the life and adventures of William Buckley, an escaped convict, who lived among the blacks for upwards of thirty years. lOI SONGS OF THE SOUTH. And bursting like a gathered storm Slow rounded into shape and form The embryonic work that grew Another Britain, whence you drew The strength that nerves your bosom still And your supreme, enduring will. Beloved land ! when fading time Shall sound for me its vesper chime And fill life's modulated day With breathings of its holier lay, O, be my fondest wish to see Thy full-orbed glory crowning thee, Thy years resplendent sound and shine Rose-girt with brotherhood divine. And all thy sons united be And wise to rule thine empery; Strong under freedom-loving skies. Made doubly brave by Peril's ties ; Reliant by the triumphs won Through Toil's all-glorious martyrdom ; Till nerved by Honour, steeled by Truth, A noble manhood crowns thy youth, And Virtue's trumpet sounds afar The presage of Love's Avatar. patt I. THE ESCAPE. The curtains of the past are drawn, The naked eld again appears, And in a vision, lo ! the dawn Of waking life in wild old years ! A white-winged vessel in a bay- Where wind and wave in gentle play Gave greeting to a stranger band And lured them to the flowery shore. And the low winds of summer bore Loud voices to the list'ning land. ***** What tides of life have rolled since then Their burdens on the Austral shore O'er hearts that broke through gorge and glen And Hope's exultant banner bore ! — The brave oak-hearted pioneers Who bore the burden of old years, Who set their faces to the foe Thrice twenty glowing years ago, 103 104 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. And brooked the grim austerities Of alien lands, of alien seas Where icebergs wand'ring Northward clave The lonely, shipless Southern wave, And barren islands bleaker faced Than ice-floes strewed the watery waste. Can you, ye men of yesterday. Appraise the perils of the dead ; Can you their bravery gainsay. Deny the bardic wreath we lay On tombs to glory wed? They live no more ; but ah ! each name Is sanctified by living fame, Is jewel-starred and firmly set In Mem'ry's gleaming coronet. Shines out when glory's scroll unfolds ; And Time, true test of worth,, beholds In her Valhalla shine like suns The records of those dreamless ones. * * * * « But where yon white-winged vessel lay What sailor bands, what strangers, say! Did sweet Romance's golden dreams Allure them from their native streams? Did wild Adventure's restless breeze THE WILD WHITE MAN. 105 Drive them across the weltering seas ? Or came they here to found a home By blue waves flowering into foam, Brave-hearted pioneers ? Ah, no ! behold the felon's chain, The low ensanguined brows of Cain, Souls darkened with the deadly stain Of sinful wasted years ! Yet in that Convict band was one Upon whose face the clouding sun Of passion left no score of crime Defiant of the march of time ; Youthful his frame, yet strong was he, Yea, mightier than any three, Who here of giant stature stood Amid this doubtful brotherhood; But well aloof he kept nor shared Their idle vaunting hours, nor cared Young Loman for that felon throng. Their ribald jest, their rabble song ; For thoughts of times beyond recall Rose fast as Mem'ry's frescoed wall Brought back the summer days that were, The hours unkissed by lips of care. When mate of mountain, vale, and wood He roamed by shining tarn and flood io6 SONGS OF THE SOUTH As fearless, fetterless, and free As sounding streams that storm the sea, The eagle death alone enslaves. Or winds that wing the dancing waves. Nor master owned save One supreme, The Lord of mount and mere and stream. Of whose free gifts of sun and air To man he claimed an earth-born share, — Forgetful in a luckless hour That sea and sky and plain. Yea, spring's and summer's blosmy dower And autumn's golden gain, The ambient air, the grassy sward, Created were by Nature's Lord For one whose goodly claim Dates backward to the Tudor time. Was built on perfidy and crime. Or woman's burning shame ! The beauty of the summer-time, The magic of a stranger clime. And the anticipated ease After the wild wind-driven seas. Awoke to laughter and to song The olden joy that slumbered long And filled the echoing forest floor. The laughing tide, the sunny shore. THE WILD WHITE MAN. 107 The startled glen and sleepy range With music of a language strange. The sea-mew saw the stranger's oar Toss the light blue and win the shore ; And wond'ring heard the first deep note Of music from an alien throat ; And gazing downward in surprise Saw in the sailor's fearless eyes The hue of her own sunny skies. The dusky children of the wood An instant by the water stood ; An instant saw the glancing prow Kiss the blue billow's laughing brow ; An instant saw that morning face : Was it a dream? Was this a race Of spirits from a land of dawn? Then passed like morning's rose away, Like shadows of the breaking day, The curtains of the night withdrawn. They stood upon the new-found land Irresolute, a wondering band, Where now Sorrento's wave-worn cliff Hails many a dancing ocean skiff; They stood where wasted bluffs rose high, Hearts bred beneath a Northern sky. Rude exiles from those island shores io8 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. Where Peace her golden blessing pours, Where that great race hath grown Whose fruitful, lordly branches sweep From land to land, from deep to deep, Wherever speech hath flown. There in immeasurable woods, In grim and voiceless solitudes. Back in the heart of an old year Loud with the wild man's singing spear. Arose the first white gleaming tent, The dawn of convict settlement. Yea, in a land by shipless seas. Where through the dim, dead centuries Fair Nature lacked no winning grace To crown the beauty of her face ; Where in the glad wave prisoned lies The sapphire hue of summer skies ; Where every lingering season fades Regretful from the leafy glades, And longs to clasp within her arms Her coming sister's varied charms That bloom upon the smiling strand, And blossom on the golden shore, As year by year the sisters four Stray singing through a fairy land. THE WILD WHITE MAN. 109 Within a wood where Morning shakes Her dewy locks of gold, And rosy red in beauty breaks Above the laughing wold, Where never sound of Saxon speech Drove the wild warrior from the beach Back to his inland glades to tell Of all the sea-wrought miracle, They raised like eastern pagods round Their white tents on the forest floor In immemorial woods where hoar Great gum trees shadowed all the ground, Ere the loud axe with ringing stroke The sombre wall of forest broke. And made a widening space that stood Upon the border of the wood : A wild home for a wilder horde. For crime from sorrow's vial poured ! Sad waifs ! by strong temptation driven For earthly hell to barter heaven, For flinty paths and stormy skies The golden glades of Paradise, And sweep far down that dark abyss Where life bids long farewell to bliss — For callous guilt and dull despair Hold dread and equal sceptre there — SONGS OF THE SOUTH. Till, sunk beyond recapture, all The finer life is held in thrall, And passions base, unbridled, free, Hide the fair Soul's identity. They hesitated, sinned, and fell, Resentful heard the judgment knell ; For cradled in the lap of Crime And born in ignorance they saw No social wrong in after-time. No crime in violated law ; And if the name of God they heard, 'Twas outcome of deep passions stirred Or they had heard perchance of old Of an Avenger stern and cold. With man the ruthless instrument To work His earthly punishment. Day after day the lash was theirs. The brutal curse their matin prayers. And for imaginary wrong Keen terrors of the biting thong. That dragged their better- nature down Till vice from virtue tore the crown. Young Loman held himself apart. And hid with no untutored art THE WILD WHITE MAN. The stormy passions' waiting war Beneath the lash's stinging scar — The blow that made his manhood feel What never words could well reveal, And from his being rudely swept The finer sense, the gentler traits. And broke the subtle chord that kept A note of sweeter days. And deeper grew his dark despair Shrouding a life that once was fair, Till shrillest discord marred the keys That woke the higher harmonies. And early visions came to be The ghosts of dead reality. It chanced one summer day, as Loman stood Hard by the border of the darksome wood. Uprose the dark wall of a sudden cloud. And waking winds took voice and called aloud. Or ere the warning note had died, the wood Bowed its grave head in reverent attitude, While the swift heralds of the tempest run, — Ho, hark, afar the storm-wind's clarion ! Then broke the storm upon the land Red with the lightning in his hand. And smote the forest with his sword, SONGS OF THE SOUTH. And through the great gums storming poured The fury of his howling horde Of thunders on the startled land ; And swift as meteor's sudden play Gross darkness fell upon the day, Encircling Loman's band. They sought the shelter of a tree, Awed by the storm's sublimity — A tree the mightiest of earth. Coeval with creation's birth, A loose-limbed Titan, towering there Amphibium of earth and air. But now fierce Nature's fiery flame Had hollowed deep its giant frame. And robbed its arms of vigour bold Matured in centuries of old — A giant tree whose hollow womb Would well thrice thirty men entomb, A refuge meet by Nature planned For that tumultuous flying band. Lo, clouds afire ! and skies aflame ! Till heaven's lurid vault became One awful flowing oriflamme, Fierce as abyssmal hell ; And now the bright brands nearer fly, The white death thickens in the sky, THE WILD WHITE MAN. 113 Smitten, the great tree mightily A shattered ruin fell. Amidst that scene of wild alarms No warder's cry : " To arms ! to arms ! " For dead the gaoler lay ; But louder than the tempest's cry A wail of human agony That pierced the groaning day. And Loman heard and saw, and drew Resolve from hope lit up anew, A quick resolve that shook his frame, And chased the crimson tide Of honest manhood brought to shame And robbed of honest pride : Hope sparkled in his kindling eye. And Freedom whispered in his ear : " The woods are thine, the woods are near ; No longer linger — fly ! " He looked upon his limbs, and lo ! The old-time marks of many a blow, — Deep graven signs of chains accurst ! A cry triumphant fiercely burst From out his breast, now passion-riven, High heard above the warring heaven, 114 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. As he beheld the gaoler lie A dead dull mass of ebony. No tiger e'er through jungle burst To rend his prey and slake his thirst With fiercer instinct, savage, dread. Than Loman bounded on the dead ; And tore the keys from Death's grim grasp, And loosed the cursed shackles' clasp, And stood erect, defiant, proud. And laughed, as reft of reason, loud In Freedom's ecstasy : Ah ! little knew he then what pain The coming years concealed ! — how vain Man's brightest hopes may be ! But hark! what sounds are those he hears That wake his newly cradled fears, And drive the hot rebellious blood Back to his heart, a recreant flood. As icy in its pinioned tide As lone Sabrina's sea-washed side? What rushing steps his ears assail ? What loud alarm now fills the gale? He pauses like the startled deer In dread the baying hounds to hear, Then dashed with ravening fear's wild rush Through miles of tangled scrub and bush ; THE WILD WHITE MAN. 115 Till wounded, bruised and bleeding, he Wins the deep hollow of a tree Within that grave and ghostly wood Stricken of sombre solitude. And when the storm had passed away, The spirit dark that grieves, The glory of the parting day Shone down on shimmering leaves ; And Loman felt the magic power. The glory of the gracious hour. When golden skies conspired to dress Nature in new-born loveliness, When every hill's high turret showed What splendour to the westward glowed — Each seemed a watch-tower in the skies The stormy march to signalise With changing glories, as the day In flaming beauty died away. Yes, Nature wildly revelled free And held him to her breast, and he In that great hour of gladness gave Love for sweet love in dreams that crave The full fruition of desire ; While she with all her gorgeous choir Ii6 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. Sang of the mighty marvel wrought — For so her song was to his thought^ — And voiceful in the evening air Uttered her sweet, melodious prayer. And as he listened in that hour Of Freedom blown to perfect flower, The crystal springs of feeling rise, And once again sweet tears he wept. Such tears as when the Peri crept Back to her long-lost Paradise. part 11. THE RETURN. O Freedom ! name for ever blest Since first thy starry march began, Since down the ways of wild unrest The ages crowded ran. When high o'er all thy symbols flashed Men heard thy mighty voice and woke, Beneath red skies where dawnings dashed With fires of freedom broke. Red fires that fringed the fount of day In darkness hid, O God, how long! And smote through shadows thick and grey The mists of ancient wrong. Till Hope took heart and hailed thee far The mightiest since earth began, 117 Ii8 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. Great Pilgrim of the years that are, O spirit guide of man ! >, O light of ages, greater grow ! — Too long the world hath waited thee, Thou source divine whence sweetly blow All winds of liberty! As hills pour forth their joyous song When spring-time breaks the river's trance, And winds and waves the notes prolong Of earth's deliverance. So song in rapture hails thee born On heights that know but heavenly birth, * Thou mother of the mightiest morn That ever filled the earth ! And, Freedom, thou wast his who stood Alone with thee in that wide wood. With Hope that winged reluctant hours As sunset lingering left the bowers. And now hushed evening fills the glade. The ebon hand of night is laid Upon the dells below ; THE WILD WHITE MAN. 119 And swift the unimprisoned beam O'er range and valley, wood and stream, Qhases the flying foe. He watched the growing crescent moon A silver arc on high. As rapt from some far plenilune Into the hollow sky ; And though its beamy radiance shone Upon no castle dark and lone. Upon no wasted ruins grey Sapped of their pride by old decay, Their glory of an elder day. Yet beautiful the woods outspread By lightest winds untenanted. The hills in many a vasty fold Of dark magnificence unrolled. Piercing the argent fields of light In bold relief that made more bright The silver hollow of the night. And now young Loman's waning power Pays homage to the passing hour : Relaxing nature loud demands The aid of ministering hands. But though nor fruit nor berried trees The pangs of hunger to appease, SONGS OF THE SOUTH. He laughed in all his manhood's pride, A laugh that shook his locks of brown "What care I for the fiend," he cried, "If sleep but seal my eyelids down ; What care I for his vain assault, While here a king*'uncrowned I lie Beneath the free 'and flowing vault Of God's star-spangled sky ? " Then laid him down upon the sward, The floweiy laughing lea, To garner all the sweet reward Of toil's best legacy — Nor all the quaintness loud and deep Of him that filled the grove With mocking laughter broke that sleep. Those dreams of hofee and love. Thus fled the hours, and ere the night Disjewelled for her hasty flight Passed from the misty mountain lawn, She kissed the sleepy lips of dawn, Who blushed a rosy red that grew A fiery spot of angry hue ; And for his desecrated sleep His quiver forth he drew, And where the wanton fled the steep His gleaming arrow flew. THE WILD WHITE MAN. And while the woodland rafters rang With varied sound and song, Loman in new-born pride upsprang, And to the vagrant breezes sang The morning woods among. There never Saxoif'' song before Made music on the forest floor Or woke the woodland aisles ; There never wild bird stayed its wing To hear the cheery echoes ring Along the waving .wilds.. Loman's Song. '' I. ■ The skies are bright, the woods are green, A wild new life I follow. Afar from men By gorge and glen And stranger height and hollow. The grass shall be my welcome couch While silver skies hang o'er me ; For freedom's wine Is mine, is mine, And joy is all before me ! SONGS OF THE SOUTH. II. The torrent leaping from the hills Will hail me, thirsty comer ; Its glassy wave Will be my grave The hot mid-days of summer. My food shall be the speckled trout, Where shallow streams are flowing, And juicy root. And forest fruit. And wilding berries growing. III. O bounding stream and wanton wind ! I share your happy laughter. As wild as ye, And O, as free, — To-day knows no hereafter. Sing out, ye birds with breasts aflame ! Glow heavens sweetly o'er me ! For freedom's wine Is mine, is mine, And joy is all before me ! THE WILD WHITE MAN. 123 For him the weird wild woods among Glided slow-footed time along, December waning died ; The flaming sword of summer fell Unsparing on the withered dell, Upon the range's side ; Blood-red through misty vales of smoke At intervals the wan sun broke ; The woodlands far and wide Lay stirless as a forest dead From weary day to day, As Nature's 'hoarded treasure fled The fiery forest way. His aimless quest from day to day, Where woods and wilds untravelled lay And miles of flowery plains and fair, Had led his wandering footsteps where Rude ranges frowned above the sea In stern and wild asperity. Nor speech of man nor human sound Awoke the solitude profound : The music of the feathered throng, Their matin or their vesper song. Alone illumed his weary way From rosy dawn to twilight grey — 124 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. Gay victims of a wild unrest, In green and golden plumage drest ! Nor in his wand'rings did he see The face of aborigine ; For him no favouring fortune smiled In that inhospitable wild, Or brought the trackless woods among Fulfilment of that morning song. Upon a jutting crag he stands, Gaunt was his frame and worn his hands, Sunken his cheek, and dimmed that eye Of dull despairing apathy ; And wan and woful was the face Where scarcely might the watcher trace The lineaments of human grace. And now the low-voiced babbling sound Of waters woke the peace profound, The ghostly reign of death that broods Within those mountain solitudes, And swelled upon his listening ear In soft and silvery cadence clear, And called his wandering steps aside To win its cool and crystal tide. THE WILD WHITE MAN. 125 And as he slakes his burning thirst And laves each weary limb, A cry of new-born rapture burst Triumphantly from him ; He trembled like the autumn spray In early blasts of winter grey ; The floodgates of his hope once more Give way the rushing tide before That bore for freight upon its wave The treasures of Aladdin's cave, Or aught that avarice may crave. There midmost of its bed he found White sand by golden trophies crowned, Rich relic of the torrent's force Unveiled in that worn watercourse. For ages haply there it lay. Garnered in Nature's wondrous way, The glinting glittering gold — Such boundless wealth as legends say In Gyneth's sleepy palace lay Far back in days of old. For ages through the dim dead past The golden wonder lay ; There haply too the wild man passed Unconscious on his way, 126 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. Feeling no greed intuitive Within his heart arise and live. The sudden glow which Lorn an felt As by the scattered sands he knelt, Human of heart and eye, Revealed not in that hour of pride That nature even then denied What gold could never buy. How few there live who claim the power To rise above Temptation's hour And scorn the bribe, the golden gifts, In her bewitching hands she lifts To lure the heart and eye ! Lives there the flower in wood or grove Which spurns the glowing sun-god's love. And blossoms but to die ? Did ever mortal tear away The hungry lion's rended prey? Weak nature, inconsistent, strange, Capricious as the varied change Of colours, when the waning west In hues prismatically drest Illumines all her chambers bright With glories of the waning light ! THE WILD WHITE MAN. 127 Frail nature ! ever blown about Upon the changeful winds of doubt, The sport of every breeze that blows The petals from the wasted rose Of passion's stormy day, Thou strange and variable thing, No weaker in life's golden spring Than in life's winter grey ! He stood beside the creek, his hands Grasping the golden-weighted sands : The sorrows of his stormy day Melted like morning mist away, As now hope fires his cheek where pain The rose of health had rudely slain. And with its olden flame made bright The eyes that lacked their morning light ; And trembling all, and passion stirred. The beating of his heart he heard. No longer faint and slow : A great glad rapture swayed and swung His quivering frame, and round him flung In ecstasy its glow. Ah ! what avails the gold he spurns With naked feet where'er he turns? 128 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. Better one hour of glowing health Than lordship o'er ungarnered wealth, To feel again the olden power, The blossom of his manhood's flower. Ah ! what avails that here he stands Sole lord above these golden sands ? And musing in that empty hour. Tricked with the mockery of power, Came back to him the story old Of food transmuted into gold By that sad king whose greed, men say, Baulked the rich splendour of his sway. " Ambitious fool," he musing said, " Take, take the gold, give me the bread ! " Awhile he stood, his heaving breast The tumult of his heart confessed — Its purple riot — as each limb Quivered like light leaves under him When a low wind of morning wakes Faint music on sleep-folded lakes ; Yet shorter-lived than thunder-peals, When autumn from her warring fields Scatters with light irriguous hand Small bounty on the thirsty land, Was that fierce storm that shook his frame, And rocked ambition's dying flame, THE WILD WHITE MAN. 129 And filled his soul with wish as frail To live as flowers in winter's gale. But when the panting passion sped He raised a pallid face and said : "Woe, want, and sister misery Are goads for ever driving me Down to despair's fierce hell ; And vain is sleep, for sleep is slain. Each dawn beholds the darkness wane Above this restless shell ! Yet fairer, Death, thy portal shows Than the old life of bitter blows, Better the wilding's flinty woes Than man's inhuman strife : I'd gladder grapple with grim fate In these wide forests desolate Than live the other life ; Yea, even rend the veil and see Beyond the wondrous^ mystery ; But dread the hand that lifts the oar On life's reverberating shore. Across the misty low-voiced sea, Where never backward swings the prow On that dread deep of mystery Whose moaning haunts me now. 9 130 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. " Yet, what if all this wealth should be The gate of opportunity ! What if I brave old fate again And clanking horrors of the chain ! — The golden wonders of my tale, The story of this gleaming vale. As o'er the land its echoes roll Shall thrill men's hearts from pole to pole, And win perchance for me, for me, The guerdon of a pardon free ! " He ceased, and gathered in his hands Rich tribute from the shining sands. The magic talisman whose glow High hope revived, despair laid low ; Yet all he would have freely given For one glad hour again to roam The meadows of his Northern home Under their cold and cloudy heaven. Now slowly up the blackened height Whose hue might rival ebon night. For on its face the fire-fiend set Eternal gloom's dread silhouette, He passed, and toiling slowly won Where first the morning meets the sun. THE WILD WHITE MAN. 131 What prospect greets his eager eye Where all is wood and misty sky? Wild range on range in dim repose With rock-strewn pinnacles arose ; And down each thunder-blasted face Grim gorges might the watcher trace ; And mighty crests of time-worn rock In quaintness thrown by some rude shock, Great masses piled in midmost air That stood since dawn's creation there, Nor basement wide nor aught to clasp To save from doom's impending grasp, But clinging to some shattered cone That speaks itself of death wind-blown — Huge hanging bulks, you well might deem A blow would break their cloudy dream And whirl the crashing death to drag A ruin down from crag to crag. There one might read what torrent rage Wrote Nature's desecrated page : The flood in winter's stormy plan Had proved a rugged artisan. And worn in plates of granite grey The summer's gentler waterway. And far below the grim ravine The wild dark hill-heads stood between, SONGS OF THE SOUTH. The gloomy gorge, where scarce the day- Could cast a luminating ray, Now widening into gullies vast Where Nature's self looks on aghast At ruin wrought, what time from heaven On wings of storm the flashing levin Rocks, trees, promiscuous hurled From the grim bulwarks on each side, Stern sentinels that ever eyed The wild dark underwold. But westward far shone like a shield, Outspread before his eyes. The sea upon whose glassy field No wind and wave arise ; No white sail broke its dim expanse, No wings upon the waters glance. No wine-dark waves with lapsing chime Broke the sweet dream of summer-time. There lay the goal of all his fears Now dim as seen through rising tears. And there the goal of all his hope Now bright in fancy's horoscope. Alternate feelings ebb and flow As noontide shadows come and go Across the ranges old. THE WILD WHITE MAN. 133 And lure his footsteps falteringly By wandering woodways to the sea, The sea of burnished gold. For days the wild and rocky shore, Weary and worn, he wandered o'er, Beneath high bluffs, stern battlements, Where wind and wave made ruthless rents, The cave his welcome bed. And goodly festival it gave What time the tributary wave Its spoil deposited. But ere the fifth glad evening fell He gained again the wooded dell, And stood a quarter-league or more, Sorrento, from thy rugged shore. As fearful yet to boldly face The terrors of the dreaded place ; For Mem'ry plied her bitter scourge Till action stood upon the verge Of weak irresolution's power. Resolve, thou transitory thing. Spreading thy light inconstant wing To every fickle hour ! Another night ! how coldly fell The wind upon the lonely dell! 134 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. How weirdly all the gaunt trees stood, Grim phantoms in a ghostly wood ! For darkness was a gruesome thing That brushed him with its boding wing, A hov'ring great black bird of prey Brooding above his life alway. Day rose upon the rugged steep, And kissed the glad expectant deep, And woke the forest wide ; And laughing sky, and winsome wold. In waves of splendour brightly rolled. Crimson and amethyst and gold, Laved in the sunny tide. And later, when the dews of morn Had wasted from wild briar and thorn, The haggard wretch arose, And wearily his way he bent Up the low range's battlement. Sleeping in still repose. He climbs the weary summit ; now Descends into the wood below. Unhappy haunt of old ; You trace him by the noisy flight Of parrots in the morning light, THE WILD WHITE MAN. 135 Resentful of their ancient right Of reign within the wold. Now peering forth, now lurking low, As one who fears a hidden foe In secret ambush there ; But hark ! upon the rising breeze A sound is wafted from the seas, That swells into rude melodies And fills the morning air : — Song. Farewell to the forest! Farewell to the shore ! Where the pang that was sorest Oppresses no more; Where pain and sad sorrow No longer shall kiss ; And grey grief may borrow A season of bliss. Than wings of the swallow More swift is delight, Than flame in the hollow Red regions of night, Than fancy attaining Sweet visions aflight. 136 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. " Yet our sorrows are waning On wings of delight. Hail, ocean ! far sweeter For pangs that are past, Sound, billowy metre ! Blow, arrowy blast ! The sea is before us. The woods are behind, Ho ! welcome in chorus The wave and the wind ! As winter torrent sounding hoarse Rude rushes down its mountain course, 111 brooks the wave the rocky mass That leans above the narrow pass, Strong for the furious fray. Borne past the shoulder of the rock And shivered by the stormy shock. It foams upon its way. So through the tangled underwold, Ungilt by morning's gift of gold. Sped Loman swift as hunted deer. Now shaken with a nameless fear. Beneath the trees that fringed the wood A breathless moment there he stood ! ' THE WILD WHITE MAN. 137 Was it a dream? Did fancy weave A vision only to deceive? Or lacked his eye through lustre dim Reality again to limn? Stirless as death the dark camp lay, Nor sound nor sign to glad the day ; And all was noiseless as the grave, Save the low washing of the wave. He gazed upon the shining sea : What vision mocks his view? What tall ship rides so gallantly The brows of yonder blue ? Across the wave glad voices sweep. The cheery " Heave ho ! " rings, The dark prow glances to the deep. The anchor upward swings ; And with a cry of anguish he Fled to the low shore of the sea. Lo ! yonder sail of plumage grey Bearing its freight of crime away That lingered but a short-lived day, Nor left behind a sign or trace Or Memory of its ghastly face, Or of its evil power, 138 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. Throughout our youth or morning prime, Through all the lapsing tide of time, To this our latest hour. There on the morning-coloured sands He stretches forth his suppliant hands. And called aloud : " For Christ's sweet sake Me, desolate and outcast, take ! O, take me from these solitudes, Where death for ever darkly broods ; Leave, leave me not, old comrades true. Abandoned by my God and you ! " That human cry from man to man Across the moaning waters ran ; But ah ! in vain he cried ! The twinkling billows' laughter now Invites the keel ; the glancing prow The glad blue waves divide. Then o'er his brow all rushing came A glow more bright than morning flame ; His veins upstarted on his brow. Weaving their close-reefed cordage now. While iiashed the light of great despair From his wild eyes. His shaggy hair Rose on the wind, and every limb Quivered and quailed as into him THE WILD WHITE MAN. 139 The gale of passion smote its power, And filled him in that awful hour With that wild fierce consuming hate That leaves its pathway desolate. He rent his garments, tore his hair, And left his bleeding bosom bare ; And in that hour of dread despair 'Twas pitiful, O God, to see ' The wan man's awful agony. Then through his clenched teeth there came Hissing, these broken words of flame ; For all his strength seemed brought to flower To blast that dread inglorious hour : — " Go ; and if curse of mine can speed To doom, then is your doom decreed ! And be that doom such as men say God metes to sinners on that day When thunders sound His baleful ire 'Mid lurid flames and awful fire ! May every ill that life assails, May every pang that pain unveils. May fell disease and misery. Grim vultures, hover over ye. And limb by limb your beings shred. Living yet dying, alive yet dead ! MO SONGS OF THE SOUTH. " May every crime that sin can plan Bring you beneath your brothers' ban, That, trebly cursed, your lives may be Blasted by foul iniquity ! That when your spirit upward flies. Your God from His high Paradise, Relentless in His anger fell, Your souls may hurl to deepest hell. "May Lucifer's dread angels grim, Obeying the behest of him. The furnace feed that laps your tears, While shrieking laughter in your ears, Ye coward fiends of life accurst ! When ravening with hell's fiercest thirst, May fiery flames " Wild glared his eye Afar on mingling sea and sky ; Then, dropped his palsied outspread hands. Stricken he fell upon the sands. The tide rolled in with ripple sweet And paved with gold the sloping floor. The wave unheeded kissed his feet And shone along the shining shore ; A light breeze from the ocean blew The cooling of its garnered dew. THE WILD WHITE MAN. 141 And glowed the glad sweet morning light On grassy slope and laughing height ; The sea-gull skimmed the twinkling deep, Glanced from the wave with landward sweep. Rose on the breeze and wooed the shore, A moment poised its level o'er, Saw from her station in the sky Below a pale prone figure lie,' Then startled sped with seaward sweep Over the solitary deep. part III. AMONG THE BLACKS. Sweet are the sounds of early morn When wild winds sweep the dapple grey, Calling across a world new born : " Arise ! awake ! the day, the day ! " And sweet the music of the wold That welcomes with its happy lay The broad'ning fringe of sudden gold Upon the flying verge of day. But ah ! though Nature sweetly wakes Her wild-waste songs that heavenward reach, What sound harmonious ever makes The music sweet of human speech ! What river of soft sound one hears, Dear as remembered tones that shed Their radiance in the bygone years, The other years, the old-time dead. What melody of winds may match The winsome prattle of a child ! 142 THE WILD WHITE MAN. 143 Go, Nature ; thou canst never snatch Notes sweeter from thy warbling wild ! — Build up for ever sweetest sound Of wind and wave, all that rejoice, Nor ever shall one note be found To match the music of the voice ! O'er miles of trackless forest hoar, Skirting the long low broken shore, For days the outcast wandered— ^^g^, Free ! God, what haunting mockery ! Alone, alone for evermore Upon a grim forsaken shore, With never ray of hope to bless The lone land's utter loneliness : The grey rocks where the sea streams flowed. Where sea and sky together showed So desolate, — a dead man's face Would be a comrade in that place ! In aimless wanderings day by day He trod the lonely forest way, Till winter fled, and spring-time bloomed. And summer spring's young life entombed. When hot winds winged the ranges old, The valleys deep, the plains unrolled, r44 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. And gaining now the summit high Of one lone peak that kissed the sky, He looked adown on woods unfurled, Lord of that wide but lonely world. And here upon the wind-blown height Did Loman rest him through the night. If rest and relaxation be When north winds blow unceasingly. But as the dawn to morning grew The blood-red disc arose anew, And with wan lustre weirdly shone The wasted, fainting lands upon ; For three full days with fiery breath The hot wind blew, a wind of death, O'er all the land that shrouded lay In deadly trance from day to day. Nor life through all the forest stirred, Nor voice arose of beast or bird. Till this fourth morn its wings unfurled. And woke a three-days' sleeping world With sounds that filled the stifling air As if hell's legions revelled there. And Loman heard, and looked with awe, As over all the land he saw A growing darkness drape the sky And pall the sun-god's drooping eye. THE WILD WHITE MAN. 145 And now a roaring sound afar Like ocean wild when waters war Upon an iron rock-bound shore, Or wild Niagara's sullen roar ! For hours the flames of lurid glow But made the darkness deeper grow, As scrub and bush and giant tree Were clasped in death's extremity By that devouring monster grim That feeds on log and fallen limb, Nor even spares with fiery tongue The hidden life of summer young. And farther went and nearer came The dancing, leaping, lapping flame. As from the boughs the birds fell dead To feed the fiery furnace red. And howling dingoes fled in vain To win the wide and treeless plain ; The diamond and the carpet snake In writhing terror flee the brake, — The hissing tiger shuns the strife, For once solicitous of life ! But over voice of beast and bird The roaring sound is ever heard Of crackling flame, and falling tree, And dying Nature's agony! 10 146 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. The burning brands that flying fell Made hell on earth, and earth a hell ! And terror loosened every limb As Death's loud trumpet spoke to him : " O God ! " he thought, in horror dumb, "Christ's Judgment Day has come ! has come!" A moment, and the chains are clear That bound his limbs in mystic fear. And leaping down from rock to rock. From boulder grey to granite block, - Through scrub and undergrowth he fled And over blackened logs and dead. Now down some dark and grim ravine Where summer's sun was never seen He breaks his terror-haunted way For many a mile on that dread day, Till weary at the day's blood noon He wins at last a low lagoon, Whose dark and cooling waters lay To windward far and far away. And pausing here, and panting now. He wipes his blood-stained cheeks and brow ; His fainting gaze now travels o'er The hands besmeared with clotted gore; THE WILD WHITE MAN. ^^ And now the bruised and bleeding feet His weak, bewildered glances meet ; The naked breast that storms withstood, Begrimed with sweat and smoke and blood ! " O God," he cried in agony, " Can this poor wretch be me, be me ? " For days the outcast lingered there. While south winds cooled the forest bare And laid upon the cloudy land The healing of their gentle hand ; Then far he wandered slowly back On desolation's deadly track : No more by tributary streams The deep dell moss in beauty gleams, No more the arched hills salute The wilderness with vernal fruit ; Alone in all the waste is seen The blackened gums disrobed of green, As day by day his pathway led Through spectral forests of the dead. And now within a time-worn cave, Hard by where thy slow wandering wave, Sweet Barwon, mingles with the blue Streams of the ocean, Loman threw 148 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. His wasted frame upon the floor Vibrating to the billows' roar. Nor cared he now as low he lay How revelled the last dance of day, Ere night led up her starry train, For life to him was keenest pain, And all his heart with hope was stirred Of Death's irrevocable word^ Yea, hope that lit his fading eyes — For hope is one with life, and clings Around us with its golden wings. Though doom in its fruition lies. It was a dark but lofty cave That easy flowing entrance gave To sun and wind, for toward the sea Westward its brows bent sullenly. Upon its walls fantastic things Were cai'ved : strange birds with folded wings, The slender great grey kangaroo. The warrigal and dark emu, Were rudely drawn — weird hieroglyphs Of some wild dwellers by the cliffs, Who imaged there in that lone place This poetry of their wild race. THE WILD WHITE MAN. 149 Within the sound of lapsing waves He slept the sleep that nature craves, His cares, his woe, his lonely lot In slumber's sweet caress forgot. And hour on hour he slumbered on. While downward dipped the sloping sun. Whose slanting golden-tinted ray Crept slowly up the cavern grey And gilded all within ; Now flooded full the ghostly place. Now wooed him in a fond embrace To mem'ry back again. His wondering gaze now travels o'er The crannied walls, the rugged floor. As for a space he pondering lay Recumbent in the golden ray : A moment, and his wandering eyes Confess a haunting, new surprise ; For there within the shadows grey, Where sand and rocks commingled lay. He saw upraised an inch or more Above the wet sands of the floor Some rudely wrought and fashioned thing. Some relic haply of a race 150 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. That rested in a bygone spring Within that lonely place. He drew it forth with trembling hands From out the yielding yellow sands ; And there upon the cavern's bed It lay — a spear with broken head ! A spear that once with shining length Sped forward with a warrior's strength, While whistling winds a death-note sang, And the loud cry of battle rang. Ah ! little then could Loman see This relic of the past would be, This mute memorial of strife, A thread within his web of life ! He looked upon the twinkling deep, Fresh wakened by the winds from sleep : How lovely and how lonely ! Half He wished the sea might cover him, To sink and hear the waters laugh As the glad waves lapped every limb. Now gazing down the sloping sand He seemed to see a shadowy band THE WILD WHITE MAN. 151 Whose murmurs floated in the air, And to him, half in swoon and trance. The winds of evening seemed to dance Through flowing folds of flying hair. No vision vain ! against the sky He sees wild dusky forms flit by ; And swift across his brain career Confusing thoughts that disappear In one vague wish fulfilled, as now He stands beneath the cavern's brow ; And now, upon the darkening sands. With straining eyes and trembling hands, And sees those strangers of the wood. Who in a wondering moment stood, A shadowy phalanx, where the day In the dim arms of twilight lay. And when they saw in that lone place This vision of a moon-white face, They scattered wide like startled deer. And one upraised the level spear. And Loman saw the pointed doom Quiver upon the heavy gloom. 152 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. And felt as one who nevermore May hope to look on sea or shore, While in that moment, deemed his last. Thought backward wings the whole wide past. But ere the pointed weapon sped One chanced upon the broken head Of the old spear that mouldering lay In that lone cavern many a day ; And to his brother-warriors he Spake in strange tongue excitedly. And they in wonderment beheld That relic of the days of eld, And looked on Loman ; and surprise Lit the dark circles of their eyes ; For they believed him of their race. This stranger of the moon-struck face. Some warrior who in battle died, Returned again to be their guide. While wielding tomahawk and shield On many a gory battle-field. They led him forth upon the sand. They felt each worn and wasted hand. And stroked his matted beard, and bent Looks on his limbs of wonderment ; THE WILD WHITE MAN. 153 Then pointed to the darkening skies With strange wild gestures of surprise : And Loman acquiesced ; and then With joy they greeted him again As brother, and they bore him where Their camp-fires filled the evening air. A moon of summer days rolled by, And under autumn's glowing sky He felt again the rushing flow Of health in limbs with life aglow ; For in the days of sickness he Found in the tribe meet sympathy. And many a dark maid of the wood Within the stranger's mia-mia stood, And tended him with gentle care. That was the inmost soul's revealing, For ah ! the woman's heart was there, And pity stirred each gen'rous feeling : But one, a maid whose dusky face Had more than charms of youthful grace, Would linger near and syllable The language of her race, and tell By that mute speech that fires the eye Of more than friendship's sympathy. 154 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. And so he learned in hours of ease The strange, barbaric tongue of these ; And more, ah, more ! the radiant power Of love that fills the shining hour With rapture, and enkindles light. And makes the inward spirit bright With hope's bewitching ray — The moon of misery's dark night ! The sun of sorrow's day ! And she was loving, laughing, gay, And human, young and warm. The bloom of fifteen summers lay On every opening charm ; The gladsome, glowing, morning light That sparkled in her eyes Flashed as the brands of levin bright That lit her autumn skies. And every limb was modelled bold In savage beauty's ebon mould ; For she was lithe in every limb. And beautiful in darkness grim. The freedom too of forests wide A savage grace bestowed. And through her veins the lava tide Of love resistless flowed ; THE WILD WHITE MAN. ISS And Loman in those witching hours The honey drank of Love's wild flowers. And when the sun-god woke the day, And in the ghostly twilight grey, Above his leafy bed she stood In woman's sweet solicitude, Winning him back in gentle ways To dreaming hours and brighter days : No marvel that his love she won. This dark-eyed daughter of the sun ! And often when the hour was steeped In evening's quiet spell, Or when the silver sickle reaped The shadows in the dell. She'd sit by him and whisper low The legends of the long ago ; And most of all she loved, she said. This old-time story of the dead : The Legend of the Haunted Pool. Dark it lies, unlit for ever By the smiles of laughing blossom, When the summer on the river Bares the beauty of its bosom ; iS6 SONGS. OF THE SOUTH. And the shadows seek it only, And the rushes sigh for ever To the night winds lost and lonely Moaning on the moony river. Years agone a dusky daughter Of the wild tribes long departed Stood beside the reedy water Weaving fancies, maiden-hearted : O, the laughing winds 'uplifted All the beauty of her tresses, Darker than the thunder-rifted Glens of gloomy wildernesses ! There she waited in the shadow Of the giant gums around her, Waited till across the meadow Love light-hearted came and found her ; T^en the sunlight smiled above her, T/ien its amorous radiance sought her. As they met, the dusky lover And the maiden, by the water. Well she knew the doom to meet him, Foeman sworn of all her people, Yet, love-led, she stole to greet him By the windy mountain steeple : THE WILD WHITE MAN. i57 Hate looked forth when love departed, Warned the tribe of deadly danger, And they rose up flinty-hearted. Vowing vengeance on the stranger. Hark, a sound ! Is it the thunder Swooning, dying down the hoar lands? Or the river cleft asunder By the face of falling fore-lands? Or the lutes of windy ridges. Where the cloudy hosts of heaven Build from range to range their bridges. Shattered by the lurid levin? Nay ; her brethren of the forest Swift as glancing swallows sought her. Fierce as when, O range, thou pourest Down thy waste of stormy water ; And the boomerang above her Circled with a deadly warning: Vain the weapons of her lover, — Craven flight and foemen scorning Thus he perished by the river, And her cry of anguish ringing Wildly made the forest quiver, Made the birds forget their singing. iS8 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. Then she turned, the dusky daughter, From the face of her dead lover, And she plunged into the water. And the waves they closed above her. So the pool lies dark for ever, Never lit by laughing blossom ; There the springtides wander never, There no summertides their bosom To the balmy breeze uncover ; Only winds the lost leaves squander Where the maiden and her lover, Ghostly spirits, ever wander. And he forgot his mother-tongue, And wooed in her wild speech the young Lithe maiden, till within his arms He clasped her glowing dusky charms. And in the tribe a chief became ; For he was mightiest in frame. And with the waddy and the spear Inspired a more than mortal fear ; Though never till he came a king Had ruled their warlike race : They heard the note of battle ring Unchieftained, and the death winds sing, Each chieftain in his place. THE WILD WHITE MAN. 159 For countless moons he ruled the race, The foremost warrior in the chase, And keenest when the kangaroo On the dark range arose to view. And none could win the leafy lair And slay like him the native bear, Or with the spear like him how few Could check the wild, the fleet emu, Or with the boomerang could bring From heaven the wild swan on the wing ! But ah, those days ! those barren years That never knew or hopes or fears ! Those everlasting cycles grey That came and went like leaves away! Nor wave of change on that wan sea Of strange immutability ! Nor thought nor mem'ry's faintest gleam Awoke the long-forgotten dream Of home, or friends, or boyhood's face, Among the blue-eyed Northern race. Forgotten too the Saxon tongue Those wild untutored friends among. That language of the days of yore His lips could syllable no more : Reflection's halls he haunted not, Identity and name forgot! i6o SONGS OF THE SOUTH. 'Twas spring-time, and a sea of bloom Rolled o'er the yellow land ; And where the winter's leaden gloom The ancient forest spanned, Yea, where the grave old Harper's string Its rhyme of thunder rolled, The lyrics of the leafy spring Made musical the wold : She in a thousand happy ways Poured out her pilgrim song, Her liturgy of dreamy days The annual woods among. Yea, spring-time ruled the earth and sky. But on the tribe lay heavily The .gathering gloom of hate ; for now You trace it by the sullen brow. And glancing eyes' swift light: A brother of the tribe had died. Not in the battle's rolling tide, The chieftain's aim, the warrior's pride, But in the silent night ; And superstition spake that he Had died of tribal sorcery. They raised their brother-warrior dead And hollowed in the clay his bed ; THE WILD WHITE MAN. i6i And one, a sad-eyed weeping gin, Fettered his knees beneath his chin, For thus they deemed that never he Could rise up from the grave and be A wandering ghost, to smite with dread The lubras mourning for the dead. Above the grave huge logs they piled To ward away the dingo wild ; And sitting crosswise on the ground They voiced a low and moaning sound, A low sound like the sobbing sea, Their wild and native threnody. Song. Farewell to our brother. His spirit has flown, The dark forests shudder, The wild winds make moan ! To the haunts of Nguthuru ^ his spirit has fled — Wuthung balumathi ! ^ Our brother is dead ! In the forest primeval, 'Neath the rain-smitten limb, Where NgarambP makes revel, We parted from him, ' Ghost or shadow. ^ Our younger brother is dead. ' Opossum. II i62 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. While the dark chieftain lay on his bark-builded bed— Wuthung balumathi ! Our brother is dead ! Ah ! the dark limbs shall whiten Full many a day, And Kalarka^ outwiden His wing-weary way At the gleam of his bones, when Ng-uruindh^ is red — Wuthung balumathi ! Our brother is dead ! Farewell ! but his spirit Will walk with us soon, And our mountains inherit, White-faced as a moon ; In the forested deeps shall we hear his swift tread — Wuthung balumathi ! Our brother is dead ! They ceased their mournful song, and when The evening shadows cloaked the glen And the low spires afar lay hid Under a purple pyramid. The warriors of the tribe came forth And turned their faces to the north, ' Wild fowl. ' Sun. THE WILD WHITE MAN. 163 And shook their long spears where arose The mia-mias of their hated foes, The while their war-cry's strident swell Rang on the evening air Till silence in the startled dell Fled from its lonely lair. And Loman vainly strove to quell The tumult indescribable That swayed the wild man in whose soul Reason no instant knew control, Whose morning life had cradled been On many a savage battle scene, Whose every impulse seemed to spring Forth darkly on destruction's wing. Until existence seemingly Drew life from hate's inveteracy. At length had died their wail, and when The moon hung midway o'er the glen Shook out like threads of silver hair The night-time's dewless gossamer. They formed a shadowy line whose march Scarce stirred the gums' saluting arch, And wound their way in spectral file Through the dark bush for many a mile 1 64 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. So noiselessly the dells repeat No sound of their unsandalled feet, So soft the wild opossum deems A night wind breathes, or only seems. And now they stand upon a hill, — Below the foeman's camp lay still, The fires burnt low and red ; And all unconscious on the ground The dark-skinned sleepers lay around As stirless as the dead. And wommera, and shield, and spear, The warriors' ready battle-gear. Upon the ground were spread. Alas ! no few will never wield Upon the battle's bloody field The deadly tomahawk and shield Against another foe ; For noiseless as the windless sleep Of autumn leaves the vengeful creep Into the dell below, Down with fierce eyes all passion-lit Like demons belched from hell's deep pit. Each o'er a sleeping victim stood A moment ere the spear drank blood : THE WILD WHITE MAN. 165 Then rose to heaven one cry That woke the desecrated wood And rent the shuddering sky, And filled the palpitating air, The winds that slept in darkness there, To overflowing with the breath Of human slaughter, reeking death. 'Twas finished ! and they passed away As the first opal tints of day Smote the dark peaks ; but far behind They heard a wail upon the wind, A wailing cry of vengeance borne On the low winds that woke the morn. The death-song sounding in their ears Across the haunted plain Awoke their superstitious fears, Nor winged their flight in vain, As o'er the plains the demon throng In madd'ning terror bore along. And soon in that impetuous pace Devoured the intervening space. And ere the sun the zenith gained They stretched them where the camp-fires waned i66 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. And slumbered through the day ; and when Night filled the forest floor again, They rose and held in savage glee Their weird and wild corroboree. Two mighty fires were kindled where A level stretch of land lay bare, Which made the dim vague forest loom Vaster in its funereal gloom ; And thither came the joyous gins, Wrapped in their loose opossum skins ; And seated on the ground they sang Strange snatches till the forest rang. Re-echoing from tree to tree Their wild unearthly melody. And to the middle space aflame Naked the eager dancers came, Save that a girdle zoned each waist With severed wild skins interlaced. Rude thongs that hung before, behind. And revelled with the wanton wind. With boughs were bound their ankles bare, The wild bird plumed their ebon hair. Or lent its downy tuft to hide Blood-dabbled many a warrior's side. THE WILD WHITE MAN. 167 Where rings of many-coloured clay In skeletonian fashion lay, — How wild and strange 'twere hard to tell, For it was weird and horrible ! In waiting lines the dancers stood ; But when the first hoarse note and rude Rose on the night, where sat the gins Framing with wild opossum skins Their muffled timbrels, lo ! the lines Swayed to and fro like mountain pines. Or tilting lances of the corn Under the clarion call of morn. Now right, now left, the warriors bound Like kangaroos before the hound. Now forward like a marshalled host With deep plumes to the breezes tost ; And now their spears the dark divide. Now sudden win each warrior's side, While level hands the phalanx fling Upon the night winds quivering. Through all the wild and spectral scene. The gins low squatting on the green Approval in the hoarse deep flow Of savage guttural tones bestow. i68 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. Nor niggard praise they shower upon Their leaping lords, as one by one Each sinew strong and thew they strain The plaudits of the crowd to gain, The winning smile on woman's face, Like others of a lordlier race ; For they are strong in frailty, And human, friend, like you and me. But hark ! what wild and sudden cry Resounding woke the echoes nigh. And palsied all the circling throng. The ghostly dance and mystic song ! For ere that cry had died away Poor Lulu's lifeless body lay Upon the sward, deep-crimsoned through. First sacrifice to vengeance due ! A whistling spear from out the gloom Hath winged its mission big with doom. And ere one cries, " A foe ! a foe ! " The messenger of death laid low The wife still flushed with summer gay Loman had won in love's sweet day : The wild and dark-eyed laughing gin. Pure as a lily maid from sin, Who tended him through darkened days With all a woman's glentlest ways. THE WILD WHITE MAN. 169 And made the sunshine of his life, His loyal spouse, his loving wife. And he who loved her with the glow Of purest passion felt again All the old grief of long ago. All the old weight of bitter pain That filled the old years with the cry Of unbelief and agony. Yes, she was dead ! whom Nature wild Had fashioned pure and undefiled, To whom she gave the rarest dower Of love in her most lavish hour! A savage she and unrefined, Yet great of soul and large of mind, Whose singleness contrasting shames Those shrines where social grandeur reigns. Where friendship's but a fleeting breath. And impulse early frowned to death. But Lulu felt the gentler part Of pity in her woman's heart, That fountain warm of love untold, That casket bright of burnished gold ! What though the garden roses share A place in beauty's shining hair. I70 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. The wild red rose upon the hill Hath rarer, richer beauty still : So she in her wild nature proved That purest feelings deep can stir The savage breast, — for ah, she loved ! But peace! the earth is over her! Is over her, the dusky wife Of snow-white heart and stainless life ! And Loman bowed with grief grew grey ; But when the autumn passed away With wintertide, whose rugged flail Smote lingering life within the vale, When wattles bloomed again and spring Among the grasses loitering Scattered her gifts upon the earth, Gladd'ning the old wan world with mirth, He felt the season's gracious power Revealed in every opening flower. In every leaf the young wind swings Joyous as in forgotten springs. And gladdened by the year that spills Rich wine out of the iron hills. And quickened by the raptures keen In one wide world of gold and green. In one glad waste of flower and leaf Marred only by man's senseless grief. THE WILD WHITE MAN. 171 He shook aside his slow sad pain As windy leaves their ling'ring rain, Till sad-eyed brooding Memory cast But broken glances on the past. part IV. 777^ RESCUE. We lay our loved ones down to rest In all the trappings vain of grief: The year's white garland on the breast We weave from tender flower and leaf, A passing tribute to decay That scarce outlives the fading day, Forgetful Nature's during bloom Sheds ever-varied gifts on the unconscious tomb. The soft low wind of fragrance tells. White lilies over cloudland blow, And wild flowers swing their azure bells To woodland winds with music low, A holy calmness fills the air As Nature breathes her low-voiced prayer, Rebuking all the outward show Of idle words that make a mockery of woe. 172 THE WILD WHITE MAN. 173 Ah, leave them ! let the low winds stir The grasses on their greening graves — Death needs no false interpreter, No lettered pomp, no marble craves ! They hear us not, wrapt in the deep Embraces of diviner sleep : Their ears to other sounds incline In other fields that breathe the airs of love divine. Now middle summer red with flame Over the naked hill-tops came. Burning with fiery breath the shade Where low love's voiceless shell was laid, Where fashioned from the ironbark A rude memorial rose to mark Upon the lonely green hill's side The hapless spot where Lulu died. And moons had rolled, and years had sped. And Time his snow-white blossoms shed Around the rugged wintry brow Of him who mourns not Lulu now ; Yet in her lover's heart there lay Faint memories of that darksome day, And that rude grave far far away. But ah ! those memories were as gleams Across a faint low land of dreams, 174 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. Unreal, vague, and undefined. They swept, as barren moors the wind. Through misty chambers of his mind. And far away from that sad place Where slept the fairest of their race The tribe had wandered east, and came To a long stretch of level land, A lonely shore, for miles the same Far weltering waste of changeless sand That fringed for ninety miles the sea With Nature's stern persistency. And here for weeks their mia-mias stood Upon the borders of a wood. Within whose leafy arched aisles At times the wind-blown tide defiles, Forming a chain of long lagoons Nestling beneath the windy dunes. Where swans deploy in lonely pomp Their anchored squadrons on the swamp. And the black duck unfearing leads Her broodling from the sheltering reeds. But once, night brooding on the brine. They saw above the waters shine A star that lit the ghostly tryst Where winds of the horizon kissed THE WILD WHITE MAN. 175 The yearning billows of the sea Thrilled by their stormy minstrelsy. And lo ! again a brighter spark Grew greater from the grosser dark, And streaming wide upon its track A glowing radiance flung afar, As bright as flushed in years far back The Magi's magic star. And now with fixed flame it shone The moaning waste of waves upon, While on the shore the wild men stood By wonderment and fear subdued. And Loman ! Him a strange wild wave Of memory shook. So shakes the brave Strong warder of the woods what time The storm-god sings his song sublime, And rends the heart of heaven and flings Forth on the winds his flashing wings. What time with flame of fire are shod The loud feet of the rushing god. For when he saw the first star dip And rise upon the distant wave. Ah! well he knew the sign that gave The presence of a viewless ship, 176 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. And in his soul to flower there grew The bloom of hope now born anew, — Expectancy that fain would bring Fulfilment on its golden wing. All night upon the lonely shore He stood, and watched the sleepless ray, Until he saw upon the floor Of dawn the blossoms of the day In rosy fulness. Sweeter sight! — Uplifted by departing night, — He saw a goodly ship from shore Some twenty cables' length or more. Whose outlines nearer clearer grew, As morning met the blushing blue. Now o'er the waters came the sound Of song, and all the woods around Re-echoed with the minstrelsy, For glassy lay the sleeping sea. And stirless as a still lagoon Kissed by October's wanton moon. What dawn of hope revives again A world of joy, almost of pain, As from the great ship's lofty prow A fragile pinnace sees he now THE WILD WHITE MAN. 177 The twinkling fields of ocean plough, As bending to the glancing oar The rival sailors sought the shore, Tossing with rapture's keen delight The waters into streams of white, So eagerly they rowed to reach The welcome changes of the beach ! Then, then the wild men startled fled, And to the tangled forest sped. And bore their hesitating chief. Who quailed like June's last troubled leaf. In fear's invasive flight away From those white spirits of the day, Whose gleaming tents in years long past Were on their shores a season cast. Now in the cover of the wood. Watching, the dusky warriors stood. And saw the white men leap to land And bound along the morning shore. And leave the yellow shining strand And climb the hillside hoar. They watch them as they stoop to fill Strange vessels from a trickling rill. Till laden with their liquid store They seek again the shelving shore, 12 178 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. And turn their prow to breast the breeze Now blowing lightly from the seas. And Loman in the sheltering wood Irresolute a moment stood, Then frenzied with a hope new born Pursued the parting sons of morn, And won the water's side. And like the blind old shepherd he Waded waist-deep into the sea. Into the rising tide. The strangers paused a space, and one Glanced down a shining length of steel. The gleaming level of a gun That woke the morning with its peal ; For Loman swarthy was and dark. And stood in nature's raiment stark. So they had deemed him some fierce child Cradled within the forest wild, A subtle foe whose every thought From guile and treachery was wrought. Nor mercy in their hearts awoke. As loud the deadly rifle spoke : Now broad'ning on the heaving tide His blood the waste of waters dyed. THE WILD WHITE MAN. 179 As on its breast he rose and fell Responsive to the sobbing swell. Ah ! ill had fared it then with him Lapped by the waters, lip and limb, Had not his dusky brothers been On. that inhuman savage scene ! Unfearing that strange echoing roar That death unto his chieftain bore A warrior waded out and drew His body from the blood-stained blue, While others showered a sudden rain Of rushing spears upon the main. Then to the deeper woods they pass And couch their chieftain on the grass. And deftly stem the flowing tide That trickled down his gory side. And bathe his wound and chafe each limb Till consciousness returned to him ; And some in herbs most skilled to heal From eucalypts an essence steal, And wooed him back each watchful day To life in their wild savage way. But while he slumbered in the shade. Where death with life the balance weighed. i8o SONGS OF THE SOUTH. The stranger bark upon the seas Unfurled her white wings to the breeze, The sport of Southern wave and wind, And left the long low shore behind, The cradle-couch of fresh despair To him, hope's late expectant heir : For when his wild and wistful glance Embraced the shipless sea's expanse When first he wandered to the shore. Life's stern and passing conflict o'er. The last faint spark that hope had shed His heart upon lay quenched and dead. Nor other guest may enter there Save solitary, wan despair ! From day to day on that low shore He hearkened to the breakers' roar ; For winter's minstrelsy long gave Its thunders to the sounding wave. And while he brooded o'er his care The tribe impatient lingered there ; For they would fain again pursue O'er ranges steep the kangaroo, And in his gloomy forest lair The sleepy gentle native bear : For all the summer game had strayed To every northern Take and glade THE WILD WHITE MAN. i8i And left the wintry coast awhile To revel inland many a mile. And now the camp deserted lies ; But still for hours his ling'ring eyes Look yearning backwards towards the main, Like her who fled Gomorrah's plain ; For his dead hope had found a grave By that inhospitable wave. And of that wandering host not one Who cheered not Loman's footsteps on Through all the weary hours and days, O'er widths of wildest woodland ways. No more the fleetest in the chase ; For now his slow and laggard pace Kept music to the Lubra's tread, While far and far the hunters sped. And once again when time had flown, And waning moons to years had grown. The remnant of an old-time host Had won again the caverned coast Where Barwon's rolling rushing tide Embraced the world of waters wide. Here first young Loman joined the band. All stout of limb and strong of hand ; i82 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. But ah ! what wasting years have sped Since then across his wintry head ! Full thirty years ! oh, lengthened span Of God's allotted life to man, With ghastly nothingness all rife ! — Full thirty years of blotted life ! What dreams of hope, ah, dreamer vain. Have fired thy heart, illumed thy brain. Through all that long and lapsing time Since manhood's proud and princely prime! What ling'ring, cold, and stern despair Hath silvered white thy flowing hair. And left thee, as thou standest now. As cold as Kosciusko's brow! But scarce three suns arose and set On Barwon's beetling shore. Where Bass's thundering billows fret The sounding cavern's hoar. When they beheld with sails outspread Far out upon the sea A stately bark that landward sped. And bore her gallantly ; And on she came, and gaily on. The white man's great canoe, THE WILD WHITE MAN. 183 The while the golden sunlight shone And lit the waters blue. Now scattered far with old affright The dusky children of the night ; But in their savage hearts they bore A vengeance born in days of yore, That nursed through living years at length Had grown to more than passing strength. And Loman knew this vengeance deep Was born of love for him, When he beheld hot passions leap From eye and lip and limb ; And yet his heart went rushing forth To greet those brothers of the North. Nor all the love and friendship won While thirty years their course had run Can yet their mantling mem'ries cast Upon the old unburied past ! And once awaking when the night Had winged full well its middle flight. He heard the warriors whisper low Of vengeance on their white-faced foe ; For now full seven days or more The ship lay anchored off the shore ; i84 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. And day by day the warriors found The pale face on their hunting-ground, Before whose mystic thunders dread Their heritage of game had fled, And vowed no second moon should wake A silver sister in the lake Before the shadowy land would know The spirits of their hated foe. He heard the white man's doom, and lay Perplexed while wore the night away — Nor had sleep's opiate the power To cheat thought's most intrusive hour — Until he saw the glowing east Grow brighter with the pilgrim day. As the first shafts of light released From morn's bright quiver fired the grey ; Strange fancies flitted o'er his mind And burned into his throbbing brain : How vain the welcome of the wind, Blown from the lips of dawn ! how vain ! Morn broadened o'er the bounds of night. Kissing the world to rosy light, And kindling into glowing day The wilds that late in darkness lay. THE WILD WHITE MAN. 185 Now from the still and lifeless camp O'er sandy rise and reedy swamp Stole Loman, till the booming sea Broke on his raptured ear ; and he Made for the margin of the main ; And gazing o'er the watery plain He saw in beauty rise and dip The white prow of the goodly ship. Nor long he watched the nodding prow, For soon upon the waters wide A tiny boat is seen to ride And clamber up the billow's brow, As answering to the bending oar She sped foam-fretted to the shore, And won the shelter of a cliff. And they who urged the yielding skiff Leaped on the land and forward went. Inland their hast'ning footsteps bent ; And Loman followed them until They won a sparkling silver rill, A little rill that voiceless fell Into a thirsty summer dell: And yet when the ranges were green and gay. And blithely the spring-time sang. From the earliest light of the morning grey, i86 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. In the happy tide of a wanton day, With ripple and revel it rang Down gorges drear in a sheer swift flight, Through glens where never was won A vagrant ray of the noon-day sun, Where the dews lay thick from morn till night On the fern leaves every one. And here they rested for a space, And garnered now the bounteous grace Of Nature's liquid wealth : ah ! more At times than all the golden store Of golden lands ! And while they lay Cheating the idle hour away. Or ere their backward march began, Uprose a wild and savage man All timorous near their resting-place. Advancing now with shrinking pace And lifted hands ; while in his eyes Fear mirrored all her swift surprise ! In swift alarm they rose, and one Grasped with quick hand the ready gun ; And now the dark man like a hound Submissive wooed and won the ground ; And nearer crept, and still more near. Nor yet the strangers mastered fear ; THE WILD WHITE MAN. 187 For something in that savage form, That cringing giant frame, Bespoke the wild burst of the storm, The lightning's vivid flame. Quick glances pierce the neighbouring wood As now a listening space they stood ; Nor ambush saw nor sign most dim That spake of treachery in him ! And now the white and dusky race In that wild spot stood face to face ! And Loman gazed with wond'ring look Upon those stranger eyes that took — So thought he — all the beauteous hue Of summer in the burning blue ; For they seemed glowing gods to him Whom darkness lapped in every limb, And each had all the perfect grace Of godhead in his morning face. He strove to speak ; but ah, in vain ! And in that strife what world of pain Smote him as every syllable From his dark lips unmeaning fell ! And then as o'er his spirit swept A light from other years he wept ; SONGS OF THE SOUTH. And in his weeping all men heard And felt that echoing human chord, By sorrow strung, that wakes the soul Of sympathy from pole to pole. Ah ! chide him not if in that hour He cursed as once of old the Power That through all cycles of grey time Filleth with music and with rhyme Of perfect love this planet grey, Filled with unholiest love alway ! Yet only for an instant there Broke on his vision dark despair ; For still he owned the keener sense Of man's most high intelligence. Which all his late wild years could not From reason's lordly record blot. He clasped his hands in suppliant mood, Then bent in kneeling attitude, And traced upon the yielding lea The emblem old of Calvary ! And mingling with his jargon queer One magic word smote on the ear. As kneeling reverent on the sod In guttural tones he murmured, " God," THE WILD WHITE MAN. 189- And smote his breast as Christians do Who tread the honest paths and true. And wild amaze was kindled there, And doubts arose upon the air : A cynic swore that by the Lord He was not of the savage horde ; That art not nature triumphed there Within that rugged bosom bare ; That nought but civil life alone Such outward signs had ever shown ! And he beheld their wavering mood As once again erect he stood, And felt the mighty mystic thrill Of magic Hope's supernal will. And won from her exhaustless dower Her glowing guerdon of the hour : Not from the long-forgotten speech He drew a world of cheer ; For meaningless the words of each Fell on his listening ear, But from the gathering great surprise That glowed in cheek and glist'ning eyes And spoke of human sympathies. igo SONGS OF THE SOUTH. 'By signs he told them when the sun Westward his golden course had run, And darkness trailed its drooping wings Over the face of sleeping things, The warriors of the tribe would take Vengeance on them for vengeance' sake ; And urged them even now to flee Down to the white widths of the sea, And bear with them across the wave Himself, their grateful, willing slave. No idle warning ! even now Behold upon the hill's low brow A score of ruthless hunters stand, Each with a war-spear in his hand ! Then Loman by quick spaces led The white men to their anchored skiff. While fast upon the low sand cliff The dark men gathered overhead. But when their faithless chief had fled To win the boat a great cry rose. The baffled cry of vengeance dread. Of vengeance on their flying foes : And now beneath the windy sky Their hissing spears in tumult fly. THE WILD WHITE MAN. 19I From inland too came echoing loud The war-cry of the savage crowd : Some rushing headlong swarmed the strand To intercept the flying band, And capture in that moment brief Their perjured, false, and traitor chief; For now, alas ! too late they see A captive all too willing he, Thus rending every tribal tie For which the recreant must die ! Nor yet an arrow's flight from shore The fleeing sailors won before The dusky savage gained the blue, And rushing in the tide Another shower of spears they threw That winged their mission wide ; But one unerring, urged with hate, A surer course had run. And in its message big with fate The arm of Loman won, That outspread arm the creature threw Upon the winds to bid adieu To those who harboured him for years, And gave him love, and pity's tears, And that dead wife that sleeps afar. Where winds of shining summer are. 192 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. Then of the startled sailors one Against the wild men raised his gun ; But Loman round the barrel threw His blood-stained arm, wherewith he drew The weapon down ; and with sad eyes, Tear-dimmed of fondest memories, Made mute appeal — nor made too soon For mercy's high and holy boon ! That pleading look, those words unspoke, A thrill of slumb'ring pity woke ; And retribution's stern design The yielding sailors now resign. And each betakes him to the oar To fly the wild resounding shore, Those messengers of death they fear. The boomerang and deadly spear. With shining oars they swept the sea And gained the goodly bark ; and he Who lay spear-stricken in that hour Thrilled with a rapture undefined. As with a waft of magic power Old memories crossed his mind ; For round him swept white faces all. Strange words long lost beyond recall, Till each new syllable became The sound of some forgotten name. THE WILD WHITE MAN. 193 Now, anchor-weighed, across the deep The vessel sped with stately sweep, And won the Heads that stern and grey Gazed seaward from their nursling bay. An anxious hour ! and now she clave Port Phillip's glancing glassy wave ; And now she wins the waters wild Of Yarra young and undefiled. And anchored where a canvas town Upon the crystal stream looked down : O, marvel of the years to be. Unconscious of thy destiny ! Unknowing of thy future great. The golden threads that ran Within thy mystic web of fate. When life's young march began ! But why prolong a lengthened strain, Why sing of lingering days of pain ! Or how the strength of Loman won Bare victory from that grim one Whose wintry shadow chills with gloom Our later life and early bloom ! And happy were those hours, for he Had learned what he unlearned — the free Bold sound of Saxon speech, that grew Upon his senses hour by hour, 13 194 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. Welcome as fall of silver dew Unto the summer flower. Nor need I, patient reader, sing Of men whose deeds in memory ring, Of toil in those brave-hearted years When fought and fell our pioneers — Those wild old years that claim the best Our island annals can attest. O ! great dead years of structure, when Your brave and lion-hearted men Saw in their dreams sublime the great Emancipation of a state, Whose radiant dawn their night's last breath Had kindled on the verge of death, A glory meet to symbolise The splendour of their old emprise ! Nor need the last strains of my song Our hero's after-fate prolong. To tell how to the winds of fame Men spoke aloud of Loman's name ; How gratulations long and loud Pursued him from the clamorous crowd ; And how just thirty years and two From that old tim^ which still is new THE WILD WHITE MAN. 195 Brave Batman bore across the sea Free pardon to the Escaped. Hushed is the song — old sounds and sights Fade softly as a twilight grey Of time long dead when Memory's heights Take shape from thoughts of some sweet day : Yet through the gathering haze I see One wooed of my faint minstrelsy, Whose vesper-time took deeper tone From restless years for ever flown, As still old thoughts that backward slip, Unasked, with him made fellowship. Yea, thoughts that woke love's fond regret In Mem'ry's misty chambers met, And reared again in forests vast, The phantom pageant of the past : The glimmering land of love's delight Gleamed on his momentary sight. With visions of a lonely grave Where winds of Austral winter rave. 196 SONGS OF THE SOUTH. And where, young Yarra, by thy banks The wild flowers waved in rosy ranks, In those glad days ere with rude oar Young Commerce claimed thy smiling shore, Our hero's hut for years was seen, Its garden gay with plots of green, Its wattle grove beneath whose bower The ling'ring child forgot the hour, And claimed a kinship wild with him In fancy's forests vague and dim, In storied haunts of that lone place Where warrior of the old-time race No more may tread the forest maze, The hunting-grounds of other days ; For scattered northward wide and far And dead and gone his brothers are ! And he of all that sable clan Alone survives — THE WILD WHITE MAN. 197 PRESS NOTICES OF THE FIRST SERIES (Continued). The Argus (Melbourne) : "Smooth and facile versification is common enough in the rhymed literature of the day, but true poetry is as rare as ever it was. We find it, however, in several of the shorter pieces contained in this volume. They are not only melodious in form, but poetical in sentiment and expression. They denote on the part of the writer a keen and delicate appre- ciation of the beauties of nature. . . . Mr. O'Hara has evidently lit his lamp at the sun of Tennyson, and the Laureate has no reason for disowning his disciple." The Age (Melbourne) : "... As to the other and more im- portant question (Is he really a poet ?) the answer must also be given in the affirmative. The opinion of the critics both here and at home is unanimous on the point. Since it is possible that local critics might be predisposed to be partial in their judgment, it must be peculiarly gratifying to Mr. O'Hara's Australian friends to find that the favourable opinion which they formed of his first poetic efforts, as they appeared from time to time in the local press, is fully sustained by the very flattering verdict of the English critics on the appearance of his volume in London. . . . The only Australian singer with whom he might come into any sort of rivalry is Kendall. There are points of resemblance of course, since both give voice to the peculiar scenery of their native land ; but in one respect there is a noticeable difference. The genius of Kendall seems to labour under a heavy burden of gloom and melancholy. O'Hara is bright and buoyant." The Telegraph (Melbourne) : " In the unpretentious little volume before us he has displayed the true instincts of a poet, and he bids fair to rani? amongst the most esteemed of Austral singers. His lines are full of melody, poetical in sentiment and expression, and for the most part deserving of high praise. ... It is un- doubtedly an acquisition to Australian literature." The Australasian : " His verses have a melodious sound, the lines run smoothly, there is a considerable variety of metre and stanza, and the impression left is as grateful as the sound of running water." 198 PRESS NOTICES (Continued). The leader : " His verse is characterised by sweetness rather than by power, and he is at his best when interpreting the voice of Nature as heard in mountain, stream, or fair campaign. The melodic rhythm of his lines falls pleasantly upon the ear." The Weekly Times: "In 'Songs of the South' Mr. John Bernard O'Hara has put forth a ' first poetic effort ' that gives promise of a future work of a very high order indeed." The Sydney Morning Herald : " The poems in this collection display smooth and easy versification with much grace and poetic fancy. ... It is clear that Mr. O'Hara has mastered the knack of "writing graceful and poetic verses." Sydney Freeman's Journal : " Most of the songs in the Uttle volume under notice seem to be the outcome of a genuine lyric impulse ; and though the verse is mainly descriptive, it has both colour and melody. . . . The book is, if we are not greatly mis- taken, the work of one who, if he cares to do so, will yet make his mark in Australian literature." The Adelaide Advertiser : " In the majority of his verses he displays a lyrical excellence that was sure of wide acknowledg- ment, and Australians, who are better qualified than English critics to judge of the accuracy of his studies in Australian life and nature, will cordially admit his power of truthful representa- tion. . . . ' Songs of the South ' may be conceded a permanent place in our national literature." The Australian Herald : " It is not only poetry, but is what every one agrees to call poetry. . . . Mr. O'Hara has facility of expression, a large vocabulary, and a good ear for the music of words. . . Some of the maturer pieces reach a high level, and are strong and clear in their expression." Table Talk : " Mr. O'Hara's wealth of language is apparent in all his poetry, which is fast gaining for him a seat in the English Parnassus, where an author is judged by his work, and not by personal considerations, as is often the case in small com- munities." 199 PRESS NOTICES (Continued). Uelboume Punch: "The verses are highly melodious and attractive. They breathe the spirit of the sunny land in which they were written, and demonstrate the fact that Mr. O'Hara has the true poetic faculty." The Southern Cross : "All acknowledge that these Songs are flowers of great beauty and sweetness, and full of an unmistakable promise of the rich and luscious fruit soon to come. . . . Another name must now be added to those of our Australian poets, and judging from the first effort it will certainly take a high place on the scroll of fame." The Australasian Schoolmaster : " The author, as our readers are doubtless aware, is a young Master of Arts of the Melbourne University, who has adopted teaching as his profession, and who has proved the wisdom of his choice by means of the meritorious performances of several pupils whom he has prepared for im- portant examinations of more than one type. His verses are melodious in form, as well as poetical both in sentiment and in expression. . . . What he has already written shows that, in addition to a keen sense of the beauties of nature, he has a very considerable command of language, which he can flavour at will with apt classical references or with appropriate classical quotations."