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Ah, and the shattered column crowned with the poet's wreath.
Who, who keeps silent and solemn his pa.s.sing place beneath?
~This was a poet that loved G.o.d's breath; his life was a pa.s.sionate quest; he looked down deep in the wells of death, and now he is taking his rest.~
To A. L. Gordon
In night-long days, in aeons where all Time's nights are one; where life and death sing paeans as of Greeks and Galileans, never begun or done;
where fate, the slow swooping condor, comes glooming all the sky -- as you have pondered I ponder, as you have wandered I wander, as you have died, shall I die?
Love and Death
Death? is it death you give? So be it! O Death, thou hast been long my friend, and now thy pale cool cheek shall have my kiss, while the faint breath expires on thy still lips, O lovely Death!
Come then, loose hands, fair Life, without a wail!
We've had good hours together, and you were sweet what time love whispered with the nightingale, tho' ever your music by the lark's would fail.
Come then, loose hands! Our lover time is done.
Now is the marriage with the eternal sun.
The hours are few that rest, are few and fleet.
Good-bye! The game is lost: the game is won.
Thomas William Heney.
Absence
Ah, happy air that, rough or soft, May kiss that face and stay; And happy beams that from above May choose to her their way; And happy flowers that now and then Touch lips more sweet than they!
But it were not so blest to be Or light or air or rose; Those dainty fingers tear and toss The bloom that in them glows; And come or go, both wind and ray She heeds not, if she knows.
But if I come thy choice should be Either to love or not -- For if I might I would not kiss And then be all forgot; And it were best thy love to lose If love self-scorn begot.
A Riverina Road
Now while so many turn with love and longing To wan lands lying in the grey North Sea, To thee we turn, hearts, mem'ries, all belonging, Dear land of ours, to thee.
West, ever west, with the strong sunshine marching Beyond the mountains, far from this soft coast, Until we almost see the great plains arching, In endless mirage lost.
A land of camps where seldom is sojourning, Where men like the dim fathers of our race, Halt for a time, and next day, unreturning, Fare ever on apace.
Last night how many a leaping blaze affrighted The wailing birds of pa.s.sage in their file; And dawn sees ashes dead and embers whited Where men had dwelt awhile.
The sun may burn, the mirage shift and vanish And fade and glare by turns along the sky; The haze of heat may all the distance banish To the uncaring eye.
By speech, or tongue of bird or brute, unbroken Silence may brood upon the lifeless plain, Nor any sign, far off or near, betoken Man in this vast domain.
Though tender grace the landscape lacks, too s.p.a.cious, Impa.s.sive, silent, lonely, to be fair, Their kindness swiftly comes more soft and gracious, Who live or tarry there.
All that he has, in camp or homestead, proffers To stranger guest at once a stranger host, Proudest to see accepted what he offers, Given without a boast.
Pa.s.s, if you can, the drover's cattle stringing Along the miles of the wide travelled road, Without a challenge through the hot dust ringing, Kind though abrupt the mode.
A cloud of dust where polish'd wheels are flashing Pa.s.ses along, and in it rolls the mail.
Comes from the box as on the coach goes dashing The lonely driver's hail.
Or in the track a station youngster mounted Sits in his saddle smoking for a "spell", Rides a while onward; then, his news recounted, Parts with a brief farewell.
To-day these plains may seem a face defiant, Turn'd to a mortal foe, yet scorning fear; As when, with heaven at war, an Earth-born giant Saw the Olympian near.
Come yet again! No child's fair face is sweeter With young delight than this cool blooming land, Silent no more, for songs than wings are fleeter, No blaze, but sunshine bland.
Thus in her likeness that strange nature moulding Makes man as moody, sad and savage too; Yet in his heart, like her, a pa.s.sion holding, Unselfish, kind and true.
Therefore, while many turn with love and longing To wan lands lying on the grey North Sea, To-day possessed by other mem'ries thronging We turn, wild West, to thee!
23rd December, 1891.
Patrick Edward Quinn.
A Girl's Grave
"Aged 17, OF A BROKEN HEART, January 1st, 1841."
What story is here of broken love, What idyllic sad romance, What arrow fretted the silken dove That met with such grim mischance?
I picture you, sleeper of long ago, When you trifled and danced and smiled, All golden laughter and beauty's glow In a girl life sweet and wild.