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an anthology of australian verse-第16节

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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 passage 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 spacious;

 Impassive; 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。



Pass; 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

 Passes 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 passion 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。



Hair with the red gold's luring tinge;

 Fine as the finest silk;

Violet eyes with a golden fringe

 And cheeks of roses and milk。



Something of this you must have been;

 Something gentle and sweet;

To have broken your heart at seventeen

 And died in such sad defeat。



Hardly one of your kinsfolk live;

 It was all so long ago;

The tale of the cruel love to give

 That laid you here so low。



Loving; trusting; and foully paid 

 The story is easily guessed;

A blotted sun and skies that fade

 And this grass…grown grave the rest。



Whatever the cynic may sourly say;

 With a dash of truth; I ween;

Of the girls of the period; in your day

 They had hearts at seventeen。



Dead of a fashion out of date;

 Such folly has passed away

Like the hoop and patch and modish gait

 That went out with an older day。



The stone is battered and all awry;

 The words can be scarcely read;

The rank reeds clustering thick and high

 Over your buried head。



I pluck one straight as a Paynim's lance

 To keep your memory green;

For the lordly sake of old Romance

 And your own; sad seventeen。









John Sandes。







  ‘With Death's Prophetic Ear'





Lay my rifle here beside me; set my Bible on my breast;

 For a moment let the warning bugles cease;

As the century is closing I am going to my rest;

 Lord; lettest Thou Thy servant go in peace。

But loud through all the bugles rings a cadence in mine ear;

 And on the winds my hopes of peace are strowed。

Those winds that waft the voices that already I can hear

 Of the rooi…baatjes singing on the road。



Yes; the red…coats are returning; I can hear the steady tramp;

 After twenty years of waiting; lulled to sleep;

Since rank and file at Potchefstroom we hemmed them in their camp;

 And cut them up at Bronkerspruit like sheep。

They shelled us at Ingogo; but we galloped into range;

 And we shot the British gunners where they showed。

I guessed they would return to us; I knew the chance must change 

 Hark! the rooi…baatjes singing on the road!



But now from snow…swept Canada; from India's torrid plains;

 From lone Australian outposts; hither led;

Obeying their commando; as they heard the bugle's strains;

 The men in brown have joined the men in red。

They come to find the colours at Majuba left and lost;

 They come to pay us back the debt they owed;

And I hear new voices lifted; and I see strange colours tossed;

 'Mid the rooi…baatjes singing on the road。



The old; old faiths must falter; and the old; old creeds must fail 

 I hear it in that distant murmur low 

The old; old order changes; and 'tis vain for us to rail;

 The great world does not want us  we must go。

And veldt; and spruit; and kopje to the stranger will belong;

 No more to trek before him we shall load;

Too well; too well; I know it; for I hear it in the song

 Of the rooi…baatjes singing on the road。









Inez K。 Hyland。







  To a Wave





Where were you yesterday?  In Gulistan;

 With roses and the frenzied nightingales?

Rather would I believe you shining ran

 With peaceful floods; where the soft voice prevails

Of building doves in lordly trees set high;

 Trees which enclose a home where love abides 

His love and hers; a passioned ecstasy;

 Your tone has caught its echo and derides

My joyless lot; as face down pressed I lie

 Upon the shifting sand; and hear the reeds

Voicing a thin; dissonant threnody

 Unto the cliff and wind…tormented weeds。

As with the faint half…lights of jade toward

 The shore you come and show a violet hue;

I wonder if the face of my adored

 Was ever held importraitured by you。

Ah; no! if you had seen his face; still prest

 Within your hold the picture dear would be;

Like that bright portrait which so moved the breast

 Of fairest Gurd with soft unrest that she;

Born in ice halls; she who but raised her eyes

 And scornful questioned; 〃What is love; indeed?

None ever viewed it 'neath these northern skies;〃 

 Seeing the face soon learned love's gentle creed;

But you hold nothing to be counted dear 

 Only a gift of weed and broken shells;

Yet I will gather one; so I can hear

 The soft remembrance which still in it dwells:

For in the shell; though broken; ever lies

 The murmur of the sea whence it was torn 

So in a woman's heart there never dies

 The memory of love; though love be lorn。







  Bread and Wine





A cup of opal

 Through which there glows

The cream of the pearl;

 The heart of the rose;

And the blue of the sea

 Where Australia lies;

And the amber flush

 Of her sunset skies;

And the emerald tints

 Of the dragon fly

Shall stain my cup

 With their brilliant dye。

And into this cup

 I would pour the wine

Of youth and health

 And the gifts divine

Of music and song;

 And the sweet content

Which must ever belong

 To a life well spent。

And what bread w

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