And he looks at God's day in the face.
For, rough as he seems, he would
shudder to wrong
A dog with the loss of a hair;
And the angels of shine and superlative song
See his heart and the deity there.
Few know him, indeed; but the beauty that glows
In the forest is
loveliness still;
And Providence helping the life of the rose
Is a Friend and a Father to Bill.
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COORANBEAN
YEARS fifty, and seven to boot, have
smitten the children of men
Since sound of a voice or a foot came out of the head of that glen.
The brand of black devil is there - an evil wind moaneth around -
There is doom, there is death in the air: a curse groweth up from the ground!
No noise of the axe or the saw in that hollow unholy is heard,
No fall of the hoof or the paw, no whirr of the wing of the bird;
But a grey mother down by the sea, as wan as the foam on the strait,
Has counted the beads on her knee these forty-nine winters and eight.
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Whenever an elder is asked - a white-headed man of the woods -
Of the terrible
mystery masked where the dark everlastingly broods,
Be sure he will turn to the bay, with his back to the glen in the range,
And glide like a
phantom away, with a
countenance pallid with change.
From the line of dead
timber that lies supine at the foot of the glade,
The
fierce-featured eaglehawk flies - afraid as a dove is afraid;
But back in that
wilderness dread are a fall and the forks of a ford -
Ah! pray and
uncover your head, and lean like a child on the Lord.
A
sinister fog at the wane - at the change of the moon cometh forth
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Like an
ominous ghost in the train of a bitter, black storm of the north!
At the head of the gully unknown it hangs like a spirit of bale.
And the noise of a
shriek and a groan strikes up in the gusts of the gale.
In the
throat of a feculent pit is the beard of a bloody-red sedge;
And a foam like the foam of a fit sweats out of the lips of the ledge.
But down in the water of death, in the livid, dead pool at the base -
Bow low, with inaudible
breath,
beseech with the hands to the face!
A furlong of fetid, black fen, with gelid, green patches of pond,
Lies dumb by the horns of the glen - at the gates of the
horror beyond;
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And those who have looked on it tell of the terrible growths that are there -
The flowerage fostered by hell, the blossoms that
startle and scare.
If ever a wandering bird should light on Gehennas like this
Be sure that a cry will be heard, and the sound of the flat adder's hiss.
But hard by the jaws of the bend is a
ghastly Thing matted with moss -
Ah, Lord! be a father, a friend, for the sake of the Christ of the Cross.
Black Tom, with the sinews of five - that never a hangman could hang -
In the days of the shackle and gyve, broke loose from the guards of the gang.
Thereafter, for seasons a score, this devil prowled under the ban;
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A mate of red talon and paw, a wolf in the shape of a man.
But,
ringed by ineffable fire, in a
thunder and wind of the north,
The sword of Omnipotent ire - the bolt of high Heaven went forth!
But, wan as the
sorrowful foam, a grey mother waits by the sea
For the boys that have never come home these fifty-four winters and three.
From the folds of the forested hills there are ravelled and
roundabout tracks,
Because of the
terror that fills the strong-handed men of the axe!
Of the workers away in the range there is none that will wait for the night,
When the storm-stricken moon is in change and the
sinister fog is in sight.
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And later and deep in the dark, when the bitter wind whistles about,
There is never a howl or a bark from the dog in the
kennel without,
But the white fathers
fasten the door, and often and often they start,
At a sound like a foot on the floor and a touch like a hand on the heart.
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WHEN UNDERNEATH THE BROWN DEAD GRASS
WHEN
underneath the brown dead grass
My weary bones are laid,
I hope I shall not see the glass
At ninety in the shade.
I trust indeed that, when I lie
Beneath the
churchyard pine,
I shall not hear that
startling cry
```Thermom' is ninety-nine!''
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If one should
whisper through my sleep
``Come up and be alive,''
I'd answer - No, unless you'll keep
The glass at sixty-five.
I might be
willing if allowed
To wear old Adam's rig,
And mix
amongst the city crowd
Like Polynesian ``nig''.
Far better in the sod to lie,
With pasturing pig above,
Than broil beneath a
copper sky -
In sight of all I love!
Far better to be turned to grass
To feed the poley cow,
Than be the half boiled bream, alas,
That I am really now!
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For cow and pig I would not hear,
And hoof I would not see;
But if these items did appear
They wouldn't trouble me.
For ah! the pelt of
mortal man
Weighs less than half a ton,
And any sight is better than
A
sultry southern sun.
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THE VOICE IN THE WILD OAK
(Written in the Shadow of 1872)
TWELVE years ago, when I could face
High heaven's dome with different eyes -
In days full-flowered with hours of grace,
And nights not sad with sighs -
I wrote a song in which I strove
To shadow forth thy
strain of woe,
Dark widowed sister of the grove! -
Twelve wasted years ago.
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But youth was then too young to find
Those high
authentic syllables,
Whose voice is like the wintering wind
By sunless mountain fells;
Nor had I sinned and suffered then
To that superlative degree
That I would rather seek, than men,
Wild
fellowship with thee!
But he who hears this autumn day
Thy more than deep autumnal rhyme,
Is one whose hair was shot with grey
By Grief instead of Time.
He has no need, like many a bard,
To sing
imaginary pain,
Because he bears, and finds it hard,
The
punishment of Cain.
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No more he sees the affluence
Which makes the heart of Nature glad;
For he has lost the fine, first sense
Of Beauty that he had.
The old delight God's happy breeze
Was wont to give, to Grief has grown;
And
therefore, Niobe of trees,
His song is like thine own!
But I, who am that perished soul,
Have wasted so these powers of mine,
That I can never write that whole,
Pure, perfect speech of thine.
Some lord of words
august, supreme,
The grave, grand
melody demands;
The dark
translation of thy theme
I leave to other hands.
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Yet here, where plovers
nightly call
Across dim,
melancholy leas -
Where comes by whistling fen and fall
The moan of
far-off seas -
A grey, old Fancy often sits
Beneath thy shade with tired wings,
And fills thy strong, strange rhyme by fits
With awful utterings.
Then times there are when all the words
Are like the sentences of one
Shut in by Fate from wind and birds
And light of stars and sun,
No dazzling dryad, but a dark
Dream-haunted spirit doomed to be
Imprisoned, crampt in bands of bark,
For all eternity.
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Yea, like the speech of one aghast
At Im
mortality in chains,
What time the
lordly storm rides past
With flames and arrowy rains:
Some wan Tithonus of the wood,
White with immeasurable years -
An awful ghost in solitude
With moaning moors and meres.
And when high
thunder smites the hill
And hunts the wild dog to his den,
Thy cries, like maledictions, shrill
And
shriek from glen to glen,
As if a
frightful memory whipped
Thy soul for some
infernal crime
That left it blasted, blind, and stript -
A dread to Death and Time!
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But when the fair-haired August dies,
And flowers wax strong and beautiful,
Thy songs are
stately harmonies
By wood-lights green and cool -
Most like the voice of one who shows
Through sufferings
fierce, in fine relief,
A noble
patience and
repose -
A
dignity in grief.
But, ah! conceptions fade away,
And still the life that lives in thee -
The soul of thy
majestic lay -
Remains a
mystery!
And he must speak the speech
divine -
The language of the high-throned lords -
Who'd give that grand old theme of thine
Its sense in
faultless words.
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By hollow lands and sea-tracts harsh,
With ruin of the fourfold gale,
Where sighs the sedge and sobs the marsh,
Still wail thy
lonely wail;