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Forgotten their care and their sorrow,
If of such they had ever known aught,
Each soul was wrapped up in the morrow --
The morrow which greeted them not;
A sunshiny hope was inspiring
And filling their hearts with a glow
Like that on the billows around them,
Like the silvery ocean below.
As they looked on the haven before them,
Already high looming and near,
What else but a joy could invade them,
Or what could they feel but a cheer?
. . . . .
The eve on the waters was clouded,
And gloomy and dark grew the sky;
The ocean in blackness was shrouded,
And wails of a tempest flew by;
The bark o'er the billows high surging
'Mid showers of the foam-crested spray,
Now sinking, now slowly emerging,
Held onward her dangerous way.
The gale in the distance was veering
To a point that would drift her on land,
And fearfully he that was steering
Look'd round on the cliff-girdled strand.
He thought of the home now before him
And muttered sincerely a prayer
That morning might safely restore him
To friends and to kind faces there.
He knew that if once at the mercy
Of the winds and those mountain-like waves
The sun would rise over the waters --
The day would return on their graves.
. . . . .
Still blacker the heavens were scowling,
Still nearer the rock-skirted shore;
Yet fiercer the tempest was howling
And louder the wild waters roar.
The cold rain in torrents came pouring
On deck thro' the rigging and shrouds,
And the deep, pitchy dark was illumined
Each moment with gleams from the clouds
Of forky-shap'd lightning as, darting,
It made a wide pathway on high,
And the sound of the thunder incessant
Re-echoed the breadth of the sky.
The light-hearted tars of the morning
Now gloomily watching the storm
Were silent, the glare from the flashes
Revealing each weather-beat form,
Their airy-built castles all vanished
When they heard the wild conflict ahead;
Their hopes of the morning were banished,
And terror seemed ruling instead.
They gazed on the heavens above them
And then on the waters beneath,
And shrunk as foreboding those billows
Might shroud them ere morrow in death.
. . . . .
Hark! A voice o'er the tempest came ringing,
A wild cry of bitter despair
Re-echoed by all in the vessel,
And filling the wind-ridden air.
The breakers and rocks were before them
Discovered too plain to their eyes,
And the heart-bursting shrieks of the hopeless
Ascending were lost in the skies.
Then a crash, then a moan from the dying
Went on, on the wings of the gale,
Soon hush'd in the roar of the waters
And the tempest's continuing wail.
The "Storm Power" loudly was sounding
Their funeral dirge as they passed,
And the white-crested waters around them
Re-echoed the voice of the blast.
The surges will show to the morrow
A fearful and heartrending sight,
And bereaved ones will weep in their sorrow
When they think of that terrible night.
. . . . .
The day on the ocean returning
Saw still'd to a slumber the deep --
Not a zephyr disturbing its bosom,
The winds and the breezes asleep.
Again the warm sunshine was gleaming
Refulgently fringing the sea,
Its rays to the horizon beaming
And clothing the land on the lee.
The billows were silently gliding
O'er the graves of the sailors beneath,
The waves round the vessel yet pointing
The scene of their anguish and death.
They seemed to the fancy bewailing
The sudden and terrible doom
Of those who were yesterday singing
And laughing in sight of their tomb.
. . . . .
'Tis thus on the sea of existence --
The morning begins without care,
Hope cheerfully points to the distance,
The Future beams sunny and fair;
And we -- as the bark o'er the billows,
Admiring the beauty of day,
With Fortune all smiling around us --
Glide onward our silvery way.
We know not nor fear for a sorrow
Ever crossing our pathway in life;
We judge from to-day the to-morrow
And dream not of meeting with strife.
This world seems to us as an Eden
And we wonder when hearing around
The cries of stern pain and affliction
How such an existence is found.
But we find to our cost when misfortune
Comes mantling our sun in its night,
That the Earth was not made to be Heaven,
Not always our life can be bright.
In turn we see each of our day-dreams
Dissolve into air and decay,
And learn that the hopes that are brightest
Fade soonest -- far soonest away.
(These lines were written in 1857, and were suggested by the wreck
of the ~Dunbar~, but the writer did not confine himself in particular
to a description of that disaster, as may be seen from perusal. -- H.K.)
~~~ Oh, Tell Me, Ye Breezes ~~~
Perchance as ye flitted on heedlessly by
Tell me, ye breezes, ye've traversed the wild,
Ye answer me not but are passing away -- ~~~ The Far Future ~~~
Australia, advancing like day on the sky,
Australia, advancing with Power, will entwine
Australia, advancing with rapid wing'd stride,
(I hope the above will not be considered disloyal. It is but reasonable ~~~ Silent Tears ~~~
Here is a wound that in the breast
The world may deem from outward looks ~~~ Extempore Lines ~~~
A morning crowns the Western hill,
Too long the "Dark of Ignorance"
Since Adam lived, the mighty ones
A tiny rill will swell a stream,
The "few" will try to beat it down, ~~~ The Old Year ~~~
It passed with its shadows, its smiles and its tears,
It passed, but the bark on its billowy track
It fled; but away and away in its wake ~~~ Tanna ~~~
Shades of my father, the hour is approaching.
No more will he traverse the flame sheeted mountain,
His voice in the battle, loud thunder resembling,
The `muska' hung up on the cocoa is sleeping,
The lines are suspended, the `muttow' is broken,
Ye cloud-seated visions, ye shades of my fathers,
. . . . .
The struggles are over, the cords are asunder,
Come downwards a space thro' the fogs till ye meet him,
Thanks, spirits departed! -- heard I not your voices
The midnight is clearing; the Death-song is ended.
(Tanna is one of the largest islands in the group known as the New Hebrides.
Tanna, besides the never-sleeping volcano, has its other objects of interest
When any of their great warriors die, the aborigines believe that
(Explanation of Native Words: "Arrochin" -- Heaven. "Cava" -- a drink extracted from a root. ~~~ The Earth Laments for Day ~~~
The moon is rising o'er the hill,
She mourneth for the lovely day,
The evening queen will strive in vain
But why should gentle Nature weep
Oh, can she not from yonder sky ~~~ The Late W. V. Wild, Esq. ~~~
The leaves of the autumn are scattering fast,
A strange shadow broods o'er the desolate earth,
How weary we grow when we turn to reflect
It is useless to grieve o'er the light that has fled ~~~ Astarte ~~~
Astarte, Syrian sister,
Ah, Helen Hope in heaven,
Astarte knoweth, darling,
If I am past all crying,
To: The List of Poetic Works of Henry Kendall
To: Australian Master Poets Menu
Oh, tell me, ere passing away,
If Leichhardt's bold spirit has fled to its rest?
Where moulders the traveller's clay?
The long lost was yielding his breath;
Perchance ye have borne on your wings the last sigh
That 'scap'd from the lone one in death.
And passed o'er the desolate spot,
Where reposeth in silence sweet Nature's own child,
Where slumbers one nearly forgot?
Ye breezes that spring from the west,
Unhallow'd still moulders the traveller's clay,
For unknown is the place of his rest.
Shall plant among nations her banners in pride,
The yoke of dependence aside she will cast,
And build on the ruins and wrecks of the Past.
Her flag on the tempest will wave to proclaim
'Mong kingdoms and empires her national name;
The Future shall see it, asleep or unfurl'd,
The shelter of Freedom and boast of the world.
Has glimmer'd thro' darkness, will blazon on high,
A Gem in its glitter has yet to be seen,
When Progress has placed her where England has been;
When bursting those limits above she will soar,
Outstretching all rivals who've mounted before,
And, resting, will blaze with her glories unfurl'd,
The empire of empires and boast of the world.
With Honour and Justice a Mercy divine;
No Despot shall trample -- no slave shall be bound --
Oppression must totter and fall to the ground.
The stain of all ages, tyrannical sway,
Will pass like a flash or a shadow away,
And shrink to nothing 'neath thunderbolts hurl'd
From the hand of the terror -- the boast of the world.
Shall plant among nations her banners in pride;
The yoke of dependence aside she will cast,
And build on the ruins and wrecks of the Past.
Her flag in the tempest will wave to proclaim,
'Mong kingdoms and empires her national name,
And Ages shall see it, asleep or unfurl'd
The shelter of Freedom and boast of the world.
to imagine that Australia will in the far future become
an independent nation -- that imagination springing as it does
from a native-born Australian brain. -- H.K.)
Yon mourner's faded cheek?
Those scalding drops betray a grief
Within, too full to speak.
Outspoken words cannot express
The pangs, the pains of years;
They're ne'er so deep or eloquent
As are those silent tears.
Must canker, hid'n from sight;
Though all without seems sunny day,
Within 'tis ever night.
Yet sometimes from this secret source
The gloomy truth appears;
The wind's dark dungeon must have vent
If but in silent tears.
That heart is hard and cold;
But oh! could they the mantle lift
What sorrows would be told!
Then, only then, the truth would show
Which most the bosom sears:
The pain portrayed by burning words
Or that by -- silent tears.
A day begins to reign,
A sun awakes o'er distant seas --
Shall never sleep again.
The world is growing old,
And men are waxing wise;
A mist has cleared -- a something falls
Like scales from off their eyes.
Has brooded on their way;
Too long Oppression 's stood before,
Excluding light of day.
But now they've found the track
And now they've seen the dawn,
A "beacon lamp" is pointing on,
Where stronger glows the morn.
Have ever ruled the weak;
Since Noah's flood, the fettered slave
Has seldom dared to speak.
'Tis time a voice was heard,
'Tis time a voice was spoken
So in the chain of tyranny
A link or two be broken.
A spark will cause a flame,
And one man's burning eloquence
Has help'd to do the same.
And he will persevere,
And soon that blaze must spread,
Till to the corners of the earth
Reflecting beams are shed.
But can they stop the flood --
Bind up the pinions of the light,
Or check the will of God?
And is it not His will
That deeply injured Right
Should overthrow the iron rule
And reign instead of Might?
It fled like a mist at the dawn of the day;
It lasted its moment, then backward was hurled,
Another increase to the age of the world.
It passed as a stream to the ocean of years;
Years that were coming -- were here -- and are o'er,
The ages departed to visit no more.
Leaves an impression on waters aback:
The glow of the gloaming remains on the sky,
Unwilling to leave us -- unwilling to die.
There lingers a something that time cannot break.
The past and the future are joined by a chain,
And memories live that must ever remain.
Prepare ye the `cava' for `Yona' on high;
Make ready the welcome, ye souls of Arrochin.
The Death God of Tanna speaks -- Yona must die.
To lead forth his brothers to hunting and war;
No more will he drink from the time honoured fountain,
Nor rise in the councils of Uking-a-shaa.
Has died like a zephyr o'errunning the plain;
His whoop like the tempest thro' forest trees trembling,
Shall never strike foemen with terror again.
And Attanam's spirits have gathered a-nigh
To see their destroyer; and, wailing and weeping,
Roll past on the night-breathing winds of the sky.
The canoe's far away from the water-wash'd shore,
Mourn, mourn, ye `whyeenas', the word has been spoken,
The chieftain can bring ye the `weepan' no more.
Awake from your slumbers, the trumpet blast blow;
The moments are flying, the mountain mist gathers,
And Yona is leaving his camp fire below.
Ye Phantoms hold forward your heavenly light,
Speak on the wings of the sky-shaking thunder,
And fill him with joy on the path of his flight.
Throw open the doors of Arrochin awide,
And stand on the thresholds, ye Shadows to greet him --
The glory of Tanna, the Uking'shaa's pride.
Faint rolling along on the breath of the gale?
Thanks, spirits departed! Le-en-na rejoices:
Ye've answered the mourner -- ye've silenced the wail.
The Chieftain has gone, but ye've called him away;
For he smiled as he listened, obedient ascended,
The voice in his ear, and the torch on his way.
The natives of it, in common with all their South Sea brethren,
are generally titled by the whites "Kanakas". They are of the negro family,
resembling in feature, very closely, the Feejee tribes. It is said that
they believe in the existence of a Superior Being, whose earthly dwelling
they fancy is in the burning volcanoes for which the island is remarkable.
They believe in a future happy state, and call their heaven "Arrochin".
They are divided into small tribes or clans; the largest of these
are the Ukingh-a-shaa and Attanam families. A spirit of rivalry
between these two last-mentioned often causes long and bloody wars
all over the island.)
in the many boiling springs that surround the base of the burning mountain.
Some of these are held as holy, and none but chiefs are permitted
to taste their waters. Such restriction, however, does not extend over all.
the spirits of Arrochin prepare a great feast there for their coming guest,
and for fear he should lose himself on the road thither they (the spirits)
call to him and blow trumpets, sending some one at the same time with torches
to meet him and guide him on his way to those blessed regions.
(The natives believe it is made and drunk in Arrochin where it grows
as in Tanna). "Muska" (corruption of the English term, musket) --
of late their chief weapon in war. "Muttow" -- a fishing-hook.
"Whyeena" -- woman (this is not the original native appellation;
that I could never ascertain). "Weepan" -- Fish (their principal food).
"Leenna" and "Yona" -- native names. -- H.K.)
The evening winds are sighing
Among the trees -- and yonder stream
Is mournfully replying,
Lamenting loud the sunny light
That in the west is dying.
Her slanting rays are creeping
Where Nature lies profoundly still
In happy quiet sleeping,
And resting on her face, they'll find
The earth is wet with weeping.
Now deep in darkness shaded;
She sheds the dewy tear because
Of morning's mantle faded;
She misses from her breast the garb
In which the moon array'd it.
To break the spell which bound her;
A million stars can never throw
Departed warmth around her;
They all must pass away and leave
The earth as they had found her.
That night has overtaken
The wearied world that needed sleep,
Refreshed to re-awaken,
So richer light might burst around,
The gloomy shadows breaking?
That gleams above her, borrow
A single ray, or find a way
To check the tear of sorrow?
A beam of hope would last her till
The dawning of to-morrow.
"Though the harp of my country now slumbers,
Some hand will pass o'er it, in love for the dead,
And attune it to sorrowful numbers!"
But the hopes that I clung to are withering things,
For the days have gone by with a cloud on their wings,
And the touch of a bard is unknown to the strings --
~Oh, why art thou silent, Australia?~
The willows look barren and lonely;
But I dream a sad dream of my friend of the past,
And his form I can dwell upon only!
In the strength of his youth I can see him go by.
There is health on the cheek, and a fire in the eye --
Oh, who would have thought that such beauty could die!
~Ah, mourn for thy noblest, Australia!~
And the cypresses tremble and quiver;
But my heart waxeth dark with the thoughts of the worth
That has left us for ever and ever!
A dull cloud creepeth close to the moon,
And the winter winds pass with a shuddering croon --
Oh, why was he snatched from his brothers so soon?
~Ah, weep for thy lost one, Australia!~
Upon what we have seen and believed in;
When harping on promises hopelessly wrecked,
And the things we have all been deceived in!
When a voice that I loved lingers near to me yet!
And a kind, handsome face which I'll never forget --
Can I wake to the present and stifle regret --
~Can I smother these feelings, Australia?~
But the harp of my country still slumbers;
And I thought that some bard in his love for the dead,
Would have thrilled it to sorrowful numbers!
Lo, the hopes that I clung to are withering things
For the days have gone by with a cloud on their wings,
And my hand is too feeble to strike at the strings --
~Oh, why art thou silent, Australia?~
O, look, luxurious night!
She comes, the bright-haired beauty,
My luminous delight!
My luminous delight!
So hush, ye shores, your roar,
That my soul may sleep, forgetting
Dead Love's wild Nevermore!
Your face is wet with tears;
I think you know the secret
One heart hath held for years!
One heart hath held for years!
But hide your hapless love,
And my sweet -- my Syrian sister,
Dead Love's wild Nevermore!
My queen of long ago,
I've swooned with adoration,
But could not tell you so,
Or dared not tell you so,
My radiant queen of yore!
And you've passed away and left me
Dead Love's wild Nevermore!
Of eyes that once did weep,
What time entranced Passion
Hath kissed your lips in sleep;
Hath kissed your lips in sleep;
But now those tears are o'er,
Gone, my saint, with many a moan to
Dead Love's wild Nevermore!
What thoughts are maddening me,
Of you, my darling, dying
Upon the lone, wide sea,
Upon the lone, wide sea,
Ah! hush, ye shores, your roar,
That my soul may sleep, forgetting
Dead Love's wild Nevermore!
Copyright 1996-2001 - KRACKATINNI IS THE REGISTERED TRADEMARK OF RODNEY JOHN O'BRIEN