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~~~ Basil Moss ~~~
A story shining with a woman's love!
What was the fate
~This~ was his tale. For years he kept himself
There is no need
Yet sometimes, in the gloomy breaks between
So fared the drunkard for five awful years --
Then Basil Moss,
And so he did; and fought this time the fight
Here ends the tale of Basil Moss. To wives ~~~ Hunted Down ~~~
But foiled was the terror of fin, and baffled the strength of the tide,
But wolf of the hills at the end -- chased back to the depths of his lair --
Two years had his shadow been cast in forest, on highway, and run;
Dick Blake had the scent of a hound, the eye of a lynx, and could track
The mountains were many, but he who had captured big Terrigal Bill,
But the answer was blue, bitter lead, and the brother of Dick, with a cry, ~~~ Wamberal ~~~
Back there are the pondering mountains; there the dim, dumb ranges loom --
Wamberal, the home of echoes! Hard against a streaming strand,
Friend of mine beyond the mountains, here and here the perished days
Seasons come with tender solace -- time lacks neither light nor rest; ~~~ ~In Memoriam~ -- Alice Fane Gunn Stenhouse ~~~
The grand, authentic songs that roll
Yea, deep and full the South Wind sings
And where the hermit hornet hums,
Now on the misty mountain tops,
Keen fitful gusts shoot past the shore
A sobbing spirit wanders where
And ah! the fine, majestic grief
Too human for the thought to slip --
Man's mournful speech, the wail of tree,
To-night my soul looks back and sees,
A sufferer with a touching face
The fair, tired soul whose twofold grief
The large beloved heart whereon
I knew him well -- the grand, the sweet,
He, glorified by god-like lore,
God called him Home. And, in the calm
But left as solace for the hours
She, like a stray sweet seraph, shed
Suppressing, with sublime self-slight,
And, in the home so sanctified
And helped the widowed heart to lean,
Moreover, having lived, and learned
But though she had for every one
Yet self-withdrawn -- held out of reach
Then sometimes would escape a cry
At last there came the holy touch,
By hearse-like yews and grey-haired moss,
God help her soul! She cannot see,
Except it be that faltering faith
Ah, teach her, Lord! And shed through grief
Let me, a son of sin and doubt,
Give her the eyes to see the things --
Yea, shining from the highest blue
So that her heart may find the great, ~~~ From the Forests ~~~
Where in a green, moist, myrtle dell
The melodies of many leaves
I'll weave a garland out of these,
With certain words alive with light
The faithful few have waited long
May every page within this book
May all the strength and all the grace
And may that strange divinity
Here where the free, frank waters run,
May noble thoughts in faultless words --
This fair fresh life with joy I hail,
Here ends my song; I have a dream ~~~ John Bede Polding ~~~
With reverent eyes and bowed, uncovered head,
The perfect speech of superhuman spheres
And therefore he who in these latter days
But he, Thy son upon whose shoulders shone
O, Master, since the gentle Stenhouse died
Some lofty lord of music yet may find
But you will listen to the voice, although
O marvellous follower in the steps of Christ,
You saw it, Father? Let me think you did
A hope from lives like yours must everywhere
Here in a land of many sects, where God
How wonderful the self-repression must
How patiently -- with how divine a strength
Because men strove you did not love them less;
A crowned hierophant -- a high Chief-Priest
'Mid splendid forms of faith which flower and fill
The pomp of altars, chasubles, and fires
A lord of scholarship whose knowledge ran
O Father! I who at your feet have knelt,
As dies a gentle April in a sky
But though your stately face is as the dust
Ah! may it teach us -- may the lives that are
Let one of these at least retain the hope
Such hope, O Master, is a light indeed ~~~ Outre Mer ~~~
Beyond the sea -- behold it,
Across the main a vision
To: The List of Poetic Works of Henry Kendall
To: Australian Master Poets Menu
Thy haughty alpine anthem, over tracts
Whose passes and whose swift, rock-straitened streams
Catch mighty life and voice from thee, and make
A lordly harmony on sea-chafed heights.
Sing, mountain-wind, and take thine ancient tone,
The grand, austere, imperial utterance.
Which drives my soul before it back to days
In one dark hour of which, when Storm rode high
Past broken hills, and when the polar gale
Roared round the Otway with the bitter breath
That speaks for ever of the White South Land
Alone with God and Silence in the cold,
I heard the touching tale of Basil Moss,
And who that knows that love can ever doubt
How dear, divine, sublime a thing it is;
For while the tale of Basil Moss was one
Not blackened with those stark, satanic sins
Which call for superhuman sacrifice,
Still, from the records of the world's sad life,
This great, sweet, gladdening fact at length we've learned,
There's not a depth to which a man can fall,
No slough of crime in which such one can lie
Stoned with the scorn and curses of his kind,
But that some tender woman can be found
To love and shield him still.
Of Basil Moss who, thirty years ago,
A brave, high-minded, but impetuous youth,
Left happy homesteads in the sweetest isle
That wears the sober light of Northern suns?
What happened him, the man who crossed far, fierce
Sea-circles of the hoarse Atlantic -- who,
Without a friend to help him in the world,
Commenced his battle in this fair young land,
A Levite in the Temple Beautiful
Of Art, who struggled hard, but found that here
Both Bard and Painter learn, by bitter ways,
That they are aliens in the working world,
And that all Heaven's templed clouds at morn
And sunset do not weigh one loaf of bread!
Erect, and looked his troubles in the face
And grappled them; and, being helped at last
By one who found she loved him, who became
The patient sharer of his lot austere,
He beat them bravely back; but like the heads
Of Lerna's fabled hydra, they returned
From day to day in numbers multiplied;
And so it came to pass that Basil Moss
(Who was, though brave, no mental Hercules,
Who hid beneath a calmness forced, the keen
Heart-breaking sensibility -- which is
The awful, wild, specific curse that clings
Forever to the Poet's twofold life)
Gave way at last; but not before the hand
Of sickness fell upon him -- not before
The drooping form and sad averted eyes
Of hectic Hope, that figure far and faint,
Had given all his later thoughts a tongue --
"It is too late -- too late!"
To tell the elders of the English world
What followed this. From step to step, the man --
Now fairly gripped by fierce Intemperance --
Descended in the social scale; and though
He struggled hard at times to break away,
And take the old free, dauntless stand again,
He came to be as helpless as a child,
And Darkness settled on the face of things,
And Hope fell dead, and Will was paralysed.
Each fit of madness issuing from his sin,
He used to wander through familiar woods
With God's glad breezes blowing in his face,
And try to feel as he was wont to feel
In other years; but never could he find
Again his old enthusiastic sense
Of Beauty; never could he exorcize
The evil spell which seemed to shackle down
The fine, keen, subtle faculty that used
To see into the heart of loveliness;
And therefore Basil learned to shun the haunts
Where Nature holds her chiefest courts, because
They forced upon him in the saddest light
The fact of what he was, and once had been.
The last of which, while lighting singing dells,
With many a flame of flowers, found Basil Moss
Cooped with his wife in one small wretched room;
And there, one night, the man, when ill and weak --
A sufferer from his latest bout of sin --
Moaned, stricken sorely with a fourfold sense
Of all the degradation he had brought
Upon himself, and on his patient wife;
And while he wrestled with his strong remorse
He looked upon a sweet but pallid face,
And cried, "My God! is this the trusting girl
I swore to love, to shield, to cherish so
But ten years back? O, what a liar I am!"
She, shivering in a thin and faded dress
Beside a handful of pale, smouldering fire,
On hearing Basil's words, moved on her chair,
And turning to him blue, beseeching eyes,
And pinched, pathetic features, faintly said --
"O, Basil, love! now that you seem to feel
And understand how much I've suffered since
You first gave way -- now that you comprehend
The bitter heart-wear, darling, that has brought
The swift, sad silver to this hair of mine
Which should have come with Age -- which came with Pain,
Do make one more attempt to free yourself
From what is slowly killing both of us;
And if you do the thing I ask of you,
If you but try this ~once~, we may indeed --
We may be happy yet."
Remembering in his marvellous agony
How often he had found her in the dead
Of icy nights with uncomplaining eyes,
A watcher in a cheerless room for him;
And thinking, too, that often, while he threw
His scanty earnings over reeking bars,
The darling that he really loved through all
Was left without enough to eat -- then Moss,
I say, sprang to his feet with sinews set
And knotted brows, and throat that gasped for air,
And cried aloud -- "My poor, poor girl, ~I will~."
Out to the bitter end; and with the help
Of prayers and unremitting tenderness
He gained the victory at last; but not --
No, not before the agony and sweat
Of fierce Gethsemanes had come to him;
And not before the awful nightly trials,
When, set in mental furnaces of flame,
With eyes that ached and wooed in vain for sleep,
He had to fight the devil holding out
The cup of Lethe to his fevered lips.
But still he conquered; and the end was this,
That though he often had to face the eyes
Of that bleak Virtue which is not of Christ
(Because the gracious Lord of Love was one with Him
Who blessed the dying thief upon the cross),
He held his way with no unfaltering steps,
And gathered hope and light, and never missed
To do a thing for the sake of good.
And every day that glided through the world
Saw some fine instance of his bright reform,
And some assurance he would never fall
Into the pits and traps of hell again.
And thus it came to pass that Basil's name
Grew sweet with men; and, when he died, his end
Was calm -- was evening-like, and beautiful.
Who suffer as the Painter's darling did,
I dedicate these lines; and hope they'll bear
In mind those efforts of her lovely life,
Which saved her husband's soul; and proved that while
A man who sins can entertain remorse,
He is not wholly lost. If such as they
But follow her, they may be sure of this,
That Love, that sweet authentic messenger
From God, can never fail while there is left
Within the fallen one a single pulse
Of what the angels call humanity.
Been out since the night of escape -- two years under horror and ban.
In a time full of thunder and rain, when hurricanes hackled the tree,
He slipt through the sludge of a drain, and swam a fierce fork of the sea.
Through the roar of the storm, and the ring
and the wild savage whistle of hail,
Did this naked, whipt, desperate thing
break loose from the guards of the gaol.
And breasting the foam of the bay, and facing the fangs of the bight,
With a great cruel cry on his way, he dashed through the darkness of night.
For a devil supported his chin and a fiend kept a watch at his side.
And hands of iniquity drest the hellish hyena, and gave
Him food in the hills of the west -- in cells of indefinite cave.
Then, strengthened and weaponed, this peer
of the brute, on the track of its prey,
Sprang out, and shed sorrow and fear through the beautiful fields of the day.
And pillage and murder, and worse, swept peace from the face of the land --
The black, bitter work of this curse with the blood on his infamous hand.
Had horror for neighbour and friend -- he supped in the dark with despair.
A whisper of leaf or a breath of the wind in the watch of the night
Was ever as message of death to this devil bent double with fright.
For now were the hunters abroad; and the fiend like an adder at bay,
Cast out of the sight of the Lord, in the folds of his fastnesses lay.
Yea, skulking in pits of the slime -- in venomous dens of eclipse --
He cowered and bided his time, with the white malice set on his lips.
But Nemesis tracked him at last, and swept him from under the sun.
Foul felons in chains were ashamed to speak of the bloodthirsty thing
Who lived, like a panther inflamed, the life that no singer can sing --
Who butchered one night in the wild three women, a lad, and a maid,
And cut the sweet throat of a child -- its mother's pure blood on his blade!
But over the plains and away by the range and the forested lake,
Rode hard, for a week and a day, the terrible tracker, Dick Blake.
Where never a sign on the ground or the rock could be seen by the black.
A rascal at large, when he heard that Blake was out hard at his heels,
Felt just as the wilderness bird, in the snare fettered hopelessly, feels.
And, hence, when the wolf with the brand of Cain written thrice on his face,
Knew terrible Dick was at hand, he slunk like a snake to his place --
To the depths of his kennel he crept, far back in the passages dim;
But Blake and his mates never slept; they hunted and listened for him.
The slayer of Hawkins and Lee, found tracks by a conical hill.
There were three in the party -- no more: Dick Blake and his brother, and one
Who came from a far-away shore, called here by the blood of his son.
Two nights and two days did they wait on the trail of the curst of all men;
But on the third morning a fate led Dick to the door of the den;
And a thunder ran up from the south and smote all the woods into sound;
And Blake, with an oath on his mouth, called out for the fiend underground.
Fell back, and the storm overhead set night like a seal on the sky;
And the strength of the hurricane tore asunder hill-turrets uphurled;
And a rushing of rain and a roar made wan the green widths of the world.
The flame, and the roll, and the ring, and the hiss of the thunder and hail
Set fear on the face of the Spring laid bare to the arrow of gale.
But here in the flash and the din, in the cry of the mountain and wave,
Dick Blake, through the shadow, dashed in and strangled the wolf in his cave.
Like the song that once I loved so, softly of the old time sings --
Softly of the old time speaketh -- bringing ever back to me
Sights of far-off lordly forelands -- glimpses of the sounding sea!
Now the cliffs are all before me -- now, indeed, do I behold
Shining growths on wild wet hillheads, quiet pools of green and gold.
And, across the gleaming beaches, lo! the mighty flow and fall
Of the great ingathering waters thundering under Wamberal!
Ghostly shapes in dead grey vapour -- half-seen peaks august with gloom.
There the voice of troubled torrents, hidden in unfathomed deeps,
Known to moss and faint green sunlight, wanders down the oozy steeps.
There the lake of many runnels nestles in a windless wild
Far amongst thick-folded forests, like a radiant human child.
And beyond surf-smitten uplands -- high above the highest spur --
Lo! the clouds like tents of tempest on the crags of Kincumber!
Sits the hill of blind black caverns, at the limits of the land.
Here the haughty water marches -- here the flights of straitened sea
Make a noise like that of trumpets, breaking wide across the lea!
But behold, in yonder crescent that a ring of island locks
Are the gold and emerald cisterns shining moonlike in the rocks!
Clear, bright cisterns, zoned by mosses, where the faint wet blossoms dwell
With the leaf of many colours -- down beside the starry shell.
Come like sad reproachful phantoms, in the deep grey evening haze --
Come like ghosts, and sit beside me when the noise of day is still,
And the rain is on the window, and the wind is on the hill.
Then they linger, but they speak not, while my memory roams and roams
Over scenes by death made sacred -- other lands and other homes!
Places sanctified by sorrow -- sweetened by the face of yore --
Face that you and I may look on (friend and brother) nevermore!
But the old thoughts were such ~dear~ ones, and the old days seem the best.
And to those who've loved and suffered, every pulse of wind or rain --
Every song with sadness in it, brings the peopled Past again.
Therefore, just this shell yet dripping, with this weed of green and grey,
Sets me thinking -- sets me dreaming of the places far away;
Dreaming of the golden rockpools -- of the foreland and the fall;
And the home behind the mountains looming over Wamberal.
Across grey widths of wild-faced sea,
The lordly anthems of the Pole,
Are loud upon the lea.
The mighty symphonies that make
A thunder at the mountain springs --
A whiteness on the lake.
When Summer fires his wings with gold,
The hollow voice of August comes,
Across the rain and cold.
Where gleams the crag and glares the fell,
Wild Winter, like one hunted, stops
And shouts a fierce farewell.
And hiss by moor and moody mere --
The heralds bleak that come before
The turning of the year.
By fits and starts the wild-fire shines;
Like one who walks in deep despair,
With Death amongst the pines.
Which fills the heart of forests lone,
And makes a lute of limb and leaf
Is human in its tone.
How every song that sorrow sings
Betrays the broad relationship
Of all created things.
The words the winds and waters say,
Make up that general elegy,
Whose burden is decay.
Across wind-broken wastes of wave,
A widow on her bended knees
Beside a new-made grave.
By love and grief made beautiful;
Whose rapt religion lights the place
Where death holds awful rule.
For child and father lends a tone
Of pathos to the pallid leaf
That sighs above the stone.
She used to lean, lies still and cold,
Where, like a seraph, shines the sun
On flowerful green and gold.
Pure nature past all human praise;
The dear Gamaliel at whose feet
I sat in other days.
First showed my soul Life's highest aim;
When, like one winged, I breathed -- before
The years of sin and shame.
Beyond our best possessions priced,
He passed, as floats a faultless psalm,
To his fair Father, Christ.
Of sorrow and the loss thereof;
A sister of the birds and flowers,
The daughter of his love.
A healing spirit, that flamed and flowed
As if about her bright young head
A crown of saintship glowed.
The awful face of that distress
Which fell upon her youth like blight,
She shone like happiness.
By death in its most noble guise,
She kissed the lips of love, and dried
The tears in sorrow's eyes.
So broken up with human cares,
On one who must be felt and seen
By such pure souls as hers.
The taste of Life's most bitter spring,
For all the sick this sister yearned --
The poor and suffering.
The phrase of comfort and the smile,
This shining daughter of the sun
Was dying all the while.
Was grief; except when music blent
Its deep, divine, prophetic speech
With voice and instrument.
From that dark other life of hers --
The half of her humanity --
And sob through sound and verse.
With psalms from higher homes and hours;
And she who loved the flowers so much
Now sleeps amongst the flowers.
Where wails the wind in starts and fits,
Twice bowed and broken down with loss,
The wife, the mother sits.
For very trouble, anything
Beyond this wild Gethsemane
Of swift, black suffering;
Which leads the lips of life to say:
"There must be something past this death --
Lord, teach me how to pray!"
The clear full light, the undefiled,
The blessing of the bright belief
Which sanctified her child.
Whose feet are set in ways amiss --
Who cannot read Thy riddle out,
Just plead, and ask Thee this;
The Life and Love I cannot see;
And lift her with the helping wings
Thou hast denied to me.
On those that sing by Beulah's streams,
Shake on her thirsty soul the dew
Which brings immortal dreams.
Pure faith for which it looks so long;
And learn the noble way to wait,
To suffer, and be strong.
The torrent voice rings strong
And clear, above a star-bright well,
I write this woodland song.
Float in a fragrant zone;
And here are flowers by deep-mossed eaves
That day has never known.
The darlings of the birds,
And send it over singing seas
With certain sunny words --
Of welcome for a thing
Of promise, born beneath the white,
Soft afternoon of Spring.
A life like this to see;
And they will understand the song
That flows to-day from me.
Be as a radiant hour;
Or like a bank of mountain brook,
All flower and leaf and flower.
Of Letters make it beam
As beams a lawn whose lovely face
Is as a glorious dream.
That men call Genius write
Some deathless thing in days to be,
To fill those days with light.
I pray this book may grow
A sacred candour like the sun
Above the morning snow.
In clean white diction -- make
It shine as shines the home of birds
And moss and leaf and lake.
And this belief express,
Its days will be a brilliant tale
Of effort and success.
Of beauty like the grace
Which lies upon the land of stream
In yonder mountain place.
A son of sorrow kneels by fanes you knew;
But cannot say the words that should be said
To crowned and winged divinities like you.
Man has not heard since He of Nazareth,
Slain for the sins of twice two thousand years,
Saw Godship gleaming through the gates of Death.
Has lost a Father -- falling by the shrine,
Can only use the world's ephemeral phrase,
Not, Lord, the faultless language that is Thine.
So long Elisha's gleaming garments, may
Be pleased to hear a pleading human tone
To sift the spirit of the words I say.
And left the void that none can ever fill,
One harp at least has sorrow thrown aside,
Its strings all broken, and its notes all still.
Its pulse of passion. I can never touch
The chords again -- my life has been too blind;
I've sinned too long and suffered far too much.
The harp is silent -- you who glorified
Your great, sad gift of life, because you know
How souls are tempted and how hearts are tried.
How pure your spirit must have been to see
That light beyond our best expression priced
The effluence of benignant Deity.
Because I, groping in the mists of Doubt,
Am sometimes fearful that God's face is hid
From all -- that none can read His riddle out!
Become like faith -- that blessing undefiled,
The refuge of the grey philosopher --
The consolation of the simple child.
As shaped by man in countless forms appears,
Few comprehend how carefully you trod
Without a slip for two and forty years.
Have been, that made you to the lovely close
The Christian crowned with universal trust,
The foe-less Father in a land of foes.
Of tolerance you must have watched the frays
Of fighting churches -- warring through the length
Of your bright, beautiful, unruffled days!
You felt for each -- for everyone and all --
With that same apostolic tenderness
Which Samuel felt when yearning over Saul.
On flame with robes of light, you used to be;
But yet you were as humble as the least
Of those who followed Him of Galilee.
God's oldest Church with gleams ineffable
You stand, Our Lord's serene disciple still,
In all the blaze which on your pallium fell.
Of incense, moved you not; nor yet the dome
Of haughty beauty -- follower of the Sires --
Who made a holiness of elder Rome.
Through every groove of human history, you
Were this and more -- a Christian gentleman;
A fount of learning with a heart like dew.
On wings of singing fall, and fail to sing,
Remembering the immense compassion felt
By you for every form of suffering.
Of faultless beauty -- after many days
Of loveliness and grand tranquillity --
So passed your presence from our human gaze.
That windy hills to wintering hollows give,
Your memory like a deity august
Is with us still, to teach us how to live.
Take colour from the life that was; and may
Those souls be helped that in the dark so far
Have strayed, and have forgotten how to pray!
That fine examples, like a blessed dew
Of summer falling in a fruitful scope,
Give birth to issues beautiful and true.
To him that knows how hard it is to save
The spirit resting on no certain creed
Who kneels to plant this blossom on your grave.
A broad, bright, quiet sea;
Beyond it lies a haven --
The only home for me.
Some men grow strong with trouble,
But all my strength is past,
And tired and full of sorrow,
I long to sleep at last.
By force of chance and changes
Man's life is hard at best;
And, seeing rest is voiceless,
The dearest thing is rest.
The home I wish to seek
The refuge of the weary,
The solace of the weak!
Sweet angel fingers beckon,
Sweet angel voices ask
My soul to cross the waters;
And yet I dread the task.
God help the man whose trials
Are tares that he must reap;
He cannot face the future --
His only hope is sleep.
Of sunset coasts and skies,
And widths of waters gleaming,
Enchant my human eyes.
I, who have sinned and suffered,
Have sought -- with tears have sought --
To rule my life with goodness,
And shape it to my thought;
And yet there is no refuge
To shield me from distress,
Except the realm of slumber
And great forgetfulness.
Copyright 1996-2001 - KRACKATINNI IS THE REGISTERED TRADEMARK OF RODNEY JOHN O'BRIEN