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The Bush Fire, and Other Verses

Chapter 5: SUFFOLK.
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About This Book

A collection of lyrical poems that evoke rural and coastal settings through vivid sensory detail, from urgent scenes of grass fires and driven cattle to quiet evenings by the river and shore. The verses alternate brisk, eventful narratives with meditative pieces on bees, birds, and seasonal light, while recurring subjects include homestead life, animal behavior, longing, friendship, and the passage of time. Natural imagery anchors moments of crisis, tenderness, and reflection, and a few poems note cultural change and memory as the landscape and its people are observed with affectionate, observant attention.

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This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook.

Title: The Bush Fire, and Other Verses

Author: Ida Lee

Release date: April 5, 2020 [eBook #61762]
Most recently updated: October 17, 2024

Language: English

Credits: Produced by Chuck Greif, MFR and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
produced from images generously made available by The
Internet Archive)

*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BUSH FIRE, AND OTHER VERSES ***

 

T H E   B U S H   F I R E

AND OTHER VERSES

 

 

THE BUSH FIRE

AND OTHER VERSES

BY

IDA LEE


SECOND EDITION


LONDON
SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON & COMPANY

Limited

St. Dunstan’s House


Fetter Lane, Fleet Street, E.C.

1897


LONDON:
PRINTED BY GILBERT AND RIVINGTON, I.D.,
ST. JOHN’S HOUSE, CLERKENWELL ROAD, E.C.





TO MY

FATHER AND MOTHER

 

 

CONTENTS.

 PAGE
The Bush Fire1
Bill, the Groom4
White Sea Horses10
Suffolk13
The Fish-Girl’s Song18
Phantoms of the Sea20
The Water Frog23
The Forest King’s Lament25
The Drover’s Vision30
The Homestead34
The Bushman’s Wooing44
The Violet’s Message49
To a Far Distant Friend52
The Promise54
Where Lilies Grow57
Nature’s Lessons59

 

THE BUSH FIRE.

Stockman (Loq.).

Wake up, boy! the grass is burning;
See the glare across the hill!
Flames are nearing the “Flat Paddock,”
And the sheep are in there still.
Dark you say! Yes, so I think it,
Tho’ I see the field of corn;
But the lights which flicker thro’ it
Are not those we see at dawn.
Mount the Arab! Take wet sacking!
Wet it must be, mind, not dry;
We must save the master’s cattle,
If we perish while we try.
Ride on faster, you are younger,
Tie your horse to yonder tree,
Break some overhanging branches
One for you and one for me.

Face the fire and do not shirk it,
Never mind the smoke and heat;
Do not heed the dead wood cracking,
Or the sparks beneath your feet.
Beat and blind them, crush and kill them,
Till their blackened embers lie
Stark in ashes, and around you,
One by one in darkness die.
See the blaze is growing greater,
Now it runs with many a leap
To where stand the tall white gum trees,
In whose limbs the parrots sleep,—
Throws its fiery arms around them;
Every bird in terror flies
From its home in grief forsaken,
Shrieking harsh unearthly cries.
Will the wind not turn to Westward,
Or those great black clouds drop rain?
There was thunder! no, I doubt it,
But do listen once again.
Now I hear the poor sheep bleating,
How they gaze from out the gloom,
Like the stake-bound men we read of
Who have died the martyr’s doom.
Just this moment they were rushing
Thro’ the scrub down to the plain,
Parch’d and weary. Now returning,
They seek refuge here again.
. . . . .
It was thunder! It is raining,
For the cinders, hot and red,
Hiss, as cool drops fall upon them
Through the branches overhead.
Sweetly blows the yellow wattle
’Cross the road and up the lane,
But to me the scent is sweetest
Of the damp and moist’ning rain.
How it plays upon the firewood,
With a pattering ceaseless sound,
Like some grand and glorious music
Sent to soothe the saddened ground.
Take my arm, boy! I feel blinded!
’Tis with joy from such a sight.
Lead me home. I will thank God there
For His love to me to-night.

“The Bush Fire” appeared in “The Sydney Mail” (Christmas Number), December 19th, 1896.

BILL, THE GROOM.

When Bill first said he’d ride her, I think I did say “no,”
We told him all about her, the way that she would go,
That she had bucked and thrown us whene’er she’d got the chance.
Bill leaped the fence and caught her, she led him such a dance!
He put the saddle on her, it was not nearly tight,
I ran across and fixed it,—and he rode out of sight.
The hay-shed hid them from me, I watched them ’long the fence,
The mare then walked so quietly, I thought she’d learnt some sense;
I know he’d got his stirrups, and held the reins quite straight,
And sat his saddle firmly as he went out the gate.
I went and fed his horses, and forked their straw all round,
Then something seemed to whisper that Bill was on the ground;
I thought I heard him calling, but when I raised his head
His face was white and fainting, he looked to me quite dead.
I don’t know how it happened; but there! my eyes grow dim,
I helped him mount the chestnut,—and she dealt his death to him.
We brought him in and laid him upon his bed to rest,
And night and day we’ve waited, just hoping for the best,
And done our utmost for him—the family are away,—
The doctor says he cannot see out another day;
Tho’ living’s mostly trouble, my life I’m sure I’d give,
If I could bring back yesterday, and let poor Billy live.
He’s waking now, they tell me, but not for long, poor lad,
If he but had his mother, ’twould make his end less sad.
For years they have been parted, yet strange enough it seems,
Last night she came in spirit to calm his troubled dreams.
They say she is in England, across the ocean blue:
I know she here was watching her boy the long night through.
Don’t say it all was fancy! I’m not a bushman raw;
Bill saw her when she entered, first in the open door,
He followed every footstep until she reached his bed,
And caught her hand and held it, as she stroked his tired head.
And when she rose to leave us, the light, a narrow streak,
Crept underneath the windows, and tears stole down her cheek;
Her face was drooping lowly, it looked so pained and sad,
As once her glances rested upon the sleeping lad.
. . . . . .
He asks about his horses, and wants to bid good-bye
To “Colonel” and to “Captain,” to “Mill” and “Marjorie,
And even to the chestnut! he says it was his fault,
She only bucked just once or twice, and when she seemed to halt,
He pulled against the bridle, then up she reared in air
And fell right over on him—he lay beneath her there.
Come, wheel his bed among them and turn them in their stalls,
’Tis hard if he can’t see them before his strength quite falls.
They seem to know he’s going—they lick his outstretched hand,
And as he speaks they whinny, the sight is really grand!
But when he sees the chestnut (for in the door she stood),
I never thought a youngster could be one half as good,
He pats her, and he pets her, and strokes her bright red mane;
The beast I’m sure is sorry she’s caused him all this pain
(I do believe I’m crying, tho’ Bill wears such a smile,
He hardly could be wicked with a face so free from guile).
And there, among the horses, he said he heard a call,
Tho’ everyone kept silent and solemn thro’ it all.
His voice once broke the stillness, “That’s not the stable bell?
The angels call me, mother!”—I caught him as he fell;
We did not try to raise him; I saw it was no use;
The horses they were standing, with halters swinging loose,
To watch our every movement: we took his bed inside,
And now I know they’re grieving because poor Bill has died.

WHITE SEA HORSES.

Glad sea horses! Sad sea horses!
Rear the head, and toss the mane,
Spread out wide in bands together.
Face the boundless deep again!
Grand white horses! Stand, white horses!
Just one moment calm and still,
In the bright and sparkling sunshine!
None would dream your wrath would kill.
Wait, white horses! Bait, white horses!
While you don those trappings new;
Now your noble chests are wrapt in
Sumptuous folds of green-fringed blue.
Tall white horses! Small white horses!
Can it be in peace or war,
Thus you madly race the ocean
Till you reach the sand-strewn bar?
Champing horses! Ramping horses!
Mid the roaring, mid the noise,
Ere your fetlocks churn the billows,
Proudly they uplifted poise.
Darting horses! Parting horses!
They have broken loose away,
Flinging far behind their traces,
As they plunge among the spray!
Racing horses! Pacing horses!
When you speed with foam-shod feet,
Does, unseen, some ghost or spirit
Prick your flanks with spurrings fleet?
Vain sea horses! Strain, sea horses,
With the sinews you possess,
Dashing high, above the waters,
Heads which never knew distress!
Fighting horses! Biting horses!
Open mouths and nostrils wide,
Arching necks and tangled forelocks,
Snapping jaws on either side.
Fierce wild horses! Pierce wild horses!
As the ship doth glide along,
They have struck athwart the bulwarks
Blow on blow, dealt loud and strong.
Mad white horses! Bad white horses!
Has the vessel spoilt your chase?
How you turn aside to lash it,
In a passionate embrace!
Splashing horses! Crashing horses!
Soon you frolic left and right,
Angels guard storm-beaten sailors
Who encounter you to-night!

SUFFOLK.

AN EVENING IN AUTUMN.

Gray shadows speed the fading day,
And creeping mists assert their sway;
They rise arrayed in varied hue,
From sober black to faintest blue,
As smoke mounts o’er a slumbering fire,
Or lingers round some funeral pyre.
Across the fields and in the wood,
Where pheasant nestles o’er her brood,
No sound is heard; the lifeless trees
Scarce move their branches in the breeze,
And fallen leaves lie curled and damp
Where glow-worm shows his tiny lamp.
Soon too with day the shadowed light
Will folded sleep, in arms of night.
Upon the marsh and up the hill
Wild rabbits scamper with a will.

The crimson sun so warm and red
Now sunken lies, in regal bed,
And tinted clouds float gently by,
Like rose-leaves o’er a painted sky.
The bending river wends its way,
Through meadows green where oxen stray;
It stretches out its lengthy arm,
Which twists and turns past heath and farm.
Here, wild fowl often make their nest,
And plover, too, with golden crest,
From off its banks will fly or run
Amid the reeds at setting sun.
The village wrapt in sweet content
Reviews, ere night, the day well spent;
And cotters lean without their door
To talk with friends the season o’er.
Beyond the sward, smooth lies the beach
Whence mighty waters onward reach,
And to the shore still rippling send
Sweet murmurings that do not end.
So softly do the wavelets move,
They seem to breathe but words of love
As if they feared or trembled, lest
They hurt one shell upon its breast;
Or cast one pebble on the sand,
Lest it should know their strength of hand.
Thus fades the day before my sight
While nature waits the coming night.

MORNING.

Dark broke the daylight, cold and gray,
And sea-birds flecked the foaming spray,
Above the deep. The waves now dashed,
And rolling huge, so heavily lashed
Their watery fleece against the strand.
But yesterday, with loving hand,
They laved its face with warm caress,
And softly on its cheek did press.
The glowing sun, which blessed that day,
Now frowning clouds hid far away.
No tinted rays could burst the veil,
Which falling thick in showers of hail,
And stinging sleet, that blew so fierce,
The smallest floweret seemed to pierce;
And tossed aside the golden sheaf,
Or cut like steel each tiny leaf.
The breeze arose, but not to jest,
Or soothe those fears which breathe unrest;
It sprang up strong—not lightly gay—
Nor deigned with one rose-leaf to play;
But rushing madly to the wood,
Uprooted trees as there they stood,
Then threw them down among the gorse,
And crushed the ferns with cruel force.
When, whistling by the sea-girt dale,
It caused the fisherwife to pale;
And made the worn-out rafters quake,
The sleepers suddenly awake.
The busy smacksmen set their sail,
And trim their boats to ride the gale;
While aged seamen creep in sight
To glean the dangers of the night.
They long to join the gallant band,
Though wan of face and weak of hand,
And gaze upon the angry sea,
Which stirs the fading memory
To bring some peril past to each,
A lesson new, their age to teach,
When walking back to humble cot,
Each ache and ailment is forgot.
And in their homes the threadbare tale
Of wreck and rescue will not fail
The hours to enliven thro’ the day,
And chase aside the shadows gray,
Which, round their lives’ uncertain sea,
Now deepen where the warnings be
Of one last voyage which must be made
Ere sailings be for ever stayed.

NOON.

At noon’s sweet hour came peace once more,
Wide open Nature laid her store
Of fragrant flowers—the birds sang gay,
To blot the sins of dawn away.
The sea herself, though foaming still,
Acknowledged then a stronger will,
Altho’ at night the mourner’s tear
Fell thick and fast. Yet ever here
Tears dew the sorrow-stricken eyes,
While grief sits by to foster sighs.
Men only learn in Heaven above
The wisdom of our Father’s love.

THE FISH-GIRL’S SONG.

Clang! Clang! Clang!
I set my basket down;
The bells hang high in the belfry tower,
And tell the folk ’tis the evening hour,
Through in and out the town.
Clang! Clang! Clang!
O hush my wooden shoon!
When gently I swing the sacred door,
And kneel me down on the marble floor
To beg a heavenly boon.
Clang! Clang! Clang!
Good things all end too soon;
I bow the knee as I say good-bye,
To holy place, with its spire on high:
Such restless wooden shoon!
Clang! Clang! Clang!
Work, morning, night and noon;
For daily bread, and for nightly rest!
My heart is cheered and my soul is blest,
Ring out, O wooden shoon!

PHANTOMS OF THE SEA.

Black phantoms gather o’er the sea,
And move in groups mysteriously;
With shears in hand they watching wait.
The night grows old; the hour is late;
The ocean foams with angry glee,
Its waters roll tempestuously,
And dash the white salt-spangled spray
Against the rocks, in rudest play.
All noiselessly, with one consent,
Their work but on one object bent,
They carry out a sovereign will,
And never rest, and ne’er are still.
They look like beings who frequent
A nether world—their time is spent
In weaving sorrow, grief, and pain
For those who sail the boundless main.
Quite unaware, from out the night,
A ship glides forth so tall and white
Amid the darkness. Straightway she
Steers headlong to Eternity.
The vessel bears across the deep
A freight, who all unconscious sleep.
Gray gloom hath topped each frowning height
Which rising phantoms hide from sight;
With outstretched hands in air they loom,
The ship to beckon to its doom.
But no, not yet; ’tis not to be;
Thou’rt cheated! Look, thou angry sea!
Above the heights, there doth appear
A form, upholding high a spear
Of sparkling light! It is the morn!
The night is dead! The day is born!
“Begone!” she cries, her hand she rears;
“Bend low your heads, let fall your shears!
Away, you evil-meaning bands!
Aye! Hide your faces in your hands.
Together link yourselves and flee,
And leave the brave in peace with me.”
The ship is stayed. The helm they turn,
While sailors’ hearts within them burn
To see the rocks, the seething foam,
The whirlpool eddying round its home,
And giant cliffs so near at hand.
A treacherous path those spirits planned,
To lead them onward to their doom.
There soon they must have found a tomb,
Had not the morning’s early light
Reclaimed them from the clutch of night.

THE WATER FROG.

I wander far by bank and stream,
Then paddle back thro’ wave and foam,
Cross pebble stones, where waters leap;
A froth-clad doorway hides my home.
’Neath fern leaves’ shade I gently dream,
While circling weeds around me throng;
The restless waters softly flow,
Their babbling sounds like some sweet song.
Great frowning rocks above look down:
With scornful glance they watch my glee,
Aloud I croak, and broadly smile.
What matter if they angry be?
Our fleeting life is far too short,
Tho’ merry as it well can be;
The good, together with the bad,
Can sweeten still this world for me.
And when I reach my cosy home,
The bubbling waters shout “Hurrah,”
And hurrying onward, tell the tale
To other streams both near and far;
How I have braved the tempest’s din.
And now beneath the lofty pine,
While angry thunders make reply,
In sweet contentment I recline.

THE FOREST KING’S LAMENT.

Where linger the people I once called my own?
In depths of the forest I stand here alone;
Where waits my beloved one, my queen and my bride?
’Twas seldom she wandered thus far from my side.
I hear not, I see not the world where they live;
No day-dream reveals it, or comfort will give
To passionate longing; hope dies in the heart
Of man when he dwells from his fellows apart.
With weary complaining I question again;
’Mid rivers and mountains I hear a refrain
From cliff to the valley seem clearly to ring—
“Alone in thy kingdom where once thou wert king!”
From over wide seas the white chieftains had come
To rest in our mountains and claim our dear home;

’Twas morn in the vale when we rose up to fight,
’Twas darker than darkness, that fell ere the night.
Our farewells were short, as thro’ thicket we sprang,
All armed with sharp spears and the curved boomerang;
My people loud shouted their battle-cry old,
A quick answer came, by the bullet soon told!
I prayed as I fell, “May I speedily die
With those who, around me, now silently lie
Like reeds in a tempest, struck low by the rain,
Who never to life will awaken again!”
I dragged myself back, yet scarce knew it was day,
Or if any escaped from the heat of the fray;
No voice there I heard, not a sigh, not a sound,
As fainting, I lay on the grass-trodden ground.
But morning brought life, and the noonday gave strength,
The day slowly passed, and with evening at length
(Kind Nature had nourished my famishing frame)
I found I could rise, though enfeebled and lame.
Though why should I value that newly found breath?
For bitter is life to me, sweeter is death,
And if I felt sure I should find them at last,
With joy would I join those true friends of the past.
I’ve sought the deep hollows, the gorge, and ravine,
From mallee to plain not a creature is seen.
White chieftains have journeyed and left me to rest,
They scour all the country from east to the west.
Alone in my camp, now, when fadeth the day,
I sit in the firelight the lizard to flay;
Tho’ nights are as fine as were those we could choose
To dance the corroboree, feast or carouse
Around the bush fire piled with myall and pine,
And box, red and white, or the cedar-wood fine!
Once danced we the war-dance from dark till the dawn,
And stayed not to rest until sunlight was born.
Warm sunshine still plays among myriad leaves,
Where silver-like thread the tarantula weaves;
I see thro’ the green the bright web he hath spun,
And kingfishers dazzling the light of the sun;
From nests in the banks quick they flash in and out.
While jackass sits laughing with comical shout
’Mid branches o’erhead, wearing plumage of brown,
The river beneath floweth steadily down.
Thus murmuring, the ripples bring tears to my eye,
They sound like the tones of my loved one’s reply;
I turn right away, just to stifle the pain
Of knowing she never will hear them again.
Alone on the marshes the water-hens float,
With cresses and rushes surrounding their throat,
They pluck at the circles of mud-coloured slime,
Which harden and bake in the summer’s sweet time.
If water be scarce, or if river run dry,
There sandpiper, too, on occasion will hie,
And heron or pelican often be seen,
Food patiently seeking in silence serene.
At times I do wonder if haply they know
What power has arisen my sway to o’erthrow?—
What memories they stir! When they rise on the wing
I dream of the days when I reigned here as king.
The wattle’s scent mingles with that of the briar,
Where tower the white gum trees in noble attire:
In days when we hunted the emu abreast,
’Twas under their shade we would lie down and rest,
Till curlew at evening poured wail upon wail
That circled the forest and crept thro’ the vale,
Then, meeting the echoes amid the wide plain,
Would rise there and fall there, and circle again.
Do yearnings increasing disturb the strong breeze,
That moans in the brushwood and grieves in the trees?
Its sob overcomes me, no more can I sing,
But bend low in anguish where once I stood king!

THE DROVER’S VISION.

The drover’s camp one evening in hushful calm lay still,
Its fitful flickering firelight made bright the western hill;
The bronzed and bearded drover had stretched himself to rest,
In childlike peaceful slumber, his arms across his breast.
His saddle formed a pillow, the thick, coarse grass his bed,
While mounting sparks were casting a halo round his head.
Past many growing townships, o’er tracks of sun-dried plain,
And rocky hills and rivers, he brought his tale of pain.
Long shadows rose to meet him; in groups they gathered round,
While trees unbent and listened in reverence o’er the ground,
Where hallowed steps had fallen, where an angel late had trod,
Whose holy feet with pity, and love, and faith were shod.
The drover heard those footsteps; he felt an icy breath,
And, turning round in greeting, beheld the face of Death,
A vision bending o’er him, and holding, gently down,
A tiny suffering infant whose life had well-nigh flown.
It raised its fragile body, and softly turned to rest
Beside him, closely nestling against his massive breast.
And, as the shadows parted, the small wan features smiled
Upon him, oh! so sweetly, and he saw it was his child.
A moment more, it left him, and thro’ the dimness fled
Back to the Angel vision, with tiny hands outspread.
The white-robed arms enfold it, and glances sweet and rare
Fall on the stricken drover, who lies in darkness there.
When morning breaks, the sunshine streams over a moving throng
Of cattle pressing onward, while breezes bear along
The sound of parrots’ chattering; and sweet toned bell-pbirds sing,
Like chimes on a Sabbath morning, their notes through the bushland ring,
And tall trees wave their branches athwart the rosy light,
Forgetting in their pleasure, the sorrow of the night.
The drover’s world is darkened, his heart is wrung with pain,
As gazing o’er the hill-side where his ash-strewn camp had lain,
He thinks of the vanished spirit and heavily droops his head,
While sadness sits in his saddle—he knows his child is dead.
He prays with fervent pleadings that his babe may stay its flight
In God’s own Heavenly Kingdom—His home of love and light.

THE HOMESTEAD.