Poems by Adam Lindsay Gordon. Adam Lindsay Gordon

Poems by Adam Lindsay Gordon - Adam Lindsay Gordon


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Rare sport, at least, for the bear.

       Short shrift! sharp fate! dark doom to dree!

       Hard struggle, though quickly ending!

       At home or abroad, by land or sea,

       In peace or war, sore trials must be,

       And worse may happen to you or to me,

       For none are secure, and none can flee

       From a destiny impending.

       Ah! friend, did you think when the LONDON sank,

       Timber by timber, plank by plank,

       In a cauldron of boiling surf,

       How alone at least, with never a flinch,

       In a rally contested inch by inch,

       You could fall on the trampled turf?

       When a livid wall of the sea leaps high,

       In the lurid light of a leaden sky,

       And bursts on the quarter railing;

       While the howling storm-gust seems to vie

       With the crash of splintered beams that fly,

       Yet fails too oft to smother the cry

       Of women and children wailing?

       Then those who listen in sinking ships

       To despairing sobs from their lov'd one's lips,

       Where the green wave thus slowly shatters,

       May long for the crescent-claw that rips

       The bison into ribbons and strips,

       And tears the strong elk to tatters.

       Oh! sunderings short of body and breath!

       Oh! "battle and murder and sudden death!"

       Against which the Liturgy preaches;

       By the will of a just, yet a merciful Power,

       Less bitter, perchance, in the mystic hour,

       When the wings of the shadowy angel lower,

       Than man in his blindness teaches!

      Fytte VI

       Potters' Clay

       [An Allegorical Interlude]

       "Nec propter vitam vivendi perdere causas."

      Though the pitcher that goes to the sparkling rill

       Too oft gets broken at last,

       There are scores of others its place to fill

       When its earth to the earth is cast;

       Keep that pitcher at home, let it never roam,

       But lie like a useless clod,

       Yet sooner or later the hour will come

       When its chips are thrown to the sod.

       Is it wise, then, say, in the waning day,

       When the vessel is crack'd and old,

       To cherish the battered potters' clay,

       As though it were virgin gold?

       Take care of yourself, dull, boorish elf,

       Though prudent and safe you seem,

       Your pitcher will break on the musty shelf,

       And mine by the dazzling stream.

      Fytte VII

       Cito Pede Preterit Aetas

       [A Philosophical Dissertation]

       "Gillian's dead, God rest her bier—

       How I loved her many years syne;

       Marion's married, but I sit here,

       Alive and merry at three-score year,

       Dipping my nose in Gascoigne wine."—Wamba's Song—Thackeray.

      A mellower light doth Sol afford,

       His meridian glare has pass'd,

       And the trees on the broad and sloping sward

       Their length'ning shadows cast.

       "Time flies." The current will be no joke,

       If swollen by recent rain,

       To cross in the dark, so I'll have a smoke,

       And then I'll be off again.

       What's up, old horse? Your ears you prick,

       And your eager eyeballs glisten;

       'Tis the wild dog's note in the tea-tree thick,

       By the river, to which you listen.

       With head erect and tail flung out,

       For a gallop you seem to beg,

       But I feel the qualm of a chilling doubt,

       As I glance at your fav'rite leg.

       Let the dingo rest, 'tis all for the best;

       In this world there's room enough

       For him and you and me and the rest,

       And the country is awful rough.

       We've had our gallop in days of yore,

       Now down the hill we must run;

       Yet at times we long for one gallop more,

       Although it were only one.

       Did our spirits quail at a new four-rail,

       Could a "double" double-bank us,

       Ere nerve and sinew began to fail

       In the consulship of Plancus?

       When our blood ran rapidly, and when

       Our bones were pliant and limber,

       Could we stand a merry cross-counter then,

       A slogging fall over timber?

       Arcades ambo! Duffers both,

       In our best of days, alas!

       (I tell the truth, though to tell it loth)

       'Tis time we were gone to grass;

       The young leaves shoot, the sere leaves fall,

       And the old gives way to the new,

       While the preacher cries, "'Tis vanity all,

       And vexation of spirit, too."

       Now over my head the vapours curl

       From the bowl of the soothing clay,

       In the misty forms that eddy and whirl

       My thoughts are flitting away;

       Yes, the preacher's right, 'tis vanity all,

       But the sweeping rebuke he showers

       On vanities all may heaviest fall

       On vanities worse than ours.

       We have no wish to exaggerate

       The worth of the sports we prize,

       Some toil for their Church, and some for their State,

       And some for their merchandise;

       Some traffic and trade in the city's mart,

       Some travel by land and sea,

       Some follow science, some cleave to art,

       And some to scandal and tea;

       And some for their country and their queen

       Would fight, if the chance they had,

       Good sooth, 'twere a sorry world, I ween,

       If we all went galloping mad;

       Yet if once we efface the joys of the chase

       From the land, and outroot the Stud,

       GOOD-BYE TO THE ANGLO-SAXON RACE!

      


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