Edmund Clarence Stedman, ed. (1833–1908). A Victorian Anthology, 1837–1895. 1895.
Charles Harpur 181768An Aboriginal Mothers Lament
S
To make thee safer yet
From the usparing white man,
With his dread hand murder-wet!
I ’ll bear thee on as I have borne
With stealthy steps wind-fleet,
But the dark night shrouds the forest,
And thorns are in my feet.
Thy father’s gift to me—
But for a single palmful
Of water now for thee.
To glad us may he come—
He is smouldering into ashes
Beneath the blasted gum;
All charred and blasted by the fire
The white man kindled there,
And fed with our slaughtered kindred
Till heaven-high went its glare!
Had eaten me as fast!
Hark! Hark! I hear his death-cry
Yet lengthening up the blast!
But no—when his bound hands had signed
The way that we should fly,
On the roaring pyre flung bleeding—
I saw thy father die!
Be plied to win our cheer,
Or the shining fish pools darken
Beneath his shadowing spear;
The fading tracks of his fleet foot
Shall guide not as before,
And the mountain-spirits mimic
His hunting call no more!
Thy father’s gift to me—
For but a single palmful
Of water now for thee.