Walter Murdoch (1874–1970). The Oxford Book of Australasian Verse. 1918.
By J. Laurence Rentoul36 . Australia
S
The wide South seas kissed at her garment hem,
Lights of new heavens gleamed in her lustrous hair,
Freedom her diadem!
Six stars that into one rich radiance ran,
Her Urim and her Thummim of the free
Young Commonwealth of Man:
Opal and sapphire, gems of price untold,
Pearl from far wave, and, through deep mine-shaft sought,
The shimmering glow of gold:
And pasture where the sportive lambs may bleat,
And subtlest tints—no poet’s tongue can tell—
From sun-kissed fields of wheat.
Too satisfied and young to doubt or pray,
Her open glance and buoyant will unbowed
Fronted the broadening day.
Gazed on into the future unafraid,—
No mystic depths of reverence, awe, surprise,
No Past to make dismayed!
Had seamed that beauty, frank and debonair,
No sobbings from Gethsemanes of pain,
No midnights of despair—
Saw men like gods, but featured homelier far,
As, in the pass, by mazed Thermopylae
Or glorious Trafalgar.
And amplest spaces and unhindered room,
She faltered not to meet her destiny
Nor reck’d of gathering Doom.
On whose white virgin folds might yet be writ
Tales of high deeds, transcending utmost goal
Of Man’s prophetic wit.
To East and North, and Southward without bound,
And Westward where the sequent Night and Day
Circled the great world round.