THE WIREE’S SONG

The wiree sang that Christmas Day,

A rippling, limpid, liquid lay

In clump and cover trilling;

On ripened grain and gleaming road

The molten, golden sunlight glowed,

The lone land’s rapture stilling.

And health and strength and youth and grace

Were gathered down at Casey’s place

In mirthful mood of madness;

While, hidden in the currajong,

The wiree sang his limpid song,

Responsive to the gladness.

And Mary sparkled everywhere,

The sunlight weaving through her hair

The colours of December;

Ah, two shall strive—but one shall win

And one shall feel the javelin

’Twere poison to remember!

The silent bush that Christmas Day

In molten, golden sunlight lay,

Nor bough nor leaf a-tremble;

All hushed and mute, it seemed asleep,

Or wrapped away in musings deep

That sleep itself resemble.

One voice the outer spaces filled—

That lilting lay the wiree trilled,

Like raptures of a lover,

“Wir-ree, Wir-ee, Itchong, Itchong”—

Then rippled through its liquid song,

Leaf-hidden in the cover.

And one has seen the love arise

To shade the light of laughing eyes

Like white clouds in December;

But one has felt the piercing pang

That thrilled the song the wiree sang—

And he shall still remember.