BALLAARAT

A VISION OF GOLD

I see a lone stream, rolling down

Through valleys green, by ranges brown

Of hills that bear no name,

The dawn's full blush in crimson flakes

Is traced on palest blue, as breaks

The morn in Orient flame.

I see—whence comes that eager gaze?

Why rein the steed, in wild amaze?

The water's hue is gold!

Golden its wavelets foam and glide,

Through tenderest green to ocean-tide

The fairy streamlet rolled.

"Forward, 'Hope!' forward! truest steed,

Of tireless hoof and desert speed,

Up the weird water bound,

Till, echoing far and sounding deep,

I hear old Ocean's hoarse voice sweep

O'er this enchanted ground?"

The sea!—wild fancy! Many a mile

Of changeful Nature's frown and smile

Ere stand we on the shore.

And, yet! that murmur, hoarse and deep,

None save the ocean-surges keep?

It is—"the cradles' roar!"

Onward! we pass the grassy hill,

Around the base the waters still

Shimmer in golden foam;

O wanderer of the voiceless wild,

Of this far southern land the child,

How changed thy quiet home!

For, close as bees in countless hive,

Like emmet hosts that earnest strive,

Swarmed, toiled, a vast, strange crowd:

Haggard each worker's features seem,

Bright, fever-bright, each eye's wild gleam,

Nor cry, nor accent loud.

But each man dug, or rocked, or bore,

As if salvation with the ore

Of the mine-monarch lay.

Gold strung each arm to giant might,

Gold flashed before each aching sight,

Gold turned the night to day.

Where Eblis reigns o'er boundless gloom,

And, in his halls of endless doom

Lost souls for ever roam,

They wander (says the Eastern tale),

Nor ever startles moan or wail

Despair's eternal home.

Less silent scarce than that pale host

These toiled, as if each moment lost

Were the red life-drop spilt;

While, heavy, rough, and darkly bright,

In every shape, rolled to the light

Man's hope, and pride, and guilt.

All ranks, all ages! Every land

Had sent its conscripts forth, to stand

In the gold-seekers' rank:

The stalwart bushman's sinewy limb,

The pale-faced son of trade—e'en him

Who knew the fetters' clank.

* * * * *

'Tis night: her jewelled mantle fills

The busy valley, the dun hills,

'Tis a battle host's repose!

A thousand watch-fires redly gleam,

While ceaseless fusillades would seem

To warn approaching foes.

The night is older. On the sward

Stretched, I behold the heavens broad,

When—a Shape rises dim,

Then, clearer, fuller, I descry,

By the swart brow, the star-bright eye,

The Gnome-king's presence grim!

He stands upon a time-worn block;

His dark form shades the snowy rock

As cypress marble tomb:

Nor fierce yet wild and sad his mien,

His cloud-black tresses wave and stream,

His deep tones break the gloom.

"Son of a tribe accursed, of those

Whose greed has broken our repose

Of the long ages dead,

Think ye, for nought our ancient race

Leaves olden haunts, the sacred place

Of toils for ever fled?

"List while I tell of days to come,

When men shall wish the hammers dumb

That ring so ceaseless now;

That every arm were palsy-tied,

Nor ever wet on grey hillside

Was the gold-seeker's brow.

"I see the old world's human tide

Set southward on the ocean wide.

I see a wood of masts,

While crime or want, disease or death,

With each sigh of the north-wind's breath,

He on this fair shore casts.

"I see the murderer's barrel gleam,

I hear the victim's hopeless scream

Ring through these crimeless wastes;

While each base son of elder lands

Each witless dastard, in vast bands

To the gold-city hastes.

"Disease shall claim her ready toll,

Flushed vice and brutal crime the dole

Of life shall ne'er deny;

Danger and death shall stalk your streets,

While staggering idiocy greets

The horror-stricken eye!

"All men shall roll in the gold mire—

The height, the depth of man's desire—

Till come the famine years;

Then all the land shall curse the day

When first they rifled the dull clay,

With deep remorseful tears.

"Fell want shall wake to fearful life

The fettered demons. Civil strife

Rears high a gory hand!

I see a blood-splashed barricade,

While dimly lights the twilight glade

The soldier's flashing brand.

"But thou, son of the forest free!

Thou art not, wert not foe to me,

Frank tamer of the wild!

Thou hast not sought the sunless home

Where darkly delves the toiling Gnome,

The mid-earth's swarthy child.

"Then, be thou ever, as of yore,

A dweller in the woods, and o'er

Fresh plains thy herds shall roam.

Join not the vain and reckless crowd

Who swell the city's pageant proud,

But prize thy forest home."

He said: and, with an eldritch scream,

The Gnome-king vanished—and my dream:

Dawn's waking hour returned;

Yet still the wild tones echoed clear,

For many a day in reason's ear,

And my heart inly burned.

THE DEATH OF WELFORD[1]

[1] A young Englishman, "killed by blacks on the Barcoo."

Out by the far west-waters,

On the sea-land of the South,

Untombed the bones of a white man lay,

Slowly crumbling to kindred clay—

Sad prayer from Death's mute mouth!

Alone, far from his people,

The sun of his life went down.

A cry for help? No time—not a prayer:

As red blood splashed thro' riven hair,

His soul rose to Heaven's throne.

Ah! well for those felon hands

Which the strong man foully slew,

The cry from the Cross when our Saviour died

"Father, forgive"—as they pierced His side—

"For they know not what they do."

They have souls, say the teachers

Hereafter, the same as we:

If so, it is hid from human grace

By blood-writ crimes of savage race

So deep, that we cannot see.

Fear than love is far stronger:

The cruel have seldom to rue:

The neck is bowed 'neath the heavy heel,

Love's covenant with Death they seal;

"For they know not what they do."

This Dead, by the far sun-down,

This man whom they idly slew,

Was lover and friend to those who had slain

With him all human love, like Cain;

But "they know not what they do."

'Twixt laws Divine and human

To judge, if we only knew,

When the blood is hot, to part wrong from right,

When to forgive and when to smite

Foes who "know not what they do."

The wronger and wronged shall meet

For judgment, to die, or live;

And the heathen shall cry, in anguish fell,

At sight of the Bottomless Pit of Hell—

"We knew not, O Lord! Forgive."