The Fremantle Press Anthology of Western Australian Poetry

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The Fremantle Press Anthology of Western Australian Poetry Page 9

by John Kinsella


  And count it ‘such a grievous thing’

  That year and year should hurry by,

  And no gay mister bring.

  In labor’s ranks she takes her place,

  With skilful hand and cultured mind;

  Not always foremost in the race,

  But never far behind.

  And no less lightly fall her feet,

  Because they tread the busy ways;

  She is no whit less fair or sweet

  Than maids of older days,

  Who gowned in samite or brocade,

  Looked charming in their dainty guise:

  But dwelt like violets in the shade,

  With shy, half-opened eyes.

  Of life she takes a clearer view,

  And through the press serenely moves

  Unfettered, free, with judgement true,

  Avoiding narrow grooves.

  She reasons and she understands,

  And sometimes ’tis her joy and crown

  To lift with strong, yet tender hands,

  The burdens men lay down.

  Lilian Wooster Greaves (b.1869 d.1956)

  The Farmer’s Daughter

  Guess I’ll stick to washing dishes,

  Sweeping, cooking, darning socks;

  Having literary wishes

  Gives a girl too many shocks.

  I think thoughts just like those bookmen;

  Dream sweet dreams from morn to night,

  I see folks just like their spook-men

  In the evening’s ghostly light.

  I’d have loved a life of learning,

  But whene’er I go about

  With fires of genius burning,

  Then the kitchen fire goes out

  ‘Look here, Sis, we’re two great ninnies’ —

  Thus my brother yesterday —

  ‘Working hard when golden guineas

  Here are fairly flung away.

  ‘Prize for lyric, prize for sonnet,

  Prize for humorous verses, too —

  Seize a paper, scribble on it —

  Suit for me and dress for you.

  ‘Come, let’s try it — I say, Mary,

  What’s a lyric, anyhow?’ —

  So I got the dictionary,

  And forgot to milk the cow.

  — ‘Sonnets must be made to order;

  Fourteen lines, and put just so,

  Like in your embroidery border,

  Or a picture-frame, you know.

  ‘Where’s the ‘Royal Road to Rhyming’?

  Lyrics must be musical —

  Ebbing, flowing, singing, chiming,

  With a gentle rise and fall.’

  So we scribbled till the dark it

  Closed around, and day was gone;

  Mother home again from market!

  Dinner wasn’t even on!

  Father swore a score of sonnets,

  Several miles of lyric, too —

  Guess I’ll earn my frocks and bonnets

  Just as other daughters do.

  W.C. Thomas (b.1869 d.1957)

  The Terrace

  I love the Terrace and its way,

  Its moments tense with business rife —

  The Forum of the city’s life,

  Where Commerce holds its kingly sway.

  As from the heart, so from it flows

  The energies that move the State,

  To mould it to a worthy Fate,

  That enterprise alone bestows.

  I love the Terrace best of all

  When crowned with Summer’s vault of blue,

  And shafts of gold are falling through

  Its lilacs leafy, cool and tall —

  When from them drifts a subtle scent

  Recalling pleasures of the bush,

  And one may quit the city’s rush

  For all that recollection meant.

  F.W. Ophel (b.1871 d.1912)

  His Epitaph

  He lies here. See the bush

  All grey through grief for him;

  Hoar scrub — like ashes cast —

  Sprinkles the valley grim.

  The saltbush is his shroud,

  Wide skies his only pall,

  And ‘in memoriam’,

  A thousand stamp-heads fall.

  Gold-lured to death — and yet

  He would have had it so.

  Say mass, sing requiem

  With the grey bush — and go.

  Quietly he has found

  Here in the Golden West,

  The long-sought-for at last,

  An El Dorado blest.

  The Phantoms of the Dark

  I hear them pass at eventide,

  I hear the dead pass by.

  Ever the long processions ride,

  While sorrow’d night winds sigh.

  Bright burns the camp-fire at my feet

  White stars burn overhead,

  Beyond the flame, in shadows, meet

  The roaming, restless dead.

  Dead bushmen go, in ghostly guise,

  Unseen within the night

  Save by the herds with startled eyes,

  Stampeding in affright.

  All night — all night — waked or asleep

  The fall of hoofs I hear;

  Softly the phantom horses creep

  Past my lone camp — and near.

  The champing of a jingling bit

  Faintly insistent sounds;

  With loosened rein wan stockmen sit

  And ride their endless rounds.

  Oh, shadow made their fences are,

  Grey wraiths the flocks they see;

  And Death has neither bound or bar

  Except eternity.

  Lured by the will-o’-th’-wisp’s pale fire

  (Mock lights of hut and home);

  Onward by spectral post and wire

  Damned souls for ever roam.

  Shrill comes a cry across the dark,

  And weird — I know it well —

  It is the lost who call. And, hark!

  The tinkling of a bell.

  A heap of whitened bones there lies,

  And stands the dead man’s steed;

  Though never may the rider rise.

  Faithful he waits his need.

  And when the winds the storm-clouds bring

  And loud the tempest roar.

  I hear the drover galloping

  To meet his love once more.

  Night after night, in wind and rain,

  He rides and leaves his flocks,

  And night by night he falls again

  Over the fatal rocks.

  And crashing through by bush and bole

  In dread, and dumb, and straight

  Goes one, sere-stricken to the soul,

  And leaves a murdered mate.

  At morn my sweating horses stand

  Trembling in wild-eyed fright,

  For they have seen the phantom band

  That pass’d into the night.

  Ever by my lone camp they go,

  Nor heed the stars or moon.

  I hear them always, and I know

  That I shall join them soon.

  For surely I shall ride away

  To turn some midnight rush,

  And, greeting Death, remain for aye —

  A spirit of the bush.

  ‘The Boulder Bard’ (‘Willy-Willy’) (n.d.)

  Ode to West Australia

  Land of Forrests, fleas and flies,

  Blighted hopes and blighted eyes,

  Art thou hell in earth’s disguise,

  Westralia?

  Art thou some volcanic blast

  By volcanoes spurned, outcast?

  Art unfinished — made the last

  Westralia?

  Wert thou once the chosen land

  Where Adam broke God’s one command?

  That He in wrath changed thee to sand,

  Westralia!

  Land of politicians silly,

 
Home of wind and willy-willy,

  Land of blanket, tent and billy,

  Westralia.

  Home of brokers, bummers, clerks,

  Nest of sharpers, mining sharks,

  Dried up lakes and desert parks,

  Westralia!

  Land of humpies, brothels, inns,

  Old bag huts and empty tins,

  Land of blackest, grievous sins

  Westralia.

  Published 9 April 1899.

  ‘The Exile’ (n.d.)

  Caste

  The oilrag is the Labor toff, he holds the miner dirt,

  The trucker wouldn’t dare to touch a miner’s dirty shirt;

  Then if the mullocker presumes, the trucker gets annoyed,

  And all possess a lofty scorn for Boulder unemployed.

  Supposing, lads, we sling this pride and try another plan,

  And institute a better code, the Brotherhood of Man.

  Published 1 January 1905.

  Mingkarlajirri (d. late 1920s)

  The Marble Bar Pool Spirit is Releasing a Flood1

  The Marble Bar pool is releasing the wind for us,

  the Water Snake2 is poised to let the water go.

  All the gullies are overflowing,

  backing up, bank to bank

  because of me — a stranger

  — he doesn’t want to recognise me.3

  1 In almost all of the songs in this collection, Alexander Brown knew the composers personally, and in many cases he remembers when they were composed, and the situations that prompted them. However, this one is older again. It is not known when this song was composed, but the composer (who would have been a ‘mother’s brother’ for Sandy) died before 1920.

  2 Water Snake: Literally, ‘waterhole local-inhabitant’.

  3 The implication is that the composer of this song is the cause of all this water, because he is a stranger. If he were a local, the spirit water snake would not have caused the excessive flooding.

  Wurlanyalu Nganyjarranga Jurta Murru Marri

  Wurlanyalu nganyjarranga jurta murru marri,

  jayin ngarnka wirti kanyin yinta ngurraralu.

  Karlka-karlka ngapurlarnu ngarningkajarra.

  Pampanurra nganunga — kura pirnanyuru

  Dorham Doolette (b.1872 d.1925)

  The Ballade of Cottesloe Beach

  Dear, for an hour with joy bedight,

  I thank you in this little lay;

  Though well I know some luckier wight,

  With you now makes his fond essay;

  You were a summer girl as gay

  And glad as any Perth could show,

  Who shared a bushman’s holiday

  By the sea-beach at Cottesloe.

  Your sweetness fills the void of night

  And down the vistas of the day,

  Your beauty comes for my delight,

  And the cool stars your eyes portray.

  Yes! though from here a weary way,

  It is to where the west winds blow

  And wanton with the driven spray

  By the sea-beach of Cottesloe.

  Do you recall the silver-white

  Moon-pathway out across the bay,

  The flash of Rottnest’s gleaming light,

  The sandhills in their dark array,

  The sea’s sweet savour, the affray

  Of hurrying clouds tossed to and fro,

  Changing from ivory to grey,

  By the sea-beach of Cottesloe?

  Your eyes held dreams that poets write,

  Your lips the fragrance of the May,

  I sought for fancies recondite

  To clothe the love-words I would say,

  To tell you, ‘how the Fates betray’,

  How loveliest blooms must lose their glow,

  How winter follows summer’s sway

  By the sea-beach of Cottesloe.

  ‘The kiss foregone nought can requite,

  The rose ungathered must decay,

  Too soon youth’s flower must fade from sight,

  And Death but chuckles at delay —

  So sweetheart, give! while give you may,

  None of Love’s guerdons I’ll forego,

  In all his pleasances we’ll stray

  By the sea-beach at Cottesloe.’

  You heard — your eyes, so dark, so bright,

  Shone with a still diviner ray,

  And soft as falling dews alight,

  Your lips, on mine, surrendering lay;

  Ah me! your sweet hair’s disarray!

  Your warm arms, whiter than the snow!

  I knew not were you girl or fay,

  By the sea-beach of Cottesloe!

  L’Envoi

  Dear! though you took me for a jay

  It did not cause me any woe,

  That rolled-gold watch you filched away,

  By the sea-beach at Cottesloe.

  Annie H. Mark (b.1875 d.1947)

  When Morning-glory Trims a Fence

  A plain wood fence without a trace

  Of beauty in its line, or grace,

  Becomes mosaic, mysterious-wise,

  With gem-like flowers of purple dyes.

  On mornings very far away,

  I loved a morning-glory spray;

  A garden comes my eyes before

  With old grey fences purpled o’er.

  The texture of our childish dreams

  Is woven in with flowers, it seems,

  And they remain joys to behold

  In later years when we are old.

  When morning-glory trims a fence

  With purple petals, gaily dense,

  My heart makes happy holiday

  Because I chanced to pass that way.

  Miriny-Mirinymarra Jingkiri (d.1930s)

  Koolinda in Harbour1

  Look after Koolinda there, you fellows,

  (huge plucky thing,

  all its masts and derricks sticking up),

  on account of the cyclone.

  It’s a plucky thing,

  just sheltering there for a while.

  He’ll head straight out into the wind,

  the launch will lead the ship out

  as it heads towards the big sea breeze.

  Huge Koolinda!

  The skipper will take care of it

  out in the deep water.

  1 The Koolinda was a steamer plying the Western Australian coast.

  Kurlintanya

  Kurlintanya kanyinpiya,

  (yulu mungkarra, wirnta pungkurirri),

  wanngirrimannyangurarla.

  Yulu mingka kayinyu.

  Jurta juntu jina man,

  para wii marnanyurulurla laanjilu kulpirrikartilu.

  Wanakurru Kurlinta!

  Kanyin kipangku warlu martaringura.

  At Wurruwangkanya Jawiri is Increasing the Cold

  At Wurruwangkanya1 Jawirimarra is doing

  an increase ceremony.

  The dust is swirling and eddying,

  and his torso is sweating as a result of your

  blazing heat.

  The ones who increase the heat

  are piling on the blankets.

  How now? Jawirimarra has got you

  Huddled in your windbreaks!

  The Heat room totem belongs to them —

  Yirrmari, Milkuwarna, Wawiri 2 —

  but in the cold season 3 their fire is dead —

  Jawiri has blackened it!

  1 Wurruwangkanya, in Nyamal country, was the increase site for Cold.

  2 Names of three leading men whose totem was Heat, quoted as representatives of all those who had Heat as their totem.

  3 Literally, ‘When the Seven Sisters go to rest.’ When they set soon after sundown (April to May), the cold season is approaching.

  Wurruwangkanya Jipal Pirnu Jawirilu

  Wurruwangkanya jipal pirnu Jawirilu.

  Kurnturrjartu wunta murli-murli,

  ngayiny parrpa ngarringurulu

  yinararra
murnaju nyurranga.

  Pulangkarti jananmani kanyinpiya winu nyukangkurla.

  Waayi nyurranya wungku kurnu Jawirimarralu!

  Ngayinykapu pananga — Yirrmarimarrarra

  Milkuwarnarra pananga Wawirimarrarra —

  Kurri-kurringura yarnangkarla pinurrula

  panya warru jarnu.

  Katharine Susannah Prichard (b.1883 d.1969)

  The Earth Lover

  Let me lie in the grass —

  Bathe in its verdure

  As one bathes in the sea —

  Soul-drowned in herbage,

  The essence of clover,

  Dandelion, camomile, knapweed

  And centaury.

  Let me lie close to the earth,

  Battened against the broad breast

  Which brings all things to being

  And gives rest to all things.

  Let me inspire the odours of birth,

  Death, living,

  Sweets of the mould,

  The generative sap of insects,

  Crushed grasses, witch weeds,

  Flowering herbs.

  For I am an earth child,

  An earth lover,

  And I ask no more than to be,

  Of the earth, earthy,

  And to mingle again with the divine dust.

  Oscar Walters (b.1889 d.1948)

  ’17 And ’32

  ‘Myalup’ refers to a camp set up by the Western Australian Government during the depression to house and provide some ‘employment’ for unemployed workers. This was one of several and it was located at Myalup in vicinity of Harvey, some 100 miles south of Perth. Blackboy Hill was a military training camp during WWI — it was located in the outer suburban area of Perth, in the foothills near Midland Junction, some 15 miles from the city.

  They said he was a splendid stamp

  Of loyal youth, alert and keen,

  When he was training in the camp

  At Blackboy Hill in ’17.

  They cheered him when he marched away;

  Stout patriots rushed to shake his hand;

  But he’s at Myalup to-day,

  Just one of an unwanted band.

  Although he’s drained the bitter cup,

  He knows full well that he is still

  As good a man at Myalup

  As when he marched from Blackboy Hill.

  But what a difference between

  The patriotic public’s view,

 

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