Early Poems

This is a collection of early poetry by Australian poet Henry Kendall. The poems contained in this volume already reflect the particular style for which Kendall became famous later on: his poetry focussing on Australian nature.

By : Henry Kendall (1839 - 1882)

01 - The Merchant Ship



02 - Oh, Tell Me, Ye Breezes



03 - The Far Future



04 - Silent Tears



05 - Extempore Lines



06 - The Old Year



07 - Tanna



08 - The Earth Laments for Day



09 - The Late W. V. Wild, Esq.



10 - Astarte



11 - Australian War Song



12 - The Ivy on the Wall



13 - The Australian Emigrant



14 - To My Brother, Basil E. Kendall



15 - The Waterfall



16 - The Song of Arda



17 - The Helmsman



18 - To Miss Annie Hopkins



19 - Foreshadowings



20 - Sonnets on the Discovery of Botany Bay by Captain Cook



21 - To Henry Halloran



22 - Lost in the Flood



23 - Eighteen Hundred and Sixty-Four



24 - To --



25 - At Long Bay



26 - For Ever



27 - Sonnets



28 - The Bereaved One



29 - Dungog



30 - Deniehy's Lament



31 - Deniehy's Dream



32 - Cui Bono?



33 - In Hyde Park



34 - Australia Vindex



35 - Ned the Larrikin



36 - In Memoriam - Nicol Drysdale Stenhouse



37 - Rizpah



38 - Kiama Revisited



39 - Passing Away



40 - James Lionel Michael



41 - Elijah



42 - Manasseh



43 - Caroline Chisholm



44 - Mount Erebus



45 - Our Jack



46 - Camped by the Creek



47 - Euterpe



48 - Sedan

Sonnets on the Discovery of Botany Bay by Captain Cook

     

I


   The First Attempt to Reach the Shore

   Where is the painter who shall paint for you,

   My Austral brothers, with a pencil steeped

   In hues of Truth, the weather-smitten crew

   Who gazed on unknown shores—a thoughtful few—

   What time the heart of their great Leader leaped

   Till he was faint with pain of longing?  New

   And wondrous sights on each and every hand,

   Like strange supernal visions, grew and grew

   Until the rocks and trees, and sea and sand,

   Danced madly in the tear-bewildered view!

   And from the surf a fierce, fantastic band

   Of startled wild men to the hills withdrew

   With yells of fear!  Who'll paint thy face, O Cook!

   Turned seaward, "after many a wistful look!"

     

II


   The Second Attempt, Opposed by Two of the Natives

   "There were but two, and we were forty!  Yet,"

   The Captain wrote, "that dauntless couple throve,

   And faced our wildering faces; and I said

   'Lie to awhile!'  I did not choose to let

   A strife go on of little worth to us.

   And so unequal!  But the dying tread

   Of flying kinsmen moved them not:  for wet

   With surf and wild with streaks of white and black

   The pair remained."—O stout Caractacus!

   'Twas thus you stood when Caesar's legions strove

   To beat their few, fantastic foemen back—

   Your patriots with their savage stripes of red!

   To drench the stormy cliff and moaning cove

   With faithful blood, as pure as any ever shed.

   

III


   The Spot Where Cook Landed

   Chaotic crags are huddled east and west—

   Dark, heavy crags, against a straitened sea

   That cometh, like a troubled soul in quest

   Of voiceless rest where never dwelleth rest,

   With noise "like thunder everlasting."

   But here, behold a silent space of sand!—

   Oh, pilgrim, halt!—it even seems to be

   Asleep in other years.  How still!  How grand!

   How awful in its wild solemnity!

   This is the spot on which the Chief did land,

   And there, perchance, he stood what time a band

   Of yelling strangers scoured the savage lea.

   Dear friend, with thoughtful eyes look slowly round—

   By all the sacred Past 'tis sacred ground.


IV


   Sutherland's Grave

   'Tis holy ground!  The silent silver lights

   And darks undreamed of, falling year by year

   Upon his sleep, in soft Australian nights,

   Are joys enough for him who lieth here

   So sanctified with Rest.  We need not rear

   The storied monument o'er such a spot!

   That soul, the first for whom the Christian tear

   Was shed on Austral soil, hath heritage

   Most ample!  Let the ages wane with age,

   The grass which clothes this grave shall wither not.

   See yonder quiet lily!  Have the blights

   Of many winters left it on a faded tomb?*

   Oh, peace!  Its fellows, glad with green delights,

   Shall gather round it deep eternal bloom!


   * A wild lily grows on the spot supposed to be Sutherland's grave.—H.K.

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