DOWN in the South, by the waste without sail on it  
 Far from the zone of the blossom and tree  
Lieth, with winter and whirlwind and wail on it,  
 Ghost of a land by the ghost of a sea.  
Weird is the mist from the summit to base of it;  
 Sun of its heaven is wizened and grey;  
Phantom of light is the light on the face of it  
 Never is night on it, never is day!  
Here is the shore without flower or bird on it;  
 Here is no litany sweet of the springs  
Only the haughty, harsh thunder is heard on it,  
 Only the storm, with a roar in its wings!  
 
Shadow of moon is the moon in the sky of it  
 Wan as the face of a wizard, and far!  
Never there shines from the firmament high of it  
 Grace of the planet or glory of star.  
All the year round, in the place of white days on it  
 All the year round where there never is night  
Lies a great sinister, bitter, blind haze on it:  
 Growth that is neither of darkness nor light!  
Wild is the cry of the sea in the caves by it  
 Sea that is smitten by spears of the snow;  
Desolate songs are the songs of the waves by it  
 Down in the South, where the ships never go.  
 
Storm from the Pole is the singer that sings to it  
 Hymns of the land at the planets grey verge.  
Thunder discloses dark, wonderful things to it  
 Thunder, and rain, and the dolorous surge.  
Hills with no hope of a wing or a leaf on them,  
 Scarred with the chronicles written by flame,  
Stare through the gloom of inscrutable grief on them,  
 Down on the horns of the gulfs without name.  
Cliffs with the records of fierce flying fires on them  
 Loom over perilous pits of eclipse;  
Alps, with anathema stamped in the spires on them  
 Out by the wave with a curse on its lips.  
 
Never is sign of soft, beautiful green on it  
 Never the colour, the glory of rose!  
Neither the fountain nor river is seen on it,  
 Naked its crags are, and barren its snows!  
Blue as the face of the drowned is the shore of it  
 Shore, with the capes of indefinite cave.  
Strange is the voice of its wind, and the roar of it  
 Startles the mountain and hushes the wave.  
Out to the South and away to the north of it,  
 Spectral and sad are the spaces untold!  
All the year round a great cry goeth forth of it  
 Sob of this leper of lands in the cold.  
 
No man hath stood, all its bleak, bitter years on it  
 Fall of a foot on its wastes is unknown:  
Only the sound of the hurricanes spears on it  
 Breaks with the shout from the uttermost zone.  
Blind are its bays with the shadow of bale on them;  
 Storms of the nadir their rocks have uphurled;  
Earthquake hath registered deeply its tale on them  
 Tale of distress from the dawn of the world!  
There are the gaps, with the surges that seethe in them  
 Gaps in whose jaws is a menace that glares!  
There the wan reefs, with the merciless teeth in them,  
 Gleam on a chaos that startles and scares!  
 
Back in the dawn of this beautiful sphere, on it  
 Land of the dolorous, desolate face  
Beamed the blue day; and the bountiful year on it  
 Fostered the leaf and the blossom of grace.  
Grand were the lights of its midsummer noon on it  
 Mornings of majesty shone on its seas:  
Glitter of star and the glory of moon on it  
 Fell, in the march of the musical breeze.  
Valleys and hills, with the whisper of wing in them,  
 Dells of the daffodilspaces impearled,  
Flowered and flashed with the splendour of Spring in them  
 Back in the morn of this wonderful world.  
 
Soft were the words that the thunder then said to it  
 Said to this lustre of emerald plain;  
Sun brought the yellow, the green, and the red to it  
 Sweet were the songs of its silvery rain.  
Voices of water and wind in the bays of it  
 Lingered, and lulled like the psalm of a dream.  
Fair were the nights and effulgent the days of it  
 Moon was in shadow and shade in the beam.  
Summers chief throne was the marvellous coast of it,  
 Home of the Spring was its luminous lea:  
Garden of glitter! but only the ghost of it  
 Moans in the South by the ghost of a sea.
Beyond Kerguelen
written byHenry Kendall
© Henry Kendall


 



