Australia To England

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What of the years of Englishmen?
  What have they brought of growth and grace
Since mud-built London by its fen
  Became the Briton's breeding-place?
What of the Village, where our blood
  Was brewed by sires, half man, half brute,
In vessels of wild womanhood,
  From blood of Saxon, Celt and Jute?

What are its gifts, this Harvest Home
  Of English tilth and English cost,
Where fell the hamlet won by Rome
  And rose the city that she lost?
O! terrible and grand and strange
  Beyond all phantasy that gleams
When Hope, asleep, sees radiant Change
  Come to her through the halls of dreams!

A heaving sea of life, that beats
  Like England's heart of pride to-day,
And up from roaring miles of streets
  Flings on the roofs its human spray;
And fluttering miles of flags aflow,
  And cannon's voice, and boom of bell,
And seas of fire to-night, as though
  A hundred cities flamed and fell;

While, under many a fair festoon
  And flowering crescent, set ablaze
With all the dyes that English June
  Can lend to deck a day of days,
And past where mart and palace rise,
  And shrine and temple lift their spears,
Below five million misted eyes
  Goes a grey Queen of Sixty Years -

Go lords, and servants of the lords
  Of earth, with homage on their lips,
And kinsmen carrying English swords,
  And offering England battle-ships;
And tribute-payers, on whose hands
  Their English fetters scarce appear;
And gathered round from utmost lands
  Ambassadors of Love and Fear!

Dim signs of greeting waved afar,
  Far trumpets blown and flags unfurled,
And England's name an Avatar
  Of light and sound throughout the world -
Hailed Empress among nations, Queen
  Enthroned in solemn majesty,
On splendid proofs of what has been,
  And presages of what will be!

For this your sons, foreseeing not
  Or heeding not, the aftermath,
Because their strenuous hearts were hot
  Went first on many a cruel path,
And, trusting first and last to blows,
  Fed death with such as would gainsay
Their instant passing, or oppose
  With talk of Right strength's right of way!

For this their names are on the stone
  Of mountain spires, and carven trees
That stand in flickering wastes unknown
  Wait with their dying messages;
When fire blasts dance with desert drifts
  The English bones show white below,
And, not so white, when summer lifts
  The counterpane of Yukon's snow.

Condemned by blood to reach for grapes
  That hang in sight, however high,
Beyond the smoke of Asian capes,
  The nameless, dauntless, dead ones lie;
And where Sierran morning shines
  On summits rolling out like waves,
By many a brow of royal pines
  The noisiest find quiet graves.

By lust of flesh and lust of gold,
  And depth of loins and hairy breadth
Of breast, and hands to take and hold,
  And boastful scorn of pain and death,
And something more of manliness
  Than tamer men, and growing shame
Of shameful things, and something less
  Of final faith in sword and flame -

By many a battle fought for wrong,
  And many a battle fought for right,
So have you grown august and strong,
  Magnificent in all men's sight -
A voice for which the kings have ears,
  A face the craftiest statesmen scan;
A mind to mould the after years,
  And mint the destinies of man!

Red sins were yours: the avid greed
  Of pirate fathers, smocked as Grace,
Sent Judas missioners to read
  Christ's Word to many a feebler race -
False priests of Truth who made their tryst
  At Mammon's shrine, and reft or slew -
Some hands you taught to pray to Christ
  Have prayed His curse to rest on you!

Your way has been to pluck the blade
  Too readily, and train the guns.
We here, apart and unafraid
  Of envious foes, are but your sons:
We stretched a heedless hand to smutch
  Our spotless flag with Murder's blight -
For one less sacrilegious touch
  God's vengeance blasted Uzza white!

You vaunted most of forts and fleets,
  And courage proved in battle-feasts,
The courage of the beast that eats
  His torn and quivering fellow-beasts;
Your pride of deadliest armament -
  What is it but the self-same dint
Of joy with which the Caveman bent
  To shape a bloodier axe of flint?

But praise to you, and more than praise
  And thankfulness, for some things done;
And blessedness, and length of days
  As long as earth shall last, or sun!
You first among the peoples spoke
  Sharp words and angry questionings
Which burst the bonds and shed the yoke
  That made your men the slaves of Kings!

You set and showed the whole world's school
  The lesson it will surely read,
That each one ruled has right to rule -
  The alphabet of Freedom's creed
Which slowly wins it proselytes
  And makes uneasier many a throne;
You taught them all to prate of Rights
  In language growing like your own!

And now your holiest and best
  And wisest dream of such a tie
As, holding hearts from East to West,
  Shall strengthen while the years go by:
And of a time when every man
  For every fellow-man will do
His kindliest, working by the plan
  God set him. May the dream come true!

And greater dreams! O Englishmen,
  Be sure the safest time of all
For even the mightiest State is when
  Not even the least desires its fall!
Make England stand supreme for aye,
  Because supreme for peace and good,
Warned well by wrecks of yesterday
  That strongest feet may slip in blood!

© John Farrell