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with the haughty heights; For twenty spaces of the star and sun These Romans kept their harness buckled on; By gaping gorges, and by cliffs austere, These fathers struggled in the great old year. Their feet they set on strange hills scarred by fire, Their strong arms forced a path through brake and briar; They fought with Nature till they reached the throne Where morning glittered on the great UNKNOWN! There, in a time with praise and prayer supreme, Paused Blaxland, Lawson, Wentworth, in a dream; There, where the silver arrows of the day Smote slope and spire, they halted on their way. Behind them were the conquered hills--they faced The vast green West, with glad, strange beauty graced; And every tone of every cave and tree Was as a voice of splendid prophecy. Robert Parkes -- * Son of Sir Henry Parkes. -- High travelling winds by royal hill Their awful anthem sing, And songs exalted flow and fill The caverns of the spring. To-night across a wild wet plain A shadow sobs and strays; The trees are whispering in the rain Of long departed days. I cannot say what forest saith-- Its words are strange to me: I only know that in its breath Are tones that used to be. Yea, in these deep dim solitudes I hear a sound I know-- The voice that lived in Penrith woods Twelve weary years ago. And while the hymn of other years Is on a listening land, The Angel of the Past appears And leads me by the hand; And takes me over moaning wave, And tracts of sleepless change, To set me by a lonely grave Within a lonely range. The halo of the beautiful Is round the quiet spot; The grass is deep and green and cool, Where sound of life is not. Here in this lovely lap of bloom, The grace of glen and glade, That tender days and nights illume, My gentle friend was laid. I do not mark the shell that lies Beneath the touching flowers; I only see the radiant eyes Of other scenes and hours. I only turn, by grief inspired, Like some forsaken thing, To look upon a life retired As hushed Bethesda's spring. The glory of unblemished days Is on the silent mound-- The light of years, too pure for praise; I kneel on holy ground! Here is the clay of one whose mind Was fairer than the
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Blaxland