Page:Songs from the Southern Seas and Other Poems (1873).djvu/118

114 :::Thus closed the life Of Samuel Jones, known as "Number Ten" On his Ticket-of-Leave; and of all the men In the Western Colony, bond or free, None had manlier heart or hand than he.

In digging a sawpit, while all alone,— For his mate was sleeping,—Sam struck a stone With the edge of the spade, and it gleamed like fire. And looked at Sam from its bed in the mire, Till he dropped the spade and stooped and raised The wonderful stone that glittered and blazed As if it were mad at the spade's rude blow; But its blaze set the sawyer's heart aglow As he looked and trembled, then turned him round, And crept from the pit, and lay on the ground, Looking over the mould-heap at the camp Where his mate still slept. Then down to the swamp He ran with the stone, and washed it bright, And felt like a drunken man at the sight