Page:Songs from the Southern Seas and Other Poems (1873).djvu/60

56 Full-turned to those tall tuads that did hear A son's fierce mandate and a mother's prayer.

Ah, God! what memories can live of these, Save only with the half-immortal trees That saw the death of one, the other lost?

The weird-like figure now the bush has crost And stands within the ring, and turns and moans, With arms out-reaching and heart-piercing tones, And groping hands, as one a long time blind Who sees a glimmering light on eye and mind. From tree to sky he turns, from sky to earth, And gasps as one to whom a second birth Of wondrous meaning is an instant shown.

Who is this wreck of years, who all alone, In savage raiment and with words unknown, Bows down like some poor penitent who fears The wrath of God provoked?—this man who hears Around him now, wide circling through the wood, The breathing stillness of a multitude?