Page:Songs from the Southern Seas and Other Poems (1873).djvu/65

Rh The echoes only answered back the sound. They sought within the huts, but nothing found Save loneliness and shadow, falling chill On every sunny searcher: boding ill, They tried each well-known haunt, and every throat Sent far abroad the bushman's cooing note. But all in vain their searching: twilight fell, And sent them home their sorrowing tale to tell. That night their elders formed a torch-lit chain To sweep the gloomy bush; and not in vain,— For when the moon at midnight hung o'erhead, The weary searchers found poor Jacob—dead!

He lay within the tuad ring, his face Laid earthward on his hands; and all the place Was dim with shadow where the people stood. And as they gathered there, the circling wood Seemed filled with awful whisperings, and stirred By things unseen; and every bushman heard, From where the corse lay plain within their sight, A woman's heart-wail rising on the night.