<1-170> FIRST FRUITS OF AUSTRALIAN POETRY [3] BOTANY-BAY FLOWERS "juvatque novos decerpere flores, "Insignemque meo capiti petere inde coronam, "Unde prius nulli velarint tempora Musae." LUCRETIUS, lib. I. "Fairies use flowers for their charactery." SHAKESP. Merry Wives. GOD of this Planet! for that name best fits The purblind view, which men of this "dim spot" Can take of THEE, the GOD Of Suns and Spheres! What desert forests, and what barren plains, Lie unexplor'd by European eye, In what our Fathers call'd the Great South Land! Ev'n in those tracts, which we have visited, Tho' thousands of thy vegetable works Have, by the hand of Science (as 'tis call'd) Been gather'd and dissected, press'd and dried, Till all their blood and beauty are extinct; And nam'd in barb'rous Latin, men's surnames, With terminations of the Roman tongue; Yet tens of thousands have escap'd the search, The decimation, the alive-impaling, Nick-naming of GOD'S creatures - 'scap'd it all. Still fewer (perhaps none) of all these Flowers Have been by Poet sung. Poets are few, And Botanists are many, and good cheap. [4] When first I landed on AUSTRALIA'S Shore, (I neither Botanist nor Poet truly, But less a Seeker after Facts than Truth), A Flower gladden'd me above the rest, Shap'd trumpet-like, which from a palmy stalk Hung clust'ring, hyacinthine, crimson red Melting to white. Botanic Science calls The plant epacris grandiflora, gives Its class, description, habitat, then draws A line. The Bard of Truth would moralize The Flower's beauty, which caught first my eye; But, having liv'd the circle of the year, I found (and then he'd sing in Beauty's praise) This the sole plant that never ceas'd to bloom. Nor here would stop: - at length first love and fair, And fair and sweet, and sweet and constant, pall, (Alas, for poor Humanity!) and then The new, the pretty, and the unexpected, Ensnare the fancy. Thus it was with me, When first I spied the Flowret in the grass, Which forms the subject of this humble Song, And (treason to my wedded Flower) cried: - Th' Australian "fringed Violet" Shall henceforward be my pet! Oh! had this Flow'r been seen by him Who call'd Europa's "violets dim Sweeter than lids of juno's eyes," He had not let this touch suffice, But had pronounc'd it (I am certain) Of Juno's eye the "fringed curtain" - Pick'd phrase for eye-lid, which the Poet [5] Has us'd elsewhere; and he will know it Who in his dramas is well vers'd: Vide The Tempest, Act the First. - But I am wand'ring from my duty, First to describe my fringe-ey'd Beauty. 'Tis then a floss-edg'd lilac Flower, That shuts at early ev'ning's hour, When the Sun has lost his power, Like a Fairy's parasol (If Fairies walk by day at all); Or, it may quicker gain belief, To call it her silk neckerchief, Dropt before she blest the place With her last night's dancing grace: For surely Fairies haunt a land, Where they may have the free command Of beetles, flowers, butterflies, Of such enchanting tints and dyes: Not beetles black (forbidden things), But beetles of enamel'd wings, Or rather, coats of armour, boss'd And studded till the ground-work's lost: Then, for all other insects, - here Queen Mab would have no cause to fear For her respectable approach, Lest she could not set up her coach. Here's a fine grub for a coach-maker, Good as in Fairy-land Long-Acre; And very-long-indeed-legg'd spinners, To make her waggon-spokes, the sinners! And here are winged grasshoppers; And, as to gnats for waggoners, We have musquitoes will suffice [6] To drive her team of atomies. If therefore she and her regalia Have never yet been in Australia, I recommend a voyage to us, On board the Paper Nautilus; But I incline to the opinion That we are now in her dominion; For we dream all those self-same dreams, Which (from Mercutio) it seems We owe to her deliv'rancy, As midwife and queen faëry. Puck talks of putting round the earth, In forty minutes time, a girth: Ob'ron, tho' he "the groves may tread "Till th'eastern gate, all fiery red, "Open on Neptune with fair beams, "And turn to gold his salt green streams." Yet chuses he, "in silence sad, "To trip after the night's shade: "He the globe can compass soon, "Swifter than the wand'ring moon:" And Queen Titania's made to say That she had been in India; And had a mortal vot'ress there; As I hope too, among the Fair Of this young land of Shakespeare's tongue, [7] That she has here: - I've else judgy'd wrong. Enough then of the Fairies and the Flower; And, as mistaking Puck I must sure have squeez'd The juice of that same little purple flower, (Why may it not, ye Botanists, be call'd A species of Love in Idleness? Only because perhaps Jussieu would say It is no violet ), and dropt the liquor Into my sleeping eyes, to make me change My love, as erst Lysander did to Helen From Hermia: so may the Fairy King, Just Oberon, see good to break the spell With the epacris' juice, of virtuous might To take from eyes all error, that when next They wake, all this may seem a fruitless dream. "My heart with that but as guest-wise sojourn'd, "And now to this flow'r is at home return'd, "Thereto remain. "Be as thou wast wont to be; "See as thou wast wont to see: "Dian's bud o'er Cupid's flower "Hath such force and blessed power." [9] THE KANGAROO "Mixtumque genus, prolesque biformis." VIRG. Aen. vi. KANGAROO, Kangaroo! Thou Spirit of Australia, That redeems from utter failure, From perfect desolation, And warrants the creation Of this fifth part of the Earth, Which would seem an after-birth, Not conceiv'd in the Beginning (For GOD bless'd His work at first, And saw that it was good), But emerg'd at the first sinning, When the ground was therefore curst; - And hence this barren wood! Kangaroo, Kangaroo! Tho' at first sight we should say, In thy nature that there may Contradiction be involv'd, Yet, like discord well resolv'd, [10] It is quickly harmoniz'd. Sphynx or mermaid realiz'd, Or centaur unfabulous, Would scarce be more prodigious, Or Pegasus poetical, Or hippogriff - chimeras all! But, what Nature would compile, Nature knows to reconcile; And Wisdom, ever at her side, Of all her children's justified. She had made the squirrel fragile; She had made the bounding hart; But a third so strong and agile Was beyond ev'n Nature's art; So she joind the former two In thee, Kangaroo! To describe thee, it is hard: Converse of the camélopard, Which beginneth camel-wise, But endeth of the panther size, Thy fore half, it would appear, Had belong'd to some "small deer," Such as liveth in a tree; By thy hinder, thou should'st be A large animal of chace, Bounding o'er the forest's space; - Join'd by some divine mistake, None but Nature's hand can make - Nature, in her wisdom's play, On Creation's holiday. For howsoe'er anomalous, [11] Thou yet art not incongruous, Repugnant or preposterous. Better-proportion'd animal, More graceful or ethereal, Was never follow'd by the hound, With fifty steps to thy one bound. Thou can'st not be amended: no; Be as thou art; thou best art so. When sooty swans are once more rare, And duck-moles the Museum's care, Be still the glory of this land, Happiest Work of finest Hand! [15] ON READING THE CONTROVERSY BETWEEN LORD BYRON AND MR BOWLES Anticipation is to a young country what antiquity is to an old. WHETHER a ship's poetic? - Bowles would own, If here he dwelt, where Nature is prosaic, Unpicturesque, unmusical, and where Nature-reflecting Art is not yet born; - A land without antiquities, with one, And only one, poor spot of classic ground, (That on which Cook first landed) - where, instead Of heart-communings with ancestral relicks, Which purge the pride while they exalt the mind, We've nothing left us but anticipation, Better (I grant) than utter selfishness, Yet too o'erweening - too American; Where's no past tense, the ign'rant present's all; Or only great by the All hail, hereafter! One foot of Future's glass should rest on Past; Where Hist'ry is not, Prophecy is guess - If here he dwelt, Bowles (I repeat) would own A ship's the only poetry we see. For, first, she brings us "newsof human kind," [16] Of friends and kindred, whom perchance she held As visitors, that she might be a link, Connecting the fond fancy of far friendship, A few short months before, and whom she may In a few more, perhaps, receive again. Next is a ship poetic, forasmuch As in this spireless city and prophane, She is to my home-wand'ring phantasy, With her tall anch'ring masts, a three-spir'd minster, Vane-crown'd; her bell our only half-hour chimes. Lastly, a ship is poetry to me, Since piously I trust, in no long space, Her wings will bear me from this prose-dull land. [17] SONNET, ON VISITING THE SPOT WHERE CAPTAIN COOK AND SIR JOSEPH BANKS FIRST LANDED IN BOTANY BAY HERE fix the tablet. This must be the place Where our Columbus of the South did land; He saw the Indian village on that sand, And on this rock first met the simple race Of Australasia, who presum'd to face With lance and spear his musquet. Close at hand Is the clear stream, from which his vent'rous band Refresh'd their ship; and thence a little space Lies Sutherland, their shipmate; for the sound Of Christian burial better did proclaim Possession, than the flag, in England's name. These were the commelinae Banks first found; But where's the tree with the ship's wood-carv'd fame ? Fix then th' Ephesian brass. 'Tis classic ground. [18] SONNET ON AFFIXING A TABLET TO THE MEMORY OF CAPTAIN COOK AND SIR JOSEPH BANKS AGAINST THE ROCK OF THEIR FIRST LANDING IN BOTANY BAY I HAVE been musing what our Banks had said And Cook, had they had second sight, that here (Where fifty years ago the first they were Of voyagers, whose feet did ever tread These savage shores) - that here on this south head Should stand an English farm-hut; and that there On yon north shore, a barrack tow'r should peer; Still more had they this simple Tablet read, Erected by their own compatriots born, Colonists here of a discordant state, Yet big with virtues (though the flow'ry name Which Science left it, has become a scorn And hissing to the nations), if our Great Be Wise and Good. So fairest Rome became! <\1-170><\g=m><\o=b><\age=33><\status=2><\abode=02><\p=nsw><\r=pcw><\tt=ve>