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Aboriginal Death-Song

Topics: classic

Feet of the flying, and fierce     Tops of the sharp-headed spear,     Hard by the thickets that pierce,     Lo! they are nimble and near.     Women are we, and the wives     Strong Arrawatta hath won;     Weary because of our lives,     Sick of the face of the sun.     Koola, our love and our light,     What have they done unto you?     Man of the star-reaching sight,     Dipped in the fire and the dew.     Black-headed snakes in the grass     Struck at the fleet-footed lord     Still is his voice at the pass,     Soundless his step at the ford.     Far by the forested glen,     Starkly he lies in the rain;     Kings of the council of men     Shout for their leader in vain.     Yea, and the fish-river clear     Never shall blacken below     Spear and the shadow of spear,     Bow and the shadow of bow.     Hunter and climber of trees,     Now doth his tomahawk rust,     (Dread of the cunning wild bees),     Hidden in hillocks of dust.     We, who were followed and bound,     Dashed under foot by the foe,     Sit with our eyes to the ground,     Faint from the brand and the blow.     Dumb with the sorrow that kills,     Sorrow for brother and chief,     Terror of thundering hills,     Having no hope in our grief,     Seeing the fathers are far     Seeking the spoils of the dead     Left on the path of the war,     Matted and mangled and red.

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"Feet of the flying, and fierce..."

"Aboriginal Death-Song" is a quintessential example of Henry Kendall's signature style... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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