Public Domain Poetry - Above Crow’s Nest - Sydney by Henry Lawson
Custom Search
Public Domain
Poetry Menu

Index Page

Poetry Listing

Poetry By First Lines

Authors By Surname

Authors By First Name

Top Poetry

Top Authors



Main Site Menu
Home

Authors By Nickname

Articles By Title

Top Articles

Public Domain Stories


Contact Us


Top Sites, Click here to vote for our site

Sponsored Links

Read, Rate, Comment on or Submit your poetry



Above Crow’s Nest - Sydney

    By Henry Lawson



    A blanket low and leaden,
    Though rent across the west,
    Whose darkness seems to deaden
    The brightest and the best;
    A sunset white and staring
    On cloud-wrecks far away,
    And haggard house-walls glaring
    A farewell to the day.

    A light on tower and steeple,
    Where sun no longer shines,
    My people, Oh my people!
    Rise up and read the signs!
    Low looms the nearer high-line
    (No sign of star or moon),
    The horseman on the skyline
    Rode hard this afternoon!

    (Is he, and who shall know it?,
    The spectre of a scout?
    The spirit of a poet,
    Whose truths were met with doubt?
    Who sought and who succeeded
    In marking danger’s track,
    Whose warnings were unheeded
    Till all the sky was black?)

    It is a shameful story
    For our young, generous home,
    Without the rise and glory
    We’d go as Greece and Rome.
    Without the sacrifices
    That make a nation’s name,
    The elder nation’s vices
    And luxuries we claim.

    Grown vain without a conquest,
    And sure without a fort,
    And maddened in the one quest
    For pleasure or for sport.
    Self-blinded to our starkness
    We’d fling the time away
    To fight, half-armed, in darkness
    Who should be armed to-day.

    This song is for the city,
    The city in its pride,
    The coming time shall pity
    And shield the countryside.
    Shall we live in the present
    Till fearful war-clouds loom,
    And till the sullen peasant
    Shall leave us to our doom?

    Cloud-fortresses titanic
    Along the western sky,
    The tired, bowed mechanic
    And pallid clerk flit by.
    Lit by a light unhealthy,
    The ghastly after-glare,
    The veiled and goggled wealthy
    Drive fast, they know not where.

    Night’s sullen spirit rouses,
    The darkening gables lour
    From ugly four-roomed houses
    Verandah’d windows glower;
    The last long day-stare dies on
    The scrub-ridged western side,
    And round the near horizon
    The spectral horsemen ride.



Extra Info:


Add Your Thoughts on this poem.


This page viewed 1677 times.
Sponsored Links



Our Sites

10 Random Links From
Puttock International P/L.

1. Travel Maps and their usefulness
2. Photography Information, from selecting a camera to taking an Amazing Pic.
3. Figuactiv weight loss program information, hints, tips and links to products.
4. Second Income Opportunity
5. Choosing Your Garden Furniture
6. Aloe Vera Information particularly in relation to quality LR products
7. Sports Memorabilia Collectors
8. Figuactiv weight loss program information, hints, tips and links to products.
9. Public Domain Poetry from the literary greats
10. Second Income anyone? This is one of the best, that could overtake your main income.