Above Crow's Nest [Sydney]

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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.

© Henry Lawson