The Nearing Drums by C. J. Dennis

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Beside my own house-door am I
   With all the world at peace.
A little cloud against the sky
   Trails by its tattered fleece,
The sunlight sports amid the tossing trees,
Their leaves now dark, now silver in the breeze.

The brown-tipped saplings bend and sway
   As in a mimic strife,
Like merry children at their play.
   Aglow with careless life ....
And, muffled, like the roll of distant drums,
A drone of waters from the gully comes.

The Jack has laughed the whole day long --
   A jocund bird is he!
This eve, a thrush his even song
   Pipes merrily to me.
He pipes of idle hours, of pleasant days,
Of lives cast blessedly in tranquil ways.

With peace and freedom over all
   The summer day has flown;
And well content am I to call
   This happy land mine own.
Mine own! ... And in the thrush's careless song
I mark a changing note: "How long? How long?"

How long?  And, as the years march on,
   Shall it be e'er as this?
Or shall some alien look upon
   These scenes we love -- as his?
Still from the gully sounds that rhythmic beat:
The menace of the drums; the marching feet!

Shall this dear land we call our own
   Be ours one other year?
Mark how the drums have louder grown!
   The tramping feet draw near!
And thro' the drone breaks forth a warning voice:
"Yours be the sacrifice!  Yours is the choice!"

The challenge of a bugle blast!
   The thrush's song is lost.
Pale, stern-faced men march grimly past
   Where saplings swayed and tossed;
And where the peaceful clouds sailed slowly by,
I see black smoke of cannon in the sky.

I mark the smoke of cannon rise
   To hide the summer sun;
I hear the soldiers' fighting cries,
   The booming of a gun.
My countrymen!  Our summer day has flown!
To-morrow! -- shall this loved land be our own?
 
Ours is the choice. And shall our sons,
   When those dark days are o'er --
When stilled again are drums and guns --
   Sit each beside his door? --
Beside his own house-door and proudly say,
"'Tis to our sires we owe this summer day?"

Or shall they, vanquished and enslaved, 
   Mourn for a country lost --
The land their fathers might have saved
   Who meanly shirked the cost?
And shall they curse, upon that evil day,
The dolts who dreamed one summer time away?

Beside mine own house-door am I,
   With all the world at peace,
A little cloud trails slowly by
   Its torn and tattered fleece,
And sweetly, to my idle ear there comes
The note of happy bird-talk in the gums.

The brown-tipped saplings bend and gleam,
   Like careless boys at play:
Like careless boys we laugh, we dream
   The livelong summer day.....
Louder the sound from out the gully comes;
The marching feet; the sullen roll of drums.

First published in The Lone Hand, 1 March 1913


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This page contains a single entry by Perry Middlemiss published on March 1, 2013 7:33 AM.

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