Song Of The Future Poem Rhyme Scheme and Analysis
Rhyme Scheme: ABBA CDCD EFFE GHHH IJIJJ KHKHHH LMMAAL JNNJ OPOPO HPPHKOPK QPQHHP RHHR SHHPSPTT UVVU OHOHPPHOH JHWXHJYY ZA2A2B2 HDOODJJC2HHH D2HHHHD2 SHHHHHSH HTTHJHHJ PHHHA2A2PHHE2PHHE2 CQQCF2F2A2HHA2HPHHHP PG2G2PP H2HHHI2OHOH J2AJ2A K2'Tis strange that in a land so strong | A |
So strong and bold in mighty youth | B |
We have no poet's voice of truth | B |
To sing for us a wondrous song | A |
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Our chiefest singer yet has sung | C |
In wild sweet notes a passing strain | D |
All carelessly and sadly flung | C |
To that dull world he thought so vain | D |
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I care for nothing good nor bad | E |
My hopes are gone my pleasures fled | F |
I am but sifting sand he said | F |
What wonder Gordon's songs were sad | E |
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And yet not always sad and hard | G |
In cheerful mood and light of heart | H |
He told the tale of Britomarte | H |
And wrote the Rhyme of Joyous Garde | H |
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And some have said that Nature's face | I |
To us is always sad but these | J |
Have never felt the smiling grace | I |
Of waving grass and forest trees | J |
On sunlit plains as wide as seas | J |
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A land where dull Despair is king | K |
O'er scentless flowers and songless bird | H |
But we have heard the bell birds ring | K |
Their silver bells at eventide | H |
Like fairies on the mountain side | H |
The sweetest note man ever heard | H |
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The wild thrush lifts a note of mirth | L |
The bronzewing pigeons call and coo | M |
Beside their nests the long day through | M |
The magpie warbles clear and strong | A |
A joyous glad thanksgiving song | A |
For all God's mercies upon earth | L |
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And many voices such as these | J |
Are joyful sounds for those to tell | N |
Who know the Bush and love it well | N |
With all its hidden mysteries | J |
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We cannot love the restless sea | O |
That rolls and tosses to and fro | P |
Like some fierce creature in its glee | O |
For human weal or human woe | P |
It has no touch of sympathy | O |
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For us the bush is never sad | H |
Its myriad voices whisper low | P |
In tones the bushmen only know | P |
Its sympathy and welcome glad | H |
For us the roving breezes bring | K |
From many a blossum tufted tree | O |
Where wild bees murmur dreamily | P |
The honey laden breath of Spring | K |
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We have our tales of other days | Q |
Good tales the northern wanderers tell | P |
When bushmen meet and camp fires blaze | Q |
And round the ring of dancing light | H |
The great dark bush with arms of night | H |
Folds every hearer in its spell | P |
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We have our songs not songs of strife | R |
And hot blood spilt on sea and land | H |
But lilts that link achievement grand | H |
To honest toil and valiant life | R |
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Lift ye your faces to the sky | S |
Ye barrier mountains in the west | H |
Who lie so peacefully at rest | H |
Enshrouded in a haze of blue | P |
'Tis hard to feel that years went by | S |
Before the pioneers broke through | P |
Your rocky heights and walls of stone | T |
And made your secrets all their own | T |
- | |
For years the fertile Western plains | U |
Were hid behind your sullen walls | V |
Your cliffs and crags and waterfalls | V |
All weatherworn with tropic rains | U |
- | |
Between the mountains and the sea | O |
Like Israelites with staff in hand | H |
The people waited restlessly | O |
They looked towards the mountains old | H |
And saw the sunsets come and go | P |
With gorgeous golden afterglow | P |
That made the West a fairyland | H |
And marveled what that West might be | O |
Of which such wondrous tales were told | H |
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For tales were told of inland seas | J |
Like sullen oceans salt and dead | H |
And sandy deserts white and wan | W |
Where never trod the foot of man | X |
Nor bird went winging overhead | H |
Nor ever stirred a gracious breeze | J |
To wake the silence with its breath | Y |
A land of loneliness and death | Y |
- | |
At length the hardy pioneers | Z |
By rock and crag found out the way | A2 |
And woke with voices of today | A2 |
A silence kept for years and tears | B2 |
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Upon the Western slope they stood | H |
And saw a wide expanse of plain | D |
As far as eye could stretch or see | O |
Go rolling westward endlessly | O |
The native grasses tall as grain | D |
Bowed waved and rippled in the breeze | J |
From boughs of blossom laden trees | J |
The parrots answered back again | C2 |
They saw the land that it was good | H |
A land of fatness all untrod | H |
And gave their silent thanks to God | H |
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The way is won The way is won | D2 |
And straightway from the barren coast | H |
There came a westward marching host | H |
That aye and ever onward prest | H |
With eager faces to the West | H |
Along the pathway of the sun | D2 |
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The mountains saw them marching by | S |
They faced the all consuming drought | H |
They would not rest in settled land | H |
But taking each his life in hand | H |
Their faces ever westward bent | H |
Beyond the farthest settlement | H |
Responding to the challenge cry | S |
of better country farther out | H |
- | |
And lo a miracle the land | H |
But yesterday was all unknown | T |
The wild man's boomerang was thrown | T |
Where now great busy cities stand | H |
It was not much you say that these | J |
Should win their way where none withstood | H |
In sooth there was not much of blood | H |
No war was fought between the seas | J |
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It was not much but we who know | P |
The strange capricious land they trod | H |
At times a stricken parching sod | H |
At times with raging floods beset | H |
Through which they found their lonely way | A2 |
Are quite content that you should say | A2 |
It was not much while we can feel | P |
That nothing in the ages old | H |
In song or story written yet | H |
On Grecian urn or Roman arch | E2 |
Though it should ring with clash of steel | P |
Could braver histories unfold | H |
Than this bush story yet untold | H |
The story of their westward march | E2 |
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But times are changed and changes rung | C |
From old to new the olden days | Q |
The old bush life and all its ways | Q |
Are passing from us all unsung | C |
The freedom and the hopeful sense | F2 |
Of toil that brought due recompense | F2 |
Of room for all has passed away | A2 |
And lies forgotten with the dead | H |
Within our streets men cry for bread | H |
In cities built but yesterday | A2 |
About us stretches wealth of land | H |
A boundless wealth of virgin soil | P |
As yet unfruitful and untilled | H |
Our willing workmen strong and skilled | H |
Within our cities idle stand | H |
And cry aloud for leave to toil | P |
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The stunted children come and go | P |
In squalid lanes and alleys black | G2 |
We follow but the beaten track | G2 |
Of other nations and we grow | P |
In wealth for some for many woe | P |
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And it may be that we who live | H2 |
In this new land apart beyond | H |
The hard old world grown fierce and fond | H |
And bound by precedent and bond | H |
May read the riddle right and give | I2 |
New hope to those who dimly see | O |
That all things yet shall be for good | H |
And teach the world at length to be | O |
One vast united brotherhood | H |
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So may it be and he who sings | J2 |
In accents hopeful clear and strong | A |
The glories which that future brings | J2 |
Shall sing indeed a wondrous song | A |
- | |
The Bulletin December | K2 |
Banjo Paterson (andrew Barton)
(1)
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