[A foolish suggestion has lately been mooted in the English papers, that British New Guinea should be bartered with Germany for her African West Coast possessions.]
Bold Torres the sailor came and went
With his swarthy, storm-worn band;
He saw Saavedra's * Isle to north,
To the south a loom of land.
He left, unknowing his name would live
Through ages big with Fate
As the first to stem with his broad-bowed ship
The wash of the Northern Strait.
Round the western shores the Dutch ships crept,
Seeking the hidden way;
Some left their bones on a wind-swept coast,
And the others sailed away.
Turned back, turned back by reef and rock ---
Twin guards of the sunlit gate,
The path of the sun from the eastern seas ---
They were mocked by the Northern Strait.
Year in, year out, the monsoons swept
O'er the isles off the coral shore;
The savage tossed in his frail canoe
But the white man came no more.
No sail in sight at the break of dawn,
No sail at the gloaming late;
Silent and still was the lonely pass,
Unsought was the Northern Strait.
A rattle of arms and a roll of drums,
And the meteor flag flies free,
As an English voice proclaims King George
Lord of that tropic sea.
The parrots scream as the volleys flash,
The gulls their haunts vacate,
And the "south-east" fills the Endeavour's sails
As she heads through the Northern Strait.
And ever since then has the watch been kept
O'er the ships in the narrow way,
Where the smoking funnels flare by night,
And the house-flags flaunt by day.
Ever the same strong "south-east" blows,
And ever we watch and wait ---
The wardens we, in Australia's name,
The Guard of the Northern Strait.
Over banks of pearl our watch is kept,
Over sands where the drown'd men rest;
Ever we signal the ships from east,
And watch for the ships from west;
Always we watch for the battle-flag
Of a foe with defiant prate;
Our answer is --- "In Australia's name,
"We're the Guard of the Northern Strait!"
*Alvaro Saavedra, the discoverer of New Guinea in 1528.
First published in The Queenslander, 13 August 1898;
and later in
A Book of Australian Verse for Boys and Girls edited by Bertram Stevens, 1915; and
This Land: An Anthology of Australian Poetry for Young People edited by M.M. Flynn and J. Groom 1968.
Author reference sites: Austlit, Australian Dictionary of Biography
See also.
Bold Torres the sailor came and went
With his swarthy, storm-worn band;
He saw Saavedra's * Isle to north,
To the south a loom of land.
He left, unknowing his name would live
Through ages big with Fate
As the first to stem with his broad-bowed ship
The wash of the Northern Strait.
Round the western shores the Dutch ships crept,
Seeking the hidden way;
Some left their bones on a wind-swept coast,
And the others sailed away.
Turned back, turned back by reef and rock ---
Twin guards of the sunlit gate,
The path of the sun from the eastern seas ---
They were mocked by the Northern Strait.
Year in, year out, the monsoons swept
O'er the isles off the coral shore;
The savage tossed in his frail canoe
But the white man came no more.
No sail in sight at the break of dawn,
No sail at the gloaming late;
Silent and still was the lonely pass,
Unsought was the Northern Strait.
A rattle of arms and a roll of drums,
And the meteor flag flies free,
As an English voice proclaims King George
Lord of that tropic sea.
The parrots scream as the volleys flash,
The gulls their haunts vacate,
And the "south-east" fills the Endeavour's sails
As she heads through the Northern Strait.
And ever since then has the watch been kept
O'er the ships in the narrow way,
Where the smoking funnels flare by night,
And the house-flags flaunt by day.
Ever the same strong "south-east" blows,
And ever we watch and wait ---
The wardens we, in Australia's name,
The Guard of the Northern Strait.
Over banks of pearl our watch is kept,
Over sands where the drown'd men rest;
Ever we signal the ships from east,
And watch for the ships from west;
Always we watch for the battle-flag
Of a foe with defiant prate;
Our answer is --- "In Australia's name,
"We're the Guard of the Northern Strait!"
*Alvaro Saavedra, the discoverer of New Guinea in 1528.
First published in The Queenslander, 13 August 1898;
and later in
A Book of Australian Verse for Boys and Girls edited by Bertram Stevens, 1915; and
This Land: An Anthology of Australian Poetry for Young People edited by M.M. Flynn and J. Groom 1968.
Author reference sites: Austlit, Australian Dictionary of Biography
See also.