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Roving Men

Take the boat to the bounds of the ocean,
  Away to the ends of the earth:
We've a heritage no one may plunder,
  A right that is ours from our birth!
Wooers of fortune the fickle,
  Bondsmen of limitless sea,
Brothers in soul from the cradle,
  Blood of the Vikings are we!

Since our fathers sailed with Drake,
  Alien lands to find and take,
In the misty days of yore,
  Forth our hopeful way we wend, —
Tramp the world from end to end,
  Roam the ocean and the shore.
Tho' men say the earth is old
  And can nothing new unfold,
And that all her songs are sung,
  Yet our burning steps pass on
Where the men of old have gone,
  As it was when earth was young.

We have jested with the earth
  In the fullness of our mirth
In her silent sanctity:
  We have wrestled long with Death
'Mid the poisonous fever breath,
  Which should gain the mastery.
Southern Cross and Northern Light
  Know our manhood and our might,
And our folly and our sin:
  On the lonely untrod lands
Lightly have we laid our hands,
  Set and sealed them for our kin.

In our days the war and dearth
  Heralding a nation's birth,
From our ranks death's harvesting;
  Yet we stay not to behold,
As the passing years unfold,
  All the fruit our toil may bring.
Other folk may follow on
  Where our fleeting steps have gone,
Sow and reap where we have trod:
  But our restless footsteps turn
To the wilds for which we yearn,
  Unknown way and untilled sod!

Take the boat for the bounds of the ocean,
  Away to the ends of the earth:
We've a heritage no one may plunder,
  A right that is ours from our birth!
Little we ask for our guerdon;
  Nought save to roam and be free;
Bound for the tents of the nomad,
  Blood of the Viking, are we!

Notes

From THE FOREMOST TRAIL, by Cicely Fox Smith, published by Sampson Low, Marston & Co., London, UK, © 1899, pp. 10-12.

Contributed by Ian "Nobby" Dye of Bristol, UK.

Guerdon in this context means reward

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Comments


  • I-Like-Rhymes Moderators member
    June 2, 2006
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    Shades of Rule Brittania
    Written at the height of the British Empire, this poem reflects the brash certainty that the British colonial system was the best for everybody and would lead to the best development of its members.
    Written by a teenage girl shortly after Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee where she would have been exposed to masses of unquestioning jingoistic self congartulation in the British press.
    If we can disregard the content and view the style this shows a very well developed poetic style in someone so young. (In that era)
    Jim


    • Charley Noble Moderators member
      June 4, 2006
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      Jingoistic Indeed!

      Jim-

      I couldn't agree with you more! It's little wonder that Cicely Fox Smith did not get on well with her anti-imperialistic classmate Sylvia Pankhurst at The Manchester School of Art. Cicely even admits in ALL THE WAY ROUND that she flushed some of Sylvia's anti-Boar War flyers down the loo!

      Charley Noble