CCXXXI OUR HERITAGE
A perfect peaceful stillness reigns, Not e’en a passing playful breeze The sword-shaped flax-blades gently stirs: The vale and slopes of rising hills Are thickly clothed with yellow grass, Whereon the sun, late risen, throws His rays, to linger listlessly. Naught the expanse of yellow breaks, Save where a darker spot denotes Some straggling bush of thorny scrub; While from a gully down the glen, The foliage of the dull-leaved trees Rises to view; and the calm air From stillness for a moment waked By parakeets’ harsh chattering, Swift followed by a tui’s trill Of bell-like notes, is hushed again. The tiny orbs of glistening dew Still sparkle, gem-like, ’mid the grass; While morning mist, their Mother moist, Reluctant loiters on the hill, Whence presently she’ll pass to merge In the soft depths of the blue heav’ns. This fertile Isle to us is given Fresh from its Maker’s hand; for here No records of the vanished past Tell of the time when might was right, And self-denial weakness was; But all is peaceful, pure, and fair. Our heritage is hope. We’ll rear A Nation worthy of the land; And when in age we linger late, Upon the heights above life’s vale, Before we, like the mist, shall merge In depths of God’s eternity, We’ll see, perchance, our influence Left dew-like, working for the good Of those whose day but dawns below.
Alexander Bathgate.
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