Song of Brave Men
1867-1922
by Henry Lawson
1912
-
- Man, is the Sea your master? Sea, and
is man your slave?
- This is the song of brave men who
never know they are brave:
- Ceaselessly watching to save you,
stranger from foreign lands,
- Soundly asleep in your state room,
full sail for the Goodwin Sands!
- Life is a dream, they tell us, but
life seems very real,
- When the lifeboat puts out from
Ramsgate, and the luggers put out from Deal!
-
- A gun from the lightship! a
rocket! a cry of, "Turn out, me lad!"
- "Ship on the Sands!" they're shouting,
and a rush of the oilskin-clad.
- The lifeboat leaping and swooping, in
the wake of the fighting tug,
- And the luggers afloat in Hell's water
Oh, "tourist", with cushion and rug!
- Think of the freezing fury, without
one minute's relief,
- When they stood all night in the
blackness by the wreck of the Indian Chief!
-
- Lashed to their seats, and crouching,
to the spray that froze as it flew,
- Twenty-six hours in midwinter! That
was the lifeboat's crew.
- Twice she was swamped, and she
righted, in the rush of the heavy seas,
- And her tug was mostly buried; but
these were common things, these.
- And the luggers go out whenever
there's a hope to get them afloat,
- And these things they do for nothing,
and those fishermen say, "Oh! it's nowt!"
-
- (Enemy, Friend or Stranger! In every
sea or land,
- And across the lives of most men run
stretches of Goodwin Sand;
- And across the life of a nation, as
across the track of a ship,
- Lies the hidden rock, or the iceberg,
within the horizon dip.
- And wise men know them, and warn us,
with lightship, or voice, or pen;
- But we strike, and the fool survivors
sail on to strike again.)
-
- But this is a song of brave men,
wherever is aught to save,
- Christian or Jew or Wowser and
I knew one who was brave;
- British or French or German, Dane or
Latin or Dutch:
- "Scandies" that ignorant British
reckon with "Dagoes and such"
- (Where'er, on a wreck titanic, in a
scene of wild despair,
- The officers call for assistance, a
Swede or a Norse is there.)
-
- Tale of a wreck titanic, with the last
boat over the side,
- And a brave young husband fighting his
clinging, hysterical bride;
- He strikes her fair on the temple,
while the decks are scarce afloat,
- And he kisses her once on the
forehead, and he drops her into the boat.
- So he goes to his death to save her;
and she lives to remember and lie
- Or be true to his love and courage.
But that's how brave men die.
-
- (I hate the slander: "Be British"
and I don't believe it, that's flat:
- No British sailor and captain would
stoop to such cant as that.
- What in the rush of cowards
of the help from before the mast
- Of the two big Swedes and the Norse,
who stood by the mate to the last?
- In every mining disaster, in a
New-World mining town,
- In one of the rescue parties an Olsen
or Hans goes down.)
-
- Men who fought for their village, away
on their country's edge:
- The priest with his cross and a
musket, and the blacksmith with his sledge;
- The butcher with cleaver and pistols,
and the notary with his pike.
- And the clerk with what he laid hands
on; but all were ready to strike.
- And Tennyson notwithstanding
when the hour of danger was come,
- The shopman has struck full often with
his "cheating yard-wand" home!
-
- This is a song of brave men, ever, the
wide world o'er
- Starved and crippled and murdered by
the land they are fighting for.
- Left to freeze in the trenches, sent
to drown by the Cape,
- Throttled by army contractors, and
strangled bv old red-tape.
- Fighting for "Home" and "Country", or
"Glory", or what you choose
- Sacrificed for the Syndicates, and a
monarch "in" with the Jews.
-
- Australia! your trial is coming! Down
with the party strife:
- Send Your cackling, lying women back
to the old Home Life.
- Brush trom your Parliament benches the
legal chaff and dust:
- Make Federation perfect, as sooner or
later you must.
- Scatter your crowded cities, cut up
your States and so
- Give your brave sons of the future the
ghost of a White Man's show.
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