An Australian Rose
(from Lala Fisher [ed.], By Creek and Gully. Stories and Sketches Mostly of Bush Life:Told in Prose and Rhyme by Australian Writers in England: 1899)
Patchett Martin
To R. M. P.
To her of gracious gifts, whose graceful pen
Becomes a fairy wand in her frail hand
Flashing the sunlight of her Austral land
On the slim maidens and brown-bearded men
Who live their lives for us at her command
I said — “I always think of you as when,
Like one entranced in an enchanted glen,
You stood one night amidst a madcap band.
With red lips parted, and a roseleaf flush
Painting the pearly pallor of your face,
Mute, motionless, in an expectant hush,
Your dreamy eyes like stars shone into space.”
Softly she answer’d with a shadowy blush—
“My soul first stirred to life in that fair place.”
Harriet Anne Martin (c. 1837-1908)
Australian poet and writer
A beautiful poem.
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