The Earth-Mother

Frank Dalby Davison 1893 (Hawthorn, Victoria) – 1970 (Melbourne)



COMETH a voice:—‘My children, hear;   
 From the crowded street and the close-packed mart   
I call you back with my message clear,   
 Back to my lap and my loving heart.   
Long have ye left me, journeying on           
 By range and river and grassy plain,   
To the teeming towns where the rest have gone—   
 Come back, come back to my arms again.   
  
‘So shall ye lose the foolish needs   
 That gnaw your souls; and my touch shall serve           
To heal the ills that the city breeds,   
 The pallid cheek and the fretted nerve.   
Treading the turf that ye once loved well,   
 Instead of the stones of the city’s street,   
Ye shall hear nor din nor drunken yell,           
 But the wind that croons in the ripening wheat.   
  
‘Yonder, beneath the smoke-smeared sky,   
 A city of half a million souls   
That struggle and chaffer and strive and cry   
 By a sullied river that seaward rolls.           
But here, blue range and full-filled creek,   
 And the soil made glad by the welcome rain   
Waiting the plough. If peace ye seek,   
 Come back, come back to my arms again.   
  
‘I that am old have seen long since           
 Ruin of palaces made with hands   
For the soldier-king and the priest and prince   
 Whose cities crumble in desert sands.   
But still the furrow in many a clime   
 Yields softly under the ploughman’s feet;           
Still there is seeding and harvest time,   
 And the wind still croons in the ripening wheat.   
  
‘Where is Persepolis? Ask the Wind   
 That once the tresses of Thais kissed.   
A stone or two you may haply find           
 Where Night and the Desert keep their tryst.   
But the broken goblet is cast away,   
 And to seek for the lights that are lost is vain.   
The city passes; the green fields stay—   
 Come back, come back to my arms again.           
  
‘The works of man are but little worth;   
 For a time they stand, for a space endure;   
But turn once more to your mother—Earth,   
 My gifts are gracious, my works are sure.   
Green shoot of herbage for growing herd,           
 And blossoming promise of fruitage sweet,   
These shall not fail, if ye heed my word,   
 Nor the wind that croons in the ripening wheat.   
  
‘Would ye fashion a nation, whole and true,   
 Goodly-proportioned, sound at core?           
Then this, my sons, ye must surely do—   
 Give city less, and country more.   
Would ye rear a race to hold this land   
 From foemen steering across the main?   
Then, children, listen and understand—           
 Come back, come back to my arms again.   
  
‘Your coastwise cities are passing fair—   
 Jetty and warehouse and banking-hall,   
Tower and dome and statued square—   
 But who is to guard when the blow shall fall?           
The men who can shoot and ride are found   
 Not where the clerks and the shopmen meet,   
But out, where the reaper hears the sound   
 Of the wind that croons in the ripening wheat.   
  
‘Ye know, who have long since left the loam           
 For a city job in some crowded works,   
That sorrow abides in the straitened home,   
 And Death in the stifling factory lurks.   
And some, who are out of a job, must sleep   
 On a city bench in the driving rain.           
Of happier days are ye dreaming deep?   
 Come back, come back to my arms again.   
  
‘There in the city, by jungle law,   
 Each fights for his meat till set of sun.   
By the deadliest fang and the sharpest claw           
 The right to the largest share is won.   
But here there is neither strife nor guile,   
 The brazen robber nor smooth-tongued cheat.   
Your gold is safe—where the harvests smile,   
 And the wind still croons in the ripening wheat.           
  
‘I mind me once, in a sunlit land,   
 Lancer, Hussar, and fierce Uhlan   
Came galloping in on every hand,   
 And poppied cornfields over-ran.   
And many a sabre was stoutly plied,           
 And many a hero kissed the plain,   
And many a hero’s mother cried,   
 “Come back, come back to my arms again!”   
  
‘But when no longer the trumpets pealed,   
 And the stricken land was at rest once more,           
They found a peasant who sowed his field   
 Nor knew that France had been at war.   
E’en so, instead of the strife and pain   
 I give you peace, with its blessing sweet.   
Come back, come back to my arms again,           
 For the wind still croons in the ripening wheat.’

 

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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

3:38 min read
71

Quick analysis:

Scheme xaxabcxD efefghgh ijijkckD lmlmnhnH opopqcqD rsrsthth uvuvwcwD xyxyzhzh n1 n1 2 c2 d 3 4 3 4 5 h5 h wbwx6 c6 d avxvchdh
Closest metre Iambic pentameter
Characters 4,350
Words 727
Stanzas 12
Stanza Lengths 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8, 8

Frank Dalby Davison

Frank Dalby Davison, also known as F. D. Davison and Freddie Davison, was an Australian novelist and short story writer. Whilst several of his works demonstrated his progressive political philosophy, he is best known as "a writer of animal stories and a sensitive interpreter of Australian bush life in the tradition of Henry Lawson, Joseph Furphy and Vance Palmer." His most popular works were two novels, Man-shy and Dusty, and his short stories. more…

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