The Camp Within the West

Roderic Quinn 1867 (Surry Hills, New South Wales) – 1949 (Darlinghurst, New South Wales)



O DID you see a troop go by   
 Way-weary and oppressed,   
Dead kisses on the drooping lip   
And a dead heart in the breast?   
  
Yea, I have seen them one by one           
Way-weary and oppressed,   
And when I asked them, ‘Whither speed?’   
They answered, ‘To the West!’   
  
And were they pale as pale could be—   
Death-pale with haunted eyes,           
And did you see the hot white dust   
Range round their feet and rise?   
  
Oh, they were pale as pale could be,   
And pale as an embered leaf;   
The hot white dust had risen, but           
They laid it with their grief.   
  
Did no one say the way is long,   
And crave a little rest?   
Oh no, they said, ‘The night is nigh,   
Our camp is in the West!’           
  
And did pain pierce their feet, as though   
The way with thorns were set,   
And were they visited by strange   
Dark angels of regret?   
  
Oh yea, and some were mute as death,           
Though shot by many a dart,   
With them the salt of inward tears   
Went stinging through the heart.   
  
And how are these wayfarers called,   
And whither do they wend?           
The Weary-Hearted—and their road   
At sunset hath and end.   
  
Shed tears for them…Nay, nay, no tears!   
They yearn for endless rest;   
Perhaps large stars will burn above           
Their camp within the West.

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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

1:07 min read
85

Quick analysis:

Scheme aBxb xBxb cdxd cexe xbab xfxf xghg xixi hbxb
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 1,313
Words 225
Stanzas 9
Stanza Lengths 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4, 4

Roderic Quinn

Roderic Joseph Quinn was an Australian poet. more…

All Roderic Quinn poems | Roderic Quinn Books

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