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THE DESOLATE VALLEY.

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Far up among the forest-belted mountains,

Where Winterberg, stern giant old and grey,

Looks down the subject dells, whose gleaming fountains

To wizard Kat their virgin tribute pay,

A valley opens to the noontide ray,

With green savannahs shelving to the brim

Of the swift river, sweeping on its way

To where Umtóka[3] tries to meet with him, Like a blue serpent gliding through the acacias dim.

Round this secluded region circling rise

Are billowy wastes of mountains, wild and wide;

Upon whose grassy slopes the pilgrim spies

The gnu and quagga, by the greenwood side,

Tossing their shaggy manes in tameless pride;

Or troop of elands near some sedgy fount;

Or Kùdù fawns, that from the thicket glide.

To seek their dam upon the misty mount,

With harts, gazelles, and roes, more than the eye can count.

And as we journeyed up the pathless glen,

Flanked by romantic hills on either hand,

The boschbok oft would bound away—and then

Beside the willows, backward gazing, stand.

And where old forests darken all the land

From rocky Kalberg to the river’s brink,

The buffalo would start upon the strand,

Where, ’mid palmetto flags, he stooped to drink,

And, crashing through the brakes, to the deep jungle shrink.

Then, couched at night in hunter’s wattled sheiling,

How wildly beautiful it was to hear

The elephant his shrill réveillé pealing, Like some far signal-trumpet on the ear! While the broad midnight moon was shining clear, How fearful to look forth upon the woods, And see those stately forest-kings appear, Emerging from their shadowy solitudes— As if that trump had woke Earth’s old gigantic broods!

Such the majestic, melancholy scene

Which ’midst that mountain-wilderness we found;

With scarce a trace to tell where man had been,

Save the old Caffer cabins crumbling round.

Yet this lone glen (Sicāna’s ancient ground)

To nature’s savage tribes abandoned long,

Had heard, erewhile, the Gospel’s joyful sound,

And low of herds mixed with the Sabbath song.

But all is silent now. The oppressor’s hand was strong.

Now the blithe loxia hangs her pensile nest

From the wild-olive, bending o’er the rock,

Beneath whose shadow, in grave mantle drest,

The Christian pastor taught his swarthy flock.

A roofless ruin, scathed by flame and smoke,

Tells where a decent mission-chapel stood;

While the baboon with jabbering cry doth mock

The pilgrim, pausing in his pensive mood

To ask—“Why is it thus? Shall Evil baffle Good?”

Yes—for a season Satan may prevail,

And hold, as if secure, his dark domain;

The prayers of righteous men may seem to fail,

And Heaven’s glad tidings be proclaimed in vain.

But wait in faith: ere long shall spring again

The seed that seemed to perish in the ground;

And fertilised by Zion’s latter rain,

The long-parched land shall laugh, with harvests crowned,

And through those silent wastes Jehovah’s praise resound.

Look round that vale: behold the unburied bones

Of Ghona’s children withering in the blast:

The sobbing wind, that through the forest moans,

Whispers—“The spirit hath for ever passed!”

Thus, in the vale of desolation vast,

In moral death dark Afric’s myriads lie;

But the appointed day shall dawn at last,

When breathed on by a spirit from on high,

The dry bones shall awake, and shout—“Our God is nigh!”

Thomas Pringle.


The Poetry of South Africa

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