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THE CAFFER COMMANDO.

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Hark! heard ye the signals of triumph afar?

’Tis our Caffer Commando returning from war:

The voice of their laughter comes loud on the wind,

Nor heed they the curses that follow behind.

For who cares for him, the poor Kósa, that wails

Where the smoke rises dim from yon desolate vales—

That wails for his little ones killed in the fray,

And his herds by the colonist carried away?

Or who cares for him that once pastured this spot,

Where his tribe is extinct and their story forgot?

As many another, ere twenty years pass,

Will only be known by their bones in the grass!

And the sons of the Keisi, the Kei, the Gareep,

With the Gunja and Ghona in silence shall sleep:

For England hath spoke in her tyrannous mood,

And the edict is written in African blood!

Dark Katta[14] is howling; the eager jackal, As the lengthening shadows more drearily fall, Shrieks forth his hymn to the hornèd moon; And the lord of the desert will follow him soon: And the tiger-wolf laughs in his bone-strewed brake, As he calls on his mate and her cubs to awake; And the panther and leopard come leaping along; All hymning to Hecate a festival song: For the tumult is over, the slaughter hath ceased— And the vulture hath bidden them all to the feast.

Thomas Pringle.

The Poetry of South Africa

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