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Home  »  Collected Poems by A.E.  »  156. The Iron Age

Walter Murdoch (1874–1970). The Oxford Book of Australasian Verse. 1918.

156. The Iron Age

HOW came this pigmy rabble spun,

After the gods and kings of old,

Upon a tapestry begun

With threads of silver and of gold?

In heaven began the heroic tale

What meaner destinies prevail!

They wove about the antique brow

A circlet of the heavenly air.

To whom is due such reverence now,

The thought “What deity is there”?

We choose the chieftains of our race

From hucksters in the market place.

When in their councils over all

Men set the power that sells and buys,

Be sure the price of life will fall,

Death be more precious in our eyes.

Have all the gods their cycles run?

Has devil worship now begun?

O whether devil planned or no,

Life here is ambushed, this our fate,

That road to anarchy doth go,

This to the grim mechanic state.

The gates of hell are open wide,

But lead to other hells outside.

How has the fire Promethean paled?

Who is there now who wills or dares

Follow the fearless chiefs who sailed,

Celestial adventurers,

Who charted in undreamt of skies

The magic zones of paradise?

Mankind that sought to be god-kind,

To wield the sceptre, wear the crown,

What made it wormlike in its mind?

Who bade it lay the sceptre down?

Was it through any speech of thee,

Misunderstood of Galilee?

The whip was cracked in Babylon

That slaves unto the gods might raise

The golden turrets nigh the sun.

Yet beggars from the dust might gaze

Upon the mighty builders’ art

And be of proud uplifted heart.

We now are servile to the mean

Who once were slaves unto the proud.

No lordlier life on earth has been

Although the heart be lowlier bowed.

Is there an iron age to be

With beauty but a memory?

Send forth, who promised long ago,

“I will not leave thee or forsake,”

Someone to whom our hearts may flow

With adoration, though we make

The crucifixion be the sign,

The meed of all the kingly line.

The morning stars were heard to sing

When man towered golden in the prime.

One equal memory let us bring

Before we face our night in time.

Grant us one only evening star,

The iron age’s avatar.