Now he is dead - Alistair Campbell
Now he is dead, who talked
Of wild places and skies
Inhabited by the hawk;
Of the hunted hare that flies
Down bare parapets of stone,
And there closes its eyes;
Of trees fast-rooted in stone
Winds bend but cannot break;
Of the low terrible moan
That dead thorn trees make
On a windy desolate knoll;
Of the storm-blackened lake
Where heavy breakers roll
Out of the snow-bred mist,
When the glittering air is cold;
Of the Lion Rock that lifts
Out of the whale-backed waves
Its black sky-battering cliffs;
Of the waterfall that raves
Down the dark mountain side,
And into a white cauldron dives.
O'Sullivan, V. (Ed.). (1979). An anthology of twentieth century New Zealand poetry. Wellington: Oxford University Press.
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