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Home  »  The Oxford Book of Australasian Verse  »  7 . A Midsummer Noon in the Australian Forest

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

By Charles Harpur

7 . A Midsummer Noon in the Australian Forest

NOT a sound disturbs the air,

There is quiet everywhere;

Over plains and over woods

What a mighty stillness broods!

All the birds and insects keep

Where the coolest shadows sleep;

Even the busy ants are found

Resting in their pebbled mound;

Even the locust clingeth now

Silent to the barky bough:

Over hills and over plains

Quiet, vast and slumbrous, reigns.

Only there ’s a drowsy humming

From yon warm lagoon slow coming:

’Tis the dragon-hornet—see!

All bedaubed resplendently,

Yellow on a tawny ground—

Each rich spot nor square nor round,

Rudely heart-shaped, as it were

The blurred and hasty impress there

Of a vermeil-crusted seal,

Dusted o’er with golden meal.

Only there ’s a droning where

Yon bright beetle shines in air,

Tracks it in its gleaming flight

With a slanting beam of light,

Rising in the sunshine higher,

Till its shards flame out like fire.

Every other thing is still,

Save the ever-wakeful rill,

Whose cool murmur only throws

Cooler comfort round repose;

Or some ripple in the sea

Of leafy boughs, where, lazily,

Tired summer, in her bower

Turning with the noontide hour,

Heaves a slumbrous breath ere she

Once more slumbers peacefully.

Oh, ’tis easeful here to lie

Hidden from noon’s scorching eye,

In this grassy cool recess

Musing thus of quietness.