Stand Up
Victor Daley
1880
Stand up, my young Australian,
In the
brave light of the sun,
And hear how Freedom's battle
Was in the old
days lost - and won.
The blood burns in my veins, boy,
As it did in
years of yore,
Remembering Eureka,
And the men of
'Fifty-four.
The old times were the grand times,
And to me the
Past appears
As rich as seas at sunset,
With its many-coloured
years;
And like a lonely island
Aglow in sunset light,
One day
stands out in splendour -
The day of the Good Fight.
Where
Ballarat the Golden
On her throne sits like a Queen,
Ten thousand
tents were shining
In the brave days that have been.
There dwelt the
stalwart diggers,
When our hearts with hope were high.
The stream of
Life ran brimming
In that golden time gone by.
They came from
many countries,
And far islands in the main,
And years shall pass
and vanish
Ere their like are seen again.
Small chance was there for
weaklings
With these man of iron core,
Who worked and played like
Giants
In the year of 'Fifty-four.
The Tyrants of the
Goldfields
Would not let us live in peace;
They harried us and
chased us
With their horse and foot police.
Each man must show his
licence
When they chose, by fits and starts:
They tried to break our
spirits,
And they almost broke our hearts.
We wrote a
Declaration
In the store of Shanahan,
Demanding Right and
justice,
And we signed it, man by man,
And unto Charles
Hotham,
Who was then the Lord of High,
We sent it; Charles
Hotham
Sent a regiment in reply.
There comes a time to all
men
When submission is a sin;
We made a bonfire brave, and
Flung
our licences therein.
Our hearts with scorn and anger
Burned more
fiercely than the flame,
Full well we knew our peril,
But we dared
it all the same.
On Bakery Hill the Banner
Of the Southern Cross
flew free;
Then up rose Peter Lalor,
And with lifted hand spake he:
-
"We swear by God above us
While we live to work and fight
For
Freedom and for justice,
For our Manhood and our Right."
Then,
on the bare earth kneeling,
As on a chapel-floor,
Beneath the sacred
Banner,
One and all, that oath we swore;
And some of those who swore
it
Were like straws upon a flood,
But there were men who swore
it
And who sealed it with their blood.
We held a stern War
Council,
For in bitter mood were we,
With Vern and Hayes and
Humffray,
Brady, Ross, and Kennedy,
And fire-eyed Raffaello,
Who
was brave as steel, though small -
But gallant Peter Lalor
Was the
leader of us all.
Pat Curtain we made captain
Of our Pikemen,
soon enrolled,
And Ross, the tall Canadian,
Was our standard-bearer
bold.
He came from where St. Lawrence
Flows majestic to the
main;
But the River of St. Lawrence
He would never see
again.
Then passed along the order
That a fortress should be
made,
And soon, with planks and palings,
We constructed the
Stockade.
We worked in teeth-set silence,
For we knew what was in
store:
Sure never men defended
Such a feeble fort before.
All
day the German blacksmith
At his forge wrought fierce and fast;
All
day the gleaming pike-blades
At his side in piles were cast;
All day
the diggers fitted
Blade to staff with stern goodwill,
Till all men,
save the watchers,
Slept upon the fatal hill.
The night fell
cold and dreary,
And the hours crawled slowly be.
Deep sleep was all
around me,
But a sentinel was I.
And then the moon grew
ghostly,
And I saw the grey dawn creep,
A wan and pallid
phantom
O'er the Mount of Warrenheip.
When over the dark
mountain
Rose the red rim of the sun,
Right sharply in the
stillness
Rang our picket's warning gun.
And scarce had died the
echo
Ere, of all our little host,
Each man had grasped his
weapon,
And each man was at his post.
The foe came on in
silence
Like an army of the dumb;
There was no blare of
trumpet.
And there was no tap of drum.
But ever they came
onward,
And I thought, with indrawn breath,
The Redcoats looked like
Murder,
And the Blackcoats looked like Death.
Our gunners, in
their gun-pits
That were near the palisade,
Fired fiercely, but the
Redcoats
Fired as if upon parade.
Yet, in the front rank
leading
On his men with blazing eyes,
The bullet of a
digger
Struck down valiant Captain Wise.
Then "Charge!" cried
Captain Thomas,
And with bayonets fixed they came.
The palisade
crashed inwards,
Like a wall devoured by flame.
I saw our gallant
gunners,
Struggling vainly, backward reel
Before that surge of
scarlet
All alive with stabbing steel.
There Edward Quinn of
Cavan,
Samuel Green the Englishman,
And Haffele the
German,
Perished, fighting in the van.
And with them William
Quinlan
Fell while battling for the Right,
The first Australian
Native
In the first Australian Fight.
But Robertson the
Scotchman,
In his gripping Scottish way,
Caught by the throat a
Redcoat,
And upon that Redcoat lay.
They beat the Scotchman's head
in
Smiting hard with butt of gun,
And slew him - but the
Redcoat
Died before the week was done.
These diggers fought like
heroes
Charged to guard a kingdom's gate.
But vain was all their
valour,
For they could not conquer Fate.
The Searchers for the
Wounded
Found them lying side by side.
They lived good mates
together,
And good mates together died.
Then Peter Lalor,
gazing
On the fight with fiery glance,
His lion-voice
uplifted,
Shouting, 'Pikemen, now advance!'
A bullet struck him,
speaking,
And he fell as fall the dead:
The Fight had lost its
leader,
And the Pikemen broke and fled.
The battle was not
over,
For there stood upon the hill
A little band of
diggers,
Fighting desperately still,
With pistol, pike, and
hayfork,
Against bayonet and gun.
There was no madder combat
Ever
seen beneath the sun.
Then Donaghey and Dimond,
And Pat Gittins
fighting fell,
With Thaddeus Moore, and Reynolds:
And the muskets
rang their knell.
And staring up at Heaven,
As if watching his
soul's track,
Shot through his heart so merry,
Lay our jester 'Happy
Jack'.
The sky grew black above us,
And the earth below was
red,
And, oh, our eyes were burning
As we gazed upon our dead.
On
came the troopers charging,
Valiant cut-throats of the Crown,
And
wounded men and dying
Flung their useless weapons down.
The
bitter fight was ended,
And, with cruel coward-lust,
They dragged
our sacred Banner
Through the Stockade's bloody dust.
But, patient
as the gods are,
Justice counts the years and waits -
That Banner
now waves proudly
Over six Australian States.
I said, my young
Australian,
That the fight was lost - and won -
But, oh, our hearts
were heavy
At the setting of the sun.
Yet, ere the year was
over,
Freedom rolled in like a flood:
They gave us all we asked for
-
When we asked for it in blood.
God rest you, Peter
Lalor!
For you were a whiteman whole;
A swordblade in the
sunlight
Was your bright and gallant soul.
And God reward you
kindly,
Father Smith, alive or dead:
'Twas you that give him
shelter
When a price was on his head.
Within the Golden
City
In the place of peace profound
The Heroes sleep. Tread
softly:
'Tis Australia's Holy Ground.
And ever more
Australia
Will keep green in her heart's core
The memory of
Lalor
And the men of 'Fifty-four.
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