The Poetry Corner

Sonnets on the Discovery of Botany Bay by Captain Cook - II - The Second Attempt, Opposed by Two of the Natives

By Henry Kendall

There were but two, and we were forty! Yet, The Captain wrote, that dauntless couple throve, And faced our wildering faces; and I said Lie to awhile! I did not choose to let A strife go on of little worth to us. And so unequal! But the dying tread Of flying kinsmen moved them not: for wet With surf and wild with streaks of white and black The pair remained.O stout Caractacus! Twas thus you stood when Caesars legions strove To beat their few, fantastic foemen back Your patriots with their savage stripes of red! To drench the stormy cliff and moaning cove With faithful blood, as pure as any ever shed.