Here you will find the Poem Marvellous Martin of poet Charles Harpur
Who sees him walk the street, can scarce forbear To question thus his friend, What prig goes there? So much hath Nature, as 'tis oft her plan, Stamped inward trickery on the outward man! And yet, with her great interdiction deep Impressed thus on his being, see him creep Into our Parliament, and dare to prate About the god-like principles of State; With this sole claim address him to the work, That he has read that prince of sophists, Burke! And though a dreary Plunkett's glad to praise His talent, seeing that their feeble rays Have just that kindred with his own pinched mind Which (says the proverb ) makes us wond'rous kind. No more could such a creature feel or think Beyond Expediency's most beaten brink, Or sum the onward pressure of our race, Than I could heave a mountain from its base! Nay, even the dogmas of his vaunted Burke Work in him to no end, or backward work, Or dwindle in his view, like heaven's wide cope Seen through the wrong end of a telescope. How then might such a 'thing', with all the gang That yet like vermin about Wentworth hang, Rear-ranked with hirelings,-how might he and these, (Any-thing snobs and no-thing Nominees!) Devise a Government intoned and twined With all that's true and fetterless in mind And free in body-one, in short, designed Not for the pigmies of the passing hour, But for Australia's future sons of Power? No! they can spin but feudal cobwebs, soon By Freedom to be blown into the moon, Or back to Norfolk Island, whence, 'tis plain, Their slimy embryos came in youthful Lottery's brain.