Here you will find the Poem The Domain of poet John Le Gay Brereton
The bulging cloud mounts lazily In shade where sunlight glances through, And sweeping lightly from the tree Melts indolently in the blue. The scanty grass-blades yonder shake, A tremulous flurry takes the smoke, And ancient memories start awake At pungent scent of fig and oak. For here of old an urchin strayed And gloomed in lonely pride the while, An outlaw in a forest glade Or pirate on a tropic isle. Here where a staid policeman strolls Ned Kelly in his armour stood, And underneath the roadway rolls The river of the Haunted Wood. And yonder, couched in phantom fern, Not far from Nelson's rolling ship, I spied the antler'd head of Herne And saw the startled rabbit skip. And Will Wing shook in desperate strife Defiantly his bloody hand, And heard the waves of daily life Drone on the reef-ring, far from land. Not Robin, clad in verdant baize, Nor Britain's silver-plated king, Was master of the winning ways That drew me to the flag of Wing. He sauntered on the southern isle In garments of eccentric cut, And, with his grim sardonic smile, Would masticate his coco-nut. Within his cave, upon a heap Of Spanish coin and rubies red, I've seen him lying half-asleep And dreaming of the blood he'd shed. The gold-dust, spilled about the ground, Made common dirt a treasure rare, And if you fingered it you found The flashing jewels buried there. The seabird, sweeping free and far On wings of wonder, will not see That green isle and its coral bar, That corsair and his mystery. As when a lump of sugar shrinks, When coffee waves about it glide, Crumbles and topples, melts and sinks, And mingles with the sombre tide, So is the islet vanished; yet As now I gulp a bitter draught The sweetness lingers. Up, and set The canvas of the rakish craft!