The Last of His Tribe
(Henry
Kendall, 1839 - 1882)
The poem is broken into three distinct themes – the first two verses speak of ‘his’ shame and broken spirit. Verses 3 and 4 speak of his determination to do something about his fate (take action). The last three verses speak of his suddenly being shot and dying. Also note the structure of rhythm and rhyme that makes the poem so enjoyable to recite.
He crouches, and buries his face in his knees, (11
syllables; 5 feet iambic pentameter)
And hides in the dark of his hair; (4
feet)
For he cannot look up to the storm-smitten trees, (11
syllables; 5 feet iambic pentameter)
Or think of the loneliness there; (8
syllables; 4 feet)
Of the loss and the loneliness there. (8
syllables; 4 feet)
Who but a man who is prisoner and broken buries his face in his knees and hides in the dark of his hair? This aborigine is in captivity and is sick with shame; so sick, he can’t bear to look up to the storm-smitten trees because it reminds him of all that’s been lost and the loneliness. It’s quite possible that he’s just been captured – colonial police and trackers standing over him; he may be in leg irons and been beaten after a struggle.
The wallaroos grope through the tufts of the grass,
And turn to their covers in fear;
But he sits in the ashes and lets them pass
Where the boomerangs sleep with the spear:
With the nullah, the sling, and the spear. (9
syllables)
Wild game he used to hunt still come and act in the same way, but now he does not respond to them as he would have with his own instinctive mimic and step. Why? Perhaps he is not allowed to hunt anymore (hunting weapons banned by the white man because they could be too easily used as weapons of battle). Perhaps it is a continuation of his shame for he has no reason to hunt anymore – nobody left to provide for and no reason to maintain his own strength – a willing to die.
Uloola, behold him! The thunder that breaks
On the tops of the rocks with the rain,
And the wind which drives up with the salt of the lakes,
Have made him a hunter again:
A hunter and fisher again.
Suddenly, he is stirred up with rage – stirred up by the
spirits of nature, thunder that breaks,
wind which drives, stinging salt of the lakes. Suddenly, he is aroused to the man he used to
be, hunter and fisher again. He stands up; stands up proud; lifts his head
out of his knees and out from the dark of his hair.
For his eyes have been full with a smouldering thought;
But he dreams of the hunts of yore,
And of foes that he
sought, and of fights that he fought
With those who will
battle no more:
Who will go to the battle
no more.
The arousal is coupled with something he’s been brooding on
for quite awhile, a smouldering thought. A smouldering thought is perhaps coupled with
a plot, a plan to take action. But what
action? With his thoughts, of foes that he sought and fights that he
fought, the action seems assuredly to be one of warrior revenge (whatever
the consequences). Though the
smouldering thought may also have been coupled with a willing for himself to
die, starve to death, suicide. But then
perhaps the spirits stir him to believe he is too good to die without a fight
(implies that what he does next is contra to what was in his smouldering
thought).
It is well that the water which tumbles and fills
Goes moaning and
moaning along;
For an echo rolls out
from the sides of the hills,
And he starts at a
wonderful song: (4)
At the sounds of a
wonderful song.
Why is it ‘well’ that the water goes moaning and moaning
along? Because it masks the rifle shot, an echo rolls out from the sides of the
hills. That is the precise moment
they shot him! And it is ‘well’, because
he doesn’t know what’s really happened to him.
His head snaps back; he is jolted by the bullet, he starts! ………. at a
wonderful song, sounds of …….
And he sees, through
the rents of the scattering fogs,
The corrobboree
warlike and grim,
And the lubra who sat by the fire on the logs,
To watch, like a
mourner, for him:
Like a mother and
mourner, for him.
In his loss of consciousness his vision becomes blurred, through the rents of the scattering fogs. His thoughts rush jumbled and he relives all the
preparations for battle, the noble death and the women who would be, mourner, for him, to wish him into the
spirit world.
Will he go in his sleep from these desolate lands,
Like a chief, to the rest of his race,
With the honey-voiced woman who beckons, and stands,
And gleams like a
Dream in his face –
Like a marvellous
Dream in his face?
The last one left from his tribe is dying, will he go in his sleep. And he is at peace, having acquitted himself
well, showed courage and bravery, proud.
He is deserved to now go, from
these desolate lands like a chief.
And in his final passing over he sees the vision of, a honey-voiced woman who beckons and stands
………. dream in his face.
1989. HMAS Creswell is the Naval Officer’s training college situated on
Creek at Creswell
When I
walk down to the creek
beside
Creswell,
I see
an aboriginal tribe,
living
and hunting,
thousands
of years ago.
The
water runs slowly to the bay,
in
pools it backs up,
the
color of cold tea.
Bracken
hangs over the path,
cool
fronds of rain-forest fern.
Orange
bell flowers,
decorate
the vivid green bush.
The
hunters strut warily,
up
there,
where
the sand juts out at the bend,
trees
hang over to shade the water,
the
white sand on the beach,
blazes
in the heat,
a blue
and orange bird startled,
bobs
his head at the shadows,
feathers
shine,
as if
painted colors,
so
rich, copied from,
silk
clothes of a court jester.
Spears
raised,
fish or
wallaby maybe,
come
down to the creek to drink,
silence,
only
the trickling sound,
of
water along the narrow sand channel,
but the
hunters don’t come on,
stopped
by the concrete block,
tumbled
into the creek,
steel
reinforcement rods,
point
fingers,
fading
them back
into
the shadows.
J.O. White
very useful
ReplyDeleteThankyou, I'm glad I can share it.
DeleteThank you for your time and effort
ReplyDeleteNo, thank you for your interest.
Deletevery helpful
ReplyDeleteIt's a great poem.
DeleteThanks heaps, you helped me a lot. Got full marks on my school essay. No I didn't steal your work. But thanks.
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome. I am grateful if I have contributed to your success in studies, your continuing love of poetry and our pursuit of truth.
DeleteThanks for this great analysis, very helpful!
ReplyDeleteThank you - I am glad you got some use out of it, and I am glad you thanked me.
DeleteThanks...:)
ReplyDeleteYou are most welcome ..............
ReplyDeleteThanks heaps it really helped me
ReplyDeleteHey, thanks for your response - glad it helped.
DeleteI dare to disagree with your assumption that the old fella got shot.
ReplyDeleteThere is nothing in the vocab or meter that suggests this - no change of pace, nor startling recoil. Instead the sounds of the creek which are echoing from the surrounding hills lull him into reflection and memory. The echoes from the hills elude to echoes of the past. The bush has this anaesthetising influence.
The poem is definitely melancholic but seeing conflict between black and white is looking at this through a modern lens. The war referred to is black on black ... not white on black.
No doubt at all that colonisation led to this scenario, however, perhaps your Defence Force years have you seeing conflict and hearing shots fire in absentia. LOL
REALLY HELPFUL I LOVED IT THANKS!
ReplyDeleteThanks it really did help...well according to my understanding, The Last Of His Tribe, hid behind his dark hair cause he is not willing to look at the death and destruction caused by the colonizers and to face the isolation and loneliness.
ReplyDelete