The Buried Chief

By Sir Henry Parkes

5/27/1815-4/27/1896


(November 6th, 1886)

With speechless lips and solemn tread
         They brought the Lawyer-Statesman home:
They laid him with the gather'd dead,
         Where rich and poor like brothers come.

How bravely did the stripling climb,
         From step to step the rugged hill:
His gaze thro' that benighted time
         Fix'd on the far-off beacon still.

He faced the storm that o'er him burst,
         With pride to match the proudest born:
He bore unblench'd Detraction's worst, --
         Paid blow for blow, and scorn for scorn.

He scaled the summit while the sun
         Yet shone upon his conquer'd track:
Nor falter'd till the goal was won,
         Nor struggling upward, once look'd back.

But what avails the "pride of place",
         Or winged chariot rolling past?
He heeds not now who wins the race,
         Alike to him the first or last.

DayPoems Poem No. 843
<a href="http://www.daypoems.net/poems/843.html">The Buried Chief by Sir Henry Parkes</a>

The DayPoems Poetry Collection, www.daypoems.net
Timothy Bovee, editor

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