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The New Zealand Reader

Fight Between "Sounding Sea" And "Angry Star."

Fight Between "Sounding Sea" And "Angry Star."

I.

Short breathing time the "Angry Star"
Gave Tangi,* nor retreated far.
Soon as he saw his feint to draw
The veteran from his Fort had failed,
Again he marshalled all his band
Upon the flat beside the shore.

* [Tangi means lamentation. In the poem "Sounding Sea" is given as equivalent to the name of the warrior, Tangi Moana.]

page 112 Then, with a new device, though planned
Before, with hearts and hopes new-fanned
And by the cunning priest beguiled
With omens sure and safe, once more
The stubborn stronghold they assailed.
With songs and yells and gestures wild
In swarms across the ditch they swept;
In swarms the broken barrier leapt;
Once more by casual shots annoyed
Around the platform swift deployed.
Again—scarce waiting their attack—
The fiery Chief, whom neither age
Nor odds nor toil made slow or slack,
Had sallied forth to force them back,
Or hand-to-hand at least engage
The first who scaled that fighting-stage.
So all the terrace circling round
The ramparts, as before, was crowned
With thronging men in deadly broil
O'erthrown—o'erthrowing; a dark coil
Convulsive, fluctuating, dense,
Of agonizing forms confused,
In every violent posture used
In mad attack or tough defence!
A mass of spears and clubs that crossed
And clashed, and limbs that twined and tossed,
As leathery links of seaweed lithe
At ebbing tide on rock-reefs writhe:
And all the forms and limbs exact
In statuesque proportions cast—
Dark symmetry of strength compact,
Where working muscles rose and fell
With shifting undulations, fast
As poppling wavelets when the breeze
The tide-rip grates in narrow seas!
Till all that ring of wrestlings rife,
Continuous knots of naked strife,
Had seemed, to looker-on at ease,
Some crowded Phigaleian* frieze

* [Phigalia—or Phialia—is in the south-west corner of Arcadia. Near it are the remains of a celebrated temple with sculptured frieze.]

page 113 Or Parthenaic* miracle
Of Art awaked to sudden life—
Or worked in terra-cotta, say,
Brown Lapithae in deadly fray;
Large-limbed Theseian heroes old,
But darkly-dyed, of kindred race,
Whose naked forms of classic mould
In one wide-ranging death-embrace
Their naked, struggling foes enfold.

* [The Parthenon is the temple of Athene at Athens. Parthenaic is an unauthorised form.]

[The frieze here referred to represents the strife of the Lapithæ and the Centaurs.]

[Thesous was a legendary Athenian horo.]

Ii.

But when the fight was at its height,
His new device Te Whetu§ tried.
Up rushed a shouting band outside
The black-charred fence before laid low.
In order good, a double row
They came; each warrior of the first
Poising a plaited green flax-sling
Well wetted in the nearest spring;
And in the sling a red-hot stone,
Which, high above the ramparts thrown,
Should soon make such a blaze outburst
From walls of rush and roofs of thatch
As might the whole defences catch,
And force the stifled foe to fly
The fort he held so stubbornly.
The second rank bore, close behind,
In baskets green, with earth safe-lined,
Of heated stones a fresh supply.
Then, at a signal given, they hurl
A burning volley thick and hot
As soft red lumps of scoria whirl,
In showers from dark abysses shot
By old Vesuvius in his play,
His common freaks of every day,

§ [Te Whetu means "The Star."]

page 114 When all his lava floods repose:
Or such as o'er his creviced snows
The grander Tongariro* throws—
While dread reverberations round
His sulphurous crater-depths resound—
When all the solemn midnight skies
With that red beacon of surprise
He startles—seeming from afar
Though low upon the horizon's bound
Sole object in the vault profound!
So baleful glares its fiery shine,
To all the tribes an ominous sign
Of death and wide disastrous war.
—Now, now, alert and active be,
Ye children of the "Sounding Sea!"
Your shifty foes will else make good
The threats ere long that boastful song
Sent echoing late o'er vale and wood!—
Not wholly unprepared they speed
To baulk and baffle if they may
Their fierce assailant's fresh essay.
For they had seen above the green
The smoke of fires lit up when need
Was none of tires for warmth or food;
And soon the project understood.
So all the gourds they could provide
Were ready, every house beside;
And even a large canoe to be
Their tank in this extremity
Hauled up and fitly placed;—all filled
With water from a well, supplied
Itself by channels issuing through
The rock upon the lake, below
Its surface cut; their outlet so
From keenest-eyed besiegers' view
Well hidden by its waters' blue.
And when that shower of firestones red

* A volcano, 6,500ft. in height, in the centre of the northern island; in active eruption when this was written (May, 1871). [It was Nga-uru-hoe that was in eruption: 7,515ft.]

page break
Ngauruhoe (7,515ft.) from Blue Lake Crater (5,570ft,).

Ngauruhoe (7,515ft.) from Blue Lake Crater (5,570ft,).


page 115 Came whirling, whizzing overhead,
For this vocation primed and drilled,
All those whom duty did not call
To watch the gates, defend the wall—
The old by age outworn, the young
With sinews yet for fight unstrung.
And young or old, the women too,
With Amohia* first of all,
Quick to the calabashes flew
Or tottered as they best could do.
And when the slightest whiff of smoke
From any roof or rush-wall broke,
Some hand was prompt the place to drench,
And, ere it spread, the burning quench.

* [Pronounce "Ah'mo-hee' ah."]

Iii.

But Amo, first among the crowd,
With cheery accents, low and loud,
As if at once their hearts to warm
To effort, yet repress alarm—
With smiles upon her face—howe'er
Her heart might throb with secret care—
Seemed ever everywhere at hand,
To guide, encourage, cheer, command!
And once when fire broke out indeed,
And none just then appeared to heed,
Nor quick enough the water came—
Up to the roof she leapt, she sprung,
And o'er the thatch her mantle flung,
And trampled out the mounting flame.
With arms and that firm bosom bare,
In skirt of glossy flax, as there
Aloft in such excited mood
Hurrying her hastening handmaids, stood
The dauntless Girl—she looked as rare
For spirit, grace, commanding mien,
As loveliest Amazonian Queen
In those surpassing friezes seen!

page 116

Iv.

But while this passed upon the hill
The fight below was raging still;
And that resistless "Sounding Sea"
At last had met the enemy
Whose death the most, of all the heap
Of slaughter his remorseless blade
That day, a bloody harvest, made,
The haughty veteran cared to reap.
With satisfaction stern and deep
To feel his foe within his power,
He hurled—through clenching teeth that ground
As if with grim resolve that hour
Should be the, last of both or one
And see the hateful contest done—
Defiance at "the slave—the hound!"
Then rushed upon him with a shower
Of blows of such terrific power
And weight and swiftness, left and right—
The "Angry Star," who tried in vain
The pelting tempest to sustain,
Was backward borne in self-despite,
Parrying the blows as best he might;
Ducking his head from side to side
Lake tortured tree that scarce can bide
The beating of a gusty gale.
But Tangi's breath begins to fail,
The driving blows at length relax;
Less swiftly whirls his battle-axe;
And Whetu in his turn attacks;
But stalking round and round his foe
And watching where a blow to plant,
As runs a Tiger crouching low
Around some wary Elephant,
For chance, with viewless lightning-spring
His weight to launch upon the haunch
Of the dread monster and escape
The white destruction that in shape
Of those impaling tusks still gleams
Before him—still to face him seems
Turn where his eyes' green lustres may!
page 117 So watched Te Whetu when to fling
Himself upon that warrior grey—
So round him plied his swinging stride;
Then flew at him with yell and blow.
Twas well for Tangi, eye and hand
Were quick enough to slant aside—
And tough enough his battle-brand
Its sweeping fury to withstand.
Then such a whirling maze began
Of clattering weapons—stroke and guard
And feint and parry, thrust and ward,
As up and down the axes ran
Together, that no sharpest eye
Could follow their rapidity!
But Tangi, see! has clutched at last
Te Whetu by a necklace fast
The boastful savage ever wore
Of warrior's teeth, a ghastly wreath—
And twists it hard his foe to choke,
And shortens for a final stroke
His axe's hold—but fails once more—
The treacherous chain beneath the strain
Breaks, scattering wide the hideous beads.
Back springs Te Whetu—free again,
The deadly strife may still maintain:
Close follows Tangi; mad to be
Baulked of so sure a victory,
The road beneath him little heeds:
His step upon a spot is set
Where the hard clay is slippery wet
With gore; he slips—he stumbles o'er
A wounded wretch unseen who lies
Bight in his path, on crimsoned stones
And dust that chokes a ruddy rill,
Slow-creeping, but increasing still—
Lies in the pathway there—with eyes
That anguished roll, heartrending groans,
And writhings like a centipede's
Caught in a burning log—and bleeds.
Down, down the giant goes before
His Foe, who now began to rave
With joy at this unwonted run
page 118 Of luck his favouring Atuas gave!
Ere Tangi—old—with toil o'erdone—
Could raise him from his heavy fall,
He raised his poleaxe high to end
Him and his triumphs, once for all.
The blow was never to descend;
For at that instant at full speed
Up Ranolf ran to save his friend:
There was no time for thought, nor need:
Three balls in swift succession sent
Through Whetu's body crashing went;
Down drops his axe—his arms upthrown;
His eyes a moment wildly glare,
Then glaze with fixed and ghastly stare;
His staggering knees give way; and there
He lies a corpse, without a groan!
A pang smote Ranolf—though he knew
There was nought else for him to do.
Slowly rose Tangi; dauntless still,
And half disposed to take it ill
That Ranolf s shot his debt should pay,
And from his clutches snatch his prey.

Alfred Domett

("Ranolf and Amohia").