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The Cornish Miner (1871)The following stanzas are taken from
Rhymes from Cornwall, by the author of
The Yale of Lanherne, recently published in London :--'Tis his to find the glittering ore,
For ages hid in earth's dark womb ;
To creep and climb, and dig and bore,
And build himself a living tomb,
Some six feet high, some four feet wide,
And reached o'er depths that few would stride.If England's Church is for the poor,
The miner scarcely knows the way ;
His chapel seen on every moor
From Hingston Down to far Cairn Brea ;
Built by his own and comrades' hands,
The plain and lowly temple stands.What's more, he both can pray and preach ;
It was Saint Wesley told him how ;
His voice is strong, and plain his speech,
His style not graceful, I allow ;
Much like the manner it may be
Of the poor folk at Galilee.He takes his text from the same book
As the great lawn sleeved doctors read ;
A shepherd, but without the crook,
His sheep are sometimes wild indeed ;
The outcast often of the poor,
Too shabby for a Gothic door.When his work's ended, and he dies.
Much short of three score years and ten,
Hundreds, with honest tears and sighs,
Will gather-- maidens, mothers, men ;
And as his toil-worn limbs they bring,
They sing the hymns he loved to sing.But I've not done with him as yet ;
He or his seed is in all lands ;
His hand the Chilian ores must get ;
On Chimborano's range he stands ;
Tells where a Cornishman takes hold.
His arm is strong, though spare his form.His eye is clear, though pale his cheek ;
If cold his hand, his heart is warm--
To find like his you far must seek ;
Should he get rich in other zones,
To Cornwall he brings back his bones.Notes
From the NSW Newspaper The Newcastle Chronicle 29 Jun 1871 p. 4.
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australian traditional songs . . . a selection by mark gregory