The Children of the Goldfields
There’s J.A .Hayes aged seven days and Brierley , Hugh James
just two out of two hundred, most of the graves bear no names.
They’re children of the Goldfields – and on God’s Acre they stay
their little graves are shallow - barely two foot where they lay.
Their families are long gone now, lost in annals of time,
most never scraped a living out from digging in their mine.
The gold was sparse and hard to find, the ground rocky and hard
and many children’s lives were lost, the price for every yard.
A scant acre of ground they spared, above the Pennyweight flats
so named because the gold yield there was sparse. Gold wasn’t at
this place – they claimed a pennyweight of gold would not be found
though one acre of soil be dug. This place was barren ground.
They knew the miners would not dig to find the golden ore
in this desolate patch of ground – a cemetery they saw.
A place to bury their children, and some were young indeed
their little bodies planted in depressions like small seeds.
A pick and shovel could not break that hard rock littered soil.
Made barely an impression despite many hours of toil.
Above ground, stone mounds now defined each young child’s resting place
with most lacking a headstone to even show a trace.
And down below this tragic, sad and isolated hill
were many excavations and people toiled until
each ounce of soil from round and square and wide holes deep and narrow
had been thoroughly cradle rocked then dumped into a barrow.
In 1857 the last small child was interred
I thought I heard their voices but was only leaves that stirred.
Wind soughing through the eucalypts playing a mournful dirge
and none were there to hear it except me and my ears heard.
And when I closed my eyes, my mind’s eye saw again this place
just as it was in 1855 – a baby’s face
angelic in repose, with handmade lace around its brow
with blue veined eyelids closed in death – forgotten until now.
And once again I wept and shook, and beat my breast in vain.
And once again I felt despair and soul destroying pain.
How could that be? Surely it was an outpour of emotion
from one whose heart had just been touched by events set in motion;
too much heartache and sun, tiredness, imagination;
for I had never known this place – so why such perturbation?
And as I walked ‘tween sandstone mounds in Pennyweight Cemetery
my heart welled with such sadness. Not a happy place to be.
Those little scattered rock-piles left me with a sense of awe
I thought about the parents whose children had passed before
their time on earth had been fulfilled, these children of the fields
dying from typhoid, whooping cough, and frail small bodies yield.
There’s J.A .Hayes aged seven days and Brierley, Hugh James
just two out of two hundred, though most graves bear no names.
Their bodies rest at Pennyweight flats – and who pray mourns them now?
These children of the Goldfields, long forgotten until now.
Maureen Clifford © 01/13
Homework 18/02/13 - Children of the Goldfields
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- Maureen K Clifford
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Homework 18/02/13 - Children of the Goldfields
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Check out The Scribbly Bark Poets blog site here -
http://scribblybarkpoetry.blogspot.com.au/
I may not always succeed in making a difference, but I will go to my grave knowing I at least tried.
http://scribblybarkpoetry.blogspot.com.au/
I may not always succeed in making a difference, but I will go to my grave knowing I at least tried.
- Maureen K Clifford
- Posts: 8153
- Joined: Tue Nov 09, 2010 10:31 am
- Location: Ipswich - Paul Pisasale country and home of the Ipswich Poetry Feast
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Re: Homework 18/02/13 - Children of the Goldfields
some more piccies including a sign with the original story - just click on each picture to enlarge them
http://www.australiancemeteries.com/vic ... htflat.htm
http://www.australiancemeteries.com/vic ... htflat.htm
Check out The Scribbly Bark Poets blog site here -
http://scribblybarkpoetry.blogspot.com.au/
I may not always succeed in making a difference, but I will go to my grave knowing I at least tried.
http://scribblybarkpoetry.blogspot.com.au/
I may not always succeed in making a difference, but I will go to my grave knowing I at least tried.
Re: Homework 18/02/13 - Children of the Goldfields
I was there a couple of years ago Maureen and it was cold, windy and miserable.
Heather
Heather

- Maureen K Clifford
- Posts: 8153
- Joined: Tue Nov 09, 2010 10:31 am
- Location: Ipswich - Paul Pisasale country and home of the Ipswich Poetry Feast
- Contact:
Re: Homework 18/02/13 - Children of the Goldfields
but at least you were alive Heather 

Check out The Scribbly Bark Poets blog site here -
http://scribblybarkpoetry.blogspot.com.au/
I may not always succeed in making a difference, but I will go to my grave knowing I at least tried.
http://scribblybarkpoetry.blogspot.com.au/
I may not always succeed in making a difference, but I will go to my grave knowing I at least tried.