Welcome To Godzone Ambassador Moseley-Braun
In the absence of archconservative, Sen. Jesse Helms, the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing last Friday, gave US Ambassador-designate to New Zealand, Carol Moseley-Braun, a cordial reception which means she will almost be guaranteed the job.
Moseley-Braun still needs to be confirmed next week in a two-thirds Senate majority vote. She will become the seventh black woman currently serving as a US Ambassador.
When she appeared before the committee Moseley-Braun had no harsh words for Helms, who had been blocking her nomination, but was clearly relieved to be out from under an ethical cloud. "Seven years of being smeared with this has not been fun," she said.
Last month she said she had heard that New Zealand was a "magical place."
Your Excellency, we at Scoop - increasingly well known for jumping the gun on these sorts of stories - welcome you to our "magical place" through the words of poet Thomas Bracken.
...the Scoop Team...
Give me, give me God's own
country! there to live and there to die,
God's own
country! fairest region resting 'neath the southern
sky,
God's own country! framed by Nature in her grandest,
noblest mould;
Land of peace and land of plenty, land of
wool and corn and gold!
Where the forests are the
greenest and the rugged mountains rear
Noble turrets,
towers, and spires, piercing through the ambient
air;
Rising to the gates supernal, pointing Godwards
through the blue,
When the summer's sunny splendours tip
them with a nameless hue,
And the gusts of winter gather
snow and sleet and mist and cloud,
Weaving many a curious
mantle, many a quaint fantastic shroud.
Oh! the mountains
of New Zealand! wild and rugged though they be,
They are
types of highest manhood, landmarks of a nation
free.
Pleasure-ground of the Pacific! brightest region on
the main!
Land of many a rushing river, verdant valley,
fertile plain!
I revisit thee in fancy, all thy wonders
rise once more,
Once again, enthrall'd, I listen to old
Tongariro's roar;
Tarawera roused to fury, belches forth
his molten wrath,
And a host of fiery demons dance along
his flaming path,
Boiling cauldrons, foaming geysers,
lakes whose bosoms leap with fear;
Well and truly it is
written - "wonderland is really here!"
Shift the scene!
Night grows to morning, morn soon ripens into day.
Lovely
islands crowd and cluster in a bright and placid
bay,
Silver ripples shimmer softly on the bosom of the
deep;
And the mountains see their faces, for the wind is
fast asleep.
Bay of Island! bay of beauty! who would
dream that such a place
Should have been a scene of
slaughter, man 'gainst man, and race
'gainst
race;
Yonder, in the little churchyard,
mouldering tombstones sadly tell
Tales of valour and of
honour, records of how brave men fell
In the sacred cause
of duty; thanks to God, those days are o'er,
And the old
race and the new race now are enemies no more.
Sweep we
round by Rangitoto, with his rough and rocky crest,
Grim
old guardian of the gateway leading out to ocean's
breast;
Takapuna slumbers, deeply Waitemata opens its
arms,
All its loveliness unfolding, circled by a hundred
charms;
Fly we on to Taranaki, and 'neath Taranaki's
shade we stand---
Taranaki, monarch of the mountains!
bold, majestic, solemn, grand;
Rising from the pleasant
pastures, climbing to the clouds alone
Peerless, and
without a rival, proudly sits he on his throne.
It is
morning in the summer, and the monarch is arrayed
In his
pure white cap and mantle, which were never known to
fade.
All the blue above is speckless, only one small
cloud is seen
Sleeping on the mountain's bosom, nestling
'twixt the gold and green;
Now it seems as if awakening,
slowly it begins to creep
Upwards in a spiral column,
making for the summit steep,
But it fails to reach the
apex, so it curls itself away
Round about the monarch's
shoulders, like a silken scarf of grey;
And the East
flings out its glories on the monarch as he
stands,
Crowning him with sparkling jewels, richly set in
golden bands,
On we go by happy homesteads, on to
Wanganui's flood--
Oft where Wanganui's waters, in the
old time, stained with blood;
Now along the stately river
flocks and herds o'er uplands graze,
Peace has swept away
for ever traces of the warlike days.
Leap we o'er the
hills and valleys to Poneke's noble tide,
On whose
swelling breast the navies of the Universe might
ride,
Safely ride beneath the shadows of the mighty hills
that keep
Watchful and ward against the tempests, born
upon the outer deep.
Soar from island unto island, for
were we to tarry here, Tracing all the
North-land's
beauties, we might linger for a year.
Fancy's wings are
swift and silent, o'er the sea and o'er the
Strait--
Canterbury smiles before us, Ah! we have not
time to wait;
Fly we o'er green pictures shining in their
frames of spring's new gold,
Fly we past the smiling
homesteads, fly we over the field and fold--
Onward o'er
the pass of Arthur! Magicland is drawing near--
Halt!
the Gorge of wildest grandeur opens up its wonders
here;
Look below; and gaze above us! was there ever
grander sight?
Here is every shade of darkness; here is
every tint of light;
Listen to the torrent roaring in the
deep ravine below,
See the cataracts descending from
their home among the snow,
See the pine and larch and
rata climbing up the mountain walls,
Hearken to the
tumbling torrents answering the distant falls.
Weird
Otira! grand Otira; is there any other clime
That can
show us such a picture, so entrancing so sublime?
Down
the Gorge and through the valley, over floods that fret and
foam,
As the rush among the boulders, hast'ning to their
Ocean home;
Now the matchless forests open all their
brightness on the scene,
And the gladdened eye is
feasting on a hundred tints of green.
We must leave the
lordly forest-- "Stay, oh, stay," the
wood-nymphs
sing;
"Stay, oh, stay," the fairies
whisper; "Stay, oh, stay," the bell-birds
ring.
Fancy
will not fold her pinions; onward, onward we must
go
Where Mount Cook in icy armour guards his pyramids of
snow.
Fancy can outwing the lightning, fancy can outwing
the wind--
Hill and plain and glen and valley soon are
left far, far behind.
We are resting on the high land
over New Edina's town,
Wrapt in perfect admiration,
looking up, and looking down---
Upwards at the wooded
mountains, tinted now by opening day,
Downwards at the
noble city, stretching round the lovely bay.
One short
flight and we are sailing over Taieri's plains of
corn,
Scoop Welcomes New US Ambassador To Godzone
Now
we cross the lonely ranges, painted by the brush of
morn;
Wanaka and Manapouri pass before our wondering
sight;
Hawea, in sylvan softness, fills us with a calm
delight;
Wakatipu's deep dark waters, walled by mighty
mountains, raise
All our highest aspirations, till the
soul is filled with praise.
Here the poet soon might
gather subject for a thousand lays,
Here the artist might
discover rich employment all his days.
God's own country!
God's own country! we must hasten o'er the sea,
Filled
with sweetest recollections of thy beauty; blessing
thee,
Wishing thee all future greatness, bidding thee
"Advance! advance!"
Fruitful land, and land of wonder,
richest region of romance!
Mitre Peak, erect, majestic,
slowly vanishes from view,
And the distant waves are
moaning, as we cry "Adieu!
adieu!"
ends