‘The land went on living’. The use of alliteration here draws our attention to ‘land’ and ‘living’, and thus to nature itself, which endlessly renews. But the use of enjambment in stanza eight is important, for this stanza may end with the verb ‘living’, but the run- poem: ‘Dying. What else could it choose?’ between European settlers and Indigenous Americans. But the land didn’t pick sides, it just continued existing.
The poem ends up in quite a different place from where it started, and it is multi-layered in its complexity. We can see why Smith prefaced the title of ‘The Searchers’ with ‘after ’ what that message is.
Fatalism is the belief that all events are predetermined and inevitable. It could be argued that the attitude of the speaker in this poem is fatalistic.