Walter Murdoch (1874–1970). The Oxford Book of Australasian Verse. 1918.
By Adam Lindsay Gordon15 . The Sick Stockrider
H
Old man, you’ve had your work cut out to guide
Both horses, and to hold me in the saddle when I swayed,
All through the hot, slow, sleepy, silent ride.
The sunrise was a sullen, sluggish lamp;
I was dozing in the gateway of Arbuthnot’s boundary fence,
I was dreaming on the Limestone cattle camp.
And suddenly the sun shot flaming forth;
To southward lay ‘Katâwa’, with the sand peaks all ablaze,
And the flushed fields of Glen Lomond lay to north.
And yonder looms the double-headed Bluff;
From the far side of the first hill, when the skies are clear and calm,
You can see Sylvester’s woolshed fair enough.
Where the big tree spans the roadway like an arch;
’Twas here we ran the dingo down that gave us such a chase
Eight years ago—or was it nine?—last March.
To wander as we’ve wandered many a mile,
And blow the cool tobacco cloud, and watch the white wreaths pass,
Sitting loosely in the saddle all the while.
To wheel the wild scrub cattle at the yard,
With a running fire of stockwhips and a fiery run of hoofs;
Oh! the hardest day was never then too hard!
When they bolted from Sylvester’s on the flat;
How the sun-dried reed-beds crackled, how the flint-strewn ranges rang
To the strokes of ‘Mountaineer’ and ‘Acrobat’.
Close behind them through the tea-tree scrub we dashed;
And the golden-tinted fern-leaves, how they rustled underneath!
And the honeysuckle osiers, how they crashed!
And the troopers were three hundred yards behind,
While we emptied our six-shooters on the bushrangers at bay,
In the creek with stunted box-tree for a blind!
And you rolled together when the chestnut reared;
He blazed away and missed you in that shallow water-course—
A narrow shave—his powder singed your beard!
Come back to us; how clearly I recall
Even the yarns Jack Hall invented, and the songs Jem Roper sung;
And where are now Jem Roper and Jack Hall?
Our ancient boon companions, Ned, are gone;
Hard livers for the most part, somewhat reckless as a rule,—
It seems that you and I are left alone.
It matters little what became of him;
But a steer ripped up MacPherson in the Cooraminta yards,
And Sullivan was drowned at Sink-or-swim;
In ‘the horrors’, at the Upper Wandinong,
And Carisbrooke, the rider, at the Horsefall broke his neck—
Faith! the wonder was he saved his neck so long!
The Logans, man and wife, have long been dead.
Elsie’s tallest girl seems taller than your little Elsie then;
And Ethel is a woman grown and wed.
And life is short—the longest life a span;
I care not now to tarry for the corn or for the oil,
Or for the wine that maketh glad the heart of man.
’Tis somewhat late to trouble. This I know—
I should live the same life over, if I had to live again,
And the chances are I go where most men go.
The sward beneath me seems to heave and fall;
And sickly, smoky shadows through the sleepy sunlight swim,
And on the very sun’s face weave their pall.
With never stone or rail to fence my bed;
Should the sturdy station children pull the blush flowers on my grave,
I may chance to hear them romping overhead.