Public Domain Poetry And Stories - A Death in the Bush by Henry Kendall
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A Death in the Bush

    By Henry Kendall



    The hut was built of bark and shrunken slabs,
    That wore the marks of many rains, and showed
    Dry flaws wherein had crept and nestled rot.
    Moreover, round the bases of the bark
    Were left the tracks of flying forest fires,
    As you may see them on the lower bole
    Of every elder of the native woods.

    For, ere the early settlers came and stocked
    These wilds with sheep and kine, the grasses grew
    So that they took the passing pilgrim in
    And whelmed him, like a running sea, from sight.

    And therefore, through the fiercer summer months,
    While all the swamps were rotten; while the flats
    Were baked and broken; when the clayey rifts
    Yawned wide, half-choked with drifted herbage past,
    Spontaneous flames would burst from thence and race
    Across the prairies all day long.

    At night
    The winds were up, and then, with four-fold speed
    A harsh gigantic growth of smoke and fire
    Would roar along the bottoms, in the wake
    Of fainting flocks of parrots, wallaroos,
    And ‘wildered wild things, scattering right and left,
    For safety vague, throughout the general gloom.

    Anon the nearer hillside-growing trees
    Would take the surges; thus from bough to bough
    Was borne the flaming terror! Bole and spire,
    Rank after rank, now pillared, ringed, and rolled
    In blinding blaze, stood out against the dead,
    Down-smothered dark, for fifty leagues away.

    For fifty leagues; and when the winds were strong
    For fifty more! But in the olden time
    These fires were counted as the harbingers
    Of life-essential storms, since out of smoke
    And heat there came across the midnight ways
    Abundant comfort, with upgathered clouds
    And runnels babbling of a plenteous fall.

    So comes the southern gale at evenfall
    (The swift brick-fielder of the local folk),
    About the streets of Sydney, when the dust
    Lies burnt on glaring windows, and the men
    Look forth from doors of drouth and drink the change
    With thirsty haste, and that most thankful cry
    Of “Here it is the cool, bright, blessed rain!”

    The hut, I say, was built of bark and slabs,
    And stood, the centre of a clearing, hemmed
    By hurdle-yards, and ancients of the blacks;
    These moped about their lazy fires, and sang
    Wild ditties of the old days, with a sound
    Of sorrow, like an everlasting wind
    Which mingled with the echoes of the noon
    And moaned amongst the noises of the night.

    From thence a cattle track, with link to link,
    Ran off against the fish-pools to the gap
    Which sets you face to face with gleaming miles
    Of broad Orara, winding in amongst
    Black, barren ridges, where the nether spurs
    Are fenced about by cotton scrub, and grass
    Blue-bitten with the salt of many droughts.

    ’Twas here the shepherd housed him every night,
    And faced the prospect like a patient soul,
    Borne up by some vague hope of better days,
    And God’s fine blessing in his faithful wife,
    Until the humour of his malady
    Took cunning changes from the good to bad,
    And laid him lastly on a bed of death.

    Two months thereafter, when the summer heat
    Had roused the serpent from his rotten lair,
    And made a noise of locusts in the boughs,
    It came to this, that as the blood-red sun
    Of one fierce day of many slanted down
    Obliquely past the nether jags of peaks
    And gulfs of mist, the tardy night came vexed
    By belted clouds and scuds that wheeled and whirled
    To left and right about the brazen clifts
    Of ridges, rigid with a leaden gloom.

    Then took the cattle to the forest camps
    With vacant terror, and the hustled sheep
    Stood dumb against the hurdles, even like
    A fallen patch of shadowed mountain snow;
    And ever through the curlew’s call afar,
    The storm grew on, while round the stinted slabs
    Sharp snaps and hisses came, and went, and came,
    The huddled tokens of a mighty blast
    Which ran with an exceeding bitter cry
    Across the tumbled fragments of the hills,
    And through the sluices of the gorge and glen.

    So, therefore, all about the shepherd’s hut
    That space was mute, save when the fastened dog,
    Without a kennel, caught a passing glimpse
    Of firelight moving through the lighted chinks,
    For then he knew the hints of warmth within,
    And stood and set his great pathetic eyes,
    In wind and wet, imploring to be loosed.

    Not often now the watcher left the couch
    Of him she watched, since in his fitful sleep
    His lips would stir to wayward themes, and close
    With bodeful catches. Once she moved away,
    Half-deafened by terrific claps, and stooped
    And looked without to see a pillar dim
    Of gathered gusts and fiery rain.

    Anon
    The sick man woke, and, startled by the noise,
    Stared round the room with dull, delirious sight,
    At this wild thing and that: for through his eyes
    The place took fearful shapes, and fever showed
    Strange crosswise lights about his pillow-head.
    He, catching there at some phantasmic help,
    Sat upright on the bolster with a cry
    Of “Where is Jesus? It is bitter cold!”
    And then, because the thunder-calls outside
    Were mixed for him with slanders of the past,
    He called his weeping wife by name, and said,
    “Come closer, darling! We shall speed away
    Across the seas, and seek some mountain home
    Shut in from liars and the wicked words
    That track us day and night and night and day.”
    So waned the sad refrain. And those poor lips,
    Whose latest phrases were for peace, grew mute,
    And into everlasting silence passed.

    As fares a swimmer who hath lost his breath
    In ’wildering seas afar from any help
    Who, fronting Death, can never realize
    The dreadful Presence, but is prone to clutch
    At every weed upon the weltering wave
    So fared the watcher, poring o’er the last
    Of him she loved, with dazed and stupid stare;
    Half conscious of the sudden loss and lack
    Of all that bound her life, but yet without
    The power to take her mighty sorrow in.

    Then came a patch or two of starry sky,
    And through a reef of cloven thunder-cloud
    The soft moon looked: a patient face beyond
    The fierce impatient shadows of the slopes
    And the harsh voices of the broken hills!
    A patient face, and one which came and wrought
    A lovely silence, like a silver mist,
    Across the rainy relics of the storm.

    For in the breaks and pauses of her light
    The gale died out in gusts: yet, evermore
    About the roof-tree on the dripping eaves,
    The damp wind loitered, and a fitful drift
    Sloped through the silent curtains, and athwart The dead.

    There, when the glare had dropped behind
    A mighty ridge of gloom, the woman turned
    And sat in darkness, face to face with God,
    And said, “I know,” she said, “that Thou art wise;
    That when we build and hope, and hope and build,
    And see our best things fall, it comes to pass
    For evermore that we must turn to Thee!
    And therefore, now, because I cannot find
    The faintest token of Divinity
    In this my latest sorrow, let Thy light
    Inform mine eyes, so I may learn to look
    On something past the sight which shuts and blinds
    And seems to drive me wholly, Lord, from Thee.”

    Now waned the moon beyond complaining depths,
    And as the dawn looked forth from showery woods
    (Whereon had dropped a hint of red and gold)
    There went about the crooked cavern-eaves
    Low flute-like echoes, with a noise of wings,
    And waters flying down far-hidden fells.
    Then might be seen the solitary owl
    Perched in the clefts, scared at the coming light,
    And staring outward (like a sea-shelled thing
    Chased to his cover by some bright, fierce foe),
    As at a monster in the middle waste.

    At last the great kingfisher came, and called
    Across the hollows, loud with early whips,
    And lighted, laughing, on the shepherd’s hut,
    And roused the widow from a swoon like death.

    This day, and after it was noised abroad
    By blacks, and straggling horsemen on the roads,
    That he was dead “who had been sick so long”,
    There flocked a troop from far-surrounding runs,
    To see their neighbour, and to bury him;
    And men who had forgotten how to cry
    (Rough, flinty fellows of the native bush)
    Now learned the bitter way, beholding there
    The wasted shadow of an iron frame,
    Brought down so low by years of fearful pain,
    And marking, too, the woman’s gentle face,
    And all the pathos in her moaned reply
    Of “Masters, we have lived in better days.”

    One stooped a stockman from the nearer hills
    To loose his wallet-strings, from whence he took
    A bag of tea, and laid it on her lap;
    Then sobbing, “God will help you, missus, yet,”
    He sought his horse, with most bewildered eyes,
    And, spurring, swiftly galloped down the glen.

    Where black Orara nightly chafes his brink,
    Midway between lamenting lines of oak
    And Warra’s Gap, the shepherd’s grave was built;
    And there the wild dog pauses, in the midst
    Of moonless watches, howling through the gloom
    At hopeless shadows flitting to and fro,
    What time the east wind hums his darkest hymn,
    And rains beat heavy on the ruined leaf.

    There, while the autumn in the cedar trees
    Sat cooped about by cloudy evergreens
    The widow sojourned on the silent road,
    And mutely faced the barren mound, and plucked
    A straggling shrub from thence, and passed away,
    Heart-broken, on to Sydney, where she took
    Her passage in an English vessel bound
    To London, for her home of other years.

    At rest! Not near, with Sorrow on his grave,
    And roses quickened into beauty wrapt
    In all the pathos of perennial bloom;
    But far from these, beneath the fretful clay
    Of lands within the lone perpetual cry
    Of hermit plovers and the night-like oaks,
    All moaning for the peace which never comes.

    At rest! And she who sits and waits behind
    Is in the shadows; but her faith is sure,
    And one fine promise of the coming days
    Is breaking, like a blessed morning, far
    On hills that “slope through darkness up to God.”



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