Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Men Who Sleep With Danger by Henry Lawson
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The Men Who Sleep With Danger

    By Henry Lawson



    The men who camp with Danger
    Are mostly quiet men:
    And one may use a rifle,
    And one may use a pen,
    And one may strap a camera
    In deserts to his bike;
    But men who sleep with Danger
    Are pretty much alike.
    To men in places pleasant
    Or in the barren West
    There’s Danger ever present,
    A half unheeded guest.
    But, thoughtful for the stranger,
    The timid or the weak,
    The men who camp with Danger
    Keep watch but do not speak.
    The men who go with Danger
    Are mostly dreamy-eyed
    Upon the swooping fo’c’sle.
    Or by the camp-fire side,
    And when they sit in darkness,
    To show us where they are:
    The glowing of a pipe-bowl
    And often a cigar
    The men who camp with Danger
    Have quiet humour too,
    And songs that you’ve forgotten,
    And real good yarns for you.
    There’s little you can tell them
    Of yourself or your own
    That men who’ve lived with Danger
    Have never felt or known.
    The men who sleep with Danger
    Sleep soundly while they may,
    But always wake at midnight
    Or just before the day.
    A something in the darkness
    That shudders at the dawn,
    A side-mate softly wakened,
    A rifle swiftly drawn.
    The men who sail with Danger
    As actors are ideal:
    They lightly laugh to fool you
    When Danger’s very real.
    The men who sail with Danger
    A wondrous insight have:
    They know if you are timid,
    They know if you are brave.
    The stewards set the tables
    With careless, practised care,
    And take accustomed comforts
    To sea-sick cabins there.
    They knock at doors of state-rooms
    With broth and tea and toast,
    While well they know, it’s touch and go,
    And death sits on the coast.
    The man who lives with Danger
    Has knowledge all his own;
    The instinct of a woman,
    Of men who fight alone.
    He learns from peace and comfort,
    He learns from care and strife;
    Unwittingly from all things
    And from his native wife.
    The men who live with Danger
    See sermons in a log;
    They have the nerves of horses,
    The instincts of a dog,
    When illness comes to loved ones
    They know where’er they roam,
    Have you seen, without for reason,
    A farther start for home?
    They know and feel our "warnings"
    As only Gipsies do;
    They know the Norse Vardoger,
    They hear and see it, too.
    They know when death has passed them,
    And the death watch is at end.
    They know when he is coming,
    The Unexpected Friend.
    The men who live with Danger,
    They take things as they go,
    In seeming unpreparedness,
    To those who do not know.
    They sleep when they have toiled and laughed
    And fought for someone’s sake;
    But Danger whispers in their ear,
    And they are wide awake !



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