Barcroft Henry Boake

Here you will find the Long Poem Fogarty's Gin of poet Barcroft Henry Boake

Fogarty's Gin

A sweat-dripping horse and a half-naked myall, 
And a message: `Come out to the back of the run? 
Be out at the stake-yards by rising of sun! 
Ride hard and fail not! there's the devil to pay: 
For the men from Monkyra have mustered the run? 
Cows and calves, calves of ours, without ever a brand, 
Fifty head, if there's one, on the camp there they stand. 
Come out to the stake-yards, nor fail me, or by all 
The saints they'll be drafted and driven away!' 
Boot and saddle it was to the rolling of curses: 
Snatching whip, snatching spurs, where they hung on the nail. 
In his wrath old McIvor, head stockman, turned pale, 
Spitting oaths with his head 'neath the flap of his saddle; 
Taking up the last hole in the girth with his teeth; 
Then a hand on the pommel, a quick catch of breath, 
A lift of the body, a swing to the right? 
And, ten half-broken nags with ten riders astraddle, 
We sped, arrow-swift, for the heart of the night. 
Thud of hoofs! thud of hearts! breath of man! breath of beast! 
With M'Ivor in front, and the rest heel to flank, 
So we rode in a bunch down the steep river bank, 
Churning up the black tide in the shallows like yeast. 
Through the coolabahs, out on the plain, it increased 
Till we swung with the stride of the dingo-pack, swooping 
On scent of weak mother with puny calf drooping. 
Staring eyes, swaying forms o'er the saddle-bow stooping, 
With the wind in our shirts, grip of knee, grip of rein, 
Losing ground, falling back, creeping forward again. 
Behind us the low line of dark coolabah; 
Overhead a sky spangled by planet and star; 
And to left, on our shoulder, the mighty Cross flaring, 
While afoot the quick pulsing of hoof-beats disturbs 
Moist silence of grasses and salty-leaved herbs. 

Steering on by the stars, over hollow and crest; 
Tingling eyes looking out through a curtain of tears 
From the slap of the wind over forward-pricked ears, 
Over forehead and nose stretching out for the west, 
And into the face of the sombre night staring. 
Threading in, threading out, through a maze of sand rises 
That spring either side, loom a moment, then flee: 
Dim hillocks of herbage and sun-blasted tree, 
Till again a dark streak of far timber arises; 
And anon, through the thick of a lignum swamp tearing, 
Bare tendrils, back-springing, switch sharp on the knee. 
Plain again! and again, with the speed of the wind, 
The long miles in front join their comrades behind; 
Then a sound in our ears like to far summer thunder 
Or the booming of surf in a southerly gale; 
And we shouted aloud each to each in our wonder, 
For we knew that those beasts must have come fast and far, 
That they moaned as the breaking of waves on a bar. 

But behold! overhead the dark sky had grown pale, 
With the azure-tinged paleness of newly-skimmed milk, 
And the dawn-spiders floated on threads of floss-silk 
As the guards of the sun drew aside the thick veil 
And made ready to fling the dawn-portals asunder. 
Still that sound swelled and rolled, thrilling deep on the air, 
Calling long, calling loud in the ear of each steed, 
Bringing courage and strength in the moment of need, 
And light'ning the weight of the burdens they bare. 

But that moment behind us upshot a red glare 
As the sun swept the sky with a roseate sponge; 
And McIvor's blue roan gave a rear and a plunge, 
A half-sob, and so fell, like an over-ripe pear. 
Not a rein did we pull, not a stride did we stay, 
Speeding onward and speeding! For long we could hear 
Old Mac.'s maledictions ring loud in our rear 
As we rode in hot haste from the incoming day. 
Then all sudden and strangely we came face to face 
With the lead of the cattle, and lo! our long race 
Was run out; and we drew up the horses, all panting 
In stress of the chase, and yet ready for more; 
And our eager ears drank in that thunderous roar, 
While we watched the red squadrons come over the levels 
As if view-holloa'd by a pack of night-devils? 
Cow and calf chasing heifer and lumbering steer, 
With their grey, dripping nostrils, and eyes wide with fear, 
As if Burgess's cob followed hard on their rear. 

So we blocked them, and lo! the new sun laid a slanting 
Red finger on one who rode over the plain, 
Steed treading full slowly, head drooping, slack rein, 
Turning often aside through the dew-laden grasses 
To crop a sweet mouthful. We needed no glasses 
To see it was Fogarty. Once and again, 
And again did we hail?yet he never looked round, 
Neither made the least motion of hearing the sound. 

Riding on like a man who should ride in his sleep, 
Or as one in the web of some deep-woven charm, 
So he came through the grass?his horse striding breast-deep? 
With a woman held close in the crook of his arm;