Barcroft Henry Boake

Here you will find the Long Poem The Babes In The Bush of poet Barcroft Henry Boake

The Babes In The Bush

Dozens of damp little curls; 
One little short upper lip; 
Two rows of teeth like diminutive pearls; 
Eyes clear and grey as the creek where it swirls 
Over the ledges?that's Tip! 
With a skip!? 
A perfectly hopeless young nip! 

Smudge on the tip of his nose; 
Mischievous glance of a Puck; 
Heart just as big as the rents in his clothes; 
Lungs like a locust and cheeks like a rose;? 
Total it!?there you have Tuck! 
And bad luck 
To the man who would question his pluck! 

School is all over at last? 
School with its pothooks and strokes: 
Homeward they toddle, but who could go fast?? 
So many wonderful things to be passed? 
Froggie, for instance, who croaks 
'Neath the oaks 
By the creek where the watercress soaks. 

Sandpipers dance on the bars; 
Swallows, white-throated and fleet, 
Dip thirsty beaks in the stream as they pass; 
Smooth water-beetles that twinkle like stars 
Watch the gay dragon-flies greet. 
Hark how sweet 
Is the pipe of the tiny pee-weet! 

Near, too, the earth is all torn: 
Strong, willing workers have thrown 
Great heaps of tailings, smooth-polished and worn, 
Round the mysterious caverns that yawn? 
Stacks of the snowy quartz stone, 
Grass-grown 
Piles of the Earth's dry bone. 

Grasshoppers chirp on the brace; 
Briars drop berries blood-red 
Into the mouldering void of the race; 
Green mosses flourish on cutting and face; 
Children speak softly, with dread, 
When they tread 
In this desolate place of the dead. 

`Tum on!' said Tip, `here's a nest!' 
Looking behind as he ran. 
`No,' said his brother, expanding his chest, 
`I like to play at pro'pectin' the best'? 
Thumping a rusty old pan; 
Then began 
To wash up a dish like a man. 

`Tum on! here's four little eggs! 
Do tum!'?he whimpers his lip: 
A-tremble his eyes, wet by tears as he begs, 
And sharp briars are scratching his legs. 
A branch strikes his face like a whip; 
Then a slip? 
And a shaft swallows poor little Tip! 

Peering and catching his breath, 
Tuck felt his little heart swell: 
Nothing at all could he see underneath? 
P'r'aps poor old Tippy had gone to his death? 
Would it hurt him if he fell? 
Who could tell 
The depth of that horrible well? 

`Tippy! oh, Tip! are you dead?' . . . 
Never a sound or a sigh! 
Tuck held his breath, his heart heavy as lead: 
Then: `Tuck! where are you? I've hurted my head!' 
Came up the quav'ring reply; 
And a cry: 
`Oh, Tuck! don't go 'way, or I'll die! 

`Tuck! it's so dark; I'm afraid!' . . . 
He drew down his eyebrows and frowned 
Up the creek, down the creek, somewhat dismayed. 
Miles to go home; but, again, if he stayed, 
How would they ever be found Underground 
In that cavern that swallowed all sound? 

`Tuck, I'm all covered with blood!
Sobbed the small voice without cess. 
`Why don't you help me up out of the mud?' 
Tuck foraged out a long length of pine wood; 
Stripped off his little print dress, 
And?just guess! 
Rigged a white flag of distress! 

Truly the depth was not great? 
That, though, the babe did not know; 
Lowering himself till the whole of his weight 
Hung on the fingers that clutched the blue slate . . . 
`Please God!' . . . he let himself go; 
And I trow 
That angel hands caught him below. 

Never a scratch or a mark! 
No, and not even a tear! 
Little hands feeling their way through the dark . . . 
What if that other should be stiff and stark? 
`Here I am, Tippy! quite near? 
Oh, dear!' 
Then came the answer: `I'm here!' 

Crouched in the mouth of a drive, 
Tippy sobbed out his delight? 
Not so much hurt, after all?quite alive: 
Almost convinced that no harm could arrive 
Now that Tuck's arms clasped him tight. 
Then the light 
Died slowly, and lo! it was Night. 

Above?the flag blows to the air: 
Sad parents seek vainly and weep: 
There are lights 'mid the thistles, and cries of despair: 
A rifle cracks loudly, and bonfires glare . . . 
Below?where the blind creatures creep, 
Hidden deep, 
Two pretty babes smile in their sleep.