Page:Backblock Ballads and Later Verses (C.J. Dennis, 1918).djvu/37

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.

"Got-a-Fag"


He was tall and tough and stringy, with the shoulders of an axe-man,
    Broad and loose, with greenhide muscles; and a hand shaped to the reins;
He was slow of speech and prudent, something of a Nature student,
    With the eye of one who gazes far across the saltbush plains.

Smith, by name; but long forgotten was his legal patronymic
    In a land where every bushman wears some unbaptismal tag;
And through frequent repetition of a well-worn requisition,
    "Smith" had long retired in favour of the title, "Got-a-Fag."

Not until the war was raging for a month, or maybe longer,
    Did the tidings reach the station, blest with quite unfrequent mails;
And, though still a steady grafter, he grew restless ever after,
    And he pondered long of evenings, seated on the stockyard rails.

29