<h2> Sweeney </h2>
<p>It was somewhere in September, and the sun was going down,<br/>
When I came, in search of 'copy', to a Darling-River town;<br/>
'Come-and-have-a-drink' we'll call it — 'tis a fitting name, I think —<br/>
And 'twas raining, for a wonder, up at Come-and-have-a-drink.<br/>
<br/>
'Neath the public-house verandah I was resting on a bunk<br/>
When a stranger rose before me, and he said that he was drunk;<br/>
He apologised for speaking; there was no offence, he swore;<br/>
But he somehow seemed to fancy that he'd seen my face before.<br/>
<br/>
'No erfence,' he said. I told him that he needn't mention it,<br/>
For I might have met him somewhere; I had travelled round a bit,<br/>
And I knew a lot of fellows in the bush and in the streets —<br/>
But a fellow can't remember all the fellows that he meets.<br/>
<br/>
Very old and thin and dirty were the garments that he wore,<br/>
Just a shirt and pair of trousers, and a boot, and nothing more;<br/>
He was wringing-wet, and really in a sad and sinful plight,<br/>
And his hat was in his left hand, and a bottle in his right.<br/>
<br/>
His brow was broad and roomy, but its lines were somewhat harsh,<br/>
And a sensual mouth was hidden by a drooping, fair moustache;<br/>
(His hairy chest was open to what poets call the 'wined',<br/>
And I would have bet a thousand that his pants were gone behind).<br/>
<br/>
He agreed: 'Yer can't remember all the chaps yer chance to meet,'<br/>
And he said his name was Sweeney — people lived in Sussex-street.<br/>
He was campin' in a stable, but he swore that he was right,<br/>
'Only for the blanky horses walkin' over him all night.'<br/>
<br/>
He'd apparently been fighting, for his face was black-and-blue,<br/>
And he looked as though the horses had been treading on him, too;<br/>
But an honest, genial twinkle in the eye that wasn't hurt<br/>
Seemed to hint of something better, spite of drink and rags and dirt.<br/>
<br/>
It appeared that he mistook me for a long-lost mate of his —<br/>
One of whom I was the image, both in figure and in phiz —<br/>
(He'd have had a letter from him if the chap were living still,<br/>
For they'd carried swags together from the Gulf to Broken Hill.)<br/>
<br/>
Sweeney yarned awhile and hinted that his folks were doing well,<br/>
And he told me that his father kept the Southern Cross Hotel;<br/>
And I wondered if his absence was regarded as a loss<br/>
When he left the elder Sweeney — landlord of the Southern Cross.<br/>
<br/>
He was born in Parramatta, and he said, with humour grim,<br/>
That he'd like to see the city ere the liquor finished him,<br/>
But he couldn't raise the money. He was damned if he could think<br/>
What the Government was doing. Here he offered me a drink.<br/>
<br/>
I declined — 'TWAS self-denial — and I lectured him on booze,<br/>
Using all the hackneyed arguments that preachers mostly use;<br/>
Things I'd heard in temperance lectures (I was young and rather green),<br/>
And I ended by referring to the man he might have been.<br/>
<br/>
Then a wise expression struggled with the bruises on his face,<br/>
Though his argument had scarcely any bearing on the case:<br/>
'What's the good o' keepin' sober? Fellers rise and fellers fall;<br/>
What I might have been and wasn't doesn't trouble me at all.'<br/>
<br/>
But he couldn't stay to argue, for his beer was nearly gone.<br/>
He was glad, he said, to meet me, and he'd see me later on;<br/>
He guessed he'd have to go and get his bottle filled again,<br/>
And he gave a lurch and vanished in the darkness and the rain.<br/>
<br/>
. . . . .<br/>
<br/>
And of afternoons in cities, when the rain is on the land,<br/>
Visions come to me of Sweeney with his bottle in his hand,<br/>
With the stormy night behind him, and the pub verandah-post —<br/>
And I wonder why he haunts me more than any other ghost.<br/>
<br/>
Still I see the shearers drinking at the township in the scrub,<br/>
And the army praying nightly at the door of every pub,<br/>
And the girls who flirt and giggle with the bushmen from the west —<br/>
But the memory of Sweeney overshadows all the rest.<br/>
<br/>
Well, perhaps, it isn't funny; there were links between us two —<br/>
He had memories of cities, he had been a jackeroo;<br/>
And, perhaps, his face forewarned me of a face that I might see<br/>
From a bitter cup reflected in the wretched days to be.<br/>
<br/>
. . . . .<br/>
<br/>
I suppose he's tramping somewhere where the bushmen carry swags,<br/>
Cadging round the wretched stations with his empty tucker-bags;<br/>
And I fancy that of evenings, when the track is growing dim,<br/>
What he 'might have been and wasn't' comes along and troubles him.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />