<h2> The Fire at Ross's Farm </h2>
<p>The squatter saw his pastures wide<br/>
Decrease, as one by one<br/>
The farmers moving to the west<br/>
Selected on his run;<br/>
Selectors took the water up<br/>
And all the black soil round;<br/>
The best grass-land the squatter had<br/>
Was spoilt by Ross's Ground.<br/>
<br/>
Now many schemes to shift old Ross<br/>
Had racked the squatter's brains,<br/>
But Sandy had the stubborn blood<br/>
Of Scotland in his veins;<br/>
He held the land and fenced it in,<br/>
He cleared and ploughed the soil,<br/>
And year by year a richer crop<br/>
Repaid him for his toil.<br/>
<br/>
Between the homes for many years<br/>
The devil left his tracks:<br/>
The squatter pounded Ross's stock,<br/>
And Sandy pounded Black's.<br/>
A well upon the lower run<br/>
Was filled with earth and logs,<br/>
And Black laid baits about the farm<br/>
To poison Ross's dogs.<br/>
<br/>
It was, indeed, a deadly feud<br/>
Of class and creed and race;<br/>
But, yet, there was a Romeo<br/>
And a Juliet in the case;<br/>
And more than once across the flats,<br/>
Beneath the Southern Cross,<br/>
Young Robert Black was seen to ride<br/>
With pretty Jenny Ross.<br/>
<br/>
One Christmas time, when months of drought<br/>
Had parched the western creeks,<br/>
The bush-fires started in the north<br/>
And travelled south for weeks.<br/>
At night along the river-side<br/>
The scene was grand and strange —<br/>
The hill-fires looked like lighted streets<br/>
Of cities in the range.<br/>
<br/>
The cattle-tracks between the trees<br/>
Were like long dusky aisles,<br/>
And on a sudden breeze the fire<br/>
Would sweep along for miles;<br/>
Like sounds of distant musketry<br/>
It crackled through the brakes,<br/>
And o'er the flat of silver grass<br/>
It hissed like angry snakes.<br/>
<br/>
It leapt across the flowing streams<br/>
And raced o'er pastures broad;<br/>
It climbed the trees and lit the boughs<br/>
And through the scrubs it roared.<br/>
The bees fell stifled in the smoke<br/>
Or perished in their hives,<br/>
And with the stock the kangaroos<br/>
Went flying for their lives.<br/>
<br/>
The sun had set on Christmas Eve,<br/>
When, through the scrub-lands wide,<br/>
Young Robert Black came riding home<br/>
As only natives ride.<br/>
He galloped to the homestead door<br/>
And gave the first alarm:<br/>
'The fire is past the granite spur,<br/>
'And close to Ross's farm.'<br/>
<br/>
'Now, father, send the men at once,<br/>
They won't be wanted here;<br/>
Poor Ross's wheat is all he has<br/>
To pull him through the year.'<br/>
'Then let it burn,' the squatter said;<br/>
'I'd like to see it done —<br/>
I'd bless the fire if it would clear<br/>
Selectors from the run.<br/>
<br/>
'Go if you will,' the squatter said,<br/>
'You shall not take the men —<br/>
Go out and join your precious friends,<br/>
And don't come here again.'<br/>
'I won't come back,' young Robert cried,<br/>
And, reckless in his ire,<br/>
He sharply turned his horse's head<br/>
And galloped towards the fire.<br/>
<br/>
And there, for three long weary hours,<br/>
Half-blind with smoke and heat,<br/>
Old Ross and Robert fought the flames<br/>
That neared the ripened wheat.<br/>
The farmer's hand was nerved by fears<br/>
Of danger and of loss;<br/>
And Robert fought the stubborn foe<br/>
For the love of Jenny Ross.<br/>
<br/>
But serpent-like the curves and lines<br/>
Slipped past them, and between,<br/>
Until they reached the bound'ry where<br/>
The old coach-road had been.<br/>
'The track is now our only hope,<br/>
There we must stand,' cried Ross,<br/>
'For nought on earth can stop the fire<br/>
If once it gets across.'<br/>
<br/>
Then came a cruel gust of wind,<br/>
And, with a fiendish rush,<br/>
The flames leapt o'er the narrow path<br/>
And lit the fence of brush.<br/>
'The crop must burn!' the farmer cried,<br/>
'We cannot save it now,'<br/>
And down upon the blackened ground<br/>
He dashed the ragged bough.<br/>
<br/>
But wildly, in a rush of hope,<br/>
His heart began to beat,<br/>
For o'er the crackling fire he heard<br/>
The sound of horses' feet.<br/>
'Here's help at last,' young Robert cried,<br/>
And even as he spoke<br/>
The squatter with a dozen men<br/>
Came racing through the smoke.<br/>
<br/>
Down on the ground the stockmen jumped<br/>
And bared each brawny arm,<br/>
They tore green branches from the trees<br/>
And fought for Ross's farm;<br/>
And when before the gallant band<br/>
The beaten flames gave way,<br/>
Two grimy hands in friendship joined —<br/>
And it was Christmas Day.<br/></p>
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