<h2> Marshall's Mate </h2>
<p>You almost heard the surface bake, and saw the gum-leaves turn —<br/>
You could have watched the grass scorch brown had there been grass to burn.<br/>
In such a drought the strongest heart might well grow faint and weak —<br/>
'Twould frighten Satan to his home — not far from Dingo Creek.<br/>
<br/>
The tanks went dry on Ninety Mile, as tanks go dry out back,<br/>
The Half-Way Spring had failed at last when Marshall missed the track;<br/>
Beneath a dead tree on the plain we saw a pack-horse reel —<br/>
Too blind to see there was no shade, and too done-up to feel.<br/>
And charcoaled on the canvas bag ('twas written pretty clear)<br/>
We read the message Marshall wrote. It said: 'I'm taken queer —<br/>
I'm somewhere off of Deadman's Track, half-blind and nearly dead;<br/>
Find Crowbar, get him sobered up, and follow back,' it said.<br/>
<br/>
'Let Mitchell go to Bandicoot. You'll find him there,' said Mack.<br/>
'I'll start the chaps from Starving Steers, and take the dry-holes back.'<br/>
We tramped till dark, and tried to track the pack-horse on the sands,<br/>
And just at daylight Crowbar came with Milroy's station hands.<br/>
His cheeks were drawn, his face was white, but he was sober then —<br/>
In times of trouble, fire, and flood, 'twas Crowbar led the men.<br/>
'Spread out as widely as you can each side the track,' said he;<br/>
'The first to find him make a smoke that all the rest can see.'<br/>
<br/>
We took the track and followed back where Crowbar followed fate,<br/>
We found a dead man in the scrub — but 'twas not Crowbar's mate.<br/>
The station hands from Starving Steers were searching all the week —<br/>
But never news of Marshall's fate came back to Dingo Creek.<br/>
And no one, save the spirit of the sand-waste, fierce and lone,<br/>
Knew where Jack Marshall crawled to die — but Crowbar might have known.<br/>
<br/>
He'd scarcely closed his quiet eyes or drawn a sleeping breath —<br/>
They say that Crowbar slept no more until he slept in death.<br/>
A careless, roving scamp, that loved to laugh and drink and joke,<br/>
But no man saw him smile again (and no one saw him smoke),<br/>
And, when we spelled at night, he'd lie with eyes still open wide,<br/>
And watch the stars as if they'd point the place where Marshall died.<br/>
<br/>
The search was made as searches are (and often made in vain),<br/>
And on the seventh day we saw a smoke across the plain;<br/>
We left the track and followed back — 'twas Crowbar still that led,<br/>
And when his horse gave out at last he walked and ran ahead.<br/>
We reached the place and turned again — dragged back and no man spoke —<br/>
It was a bush-fire in the scrubs that made the cursed smoke.<br/>
And when we gave it best at last, he said, 'I'LL see it through,'<br/>
Although he knew we'd done as much as mortal men could do.<br/>
'I'll not — I won't give up!' he said, his hand pressed to his brow;<br/>
'My God! the cursed flies and ants, they might be at him now.<br/>
I'll see it so in twenty years, 'twill haunt me all my life —<br/>
I could not face his sister, and I could not face his wife.<br/>
It's no use talking to me now — I'm going back,' he said,<br/>
'I'm going back to find him, and I will — alive or dead!'<br/>
<br/>
. . . . .<br/>
<br/>
He packed his horse with water and provisions for a week,<br/>
And then, at sunset, crossed the plain, away from Dingo Creek.<br/>
We watched him tramp beside the horse till we, as it grew late,<br/>
Could not tell which was Bonypart and which was Marshall's mate.<br/>
The dam went dry at Dingo Creek, and we were driven back,<br/>
And none dared face the Ninety Mile when Crowbar took the track.<br/>
<br/>
They saw him at Dead Camel and along the Dry Hole Creeks —<br/>
There came a day when none had heard of Marshall's mate for weeks;<br/>
They'd seen him at No Sunday, he called at Starving Steers —<br/>
There came a time when none had heard of Marshall's mate for years.<br/>
They found old Bonypart at last, picked clean by hungry crows,<br/>
But no one knew how Crowbar died — the soul of Marshall knows!<br/>
<br/>
And now, way out on Dingo Creek, when winter days are late,<br/>
The bushmen talk of Crowbar's ghost 'what's looking for his mate';<br/>
For let the fools indulge their mirth, and let the wise men doubt —<br/>
The soul of Crowbar and his mate have travelled further out.<br/>
Beyond the furthest two-rail fence, Colanne and Nevertire —<br/>
Beyond the furthest rabbit-proof, barbed wire and common wire —<br/>
Beyond the furthest 'Gov'ment' tank, and past the furthest bore —<br/>
The Never-Never, No Man's Land, No More, and Nevermore —<br/>
Beyond the Land o' Break-o'-Day, and Sunset and the Dawn,<br/>
The soul of Marshall and the soul of Marshall's mate have gone<br/>
Unto that Loving, Laughing Land where life is fresh and clean —<br/>
Where the rivers flow all summer, and the grass is always green.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0053" id="link2H_4_0053"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />