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Skeeta ( An Old Servant’s Tale )

Our Skeeta was married, our Skeeta! the tomboy
                and pet of the place,
No more as a maiden we’d greet her, no more
                would her pert little face
Light up the chill gloom of the parlour; no more
                would her deft little hands
Serve drinks to the travel-stained caller on his way
                to more southerly lands;
No more would she chaff the rough drovers and
                send them away with a smile,
No more would she madden her lovers, demurely,
                with womanish guile -
The “prince” from the great Never-Never, with
                light touch of lips and of hand
Had come, and enslaved her for ever– a potentate
                bearded and tanned
From the land where the white mirage dances its
                dance of death over the plains,
With the glow of the sun in his glances, the lust of
                the West in his veins;
 
 
 
His talk of long drought-stricken stretches when the
                tongue rattled dry on the lips;
Of his fights with the niggers, poor wretches, as
                he sped on his perilous trips.
A supple-thewed, desert-bred rover, with naught to
                commend him but this,
That he was her idol, her lover, who’d fettered her
                heart with a kiss.
 
 
 
They were wed, and he took her to Warren, where
                she with his love was content;
But town-life to him was too foreign, so back to the
                droving he went:
A man away down on the border of “Vic.” bought
                some cattle from “Cobb,”
And gave Harry Parker the order to go to “the
                Gulf” for the mob:
And he went, for he held her love cheaper than his
                wish to re-live the old life,
Or his reason might have been deeper– I called it
                deserting his wife.
 
 
 
Then one morning his horses were mustered, the
                start on the journey was made -
A clatter, an oath through the dust heard, was the
                last of the long cavalcade.
As we stood by the stockyard assembled, poor child,
                how she strove to be brave!
But yet I could see how she trembled at the careless
                farewell that he gave.
We brought her back home on the morrow, but none
                of us ever may learn
Of the fight that she fought to keep sorrow at bay
                till her husband’s return.
He had gone, but the way of his going, ‘twas that
                which she dwelt on with pain -
Careless kiss, though there sure was no knowing,
                when or where he might kiss her again.
He had ridden away and had left her a woman,
                in all but in years,
Of her girlhood’s gay hopes had bereft her, and
                left in their place nought but tears.
 
 
 
Yet still, as the months passed, a treasure was
                brought her by Love, ere he fled,
And garments of infantile measure she fashioned
                with needle and thread;
She fashioned with linen and laces and ribbons a
                nest for her bird,
While colour returned to her face as the bud of
                maternity stirred.
It blossomed and died; we arrayed it in all its soft
                splendour of white,
And sorrowing took it and laid it in the earth
                whence it sprung, out of sight.
She wept not at all, only whitened, as Death, in
                his pitiless quest,
Leant over her pillow and tightened the throat of the
                child at her breast.
 
 
 
She wept not, her soul was too tired, for waiting is
                harrowing work,
And then I bethought me and wired away to the
                agents in Bourke;
’Twas little enough I could glean there; ’twas little
                enough that they knew -
They answered he hadn’t been seen there, but might
                in a week, perchance two.
She wept not at all, only whitened with staring too
                long at the night:
There was only one time when she brightened, that
                time when red dust hove in sight,
And settled and hung on the backs of the cattle, and
                altered their spots,
While the horses swept up, with their packs of blue
                blankets and jingling pots.
She always was set upon meeting those boisterous
                cattle-men, lest
Her husband had sent her a greeting by one of them,
                in from the West.
Not one of them ever owned to him, or seemed to
                remember the name
(The truth was they all of them knew him, but
                wouldn’t tell her of his shame)
But never, though long time she waited, did her faith
                in the faithless grow weak,
And each time the outer door grated, an eager flush
                sprang to her cheek—
 
 
 
’Twasn’t he, and it died with a flicker, and then
                what I had long dreaded came:
I was serving two drovers with liquor when one of
                them mentioned his name.
“Oh, yes!” said the other one, winking, “on the
                Paroo I saw him, he’d been
In Eulo a fortnight then, drinking, and driving
                about with ”The Queen”
While the bullocks were going to glory, and his
                billet was not worth a G— d—;”
I told him to cut short the story, as I pulled-to the
                door with a slam -
Too late! for the words were loud-spoken, and Skeeta
                was out in the hall,
Then I knew that a girl’s heart was broken, as I
                heard a low cry and a fall.
 
 
 
And then came a day when the doctor went home,
                for the truth was avowed;
And I knew that my hands, which had rocked her in
                childhood, would fashion her shroud,
I knew we should tenderly carry and lay her where
                many more lie,
Ah, why will the girls love and marry, when men are
                not worthy, ah, why?
She lay there a-dying, our Skeeta; not e’en did she
                stir at my kiss,
In the next world perchance we may greet her, but
                never, ah, never, in this.
Like the last breath of air in a gully, that sighs as
                the sun slowly dips,
To the knell of a heart beating dully, her soul
                struggled out on her lips.
But she lifted great eyelids and pallid, while once
                more beneath them there glowed
The fire of Love, as she rallied at sound of hoofs
                out on the road;
They rang sharp and clear on the metal, they ceased
                at the gate in the lane,
A pause, and we heard the beats settle in long,
                swinging cadence again;
With a rattle, a rush, and a clatter the rider came
                down by the store,
And neared us, but what did it matter? he never
                pulled rein at the door,
But over the brow of the hill he sped on with a
                low muffled roll,
“Twas only young Smith on his filly; he passed, and
                so too did her soul.
 
 
 
Weeks after, I went down one morning to trim the
                white rose that had grown
And clasped, with its tender adorning, the plain
                little cross of white stone.
In the lane dusty drovers were wheeling dull cattle,
                with turbulent sound,
But I paused as I saw a man kneeling, with his
                forehead pressed low on the mound;
Already he’d heard me approaching, and slowly I
                saw him up-rise
And move away, sullenly slouching his “cabbage–
                tree” over his eyes,
I never said anything to him, as he mounted his horse
                at the gate,
He didn’t know me, but I knew him, the husband
                who came back too late.

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