The Poetry Corner

How Polly Paid For Her Keep

By Barcroft Boake

Do I know Polly Brown? Do I know her? Why, damme, You might as well ask if I know my own name? Its a wonder you never heard tell of old Sammy, Her father, my mate in the Crackenback claim. He asks if I know little Poll! Why, I nursed her As often, I reckon as old Mother Brown When they lived at the Flats, and old Sam went a burster In Chinamans Gully, and dropped every crown. My golden-haired mate, ever brimful of folly And childish conceit, and yet ready to rest Contented beside me, Twas I who taught Polly To handle four horses along with the best. Twas funny to hear the small fairy discoursing Of horses and drivers! Ill swear that she knew Every one of the nags that I drove to the Crossing, Their vices, and paces, and pedigrees too. She got a strange whim in her golden-haired noodle That a drivers high seat was a kind of a throne, Ive taken her up there before she could toddle, And shed talk to the nags in a tongue of her own. Then old Mother Brown got the horrors around her: (I think it was pineapple-rum drove her daft) She cleared out one night, and the next morning they found her, A mummified mass, in a forty foot shaft. And Sammy? Well, Sammy was wailing and weeping, And raving, and raising the devils own row; He was only too glad to give into our keeping His motherless babe, wed have kept her till now But Jimmy Maloney thought proper to court her, Among all the lasses he loved but this one: Shes no longer Polly, our golden-haired daughter, Shes Mrs Maloney, of Paddlesack Run. Our little girl Pollys no end of a swell (you Must know Jimmy shears fifty thousand odd sheep), But Im clean off the track, I was going to tell you The way in which Polly paid us for her keep. It was this way: My wifes living in Tumbarumba, And Im down at Germanton yards, for a sale, Inspecting coach-horses (I wanted a number), When they flashed down a message that made me turn pale. Twas from Polly, to say the old wife had fallen Down-stairs, and in falling had fractured a bone, There was no doctor nearer than Tumut to call on, So she and the blacksmith had set it alone. Theyd have to come down by the coach in the morning, As one of the two buggy ponies was lame, Would I see the old doctor, and give him fair warning To keep himself decently straight till they came? I was making good money those times, and a fiver Per week was the wages my deputy got, A good, honest worker, and out-and-out driver, But, like all the rest, a most terrible sot. So, just on this morning, which made it more sinful, With my women on board, the unprincipled skunk Hung round all the bars till he loaded a skinful Of grog, and then started his journey, dead drunk. Drunk! with my loved ones on board, drunk as Chloe, He might have got right by the end of the trip Had he rested contented and quiet, but no, he Must pull up at Rosewood, for one other nip. That finished him off, quick, and there he sat, dozing Like an owl on his perch, half-awake, half-asleep. Till a lurch of the coach came, when, suddenly losing His balance, he fell to the earth all of a heap, While the coach, with its four frightened horses, went sailing Downhill to perdition and Carabost break, Four galloping devils, with reins loosely trailing, And passengers falling all roads in their wake. Two bagmen, who sat on the box, jumped together And found a soft bed in the mud of the drain; The barmaid from Murphys fell light as a feather, I think she got off with a bit of a sprain; While the jock, with his nerves most decidedly shaken, Made straight for the door, never wasting his breath In farewell apologies; basely forsaken, My wife and Poll Brown sat alone with grim Death. While the coach thundered downward, my wife fell a-praying; But Poll in a fix, now, is dashed hard to beat: She picked up her skirts, scrambled over the swaying High roof of the coach, till she lit on the seat, And there looked around. In her hand was a pretty, Frail thing made of laces, with which a girl strives To save her complexion when down in the city, A lace parasol! yet it saved both their lives. Oh, Polly was game, you may bet your last dollar, She leans on the splashboard, and stretches and strains With her parasol, down by the off-siders collar, Until she contrives to catch hold of the reins. They lay quite secure in the crook of the handle, She clutched them, the parasol fell underneath. I tell you no girl ever could hold a candle To Poll, as she hung back and clenched her white teeth. The bolters sped downward, with nostrils distended, She must get a pull on them ere they should reach The fence on the hill, where the road had been mended; The blocks bit the wheels with a sroope and a screech; The little blue veins in her arms swelled and blackened; The reins were like fiddle-strings stretched in her grip; When the break hove in sight, the mad gallop had slackened, She had done it, my word, they were under the whip. They still had the pace on, but Polly was able To steer twixt the fences with never a graze, They flashed past the Change where the groom at the stable Just stood with his mouth open, dumb with amaze. On the level she turned them, the best bit of driving That was ever done on this side of the range, And trotted them back up the hill-side, arriving With not a strap broken in front of the Change. And the wife? well she prayed to the Lord till she fainted; I reckon He answered her prayers all the same, He must have helped Polly, its curious now, aint it, To see a thin slip of a girl be so game? Did I summons the driver? I had no occasion, The coroner came with his jury instead, Who found that he died from a serious abrasion, Both wheels of the coach had gone over his head.