The Poetry Corner

The Cattle-Dog's Death

By Henry Lawson

The Plains lay bare on the homeward route, And the march was heavy on man and brute; For the Spirit of Drought was on all the land, And the white heat danced on the glowing sand. The best of our cattle-dogs lagged at last, His strength gave out ere the plains were passed, And our hearts grew sad when he crept and laid His languid limbs in the nearest shade. He saved our lives in the years gone by, When no one dreamed of the danger nigh, And the treacherous blacks in the darkness crept On the silent camp where the drovers slept. The dog is dying, a stockman said, As he knelt and lifted the shaggy head; Tis a long days march ere the run be near, And hes dying fast; shall we leave him here? But the super cried, Theres an answer there! As he raised a tuft of the dogs grey hair; And, strangely vivid, each man descried The old spear-mark on the shaggy hide. We laid a bluey and coat across The camping pack of the lightest horse, And raised the dog to his deathbed high, And brought him far neath the burning sky. At the kindly touch of the stockmen rude His eyes grew human with gratitude; And though we parched in the heat that fags, We gave him the last of the water-bags. The supers daughter we knew would chide If we left the dog in the desert wide; So we brought him far oer the burning sand For a parting stroke of her small white hand. But long ere the station was seen ahead, His pain was oer, for the dog was dead And the folks all knew by our looks of gloom Twas a comrades corpse that we carried home.