Get Your Premium Membership

Best Famous Bails Poems

Here is a collection of the all-time best famous Bails poems. This is a select list of the best famous Bails poetry. Reading, writing, and enjoying famous Bails poetry (as well as classical and contemporary poems) is a great past time. These top poems are the best examples of bails poems.

Search and read the best famous Bails poems, articles about Bails poems, poetry blogs, or anything else Bails poem related using the PoetrySoup search engine at the top of the page.

See Also:
Written by Les Murray | Create an image from this poem

Towards The Imminent Days (Section 4)

 In my aunt's house, the milk jug's beaded crochet cover
tickles the ear. We've eaten boiled things with butter. 
Pie spiced like islands, dissolving in cream, is now
dissolving in us. We've reached the teapot of calm. 
The table we sit at is fashioned of three immense
beech boards out of England. The minute widths of the year
have been refined in the wood by daughters' daughters. 
In the year of Nelson, I notice, the winter was mild. 

But our talk is cattle and cricket. My quiet uncle
has spent the whole forenoon sailing a stump-ridden field
of blady-grass and Pleistocene clay never ploughed 
since the world's beginning. The Georgic furrow lengthens 

in ever more intimate country. But we're talking bails,
stray cattle, brands. In the village of Merchandise Creek
there's a post in a ruined blacksmith shop that bears
a charred-in black-letter script of iron characters, 

hooks, bars, conjoined letters, a weird bush syllabary. 
It is the language of property seared into skin
but descends beyond speech into the muscles of cattle, 
the world of feed as it shimmers in cattle minds. 

My uncle, nodding, identifies the owners
(I gather M-bar was mourned by thousands of head).
It has its roots in meadows deeper than Gaelic, 
my uncle's knowledge. Farmers longest in heaven 

share slyly with him in my aunt's grave mischievous smile
that shines out of every object in my sight
in these loved timber rooms at the threshold of grass.
The depth in this marriage will heal the twentieth century.


Written by Andrew Barton Paterson | Create an image from this poem

The Duties of an Aide-de-camp

 Oh, some folk think vice-royalty is festive and hilarious, 
The duties of an A.D.C. are manifold and various, 
So listen, whilst I tell in song 
The duties of an aide-de-cong. 
Whatsoever betide 
To the Governor's side 
We must stick -- or the public would eat him -- 
For each bounder we see 
Says, "Just introduce me 
To His Lordship -- I'm anxious to meet him." 

Then they grab at his paw 
And they chatter and jaw 
Till they'd talk him to death -- if we'd let 'em -- 
And the folk he has met, 
They are all in a fret, 
Just for fear he might chance to forget 'em. 

When some local King Billy 
Is talking him silly, 
Or the pound-keeper's wife has waylaid him, 
From folks of that stamp 
When he has to decamp -- 
We're his aides to decamp -- so we aid him. 

Then some feminine beauty 
Will come and salute ye, 
She may be a Miss or a Madam, 
Or a man comes in view, 
Bails you up, "How de do!" 
And you don't know the fellow from Adam! 

But you've got to keep sweet 
With each man that you meet, 
And a trifle like this mustn't bar you, 
So you clutch at his fin, 
And you say, with a grin, 
"Oh, delighted to see you -- how are you?" 

Then we do country shows 
Where some prize-taker blows 
Of his pig -- a great, vast forty-stoner -- 
"See, my Lord! ain't he fine! 
How is that for a swine!" 
When it isn't a patch on its owner! 

We fix up the dinners 
For parsons and sinners 
And lawyers and bishops and showmen, 
And a judge of the court 
We put next to a "sport", 
And an Orangeman next to a Roman. 

We send invitations 
To all celebrations, 
Some Nobody's presence entreating, 
And the old folks of all 
We invite to a ball, 
And the young -- to a grandmothers' meeting. 

And when we go dancing, 
Like cart-horses prancing, 
We plunge where the people are thickenkn'; 
And each gay local swell 
Thinks it's "off" to dance well, 
So he copies our style -- ain't it sickenin'! 

Then at banquets we dine 
And swig cheap, nasty wine, 
But the poor aide-de-camp mustn't funk it -- 
And they call it champagne, 
But we're free to maintain 
That he feels real pain when he's drunk it. 

Then our horses bestriding 
We go out a-riding 
Lest our health by confinement we'd injure; 
You can notice the glare 
Of the Governor's hair 
When the little boys say, "Go it, Ginger!" 

Then some wandering lords -- 
They so often are frauds -- 
This out-of-way country invading, 
If a man dresses well 
And behaves like a swell, 
Then he's somebody's cook masquerading. 

But an out-an-out ass 
With a thirst for the glass 
And the symptoms of drink on his "boko", 
Who is perpetually 
Pursuing the ballet, 
He is always the "true Orinoco". 

We must slave with our quills -- 
Keep the cash -- pay the bills -- 
Keep account of the liquor and victuals -- 
So I think you'll agree 
That the gay A.D.C. 
Has a life that's not all beer and skittles!
Written by Henry Lawson | Create an image from this poem

The Drovers Sweetheart

 An hour before the sun goes down 
Behind the ragged boughs, 
I go across the little run 
And bring the dusty cows; 
And once I used to sit and rest 
Beneath the fading dome, 
For there was one that I loved best 
Who'd bring the cattle home. 

Our yard is fixed with double bails, 
Round one the grass is green, 
The bush is growing through the rails, 
The spike is rusted in; 
And 'twas from there his freckled face 
Would turn and smile at me -- 
He'd milk a dozen in the race 
While I was milking three. 

I milk eleven cows myself 
Where once I milked but four; 
I set the dishes on the shelf 
And close the dairy door; 
And when the glaring sunlight fails 
And the fire shines through the cracks, 
I climb the broken stockyard rails 
And watch the bridle-tracks. 

He kissed me twice and once again 
And rode across the hill, 
The pint-pots and the hobble-chain 
I hear them jingling still; 
He'll come at night or not at all -- 
He left in dust and heat, 
And when the soft, cool shadows fall 
Is the best time to meet. 

And he is coming back again, 
He wrote to let me know, 
The floods were in the Darling then -- 
It seems so long ago; 
He'd come through miles of slush and mud, 
And it was weary work, 
The creeks were bankers, and the flood 
Was forty miles round Bourke. 

He said the floods had formed a block, 
The plains could not be crossed, 
And there was foot-rot in the flock 
And hundreds had been lost; 
The sheep were falling thick and fast 
A hundred miles from town, 
And when he reached the line at last 
He trucked the remnant down. 

And so he'll have to stand the cost; 
His luck was always bad, 
Instead of making more, he lost 
The money that he had; 
And how he'll manage, heaven knows 
(My eyes are getting dim), 
He says -- he says -- he don't -- suppose 
I'll want -- to -- marry -- him. 

As if I wouldn't take his hand 
Without a golden glove -- 
Oh! Jack, you men won't understand 
How much a girl can love. 
I long to see his face once more -- 
Jack's dog! thank God, it's Jack! -- 
(I never thought I'd faint before) 
He's coming -- up -- the track.

Book: Reflection on the Important Things