Poems Extracted from

Back O’ Cairns

Adventures in the Far North

By Ion Idriess

1994

ISBN 0 207 18561 1.

Presented by Paul Clacher

THE REVIEW

Ion Idriess

I sat by the campfire musing,
On the dead, departed Past,

While spectral thoughts on memory's -wings

Came crowding round me fast.

And golden scenes were rising,

Through the magic-tinted air,.

When Earth seemed mostly Dreamland,

And life surpassing fair.

And I was thinking, musing,

If life was made in vain.

I've had my share of pleasure,

I've had my share of pain.

On fleeting -wings of happiness

Those brilliant years did fly;

In robes of sweetness glowing,

Each golden month sped by.

Then, life was a sparkling Eden,

Where every dream proved true,

While Youth remained my bounty,

And Hope my pleadings knew.

My musing now is changing

To a misty, fog-bound land.

And I was gently veering

To Tassy's rugged strand.

I thought old friends were round me,

And old, familiar scenes.

And I forgot the bitterness

That follows after dreams.

My musing now was drifting
To that distant Mulga Land,

Where the lonely traveller’s walking

Through a treeless waste of sand.

Where lies the gold alluring,

So many have led astray.

Where Hope is so assuring

That Pate might her obey.

The fire hums low—the moon has gone,

The sky is sullen black.

With never a thought like a silver star

To shine through the future track.

The Past has gone, the future's near—

A vista of dragging fears.

No wonder that many a man goes mad

At the phantom of coming years.

Ion Idreiss Back O ‘ Cairns pp 98 – 99.

When Girlie Goes Looking for Nuts

Ion Idriess

"The doctors tell us that our bones
To them a tale unfold,

Of how we're degenerating

From the usual human mould.

"For we are slipping back, they say,

To what we were before,

And by our tails wilt swing from trees

In a thousand years or more.

"But this to me seems passing strange,

'TIS laughable if true,

I pray my ghost will live to see

The troubles it will brew.

"How will a politician look

If monkey he must be?

Will he harangue the crowd for votes

While sitting on a tree?

"And will he promise them the nuts

Of others that he'll scatter,

And waste the precious fleeing hours

On things that do not matter?

"What tickles me, though, most of all

Is how will Girlie take it—

Will she quite spring up from her tail

Should a male monk strive to shake it?

"And will she comb her pretty fur

Then gaze upon a pool?

And will she fold her furry tail

When sitting on a stool?

"Or will she pass her time of day
in looking out for nuts,

Or coyly -wander through the bush

A shyly meeting knuts?

"Or maybe she mil climb a tree

And crack upon her knees,

The really choice collection

Of her daily catch of fleas.

"Oh joy 'twill be if I am there

To watch, the pretty dears,

To watch their little antics

in another thousand years'."

Ion Idreiss Back O ‘ Cairns pp 98 – 99.

The Belle of Nigger Creek

Some say it's dark-eyed Polly,
More say it's Rose or Nell,

But I think it's only folly

To try and -pick the belle.

There's lovely minds in Nigger Creek

Both white and. black and brawn,

And I think it's height of insolence

To look for girls in town.

For here you'll find the prettiest maids

That any could wish to see,

And some their colour never fades

Through dye of ancestry.

We'll toast them all in sparkling wine,

The dark ones and the fair,

And when we find that precious tin

We'll have a grand time there.

Ion Idreiss Back O ‘ Cairns p 129.

Idriess Ion, “Back O’ Cairns - Adventures in the Far North”, Sydney, Australia, Harper Collins, (Angus & Robertson Publication), 1994, ISBN 0 207 18561 1..