The Sliprails and the SpurHenry Lawson |
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| The colours of the setting sun Withdrew across the Western land He raised the sliprails, one by one, And shot them home with trembling hand; Her brown hands clung her face grew pale Ah! quivering chin and eyes that brim! One quick, fierce kiss across the rail, And, "Good-bye, Mary!" "Good-bye, Jim!" Oh,
he rides hard to race the pain A hand upon the horses mane, |
She gasped for sudden loss of hope, As, with a backward wave to her, He cantered down the grassy slope And swiftly round the darkening spur. Black-pencilled panels standing high, And darkness fading into stars, And, blurring fast against the sky, A faint white form beside the bars. And often at the set of
sun, And he rides hard to dull the pain |
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