Another of my Dads poems, he wrote a good verse, and his
recitals were always popular.
The Dairyman’s Ball.
The horses were tied to the post and rail fence
On the lee of the little bush hall
Their feeders and nose bags were bulging and full
On the night of the dairyman’s ball.
We covered their backs with a couple of rugs
For a chill wind howled ore the plain
And contented they rested on this foot and that
As their noses went deep for the grain.
A tarpaulin was stretched over stringy bark poles
From the ridge hung a hurricane lamp
That shone bright on tables of unpolished slabs
To brighten the hall, and help keep out the damp.
Plump women were brewing great buckets of tea
Some sandwiched thick wedges of meat
Twixt slices of bread that were camp oven cooked
For those who were dancing to eat.
The hall was bedecked with green bushes and ferns
With sorghum stalks crossed ore the door
And a sheaf of white maize towered 7 feet high
In a cream can that stood on the floor.
No programs were needed; each dance had its turn
And placards were nailed to the wall
That stated, “No Smoking or Swearing inside”
Were the rules of the dairyman’s ball.
Few couples arose when the first set was called
For the bush boys were awkward and shy
To long seemed their coats and their trouser to short
And strange felt the collar and tie.
But the music aroused them, they rose for a waltz
With hitching of braces and belts
Reverse and balance then circle again
Shook the dust from the yard as they went.
The bush girls were smiling, their eyes shining bright
Smooth bosoms and shoulders were bare
While suntan and freckles were powdered and rouged
And shingled or bobbed was their hair.
Forgotten the dresses bedraggled and stiff
With the odor of milk overall
But dresses of chiffon and stockings of silk
For the night of the dairyman’s ball.
Old timers were seated on stools round the wall
Dirt wrinkled and lined were their brows
With toe and heel tapping and grey beards aside
Their minds were away from the cows.
And the birds were asong when the horses were brought
With backs humped and tightly pressed tails
One was contrary, his shoulders were sore
Ran backwards and crashed through the rails.
And the babies awakened, cried loud in the chill
That their pleasure at dancing was small
Young couples hung back, for a kiss in the dawn
At the close of the dairyman’s ball.
Mervyn Holt 1911 - 2002
1 comment:
Good one Peter ~~ Keep them coming. Hi from your sister taking a break from running through the house with scissors !!!
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