VIII. JIM'S GIRL

Jim's Girl

O is that girl," sez Digger Smith,
"That never seems to bother with

No blokes: the bint with curly 'air?

I've often seen 'er over there

Talkin' to Missus Flood, an' she
Seems like a reel ripe peach to me.
"Not that I'm askin'" . . . 'Ere 'is eyes
Goes sort uv swiv'ly, an' 'e sighs.

"Not that I'm askin' with idears

Uv love an' marridge; 'ave no fears.

I've chucked the matrimony plan,"
'E sez. "I'm only 'arf a man."
This Digger Smith 'as fairly got
Me rampin' with 'is "'arf man" rot.

'E 'as a timber leg, it's true;

But 'e can do the work uv two.

Besides, the things 'e's done Out There
Makes 'im one man an' some to spare.
I knoo 'is question was jist kid.
'E'd met this girl; I know 'e did.

'E knoo Jim Flood an' 'er was booked

For double when the 'Un was cooked.

But, seein' 'er, it used to start
'Im thinkin' uv another tart.
"Oh, 'er?" sez I. "She is a pearl.
I've 'eard she used to be Jim's girl;

But she was jist a child when Jim

Got out. She 'as forgotten 'im."

I knows jist wot was in 'is mind,
An' sez, "Wade in, if you're inclined."
'E give me sich a narsty look
I thought 'e meant to answer crook;

But, "I ain't out for jokes," sez 'e

"Yeh needn't sling that stuff to me.

I only was jist thinkin'--p'r'aps . . . . .
There's some," 'e sez, "that sticks to chaps.
"Some girls," sez 'e, "keeps true to chaps,
An' wed 'em when they've done with scraps,

An' come 'ome whole. Yeh don't ixpec'

No tart to tie up to a wreck?

Besides," 'e sez. . . . "Well, any'ow,
That girl's all right; I know it now.
"I know," sez Smith. "I got it right.
Jim used to talk to me at night

About a little girl 'e tracked.

'Er name is Flo. Ain't that a fact?

That's 'er. I know she writes to 'im
Each mail. She ain't forgotten Jim.
"I'd like to swap my luck for Jim's
If 'e comes 'ome with all 'is limbs.

An', if 'e don't--well, I dunno.

I've taken notice uv this Flo,

An' wonder if"--'e stares at me--
"If there is more like 'er" sez 'e.
Now, Digger Smith 'as learned a lot
Out fightin' there, but 'e ain't got

The cunnin' for to 'ide 'is 'eart.

'E's too dam honest, for a start;

'Is mind's dead simple to a friend.
I've read 'im through from end to end.
I've learned from things 'e 'asn't said
Jist wot's been runnin in 'is 'ead.

I know there is a girl, somewhere;

Some one 'oo 'ad the 'eart to care

For 'im when 'e went to the war.
I know all that, an' somethin' more.
I know that since 'e came back 'ere
'E 'asn't seen that girl for fear

She'd turn 'im down--give 'im the bird,

An' 'and 'im out the frozen word,

Because 'e's left a leg in France;
An' 'e's afraid to take a chance.
Well, not afraid, per'aps, but--shook.
It's jist the form 'is nerves 'ave took.

Now 'e's been watchin' Flo an' seen

'Er style, an' 'ow she's always keen

For news uv Jim.Then 'e starts out
To 'ope, an' 'esitate, an' doubt.
'E wonders if 'is own girl spoke
Jist this same way about 'er bloke.

'E wonders if in 'is girl's eyes

That same look came; an' then 'e sighs,

An' dulls 'is senses with the dope
That 'arf a man ain't got no 'ope.
'E makes me tired. But, all the same,
I tries to work a little game.

"Look 'ere," I sez. "About this Flo.

Jim mightn't come back 'ome, yeh know.

You 'ave a fly; yeh're sure to score;
Besides, all's fair in love an' war."
"Sling that!" 'e sez; but I goes on
"Ole Jim won't blame yeh when she's gone.

'E knows, the same as me an' you,

These silly tarts, they can't keep true."

I piles it on until I've got
'Im where I want 'im--jumpin' 'ot.
An' then 'e sez, "'Ere, sling that talk!
I might be groggy in me walk;

But if yeh say them things to me

I'm man enough to crack yeh; see?"

"Righto," sez I. "That was me plan.
Now wot about this 'arf a man?"
'E stares at me, an' then sez, slow,
"Wot is yer game? Wot do yeh know?"

"Nothin'," I tells 'im, "only this

When there's a waitin' tart to kiss

Yeh're only 'arf a man; but when
There's blokes to fight, yeh're twenty men."
"Wot tart?" 'e asks. "Yeh mean this Flo?"
"P'r'aps not," I sez. "You ought to know."

I waits to let me words sink in.

An' then--'e beats me with that grin.

"Match-makin', Bill?" 'e laughs. "Oh, 'Ell!
You take up knittin' for a spell."

IX. THE BOYS OUT THERE

The Boys Out There

HY do they do it? I dunno,"

Sez Digger Smith. "Yeh got me beat.

Some uv the yarns yeh 'ear is true,
An' some is rather umptydoo,

An' some is--indiscreet.

But them that don't get to the crowd,
Them is the ones would make yeh proud."
With Digger Smith an' other blokes

'Oo 'ave returned it's much the same

They'll talk uv wot they've seen an' done
When they've been out to 'ave their fun;

But no word uv the game.

On fights an' all the tale uv blood
Their talk, as they remark, is dud.
It's so with soldiers, I 'ave 'eard,

All times. The things that they 'ave done,

War-mad, with blood before their eyes,
An' in their ears wild fightin' cries,

They ever after shun.

P'r'aps they forget; or find it well
Not to recall too much uv 'Ell.
An' when they won't loose up their talk

It's 'ard for us to understand

'Ow all those boys we used to know,
Ole Billo, Jim an' Tom an' Joe,

Done things to beat the band.

We knoo they'd fight; but they've became
'Ead ringers at the fightin' game.
Well, wot I've 'eard from Digger Smith

An' other soldier blokes like 'im

I've put together bit by bit,
An' chewed a long time over it;

An' now I've got a dim

An' 'azy notion in me 'ead
Why they is battlers, born an' bred.
Wot did they know uv war first off,

When they joined up? Wot did I know

When I was tossed out on me neck
As if I was a shattered wreck

The time I tried to go?

Flat feet! Me feet 'as len'th an' brea'th
Enough to kick a 'Un to death!
They don't know nothin', bein' reared

Out 'ere where war 'as never spread--

"A land by bloodless conquest won,"
As some son uv a writin' gun

Sez in a book I read

They don't know nix but wot they're told
At school; an' that sticks till they're old.
Yeh've got to take the kid at school,

Gettin' 'is 'ist'ry lesson learned--

Then tales uv Nelson an' uv Drake,
Uv Wellin'ton an' Fightin' Blake.

'Is little 'eart 'as burned

To get right out an' 'ave a go,
An' sock it into some base foe.
Nothin' but glory fills 'is mind;

The British charge is somethin' grand;

The soldier that 'e reads about
Don't 'ave no time for fear an' doubt;

'E's the 'eroic brand.

So, when that boy gets in the game,
'E jist wades in an' does the same.
Not bein' old 'ands at the stunt,

They simply does as they are told;

But, bein' Aussies--Spare me days!--
They never thinks uv other ways,

But does it brave an' bold.

That's 'arf; an' for the other part
Yeh got to go back to the start.
Yeh've got to go right back to Dad,

To Gran'dad and the pioneers,

'Oo packed up all their bag uv tricks
An' come out 'ere in fifty-six,

An' battled thro' the years;

Our Gran'dads; _and their women, too_,
That 'ad the grit to face the new.
It's that old stock; an', more than that,

It's Bill an' Jim an' ev'ry son

Gettin' three good meat meals a day
An' 'eaps uv chance to go an' play

Out in the bonzer sun.

It's partly that; but, don't forget,
When it's all said, there's somethin' yet.
There's somethin' yet; an' there I'm beat.

Crowds uv these lads I've known, but then,

They 'ave got somethin' from this war,
Somethin' they never 'ad before,

That makes 'en better men.

Better? There's no word I can get
To name it right. There's somethin' yet.
We 'ear a lot about reward;

We praise, an' sling the cheers about;

But there was debts we can't repay
Piled up on us one single day--

When that first list come out.

There ain't no way to pay that debt.
Do wot we can--there's somethin' yet.

X. HALF A MAN