He sniffed the clean and eager smell
Of crushed wild garlic as he thrust
Beneath the sallows; and a spell
He stood there munching a thick crust—
The fresh tang giving keener zest
To bread and cheese, and watched a pair
Of wagtails preening wing and breast,
Then running, flirting tails in air
And pied plumes sleeked to silky sheen,
Chasing each other in and out
The wet wild garlic's white and green.
And then, remembering, with a shout
And rattle whirring he ran back
Again into the Fair Maid's Mead
To scare the rascal thieves and black
That flocked from far and near to feed
Upon the sprouting grain. As one
They rose with clapping rustling wings—
Rooks, starlings, pigeons, in the sun
Circling about him in wide rings,
And plovers hovering over him
In mazy interweaving flight
Until it made his young wits swim
To see them up against the light,
A dazzling dance of black and white
Against the clear blue April sky—
Wings on wings in flashing flight
Swooping low and soaring high,
Swooping, soaring, fluttering, flapping,
Tossing, tumbling, swerving, dipping,
Chattering, cawing, creaking, clapping,
Till he felt his senses slipping,
And gripped his corncrake rattle tight
And flourished it above his head
Till every bird was out of sight,
And laughed when all had flown and fled
To think that he, and all alone,
Could put so many thieves to rout.
Then, sitting down upon a stone,
He wondered if the school were out—
The school where only yesterday
He'd sat at work among his mates,
At work that now seemed children's play
With pens and pencils, books and slates;
Although he'd liked it well enough,
The hum and scuffling of the school,
And hadn't cared when Grim-and-Gruff
Would call him dunderhead and fool.
And he could see them sitting there,
His class-mates, in the lime-washed room
With fingers inked and towzled hair—
Bill Baxter with red cheeks abloom
And bright black eyes, and Ginger Jim
With freckled face and solemn look,
Who'd wink a pale blue eye at him,
Then sit intent upon his book
While, caught agiggle, he was caned.
He'd liked that room, he'd liked it all—
The window steaming when it rained,
The sunlight dancing on the wall
Among the glossy charts and maps,
The blotchy stain beside the clock
That only he of all the chaps
Knew for a Chart of Dead Man's Rock
That lies in Tiger Island Bay—
The reef on which the schooners split
And founder, that would bear away
The treasure chest of Cut-Throat-Kit
That's buried under Black Bill's bones
Beneath the purple pepper tree. …
A trail of clean-sucked cherry-stones
Which you must follow carefully
Across the dunes of yellow sand
Leads winding upward from the beach
Till, with a pistol in each hand
And cutlass 'twixt your teeth, you reach …
Plumping their fat crops peacefully
Were plovers, pigeons, starlings, rooks,
Feeding on every side while he
Was in the land of story-books.
He raised his rattle with a shout
And scattered them with yell and crake …
A man must mind what he's about
And keep his silly wits awake,
Not go woolgathering, if he'd earn
His wage. And soon, no schoolboy now,
He'd take on a man's job and learn
To build a rick and drive a plough
Like father.
Up against the sky,
Beyond the spinney and the stream,
With easy stride and steady eye
He saw his father drive his team,
Turning the red marl gleaming wet
Into long furrows clean and true:
And, dreaming there, he longed to set
His young hand to the ploughshare too.
Of crushed wild garlic as he thrust
Beneath the sallows; and a spell
He stood there munching a thick crust—
The fresh tang giving keener zest
To bread and cheese, and watched a pair
Of wagtails preening wing and breast,
Then running, flirting tails in air
And pied plumes sleeked to silky sheen,
Chasing each other in and out
The wet wild garlic's white and green.
And then, remembering, with a shout
And rattle whirring he ran back
Again into the Fair Maid's Mead
To scare the rascal thieves and black
That flocked from far and near to feed
Upon the sprouting grain. As one
They rose with clapping rustling wings—
Rooks, starlings, pigeons, in the sun
Circling about him in wide rings,
And plovers hovering over him
In mazy interweaving flight
Until it made his young wits swim
To see them up against the light,
A dazzling dance of black and white
Against the clear blue April sky—
Wings on wings in flashing flight
Swooping low and soaring high,
Swooping, soaring, fluttering, flapping,
Tossing, tumbling, swerving, dipping,
Chattering, cawing, creaking, clapping,
Till he felt his senses slipping,
And gripped his corncrake rattle tight
And flourished it above his head
Till every bird was out of sight,
And laughed when all had flown and fled
To think that he, and all alone,
Could put so many thieves to rout.
Then, sitting down upon a stone,
He wondered if the school were out—
The school where only yesterday
He'd sat at work among his mates,
At work that now seemed children's play
With pens and pencils, books and slates;
Although he'd liked it well enough,
The hum and scuffling of the school,
And hadn't cared when Grim-and-Gruff
Would call him dunderhead and fool.
And he could see them sitting there,
His class-mates, in the lime-washed room
With fingers inked and towzled hair—
Bill Baxter with red cheeks abloom
And bright black eyes, and Ginger Jim
With freckled face and solemn look,
Who'd wink a pale blue eye at him,
Then sit intent upon his book
While, caught agiggle, he was caned.
He'd liked that room, he'd liked it all—
The window steaming when it rained,
The sunlight dancing on the wall
Among the glossy charts and maps,
The blotchy stain beside the clock
That only he of all the chaps
Knew for a Chart of Dead Man's Rock
That lies in Tiger Island Bay—
The reef on which the schooners split
And founder, that would bear away
The treasure chest of Cut-Throat-Kit
That's buried under Black Bill's bones
Beneath the purple pepper tree. …
A trail of clean-sucked cherry-stones
Which you must follow carefully
Across the dunes of yellow sand
Leads winding upward from the beach
Till, with a pistol in each hand
And cutlass 'twixt your teeth, you reach …
Plumping their fat crops peacefully
Were plovers, pigeons, starlings, rooks,
Feeding on every side while he
Was in the land of story-books.
He raised his rattle with a shout
And scattered them with yell and crake …
A man must mind what he's about
And keep his silly wits awake,
Not go woolgathering, if he'd earn
His wage. And soon, no schoolboy now,
He'd take on a man's job and learn
To build a rick and drive a plough
Like father.
Up against the sky,
Beyond the spinney and the stream,
With easy stride and steady eye
He saw his father drive his team,
Turning the red marl gleaming wet
Into long furrows clean and true:
And, dreaming there, he longed to set
His young hand to the ploughshare too.