The Sliprails and the Spur (just like a girl)
Acknowledgements to Henry Lawson 1899 for his original piece of the “The Sliprails and the Spur”
It is an evocative piece with a steady cadence to suit the time.
I have often felt he was “too close” to the hardships and it is difficult for us to understand the context from this far away.
Anyway this little story does not attempt to mimic Henry, rather to compliment the tale.
We never had a gate, or a big swinging door
To keep the cattle out, or the dust off the floor
But everyone has one now
Perhaps they think
That we were poor
It did not seem hard
To keep the heifers out
And slide the sliprails home
No need for fancy hinges
Or shiny bits of chrome
A sapling of timber
Would do the same thing
And far beyond the dusty mob
That circled in the yard
We glanced toward the ridge
Where two mountain gullies meet
Where a horse may gallop down
With a rider long forgotten
Finally, homeward bound
For days are long and nights are longer
When we are left behind
While the ones we do remember
Travel far and wide
It is not the place to go
For one who’s “Just a girl”
Now at the end of this long day
I will ride out to check the pocket, by the spur
Should I pick the roan, or maybe the bay?
They both deserve a break.
Now one has the saddle blanket on, it looks like I’ll ride her.
I’ve pulled the girth strap tight
Raise my knee against her gut
And hitched it even tighter
With the Surcingle set, for sure
Grab a handful of mane
My left boot in the stirrup
Heft up, and sitting tight.
Then with a whistle and a shout
It makes her wheel about
Till I slacken off the rein
And let her have her head.
With ears back, against an arching neck
This mare knows how to race
Across the flat, at pace
Till we slow and walk
Across the corduroy
And I turn her head for home
But that stubborn, cur-s-ed, roan
Only wants to roam
It’s no use twisting with the rein
It will not make it matter
She’ll barely raise a canter
Then, there comes a cooee
A flash among the trees
Between lancewood stumps and splinters
Down the broken sandstone scree
With a crack of stock whip leather
He’s standing in the stirrups
Shouting………… I can’t quite hear it
Sounds like………
“……just a girl”
The roan stamps indignant
And with the bit between her teeth
Bolts like lightning
To the disappearing feet
Of a younger little gelding
Who has not yet seen defeat
We break past the timbers
And race across the flat
He laughs and shouts again
The roan responds to that
We start to run them down
As we straightened up for home
I feel her tire beneath my knees
Her breath sounds like a wheeze
The gelding’s sides are flecked with foam
As the whip sings one more time
I rake my spurs along her flanks
And she leads the gelding home
It’s clear that even, if there was a gate
This mare was, not arriving late
She props beside the slip rails
Nostrils flaring wide
And flicks her tail
Her eyes like dancing fires
Snorting, a look to make you dread
Rattling the bit and bridle
With every shake of her head.
I lean back in the saddle
The stirrups splaying wide
The gelding barely ambles
His riders whip, by his side
I wink at him and say
“If you want to win a race
Between the sliprails and the spur
You will have to learn to ride
Just like a girl”


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