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It's gone. I've checked. I know. But then, it never was much. Made mostly of scraps; A rough frame of old bush lumber; Walls of flattened fuel cans and lime coated hessian; A roof of corrugated iron, battered and rusting. Scorched by searing summer heat; Blasted by dust storms; Chilled by winter frost. Insubstantial against the vastness of desert that stretched in every direction from the tiny bush town. But it was home. Within its walls were love and care. At its table were sustenance and conversation. For three years we lived there when I was a boy. I'd rise early and sit on the edge of the gibber plain with our dog watching the sunrise. One morning I heard the jangling of hobbled camels returning to town from a night in the desert. On another, there were herds of cattle, walked in from an outlying station for drafting and yarding, then transport southward in a train hauled by a small steam engine. At the stock-yard we'd pretend to be cowboys, prodding the cattle in the loading race with sticks, revelling in the dust and noise, caring little for their terror or their destination. One day we hiked out past the stock cemetery, of carcasses leering sightless, scavenged by crows. We trudged to the red sand hills, then back to the rail-line for a ride home with the fettlers. We went barefoot often - foot-soles like leather from the searing sand. In the heat of the day we'd pause in the scant shadow of a bush, to choose the next meagre patch of shade, then run like the wind to roll on our backs, waving scorched feet in the air. It's still all there in my memory. Every few years I take the old track north, just to check, to experience again, to remember. Other than the vastness of the desert, it all seems smaller now - one tiny settlement within the compass of an unbroken horizon. The old house is just a memory. It's gone. I've checked. I know. But then, it never was much.
0
Sep 13, 2018
Sep 13, 2018 at 11:03 PM UTC
A bush childhood
It's gone. I've checked. I know. But then, it never was much. Made mostly of scraps; A rough frame of old bush lumber; Walls of flattened fuel cans and lime coated hessian; A roof of corrugated iron, battered and rusting. Scorched by searing summer heat; Blasted by dust storms; Chilled by winter frost. Insubstantial against the vastness of desert that stretched in every direction from the tiny bush town. But it was home. Within its walls were love and care. At its table were sustenance and conversation. For three years we lived there when I was a boy. I'd rise early and sit on the edge of the gibber plain with our dog watching the sunrise. One morning I heard the jangling of hobbled camels returning to town from a night in the desert. On another, there were herds of cattle, walked in from an outlying station for drafting and yarding, then transport southward in a train hauled by a small steam engine. At the stock-yard we'd pretend to be cowboys, prodding the cattle in the loading race with sticks, revelling in the dust and noise, caring little for their terror or their destination. One day we hiked out past the stock cemetery, of carcasses leering sightless, scavenged by crows. We trudged to the red sand hills, then back to the rail-line for a ride home with the fettlers. We went barefoot often - foot-soles like leather from the searing sand. In the heat of the day we'd pause in the scant shadow of a bush, to choose the next meagre patch of shade, then run like the wind to roll on our backs, waving scorched feet in the air. It's still all there in my memory. Every few years I take the old track north, just to check, to experience again, to remember. Other than the vastness of the desert, it all seems smaller now - one tiny settlement within the compass of an unbroken horizon. The old house is just a memory. It's gone. I've checked. I know. But then, it never was much.
john-wiley
Written by
84/M/Australia
Sep 13, 2018
Sep 13, 2018 at 11:03 PM UTC
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