A peaceful spot is Piper's
Flat, the folk that live around
They keep themselves by keeping
sheep,
and turning up the ground;
But the climate is erratic, and the
consequences are
The struggle with the elements is everlasting
war.
We plough, and sow, and harrow - then sit down and pray
for
rain;
And then we all get flooded out and have to start
again.
But
the folk are now rejoicing as they ne'er rejoiced before,
For
we've
played Molongo cricket, and McDougal topped the
score!
Molongo had
a head on it, and challenged us to play
A single-innings match
for
lunch - the losing team to pay.
We were not great guns at
cricket, but
we couldn't well say no,
So we all began to practise, and we
let the
reaping go.
We scoured the Flat for ten miles round to muster
up our
men,
But when the list was totaled we could only number
ten.
Then
up spoke big Tim Brady; he was always slow to speak,
And he
said -
"What price McDougal, who lives down at Cooper's Creek?"
So
we sent
for old McDougal, and he stated in reply,
That he'd never
played at
cricket, but he'd half a mind to try.
He couldn't come to practise - he
was getting in his hay,
But he guessed he'd show the beggars
from Molongo how to play.
Now, McDougal was a Scotchman, and a canny
one at
that,
So he started in to practise with a paling for a
bat.
He got
Mrs. Mac to bowl to him, but she couldn't run at all,
So he
trained his
sheep-dog Pincher, how to scout and fetch the ball.
Now,
Pincher
was no puppy; he was old, and worn, and grey;
But he understood
McDougal, and - accustomed to obey -
When McDougal cried out "Fetch
it!" he would fetch it in a trice,
But, until the word was
"Drop it!"
he would grip it like a vice.
And each succeeding night they
played
until the light grew dim:
Sometimes McDougal struck the ball -
sometimes the ball struck him.
Each time he struck, the ball
would
plough a furrow in the ground;
And when he missed, the impetus
would
turn him three times round.
The fatal day at length arrived - the
day that was to see
Molongo bite the dust, or Piper's Flat
knocked up a
tree!
Molongo's captain won the toss, and sent his men to bat,
And
they gave some leather-hunting to the men of Piper's Flat.
When
the
ball sped where McDougal stood, firm planted in his track,
He
shut his
eyes, and turned him round, and stopped it - with his back!
The
highest
score was twenty-two, the total sixty-six,
When Brady sent a yorker
down that scattered Johnson's sticks.
Then Piper's Flat
went in to
bat, for glory and renown,
But, like the grass before the
scythe, our
wickets tumbled down.
"Nine wickets down for seventeen, with
fifty more
to win!"
Our captain heaved a heavy sigh, and sent McDougal
in.
"Ten
pounds to one, you'll lose it!" cried a barracker from
town;
But
McDougal said, "I'll tak' it, mon!" and planked the money
down.
Then he
girded up his moleskins in a self-reliant style,
Threw off his
hat and
boots and faced the bowler with a smile.
He held the bat
the wrong
side out, and Johnson with a grin
Stepped lightly to the
bowling
crease, and sent a "wobbler" in;
McDougal spooned it softly back,
and
Johnson waited there,
But McDougal crying "Fetch
it!" started running like a
hare.
Molongo shouted "Victory! He's out as sure as
eggs,"
When
Pincher started through the crowd, and ran through Johnson's
legs.
He
seized the ball like lightning; and then ran behind a log,
And
McDougal
kept on running, while Molongo chased the dog!
They chased
him up,
they chased him down, they chased him round, and then
He darted
through
the slip-rail as the scorer shouted "Ten!"
McDougal puffed; Molongo
swore; excitement was intense;
As the scorer marked down
twenty,
Pincher cleared a barbed-wire fence.
"Let us head him!"
shrieked Molongo. "Brain the mongrel with a bat!"
"Run it out! Good old
McDougal!" yelled the men of Piper's Flat.
And McDougal kept on
jogging, and then Pincher doubled back,
And the scorer counted
"Forty!" as
they raced across the track.
McDougal's legs were going
fast, Molongo's breath was gone -
But still Molongo chased the dog - McDougal
struggled on.
When the scorer shouted "Fifty!"then they knew the chase would
cease;
And
McDougal gasped out "Drop it!"as he dropped within his crease.
Then Pincher dropped
the ball,
and as instinctively he knew
Discretion was the wiser
plan, he
disappeared from view;
And as Molongo's beaten men exhausted
lay
around,
We raised McDougal shoulder-high, and bore him from the
ground.
We bore him to McGinniss's, where lunch was
ready-laid,
And filled him up with whisky-punch, for which Molongo
paid.
We drank his health in bumpers and we cheered him three
times
three,
And when Molongo got its breath Molongo joined the spree.
And
the critics say they never saw a cricket match like that,
When
McDougal
broke the record in the game at Piper's Flat;
And the folk are
jubilating as they never did before;
For we played Molongo
cricket -
and McDougal topped the score!