Henry Lawson

The Legend of Cooee Gully

The night came down thro’ Deadman’s Gap,
      Where the ghostly saplings bent
Before a wind that tore the fly
      From many a digger’s tent.
 
Dark as pitch, and the rain rushed past
      On a wind that howled again;
And we crowded into the only but
      That stood on the hillside then.
 
The strong pine rafters creaked and strained,
      'Til we thought that the roof would go;
And we felt the box-bark walls bend in
      And bulge like calico.
 
A flood had come from the gorges round:
      Thro’ the gully’s bed it poured.
Down many a deep, deserted shaft
      The yellow waters roared.
 
The scene leapt out when the lightning flashed
      And shone with a ghastly grey;
And the night sprang back to the distant range
      'Neath a sky as bright as day.
 
Then the darkness closed like a trap that was sprung,
      And the night grew black as coals,
And we heard the ceaseless thunder
      Of the water down the holes.
 
And now and then like a cannon’s note
      That sounds in the battle din,
We heard the louder thunder spring
      From a shaft, when the sides fell in.
 
We had gathered close to the broad but fire
      To yarn of the by-gone years,
When a coo-ee that came from the flooded grounds
      Fell sharp on our startled ears.
 
We sprang to our feet, for well we knew
      That in speed lay the only hope;
One caught and over his shoulder threw
      A coil of yellow rope.
 
Then, blinded oft by the lightning’s flash,
      Down the steep hillside we sped,
And at times we slipped on the sodden path
      That ran to the gully’s bed.
 
And on past many a broken shaft
      All reckless of risk we ran,
For the wind still brought in spiteful gusts
      The cry of the drowning man.
 
But the cooeying ceased when we reached the place;
      And then, ere a man could think,
We heard the treacherous earth give way
      And fall from a shaft’s black brink.
 
And deep and wide the rotten side
      Slipped into the hungry hole,
And the phosphorus leapt and vanished
      Like the flight of the stranger’s soul.
 
And still in the sound of the rushing rain,
      When the night comes dark and drear,
From the pitch-black side of that gully wide
      The coo-ee you’ll hear and hear.
 
Coo-ee—coo-e-e-e, low and eerily,
      It whispers afar and drear—
And then to the heart like an icy dart
      It strikes thro’ the startled ear!
 
Dreader than wrung from the human tongue
      It shrieks o’er the sound of the rain,
And back on the hill when the wind is still
      It whispers and dies again.
 
And on thro’ the night like the voice of a sprite
      That tells of a dire mishap
It echoes around in the gully’s bound
      And out thro’ Deadman’s Gap.
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