[Editor: This story by Henry Lawson was published in Short Stories in Prose and Verse, 1894.]
The union buries its dead
A bushman’s funeral.
A sketch from Life and Death.
While out boating, one Sunday afternoon on a bilabong across the river, we saw a young man on horseback driving some horses along the bank. He said it was a fine day, and asked if the water was deep there. The joker of our party said it was deep enough to drown him, and he laughed and rode further up. We didn’t take-much notice of him.
Next day a funeral gathered at a corner pub and asked each other in to have a drink while waiting for the hearse. They passed away some of the time dancing jigs to a piano in the bar parlour. They passed away the rest of the time “sky-larking” and fighting.
The defunct was a young union labourer, about 25, who had been drowned the previous day ,while trying to swim some horses across a bilabong of the Darling.
He was almost a stranger in town, and the fact of his having been a union man accounted for the funeral. The police found some union papers in his swag, and called at the General Labourers’ Union Office for information about him. That’s how we knew. The secretary had very little information to give. The departed was a “Roman,” and the majority of the town were otherwise — but unionism is stronger than creed. Drink, however, is stronger than unionism; and, when the hearse presently arrived, more than two-thirds of the funeral were unable to follow. They were too drunk.
The procession numbered 15, including the corpse — fourteen souls following the broken shell of a soul. Perhaps not one of the fourteen possessed a soul any more than the corpse did — but that doesn’t matter.
Four or five of the funeral, who were boarders at the pub, borrowed a trap which the landlord used to carry passengers to and from the railway station. They were strangers to us on foot, and we to them. We were all strangers to the corpse.
A “horseman,” who looked like a drover just returned from a big trip, dropped into our dusty wake and followed us a few hundred yards, dragging his packhorse behind him, but a friend made wild and demonstrative signals from a hotel veranda — hooking at the air in front with his right hand and jobbing his left thumb over his shoulder in the direction of the bar — so the drover hauled off and didn’t catch up to us any more. He was a stranger to the entire show.
We walked in two’s. There were three two’s. It was very hot and dusty; the heat rushed in fierce dazzling waves across every iron roof and light coloured wall that was turned to the sun. One or two pubs closed respectfully ’til we got past. They closed their bar doors and the patrons went in and out through some side or back entrance for a few minutes. Bushmen seldom grumble at an inconvenience of this sort, when it is caused by a funeral. They have too much respect for the dead.
On the way to the cemetery we passed three shearers sitting on the shady side of a fence. One was drunk — very drunk. The other two covered their right ears with their hats, out of respect for the departed — whoever he might have been — and one of them kicked the drunk and muttered something to him.
He straightened himself up, stared before him and reached helplessly for his hat, which he shoved half off and then on again. Then he made a great effort to pull himself together — and succeeded. He stood up, braced his back against the fence, knocked off his hat, and remorsefully placed his foot on it to keep it off his head till the funeral passed.
A tall, sentimental drover, who walked by my side, cynically quoted Byronic verses suitable to the occasion — to death — and asked with pathetic humor whether we thought the dead man’s ticket would be recognised “over yonder.” It was a G.L.U. ticket, and the general opinion was that it would be recognised.
Presently my friend said:
“You remember when we were in the boat yesterday, we saw a man driving some horses along the bank?”
“Yes.”
He nodded at the hearse and said
“Well, that’s him.”
I thought awhile.
“I didn’t take any particular notice of him,” I said, “He said something, didn’t he?”
“Yes — said it was a fine day. You’d have taken more notice if you’d known that he was doomed to die in the hour, and that those were the last words he would say to any man on earth.”
“To be sure,” said a full voice from the rear. “If ye’d known that, ye’d have prolonged the conversation.”
We plodded on across the railway line and along the hot, dusty road which ran to the cemetery — some of us talking about the accident, and lying about the narrow escapes we had had ourselves. Presently someone said:
“There’s the devil.”
I looked up and saw a priest standing in the shade of the tree by the cemetery gate. A Church of England parson would have done as well.
The hearse was drawn up and the tail boards were opened. The funeral extinguished its right ear with its hat as three men lifted the coffin out and laid it over the grave. The priest — a pale, quiet young fellow — stood under the shade of a sapling which grew at the head of the grave. He took off his hat, dropped it carelessly on the ground, and proceeded to business. I noticed that one or two heathens winced slightly when the holy water was sprinkled on the coffin. The drops quickly evaporated, and the little round black spots they left were soon dusted over; but the spots showed, by contrast, the cheapness and shabbiness of the cloth which covered the coffin. It seemed black before, now it looked a dusky grey.
Just here man’s ignorance and vanity made a farce of the funeral. A big, bull-necked publican — with heavy blotchy features, and a supremely ignorant expression — picked up the priest’s straw hat and held it about two inches over the head of his reverence during the whole of the service. The father, be it remembered, was standing in the shade. A few shoved their hats on and off uneasily, struggling between their disgust far the living and their respect for the dead. The hat had a conical crown and a brim sloping down all round like a sunshade, and the publican held it with his great red claw spread over the crown.
To do the priest justice, perhaps, he didn’t notice the incident. A stage priest or parson in the same position might have said, “Put the hat down, my friend; is not the soul or memory of our dear brother worth more than my complexion?” A wattlebard layman might have expressed himself in stronger language, none the less to the point. But my priest seemed unconscious of what was going on. Besides, the publican was a great and important pillar of the church. He couldn’t, as an ignorant and conceited fool, lose such a good opportunity of asserting his faithfulness and importance to his creed. The grave looked very narrow under the coffin, and I drew a breath of relief when the box slid easily down. I saw a coffin get stuck once, at Rookwood, and it had to be yanked out with difficulty, and laid on the sods at the feet of the heart-broken relations, who howled dismally while the grave-diggers widened the hole. But they don’t cut contracts so fine in the West. Our grave-digger was not altogether bowelless, and, out of respect for that human quality described as “feelin’s,” he scraped up some light and dusty soil and threw it down to deaden the fall of the clay lumps on the coffin. He also tried to steer the first few shovelsful gently down against the end of the grave with the back of the shovel turned outwards, but the hard dry Darling River clods rebounded and knocked all the same. It didn’t matter much; nothing does; the fall of lumps of clay on a stranger’s coffin doesn’t sound any different from the fall of the same things on an ordinary wooden box, at least I didn’t notice anything awesome or unusual in the sound; but, perhaps, one of us — the most sensitive — might have been impressed by being reminded of a burial of long ago, when the thump of every sod jolted his heart. That’s nearly all about the funeral except that the priest did his work in an unusually callous and business-like way.
I have left out the wattle — because it wasn’t there. I have also neglected to mention the heart-broken old mate, with his grizzled head bowed and great pearly drops streaming down his rugged cheeks. He was absent — he was probably “Out Back.” For similar reasons I have omitted reference to the “suspicious” moisture in the eyes of a bearded bush ruffian named Bill. Bill failed to turn up, and the only moisture was that which was induced by the heat. I have left out the “sad Australian sunset” because the sun was not going down at the time. The burial took place exactly at mid-day.
The dead bushman’s name was Jim, apparently; but they found no portraits, nor locks of hair, nor any love letters, nor anything of that kind in his swag — not even a reference to his mother; only some papers relating to union matters. Most of us didn’t know the name till we saw it on the coffin: we knew him as “that young feller that was drowned yesterday.”
“So, his name’s James Tyson,” said my drover, acquaintance, looking at the plate.
“Why! Didn’t you know that before?” I asked.
“No, — but I knew he was a union man.”
It turned out, afterwards, that J.T. wasn’t his real name — only “the name he went by.”
Anyhow he was buried by it, and most of the “Great Australian Dailies” have mentioned in their brevity columns that a young man named James John Tyson was drowned in a bilabong of the Darling last Sunday.
We did hear, later on, what his real name was, but if we ever chance to read it among the missing friends in some agony column, we shall not be aware of it, and therefore not able to give any information to a “sorrowing sister” or “heart broken mother” — for we have already forgotten his name.
Source:
Henry Lawson. Short Stories in Prose and Verse, L. Lawson, Sydney, [1894], pages 46-53
Editor’s notes:
Darling = the Darling River
Roman = in a religious context, a Roman Catholic
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