Jump to content

Page:Songs, Legends, and Ballads.djvu/237

From Wikisource
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
THE DUKITE SNAKE.
225

Of the Dukite's ways,—he jumped to the road,
And smashed its flat head with the bullock-goad!
 
He was proud of the red skin, so he tied
Its tail to the cart, and the snake's blood dyed
The bush on the path he followed that night.

He was early home, and the dead Dukite
Was flung at the door to be skinned next day.
At sunrise next morning he started away
To hunt up his cattle. A three hours' ride
Brought him back: he gazed on his home with pride
And joy in his heart; he jumped from his horse
And entered—to look on his young wife's corse,
And his dead child clutching its mother's clothes
As in fright; and there, as he gazed, arose
From her breast, where 'twas resting, the gleaming head
Of the terrible Dukite, as if it said,
"I've had vengeance, my foe: you took all I had."

And so had the snake—David Sloane was mad!