Louis Becke

Verse about
Louis Becke



 
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Woodcut by B.E. Minns for three of Louis Becke's stories printed in the Christmas Issue of The Bulletin 1893

 
 

Wrecked Illusions

Victor Daley

Dedicated to Louis Becke
[For the Bulletin]


You are now in London town,
Louis Becke,
Keeping up your old renown,
Writing yarns of women brown,
Getting yellow money down,
Or a cheque.


That is right enough, maybe-
You are wise;
But your Isles of the South Sea,
Where the life is bold and free,
You may have them all for me-
Dash your eyes!


I armful of you, I am,
To the neck;
And I cannot think with a calm
Of your tales "By Reef and I'alm"
But I have to mutter" D----n
Louis Becke!"


You have lined, the press records
(Not in joke),
At the hospitable boards
Of a lot of dukes and lords,
And beguiled them with you words--
Simple folk!


Yet I would not envy you,
Be it said,
if the tales you told were true
As they were unique and new--
But you made them all up, Loo,
In your head.


Never, as in days of yore,
(You will see)
On your pages shall I pore,
With their yarns of love and gore,
Never, Louis, anymore
Becke for me.


I'd rejoice to have you here
(You might grieve!)
With your pen behind your ear,
In this clammy atmosphere,
Where it rains all round the year,
I believe.


O, you made a fine renown!
Mr. B.,
With your yarns of women brown,
And the red hibiscus crown
On the black hair hanging down
To the knee.


I have seen in Santa Cruz,
(Bet your life!)
Women browner than tan shoes-
And I'd rather die than choose
Any on of them as Muse,
Or as wife.


They had hair limed freely, but
Wore no wreath;
They (a) mouths of comic cut-
Mounts that hardly ever shut-
Red with chewing betel-nut,
And black teeth.


And their tank ears hung in loops,
And were well
Loaded down with rings in groups,
Blocks of wood, and things like scoops,
and their noses shone with hoops
Made of shell.


They exhales a perfume rare
(Potent yet,
Even in this strong sea-air)
Of its name I'm not aware-
But it was not, I can swear,
Mignonette.


Could Romance live there? Alas,
It took wings!
Louis, you can take the class,
You can have the lot-I pass-
With their petticoats of grass,
And nose-rings


And your traders--Grand old Drunks--
Where are they?
I have seen some queer quidnuncs
Who go sober to their bunks,
And are temperate as monks,
Sad to say.


They were clothed in suits of white,
Fresh and neat;
And no marks of recent fight
Marred their countenances bright,
And they spoke in words polite,
Clean and sweet.


If this Reehabitish crew,
This tame lot,
Are indeed the models true
Of the Traders bold you drew--
Then I really think that you
Should be shot.


You may say in weak excuse--
Being gnawed
By your conscience-that the loose
Stories that you did produce
Dealt with other isles. No use!
You're a Fraud!


Well, my Last Illusion so
Come to wreck.
'Tis your fault, as well you know,
Yet I would not wish you woe--
But you know where liars go,
Louis Becke!


 

Louis Becke

Henry Lawson

[For the Bulletin]


They're at their age-long harvest still -- the angel
    Death and Time --
But ebb or flow, we all must go, and leave the
    broken rhyme.
Wide blue with whitecaps here and there-the glory
    of the day-
A space of seascapes wond'rous fair, in Islands far
    away;
Faint silver on the distant reef, on skylines scarce
    a fleck,
But fleecy clouds of best-relief that welcome Louis
    Becke.


Who'll miss the well-loved stuttering speech?
    Who'll mind the distant date
When by the mast and palm-fringed beach those halt-
    ing words had weight!
Who'd dream those sad, kind manly eyes, when
    traders were "in holts,"
In summer Isles of Paradise could glint behind a
    Colt's?
We only know "By Reef and Palm" -- the world he
    made his own --
(The later wounds, without a balm, are better never
    known).


We live and fight by day and night in carking care
    and strife,
And take our pen in death to write the story of our
    life.
Farewell, my friend -- 'twill ne'er be told -- or told
    in printed line
(Your destiny in days of old was strongly linked
    with mine).
I trust my track shall run as true, though come it
    late or soon,
When my name shall be missing, too, from "Some
    Birthdays in June."

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