Barcroft Henry Boake

Here you will find the Poem On the Boundary of poet Barcroft Henry Boake

On the Boundary

I Love the ancient boundary-fence,
 That mouldering chock-and-log.
When I go ride the boundary
 I let the old horse jog
And take his pleasure in and out
 Where the sandalwood grows dense,
And tender pines clasp hands across
 The log that tops the fence. 
?Tis pleasant on the boundary-fence,
 These sultry summer days;
A mile away, outside the scrub,
 The plain is all ablaze,
The sheep are panting on the camps,
 The heat is so intense;
But here the shade is cool and sweet
 Along the boundary-fence. 

I love to loaf along the fence,
 So does my collie dog,
He often finds a spotted cat
 Hid in a hollow log;
He?s very near as old as I
 And ought to have more sense,
I?ve hammered him so many times
 Along the boundary-fence. 

My mother says that boundary fence
 Must surely be bewitched;
The old man says that through that fence
 The neighbours are enriched;
It?s always down, and through the gaps
 Our stock all get them hence,
I takes me half my time to watch
 The doings of that fence. 

But should you seek the reason
 You won?t travel very far,
?Tis there a mile away among
 The murmuring Belar:
The Jones?s block joins on to ours,
 And so, in consequence,
It?s part of Polly?s work to ride
 Their side the boundary-fence.