The Bush Undertaker

"The Bush Undertaker" is a popular short story by Australian writer and poet Henry Lawson. Along with "The Drover's Wife", "The Bush Undertaker" is one of Lawson's first sketches, and is among the stories for which he first gained attention as an accommplished writer. The story concerns an eccentric old man, who lives alone with only his dog for company, and his discovery and treatment of a friend's deceased body.

Plot summary

The sketch begins with old man preparing dinner for himself and his beloved dog, Five Bob. Dinner consumed, the man gathers a pick and shovel and travels to a "blackfellow's grave about which he was curious."
He digs up the bones, places them in a bag, and starts for home. He discovers the body of a man, parched by the intense Australian sun. After close examination, the deceased man is determined to be a friend of the old man, an alcoholic named Brummy.
The old man, somewhat ingeniously, devises a way of carrying Brummy back home, but he is startled by numerous large, greasy black goannas. He wonders why the peculiar lizards are so abundant today. He only discovers later, when he shoots one near the house, that they are attracted to Brummy's body.
When the old man returns to his home, he decides that Brummy deserves a respectful funeral. He buries his friend, and decides that something must be said. He is unsure of Brummy's religion, or if he even has a religion at all, but the old man does his best. Presently, he rises, takes up his tools, and walks back to his hut as the sun sinks on the "grand Australian bush."

Characters

Major themes

"The Bush Undertaker" continues a theme explored in many other Lawson stories, that prolonged exposure to Bush life will inevitably result in its inhabitants becoming "weird" or unbalanced.

This short story presents the reader with perhaps Lawson's most bizarre character. The old man, put quite simply, is an eccentric individual. Years of isolation in the remote bush, with only his faithful "four-legged mate" Five-Bob for companionship, have intricately sculpted this old man's mind to cope with the otherwise-maddening loneliness of his lifestyle.

The almost-indecipherable soliloquys of The Bush Undertaker serve, not only as a source of humour, but also as evidence of the old man's long-term separation from civilised society. The Bush Undertaker's various exploits, including the unearthing of a "black fella about which he was curious" and his delight upon finding his mate Brummy dead alongside an almost-full bottle of rum are hardly the actions of a sane man, yet his attitudes certainly serve him well in life.

A similarly-eccentric character is humorously portrayed in another popular sketch story, "Rats."

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