4553 lines
167 KiB
Plaintext
4553 lines
167 KiB
Plaintext
The Project Gutenberg Etext of
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In the Days When the World Was Wide and Other Verses
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by Henry Lawson [Australian house-painter/author/poet 1867-1922]
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In the Days When the World was Wide, by Henry Lawson
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February, 1995 [Etext #214]
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entered/proofed by A. Light, alight@mercury.interpath.net
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In the Days When the World was Wide and Other Verses (2 ed.)
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by Henry Lawson [Australian house-painter, author and poet -- 1867-1922.]
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[Note on text: Italicized stanzas will be indented 5 spaces.
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Italicized stanzas that are ALREADY indented will be indented 10 spaces.
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Italicized words and phrases have been capitalized.
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Lines longer than 75 characters have been broken according to metre,
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and the continuation is indented two spaces. Also,
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some obvious errors, after being confirmed against other sources,
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have been corrected. This etext was prepared from Angus & Robertson's
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1913 printing.]
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[Note on content: Banjo Paterson and Henry Lawson were writing for
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the Sydney `Bulletin' in 1892 when Lawson suggested a `duel' of poetry
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to increase the number of poems they could sell to the paper.
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It was apparently entered into in all fun, though there are reports
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that Lawson was bitter about it later. `Up the Country'
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and `The City Bushman', included in this selection,
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were two of Lawson's contributions to the debate. Please note
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that this is the revised edition of 1900. Therefore, even though this book
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was originally published in 1896, it includes two poems not published
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until 1899 (`The Sliprails and the Spur' and `Past Carin'').]
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First Edition printed February 1896,
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Reprinted August 1896, October 1896, March 1898, and November 1898;
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Revised Edition, January 1900;
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Reprinted May 1903, February 1910, June 1912, and July 1913.
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Preface
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Most of the verses contained in this volume were first published
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in the Sydney `Bulletin'; others in the Brisbane `Boomerang',
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Sydney `Freeman's Journal', `Town and Country Journal', `Worker',
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and `New Zealand Mail', whose editors and proprietors I desire to thank
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for past kindnesses and for present courtesy in granting me
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the right of reproduction in book form.
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`In the Days When the World was Wide' was written in Maoriland
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and some of the other verses in Victoria, Queensland and Western Australia.
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The dates of original publication are given in the Table of Contents.
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Those undated are now printed for the first time.
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HENRY LAWSON.
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To J. F. Archibald
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To an Old Mate
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Old Mate! In the gusty old weather,
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When our hopes and our troubles were new,
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In the years spent in wearing out leather,
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I found you unselfish and true --
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I have gathered these verses together
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For the sake of our friendship and you.
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You may think for awhile, and with reason,
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Though still with a kindly regret,
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That I've left it full late in the season
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To prove I remember you yet;
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But you'll never judge me by their treason
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Who profit by friends -- and forget.
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I remember, Old Man, I remember --
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The tracks that we followed are clear --
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The jovial last nights of December,
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The solemn first days of the year,
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Long tramps through the clearings and timber,
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Short partings on platform and pier.
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I can still feel the spirit that bore us,
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And often the old stars will shine --
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I remember the last spree in chorus
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For the sake of that other Lang Syne,
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When the tracks lay divided before us,
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Your path through the future and mine.
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Through the frost-wind that cut like whip-lashes,
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Through the ever-blind haze of the drought --
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And in fancy at times by the flashes
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Of light in the darkness of doubt --
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I have followed the tent poles and ashes
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Of camps that we moved further out.
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You will find in these pages a trace of
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That side of our past which was bright,
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And recognise sometimes the face of
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A friend who has dropped out of sight --
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I send them along in the place of
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The letters I promised to write.
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Contents
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To an Old Mate
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Old Mate! In the gusty old weather,
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In the Days When the World was Wide
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The world is narrow and ways are short, and our lives are dull and slow,
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[Dec. -- 1894]
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Faces in the Street
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They lie, the men who tell us in a loud decisive tone
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[July -- 1888]
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The Roaring Days
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The night too quickly passes
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[Dec. -- 1889]
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`For'ard'
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It is stuffy in the steerage where the second-classers sleep,
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[Dec. -- 1893]
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The Drover's Sweetheart
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An hour before the sun goes down
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[June -- 1891]
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Out Back
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The old year went, and the new returned,
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in the withering weeks of drought,
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[Sept. -- 1893]
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The Free-Selector's Daughter
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I met her on the Lachlan Side --
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[May -- 1891]
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`Sez You'
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When the heavy sand is yielding backward from your blistered feet,
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[Mar. -- 1894]
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Andy's Gone With Cattle
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Our Andy's gone to battle now
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[Oct. -- 1888]
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Jack Dunn of Nevertire
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It chanced upon the very day we'd got the shearing done,
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[Aug. -- 1892]
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Trooper Campbell
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One day old Trooper Campbell
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[Apr. -- 1891]
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The Sliprails and the Spur
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The colours of the setting sun
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[July -- 1899]
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Past Carin'
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Now up and down the siding brown
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[Aug. -- 1899]
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The Glass on the Bar
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Three bushmen one morning rode up to an inn,
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[Apr. -- 1890]
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The Shanty on the Rise
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When the caravans of wool-teams climbed the ranges from the West,
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[Dec. -- 1891]
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The Vagabond
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White handkerchiefs wave from the short black pier
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[Aug. -- 1895]
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Sweeney
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It was somewhere in September, and the sun was going down,
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[Dec. -- 1893]
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Middleton's Rouseabout
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Tall and freckled and sandy,
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[Mar. -- 1890]
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The Ballad of the Drover
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Across the stony ridges,
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[Mar. -- 1889]
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Taking His Chance
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They stood by the door of the Inn on the Rise;
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[June -- 1892]
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When the `Army' Prays for Watty
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When the kindly hours of darkness, save for light of moon and star,
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[May -- 1893]
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The Wreck of the `Derry Castle'
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Day of ending for beginnings!
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[Dec. -- 1887]
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Ben Duggan
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Jack Denver died on Talbragar when Christmas Eve began,
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[Dec. -- 1891]
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The Star of Australasia
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We boast no more of our bloodless flag, that rose from a nation's slime;
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The Great Grey Plain
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Out West, where the stars are brightest,
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[Sept. -- 1893]
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The Song of Old Joe Swallow
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When I was up the country in the rough and early days,
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[May -- 1890]
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Corny Bill
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His old clay pipe stuck in his mouth,
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[May -- 1892]
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Cherry-Tree Inn
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The rafters are open to sun, moon, and star,
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Up the Country
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I am back from up the country -- very sorry that I went --
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[July -- 1892]
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Knocked Up
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I'm lyin' on the barren ground that's baked and cracked with drought,
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[Aug. -- 1893]
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The Blue Mountains
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Above the ashes straight and tall,
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[Dec. -- 1888]
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The City Bushman
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It was pleasant up the country, City Bushman, where you went,
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[Aug. -- 1892]
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Eurunderee
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There are scenes in the distance where beauty is not,
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[Aug. -- 1891]
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Mount Bukaroo
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Only one old post is standing --
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[Dec. -- 1889]
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The Fire at Ross's Farm
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The squatter saw his pastures wide
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[Apr. -- 1891]
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The Teams
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A cloud of dust on the long white road,
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[Dec. -- 1889]
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Cameron's Heart
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The diggings were just in their glory when Alister Cameron came,
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[July -- 1891]
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The Shame of Going Back
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When you've come to make a fortune and you haven't made your salt,
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[Oct. -- 1891]
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Since Then
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I met Jack Ellis in town to-day --
|
|
[Nov. -- 1895]
|
|
|
|
Peter Anderson and Co.
|
|
He had offices in Sydney, not so many years ago,
|
|
[Aug. -- 1895]
|
|
|
|
When the Children Come Home
|
|
On a lonely selection far out in the West
|
|
[Dec. -- 1890]
|
|
|
|
Dan, the Wreck
|
|
Tall, and stout, and solid-looking,
|
|
|
|
A Prouder Man Than You
|
|
If you fancy that your people came of better stock than mine,
|
|
[June -- 1892]
|
|
|
|
The Song and the Sigh
|
|
The creek went down with a broken song,
|
|
[Mar. -- 1889]
|
|
|
|
The Cambaroora Star
|
|
So you're writing for a paper? Well, it's nothing very new
|
|
[Dec. -- 1891]
|
|
|
|
After All
|
|
The brooding ghosts of Australian night
|
|
have gone from the bush and town;
|
|
|
|
Marshall's Mate
|
|
You almost heard the surface bake, and saw the gum-leaves turn --
|
|
[July -- 1895]
|
|
|
|
The Poets of the Tomb
|
|
The world has had enough of bards who wish that they were dead,
|
|
[Oct. -- 1892]
|
|
|
|
Australian Bards and Bush Reviewers
|
|
While you use your best endeavour to immortalise in verse
|
|
[Feb. -- 1894]
|
|
|
|
The Ghost
|
|
Down the street as I was drifting with the city's human tide,
|
|
[Aug. -- 1889]
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
In the Days When the World was Wide and Other Verses
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
In the Days When the World was Wide
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The world is narrow and ways are short, and our lives are dull and slow,
|
|
For little is new where the crowds resort, and less where the wanderers go;
|
|
Greater, or smaller, the same old things we see by the dull road-side --
|
|
And tired of all is the spirit that sings
|
|
of the days when the world was wide.
|
|
|
|
When the North was hale in the march of Time,
|
|
and the South and the West were new,
|
|
And the gorgeous East was a pantomime, as it seemed in our boyhood's view;
|
|
When Spain was first on the waves of change,
|
|
and proud in the ranks of pride,
|
|
And all was wonderful, new and strange in the days when the world was wide.
|
|
|
|
Then a man could fight if his heart were bold,
|
|
and win if his faith were true --
|
|
Were it love, or honour, or power, or gold, or all that our hearts pursue;
|
|
Could live to the world for the family name, or die for the family pride,
|
|
Could fly from sorrow, and wrong, and shame
|
|
in the days when the world was wide.
|
|
|
|
They sailed away in the ships that sailed ere science controlled the main,
|
|
When the strong, brave heart of a man prevailed
|
|
as 'twill never prevail again;
|
|
They knew not whither, nor much they cared --
|
|
let Fate or the winds decide --
|
|
The worst of the Great Unknown they dared
|
|
in the days when the world was wide.
|
|
|
|
They raised new stars on the silent sea that filled their hearts with awe;
|
|
They came to many a strange countree and marvellous sights they saw.
|
|
The villagers gaped at the tales they told,
|
|
and old eyes glistened with pride --
|
|
When barbarous cities were paved with gold
|
|
in the days when the world was wide.
|
|
|
|
'Twas honest metal and honest wood, in the days of the Outward Bound,
|
|
When men were gallant and ships were good -- roaming the wide world round.
|
|
The gods could envy a leader then when `Follow me, lads!' he cried --
|
|
They faced each other and fought like men
|
|
in the days when the world was wide.
|
|
|
|
They tried to live as a freeman should -- they were happier men than we,
|
|
In the glorious days of wine and blood, when Liberty crossed the sea;
|
|
'Twas a comrade true or a foeman then, and a trusty sword well tried --
|
|
They faced each other and fought like men
|
|
in the days when the world was wide.
|
|
|
|
The good ship bound for the Southern seas when the beacon was Ballarat,
|
|
With a `Ship ahoy!' on the freshening breeze,
|
|
`Where bound?' and `What ship's that?' --
|
|
The emigrant train to New Mexico -- the rush to the Lachlan Side --
|
|
Ah! faint is the echo of Westward Ho!
|
|
from the days when the world was wide.
|
|
|
|
South, East, and West in advance of Time -- and, ay! in advance of Thought
|
|
Those brave men rose to a height sublime -- and is it for this they fought?
|
|
And is it for this damned life we praise the god-like spirit that died
|
|
At Eureka Stockade in the Roaring Days
|
|
with the days when the world was wide?
|
|
|
|
We fight like women, and feel as much; the thoughts of our hearts we guard;
|
|
Where scarcely the scorn of a god could touch,
|
|
the sneer of a sneak hits hard;
|
|
The treacherous tongue and cowardly pen, the weapons of curs, decide --
|
|
They faced each other and fought like men
|
|
in the days when the world was wide.
|
|
|
|
Think of it all -- of the life that is! Study your friends and foes!
|
|
Study the past! And answer this: `Are these times better than those?'
|
|
The life-long quarrel, the paltry spite, the sting of your poisoned pride!
|
|
No matter who fell it were better to fight
|
|
as they did when the world was wide.
|
|
|
|
Boast as you will of your mateship now -- crippled and mean and sly --
|
|
The lines of suspicion on friendship's brow
|
|
were traced since the days gone by.
|
|
There was room in the long, free lines of the van
|
|
to fight for it side by side --
|
|
There was beating-room for the heart of a man
|
|
in the days when the world was wide.
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
With its dull, brown days of a-shilling-an-hour
|
|
the dreary year drags round:
|
|
Is this the result of Old England's power?
|
|
-- the bourne of the Outward Bound?
|
|
Is this the sequel of Westward Ho! -- of the days of Whate'er Betide?
|
|
The heart of the rebel makes answer `No!
|
|
We'll fight till the world grows wide!'
|
|
|
|
The world shall yet be a wider world -- for the tokens are manifest;
|
|
East and North shall the wrongs be hurled that followed us South and West.
|
|
The march of Freedom is North by the Dawn! Follow, whate'er betide!
|
|
Sons of the Exiles, march! March on! March till the world grows wide!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Faces in the Street
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
They lie, the men who tell us in a loud decisive tone
|
|
That want is here a stranger, and that misery's unknown;
|
|
For where the nearest suburb and the city proper meet
|
|
My window-sill is level with the faces in the street --
|
|
Drifting past, drifting past,
|
|
To the beat of weary feet --
|
|
While I sorrow for the owners of those faces in the street.
|
|
|
|
And cause I have to sorrow, in a land so young and fair,
|
|
To see upon those faces stamped the marks of Want and Care;
|
|
I look in vain for traces of the fresh and fair and sweet
|
|
In sallow, sunken faces that are drifting through the street --
|
|
Drifting on, drifting on,
|
|
To the scrape of restless feet;
|
|
I can sorrow for the owners of the faces in the street.
|
|
|
|
In hours before the dawning dims the starlight in the sky
|
|
The wan and weary faces first begin to trickle by,
|
|
Increasing as the moments hurry on with morning feet,
|
|
Till like a pallid river flow the faces in the street --
|
|
Flowing in, flowing in,
|
|
To the beat of hurried feet --
|
|
Ah! I sorrow for the owners of those faces in the street.
|
|
|
|
The human river dwindles when 'tis past the hour of eight,
|
|
Its waves go flowing faster in the fear of being late;
|
|
But slowly drag the moments, whilst beneath the dust and heat
|
|
The city grinds the owners of the faces in the street --
|
|
Grinding body, grinding soul,
|
|
Yielding scarce enough to eat --
|
|
Oh! I sorrow for the owners of the faces in the street.
|
|
|
|
And then the only faces till the sun is sinking down
|
|
Are those of outside toilers and the idlers of the town,
|
|
Save here and there a face that seems a stranger in the street,
|
|
Tells of the city's unemployed upon his weary beat --
|
|
Drifting round, drifting round,
|
|
To the tread of listless feet --
|
|
Ah! My heart aches for the owner of that sad face in the street.
|
|
|
|
And when the hours on lagging feet have slowly dragged away,
|
|
And sickly yellow gaslights rise to mock the going day,
|
|
Then flowing past my window like a tide in its retreat,
|
|
Again I see the pallid stream of faces in the street --
|
|
Ebbing out, ebbing out,
|
|
To the drag of tired feet,
|
|
While my heart is aching dumbly for the faces in the street.
|
|
|
|
And now all blurred and smirched with vice the day's sad pages end,
|
|
For while the short `large hours' toward the longer `small hours' trend,
|
|
With smiles that mock the wearer, and with words that half entreat,
|
|
Delilah pleads for custom at the corner of the street --
|
|
Sinking down, sinking down,
|
|
Battered wreck by tempests beat --
|
|
A dreadful, thankless trade is hers, that Woman of the Street.
|
|
|
|
But, ah! to dreader things than these our fair young city comes,
|
|
For in its heart are growing thick the filthy dens and slums,
|
|
Where human forms shall rot away in sties for swine unmeet,
|
|
And ghostly faces shall be seen unfit for any street --
|
|
Rotting out, rotting out,
|
|
For the lack of air and meat --
|
|
In dens of vice and horror that are hidden from the street.
|
|
|
|
I wonder would the apathy of wealthy men endure
|
|
Were all their windows level with the faces of the Poor?
|
|
Ah! Mammon's slaves, your knees shall knock, your hearts in terror beat,
|
|
When God demands a reason for the sorrows of the street,
|
|
The wrong things and the bad things
|
|
And the sad things that we meet
|
|
In the filthy lane and alley, and the cruel, heartless street.
|
|
|
|
I left the dreadful corner where the steps are never still,
|
|
And sought another window overlooking gorge and hill;
|
|
But when the night came dreary with the driving rain and sleet,
|
|
They haunted me -- the shadows of those faces in the street,
|
|
Flitting by, flitting by,
|
|
Flitting by with noiseless feet,
|
|
And with cheeks but little paler than the real ones in the street.
|
|
|
|
Once I cried: `Oh, God Almighty! if Thy might doth still endure,
|
|
Now show me in a vision for the wrongs of Earth a cure.'
|
|
And, lo! with shops all shuttered I beheld a city's street,
|
|
And in the warning distance heard the tramp of many feet,
|
|
Coming near, coming near,
|
|
To a drum's dull distant beat,
|
|
And soon I saw the army that was marching down the street.
|
|
|
|
Then, like a swollen river that has broken bank and wall,
|
|
The human flood came pouring with the red flags over all,
|
|
And kindled eyes all blazing bright with revolution's heat,
|
|
And flashing swords reflecting rigid faces in the street.
|
|
Pouring on, pouring on,
|
|
To a drum's loud threatening beat,
|
|
And the war-hymns and the cheering of the people in the street.
|
|
|
|
And so it must be while the world goes rolling round its course,
|
|
The warning pen shall write in vain, the warning voice grow hoarse,
|
|
But not until a city feels Red Revolution's feet
|
|
Shall its sad people miss awhile the terrors of the street --
|
|
The dreadful everlasting strife
|
|
For scarcely clothes and meat
|
|
In that pent track of living death -- the city's cruel street.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Roaring Days
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The night too quickly passes
|
|
And we are growing old,
|
|
So let us fill our glasses
|
|
And toast the Days of Gold;
|
|
When finds of wondrous treasure
|
|
Set all the South ablaze,
|
|
And you and I were faithful mates
|
|
All through the roaring days!
|
|
|
|
Then stately ships came sailing
|
|
From every harbour's mouth,
|
|
And sought the land of promise
|
|
That beaconed in the South;
|
|
Then southward streamed their streamers
|
|
And swelled their canvas full
|
|
To speed the wildest dreamers
|
|
E'er borne in vessel's hull.
|
|
|
|
Their shining Eldorado,
|
|
Beneath the southern skies,
|
|
Was day and night for ever
|
|
Before their eager eyes.
|
|
The brooding bush, awakened,
|
|
Was stirred in wild unrest,
|
|
And all the year a human stream
|
|
Went pouring to the West.
|
|
|
|
The rough bush roads re-echoed
|
|
The bar-room's noisy din,
|
|
When troops of stalwart horsemen
|
|
Dismounted at the inn.
|
|
And oft the hearty greetings
|
|
And hearty clasp of hands
|
|
Would tell of sudden meetings
|
|
Of friends from other lands;
|
|
When, puzzled long, the new-chum
|
|
Would recognise at last,
|
|
Behind a bronzed and bearded skin,
|
|
A comrade of the past.
|
|
|
|
And when the cheery camp-fire
|
|
Explored the bush with gleams,
|
|
The camping-grounds were crowded
|
|
With caravans of teams;
|
|
Then home the jests were driven,
|
|
And good old songs were sung,
|
|
And choruses were given
|
|
The strength of heart and lung.
|
|
Oh, they were lion-hearted
|
|
Who gave our country birth!
|
|
Oh, they were of the stoutest sons
|
|
From all the lands on earth!
|
|
|
|
Oft when the camps were dreaming,
|
|
And fires began to pale,
|
|
Through rugged ranges gleaming
|
|
Would come the Royal Mail.
|
|
Behind six foaming horses,
|
|
And lit by flashing lamps,
|
|
Old `Cobb and Co.'s', in royal state,
|
|
Went dashing past the camps.
|
|
|
|
Oh, who would paint a goldfield,
|
|
And limn the picture right,
|
|
As we have often seen it
|
|
In early morning's light;
|
|
The yellow mounds of mullock
|
|
With spots of red and white,
|
|
The scattered quartz that glistened
|
|
Like diamonds in light;
|
|
The azure line of ridges,
|
|
The bush of darkest green,
|
|
The little homes of calico
|
|
That dotted all the scene.
|
|
|
|
I hear the fall of timber
|
|
From distant flats and fells,
|
|
The pealing of the anvils
|
|
As clear as little bells,
|
|
The rattle of the cradle,
|
|
The clack of windlass-boles,
|
|
The flutter of the crimson flags
|
|
Above the golden holes.
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
Ah, then our hearts were bolder,
|
|
And if Dame Fortune frowned
|
|
Our swags we'd lightly shoulder
|
|
And tramp to other ground.
|
|
But golden days are vanished,
|
|
And altered is the scene;
|
|
The diggings are deserted,
|
|
The camping-grounds are green;
|
|
The flaunting flag of progress
|
|
Is in the West unfurled,
|
|
The mighty bush with iron rails
|
|
Is tethered to the world.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
`For'ard'
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
It is stuffy in the steerage where the second-classers sleep,
|
|
For there's near a hundred for'ard, and they're stowed away like sheep, --
|
|
They are trav'lers for the most part in a straight 'n' honest path;
|
|
But their linen's rather scanty, an' there isn't any bath --
|
|
Stowed away like ewes and wethers that is shore 'n' marked 'n' draft.
|
|
But the shearers of the shearers always seem to travel aft;
|
|
In the cushioned cabins, aft,
|
|
With saloons 'n' smoke-rooms, aft --
|
|
There is sheets 'n' best of tucker for the first-salooners, aft.
|
|
|
|
Our beef is just like scrapin's from the inside of a hide,
|
|
And the spuds were pulled too early, for they're mostly green inside;
|
|
But from somewhere back amidships there's a smell o' cookin' waft,
|
|
An' I'd give my earthly prospects for a real good tuck-out aft --
|
|
Ham an' eggs 'n' coffee, aft,
|
|
Say, cold fowl for luncheon, aft,
|
|
Juicy grills an' toast 'n' cutlets -- tucker a-lor-frongsy, aft.
|
|
|
|
They feed our women sep'rate, an' they make a blessed fuss,
|
|
Just as if they couldn't trust 'em for to eat along with us!
|
|
Just because our hands are horny an' our hearts are rough with graft --
|
|
But the gentlemen and ladies always DINE together, aft --
|
|
With their ferns an' mirrors, aft,
|
|
With their flow'rs an' napkins, aft --
|
|
`I'll assist you to an orange' -- `Kindly pass the sugar', aft.
|
|
|
|
We are shabby, rough, 'n' dirty, an' our feelin's out of tune,
|
|
An' it's hard on fellers for'ard that was used to go saloon;
|
|
There's a broken swell among us -- he is barracked, he is chaffed,
|
|
An' I wish at times, poor devil, for his own sake he was aft;
|
|
For they'd understand him, aft,
|
|
(He will miss the bath-rooms aft),
|
|
Spite of all there's no denyin' that there's finer feelin's aft.
|
|
|
|
Last night we watched the moonlight as it spread across the sea --
|
|
`It is hard to make a livin',' said the broken swell to me.
|
|
`There is ups an' downs,' I answered, an' a bitter laugh he laughed --
|
|
There were brighter days an' better when he always travelled aft --
|
|
With his rug an' gladstone, aft,
|
|
With his cap an' spyglass, aft --
|
|
A careless, rovin', gay young spark as always travelled aft.
|
|
|
|
There's a notice by the gangway, an' it seems to come amiss,
|
|
For it says that second-classers `ain't allowed abaft o' this';
|
|
An' there ought to be a notice for the fellows from abaft --
|
|
But the smell an' dirt's a warnin' to the first-salooners, aft;
|
|
With their tooth and nail-brush, aft,
|
|
With their cuffs 'n' collars, aft --
|
|
Their cigars an' books an' papers, an' their cap-peaks fore-'n'-aft.
|
|
|
|
I want to breathe the mornin' breeze that blows against the boat,
|
|
For there's a swellin' in my heart -- a tightness in my throat --
|
|
We are for'ard when there's trouble! We are for'ard when there's graft!
|
|
But the men who never battle always seem to travel aft;
|
|
With their dressin'-cases, aft,
|
|
With their swell pyjamas, aft --
|
|
Yes! the idle and the careless, they have ease an' comfort, aft.
|
|
|
|
I feel so low an' wretched, as I mooch about the deck,
|
|
That I'm ripe for jumpin' over -- an' I wish there was a wreck!
|
|
We are driven to New Zealand to be shot out over there --
|
|
Scarce a shillin' in our pockets, nor a decent rag to wear,
|
|
With the everlastin' worry lest we don't get into graft --
|
|
There is little left to land for if you cannot travel aft;
|
|
No anxiety abaft,
|
|
They have stuff to land with, aft --
|
|
Oh, there's little left to land for if you cannot travel aft;
|
|
|
|
But it's grand at sea this mornin', an' Creation almost speaks,
|
|
Sailin' past the Bay of Islands with its pinnacles an' peaks,
|
|
With the sunny haze all round us an' the white-caps on the blue,
|
|
An' the orphan rocks an' breakers -- Oh, it's glorious sailin' through!
|
|
To the south a distant steamer, to the west a coastin' craft,
|
|
An' we see the beauty for'ard, better than if we were aft;
|
|
Spite of op'ra-glasses, aft;
|
|
But, ah well, they're brothers aft --
|
|
Nature seems to draw us closer -- bring us nearer fore-'n'-aft.
|
|
|
|
What's the use of bein' bitter? What's the use of gettin' mad?
|
|
What's the use of bein' narrer just because yer luck is bad?
|
|
What's the blessed use of frettin' like a child that wants the moon?
|
|
There is broken hearts an' trouble in the gilded first saloon!
|
|
We are used to bein' shabby -- we have got no overdraft --
|
|
We can laugh at troubles for'ard that they couldn't laugh at aft;
|
|
Spite o' pride an' tone abaft
|
|
(Keepin' up appearance, aft)
|
|
There's anxiety an' worry in the breezy cabins aft.
|
|
|
|
But the curse o' class distinctions from our shoulders shall be hurled,
|
|
An' the influence of woman revolutionize the world;
|
|
There'll be higher education for the toilin' starvin' clown,
|
|
An' the rich an' educated shall be educated down;
|
|
An' we all will meet amidships on this stout old earthly craft,
|
|
An' there won't be any friction 'twixt the classes fore-'n'-aft.
|
|
We'll be brothers, fore-'n'-aft!
|
|
Yes, an' sisters, fore-'n'-aft!
|
|
When the people work together, and there ain't no fore-'n'-aft.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Drover's Sweetheart
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
An hour before the sun goes down
|
|
Behind the ragged boughs,
|
|
I go across the little run
|
|
And bring the dusty cows;
|
|
And once I used to sit and rest
|
|
Beneath the fading dome,
|
|
For there was one that I loved best
|
|
Who'd bring the cattle home.
|
|
|
|
Our yard is fixed with double bails,
|
|
Round one the grass is green,
|
|
The bush is growing through the rails,
|
|
The spike is rusted in;
|
|
And 'twas from there his freckled face
|
|
Would turn and smile at me --
|
|
He'd milk a dozen in the race
|
|
While I was milking three.
|
|
|
|
I milk eleven cows myself
|
|
Where once I milked but four;
|
|
I set the dishes on the shelf
|
|
And close the dairy door;
|
|
And when the glaring sunlight fails
|
|
And the fire shines through the cracks,
|
|
I climb the broken stockyard rails
|
|
And watch the bridle-tracks.
|
|
|
|
He kissed me twice and once again
|
|
And rode across the hill,
|
|
The pint-pots and the hobble-chain
|
|
I hear them jingling still;
|
|
He'll come at night or not at all --
|
|
He left in dust and heat,
|
|
And when the soft, cool shadows fall
|
|
Is the best time to meet.
|
|
|
|
And he is coming back again,
|
|
He wrote to let me know,
|
|
The floods were in the Darling then --
|
|
It seems so long ago;
|
|
He'd come through miles of slush and mud,
|
|
And it was weary work,
|
|
The creeks were bankers, and the flood
|
|
Was forty miles round Bourke.
|
|
|
|
He said the floods had formed a block,
|
|
The plains could not be crossed,
|
|
And there was foot-rot in the flock
|
|
And hundreds had been lost;
|
|
The sheep were falling thick and fast
|
|
A hundred miles from town,
|
|
And when he reached the line at last
|
|
He trucked the remnant down.
|
|
|
|
And so he'll have to stand the cost;
|
|
His luck was always bad,
|
|
Instead of making more, he lost
|
|
The money that he had;
|
|
And how he'll manage, heaven knows
|
|
(My eyes are getting dim),
|
|
He says -- he says -- he don't -- suppose
|
|
I'll want -- to -- marry -- him.
|
|
|
|
As if I wouldn't take his hand
|
|
Without a golden glove --
|
|
Oh! Jack, you men won't understand
|
|
How much a girl can love.
|
|
I long to see his face once more --
|
|
Jack's dog! thank God, it's Jack! --
|
|
(I never thought I'd faint before)
|
|
He's coming -- up -- the track.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Out Back
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The old year went, and the new returned, in the withering weeks of drought,
|
|
The cheque was spent that the shearer earned,
|
|
and the sheds were all cut out;
|
|
The publican's words were short and few,
|
|
and the publican's looks were black --
|
|
And the time had come, as the shearer knew, to carry his swag Out Back.
|
|
|
|
For time means tucker, and tramp you must,
|
|
where the scrubs and plains are wide,
|
|
With seldom a track that a man can trust, or a mountain peak to guide;
|
|
All day long in the dust and heat -- when summer is on the track --
|
|
With stinted stomachs and blistered feet,
|
|
they carry their swags Out Back.
|
|
|
|
He tramped away from the shanty there, when the days were long and hot,
|
|
With never a soul to know or care if he died on the track or not.
|
|
The poor of the city have friends in woe, no matter how much they lack,
|
|
But only God and the swagmen know how a poor man fares Out Back.
|
|
|
|
He begged his way on the parched Paroo and the Warrego tracks once more,
|
|
And lived like a dog, as the swagmen do, till the Western stations shore;
|
|
But men were many, and sheds were full, for work in the town was slack --
|
|
The traveller never got hands in wool,
|
|
though he tramped for a year Out Back.
|
|
|
|
In stifling noons when his back was wrung
|
|
by its load, and the air seemed dead,
|
|
And the water warmed in the bag that hung to his aching arm like lead,
|
|
Or in times of flood, when plains were seas,
|
|
and the scrubs were cold and black,
|
|
He ploughed in mud to his trembling knees, and paid for his sins Out Back.
|
|
|
|
He blamed himself in the year `Too Late' --
|
|
in the heaviest hours of life --
|
|
'Twas little he dreamed that a shearing-mate had care of his home and wife;
|
|
There are times when wrongs from your kindred come,
|
|
and treacherous tongues attack --
|
|
When a man is better away from home, and dead to the world, Out Back.
|
|
|
|
And dirty and careless and old he wore, as his lamp of hope grew dim;
|
|
He tramped for years till the swag he bore seemed part of himself to him.
|
|
As a bullock drags in the sandy ruts, he followed the dreary track,
|
|
With never a thought but to reach the huts when the sun went down Out Back.
|
|
|
|
It chanced one day, when the north wind blew
|
|
in his face like a furnace-breath,
|
|
He left the track for a tank he knew -- 'twas a short-cut to his death;
|
|
For the bed of the tank was hard and dry, and crossed with many a crack,
|
|
And, oh! it's a terrible thing to die of thirst in the scrub Out Back.
|
|
|
|
A drover came, but the fringe of law was eastward many a mile;
|
|
He never reported the thing he saw, for it was not worth his while.
|
|
The tanks are full and the grass is high in the mulga off the track,
|
|
Where the bleaching bones of a white man lie
|
|
by his mouldering swag Out Back.
|
|
|
|
For time means tucker, and tramp they must,
|
|
where the plains and scrubs are wide,
|
|
With seldom a track that a man can trust, or a mountain peak to guide;
|
|
All day long in the flies and heat the men of the outside track
|
|
With stinted stomachs and blistered feet
|
|
must carry their swags Out Back.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Free-Selector's Daughter
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
I met her on the Lachlan Side --
|
|
A darling girl I thought her,
|
|
And ere I left I swore I'd win
|
|
The free-selector's daughter.
|
|
|
|
I milked her father's cows a month,
|
|
I brought the wood and water,
|
|
I mended all the broken fence,
|
|
Before I won the daughter.
|
|
|
|
I listened to her father's yarns,
|
|
I did just what I `oughter',
|
|
And what you'll have to do to win
|
|
A free-selector's daughter.
|
|
|
|
I broke my pipe and burnt my twist,
|
|
And washed my mouth with water;
|
|
I had a shave before I kissed
|
|
The free-selector's daughter.
|
|
|
|
Then, rising in the frosty morn,
|
|
I brought the cows for Mary,
|
|
And when I'd milked a bucketful
|
|
I took it to the dairy.
|
|
|
|
I poured the milk into the dish
|
|
While Mary held the strainer,
|
|
I summoned heart to speak my wish,
|
|
And, oh! her blush grew plainer.
|
|
|
|
I told her I must leave the place,
|
|
I said that I would miss her;
|
|
At first she turned away her face,
|
|
And then she let me kiss her.
|
|
|
|
I put the bucket on the ground,
|
|
And in my arms I caught her:
|
|
I'd give the world to hold again
|
|
That free-selector's daughter!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
`Sez You'
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
When the heavy sand is yielding backward from your blistered feet,
|
|
And across the distant timber you can SEE the flowing heat;
|
|
When your head is hot and aching, and the shadeless plain is wide,
|
|
And it's fifteen miles to water in the scrub the other side --
|
|
Don't give up, don't be down-hearted, to a man's strong heart be true!
|
|
Take the air in through your nostrils, set your lips and see it through --
|
|
For it can't go on for ever, and -- `I'll have my day!' says you.
|
|
|
|
When you're camping in the mulga, and the rain is falling slow,
|
|
While you nurse your rheumatism 'neath a patch of calico;
|
|
Short of tucker or tobacco, short of sugar or of tea,
|
|
And the scrubs are dark and dismal, and the plains are like a sea;
|
|
Don't give up and be down-hearted -- to the soul of man be true!
|
|
Grin! if you've a mate to grin for, grin and jest and don't look blue;
|
|
For it can't go on for ever, and -- `I'll rise some day,' says you.
|
|
|
|
When you've tramped the Sydney pavements till you've counted all the flags,
|
|
And your flapping boot-soles trip you, and your clothes are mostly rags,
|
|
When you're called a city loafer, shunned, abused, moved on, despised --
|
|
Fifty hungry beggars after every job that's advertised --
|
|
Don't be beaten! Hold your head up! To your wretched self be true;
|
|
Set your pride to fight your hunger! Be a MAN in all you do!
|
|
For it cannot last for ever -- `I will rise again!' says you.
|
|
|
|
When you're dossing out in winter, in the darkness and the rain,
|
|
Crouching, cramped, and cold and hungry 'neath a seat in The Domain,
|
|
And a cloaked policeman stirs you with that mighty foot of his --
|
|
`Phwat d'ye mane? Phwat's this?
|
|
Who are ye? Come, move on -- git out av this!'
|
|
Don't get mad; 'twere only foolish; there is nought that you can do,
|
|
Save to mark his beat and time him -- find another hole or two;
|
|
But it can't go on for ever -- `I'll have money yet!' says you.
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
Bother not about the morrow, for sufficient to the day
|
|
Is the evil (rather more so). Put your trust in God and pray!
|
|
Study well the ant, thou sluggard. Blessed are the meek and low.
|
|
Ponder calmly on the lilies -- how they idle, how they grow.
|
|
A man's a man! Obey your masters! Do not blame the proud and fat,
|
|
For the poor are always with them, and they cannot alter that.
|
|
Lay your treasures up in Heaven -- cling to life and see it through!
|
|
For it cannot last for ever -- `I shall die some day,' says you.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Andy's Gone With Cattle
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Our Andy's gone to battle now
|
|
'Gainst Drought, the red marauder;
|
|
Our Andy's gone with cattle now
|
|
Across the Queensland border.
|
|
|
|
He's left us in dejection now;
|
|
Our hearts with him are roving.
|
|
It's dull on this selection now,
|
|
Since Andy went a-droving.
|
|
|
|
Who now shall wear the cheerful face
|
|
In times when things are slackest?
|
|
And who shall whistle round the place
|
|
When Fortune frowns her blackest?
|
|
|
|
Oh, who shall cheek the squatter now
|
|
When he comes round us snarling?
|
|
His tongue is growing hotter now
|
|
Since Andy cross'd the Darling.
|
|
|
|
The gates are out of order now,
|
|
In storms the `riders' rattle;
|
|
For far across the border now
|
|
Our Andy's gone with cattle.
|
|
|
|
Poor Aunty's looking thin and white;
|
|
And Uncle's cross with worry;
|
|
And poor old Blucher howls all night
|
|
Since Andy left Macquarie.
|
|
|
|
Oh, may the showers in torrents fall,
|
|
And all the tanks run over;
|
|
And may the grass grow green and tall
|
|
In pathways of the drover;
|
|
|
|
And may good angels send the rain
|
|
On desert stretches sandy;
|
|
And when the summer comes again
|
|
God grant 'twill bring us Andy.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Jack Dunn of Nevertire
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
It chanced upon the very day we'd got the shearing done,
|
|
A buggy brought a stranger to the West-o'-Sunday Run;
|
|
He had a round and jolly face, and he was sleek and stout,
|
|
He drove right up between the huts and called the super out.
|
|
We chaps were smoking after tea, and heard the swell enquire
|
|
For one as travelled by the name of `Dunn of Nevertire'.
|
|
Jack Dunn of Nevertire,
|
|
Poor Dunn of Nevertire;
|
|
There wasn't one of us but knew Jack Dunn of Nevertire.
|
|
|
|
`Jack Dunn of Nevertire,' he said; `I was a mate of his;
|
|
And now it's twenty years since I set eyes upon his phiz.
|
|
There is no whiter man than Jack -- no straighter south the line,
|
|
There is no hand in all the land I'd sooner grip in mine;
|
|
To help a mate in trouble Jack would go through flood and fire.
|
|
Great Scott! and don't you know the name of Dunn of Nevertire?
|
|
Big Dunn of Nevertire,
|
|
Long Jack from Nevertire;
|
|
He stuck to me through thick and thin, Jack Dunn of Nevertire.
|
|
|
|
`I did a wild and foolish thing while Jack and I were mates,
|
|
And I disgraced my guv'nor's name, an' wished to try the States.
|
|
My lamps were turned to Yankee Land, for I'd some people there,
|
|
And I was right when someone sent the money for my fare;
|
|
I thought 'twas Dad until I took the trouble to enquire,
|
|
And found that he who sent the stuff was Dunn of Nevertire,
|
|
Jack Dunn of Nevertire,
|
|
Soft Dunn of Nevertire;
|
|
He'd won some money on a race -- Jack Dunn of Nevertire.
|
|
|
|
`Now I've returned, by Liverpool, a swell of Yankee brand,
|
|
To reckon, guess, and kalkilate, 'n' wake my native land;
|
|
There is no better land, I swear, in all the wide world round --
|
|
I smelt the bush a month before we touched King George's Sound!
|
|
And now I've come to settle down, the top of my desire
|
|
Is just to meet a mate o' mine called `Dunn of Nevertire'.
|
|
Was raised at Nevertire --
|
|
The town of Nevertire;
|
|
He humped his bluey by the name of `Dunn of Nevertire'.
|
|
|
|
`I've heard he's poor, and if he is, a proud old fool is he;
|
|
But, spite of that, I'll find a way to fix the old gum-tree.
|
|
I've bought a station in the North -- the best that could be had;
|
|
I want a man to pick the stock -- I want a super bad;
|
|
I want no bully-brute to boss -- no crawling, sneaking liar --
|
|
My station super's name shall be `Jack Dunn of Nevertire'!
|
|
Straight Dunn of Nevertire,
|
|
Old Dunn of Nevertire;
|
|
I guess he's known up Queensland way -- Jack Dunn of Nevertire.'
|
|
|
|
The super said, while to his face a strange expression came:
|
|
`I THINK I've seen the man you want, I THINK I know the name;
|
|
Had he a jolly kind of face, a free and careless way,
|
|
Gray eyes that always seem'd to smile, and hair just turning gray --
|
|
Clean-shaved, except a light moustache, long-limbed, an' tough as wire?'
|
|
`THAT'S HIM! THAT'S DUNN!' the stranger roared, `Jack Dunn of Nevertire!
|
|
John Dunn of Nevertire,
|
|
Jack D. from Nevertire,
|
|
They said I'd find him here, the cuss! -- Jack Dunn of Nevertire.
|
|
|
|
`I'd know his walk,' the stranger cried, `though sobered, I'll allow.'
|
|
`I doubt it much,' the boss replied, `he don't walk that way now.'
|
|
`Perhaps he don't!' the stranger said, `for years were hard on Jack;
|
|
But, if he were a mile away, I swear I'd know his back.'
|
|
`I doubt it much,' the super said, and sadly puffed his briar,
|
|
`I guess he wears a pair of wings -- Jack Dunn of Nevertire;
|
|
Jack Dunn of Nevertire,
|
|
Brave Dunn of Nevertire,
|
|
He caught a fever nursing me, Jack Dunn of Nevertire.'
|
|
|
|
We took the stranger round to where a gum-tree stood alone,
|
|
And in the grass beside the trunk he saw a granite stone;
|
|
The names of Dunn and Nevertire were plainly written there --
|
|
`I'm all broke up,' the stranger said, in sorrow and despair,
|
|
`I guess he has a wider run, the man that I require;
|
|
He's got a river-frontage now, Jack Dunn of Nevertire;
|
|
Straight Dunn of Nevertire,
|
|
White Jack from Nevertire,
|
|
I guess Saint Peter knew the name of `Dunn of Nevertire'.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Trooper Campbell
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
One day old Trooper Campbell
|
|
Rode out to Blackman's Run,
|
|
His cap-peak and his sabre
|
|
Were glancing in the sun.
|
|
'Twas New Year's Eve, and slowly
|
|
Across the ridges low
|
|
The sad Old Year was drifting
|
|
To where the old years go.
|
|
|
|
The trooper's mind was reading
|
|
The love-page of his life --
|
|
His love for Mary Wylie
|
|
Ere she was Blackman's wife;
|
|
He sorrowed for the sorrows
|
|
Of the heart a rival won,
|
|
For he knew that there was trouble
|
|
Out there on Blackman's Run.
|
|
|
|
The sapling shades had lengthened,
|
|
The summer day was late,
|
|
When Blackman met the trooper
|
|
Beyond the homestead gate.
|
|
And if the hand of trouble
|
|
Can leave a lasting trace,
|
|
The lines of care had come to stay
|
|
On poor old Blackman's face.
|
|
|
|
`Not good day, Trooper Campbell,
|
|
It's a bad, bad day for me --
|
|
You are of all the men on earth
|
|
The one I wished to see.
|
|
The great black clouds of trouble
|
|
Above our homestead hang;
|
|
That wild and reckless boy of mine
|
|
Has joined M'Durmer's gang.
|
|
|
|
`Oh! save him, save him, Campbell!
|
|
I beg in friendship's name!
|
|
For if they take and hang him,
|
|
The wife would die of shame.
|
|
Could Mary or her sisters
|
|
Hold up their heads again,
|
|
And face a woman's malice
|
|
Or claim the love of men?
|
|
|
|
`And if he does a murder
|
|
'Twere better we were dead.
|
|
Don't take him, Trooper Campbell,
|
|
If a price be on his head;
|
|
But shoot him! shoot him, Campbell,
|
|
When you meet him face to face,
|
|
And save him from the gallows,
|
|
And us from that disgrace.'
|
|
|
|
`Now, Tom,' cried Trooper Campbell,
|
|
`You know your words are wild.
|
|
Though he is wild and reckless,
|
|
Yet still he is your child;
|
|
So bear up in your trouble,
|
|
And meet it like a man,
|
|
And tell the wife and daughters
|
|
I'll save him if I can.'
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
The sad Australian sunset
|
|
Had faded from the west;
|
|
But night brings darker shadows
|
|
To hearts that cannot rest;
|
|
And Blackman's wife sat rocking
|
|
And moaning in her chair.
|
|
`I cannot bear disgrace,' she moaned;
|
|
`Disgrace I cannot bear.
|
|
|
|
`In hardship and in trouble
|
|
I struggled year by year
|
|
To make my children better
|
|
Than other children here.
|
|
And if my son's a felon
|
|
How can I show my face?
|
|
I cannot bear disgrace; my God,
|
|
I cannot bear disgrace!
|
|
|
|
`Ah, God in Heaven pardon!
|
|
I'm selfish in my woe --
|
|
My boy is better-hearted
|
|
Than many that I know.
|
|
And I will face the world's disgrace,
|
|
And, till his mother's dead,
|
|
My foolish child shall find a place
|
|
To lay his outlawed head.'
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
With a sad heart Trooper Campbell
|
|
Rode back from Blackman's Run,
|
|
Nor noticed aught about him
|
|
Till thirteen miles were done;
|
|
When, close beside a cutting,
|
|
He heard the click of locks,
|
|
And saw the rifle muzzles
|
|
Were on him from the rocks.
|
|
|
|
But suddenly a youth rode out,
|
|
And, close by Campbell's side:
|
|
`Don't fire! don't fire, in heaven's name!
|
|
It's Campbell, boys!' he cried.
|
|
Then one by one in silence
|
|
The levelled rifles fell,
|
|
For who'd shoot Trooper Campbell
|
|
Of those who knew him well?
|
|
|
|
Oh, bravely sat old Campbell,
|
|
No sign of fear showed he.
|
|
He slowly drew his carbine;
|
|
It rested by his knee.
|
|
The outlaws' guns were lifted,
|
|
But none the silence broke,
|
|
Till steadfastly and firmly
|
|
Old Trooper Campbell spoke.
|
|
|
|
`That boy that you would ruin
|
|
Goes home with me, my men;
|
|
Or some of us shall never
|
|
Ride through the Gap again.
|
|
You know old Trooper Campbell,
|
|
And have you ever heard
|
|
That bluff or lead could turn him,
|
|
That e'er he broke his word?
|
|
|
|
`That reckless lad is playing
|
|
A heartless villain's part;
|
|
He knows that he is breaking
|
|
His poor old mother's heart.
|
|
He'll bring a curse upon himself;
|
|
But 'tis not that alone,
|
|
He'll bring dishonour to a name
|
|
That I'D be proud to own.
|
|
|
|
`I speak to you, M'Durmer, --
|
|
If your heart's not hardened quite,
|
|
And if you'd seen the trouble
|
|
At Blackman's home this night,
|
|
You'd help me now, M'Durmer --
|
|
I speak as man to man --
|
|
I swore to save that foolish lad,
|
|
And I'll save him if I can.'
|
|
|
|
`Oh, take him!' said M'Durmer,
|
|
`He's got a horse to ride.'
|
|
The youngster thought a moment,
|
|
Then rode to Campbell's side --
|
|
`Good-bye!' the outlaws shouted,
|
|
As up the range they sped.
|
|
`A Merry New Year, Campbell,'
|
|
Was all M'Durmer said.
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
Then fast along the ridges
|
|
Two bushmen rode a race,
|
|
And the moonlight lent a glory
|
|
To Trooper Campbell's face.
|
|
And ere the new year's dawning
|
|
They reached the home at last;
|
|
And this is but a story
|
|
Of trouble that is past!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Sliprails and the Spur
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The colours of the setting sun
|
|
Withdrew across the Western land --
|
|
He raised the sliprails, one by one,
|
|
And shot them home with trembling hand;
|
|
Her brown hands clung -- her face grew pale --
|
|
Ah! quivering chin and eyes that brim! --
|
|
One quick, fierce kiss across the rail,
|
|
And, `Good-bye, Mary!' `Good-bye, Jim!'
|
|
Oh, he rides hard to race the pain
|
|
Who rides from love, who rides from home;
|
|
But he rides slowly home again,
|
|
Whose heart has learnt to love and roam.
|
|
|
|
A hand upon the horse's mane,
|
|
And one foot in the stirrup set,
|
|
And, stooping back to kiss again,
|
|
With `Good-bye, Mary! don't you fret!
|
|
When I come back' -- he laughed for her --
|
|
`We do not know how soon 'twill be;
|
|
I'll whistle as I round the spur --
|
|
You let the sliprails down for me.'
|
|
|
|
She gasped for sudden loss of hope,
|
|
As, with a backward wave to her,
|
|
He cantered down the grassy slope
|
|
And swiftly round the dark'ning spur.
|
|
Black-pencilled panels standing high,
|
|
And darkness fading into stars,
|
|
And blurring fast against the sky,
|
|
A faint white form beside the bars.
|
|
|
|
And often at the set of sun,
|
|
In winter bleak and summer brown,
|
|
She'd steal across the little run,
|
|
And shyly let the sliprails down.
|
|
And listen there when darkness shut
|
|
The nearer spur in silence deep;
|
|
And when they called her from the hut
|
|
Steal home and cry herself to sleep.
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
{Some editions have four more lines here.}
|
|
And he rides hard to dull the pain
|
|
Who rides from one that loves him best;
|
|
And he rides slowly back again,
|
|
Whose restless heart must rove for rest.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Past Carin'
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Now up and down the siding brown
|
|
The great black crows are flyin',
|
|
And down below the spur, I know,
|
|
Another `milker's' dyin';
|
|
The crops have withered from the ground,
|
|
The tank's clay bed is glarin',
|
|
But from my heart no tear nor sound,
|
|
For I have gone past carin' --
|
|
Past worryin' or carin',
|
|
Past feelin' aught or carin';
|
|
But from my heart no tear nor sound,
|
|
For I have gone past carin'.
|
|
|
|
Through Death and Trouble, turn about,
|
|
Through hopeless desolation,
|
|
Through flood and fever, fire and drought,
|
|
And slavery and starvation;
|
|
Through childbirth, sickness, hurt, and blight,
|
|
And nervousness an' scarin',
|
|
Through bein' left alone at night,
|
|
I've got to be past carin'.
|
|
Past botherin' or carin',
|
|
Past feelin' and past carin';
|
|
Through city cheats and neighbours' spite,
|
|
I've come to be past carin'.
|
|
|
|
Our first child took, in days like these,
|
|
A cruel week in dyin',
|
|
All day upon her father's knees,
|
|
Or on my poor breast lyin';
|
|
The tears we shed -- the prayers we said
|
|
Were awful, wild -- despairin'!
|
|
I've pulled three through, and buried two
|
|
Since then -- and I'm past carin'.
|
|
I've grown to be past carin',
|
|
Past worryin' and wearin';
|
|
I've pulled three through and buried two
|
|
Since then, and I'm past carin'.
|
|
|
|
'Twas ten years first, then came the worst,
|
|
All for a dusty clearin',
|
|
I thought, I thought my heart would burst
|
|
When first my man went shearin';
|
|
He's drovin' in the great North-west,
|
|
I don't know how he's farin';
|
|
For I, the one that loved him best,
|
|
Have grown to be past carin'.
|
|
I've grown to be past carin'
|
|
Past lookin' for or carin';
|
|
The girl that waited long ago,
|
|
Has lived to be past carin'.
|
|
|
|
My eyes are dry, I cannot cry,
|
|
I've got no heart for breakin',
|
|
But where it was in days gone by,
|
|
A dull and empty achin'.
|
|
My last boy ran away from me,
|
|
I know my temper's wearin',
|
|
But now I only wish to be
|
|
Beyond all signs of carin'.
|
|
Past wearyin' or carin',
|
|
Past feelin' and despairin';
|
|
And now I only wish to be
|
|
Beyond all signs of carin'.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Glass on the Bar
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Three bushmen one morning rode up to an inn,
|
|
And one of them called for the drinks with a grin;
|
|
They'd only returned from a trip to the North,
|
|
And, eager to greet them, the landlord came forth.
|
|
He absently poured out a glass of Three Star.
|
|
And set down that drink with the rest on the bar.
|
|
|
|
`There, that is for Harry,' he said, `and it's queer,
|
|
'Tis the very same glass that he drank from last year;
|
|
His name's on the glass, you can read it like print,
|
|
He scratched it himself with an old piece of flint;
|
|
I remember his drink -- it was always Three Star' --
|
|
And the landlord looked out through the door of the bar.
|
|
|
|
He looked at the horses, and counted but three:
|
|
`You were always together -- where's Harry?' cried he.
|
|
Oh, sadly they looked at the glass as they said,
|
|
`You may put it away, for our old mate is dead;'
|
|
But one, gazing out o'er the ridges afar,
|
|
Said, `We owe him a shout -- leave the glass on the bar.'
|
|
|
|
They thought of the far-away grave on the plain,
|
|
They thought of the comrade who came not again,
|
|
They lifted their glasses, and sadly they said:
|
|
`We drink to the name of the mate who is dead.'
|
|
And the sunlight streamed in, and a light like a star
|
|
Seemed to glow in the depth of the glass on the bar.
|
|
|
|
And still in that shanty a tumbler is seen,
|
|
It stands by the clock, ever polished and clean;
|
|
And often the strangers will read as they pass
|
|
The name of a bushman engraved on the glass;
|
|
And though on the shelf but a dozen there are,
|
|
That glass never stands with the rest on the bar.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Shanty on the Rise
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
When the caravans of wool-teams climbed the ranges from the West,
|
|
On a spur among the mountains stood `The Bullock-drivers' Rest';
|
|
It was built of bark and saplings, and was rather rough inside,
|
|
But 'twas good enough for bushmen in the careless days that died --
|
|
Just a quiet little shanty kept by `Something-in-Disguise',
|
|
As the bushmen called the landlord of the Shanty on the Rise.
|
|
|
|
City swells who `do the Royal' would have called the Shanty low,
|
|
But 'twas better far and purer than some toney pubs I know;
|
|
For the patrons of the Shanty had the principles of men,
|
|
And the spieler, if he struck it, wasn't welcome there again.
|
|
You could smoke and drink in quiet, yarn, or else soliloquise,
|
|
With a decent lot of fellows in the Shanty on the Rise.
|
|
|
|
'Twas the bullock-driver's haven when his team was on the road,
|
|
And the waggon-wheels were groaning as they ploughed beneath the load;
|
|
And I mind how weary teamsters struggled on while it was light,
|
|
Just to camp within a cooey of the Shanty for the night;
|
|
And I think the very bullocks raised their heads and fixed their eyes
|
|
On the candle in the window of the Shanty on the Rise.
|
|
|
|
And the bullock-bells were clanking from the marshes on the flats
|
|
As we hurried to the Shanty, where we hung our dripping hats;
|
|
And we took a drop of something that was brought at our desire,
|
|
As we stood with steaming moleskins in the kitchen by the fire.
|
|
Oh! it roared upon a fireplace of the good, old-fashioned size,
|
|
When the rain came down the chimney of the Shanty on the Rise.
|
|
|
|
They got up a Christmas party in the Shanty long ago,
|
|
While I camped with Jimmy Nowlett on the riverbank below;
|
|
Poor old Jim was in his glory -- they'd elected him M.C.,
|
|
For there wasn't such another raving lunatic as he.
|
|
`Mr. Nowlett, Mr. Swaller!' shouted Something-in-Disguise,
|
|
As we walked into the parlour of the Shanty on the Rise.
|
|
|
|
There is little real pleasure in the city where I am --
|
|
There's a swarry round the corner with its mockery and sham;
|
|
But a fellow can be happy when around the room he whirls
|
|
In a party up the country with the jolly country girls.
|
|
Why, at times I almost fancied I was dancing on the skies,
|
|
When I danced with Mary Carey in the Shanty on the Rise.
|
|
|
|
Jimmy came to me and whispered, and I muttered, `Go along!'
|
|
But he shouted, `Mr. Swaller will oblige us with a song!'
|
|
And at first I said I wouldn't, and I shammed a little too,
|
|
Till the girls began to whisper, `Mr. Swallow, now, ah, DO!'
|
|
So I sang a song of something 'bout the love that never dies,
|
|
And the chorus shook the rafters of the Shanty on the Rise.
|
|
|
|
Jimmy burst his concertina, and the bullock-drivers went
|
|
For the corpse of Joe the Fiddler, who was sleeping in his tent;
|
|
Joe was tired and had lumbago, and he wouldn't come, he said,
|
|
But the case was very urgent, so they pulled him out of bed;
|
|
And they fetched him, for the bushmen knew that Something-in-Disguise
|
|
Had a cure for Joe's lumbago in the Shanty on the Rise.
|
|
|
|
Jim and I were rather quiet while escorting Mary home,
|
|
'Neath the stars that hung in clusters, near and distant, from the dome;
|
|
And we walked so very silent -- being lost in reverie --
|
|
That we heard the settlers'-matches rustle softly on the tree;
|
|
And I wondered who would win her when she said her sweet good-byes --
|
|
But she died at one-and-twenty, and was buried on the Rise.
|
|
|
|
I suppose the Shanty vanished from the ranges long ago,
|
|
And the girls are mostly married to the chaps I used to know;
|
|
My old chums are in the distance -- some have crossed the border-line,
|
|
But in fancy still their glasses chink against the rim of mine.
|
|
And, upon the very centre of the greenest spot that lies
|
|
In my fondest recollection, stands the Shanty on the Rise.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Vagabond
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
White handkerchiefs wave from the short black pier
|
|
As we glide to the grand old sea --
|
|
But the song of my heart is for none to hear
|
|
If one of them waves for me.
|
|
A roving, roaming life is mine,
|
|
Ever by field or flood --
|
|
For not far back in my father's line
|
|
Was a dash of the Gipsy blood.
|
|
|
|
Flax and tussock and fern,
|
|
Gum and mulga and sand,
|
|
Reef and palm -- but my fancies turn
|
|
Ever away from land;
|
|
Strange wild cities in ancient state,
|
|
Range and river and tree,
|
|
Snow and ice. But my star of fate
|
|
Is ever across the sea.
|
|
|
|
A god-like ride on a thundering sea,
|
|
When all but the stars are blind --
|
|
A desperate race from Eternity
|
|
With a gale-and-a-half behind.
|
|
A jovial spree in the cabin at night,
|
|
A song on the rolling deck,
|
|
A lark ashore with the ships in sight,
|
|
Till -- a wreck goes down with a wreck.
|
|
|
|
A smoke and a yarn on the deck by day,
|
|
When life is a waking dream,
|
|
And care and trouble so far away
|
|
That out of your life they seem.
|
|
A roving spirit in sympathy,
|
|
Who has travelled the whole world o'er --
|
|
My heart forgets, in a week at sea,
|
|
The trouble of years on shore.
|
|
|
|
A rolling stone! -- 'tis a saw for slaves --
|
|
Philosophy false as old --
|
|
Wear out or break 'neath the feet of knaves,
|
|
Or rot in your bed of mould!
|
|
But I'D rather trust to the darkest skies
|
|
And the wildest seas that roar,
|
|
Or die, where the stars of Nations rise,
|
|
In the stormy clouds of war.
|
|
|
|
Cleave to your country, home, and friends,
|
|
Die in a sordid strife --
|
|
You can count your friends on your finger ends
|
|
In the critical hours of life.
|
|
Sacrifice all for the family's sake,
|
|
Bow to their selfish rule!
|
|
Slave till your big soft heart they break --
|
|
The heart of the family fool.
|
|
|
|
Domestic quarrels, and family spite,
|
|
And your Native Land may be
|
|
Controlled by custom, but, come what might,
|
|
The rest of the world for me.
|
|
I'd sail with money, or sail without! --
|
|
If your love be forced from home,
|
|
And you dare enough, and your heart be stout,
|
|
The world is your own to roam.
|
|
|
|
I've never a love that can sting my pride,
|
|
Nor a friend to prove untrue;
|
|
For I leave my love ere the turning tide,
|
|
And my friends are all too new.
|
|
The curse of the Powers on a peace like ours,
|
|
With its greed and its treachery --
|
|
A stranger's hand, and a stranger land,
|
|
And the rest of the world for me!
|
|
|
|
But why be bitter? The world is cold
|
|
To one with a frozen heart;
|
|
New friends are often so like the old,
|
|
They seem of the past a part --
|
|
As a better part of the past appears,
|
|
When enemies, parted long,
|
|
Are come together in kinder years,
|
|
With their better nature strong.
|
|
|
|
I had a friend, ere my first ship sailed,
|
|
A friend that I never deserved --
|
|
For the selfish strain in my blood prevailed
|
|
As soon as my turn was served.
|
|
And the memory haunts my heart with shame --
|
|
Or, rather, the pride that's there;
|
|
In different guises, but soul the same,
|
|
I meet him everywhere.
|
|
|
|
I had a chum. When the times were tight
|
|
We starved in Australian scrubs;
|
|
We froze together in parks at night,
|
|
And laughed together in pubs.
|
|
And I often hear a laugh like his
|
|
From a sense of humour keen,
|
|
And catch a glimpse in a passing phiz
|
|
Of his broad, good-humoured grin.
|
|
|
|
And I had a love -- 'twas a love to prize --
|
|
But I never went back again . . .
|
|
I have seen the light of her kind brown eyes
|
|
In many a face since then.
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
The sailors say 'twill be rough to-night,
|
|
As they fasten the hatches down,
|
|
The south is black, and the bar is white,
|
|
And the drifting smoke is brown.
|
|
The gold has gone from the western haze,
|
|
The sea-birds circle and swarm --
|
|
But we shall have plenty of sunny days,
|
|
And little enough of storm.
|
|
|
|
The hill is hiding the short black pier,
|
|
As the last white signal's seen;
|
|
The points run in, and the houses veer,
|
|
And the great bluff stands between.
|
|
So darkness swallows each far white speck
|
|
On many a wharf and quay.
|
|
The night comes down on a restless deck, --
|
|
Grim cliffs -- and -- The Open Sea!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sweeney
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
It was somewhere in September, and the sun was going down,
|
|
When I came, in search of `copy', to a Darling-River town;
|
|
`Come-and-have-a-drink' we'll call it -- 'tis a fitting name, I think --
|
|
And 'twas raining, for a wonder, up at Come-and-have-a-drink.
|
|
|
|
'Neath the public-house verandah I was resting on a bunk
|
|
When a stranger rose before me, and he said that he was drunk;
|
|
He apologised for speaking; there was no offence, he swore;
|
|
But he somehow seemed to fancy that he'd seen my face before.
|
|
|
|
`No erfence,' he said. I told him that he needn't mention it,
|
|
For I might have met him somewhere; I had travelled round a bit,
|
|
And I knew a lot of fellows in the bush and in the streets --
|
|
But a fellow can't remember all the fellows that he meets.
|
|
|
|
Very old and thin and dirty were the garments that he wore,
|
|
Just a shirt and pair of trousers, and a boot, and nothing more;
|
|
He was wringing-wet, and really in a sad and sinful plight,
|
|
And his hat was in his left hand, and a bottle in his right.
|
|
|
|
His brow was broad and roomy, but its lines were somewhat harsh,
|
|
And a sensual mouth was hidden by a drooping, fair moustache;
|
|
(His hairy chest was open to what poets call the `wined',
|
|
And I would have bet a thousand that his pants were gone behind).
|
|
|
|
He agreed: `Yer can't remember all the chaps yer chance to meet,'
|
|
And he said his name was Sweeney -- people lived in Sussex-street.
|
|
He was campin' in a stable, but he swore that he was right,
|
|
`Only for the blanky horses walkin' over him all night.'
|
|
|
|
He'd apparently been fighting, for his face was black-and-blue,
|
|
And he looked as though the horses had been treading on him, too;
|
|
But an honest, genial twinkle in the eye that wasn't hurt
|
|
Seemed to hint of something better, spite of drink and rags and dirt.
|
|
|
|
It appeared that he mistook me for a long-lost mate of his --
|
|
One of whom I was the image, both in figure and in phiz --
|
|
(He'd have had a letter from him if the chap were living still,
|
|
For they'd carried swags together from the Gulf to Broken Hill.)
|
|
|
|
Sweeney yarned awhile and hinted that his folks were doing well,
|
|
And he told me that his father kept the Southern Cross Hotel;
|
|
And I wondered if his absence was regarded as a loss
|
|
When he left the elder Sweeney -- landlord of the Southern Cross.
|
|
|
|
He was born in Parramatta, and he said, with humour grim,
|
|
That he'd like to see the city ere the liquor finished him,
|
|
But he couldn't raise the money. He was damned if he could think
|
|
What the Government was doing. Here he offered me a drink.
|
|
|
|
I declined -- 'TWAS self-denial -- and I lectured him on booze,
|
|
Using all the hackneyed arguments that preachers mostly use;
|
|
Things I'd heard in temperance lectures (I was young and rather green),
|
|
And I ended by referring to the man he might have been.
|
|
|
|
Then a wise expression struggled with the bruises on his face,
|
|
Though his argument had scarcely any bearing on the case:
|
|
`What's the good o' keepin' sober? Fellers rise and fellers fall;
|
|
What I might have been and wasn't doesn't trouble me at all.'
|
|
|
|
But he couldn't stay to argue, for his beer was nearly gone.
|
|
He was glad, he said, to meet me, and he'd see me later on;
|
|
He guessed he'd have to go and get his bottle filled again,
|
|
And he gave a lurch and vanished in the darkness and the rain.
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
And of afternoons in cities, when the rain is on the land,
|
|
Visions come to me of Sweeney with his bottle in his hand,
|
|
With the stormy night behind him, and the pub verandah-post --
|
|
And I wonder why he haunts me more than any other ghost.
|
|
|
|
Still I see the shearers drinking at the township in the scrub,
|
|
And the army praying nightly at the door of every pub,
|
|
And the girls who flirt and giggle with the bushmen from the west --
|
|
But the memory of Sweeney overshadows all the rest.
|
|
|
|
Well, perhaps, it isn't funny; there were links between us two --
|
|
He had memories of cities, he had been a jackeroo;
|
|
And, perhaps, his face forewarned me of a face that I might see
|
|
From a bitter cup reflected in the wretched days to be.
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
I suppose he's tramping somewhere where the bushmen carry swags,
|
|
Cadging round the wretched stations with his empty tucker-bags;
|
|
And I fancy that of evenings, when the track is growing dim,
|
|
What he `might have been and wasn't' comes along and troubles him.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Middleton's Rouseabout
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tall and freckled and sandy,
|
|
Face of a country lout;
|
|
This was the picture of Andy,
|
|
Middleton's Rouseabout.
|
|
|
|
Type of a coming nation,
|
|
In the land of cattle and sheep,
|
|
Worked on Middleton's station,
|
|
`Pound a week and his keep.'
|
|
|
|
On Middleton's wide dominions
|
|
Plied the stockwhip and shears;
|
|
Hadn't any opinions,
|
|
Hadn't any `idears'.
|
|
|
|
Swiftly the years went over,
|
|
Liquor and drought prevailed;
|
|
Middleton went as a drover,
|
|
After his station had failed.
|
|
|
|
Type of a careless nation,
|
|
Men who are soon played out,
|
|
Middleton was: -- and his station
|
|
Was bought by the Rouseabout.
|
|
|
|
Flourishing beard and sandy,
|
|
Tall and robust and stout;
|
|
This is the picture of Andy,
|
|
Middleton's Rouseabout.
|
|
|
|
Now on his own dominions
|
|
Works with his overseers;
|
|
Hasn't any opinions,
|
|
Hasn't any `idears'.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Ballad of the Drover
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Across the stony ridges,
|
|
Across the rolling plain,
|
|
Young Harry Dale, the drover,
|
|
Comes riding home again.
|
|
And well his stock-horse bears him,
|
|
And light of heart is he,
|
|
And stoutly his old pack-horse
|
|
Is trotting by his knee.
|
|
|
|
Up Queensland way with cattle
|
|
He travelled regions vast;
|
|
And many months have vanished
|
|
Since home-folk saw him last.
|
|
He hums a song of someone
|
|
He hopes to marry soon;
|
|
And hobble-chains and camp-ware
|
|
Keep jingling to the tune.
|
|
|
|
Beyond the hazy dado
|
|
Against the lower skies
|
|
And yon blue line of ranges
|
|
The homestead station lies.
|
|
And thitherward the drover
|
|
Jogs through the lazy noon,
|
|
While hobble-chains and camp-ware
|
|
Are jingling to a tune.
|
|
|
|
An hour has filled the heavens
|
|
With storm-clouds inky black;
|
|
At times the lightning trickles
|
|
Around the drover's track;
|
|
But Harry pushes onward,
|
|
His horses' strength he tries,
|
|
In hope to reach the river
|
|
Before the flood shall rise.
|
|
|
|
The thunder from above him
|
|
Goes rolling o'er the plain;
|
|
And down on thirsty pastures
|
|
In torrents falls the rain.
|
|
And every creek and gully
|
|
Sends forth its little flood,
|
|
Till the river runs a banker,
|
|
All stained with yellow mud.
|
|
|
|
Now Harry speaks to Rover,
|
|
The best dog on the plains,
|
|
And to his hardy horses,
|
|
And strokes their shaggy manes;
|
|
`We've breasted bigger rivers
|
|
When floods were at their height
|
|
Nor shall this gutter stop us
|
|
From getting home to-night!'
|
|
|
|
The thunder growls a warning,
|
|
The ghastly lightnings gleam,
|
|
As the drover turns his horses
|
|
To swim the fatal stream.
|
|
But, oh! the flood runs stronger
|
|
Than e'er it ran before;
|
|
The saddle-horse is failing,
|
|
And only half-way o'er!
|
|
|
|
When flashes next the lightning,
|
|
The flood's grey breast is blank,
|
|
And a cattle dog and pack-horse
|
|
Are struggling up the bank.
|
|
But in the lonely homestead
|
|
The girl will wait in vain --
|
|
He'll never pass the stations
|
|
In charge of stock again.
|
|
|
|
The faithful dog a moment
|
|
Sits panting on the bank,
|
|
And then swims through the current
|
|
To where his master sank.
|
|
And round and round in circles
|
|
He fights with failing strength,
|
|
Till, borne down by the waters,
|
|
The old dog sinks at length.
|
|
|
|
Across the flooded lowlands
|
|
And slopes of sodden loam
|
|
The pack-horse struggles onward,
|
|
To take dumb tidings home.
|
|
And mud-stained, wet, and weary,
|
|
Through ranges dark goes he;
|
|
While hobble-chains and tinware
|
|
Are sounding eerily.
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
The floods are in the ocean,
|
|
The stream is clear again,
|
|
And now a verdant carpet
|
|
Is stretched across the plain.
|
|
But someone's eyes are saddened,
|
|
And someone's heart still bleeds
|
|
In sorrow for the drover
|
|
Who sleeps among the reeds.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Taking His Chance
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
They stood by the door of the Inn on the Rise;
|
|
May Carney looked up in the bushranger's eyes:
|
|
`Oh! why did you come? -- it was mad of you, Jack;
|
|
You know that the troopers are out on your track.'
|
|
A laugh and a shake of his obstinate head --
|
|
`I wanted a dance, and I'll chance it,' he said.
|
|
|
|
Some twenty-odd bushmen had come to the `ball',
|
|
But Jack from his youth had been known to them all,
|
|
And bushmen are soft where a woman is fair,
|
|
So the love of May Carney protected him there;
|
|
And all the short evening -- it seems like romance --
|
|
She danced with a bushranger taking his chance.
|
|
|
|
`Twas midnight -- the dancers stood suddenly still,
|
|
For hoofs had been heard on the side of the hill!
|
|
Ben Duggan, the drover, along the hillside
|
|
Came riding as only a bushman can ride.
|
|
He sprang from his horse, to the shanty he sped --
|
|
`The troopers are down in the gully!' he said.
|
|
|
|
Quite close to the homestead the troopers were seen.
|
|
`Clear out and ride hard for the ranges, Jack Dean!
|
|
Be quick!' said May Carney -- her hand on her heart --
|
|
`We'll bluff them awhile, and 'twill give you a start.'
|
|
He lingered a moment -- to kiss her, of course --
|
|
Then ran to the trees where he'd hobbled his horse.
|
|
|
|
She ran to the gate, and the troopers were there --
|
|
The jingle of hobbles came faint on the air --
|
|
Then loudly she screamed: it was only to drown
|
|
The treacherous clatter of slip-rails let down.
|
|
But troopers are sharp, and she saw at a glance
|
|
That someone was taking a desperate chance.
|
|
|
|
They chased, and they shouted, `Surrender, Jack Dean!'
|
|
They called him three times in the name of the Queen.
|
|
Then came from the darkness the clicking of locks;
|
|
The crack of the rifles was heard in the rocks!
|
|
A shriek and a shout, and a rush of pale men --
|
|
And there lay the bushranger, chancing it then.
|
|
|
|
The sergeant dismounted and knelt on the sod --
|
|
`Your bushranging's over -- make peace, Jack, with God!'
|
|
The bushranger laughed -- not a word he replied,
|
|
But turned to the girl who knelt down by his side.
|
|
He gazed in her eyes as she lifted his head:
|
|
`Just kiss me -- my girl -- and -- I'll -- chance it,' he said.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
When the `Army' Prays for Watty
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
When the kindly hours of darkness, save for light of moon and star,
|
|
Hide the picture on the signboard over Doughty's Horse Bazaar;
|
|
When the last rose-tint is fading on the distant mulga scrub,
|
|
Then the Army prays for Watty at the entrance of his pub.
|
|
|
|
Now, I often sit at Watty's when the night is very near,
|
|
With a head that's full of jingles and the fumes of bottled beer,
|
|
For I always have a fancy that, if I am over there
|
|
When the Army prays for Watty, I'm included in the prayer.
|
|
|
|
Watty lounges in his arm-chair, in its old accustomed place,
|
|
With a fatherly expression on his round and passive face;
|
|
And his arms are clasped before him in a calm, contented way,
|
|
And he nods his head and dozes when he hears the Army pray.
|
|
|
|
And I wonder does he ponder on the distant years and dim,
|
|
Or his chances over yonder, when the Army prays for him?
|
|
Has he not a fear connected with the warm place down below,
|
|
Where, according to good Christians, all the publicans should go?
|
|
|
|
But his features give no token of a feeling in his breast,
|
|
Save of peace that is unbroken and a conscience well at rest;
|
|
And we guzzle as we guzzled long before the Army came,
|
|
And the loafers wait for `shouters' and -- they get there just the same.
|
|
|
|
It would take a lot of praying -- lots of thumping on the drum --
|
|
To prepare our sinful, straying, erring souls for Kingdom Come;
|
|
But I love my fellow-sinners, and I hope, upon the whole,
|
|
That the Army gets a hearing when it prays for Watty's soul.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Wreck of the `Derry Castle'
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Day of ending for beginnings!
|
|
Ocean hath another innings,
|
|
Ocean hath another score;
|
|
And the surges sing his winnings,
|
|
And the surges shout his winnings,
|
|
And the surges shriek his winnings,
|
|
All along the sullen shore.
|
|
|
|
Sing another dirge in wailing,
|
|
For another vessel sailing
|
|
With the shadow-ships at sea;
|
|
Shadow-ships for ever sinking --
|
|
Shadow-ships whose pumps are clinking,
|
|
And whose thirsty holds are drinking
|
|
Pledges to Eternity.
|
|
|
|
Pray for souls of ghastly, sodden
|
|
Corpses, floating round untrodden
|
|
Cliffs, where nought but sea-drift strays;
|
|
Souls of dead men, in whose faces
|
|
Of humanity no trace is --
|
|
Not a mark to show their races --
|
|
Floating round for days and days.
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
Ocean's salty tongues are licking
|
|
Round the faces of the drowned,
|
|
And a cruel blade seems sticking
|
|
Through my heart and turning round.
|
|
|
|
Heaven! shall HIS ghastly, sodden
|
|
Corpse float round for days and days?
|
|
Shall it dash 'neath cliffs untrodden,
|
|
Rocks where nought but sea-drift strays?
|
|
|
|
God in heaven! hide the floating,
|
|
Falling, rising, face from me;
|
|
God in heaven! stay the gloating,
|
|
Mocking singing of the sea!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Ben Duggan
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Jack Denver died on Talbragar when Christmas Eve began,
|
|
And there was sorrow round the place, for Denver was a man;
|
|
Jack Denver's wife bowed down her head -- her daughter's grief was wild,
|
|
And big Ben Duggan by the bed stood sobbing like a child.
|
|
But big Ben Duggan saddled up, and galloped fast and far,
|
|
To raise the longest funeral ever seen on Talbragar.
|
|
|
|
By station home
|
|
And shearing shed
|
|
Ben Duggan cried, `Jack Denver's dead!
|
|
Roll up at Talbragar!'
|
|
|
|
He borrowed horses here and there, and rode all Christmas Eve,
|
|
And scarcely paused a moment's time the mournful news to leave;
|
|
He rode by lonely huts and farms, and when the day was done
|
|
He turned his panting horse's head and rode to Ross's Run.
|
|
No bushman in a single day had ridden half so far
|
|
Since Johnson brought the doctor to his wife at Talbragar.
|
|
|
|
By diggers' camps
|
|
Ben Duggan sped --
|
|
At each he cried, `Jack Denver's dead!
|
|
Roll up at Talbragar!'
|
|
|
|
That night he passed the humpies of the splitters on the ridge,
|
|
And roused the bullock-drivers camped at Belinfante's Bridge;
|
|
And as he climbed the ridge again the moon shone on the rise;
|
|
The soft white moonbeams glistened in the tears that filled his eyes;
|
|
He dashed the rebel drops away -- for blinding things they are --
|
|
But 'twas his best and truest friend who died on Talbragar.
|
|
|
|
At Blackman's Run
|
|
Before the dawn,
|
|
Ben Duggan cried, `Poor Denver's gone!
|
|
Roll up at Talbragar!'
|
|
|
|
At all the shanties round the place they'd heard his horse's tramp,
|
|
He took the track to Wilson's Luck, and told the diggers' camp;
|
|
But in the gorge by Deadman's Gap the mountain shades were black,
|
|
And there a newly-fallen tree was lying on the track --
|
|
He saw too late, and then he heard the swift hoof's sudden jar,
|
|
And big Ben Duggan ne'er again rode home to Talbragar.
|
|
|
|
`The wretch is drunk,
|
|
And Denver's dead --
|
|
A burning shame!' the people said
|
|
Next day at Talbragar.
|
|
|
|
For thirty miles round Talbragar the boys rolled up in strength,
|
|
And Denver had a funeral a good long mile in length;
|
|
Round Denver's grave that Christmas day rough bushmen's eyes were dim --
|
|
The western bushmen knew the way to bury dead like him;
|
|
But some returning homeward found, by light of moon and star,
|
|
Ben Duggan dying in the rocks, five miles from Talbragar.
|
|
|
|
They knelt around,
|
|
He raised his head
|
|
And faintly gasped, `Jack Denver's dead,
|
|
Roll up at Talbragar!'
|
|
|
|
But one short hour before he died he woke to understand,
|
|
They told him, when he asked them, that the funeral was `grand';
|
|
And then there came into his eyes a strange victorious light,
|
|
He smiled on them in triumph, and his great soul took its flight.
|
|
And still the careless bushmen tell by tent and shanty bar
|
|
How Duggan raised a funeral years back on Talbragar.
|
|
|
|
And far and wide
|
|
When Duggan died,
|
|
The bushmen of the western side
|
|
Rode in to Talbragar.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Star of Australasia
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
We boast no more of our bloodless flag, that rose from a nation's slime;
|
|
Better a shred of a deep-dyed rag from the storms of the olden time.
|
|
From grander clouds in our `peaceful skies' than ever were there before
|
|
I tell you the Star of the South shall rise -- in the lurid clouds of war.
|
|
It ever must be while blood is warm and the sons of men increase;
|
|
For ever the nations rose in storm, to rot in a deadly peace.
|
|
There comes a point that we will not yield, no matter if right or wrong,
|
|
And man will fight on the battle-field
|
|
while passion and pride are strong --
|
|
So long as he will not kiss the rod, and his stubborn spirit sours,
|
|
And the scorn of Nature and curse of God are heavy on peace like ours.
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
There are boys out there by the western creeks, who hurry away from school
|
|
To climb the sides of the breezy peaks or dive in the shaded pool,
|
|
Who'll stick to their guns when the mountains quake
|
|
to the tread of a mighty war,
|
|
And fight for Right or a Grand Mistake as men never fought before;
|
|
When the peaks are scarred and the sea-walls crack
|
|
till the furthest hills vibrate,
|
|
And the world for a while goes rolling back in a storm of love and hate.
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
There are boys to-day in the city slum and the home of wealth and pride
|
|
Who'll have one home when the storm is come, and fight for it side by side,
|
|
Who'll hold the cliffs 'gainst the armoured hells
|
|
that batter a coastal town,
|
|
Or grimly die in a hail of shells when the walls come crashing down.
|
|
And many a pink-white baby girl, the queen of her home to-day,
|
|
Shall see the wings of the tempest whirl the mist of our dawn away --
|
|
Shall live to shudder and stop her ears to the thud of the distant gun,
|
|
And know the sorrow that has no tears when a battle is lost and won, --
|
|
As a mother or wife in the years to come, will kneel, wild-eyed and white,
|
|
And pray to God in her darkened home for the `men in the fort to-night'.
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
But, oh! if the cavalry charge again as they did when the world was wide,
|
|
'Twill be grand in the ranks of a thousand men
|
|
in that glorious race to ride
|
|
And strike for all that is true and strong,
|
|
for all that is grand and brave,
|
|
And all that ever shall be, so long as man has a soul to save.
|
|
He must lift the saddle, and close his `wings', and shut his angels out,
|
|
And steel his heart for the end of things,
|
|
who'd ride with a stockman scout,
|
|
When the race they ride on the battle track, and the waning distance hums,
|
|
And the shelled sky shrieks or the rifles crack
|
|
like stockwhip amongst the gums --
|
|
And the `straight' is reached and the field is `gapped'
|
|
and the hoof-torn sward grows red
|
|
With the blood of those who are handicapped with iron and steel and lead;
|
|
And the gaps are filled, though unseen by eyes,
|
|
with the spirit and with the shades
|
|
Of the world-wide rebel dead who'll rise and rush with the Bush Brigades.
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
All creeds and trades will have soldiers there --
|
|
give every class its due --
|
|
And there'll be many a clerk to spare for the pride of the jackeroo.
|
|
They'll fight for honour and fight for love, and a few will fight for gold,
|
|
For the devil below and for God above, as our fathers fought of old;
|
|
And some half-blind with exultant tears, and some stiff-lipped, stern-eyed,
|
|
For the pride of a thousand after-years and the old eternal pride;
|
|
The soul of the world they will feel and see
|
|
in the chase and the grim retreat --
|
|
They'll know the glory of victory -- and the grandeur of defeat.
|
|
|
|
The South will wake to a mighty change ere a hundred years are done
|
|
With arsenals west of the mountain range and every spur its gun.
|
|
And many a rickety son of a gun, on the tides of the future tossed,
|
|
Will tell how battles were really won that History says were lost,
|
|
Will trace the field with his pipe, and shirk
|
|
the facts that are hard to explain,
|
|
As grey old mates of the diggings work the old ground over again --
|
|
How `this was our centre, and this a redoubt,
|
|
and that was a scrub in the rear,
|
|
And this was the point where the guards held out,
|
|
and the enemy's lines were here.'
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
They'll tell the tales of the nights before
|
|
and the tales of the ship and fort
|
|
Till the sons of Australia take to war as their fathers took to sport,
|
|
Their breath come deep and their eyes grow bright
|
|
at the tales of our chivalry,
|
|
And every boy will want to fight, no matter what cause it be --
|
|
When the children run to the doors and cry:
|
|
`Oh, mother, the troops are come!'
|
|
And every heart in the town leaps high at the first loud thud of the drum.
|
|
They'll know, apart from its mystic charm, what music is at last,
|
|
When, proud as a boy with a broken arm, the regiment marches past.
|
|
And the veriest wreck in the drink-fiend's clutch,
|
|
no matter how low or mean,
|
|
Will feel, when he hears the march, a touch
|
|
of the man that he might have been.
|
|
And fools, when the fiends of war are out and the city skies aflame,
|
|
Will have something better to talk about than an absent woman's shame,
|
|
Will have something nobler to do by far than jest at a friend's expense,
|
|
Or blacken a name in a public bar or over a backyard fence.
|
|
And this you learn from the libelled past,
|
|
though its methods were somewhat rude --
|
|
A nation's born where the shells fall fast, or its lease of life renewed.
|
|
We in part atone for the ghoulish strife,
|
|
and the crimes of the peace we boast,
|
|
And the better part of a people's life in the storm comes uppermost.
|
|
|
|
The self-same spirit that drives the man to the depths of drink and crime
|
|
Will do the deeds in the heroes' van that live till the end of time.
|
|
The living death in the lonely bush, the greed of the selfish town,
|
|
And even the creed of the outlawed push is chivalry -- upside down.
|
|
'Twill be while ever our blood is hot, while ever the world goes wrong,
|
|
The nations rise in a war, to rot in a peace that lasts too long.
|
|
And southern nation and southern state, aroused from their dream of ease,
|
|
Must sign in the Book of Eternal Fate their stormy histories.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Great Grey Plain
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Out West, where the stars are brightest,
|
|
Where the scorching north wind blows,
|
|
And the bones of the dead gleam whitest,
|
|
And the sun on a desert glows --
|
|
Yet within the selfish kingdom
|
|
Where man starves man for gain,
|
|
Where white men tramp for existence --
|
|
Wide lies the Great Grey Plain.
|
|
|
|
No break in its awful horizon,
|
|
No blur in the dazzling haze,
|
|
Save where by the bordering timber
|
|
The fierce, white heat-waves blaze,
|
|
And out where the tank-heap rises
|
|
Or looms when the sunlights wane,
|
|
Till it seems like a distant mountain
|
|
Low down on the Great Grey Plain.
|
|
|
|
No sign of a stream or fountain,
|
|
No spring on its dry, hot breast,
|
|
No shade from the blazing noontide
|
|
Where a weary man might rest.
|
|
Whole years go by when the glowing
|
|
Sky never clouds for rain --
|
|
Only the shrubs of the desert
|
|
Grow on the Great Grey Plain.
|
|
|
|
From the camp, while the rich man's dreaming,
|
|
Come the `traveller' and his mate,
|
|
In the ghastly dawnlight seeming
|
|
Like a swagman's ghost out late;
|
|
And the horseman blurs in the distance,
|
|
While still the stars remain,
|
|
A low, faint dust-cloud haunting
|
|
His track on the Great Grey Plain.
|
|
|
|
And all day long from before them
|
|
The mirage smokes away --
|
|
That daylight ghost of an ocean
|
|
Creeps close behind all day
|
|
With an evil, snake-like motion,
|
|
As the waves of a madman's brain:
|
|
'Tis a phantom NOT like water
|
|
Out there on the Great Grey Plain.
|
|
|
|
There's a run on the Western limit
|
|
Where a man lives like a beast,
|
|
And a shanty in the mulga
|
|
That stretches to the East;
|
|
And the hopeless men who carry
|
|
Their swags and tramp in pain --
|
|
The footmen must not tarry
|
|
Out there on the Great Grey Plain.
|
|
|
|
Out West, where the stars are brightest,
|
|
Where the scorching north wind blows,
|
|
And the bones of the dead seem whitest,
|
|
And the sun on a desert glows --
|
|
Out back in the hungry distance
|
|
That brave hearts dare in vain --
|
|
Where beggars tramp for existence --
|
|
There lies the Great Grey Plain.
|
|
|
|
'Tis a desert not more barren
|
|
Than the Great Grey Plain of years,
|
|
Where a fierce fire burns the hearts of men --
|
|
Dries up the fount of tears:
|
|
Where the victims of a greed insane
|
|
Are crushed in a hell-born strife --
|
|
Where the souls of a race are murdered
|
|
On the Great Grey Plain of Life!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Song of Old Joe Swallow
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
When I was up the country in the rough and early days,
|
|
I used to work along ov Jimmy Nowlett's bullick-drays;
|
|
Then the reelroad wasn't heered on, an' the bush was wild an' strange,
|
|
An' we useter draw the timber from the saw-pits in the range --
|
|
Load provisions for the stations, an' we'd travel far and slow
|
|
Through the plains an' 'cross the ranges in the days of long ago.
|
|
|
|
Then it's yoke up the bullicks and tramp beside 'em slow,
|
|
An' saddle up yer horses an' a-ridin' we will go,
|
|
To the bullick-drivin', cattle-drovin',
|
|
Nigger, digger, roarin', rovin'
|
|
Days o' long ago.
|
|
|
|
Once me and Jimmy Nowlett loaded timber for the town,
|
|
But we hadn't gone a dozen mile before the rain come down,
|
|
An' me an' Jimmy Nowlett an' the bullicks an' the dray
|
|
Was cut off on some risin' ground while floods around us lay;
|
|
An' we soon run short of tucker an' terbacca, which was bad,
|
|
An' pertaters dipped in honey was the only tuck we had.
|
|
|
|
An' half our bullicks perished when the drought was on the land,
|
|
An' the burnin' heat that dazzles as it dances on the sand;
|
|
When the sun-baked clay an' gravel paves for miles the burnin' creeks,
|
|
An' at ev'ry step yer travel there a rottin' carcase reeks --
|
|
But we pulled ourselves together, for we never used ter know
|
|
What a feather bed was good for in those days o' long ago.
|
|
|
|
But in spite ov barren ridges an' in spite ov mud an' heat,
|
|
An' dust that browned the bushes when it rose from bullicks' feet,
|
|
An' in spite ov cold and chilblains when the bush was white with frost,
|
|
An' in spite of muddy water where the burnin' plain was crossed,
|
|
An' in spite of modern progress, and in spite of all their blow,
|
|
'Twas a better land to live in, in the days o' long ago.
|
|
|
|
When the frosty moon was shinin' o'er the ranges like a lamp,
|
|
An' a lot of bullick-drivers was a-campin' on the camp,
|
|
When the fire was blazin' cheery an' the pipes was drawin' well,
|
|
Then our songs we useter chorus an' our yarns we useter tell;
|
|
An' we'd talk ov lands we come from, and ov chaps we useter know,
|
|
For there always was behind us OTHER days o' long ago.
|
|
|
|
Ah, them early days was ended when the reelroad crossed the plain,
|
|
But in dreams I often tramp beside the bullick-team again:
|
|
Still we pauses at the shanty just to have a drop er cheer,
|
|
Still I feels a kind ov pleasure when the campin'-ground is near;
|
|
Still I smells the old tarpaulin me an' Jimmy useter throw
|
|
O'er the timber-truck for shelter in the days ov long ago.
|
|
|
|
I have been a-driftin' back'ards with the changes ov the land,
|
|
An' if I spoke ter bullicks now they wouldn't understand,
|
|
But when Mary wakes me sudden in the night I'll often say:
|
|
`Come here, Spot, an' stan' up, Bally, blank an' blank an' come-eer-way.'
|
|
An' she says that, when I'm sleepin', oft my elerquince 'ill flow
|
|
In the bullick-drivin' language ov the days o' long ago.
|
|
|
|
Well, the pub will soon be closin', so I'll give the thing a rest;
|
|
But if you should drop on Nowlett in the far an' distant west --
|
|
An' if Jimmy uses doubleyou instead of ar an' vee,
|
|
An' if he drops his aitches, then you're sure to know it's he.
|
|
An' yer won't forgit to arsk him if he still remembers Joe
|
|
As knowed him up the country in the days o' long ago.
|
|
|
|
Then it's yoke up the bullicks and tramp beside 'em slow,
|
|
An' saddle up yer horses an' a-ridin' we will go,
|
|
To the bullick-drivin', cattle-drovin',
|
|
Nigger, digger, roarin', rovin'
|
|
Days o' long ago.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Corny Bill
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
His old clay pipe stuck in his mouth,
|
|
His hat pushed from his brow,
|
|
His dress best fitted for the South --
|
|
I think I see him now;
|
|
And when the city streets are still,
|
|
And sleep upon me comes,
|
|
I often dream that me an' Bill
|
|
Are humpin' of our drums.
|
|
|
|
I mind the time when first I came
|
|
A stranger to the land;
|
|
And I was stumped, an' sick, an' lame
|
|
When Bill took me in hand.
|
|
Old Bill was what a chap would call
|
|
A friend in poverty,
|
|
And he was very kind to all,
|
|
And very good to me.
|
|
|
|
We'd camp beneath the lonely trees
|
|
And sit beside the blaze,
|
|
A-nursin' of our wearied knees,
|
|
A-smokin' of our clays.
|
|
Or when we'd journeyed damp an' far,
|
|
An' clouds were in the skies,
|
|
We'd camp in some old shanty bar,
|
|
And sit a-tellin' lies.
|
|
|
|
Though time had writ upon his brow
|
|
And rubbed away his curls,
|
|
He always was -- an' may be now --
|
|
A favourite with the girls;
|
|
I've heard bush-wimmin scream an' squall --
|
|
I've see'd 'em laugh until
|
|
They could not do their work at all,
|
|
Because of Corny Bill.
|
|
|
|
He was the jolliest old pup
|
|
As ever you did see,
|
|
And often at some bush kick-up
|
|
They'd make old Bill M.C.
|
|
He'd make them dance and sing all night,
|
|
He'd make the music hum,
|
|
But he'd be gone at mornin' light
|
|
A-humpin' of his drum.
|
|
|
|
Though joys of which the poet rhymes
|
|
Was not for Bill an' me,
|
|
I think we had some good old times
|
|
Out on the wallaby.
|
|
I took a wife and left off rum,
|
|
An' camped beneath a roof;
|
|
But Bill preferred to hump his drum
|
|
A-paddin' of the hoof.
|
|
|
|
The lazy, idle loafers what
|
|
In toney houses camp
|
|
Would call old Bill a drunken sot,
|
|
A loafer, or a tramp;
|
|
But if the dead should ever dance --
|
|
As poets say they will --
|
|
I think I'd rather take my chance
|
|
Along of Corny Bill.
|
|
|
|
His long life's-day is nearly o'er,
|
|
Its shades begin to fall;
|
|
He soon must mount his bluey for
|
|
The last long tramp of all;
|
|
I trust that when, in bush an' town,
|
|
He's lived and learnt his fill,
|
|
They'll let the golden slip-rails down
|
|
For poor old Corny Bill.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cherry-Tree Inn
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The rafters are open to sun, moon, and star,
|
|
Thistles and nettles grow high in the bar --
|
|
The chimneys are crumbling, the log fires are dead,
|
|
And green mosses spring from the hearthstone instead.
|
|
The voices are silent, the bustle and din,
|
|
For the railroad hath ruined the Cherry-tree Inn.
|
|
|
|
Save the glimmer of stars, or the moon's pallid streams,
|
|
And the sounds of the 'possums that camp on the beams,
|
|
The bar-room is dark and the stable is still,
|
|
For the coach comes no more over Cherry-tree Hill.
|
|
No riders push on through the darkness to win
|
|
The rest and the comfort of Cherry-tree Inn.
|
|
|
|
I drift from my theme, for my memory strays
|
|
To the carrying, digging, and bushranging days --
|
|
Far back to the seasons that I love the best,
|
|
When a stream of wild diggers rushed into the west,
|
|
But the `rushes' grew feeble, and sluggish, and thin,
|
|
Till scarcely a swagman passed Cherry-tree Inn.
|
|
|
|
Do you think, my old mate (if it's thinking you be),
|
|
Of the days when you tramped to the goldfields with me?
|
|
Do you think of the day of our thirty-mile tramp,
|
|
When never a fire could we light on the camp,
|
|
And, weary and footsore and drenched to the skin,
|
|
We tramped through the darkness to Cherry-tree Inn?
|
|
|
|
Then I had a sweetheart and you had a wife,
|
|
And Johnny was more to his mother than life;
|
|
But we solemnly swore, ere that evening was done,
|
|
That we'd never return till our fortunes were won.
|
|
Next morning to harvests of folly and sin
|
|
We tramped o'er the ranges from Cherry-tree Inn.
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
The years have gone over with many a change,
|
|
And there comes an old swagman from over the range,
|
|
And faint 'neath the weight of his rain-sodden load,
|
|
He suddenly thinks of the inn by the road.
|
|
He tramps through the darkness the shelter to win,
|
|
And reaches the ruins of Cherry-tree Inn.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Up the Country
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
I am back from up the country -- very sorry that I went --
|
|
Seeking for the Southern poets' land whereon to pitch my tent;
|
|
I have lost a lot of idols, which were broken on the track,
|
|
Burnt a lot of fancy verses, and I'm glad that I am back.
|
|
Further out may be the pleasant scenes of which our poets boast,
|
|
But I think the country's rather more inviting round the coast.
|
|
Anyway, I'll stay at present at a boarding-house in town,
|
|
Drinking beer and lemon-squashes, taking baths and cooling down.
|
|
|
|
`Sunny plains'! Great Scott! -- those burning
|
|
wastes of barren soil and sand
|
|
With their everlasting fences stretching out across the land!
|
|
Desolation where the crow is! Desert where the eagle flies,
|
|
Paddocks where the luny bullock starts and stares with reddened eyes;
|
|
Where, in clouds of dust enveloped, roasted bullock-drivers creep
|
|
Slowly past the sun-dried shepherd dragged behind his crawling sheep.
|
|
Stunted peak of granite gleaming, glaring like a molten mass
|
|
Turned from some infernal furnace on a plain devoid of grass.
|
|
|
|
Miles and miles of thirsty gutters -- strings of muddy water-holes
|
|
In the place of `shining rivers' -- `walled by cliffs and forest boles.'
|
|
Barren ridges, gullies, ridges! where the ever-madd'ning flies --
|
|
Fiercer than the plagues of Egypt -- swarm about your blighted eyes!
|
|
Bush! where there is no horizon! where the buried bushman sees
|
|
Nothing -- Nothing! but the sameness of the ragged, stunted trees!
|
|
Lonely hut where drought's eternal, suffocating atmosphere
|
|
Where the God-forgotten hatter dreams of city life and beer.
|
|
|
|
Treacherous tracks that trap the stranger,
|
|
endless roads that gleam and glare,
|
|
Dark and evil-looking gullies, hiding secrets here and there!
|
|
Dull dumb flats and stony rises, where the toiling bullocks bake,
|
|
And the sinister `gohanna', and the lizard, and the snake.
|
|
Land of day and night -- no morning freshness, and no afternoon,
|
|
When the great white sun in rising bringeth summer heat in June.
|
|
Dismal country for the exile, when the shades begin to fall
|
|
From the sad heart-breaking sunset, to the new-chum worst of all.
|
|
|
|
Dreary land in rainy weather, with the endless clouds that drift
|
|
O'er the bushman like a blanket that the Lord will never lift --
|
|
Dismal land when it is raining -- growl of floods, and, oh! the woosh
|
|
Of the rain and wind together on the dark bed of the bush --
|
|
Ghastly fires in lonely humpies where the granite rocks are piled
|
|
In the rain-swept wildernesses that are wildest of the wild.
|
|
|
|
Land where gaunt and haggard women live alone and work like men,
|
|
Till their husbands, gone a-droving, will return to them again:
|
|
Homes of men! if home had ever such a God-forgotten place,
|
|
Where the wild selector's children fly before a stranger's face.
|
|
Home of tragedy applauded by the dingoes' dismal yell,
|
|
Heaven of the shanty-keeper -- fitting fiend for such a hell --
|
|
And the wallaroos and wombats, and, of course, the curlew's call --
|
|
And the lone sundowner tramping ever onward through it all!
|
|
|
|
I am back from up the country, up the country where I went
|
|
Seeking for the Southern poets' land whereon to pitch my tent;
|
|
I have shattered many idols out along the dusty track,
|
|
Burnt a lot of fancy verses -- and I'm glad that I am back.
|
|
I believe the Southern poets' dream will not be realised
|
|
Till the plains are irrigated and the land is humanised.
|
|
I intend to stay at present, as I said before, in town
|
|
Drinking beer and lemon-squashes, taking baths and cooling down.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Knocked Up
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
I'm lyin' on the barren ground that's baked and cracked with drought,
|
|
And dunno if my legs or back or heart is most wore out;
|
|
I've got no spirits left to rise and smooth me achin' brow --
|
|
I'm too knocked up to light a fire and bile the billy now.
|
|
|
|
Oh it's trampin', trampin', tra-a-mpin', in flies an' dust an' heat,
|
|
Or it's trampin' trampin' tra-a-a-mpin'
|
|
through mud and slush 'n sleet;
|
|
It's tramp an' tramp for tucker -- one everlastin' strife,
|
|
An' wearin' out yer boots an' heart in the wastin' of yer life.
|
|
|
|
They whine o' lost an' wasted lives in idleness and crime --
|
|
I've wasted mine for twenty years, and grafted all the time
|
|
And never drunk the stuff I earned, nor gambled when I shore --
|
|
But somehow when yer on the track yer life seems wasted more.
|
|
|
|
A long dry stretch of thirty miles I've tramped this broilin' day,
|
|
All for the off-chance of a job a hundred miles away;
|
|
There's twenty hungry beggars wild for any job this year,
|
|
An' fifty might be at the shed while I am lyin' here.
|
|
|
|
The sinews in my legs seem drawn, red-hot -- 'n that's the truth;
|
|
I seem to weigh a ton, and ache like one tremendous tooth;
|
|
I'm stung between my shoulder-blades -- my blessed back seems broke;
|
|
I'm too knocked out to eat a bite -- I'm too knocked up to smoke.
|
|
|
|
The blessed rain is comin' too -- there's oceans in the sky,
|
|
An' I suppose I must get up and rig the blessed fly;
|
|
The heat is bad, the water's bad, the flies a crimson curse,
|
|
The grub is bad, mosquitoes damned -- but rheumatism's worse.
|
|
|
|
I wonder why poor blokes like me will stick so fast ter breath,
|
|
Though Shakespeare says it is the fear of somethin' after death;
|
|
But though Eternity be cursed with God's almighty curse --
|
|
What ever that same somethin' is I swear it can't be worse.
|
|
|
|
For it's trampin', trampin', tra-a-mpin' thro' hell across the plain,
|
|
And it's trampin' trampin' tra-a-mpin' thro' slush 'n mud 'n rain --
|
|
A livin' worse than any dog -- without a home 'n wife,
|
|
A-wearin' out yer heart 'n soul in the wastin' of yer life.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Blue Mountains
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Above the ashes straight and tall,
|
|
Through ferns with moisture dripping,
|
|
I climb beneath the sandstone wall,
|
|
My feet on mosses slipping.
|
|
|
|
Like ramparts round the valley's edge
|
|
The tinted cliffs are standing,
|
|
With many a broken wall and ledge,
|
|
And many a rocky landing.
|
|
|
|
And round about their rugged feet
|
|
Deep ferny dells are hidden
|
|
In shadowed depths, whence dust and heat
|
|
Are banished and forbidden.
|
|
|
|
The stream that, crooning to itself,
|
|
Comes down a tireless rover,
|
|
Flows calmly to the rocky shelf,
|
|
And there leaps bravely over.
|
|
|
|
Now pouring down, now lost in spray
|
|
When mountain breezes sally,
|
|
The water strikes the rock midway,
|
|
And leaps into the valley.
|
|
|
|
Now in the west the colours change,
|
|
The blue with crimson blending;
|
|
Behind the far Dividing Range,
|
|
The sun is fast descending.
|
|
|
|
And mellowed day comes o'er the place,
|
|
And softens ragged edges;
|
|
The rising moon's great placid face
|
|
Looks gravely o'er the ledges.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The City Bushman
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
It was pleasant up the country, City Bushman, where you went,
|
|
For you sought the greener patches and you travelled like a gent;
|
|
And you curse the trams and buses and the turmoil and the push,
|
|
Though you know the squalid city needn't keep you from the bush;
|
|
But we lately heard you singing of the `plains where shade is not',
|
|
And you mentioned it was dusty -- `all was dry and all was hot'.
|
|
|
|
True, the bush `hath moods and changes' -- and the bushman hath 'em, too,
|
|
For he's not a poet's dummy -- he's a man, the same as you;
|
|
But his back is growing rounder -- slaving for the absentee --
|
|
And his toiling wife is thinner than a country wife should be.
|
|
For we noticed that the faces of the folks we chanced to meet
|
|
Should have made a greater contrast to the faces in the street;
|
|
And, in short, we think the bushman's being driven to the wall,
|
|
And it's doubtful if his spirit will be `loyal thro' it all'.
|
|
|
|
Though the bush has been romantic and it's nice to sing about,
|
|
There's a lot of patriotism that the land could do without --
|
|
Sort of BRITISH WORKMAN nonsense that shall perish in the scorn
|
|
Of the drover who is driven and the shearer who is shorn,
|
|
Of the struggling western farmers who have little time for rest,
|
|
And are ruined on selections in the sheep-infested West;
|
|
Droving songs are very pretty, but they merit little thanks
|
|
From the people of a country in possession of the Banks.
|
|
|
|
And the `rise and fall of seasons' suits the rise and fall of rhyme,
|
|
But we know that western seasons do not run on schedule time;
|
|
For the drought will go on drying while there's anything to dry,
|
|
Then it rains until you'd fancy it would bleach the sunny sky --
|
|
Then it pelters out of reason, for the downpour day and night
|
|
Nearly sweeps the population to the Great Australian Bight.
|
|
It is up in Northern Queensland that the seasons do their best,
|
|
But it's doubtful if you ever saw a season in the West;
|
|
There are years without an autumn or a winter or a spring,
|
|
There are broiling Junes, and summers when it rains like anything.
|
|
|
|
In the bush my ears were opened to the singing of the bird,
|
|
But the `carol of the magpie' was a thing I never heard.
|
|
Once the beggar roused my slumbers in a shanty, it is true,
|
|
But I only heard him asking, `Who the blanky blank are you?'
|
|
And the bell-bird in the ranges -- but his `silver chime' is harsh
|
|
When it's heard beside the solo of the curlew in the marsh.
|
|
|
|
Yes, I heard the shearers singing `William Riley', out of tune,
|
|
Saw 'em fighting round a shanty on a Sunday afternoon,
|
|
But the bushman isn't always `trapping brumbies in the night',
|
|
Nor is he for ever riding when `the morn is fresh and bright',
|
|
And he isn't always singing in the humpies on the run --
|
|
And the camp-fire's `cheery blazes' are a trifle overdone;
|
|
We have grumbled with the bushmen round the fire on rainy days,
|
|
When the smoke would blind a bullock and there wasn't any blaze,
|
|
Save the blazes of our language, for we cursed the fire in turn
|
|
Till the atmosphere was heated and the wood began to burn.
|
|
Then we had to wring our blueys which were rotting in the swags,
|
|
And we saw the sugar leaking through the bottoms of the bags,
|
|
And we couldn't raise a chorus, for the toothache and the cramp,
|
|
While we spent the hours of darkness draining puddles round the camp.
|
|
|
|
Would you like to change with Clancy -- go a-droving? tell us true,
|
|
For we rather think that Clancy would be glad to change with you,
|
|
And be something in the city; but 'twould give your muse a shock
|
|
To be losing time and money through the foot-rot in the flock,
|
|
And you wouldn't mind the beauties underneath the starry dome
|
|
If you had a wife and children and a lot of bills at home.
|
|
|
|
Did you ever guard the cattle when the night was inky-black,
|
|
And it rained, and icy water trickled gently down your back
|
|
Till your saddle-weary backbone fell a-aching to the roots
|
|
And you almost felt the croaking of the bull-frog in your boots --
|
|
Sit and shiver in the saddle, curse the restless stock and cough
|
|
Till a squatter's irate dummy cantered up to warn you off?
|
|
Did you fight the drought and pleuro when the `seasons' were asleep,
|
|
Felling sheoaks all the morning for a flock of starving sheep,
|
|
Drinking mud instead of water -- climbing trees and lopping boughs
|
|
For the broken-hearted bullocks and the dry and dusty cows?
|
|
|
|
Do you think the bush was better in the `good old droving days',
|
|
When the squatter ruled supremely as the king of western ways,
|
|
When you got a slip of paper for the little you could earn,
|
|
But were forced to take provisions from the station in return --
|
|
When you couldn't keep a chicken at your humpy on the run,
|
|
For the squatter wouldn't let you -- and your work was never done;
|
|
When you had to leave the missus in a lonely hut forlorn
|
|
While you `rose up Willy Riley' -- in the days ere you were born?
|
|
|
|
Ah! we read about the drovers and the shearers and the like
|
|
Till we wonder why such happy and romantic fellows strike.
|
|
Don't you fancy that the poets ought to give the bush a rest
|
|
Ere they raise a just rebellion in the over-written West?
|
|
Where the simple-minded bushman gets a meal and bed and rum
|
|
Just by riding round reporting phantom flocks that never come;
|
|
Where the scalper -- never troubled by the `war-whoop of the push' --
|
|
Has a quiet little billet -- breeding rabbits in the bush;
|
|
Where the idle shanty-keeper never fails to make a draw,
|
|
And the dummy gets his tucker through provisions in the law;
|
|
Where the labour-agitator -- when the shearers rise in might --
|
|
Makes his money sacrificing all his substance for The Right;
|
|
Where the squatter makes his fortune, and `the seasons rise and fall',
|
|
And the poor and honest bushman has to suffer for it all;
|
|
Where the drovers and the shearers and the bushmen and the rest
|
|
Never reach the Eldorado of the poets of the West.
|
|
|
|
And you think the bush is purer and that life is better there,
|
|
But it doesn't seem to pay you like the `squalid street and square'.
|
|
Pray inform us, City Bushman, where you read, in prose or verse,
|
|
Of the awful `city urchin who would greet you with a curse'.
|
|
There are golden hearts in gutters, though their owners lack the fat,
|
|
And we'll back a teamster's offspring to outswear a city brat.
|
|
Do you think we're never jolly where the trams and buses rage?
|
|
Did you hear the gods in chorus when `Ri-tooral' held the stage?
|
|
Did you catch a ring of sorrow in the city urchin's voice
|
|
When he yelled for Billy Elton, when he thumped the floor for Royce?
|
|
Do the bushmen, down on pleasure, miss the everlasting stars
|
|
When they drink and flirt and so on in the glow of private bars?
|
|
|
|
You've a down on `trams and buses', or the `roar' of 'em, you said,
|
|
And the `filthy, dirty attic', where you never toiled for bread.
|
|
(And about that self-same attic -- Lord! wherever have you been?
|
|
For the struggling needlewoman mostly keeps her attic clean.)
|
|
But you'll find it very jolly with the cuff-and-collar push,
|
|
And the city seems to suit you, while you rave about the bush.
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
You'll admit that Up-the Country, more especially in drought,
|
|
Isn't quite the Eldorado that the poets rave about,
|
|
Yet at times we long to gallop where the reckless bushman rides
|
|
In the wake of startled brumbies that are flying for their hides;
|
|
Long to feel the saddle tremble once again between our knees
|
|
And to hear the stockwhips rattle just like rifles in the trees!
|
|
Long to feel the bridle-leather tugging strongly in the hand
|
|
And to feel once more a little like a native of the land.
|
|
And the ring of bitter feeling in the jingling of our rhymes
|
|
Isn't suited to the country nor the spirit of the times.
|
|
Let us go together droving, and returning, if we live,
|
|
Try to understand each other while we reckon up the div.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Eurunderee
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
There are scenes in the distance where beauty is not,
|
|
On the desolate flats where gaunt appletrees rot.
|
|
Where the brooding old ridge rises up to the breeze
|
|
From his dark lonely gullies of stringy-bark trees,
|
|
There are voice-haunted gaps, ever sullen and strange,
|
|
But Eurunderee lies like a gem in the range.
|
|
|
|
Still I see in my fancy the dark-green and blue
|
|
Of the box-covered hills where the five-corners grew;
|
|
And the rugged old sheoaks that sighed in the bend
|
|
O'er the lily-decked pools where the dark ridges end,
|
|
And the scrub-covered spurs running down from the Peak
|
|
To the deep grassy banks of Eurunderee Creek.
|
|
|
|
On the knolls where the vineyards and fruit-gardens are
|
|
There's a beauty that even the drought cannot mar;
|
|
For I noticed it oft, in the days that are lost,
|
|
As I trod on the siding where lingered the frost,
|
|
When the shadows of night from the gullies were gone
|
|
And the hills in the background were flushed by the dawn.
|
|
|
|
I was there in late years, but there's many a change
|
|
Where the Cudgegong River flows down through the range,
|
|
For the curse of the town with the railroad had come,
|
|
And the goldfields were dead. And the girl and the chum
|
|
And the old home were gone, yet the oaks seemed to speak
|
|
Of the hazy old days on Eurunderee Creek.
|
|
|
|
And I stood by that creek, ere the sunset grew cold,
|
|
When the leaves of the sheoaks are traced on the gold,
|
|
And I thought of old things, and I thought of old folks,
|
|
Till I sighed in my heart to the sigh of the oaks;
|
|
For the years waste away like the waters that leak
|
|
Through the pebbles and sand of Eurunderee Creek.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Mount Bukaroo
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Only one old post is standing --
|
|
Solid yet, but only one --
|
|
Where the milking, and the branding,
|
|
And the slaughtering were done.
|
|
Later years have brought dejection,
|
|
Care, and sorrow; but we knew
|
|
Happy days on that selection
|
|
Underneath old Bukaroo.
|
|
|
|
Then the light of day commencing
|
|
Found us at the gully's head,
|
|
Splitting timber for the fencing,
|
|
Stripping bark to roof the shed.
|
|
Hands and hearts the labour strengthened;
|
|
Weariness we never knew,
|
|
Even when the shadows lengthened
|
|
Round the base of Bukaroo.
|
|
|
|
There for days below the paddock
|
|
How the wilderness would yield
|
|
To the spade, and pick, and mattock,
|
|
While we toiled to win the field.
|
|
Bronzed hands we used to sully
|
|
Till they were of darkest hue,
|
|
`Burning off' down in the gully
|
|
At the back of Bukaroo.
|
|
|
|
When we came the baby brother
|
|
Left in haste his broken toys,
|
|
Shouted to the busy mother:
|
|
`Here is dadda and the boys!'
|
|
Strange it seems that she was able
|
|
For the work that she would do;
|
|
How she'd bustle round the table
|
|
In the hut 'neath Bukaroo!
|
|
|
|
When the cows were safely yarded,
|
|
And the calves were in the pen,
|
|
All the cares of day discarded,
|
|
Closed we round the hut-fire then.
|
|
Rang the roof with boyish laughter
|
|
While the flames o'er-topped the flue;
|
|
Happy days remembered after --
|
|
Far away from Bukaroo.
|
|
|
|
But the years were full of changes,
|
|
And a sorrow found us there;
|
|
For our home amid the ranges
|
|
Was not safe from searching Care.
|
|
On he came, a silent creeper;
|
|
And another mountain threw
|
|
O'er our lives a shadow deeper
|
|
Than the shade of Bukaroo.
|
|
|
|
All the farm is disappearing;
|
|
For the home has vanished now,
|
|
Mountain scrub has choked the clearing,
|
|
Hid the furrows of the plough.
|
|
Nearer still the scrub is creeping
|
|
Where the little garden grew;
|
|
And the old folks now are sleeping
|
|
At the foot of Bukaroo.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Fire at Ross's Farm
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The squatter saw his pastures wide
|
|
Decrease, as one by one
|
|
The farmers moving to the west
|
|
Selected on his run;
|
|
Selectors took the water up
|
|
And all the black soil round;
|
|
The best grass-land the squatter had
|
|
Was spoilt by Ross's Ground.
|
|
|
|
Now many schemes to shift old Ross
|
|
Had racked the squatter's brains,
|
|
But Sandy had the stubborn blood
|
|
Of Scotland in his veins;
|
|
He held the land and fenced it in,
|
|
He cleared and ploughed the soil,
|
|
And year by year a richer crop
|
|
Repaid him for his toil.
|
|
|
|
Between the homes for many years
|
|
The devil left his tracks:
|
|
The squatter pounded Ross's stock,
|
|
And Sandy pounded Black's.
|
|
A well upon the lower run
|
|
Was filled with earth and logs,
|
|
And Black laid baits about the farm
|
|
To poison Ross's dogs.
|
|
|
|
It was, indeed, a deadly feud
|
|
Of class and creed and race;
|
|
But, yet, there was a Romeo
|
|
And a Juliet in the case;
|
|
And more than once across the flats,
|
|
Beneath the Southern Cross,
|
|
Young Robert Black was seen to ride
|
|
With pretty Jenny Ross.
|
|
|
|
One Christmas time, when months of drought
|
|
Had parched the western creeks,
|
|
The bush-fires started in the north
|
|
And travelled south for weeks.
|
|
At night along the river-side
|
|
The scene was grand and strange --
|
|
The hill-fires looked like lighted streets
|
|
Of cities in the range.
|
|
|
|
The cattle-tracks between the trees
|
|
Were like long dusky aisles,
|
|
And on a sudden breeze the fire
|
|
Would sweep along for miles;
|
|
Like sounds of distant musketry
|
|
It crackled through the brakes,
|
|
And o'er the flat of silver grass
|
|
It hissed like angry snakes.
|
|
|
|
It leapt across the flowing streams
|
|
And raced o'er pastures broad;
|
|
It climbed the trees and lit the boughs
|
|
And through the scrubs it roared.
|
|
The bees fell stifled in the smoke
|
|
Or perished in their hives,
|
|
And with the stock the kangaroos
|
|
Went flying for their lives.
|
|
|
|
The sun had set on Christmas Eve,
|
|
When, through the scrub-lands wide,
|
|
Young Robert Black came riding home
|
|
As only natives ride.
|
|
He galloped to the homestead door
|
|
And gave the first alarm:
|
|
`The fire is past the granite spur,
|
|
`And close to Ross's farm.'
|
|
|
|
`Now, father, send the men at once,
|
|
They won't be wanted here;
|
|
Poor Ross's wheat is all he has
|
|
To pull him through the year.'
|
|
`Then let it burn,' the squatter said;
|
|
`I'd like to see it done --
|
|
I'd bless the fire if it would clear
|
|
Selectors from the run.
|
|
|
|
`Go if you will,' the squatter said,
|
|
`You shall not take the men --
|
|
Go out and join your precious friends,
|
|
And don't come here again.'
|
|
`I won't come back,' young Robert cried,
|
|
And, reckless in his ire,
|
|
He sharply turned his horse's head
|
|
And galloped towards the fire.
|
|
|
|
And there, for three long weary hours,
|
|
Half-blind with smoke and heat,
|
|
Old Ross and Robert fought the flames
|
|
That neared the ripened wheat.
|
|
The farmer's hand was nerved by fears
|
|
Of danger and of loss;
|
|
And Robert fought the stubborn foe
|
|
For the love of Jenny Ross.
|
|
|
|
But serpent-like the curves and lines
|
|
Slipped past them, and between,
|
|
Until they reached the bound'ry where
|
|
The old coach-road had been.
|
|
`The track is now our only hope,
|
|
There we must stand,' cried Ross,
|
|
`For nought on earth can stop the fire
|
|
If once it gets across.'
|
|
|
|
Then came a cruel gust of wind,
|
|
And, with a fiendish rush,
|
|
The flames leapt o'er the narrow path
|
|
And lit the fence of brush.
|
|
`The crop must burn!' the farmer cried,
|
|
`We cannot save it now,'
|
|
And down upon the blackened ground
|
|
He dashed the ragged bough.
|
|
|
|
But wildly, in a rush of hope,
|
|
His heart began to beat,
|
|
For o'er the crackling fire he heard
|
|
The sound of horses' feet.
|
|
`Here's help at last,' young Robert cried,
|
|
And even as he spoke
|
|
The squatter with a dozen men
|
|
Came racing through the smoke.
|
|
|
|
Down on the ground the stockmen jumped
|
|
And bared each brawny arm,
|
|
They tore green branches from the trees
|
|
And fought for Ross's farm;
|
|
And when before the gallant band
|
|
The beaten flames gave way,
|
|
Two grimy hands in friendship joined --
|
|
And it was Christmas Day.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Teams
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
A cloud of dust on the long white road,
|
|
And the teams go creeping on
|
|
Inch by inch with the weary load;
|
|
And by the power of the green-hide goad
|
|
The distant goal is won.
|
|
|
|
With eyes half-shut to the blinding dust,
|
|
And necks to the yokes bent low,
|
|
The beasts are pulling as bullocks must;
|
|
And the shining tires might almost rust
|
|
While the spokes are turning slow.
|
|
|
|
With face half-hid 'neath a broad-brimmed hat
|
|
That shades from the heat's white waves,
|
|
And shouldered whip with its green-hide plait,
|
|
The driver plods with a gait like that
|
|
Of his weary, patient slaves.
|
|
|
|
He wipes his brow, for the day is hot,
|
|
And spits to the left with spite;
|
|
He shouts at `Bally', and flicks at `Scot',
|
|
And raises dust from the back of `Spot',
|
|
And spits to the dusty right.
|
|
|
|
He'll sometimes pause as a thing of form
|
|
In front of a settler's door,
|
|
And ask for a drink, and remark `It's warm,
|
|
Or say `There's signs of a thunder-storm';
|
|
But he seldom utters more.
|
|
|
|
But the rains are heavy on roads like these;
|
|
And, fronting his lonely home,
|
|
For weeks together the settler sees
|
|
The teams bogged down to the axletrees,
|
|
Or ploughing the sodden loam.
|
|
|
|
And then when the roads are at their worst,
|
|
The bushman's children hear
|
|
The cruel blows of the whips reversed
|
|
While bullocks pull as their hearts would burst,
|
|
And bellow with pain and fear.
|
|
|
|
And thus with little of joy or rest
|
|
Are the long, long journeys done;
|
|
And thus -- 'tis a cruel war at the best --
|
|
Is distance fought in the mighty West,
|
|
And the lonely battles won.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Cameron's Heart
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The diggings were just in their glory when Alister Cameron came,
|
|
With recommendations, he told me, from friends and a parson `at hame';
|
|
He read me his recommendations -- he called them a part of his plant --
|
|
The first one was signed by an Elder, the other by Cameron's aunt.
|
|
The meenister called him `ungodly -- a stray frae the fauld o' the Lord',
|
|
And his aunt set him down as a spendthrift, `a rebel at hame and abroad'.
|
|
|
|
He got drunk now and then and he gambled (such heroes are often the same);
|
|
That's all they could say in connection with Alister Cameron's name.
|
|
He was straight and he stuck to his country
|
|
and spoke with respect of his kirk;
|
|
He did his full share of the cooking, and more than his share of the work.
|
|
And many a poor devil then, when his strength and his money were spent,
|
|
Was sure of a lecture -- and tucker, and a shakedown in Cameron's tent.
|
|
|
|
He shunned all the girls in the camp,
|
|
and they said he was proof to the dart --
|
|
That nothing but whisky and gaming had ever a place in his heart;
|
|
He carried a packet about him, well hid, but I saw it at last,
|
|
And -- well, 'tis a very old story -- the story of Cameron's past:
|
|
A ring and a sprig o' white heather, a letter or two and a curl,
|
|
A bit of a worn silver chain, and the portrait of Cameron's girl.
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
It chanced in the first of the Sixties that Ally and I and McKean
|
|
Were sinking a shaft on Mundoorin, near Fosberry's puddle-machine.
|
|
The bucket we used was a big one, and rather a weight when 'twas full,
|
|
Though Alister wound it up easy, for he had the strength of a bull.
|
|
He hinted at heart-disease often, but, setting his fancy apart,
|
|
I always believed there was nothing the matter with Cameron's heart.
|
|
|
|
One day I was working below -- I was filling the bucket with clay,
|
|
When Alister cried, `Pack it on, mon! we ought to be bottomed to-day.'
|
|
He wound, and the bucket rose steady and swift to the surface until
|
|
It reached the first log on the top,
|
|
where it suddenly stopped, and hung still.
|
|
I knew what was up in a moment when Cameron shouted to me:
|
|
`Climb up for your life by the footholes.
|
|
I'LL STICK TAE TH' HAUN'LE -- OR DEE!'
|
|
|
|
And those were the last words he uttered.
|
|
He groaned, for I heard him quite plain --
|
|
There's nothing so awful as that when it's wrung from a workman in pain.
|
|
The strength of despair was upon me; I started, and scarcely drew breath,
|
|
But climbed to the top for my life in the fear of a terrible death.
|
|
And there, with his waist on the handle, I saw the dead form of my mate,
|
|
And over the shaft hung the bucket, suspended by Cameron's weight.
|
|
|
|
I wonder did Alister think of the scenes in the distance so dim,
|
|
When Death at the windlass that morning took cruel advantage of him?
|
|
He knew if the bucket rushed down it would murder or cripple his mate --
|
|
His hand on the iron was closed with a grip that was stronger than Fate;
|
|
He thought of my danger, not his, when he felt in his bosom the smart,
|
|
And stuck to the handle in spite of the Finger of Death on his heart.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Shame of Going Back
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
When you've come to make a fortune and you haven't made your salt,
|
|
And the reason of your failure isn't anybody's fault --
|
|
When you haven't got a billet, and the times are very slack,
|
|
There is nothing that can spur you like the shame of going back;
|
|
Crawling home with empty pockets,
|
|
Going back hard-up;
|
|
Oh! it's then you learn the meaning of humiliation's cup.
|
|
|
|
When the place and you are strangers and you struggle all alone,
|
|
And you have a mighty longing for the town where you are known;
|
|
When your clothes are very shabby and the future's very black,
|
|
There is nothing that can hurt you like the shame of going back.
|
|
|
|
When we've fought the battle bravely and are beaten to the wall,
|
|
'Tis the sneers of men, not conscience, that make cowards of us all;
|
|
And the while you are returning, oh! your brain is on the rack,
|
|
And your heart is in the shadow of the shame of going back.
|
|
|
|
When a beaten man's discovered with a bullet in his brain,
|
|
They POST-MORTEM him, and try him, and they say he was insane;
|
|
But it very often happens that he'd lately got the sack,
|
|
And his onward move was owing to the shame of going back.
|
|
|
|
Ah! my friend, you call it nonsense, and your upper lip is curled,
|
|
I can see that you have never worked your passage through the world;
|
|
But when fortune rounds upon you and the rain is on the track,
|
|
You will learn the bitter meaning of the shame of going back;
|
|
Going home with empty pockets,
|
|
Going home hard-up;
|
|
Oh, you'll taste the bitter poison in humiliation's cup.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Since Then
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
I met Jack Ellis in town to-day --
|
|
Jack Ellis -- my old mate, Jack --
|
|
Ten years ago, from the Castlereagh,
|
|
We carried our swags together away
|
|
To the Never-Again, Out Back.
|
|
|
|
But times have altered since those old days,
|
|
And the times have changed the men.
|
|
Ah, well! there's little to blame or praise --
|
|
Jack Ellis and I have tramped long ways
|
|
On different tracks since then.
|
|
|
|
His hat was battered, his coat was green,
|
|
The toes of his boots were through,
|
|
But the pride was his! It was I felt mean --
|
|
I wished that my collar was not so clean,
|
|
Nor the clothes I wore so new.
|
|
|
|
He saw me first, and he knew 'twas I --
|
|
The holiday swell he met.
|
|
Why have we no faith in each other? Ah, why? --
|
|
He made as though he would pass me by,
|
|
For he thought that I might forget.
|
|
|
|
He ought to have known me better than that,
|
|
By the tracks we tramped far out --
|
|
The sweltering scrub and the blazing flat,
|
|
When the heat came down through each old felt hat
|
|
In the hell-born western drought.
|
|
|
|
The cheques we made and the shanty sprees,
|
|
The camps in the great blind scrub,
|
|
The long wet tramps when the plains were seas,
|
|
And the oracles worked in days like these
|
|
For rum and tobacco and grub.
|
|
|
|
Could I forget how we struck `the same
|
|
Old tale' in the nearer West,
|
|
When the first great test of our friendship came --
|
|
But -- well, there's little to praise or blame
|
|
If our mateship stood the test.
|
|
|
|
`Heads!' he laughed (but his face was stern) --
|
|
`Tails!' and a friendly oath;
|
|
We loved her fair, we had much to learn --
|
|
And each was stabbed to the heart in turn
|
|
By the girl who -- loved us both.
|
|
|
|
Or the last day lost on the lignum plain,
|
|
When I staggered, half-blind, half-dead,
|
|
With a burning throat and a tortured brain;
|
|
And the tank when we came to the track again
|
|
Was seventeen miles ahead.
|
|
|
|
Then life seemed finished -- then death began
|
|
As down in the dust I sank,
|
|
But he stuck to his mate as a bushman can,
|
|
Till I heard him saying, `Bear up, old man!'
|
|
In the shade by the mulga tank.
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
He took my hand in a distant way
|
|
(I thought how we parted last),
|
|
And we seemed like men who have nought to say
|
|
And who meet -- `Good-day', and who part -- `Good-day',
|
|
Who never have shared the past.
|
|
|
|
I asked him in for a drink with me --
|
|
Jack Ellis -- my old mate, Jack --
|
|
But his manner no longer was careless and free,
|
|
He followed, but not with the grin that he
|
|
Wore always in days Out Back.
|
|
|
|
I tried to live in the past once more --
|
|
Or the present and past combine,
|
|
But the days between I could not ignore --
|
|
I couldn't help notice the clothes he wore,
|
|
And he couldn't but notice mine.
|
|
|
|
He placed his glass on the polished bar,
|
|
And he wouldn't fill up again;
|
|
For he is prouder than most men are --
|
|
Jack Ellis and I have tramped too far
|
|
On different tracks since then.
|
|
|
|
He said that he had a mate to meet,
|
|
And `I'll see you again,' said he,
|
|
Then he hurried away through the crowded street
|
|
And the rattle of buses and scrape of feet
|
|
Seemed suddenly loud to me.
|
|
|
|
And I almost wished that the time were come
|
|
When less will be left to Fate --
|
|
When boys will start on the track from home
|
|
With equal chances, and no old chum
|
|
Have more or less than his mate.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Peter Anderson and Co.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
He had offices in Sydney, not so many years ago,
|
|
And his shingle bore the legend `Peter Anderson and Co.',
|
|
But his real name was Careless, as the fellows understood --
|
|
And his relatives decided that he wasn't any good.
|
|
'Twas their gentle tongues that blasted any `character' he had --
|
|
He was fond of beer and leisure -- and the Co. was just as bad.
|
|
It was limited in number to a unit, was the Co. --
|
|
'Twas a bosom chum of Peter and his Christian name was Joe.
|
|
|
|
'Tis a class of men belonging to these soul-forsaken years:
|
|
Third-rate canvassers, collectors, journalists and auctioneers.
|
|
They are never very shabby, they are never very spruce --
|
|
Going cheerfully and carelessly and smoothly to the deuce.
|
|
Some are wanderers by profession, `turning up' and gone as soon,
|
|
Travelling second-class, or steerage (when it's cheap they go saloon);
|
|
Free from `ists' and `isms', troubled little by belief or doubt --
|
|
Lazy, purposeless, and useless -- knocking round and hanging out.
|
|
They will take what they can get, and they will give what they can give,
|
|
God alone knows how they manage -- God alone knows how they live!
|
|
They are nearly always hard-up, but are cheerful all the while --
|
|
Men whose energy and trousers wear out sooner than their smile!
|
|
They, no doubt, like us, are haunted by the boresome `if' or `might',
|
|
But their ghosts are ghosts of daylight -- they are men who live at night!
|
|
|
|
Peter met you with the comic smile of one who knows you well,
|
|
And is mighty glad to see you, and has got a joke to tell;
|
|
He could laugh when all was gloomy, he could grin when all was blue,
|
|
Sing a comic song and act it, and appreciate it, too.
|
|
Only cynical in cases where his own self was the jest,
|
|
And the humour of his good yarns made atonement for the rest.
|
|
Seldom serious -- doing business just as 'twere a friendly game --
|
|
Cards or billiards -- nothing graver. And the Co. was much the same.
|
|
|
|
They tried everything and nothing 'twixt the shovel and the press,
|
|
And were more or less successful in their ventures -- mostly less.
|
|
Once they ran a country paper till the plant was seized for debt,
|
|
And the local sinners chuckle over dingy copies yet.
|
|
|
|
They'd been through it all and knew it in the land of Bills and Jims --
|
|
Using Peter's own expression, they had been in `various swims'.
|
|
Now and then they'd take an office, as they called it, -- make a dash
|
|
Into business life as `agents' -- something not requiring cash.
|
|
(You can always furnish cheaply, when your cash or credit fails,
|
|
With a packing-case, a hammer, and a pound of two-inch nails --
|
|
And, maybe, a drop of varnish and sienna, too, for tints,
|
|
And a scrap or two of oilcloth, and a yard or two of chintz).
|
|
They would pull themselves together, pay a week's rent in advance,
|
|
But it never lasted longer than a month by any chance.
|
|
|
|
The office was their haven, for they lived there when hard-up --
|
|
A `daily' for a table cloth -- a jam tin for a cup;
|
|
And if the landlord's bailiff happened round in times like these
|
|
And seized the office-fittings -- well, there wasn't much to seize --
|
|
They would leave him in possession. But at other times they shot
|
|
The moon, and took an office where the landlord knew them not.
|
|
And when morning brought the bailiff there'd be nothing to be seen
|
|
Save a piece of bevelled cedar where the tenant's plate had been;
|
|
There would be no sign of Peter -- there would be no sign of Joe
|
|
Till another portal boasted `Peter Anderson and Co.'
|
|
|
|
And when times were locomotive, billiard-rooms and private bars --
|
|
Spicy parties at the cafe -- long cab-drives beneath the stars;
|
|
Private picnics down the Harbour -- shady campings-out, you know --
|
|
No one would have dreamed 'twas Peter --
|
|
no one would have thought 'twas Joe!
|
|
Free-and-easies in their `diggings', when the funds began to fail,
|
|
Bosom chums, cigars, tobacco, and a case of English ale --
|
|
Gloriously drunk and happy, till they heard the roosters crow --
|
|
And the landlady and neighbours made complaints about the Co.
|
|
But that life! it might be likened to a reckless drinking-song,
|
|
For it can't go on for ever, and it never lasted long.
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
Debt-collecting ruined Peter -- people talked him round too oft,
|
|
For his heart was soft as butter (and the Co.'s was just as soft);
|
|
He would cheer the haggard missus, and he'd tell her not to fret,
|
|
And he'd ask the worried debtor round with him to have a wet;
|
|
He would ask him round the corner, and it seemed to him and her,
|
|
After each of Peter's visits, things were brighter than they were.
|
|
But, of course, it wasn't business -- only Peter's careless way;
|
|
And perhaps it pays in heaven, but on earth it doesn't pay.
|
|
They got harder up than ever, and, to make it worse, the Co.
|
|
Went more often round the corner than was good for him to go.
|
|
|
|
`I might live,' he said to Peter, `but I haven't got the nerve --
|
|
I am going, Peter, going -- going, going -- no reserve.
|
|
Eat and drink and love they tell us, for to-morrow we may die,
|
|
Buy experience -- and we bought it -- we're experienced, you and I.'
|
|
Then, with a weary movement of his hand across his brow:
|
|
`The death of such philosophy's the death I'm dying now.
|
|
Pull yourself together, Peter; 'tis the dying wish of Joe
|
|
That the business world shall honour Peter Anderson and Co.
|
|
|
|
`When you feel your life is sinking in a dull and useless course,
|
|
And begin to find in drinking keener pleasure and remorse --
|
|
When you feel the love of leisure on your careless heart take holt,
|
|
Break away from friends and pleasure, though it give your heart a jolt.
|
|
Shun the poison breath of cities -- billiard-rooms and private bars,
|
|
Go where you can breathe God's air and see the grandeur of the stars!
|
|
Find again and follow up the old ambitions that you had --
|
|
See if you can raise a drink, old man, I'm feelin' mighty bad --
|
|
Hot and sweetened, nip o' butter -- squeeze o' lemon, Pete,' he sighed.
|
|
And, while Peter went to fetch it, Joseph went to sleep -- and died
|
|
With a smile -- anticipation, maybe, of the peace to come,
|
|
Or a joke to try on Peter -- or, perhaps, it was the rum.
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
Peter staggered, gripped the table, swerved as some old drunkard swerves --
|
|
At a gulp he drank the toddy, just to brace his shattered nerves.
|
|
It was awful, if you like. But then he hadn't time to think --
|
|
All is nothing! Nothing matters! Fill your glasses -- dead man's drink.
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
Yet, to show his heart was not of human decency bereft,
|
|
Peter paid the undertaker. He got drunk on what was left;
|
|
Then he shed some tears, half-maudlin, on the grave where lay the Co.,
|
|
And he drifted to a township where the city failures go.
|
|
Where, though haunted by the man he was, the wreck he yet might be,
|
|
Or the man he might have been, or by each spectre of the three,
|
|
And the dying words of Joseph, ringing through his own despair,
|
|
Peter `pulled himself together' and he started business there.
|
|
|
|
But his life was very lonely, and his heart was very sad,
|
|
And no help to reformation was the company he had --
|
|
Men who might have been, who had been, but who were not in the swim --
|
|
'Twas a town of wrecks and failures -- they appreciated him.
|
|
They would ask him who the Co. was -- that queer company he kept --
|
|
And he'd always answer vaguely -- he would say his partner slept;
|
|
That he had a `sleeping partner' -- jesting while his spirit broke --
|
|
And they grinned above their glasses, for they took it as a joke.
|
|
He would shout while he had money, he would joke while he had breath --
|
|
No one seemed to care or notice how he drank himself to death;
|
|
Till at last there came a morning when his smile was seen no more --
|
|
He was gone from out the office, and his shingle from the door,
|
|
And a boundary-rider jogging out across the neighb'ring run
|
|
Was attracted by a something that was blazing in the sun;
|
|
And he found that it was Peter, lying peacefully at rest,
|
|
With a bottle close beside him and the shingle on his breast.
|
|
Well, they analysed the liquor, and it would appear that he
|
|
Qualified his drink with something good for setting spirits free.
|
|
Though 'twas plainly self-destruction -- `'twas his own affair,' they said;
|
|
And the jury viewed him sadly, and they found -- that he was dead.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
When the Children Come Home
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
On a lonely selection far out in the West
|
|
An old woman works all the day without rest,
|
|
And she croons, as she toils 'neath the sky's glassy dome,
|
|
`Sure I'll keep the ould place till the childer come home.'
|
|
|
|
She mends all the fences, she grubs, and she ploughs,
|
|
She drives the old horse and she milks all the cows,
|
|
And she sings to herself as she thatches the stack,
|
|
`Sure I'll keep the ould place till the childer come back.'
|
|
|
|
It is five weary years since her old husband died;
|
|
And oft as he lay on his deathbed he sighed
|
|
`Sure one man can bring up ten children, he can,
|
|
An' it's strange that ten sons cannot keep one old man.'
|
|
|
|
Whenever the scowling old sundowners come,
|
|
And cunningly ask if the master's at home,
|
|
`Be off,' she replies, `with your blarney and cant,
|
|
Or I'll call my son Andy; he's workin' beyant.'
|
|
|
|
`Git out,' she replies, though she trembles with fear,
|
|
For she lives all alone and no neighbours are near;
|
|
But she says to herself, when she's like to despond,
|
|
That the boys are at work in the paddock beyond.
|
|
|
|
Ah, none of her children need follow the plough,
|
|
And some have grown rich in the city ere now;
|
|
Yet she says: `They might come when the shearing is done,
|
|
And I'll keep the ould place if it's only for one.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dan, the Wreck
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Tall, and stout, and solid-looking,
|
|
Yet a wreck;
|
|
None would think Death's finger's hooking
|
|
Him from deck.
|
|
Cause of half the fun that's started --
|
|
`Hard-case' Dan --
|
|
Isn't like a broken-hearted,
|
|
Ruined man.
|
|
|
|
Walking-coat from tail to throat is
|
|
Frayed and greened --
|
|
Like a man whose other coat is
|
|
Being cleaned;
|
|
Gone for ever round the edging
|
|
Past repair --
|
|
Waistcoat pockets frayed with dredging
|
|
After `sprats' no longer there.
|
|
|
|
Wearing summer boots in June, or
|
|
Slippers worn and old --
|
|
Like a man whose other shoon are
|
|
Getting soled.
|
|
Pants? They're far from being recent --
|
|
But, perhaps, I'd better not --
|
|
Says they are the only decent
|
|
Pair he's got.
|
|
|
|
And his hat, I am afraid, is
|
|
Troubling him --
|
|
Past all lifting to the ladies
|
|
By the brim.
|
|
But, although he'd hardly strike a
|
|
Girl, would Dan,
|
|
Yet he wears his wreckage like a
|
|
Gentleman!
|
|
|
|
Once -- no matter how the rest dressed --
|
|
Up or down --
|
|
Once, they say, he was the best-dressed
|
|
Man in town.
|
|
Must have been before I knew him --
|
|
Now you'd scarcely care to meet
|
|
And be noticed talking to him
|
|
In the street.
|
|
|
|
Drink the cause, and dissipation,
|
|
That is clear --
|
|
Maybe friend or kind relation
|
|
Cause of beer.
|
|
And the talking fool, who never
|
|
Reads or thinks,
|
|
Says, from hearsay: `Yes, he's clever;
|
|
But, you know, he drinks.'
|
|
|
|
Been an actor and a writer --
|
|
Doesn't whine --
|
|
Reckoned now the best reciter
|
|
In his line.
|
|
Takes the stage at times, and fills it --
|
|
`Princess May' or `Waterloo'.
|
|
Raise a sneer! -- his first line kills it,
|
|
`Brings 'em', too.
|
|
|
|
Where he lives, or how, or wherefore
|
|
No one knows;
|
|
Lost his real friends, and therefore
|
|
Lost his foes.
|
|
Had, no doubt, his own romances --
|
|
Met his fate;
|
|
Tortured, doubtless, by the chances
|
|
And the luck that comes too late.
|
|
|
|
Now and then his boots are polished,
|
|
Collar clean,
|
|
And the worst grease stains abolished
|
|
By ammonia or benzine:
|
|
Hints of some attempt to shove him
|
|
From the taps,
|
|
Or of someone left to love him --
|
|
Sister, p'r'aps.
|
|
|
|
After all, he is a grafter,
|
|
Earns his cheer --
|
|
Keeps the room in roars of laughter
|
|
When he gets outside a beer.
|
|
Yarns that would fall flat from others
|
|
He can tell;
|
|
How he spent his `stuff', my brothers,
|
|
You know well.
|
|
|
|
Manner puts a man in mind of
|
|
Old club balls and evening dress,
|
|
Ugly with a handsome kind of
|
|
Ugliness.
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
One of those we say of often,
|
|
While hearts swell,
|
|
Standing sadly by the coffin:
|
|
`He looks well.'
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
We may be -- so goes a rumour --
|
|
Bad as Dan;
|
|
But we may not have the humour
|
|
Of the man;
|
|
Nor the sight -- well, deem it blindness,
|
|
As the general public do --
|
|
And the love of human kindness,
|
|
Or the GRIT to see it through!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
A Prouder Man Than You
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
If you fancy that your people came of better stock than mine,
|
|
If you hint of higher breeding by a word or by a sign,
|
|
If you're proud because of fortune or the clever things you do --
|
|
Then I'll play no second fiddle: I'm a prouder man than you!
|
|
|
|
If you think that your profession has the more gentility,
|
|
And that you are condescending to be seen along with me;
|
|
If you notice that I'm shabby while your clothes are spruce and new --
|
|
You have only got to hint it: I'm a prouder man than you!
|
|
|
|
If you have a swell companion when you see me on the street,
|
|
And you think that I'm too common for your toney friend to meet,
|
|
So that I, in passing closely, fail to come within your view --
|
|
Then be blind to me for ever: I'm a prouder man than you!
|
|
|
|
If your character be blameless, if your outward past be clean,
|
|
While 'tis known my antecedents are not what they should have been,
|
|
Do not risk contamination, save your name whate'er you do --
|
|
`Birds o' feather fly together': I'm a prouder bird than you!
|
|
|
|
Keep your patronage for others! Gold and station cannot hide
|
|
Friendship that can laugh at fortune, friendship that can conquer pride!
|
|
Offer this as to an equal -- let me see that you are true,
|
|
And my wall of pride is shattered: I am not so proud as you!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Song and the Sigh
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The creek went down with a broken song,
|
|
'Neath the sheoaks high;
|
|
The waters carried the song along,
|
|
And the oaks a sigh.
|
|
|
|
The song and the sigh went winding by,
|
|
Went winding down;
|
|
Circling the foot of the mountain high,
|
|
And the hillside brown.
|
|
|
|
They were hushed in the swamp of the Dead Man's Crime,
|
|
Where the curlews cried;
|
|
But they reached the river the self-same time,
|
|
And there they died.
|
|
|
|
And the creek of life goes winding on,
|
|
Wandering by;
|
|
And bears for ever, its course upon,
|
|
A song and a sigh.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Cambaroora Star
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
So you're writing for a paper? Well, it's nothing very new
|
|
To be writing yards of drivel for a tidy little screw;
|
|
You are young and educated, and a clever chap you are,
|
|
But you'll never run a paper like the CAMBAROORA STAR.
|
|
Though in point of education I am nothing but a dunce,
|
|
I myself -- you mayn't believe it -- helped to run a paper once
|
|
With a chap on Cambaroora, by the name of Charlie Brown,
|
|
And I'll tell you all about it if you'll take the story down.
|
|
|
|
On a golden day in summer, when the sunrays were aslant,
|
|
Brown arrived in Cambaroora with a little printing plant
|
|
And his worldly goods and chattels -- rather damaged on the way --
|
|
And a weary-looking woman who was following the dray.
|
|
He had bought an empty humpy, and, instead of getting tight,
|
|
Why, the diggers heard him working like a lunatic all night:
|
|
And next day a sign of canvas, writ in characters of tar,
|
|
Claimed the humpy as the office of the CAMBAROORA STAR.
|
|
|
|
Well, I cannot read, that's honest, but I had a digger friend
|
|
Who would read the paper to me from the title to the end;
|
|
And the STAR contained a leader running thieves and spielers down,
|
|
With a slap against claim-jumping, and a poem made by Brown.
|
|
Once I showed it to a critic, and he said 'twas very fine,
|
|
Though he wasn't long in finding glaring faults in every line;
|
|
But it was a song of Freedom -- all the clever critic said
|
|
Couldn't stop that song from ringing, ringing, ringing in my head.
|
|
|
|
So I went where Brown was working in his little hut hard by:
|
|
`My old mate has been a-reading of your writings, Brown,' said I --
|
|
`I have studied on your leader, I agree with what you say,
|
|
You have struck the bed-rock certain, and there ain't no get-away;
|
|
Your paper's just the thumper for a young and growing land,
|
|
And your principles is honest, Brown; I want to shake your hand,
|
|
And if there's any lumping in connection with the STAR,
|
|
Well, I'll find the time to do it, and I'll help you -- there you are!'
|
|
|
|
Brown was every inch a digger (bronzed and bearded in the South),
|
|
But there seemed a kind of weakness round the corners of his mouth
|
|
When he took the hand I gave him; and he gripped it like a vice,
|
|
While he tried his best to thank me, and he stuttered once or twice.
|
|
But there wasn't need for talking -- we'd the same old loves and hates,
|
|
And we understood each other -- Charlie Brown and I were mates.
|
|
So we worked a little `paddock' on a place they called the `Bar',
|
|
And we sank a shaft together, and at night we worked the STAR.
|
|
|
|
Charlie thought and did his writing when his work was done at night,
|
|
And the missus used to `set' it near as quick as he could write.
|
|
Well, I didn't shirk my promise, and I helped the thing, I guess,
|
|
For at night I worked the lever of the crazy printing-press;
|
|
Brown himself would do the feeding, and the missus used to `fly' --
|
|
She is flying with the angels, if there's justice up on high,
|
|
For she died on Cambaroora when the STAR began to go,
|
|
And was buried like the diggers buried diggers long ago.
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|
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|
. . . . .
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|
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|
Lord, that press! It was a jumper -- we could seldom get it right,
|
|
And were lucky if we averaged a hundred in the night.
|
|
Many nights we'd sit together in the windy hut and fold,
|
|
And I helped the thing a little when I struck a patch of gold;
|
|
And we battled for the diggers as the papers seldom do,
|
|
Though when the diggers errored, why, we touched the diggers too.
|
|
Yet the paper took the fancy of that roaring mining town,
|
|
And the diggers sent a nugget with their sympathy to Brown.
|
|
|
|
Oft I sat and smoked beside him in the listening hours of night,
|
|
When the shadows from the corners seemed to gather round the light --
|
|
When his weary, aching fingers, closing stiffly round the pen,
|
|
Wrote defiant truth in language that could touch the hearts of men --
|
|
Wrote until his eyelids shuddered -- wrote until the East was grey:
|
|
Wrote the stern and awful lessons that were taught him in his day;
|
|
And they knew that he was honest, and they read his smallest par,
|
|
For I think the diggers' Bible was the CAMBAROORA STAR.
|
|
|
|
Diggers then had little mercy for the loafer and the scamp --
|
|
If there wasn't law and order, there was justice in the camp;
|
|
And the manly independence that is found where diggers are
|
|
Had a sentinel to guard it in the CAMBAROORA STAR.
|
|
There was strife about the Chinamen, who came in days of old
|
|
Like a swarm of thieves and loafers when the diggers found the gold --
|
|
Like the sneaking fortune-hunters who are always found behind,
|
|
And who only shepherd diggers till they track them to the `find'.
|
|
|
|
Charlie wrote a slinging leader, calling on his digger mates,
|
|
And he said: `We think that Chinkies are as bad as syndicates.
|
|
What's the good of holding meetings where you only talk and swear?
|
|
Get a move upon the Chinkies when you've got an hour to spare.'
|
|
It was nine o'clock next morning when the Chows began to swarm,
|
|
But they weren't so long in going, for the diggers' blood was warm.
|
|
Then the diggers held a meeting, and they shouted: `Hip hoorar!
|
|
Give three ringing cheers, my hearties, for the CAMBAROORA STAR.'
|
|
|
|
But the Cambaroora petered, and the diggers' sun went down,
|
|
And another sort of people came and settled in the town;
|
|
The reefing was conducted by a syndicate or two,
|
|
And they changed the name to `Queensville', for their blood was very blue.
|
|
They wanted Brown to help them put the feathers in their nests,
|
|
But his leaders went like thunder for their vested interests,
|
|
And he fought for right and justice and he raved about the dawn
|
|
Of the reign of Man and Reason till his ads. were all withdrawn.
|
|
|
|
He was offered shares for nothing in the richest of the mines,
|
|
And he could have made a fortune had he run on other lines;
|
|
They abused him for his leaders, and they parodied his rhymes,
|
|
And they told him that his paper was a mile behind the times.
|
|
`Let the times alone,' said Charlie, `they're all right, you needn't fret;
|
|
For I started long before them, and they haven't caught me yet.
|
|
But,' says he to me, `they're coming, and they're not so very far --
|
|
Though I left the times behind me they are following the STAR.
|
|
|
|
`Let them do their worst,' said Charlie, `but I'll never drop the reins
|
|
While a single scrap of paper or an ounce of ink remains:
|
|
I've another truth to tell them, though they tread me in the dirt,
|
|
And I'll print another issue if I print it on my shirt.'
|
|
So we fought the battle bravely, and we did our very best
|
|
Just to make the final issue quite as lively as the rest.
|
|
And the swells in Cambaroora talked of feathers and of tar
|
|
When they read the final issue of the CAMBAROORA STAR.
|
|
|
|
Gold is stronger than the tongue is -- gold is stronger than the pen:
|
|
They'd have squirmed in Cambaroora had I found a nugget then;
|
|
But in vain we scraped together every penny we could get,
|
|
For they fixed us with their boycott, and the plant was seized for debt.
|
|
'Twas a storekeeper who did it, and he sealed the paper's doom,
|
|
Though we gave him ads. for nothing when the STAR began to boom:
|
|
'Twas a paltry bill for tucker, and the crawling, sneaking clown
|
|
Sold the debt for twice its value to the men who hated Brown.
|
|
|
|
I was digging up the river, and I swam the flooded bend
|
|
With a little cash and comfort for my literary friend.
|
|
Brown was sitting sad and lonely with his head bowed in despair,
|
|
While a single tallow candle threw a flicker on his hair,
|
|
And the gusty wind that whistled through the crannies of the door
|
|
Stirred the scattered files of paper that were lying on the floor.
|
|
Charlie took my hand in silence -- and by-and-by he said:
|
|
`Tom, old mate, we did our damnedest, but the brave old STAR is dead.'
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
Then he stood up on a sudden, with a face as pale as death,
|
|
And he gripped my hand a moment, while he seemed to fight for breath:
|
|
`Tom, old friend,' he said, `I'm going, and I'm ready to -- to start,
|
|
For I know that there is something -- something crooked with my heart.
|
|
Tom, my first child died. I loved her even better than the pen --
|
|
Tom -- and while the STAR was dying, why, I felt like I did THEN.
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
Listen! Like the distant thunder of the rollers on the bar --
|
|
Listen, Tom! I hear the -- diggers -- shouting: `Bully for the STAR!''
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
After All
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The brooding ghosts of Australian night have gone from the bush and town;
|
|
My spirit revives in the morning breeze,
|
|
though it died when the sun went down;
|
|
The river is high and the stream is strong,
|
|
and the grass is green and tall,
|
|
And I fain would think that this world of ours is a good world after all.
|
|
|
|
The light of passion in dreamy eyes, and a page of truth well read,
|
|
The glorious thrill in a heart grown cold of the spirit I thought was dead,
|
|
A song that goes to a comrade's heart, and a tear of pride let fall --
|
|
And my soul is strong! and the world to me is a grand world after all!
|
|
|
|
Let our enemies go by their old dull tracks,
|
|
and theirs be the fault or shame
|
|
(The man is bitter against the world who has only himself to blame);
|
|
Let the darkest side of the past be dark, and only the good recall;
|
|
For I must believe that the world, my dear, is a kind world after all.
|
|
|
|
It well may be that I saw too plain, and it may be I was blind;
|
|
But I'll keep my face to the dawning light,
|
|
though the devil may stand behind!
|
|
Though the devil may stand behind my back, I'll not see his shadow fall,
|
|
But read the signs in the morning stars of a good world after all.
|
|
|
|
Rest, for your eyes are weary, girl -- you have driven the worst away --
|
|
The ghost of the man that I might have been is gone from my heart to-day;
|
|
We'll live for life and the best it brings till our twilight shadows fall;
|
|
My heart grows brave, and the world, my girl, is a good world after all.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Marshall's Mate
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
You almost heard the surface bake, and saw the gum-leaves turn --
|
|
You could have watched the grass scorch brown had there been grass to burn.
|
|
In such a drought the strongest heart might well grow faint and weak --
|
|
'Twould frighten Satan to his home -- not far from Dingo Creek.
|
|
|
|
The tanks went dry on Ninety Mile, as tanks go dry out back,
|
|
The Half-Way Spring had failed at last when Marshall missed the track;
|
|
Beneath a dead tree on the plain we saw a pack-horse reel --
|
|
Too blind to see there was no shade, and too done-up to feel.
|
|
And charcoaled on the canvas bag (`twas written pretty clear)
|
|
We read the message Marshall wrote. It said: `I'm taken queer --
|
|
I'm somewhere off of Deadman's Track, half-blind and nearly dead;
|
|
Find Crowbar, get him sobered up, and follow back,' it said.
|
|
|
|
`Let Mitchell go to Bandicoot. You'll find him there,' said Mack.
|
|
`I'll start the chaps from Starving Steers, and take the dry-holes back.'
|
|
We tramped till dark, and tried to track the pack-horse on the sands,
|
|
And just at daylight Crowbar came with Milroy's station hands.
|
|
His cheeks were drawn, his face was white, but he was sober then --
|
|
In times of trouble, fire, and flood, 'twas Crowbar led the men.
|
|
`Spread out as widely as you can each side the track,' said he;
|
|
`The first to find him make a smoke that all the rest can see.'
|
|
|
|
We took the track and followed back where Crowbar followed fate,
|
|
We found a dead man in the scrub -- but 'twas not Crowbar's mate.
|
|
The station hands from Starving Steers were searching all the week --
|
|
But never news of Marshall's fate came back to Dingo Creek.
|
|
And no one, save the spirit of the sand-waste, fierce and lone,
|
|
Knew where Jack Marshall crawled to die -- but Crowbar might have known.
|
|
|
|
He'd scarcely closed his quiet eyes or drawn a sleeping breath --
|
|
They say that Crowbar slept no more until he slept in death.
|
|
A careless, roving scamp, that loved to laugh and drink and joke,
|
|
But no man saw him smile again (and no one saw him smoke),
|
|
And, when we spelled at night, he'd lie with eyes still open wide,
|
|
And watch the stars as if they'd point the place where Marshall died.
|
|
|
|
The search was made as searches are (and often made in vain),
|
|
And on the seventh day we saw a smoke across the plain;
|
|
We left the track and followed back -- 'twas Crowbar still that led,
|
|
And when his horse gave out at last he walked and ran ahead.
|
|
We reached the place and turned again -- dragged back and no man spoke --
|
|
It was a bush-fire in the scrubs that made the cursed smoke.
|
|
And when we gave it best at last, he said, `I'LL see it through,'
|
|
Although he knew we'd done as much as mortal men could do.
|
|
`I'll not -- I won't give up!' he said, his hand pressed to his brow;
|
|
`My God! the cursed flies and ants, they might be at him now.
|
|
I'll see it so in twenty years, 'twill haunt me all my life --
|
|
I could not face his sister, and I could not face his wife.
|
|
It's no use talking to me now -- I'm going back,' he said,
|
|
`I'm going back to find him, and I will -- alive or dead!'
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
He packed his horse with water and provisions for a week,
|
|
And then, at sunset, crossed the plain, away from Dingo Creek.
|
|
We watched him tramp beside the horse till we, as it grew late,
|
|
Could not tell which was Bonypart and which was Marshall's mate.
|
|
The dam went dry at Dingo Creek, and we were driven back,
|
|
And none dared face the Ninety Mile when Crowbar took the track.
|
|
|
|
They saw him at Dead Camel and along the Dry Hole Creeks --
|
|
There came a day when none had heard of Marshall's mate for weeks;
|
|
They'd seen him at No Sunday, he called at Starving Steers --
|
|
There came a time when none had heard of Marshall's mate for years.
|
|
They found old Bonypart at last, picked clean by hungry crows,
|
|
But no one knew how Crowbar died -- the soul of Marshall knows!
|
|
|
|
And now, way out on Dingo Creek, when winter days are late,
|
|
The bushmen talk of Crowbar's ghost `what's looking for his mate';
|
|
For let the fools indulge their mirth, and let the wise men doubt --
|
|
The soul of Crowbar and his mate have travelled further out.
|
|
Beyond the furthest two-rail fence, Colanne and Nevertire --
|
|
Beyond the furthest rabbit-proof, barbed wire and common wire --
|
|
Beyond the furthest `Gov'ment' tank, and past the furthest bore --
|
|
The Never-Never, No Man's Land, No More, and Nevermore --
|
|
Beyond the Land o' Break-o'-Day, and Sunset and the Dawn,
|
|
The soul of Marshall and the soul of Marshall's mate have gone
|
|
Unto that Loving, Laughing Land where life is fresh and clean --
|
|
Where the rivers flow all summer, and the grass is always green.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Poets of the Tomb
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The world has had enough of bards who wish that they were dead,
|
|
'Tis time the people passed a law to knock 'em on the head,
|
|
For 'twould be lovely if their friends could grant the rest they crave --
|
|
Those bards of `tears' and `vanished hopes', those poets of the grave.
|
|
They say that life's an awful thing, and full of care and gloom,
|
|
They talk of peace and restfulness connected with the tomb.
|
|
|
|
They say that man is made of dirt, and die, of course, he must;
|
|
But, all the same, a man is made of pretty solid dust.
|
|
There is a thing that they forget, so let it here be writ,
|
|
That some are made of common mud, and some are made of GRIT;
|
|
Some try to help the world along while others fret and fume
|
|
And wish that they were slumbering in the silence of the tomb.
|
|
|
|
'Twixt mother's arms and coffin-gear a man has work to do!
|
|
And if he does his very best he mostly worries through,
|
|
And while there is a wrong to right, and while the world goes round,
|
|
An honest man alive is worth a million underground.
|
|
And yet, as long as sheoaks sigh and wattle-blossoms bloom,
|
|
The world shall hear the drivel of the poets of the tomb.
|
|
|
|
And though the graveyard poets long to vanish from the scene,
|
|
I notice that they mostly wish their resting-place kept green.
|
|
Now, were I rotting underground, I do not think I'd care
|
|
If wombats rooted on the mound or if the cows camped there;
|
|
And should I have some feelings left when I have gone before,
|
|
I think a ton of solid stone would hurt my feelings more.
|
|
|
|
Such wormy songs of mouldy joys can give me no delight;
|
|
I'll take my chances with the world, I'd rather live and fight.
|
|
Though Fortune laughs along my track, or wears her blackest frown,
|
|
I'll try to do the world some good before I tumble down.
|
|
Let's fight for things that ought to be, and try to make 'em boom;
|
|
We cannot help mankind when we are ashes in the tomb.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Australian Bards and Bush Reviewers
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
While you use your best endeavour to immortalise in verse
|
|
The gambling and the drink which are your country's greatest curse,
|
|
While you glorify the bully and take the spieler's part --
|
|
You're a clever southern writer, scarce inferior to Bret Harte.
|
|
|
|
If you sing of waving grasses when the plains are dry as bricks,
|
|
And discover shining rivers where there's only mud and sticks;
|
|
If you picture `mighty forests' where the mulga spoils the view --
|
|
You're superior to Kendall, and ahead of Gordon too.
|
|
|
|
If you swear there's not a country like the land that gave you birth,
|
|
And its sons are just the noblest and most glorious chaps on earth;
|
|
If in every girl a Venus your poetic eye discerns,
|
|
You are gracefully referred to as the `young Australian Burns'.
|
|
|
|
But if you should find that bushmen -- spite of all the poets say --
|
|
Are just common brother-sinners, and you're quite as good as they --
|
|
You're a drunkard, and a liar, and a cynic, and a sneak,
|
|
Your grammar's simply awful and your intellect is weak.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Ghost
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Down the street as I was drifting with the city's human tide,
|
|
Came a ghost, and for a moment walked in silence by my side --
|
|
Now my heart was hard and bitter, and a bitter spirit he,
|
|
So I felt no great aversion to his ghostly company.
|
|
Said the Shade: `At finer feelings let your lip in scorn be curled,
|
|
`Self and Pelf', my friend, has ever been the motto for the world.'
|
|
|
|
And he said: `If you'd be happy, you must clip your fancy's wings,
|
|
Stretch your conscience at the edges to the size of earthly things;
|
|
Never fight another's battle, for a friend can never know
|
|
When he'll gladly fly for succour to the bosom of the foe.
|
|
At the power of truth and friendship let your lip in scorn be curled --
|
|
`Self and Pelf', my friend, remember, is the motto of the world.
|
|
|
|
`Where Society is mighty, always truckle to her rule;
|
|
Never send an `i' undotted to the teacher of a school;
|
|
Only fight a wrong or falsehood when the crowd is at your back,
|
|
And, till Charity repay you, shut the purse, and let her pack;
|
|
At the fools who would do other let your lip in scorn be curled,
|
|
`Self and Pelf', my friend, remember, that's the motto of the world.
|
|
|
|
`Ne'er assail the shaky ladders Fame has from her niches hung,
|
|
Lest unfriendly heels above you grind your fingers from the rung;
|
|
Or the fools who idle under, envious of your fair renown,
|
|
Heedless of the pain you suffer, do their worst to shake you down.
|
|
At the praise of men, or censure, let your lip in scorn be curled,
|
|
`Self and Pelf', my friend, remember, is the motto of the world.
|
|
|
|
`Flowing founts of inspiration leave their sources parched and dry,
|
|
Scalding tears of indignation sear the hearts that beat too high;
|
|
Chilly waters thrown upon it drown the fire that's in the bard;
|
|
And the banter of the critic hurts his heart till it grows hard.
|
|
At the fame your muse may offer let your lip in scorn be curled,
|
|
`Self and Pelf', my friend, remember, that's the motto of the world.
|
|
|
|
`Shun the fields of love, where lightly, to a low and mocking tune,
|
|
Strong and useful lives are ruined, and the broken hearts are strewn.
|
|
Not a farthing is the value of the honest love you hold;
|
|
Call it lust, and make it serve you! Set your heart on nought but gold.
|
|
At the bliss of purer passions let your lip in scorn be curled --
|
|
`Self and Pelf', my friend, shall ever be the motto of the world.'
|
|
|
|
Then he ceased and looked intently in my face, and nearer drew;
|
|
But a sudden deep repugnance to his presence thrilled me through;
|
|
Then I saw his face was cruel, by the look that o'er it stole,
|
|
Then I felt his breath was poison, by the shuddering of my soul,
|
|
Then I guessed his purpose evil, by his lip in sneering curled,
|
|
And I knew he slandered mankind, by my knowledge of the world.
|
|
|
|
But he vanished as a purer brighter presence gained my side --
|
|
`Heed him not! there's truth and friendship
|
|
in this wondrous world,' she cried,
|
|
And of those who cleave to virtue in their climbing for renown,
|
|
Only they who faint or falter from the height are shaken down.
|
|
At a cynic's baneful teaching let your lip in scorn be curled!
|
|
`Brotherhood and Love and Honour!' is the motto for the world.'
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The End.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
[From Angus & Robertson's July, 1909 section of Advertisements,
|
|
included at the end of one of their books.]
|
|
|
|
|
|
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WHEN THE WORLD WAS WIDE,
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AND OTHER VERSES.
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By Henry Lawson.
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THE ACADEMY: "These ballads (for such they mostly are) abound in
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spirit and manhood, in the colour and smell of Australian soil.
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They deserve the popularity which they have won in Australia, and which,
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we trust, this edition will now give them in England."
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THE SPEAKER: "There are poems in `In the Days When the World was Wide'
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which are of a higher mood than any yet heard in distinctively
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Australian poetry."
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LITERARY WORLD: "Not a few of the pieces have made us feel discontented
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with our sober surroundings, and desirous of seeing new birds,
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new landscapes, new stars; for at times the blood tingles because of
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Mr. Lawson's galloping rhymes."
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NEWCASTLE WEEKLY CHRONICLE: "Swinging, rhythmic verse."
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WHILE THE BILLY BOILS.
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By Henry Lawson.
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THE ACADEMY: "A book of honest, direct, sympathetic, humorous writing
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about Australia from within is worth a library of travellers' tales. . . .
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The result is a real book -- a book in a hundred. His language is terse,
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supple, and richly idiomatic. He can tell a yarn with the best."
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THE SCOTSMAN: "There is no lack of dramatic imagination in
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the construction of the tales; and the best of them contrive to construct
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a strong sensational situation in a couple of pages. But the chief charm
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and value of the book is its fidelity to the rough character of the scenes
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from which it is drawn."
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LITERATURE: "These sketches bring us into contact with one phase
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of colonial life at first hand. . . . The simplicity of the narrative
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gives it almost the effect of a story that is told by word of mouth."
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THE SPECTATOR: "It is strange that one we would venture to call
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the greatest Australian writer should be practically unknown in England.
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Mr. Lawson is a less experienced writer than Mr. Kipling,
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and more unequal, but there are two or three sketches in this volume
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which for vigour and truth can hold their own with even so great a rival.
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Both men have somehow gained that power of concentration
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which by a few strong strokes can set place and people before you
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with amazing force."
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THE TIMES: "A collection of short and vigorous studies and stories
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of Australian life and character. A little in Bret Harte's manner,
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crossed, perhaps, with that of Guy de Maupassant."
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BRITISH WEEKLY: "Many of Mr. Lawson's tales photograph life
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at the diggings or in the bush with an incisive and remorseless reality
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that grips the imagination. He silhouettes a swagman in a couple of pages,
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and the man is there, alive."
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THE MORNING POST: "For the most part they are full of local colour,
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and, correctly speaking, represent rather rapid sketches illustrative of
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life in the bush than tales in the ordinary sense of the word. . . .
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They bear the impress of truth, sincere if unvarnished."
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A few other titles by Henry Lawson:
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Prose: Poetry:
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On the Track When I was King
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Over the Sliprails Popular Verses
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Joe Wilson Humorous Verses
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Joe Wilson's Mates Winnowed Verses
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THE BOOK LOVER: "Any book of Lawson's should be bought and treasured
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by all who care for the real beginnings of Australian literature.
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As a matter of fact, he is the one Australian literary product,
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in any distinctive sense."
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End of this Project Gutenberg Etext of
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In the Days When the World Was Wide and Other Verses
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