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Saltbush Bill; J。P。; and Other Verses


By A。 B。 Paterson










Note





Major A。 B。 Paterson has been on active service in Egypt

for the past eighteen months。  The publishers feel it incumbent on them to say

that only a few of the pieces in this volume have been seen by him in proof;

and that he is not responsible for the selection; the arrangement or the title

of 〃Saltbush Bill; J。P。; and Other Verses〃。









Table of Contents







Song of the Pen

  Not for the love of women toil we; we of the craft;



Song of the Wheat

  We have sung the song of the droving days;



Brumby's Run

  It lies beyond the Western Pines



Saltbush Bill on the Patriarchs

  Come all you little rouseabouts and climb upon my knee;



The Reverend Mullineux

  I'd reckon his weight at eight…stun…eight;



The Wisdom of Hafiz

  My son; if you go to the races to battle with Ikey and Mo;



Saltbush Bill; J。P。

  Beyond the land where Leichhardt went;



The Riders in the Stand

  There's some that ride the Robbo style; and bump at every stride;



Waltzing Matilda

  Oh! there once was a swagman camped in the Billabong;



An Answer to Various Bards

  Well; I've waited mighty patient while they all came rolling in;



T。Y。S。O。N。

  Across the Queensland border line



As Long as your Eyes are Blue

  Wilt thou love me; sweet; when my hair is grey



Bottle…O!

  I ain't the kind of bloke as takes to any steady job;



The Story of Mongrel Grey

  This is the story the stockman told;



Gilhooley's Estate

  Oh; Mr。 Gilhooley he turned up his toes;



The Road to Hogan's Gap

  Now look; you see; it's this way like;



A Singer of the Bush

  There is waving of grass in the breeze



〃Shouting〃 for a Camel

  It was over at Coolgardie that a mining speculator;



The Lost Drink

  I had spent the night in the watch…house 



Mulligan's Mare

  Oh; Mulligan's bar was the deuce of a place



The Matrimonial Stakes

  I wooed her with a steeplechase; I won her with a fall;



The Mountain Squatter

  Here in my mountain home;



Pioneers

  They came of bold and roving stock that would not fixed abide;



Santa Claus in the Bush

  It chanced out back at the Christmas time;



〃In Re a Gentleman; One〃

  We see it each day in the paper;



The Melting of the Snow

  There's a sunny Southern land;



A Dream of the Melbourne Cup

  Bring me a quart of colonial beer



The Gundaroo Bullock

  Oh; there's some that breeds the Devon that's as solid as a stone;



Lay of the Motor…Car

  We're away! and the wind whistles shrewd



The Corner Man

  I dreamed a dream at the midnight deep;



When Dacey Rode the Mule

  'Twas to a small; up…country town;



The Mylora Elopement

  By the winding Wollondilly where the weeping willows weep;



The Pannikin Poet

  There's nothing here sublime;



Not on It

  The new chum's polo pony was the smartest pony yet 



The Protest

  I say 'e ISN'T Remorse!



The Scapegoat

  We have all of us read how the Israelites fled



An Evening in Dandaloo

  It was while we held our races 



A Ballad of Ducks

  The railway rattled and roared and swung



Tommy Corrigan

  You talk of riders on the flat; of nerve and pluck and pace;



The Maori's Wool

  Now; this is just a simple tale to tell the reader how



The Angel's Kiss

  An angel stood beside the bed



Sunrise on the Coast

  Grey dawn on the sand…hills  the night wind has drifted



The Reveille

  Trumpets of the Lancer Corps;











            Saltbush Bill; J。P。; and Other Verses











~Song of the Pen







Not for the love of women toil we; we of the craft;

 Not for the people's praise;

Only because our goddess made us her own and laughed;

 Claiming us all our days;



Claiming our best endeavour  body and heart and brain

 Given with no reserve 

Niggard is she towards us; granting us little gain;

 Still; we are proud to serve。



Not unto us is given choice of the tasks we try;

 Gathering grain or chaff;

One of her favoured servants toils at an epic high;

 One; that a child may laugh。



Yet if we serve her truly in our appointed place;

 Freely she doth accord

Unto her faithful servants always this saving grace;

 Work is its own reward!~









Song of the Wheat







We have sung the song of the droving days;

 Of the march of the travelling sheep;

By silent stages and lonely ways

 Thin; white battalions creep。

But the man who now by the land would thrive

 Must his spurs to a plough…share beat。

Is there ever a man in the world alive

 To sing the song of the Wheat!



It's west by south of the Great Divide

 The grim grey plains run out;

Where the old flock…masters lived and died

 In a ceaseless fight with drought。

Weary with waiting and hope deferred

 They were ready to own defeat;

Till at last they heard the master…word 

 And the master…word was Wheat。



Yarran and Myall and Box and Pine 

 'Twas axe and fire for all;

They scarce could tarry to blaze the line

 Or wait for the trees to fall;

Ere the team was yoked; and the gates flung wide;

 And the dust of the horses' feet

Rose up like a pillar of smoke to guide

 The wonderful march of Wheat。



Furrow by furrow; and fold by fold;

 The soil is turned on the plain;

Better than silver and better than gold

 Is the surface…mine of the grain;

Better than cattle and better than sheep

 In the fight with drought and heat;

For a streak of stubbornness; wide and deep;

 Lies hid in a grain of Wheat。



When the stock is swept by the hand of fate;

 Deep down in his bed of clay

The brave brown Wheat will lie and wait

 For the resurrection day:

Lie hid while the whole world thinks him dead;

 But the Spring…rain; soft and sweet;

Will over the steaming paddocks spread

 The first green flush of the Wheat。



Green and amber and gold it grows

 When the sun sinks late in the West;

And the breeze sweeps over the rippling rows

 Where the quail and the skylark nest。

Mountain or river or shining star;

 There's never a sight can beat 

Away to the sky…line stretching far 

 A sea of the ripening Wheat。



When the burning harvest sun sinks low;

 And the shadows stretch on the plain;

The roaring strippers come and go

 Like ships on a sea of grain;

Till the lurching; groaning waggons bear

 Their tale of the load complete。

Of the world's great work he has done his share

 Who has gathered a crop of wheat。



Princes and Potentates and Czars;

 They travel in regal state;

But old King Wheat has a thousand cars

 For his trip to the water…gate;

And his thousand steamships breast the tide

 And plough thro' the wind and sleet

To the lands where the teeming millions bide

 That say:  〃Thank God for Wheat!〃









Brumby's Run



    Brumby is the Aboriginal word for a wild horse。  At a recent trial

    a N。S。W。 Supreme Court Judge; hearing of Brumby horses; asked:

    〃Who is Brumby; and where is his Run?〃







It lies beyond the Western Pines

 Towards the sinking sun;

And not a survey mark defines

 The bounds of 〃Brumby's Run〃。



On odds and ends of mountain land;

 On tracks of range and rock

Where no one else can make a stand;

 Old Brumby rears his stock。



A wild; unhandled lot they are

 Of every shape and breed。

They venture out 'neath moon and star

 Along the flats to feed;



But when the dawn makes pink the sky

 And steals along the plain;

The Brumby horses turn and fly

 Towards the hills again。



The traveller by the mountain…track

 May hear their hoof…beats pass;

And catch a glimpse of brown and black

 Dim shadows on the grass。



The eager stockhorse pricks his ears

 And lifts his head on high

In wild excitement when he hears

 The Brumby mob go by。



Old Brumby asks no price or fee

 O'er all his wide domains:

The man who yards his stock is free

 To keep them for his pains。



So; off to scour the mountain…side

 With eager eyes aglow;

To strongholds where the wild mobs hide

 The gully…rakers go。



A rush of horses through the trees;

 A red shirt making play;

A sound of stockwhips on the breeze;

 They vanish far away!



     。    。    。    。    。



Ah; me! before our day is done

 We long with bitter pain

To ride once more on Brumby's Run

 And yard his mob again。









Saltbush Bill on the Patriarchs







Come all you little rouseabouts and climb upon my knee;

To…day; you see; is Christmas Day; and so it's up to me

To give you some instruction like  a kind of Christmas tale 

So name your yarn; and off she goes。  What; 〃Jonah and the Whale〃?



Well; whales is sheep I've never shore; I've never been to sea;

So all them great L

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