Friday, December 16, 2005

Ballad of the Drover



This poem is one written by Henry Lawson, Henry was a

contemporary of Banjo Paterson’s and like Banjo a prolific

writer, he was author to much of the classic Australian

poetry and prose of the early 1900s.


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’s traveled regions vast

And many months have vanished

Since home folks saw him last.

He hums a song of someone

He hopes to marry soon;

And hobble-chains and camp-ware

Are jingling to a tune.


Beyond the hazy dado

Against the lower skies

And yon blue line of ranges

The station homestead 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 drovers track;

But Harry pushes onward,

His horses’ strength he tries,

In hope to reach the river

before the flood shall rise.


The thunder pealing o’er him,

Goes rumbling down the plain;

And sweet on thirsty pastures

Beats fast the splashing rain;

Then every creek and gully

Sends forth it’s tribute flood…

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 tonight!”


The thunder growls a warning,

The blue, forked lightning’s gleam;

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 halfway o’er!


When flashes next the lightning

The floods grey breast is blank;

A cattle dog and packhorse

Are struggling up the bank.

But in the lonely homestead

The girl shall wait in vain…

He’ll never pass the stations

In charge of stock again.


The faithful dog a moment

Lies panting on the bank,

Then plunges through the current

To where his master sank,

And round and round in circles

He fights with failing strength,

Till, gripped by wilder waters,

He fails and sinks at length.


Across the flooded lowlands

And slopes of sodden loam

The packhorse struggles bravely

To take dumb tidings home;

And mud-stained, wet and weary,

He goes by rock and tree,

With clanging chains and tinware

All sounding eerily.


Written by Henry Lawson


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