I think this poem speaks for itself about a back breaking
job that should be undertaken only by masochists.
There’s Nothing Worse Than Shearing.
I’m not a one to criticize
A man and what he does,
As long as he can do it well
With the least amount of fuss;
But I’ve been reading lately
That some fellows firmly claim,
Picking stumps will break one’s back
And so will sugar cane.
And though I’m not denying
These aren’t the best of trades,
I still maintain, and always will,
“Get them on the blades”
That’s the job, I tell you,
To sort the men out from the boys,
It guarantees top misery
With hardly any joys.
You shear those stinking wethers
As they struggle at your feet,
And you can be assured, mates,
Their smell is far from sweet.
The cocky’s always moaning
That you’ve cut his priceless rams,
And the board boss keeps insisting
That you’re bludging on the stands.
The tucker’s always lousy
‘Cause the cook is always soused,
The beds before you use them
Have got to be deloused.
You don’t know you’re alive, mate,
Till you’ve had shearers’ boils,
Or until the belyando spew
Is clawing at your coils,
And back ache! You’re complaining!
Back ache! That’s a flamin’ laugh,
A shearer keeps on working
Though his back’s near broke in half.
Believe me, I’m not decrying
That picking stumps is hard,
That cutting cane comes pretty close
To breaking a man’s heart,
But those two jobs are cushy
Compared to
Just spend a day defleecing them
And see which job you’d choose.
So get back to those stumps, lads,
Cut down that sugar cane,
And thank your lucky stars
You’re not in the shearing game.
written by V. P. Read.
1 comment:
Hi Peter ~~ So I've heard !!
Cheers, Merle.
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