<h2> The Roaring Days </h2>
<p>The night too quickly passes<br/>
And we are growing old,<br/>
So let us fill our glasses<br/>
And toast the Days of Gold;<br/>
When finds of wondrous treasure<br/>
Set all the South ablaze,<br/>
And you and I were faithful mates<br/>
All through the roaring days!<br/>
<br/>
Then stately ships came sailing<br/>
From every harbour's mouth,<br/>
And sought the land of promise<br/>
That beaconed in the South;<br/>
Then southward streamed their streamers<br/>
And swelled their canvas full<br/>
To speed the wildest dreamers<br/>
E'er borne in vessel's hull.<br/>
<br/>
Their shining Eldorado,<br/>
Beneath the southern skies,<br/>
Was day and night for ever<br/>
Before their eager eyes.<br/>
The brooding bush, awakened,<br/>
Was stirred in wild unrest,<br/>
And all the year a human stream<br/>
Went pouring to the West.<br/>
<br/>
The rough bush roads re-echoed<br/>
The bar-room's noisy din,<br/>
When troops of stalwart horsemen<br/>
Dismounted at the inn.<br/>
And oft the hearty greetings<br/>
And hearty clasp of hands<br/>
Would tell of sudden meetings<br/>
Of friends from other lands;<br/>
When, puzzled long, the new-chum<br/>
Would recognise at last,<br/>
Behind a bronzed and bearded skin,<br/>
A comrade of the past.<br/>
<br/>
And when the cheery camp-fire<br/>
Explored the bush with gleams,<br/>
The camping-grounds were crowded<br/>
With caravans of teams;<br/>
Then home the jests were driven,<br/>
And good old songs were sung,<br/>
And choruses were given<br/>
The strength of heart and lung.<br/>
Oh, they were lion-hearted<br/>
Who gave our country birth!<br/>
Oh, they were of the stoutest sons<br/>
From all the lands on earth!<br/>
<br/>
Oft when the camps were dreaming,<br/>
And fires began to pale,<br/>
Through rugged ranges gleaming<br/>
Would come the Royal Mail.<br/>
Behind six foaming horses,<br/>
And lit by flashing lamps,<br/>
Old 'Cobb and Co.'s', in royal state,<br/>
Went dashing past the camps.<br/>
<br/>
Oh, who would paint a goldfield,<br/>
And limn the picture right,<br/>
As we have often seen it<br/>
In early morning's light;<br/>
The yellow mounds of mullock<br/>
With spots of red and white,<br/>
The scattered quartz that glistened<br/>
Like diamonds in light;<br/>
The azure line of ridges,<br/>
The bush of darkest green,<br/>
The little homes of calico<br/>
That dotted all the scene.<br/>
<br/>
I hear the fall of timber<br/>
From distant flats and fells,<br/>
The pealing of the anvils<br/>
As clear as little bells,<br/>
The rattle of the cradle,<br/>
The clack of windlass-boles,<br/>
The flutter of the crimson flags<br/>
Above the golden holes.<br/>
<br/>
. . . . .<br/>
<br/>
Ah, then our hearts were bolder,<br/>
And if Dame Fortune frowned<br/>
Our swags we'd lightly shoulder<br/>
And tramp to other ground.<br/>
But golden days are vanished,<br/>
And altered is the scene;<br/>
The diggings are deserted,<br/>
The camping-grounds are green;<br/>
The flaunting flag of progress<br/>
Is in the West unfurled,<br/>
The mighty bush with iron rails<br/>
Is tethered to the world.<br/></p>
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