<h2> The Ballad of the Drover </h2>
<p>Across the stony ridges,<br/>
Across the rolling plain,<br/>
Young Harry Dale, the drover,<br/>
Comes riding home again.<br/>
And well his stock-horse bears him,<br/>
And light of heart is he,<br/>
And stoutly his old pack-horse<br/>
Is trotting by his knee.<br/>
<br/>
Up Queensland way with cattle<br/>
He travelled regions vast;<br/>
And many months have vanished<br/>
Since home-folk saw him last.<br/>
He hums a song of someone<br/>
He hopes to marry soon;<br/>
And hobble-chains and camp-ware<br/>
Keep jingling to the tune.<br/>
<br/>
Beyond the hazy dado<br/>
Against the lower skies<br/>
And yon blue line of ranges<br/>
The homestead station lies.<br/>
And thitherward the drover<br/>
Jogs through the lazy noon,<br/>
While hobble-chains and camp-ware<br/>
Are jingling to a tune.<br/>
<br/>
An hour has filled the heavens<br/>
With storm-clouds inky black;<br/>
At times the lightning trickles<br/>
Around the drover's track;<br/>
But Harry pushes onward,<br/>
His horses' strength he tries,<br/>
In hope to reach the river<br/>
Before the flood shall rise.<br/>
<br/>
The thunder from above him<br/>
Goes rolling o'er the plain;<br/>
And down on thirsty pastures<br/>
In torrents falls the rain.<br/>
And every creek and gully<br/>
Sends forth its little flood,<br/>
Till the river runs a banker,<br/>
All stained with yellow mud.<br/>
<br/>
Now Harry speaks to Rover,<br/>
The best dog on the plains,<br/>
And to his hardy horses,<br/>
And strokes their shaggy manes;<br/>
'We've breasted bigger rivers<br/>
When floods were at their height<br/>
Nor shall this gutter stop us<br/>
From getting home to-night!'<br/>
<br/>
The thunder growls a warning,<br/>
The ghastly lightnings gleam,<br/>
As the drover turns his horses<br/>
To swim the fatal stream.<br/>
But, oh! the flood runs stronger<br/>
Than e'er it ran before;<br/>
The saddle-horse is failing,<br/>
And only half-way o'er!<br/>
<br/>
When flashes next the lightning,<br/>
The flood's grey breast is blank,<br/>
And a cattle dog and pack-horse<br/>
Are struggling up the bank.<br/>
But in the lonely homestead<br/>
The girl will wait in vain —<br/>
He'll never pass the stations<br/>
In charge of stock again.<br/>
<br/>
The faithful dog a moment<br/>
Sits panting on the bank,<br/>
And then swims through the current<br/>
To where his master sank.<br/>
And round and round in circles<br/>
He fights with failing strength,<br/>
Till, borne down by the waters,<br/>
The old dog sinks at length.<br/>
<br/>
Across the flooded lowlands<br/>
And slopes of sodden loam<br/>
The pack-horse struggles onward,<br/>
To take dumb tidings home.<br/>
And mud-stained, wet, and weary,<br/>
Through ranges dark goes he;<br/>
While hobble-chains and tinware<br/>
Are sounding eerily.<br/>
<br/>
. . . . .<br/>
<br/>
The floods are in the ocean,<br/>
The stream is clear again,<br/>
And now a verdant carpet<br/>
Is stretched across the plain.<br/>
But someone's eyes are saddened,<br/>
And someone's heart still bleeds<br/>
In sorrow for the drover<br/>
Who sleeps among the reeds.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />