<h2> Up the Country </h2>
<p>I am back from up the country — very sorry that I went —<br/>
Seeking for the Southern poets' land whereon to pitch my tent;<br/>
I have lost a lot of idols, which were broken on the track,<br/>
Burnt a lot of fancy verses, and I'm glad that I am back.<br/>
Further out may be the pleasant scenes of which our poets boast,<br/>
But I think the country's rather more inviting round the coast.<br/>
Anyway, I'll stay at present at a boarding-house in town,<br/>
Drinking beer and lemon-squashes, taking baths and cooling down.<br/>
<br/>
'Sunny plains'! Great Scott! — those burning<br/>
wastes of barren soil and sand<br/>
With their everlasting fences stretching out across the land!<br/>
Desolation where the crow is! Desert where the eagle flies,<br/>
Paddocks where the luny bullock starts and stares with reddened eyes;<br/>
Where, in clouds of dust enveloped, roasted bullock-drivers creep<br/>
Slowly past the sun-dried shepherd dragged behind his crawling sheep.<br/>
Stunted peak of granite gleaming, glaring like a molten mass<br/>
Turned from some infernal furnace on a plain devoid of grass.<br/>
<br/>
Miles and miles of thirsty gutters — strings of muddy water-holes<br/>
In the place of 'shining rivers' — 'walled by cliffs and forest boles.'<br/>
Barren ridges, gullies, ridges! where the ever-madd'ning flies —<br/>
Fiercer than the plagues of Egypt — swarm about your blighted eyes!<br/>
Bush! where there is no horizon! where the buried bushman sees<br/>
Nothing — Nothing! but the sameness of the ragged, stunted trees!<br/>
Lonely hut where drought's eternal, suffocating atmosphere<br/>
Where the God-forgotten hatter dreams of city life and beer.<br/>
<br/>
Treacherous tracks that trap the stranger,<br/>
endless roads that gleam and glare,<br/>
Dark and evil-looking gullies, hiding secrets here and there!<br/>
Dull dumb flats and stony rises, where the toiling bullocks bake,<br/>
And the sinister 'gohanna', and the lizard, and the snake.<br/>
Land of day and night — no morning freshness, and no afternoon,<br/>
When the great white sun in rising bringeth summer heat in June.<br/>
Dismal country for the exile, when the shades begin to fall<br/>
From the sad heart-breaking sunset, to the new-chum worst of all.<br/>
<br/>
Dreary land in rainy weather, with the endless clouds that drift<br/>
O'er the bushman like a blanket that the Lord will never lift —<br/>
Dismal land when it is raining — growl of floods, and, oh! the woosh<br/>
Of the rain and wind together on the dark bed of the bush —<br/>
Ghastly fires in lonely humpies where the granite rocks are piled<br/>
In the rain-swept wildernesses that are wildest of the wild.<br/>
<br/>
Land where gaunt and haggard women live alone and work like men,<br/>
Till their husbands, gone a-droving, will return to them again:<br/>
Homes of men! if home had ever such a God-forgotten place,<br/>
Where the wild selector's children fly before a stranger's face.<br/>
Home of tragedy applauded by the dingoes' dismal yell,<br/>
Heaven of the shanty-keeper — fitting fiend for such a hell —<br/>
And the wallaroos and wombats, and, of course, the curlew's call —<br/>
And the lone sundowner tramping ever onward through it all!<br/>
<br/>
I am back from up the country, up the country where I went<br/>
Seeking for the Southern poets' land whereon to pitch my tent;<br/>
I have shattered many idols out along the dusty track,<br/>
Burnt a lot of fancy verses — and I'm glad that I am back.<br/>
I believe the Southern poets' dream will not be realised<br/>
Till the plains are irrigated and the land is humanised.<br/>
I intend to stay at present, as I said before, in town<br/>
Drinking beer and lemon-squashes, taking baths and cooling down.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0035" id="link2H_4_0035"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />