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Best Famous Billabongs Poems

Here is a collection of the all-time best famous Billabongs poems. This is a select list of the best famous Billabongs poetry. Reading, writing, and enjoying famous Billabongs poetry (as well as classical and contemporary poems) is a great past time. These top poems are the best examples of billabongs poems.

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Written by Henry Lawson | Create an image from this poem

In the Storm that is to come

 By our place in the midst of the furthest seas we were fated to stand alone -
When the nations fly at each other's throats let Australia look to her own;
Let her spend her gold on the barren west, let her keep her men at home;
For the South must look to the South for strength in the storm that is to come.

Now who shall gallop from cape to cape, and who shall defend our shores - 
The crowd that stand on the kerb agape and glares at the cricket scores?
And who will hold the invader back when the shells tear up the ground - 
The weeds that yelp by the cycling track while a ****** scorches round?

There may be many to man the forts in the big towns beside the sea - 
But the East will call to the West for scouts in the storm that is to be:
The West cries out to the East in drought, but the coastal towns are dumb;
And the East must look to the West for food in the war that is to come.

The rain comes down on the Western land and the rivers run to waste,
When the city folk rush for the special tram in their childless, senseless haste,
And never a pile of a lock we drive - but a few mean tanks we scratch - 
For the fate of a nation is nought compared with the turn of a cricket match!

There's a gutter of mud where there spread a flood from the land-long western creeks,
There is dust and drought on the plains far out where the water lay for weeks,
There's a pitiful dam where a dyke should stretch and a tank where a lake should be,
And the rain goes down through the silt and sand and the floods waste into the seas.

We'll fight for Britain or for Japan, we will fling the land's wealth out;
While every penny and every man should be used to fight the drought.
God helps the nation that helps itself, and the water brings the rain,
And a deadlier foe than the world could send is loose on the western plain.

I saw a vision in days gone by and would dream that dream again
Of the days when the Darling shall not back her billabongs up in vain.
There were reservoirs and grand canals where the Dry Country had been,
And a glorious network of aqueducts, and the fields were always green.

I have seen so long in the land I love what the land I love might be,
Where the Darling rises from Queensland rains and the floods run into the sea.
And it is our fate that we'll wake to late to the truth that we were blind,
With a foreign foe at our harbour gate and a blazing drought behind!


Written by Andrew Barton Paterson | Create an image from this poem

The Story of Mongrel Grey

 This is the story the stockman told 
On the cattle-camp, when the stars were bright; 
The moon rose up like a globe of gold 
And flooded the plain with her mellow light. 
We watched the cattle till dawn of day 
And he told me the story of Mongrel Grey. 
He was a knock-about station hack, 
Spurred and walloped, and banged and beat; 
Ridden all day with a sore on his back, 
Left all night with nothing to eat. 
That was a matter of everyday 
Normal occurrence with Mongrel Grey. 

We might have sold him, but someone heard 
He was bred out back on a flooded run, 
Where he learnt to swim like a waterbird; 
Midnight or midday were all as one -- 
In the flooded ground he would find his way; 
Nothing could puzzle old Mongrel Grey. 

'Tis a trick, no doubt, that some horses learn; 
When the floods are out they will splash along 
In girth-deep water, and twist and turn 
From hidden channel and billabong, 
Never mistaking the road to go; 
for a man may guess -- but the horses know. 

I was camping out with my youngest son -- 
Bit of a nipper, just learnt to speak -- 
In an empty hut on the lower run, 
Shooting and fishing in Conroy's Creek. 
The youngster toddled about all day 
And there with our horses was Mongrel Grey. 

All of a sudden a flood came down, 
At first a freshet of mountain rain, 
Roaring and eddying, rank and brown, 
Over the flats and across the plain. 
Rising and rising -- at fall of night 
Nothing but water appeared in sight! 

'Tis a nasty place when the floods are out, 
Even in daylight; for all around 
Channels and billabongs twist about, 
Stretching for miles in the flooded ground. 
And to move seemed a hopeless thing to try 
In the dark with the storm-water racing by. 

I had to risk it. I heard a roar 
As the wind swept down and the driving rain; 
And the water rose till it reached the floor 
Of our highest room; and 'twas very plain -- 
The way the torrent was sweeping down -- 
We must make for the highlands at once, or drown. 

Off to the stable I splashed, and found 
The horses shaking with cold and fright; 
I led them down to the lower ground, 
But never a yard would they swim that night! 
They reared and snorted and turned away, 
And none would face it but Mongrel Grey. 

I bound the child on the horse's back, 
And we started off, with a prayer to heaven, 
Through the rain and the wind and the pitchy black 
For I knew that the instinct God has given 
To prompt His creatures by night and day 
Would guide the footsteps of Mongrel Grey. 

He struck deep water at once and swam -- 
I swam beside him and held his mane -- 
Till we touched the bank of the broken dam 
In shallow water; then off again, 
Swimming in darkness across the flood, 
Rank with the smell of the drifting mud. 

He turned and twisted across and back, 
Choosing the places to wade or swim, 
Picking the safest and shortest track -- 
The blackest darkness was clear to him. 
Did he strike the crossing by sight or smell? 
The Lord that held him alone could tell! 

He dodged the timber whene'er he could, 
But timber brought us to grief at last; 
I was partly stunned by a log of wood 
That struck my head as it drifted past; 
Then lost my grip of the brave old grey, 
And in half a second he swept away. 

I reached a tree, where I had to stay, 
And did a perish for two days' hard; 
And lived on water -- but Mongrel Grey, 
He walked right into the homestead yard 
At dawn next morning, and grazed around, 
With the child strapped on to him safe and sound. 

We keep him now for the wife to ride, 
Nothing too good for him now, of course; 
Never a whip on his fat old hide, 
For she owes the child to that brave grey horse. 
And not Old Tyson himself could pay 
The purchase money of Mongrel Grey.
Written by Les Murray | Create an image from this poem

The Sleepout

 Childhood sleeps in a verandah room
in an iron bed close to the wall
where the winter over the railing 
swelled the blind on its timber boom

and splinters picked lint off warm linen
and the stars were out over the hill;
then one wall of the room was forest
and all things in there were to come.

Breathings climbed up on the verandah
when dark cattle rubbed at the corner 
and sometimes dim towering rain stood
for forest, and the dry cave hunched woollen.

Inside the forest was lamplit
along tracks to a starry creek bed
and beyond lay the never-fenced country,
its full billabongs all surrounded

by animals and birds, in loud crustings,
and sometimes kept leaping up amongst them.
And out there, to kindle whenever
dark found it, hung the daylight moon.
Written by Henry Lawson | Create an image from this poem

The Song of the Darling River

 The skies are brass and the plains are bare, 
Death and ruin are everywhere -- 
And all that is left of the last year's flood 
Is a sickly stream on the grey-black mud; 
The salt-springs bubble and the quagmires quiver, 
And -- this is the dirge of the Darling River: 

`I rise in the drought from the Queensland rain, 
`I fill my branches again and again; 
`I hold my billabongs back in vain, 
`For my life and my peoples the South Seas drain; 
`And the land grows old and the people never 
`Will see the worth of the Darling River. 

`I drown dry gullies and lave bare hills, 
`I turn drought-ruts into rippling rills -- 
`I form fair island and glades all green 
`Till every bend is a sylvan scene. 
`I have watered the barren land ten leagues wide! 
`But in vain I have tried, ah! in vain I have tried 
`To show the sign of the Great All Giver, 
`The Word to a people: O! lock your river. 

`I want no blistering barge aground, 
`But racing steamers the seasons round; 
`I want fair homes on my lonely ways, 
`A people's love and a people's praise -- 
`And rosy children to dive and swim -- 
`And fair girls' feet in my rippling brim; 
`And cool, green forests and gardens ever' -- 
Oh, this is the hymn of the Darling River. 

The sky is brass and the scrub-lands glare, 
Death and ruin are everywhere; 
Thrown high to bleach, or deep in the mud 
The bones lie buried by last year's flood, 
And the Demons dance from the Never Never 
To laugh at the rise of the Darling River.

Book: Reflection on the Important Things