The Ballad of the Rousabout
A Rouseabout of rouseabouts, from any landor none
I bear a nick-name of the bush, and Ima womans son;
I came from where I campd last night, and, at the day-dawn glow,
I rub the darkness from my eyes, roll up my swag, and go.
Some take the track for bitter pride, some for no pride at all
(Butto us all the world is wide when driven to the wall)
Some take the track for gain in life, some take the track for loss
And some of us take up the swag as Christ took up the Cross.
Some take the track for faith in mensome take the track for doubt
Some flee a squalid home to work their own salvation out.
Some dared not see a mothers tears nor meet a fathers face
Born of good Christian families some leap, head-long, from Grace.
Oh we are men who fought and rose, or fell from many grades;
Some born to lie, and some to pray, were men of many trades;
Were men whose fathers were and are of high and low degree
The sea was open to us and we sailed across the sea.
Andwere our quarrels wrong or just?has no place in my song
We seared our souls in puzzling as to what was right or wrong;
We judge not and we are not judgedtis our philosophy
Theres something wrong with every ship that sails upon the sea.
From shearing shed to shearing shed we tramp to make a cheque
Jack Cornstalk and the neer-do-weelthe tar-boy and the wreck.
We learn the worth of man to manand this we learn too well
The shanty and the shearing shed are warmer spots in hell!
Ive humped my swag to Bawley Plain, and further out and on;
Ive boiled my billy by the Gulf, and boiled it by the Swan
Ive thirsted in dry lignum swamps, and thirsted on the sand,
And eked the fire with camel dung in Never-Never Land.
I know the track from Spencers Gulf and north of Coopers Creek
Where falls the half-caste to the strong, black velvet to the weak
(From gold-top Flossie in the Strand to half-caste and the gin
If they had brains, poor animals! wed teach them how to sin.)
Ive tramped, and camped, and shore and drunk with many mates Out Back
And every one to me is Jack because the first was Jack
A lifer sneaked from jail at homethe straightest mate I met
A ratty Russian Nihilista British Baronet!
I know the tucker tracks that feedor leave one in the lurch
The Burgoo (Presbyterian) trackthe Murphy (Roman Church)
But more the man, and not the track, so much as it appears,
For battling is a trade to learn, and Ive served seven years.
Were haunted by the past at timesand this is very bad,
And so we drink till horrors come, lest, sober, we go mad
So much is lost Out Back, so much of hell is realised
A man might skin himself alive and no one be surprised.
A rouseabout of rouseabouts, abovebeneath regard,
I know how soft is this old world, and I have learnt, how hard
A rouseabout of rouseaboutsI know what men can feel,
Ive seen the tears from hard eyes slip as drops from polished steel.
I learned what college had to teach, and in the school of men
By camp-fires I have learned, or, say, unlearned it all again;
But this Ive learned, that truth is strong, and if a man go straight
Hell live to see his enemy struck down by time and fate!
We hold him true whos true to one however false he be
(Theres something wrong with every ship that lies beside the quay);
We lend and borrow, laugh and joke, and when the past is drowned,
We sit upon our swags and smoke and watch the world go round.
Poems by Henry Lawson