Title: Index of the Project Gutenberg Works of Henry Lawson
Author: Henry Lawson
Editor: David Widger
Release date: August 16, 2018 [eBook #57706]
Most recently updated: July 7, 2019
Language: English
Credits: Produced by David Widger
## WHEN THE
WORLD WAS WIDE ## JOE WILSON AND HIS MATES ## ON THE TRACK ## OVER THE SLIPRAILS ## CHILDREN OF THE BUSH ## WHILE THE BILLY BOILS ## THE RISING OF THE COURT ## VERSES POPULAR AND HUMOROUS |
ANOTHER OF MITCHELL'S PLANS FOR THE FUTURE
MITCHELL DOESN'T BELIEVE IN THE SACK
AN ECHO FROM THE OLD BARK SCHOOL
THE SHEARING OF THE COOK'S DOG
Note: Only the prose stories are reproduced here, not the
poetry.
PAGE | |
THE PORTS OF THE OPEN SEA | |
---|---|
Down here where the ships loom large in | 1 |
THE THREE KINGS | |
The East is dead and the West is done, and again our course lies thus:— | 5 |
THE OUTSIDE TRACK | |
There were ten of us there on the moonlit quay, | 8 |
SYDNEY-SIDE | |
Where's the steward?—Bar-room steward? Berth? Oh, any berth will do— | 10 |
THE ROVERS | |
Some born of homely parents | 13 |
FOREIGN LANDS | |
You may roam the wide seas over, follow, meet, and cross the sun,{viii} | 18 |
MARY LEMAINE | |
Jim Duff was a 'native,' as wild as could be; | 22 |
THE SHAKEDOWN ON THE FLOOR | |
Set me back for twenty summers— | 25 |
REEDY RIVER | |
Ten miles down Reedy River | 28 |
OLD STONE CHIMNEY | |
The rising moon on the peaks was blending | 31 |
SONG OF THE OLD BULLOCK-DRIVER | |
Far Back in the days when the blacks used to ramble | 35 |
THE LIGHTS OF COBB AND CO. | |
Fire lighted, on the table a meal for sleepy men, | 39 |
HOW THE LAND WAS WON | |
The future was dark and the past was dead | 45 |
THE BOSS OVER THE BOARD | |
When he's over a rough and unpopular shed,{ix} | 48 |
WHEN THE LADIES COME TO THE SHEARING SHED | |
'The ladies are coming,' the super says | 52 |
THE BALLAD OF THE ROUSEABOUT | |
A rouseabout of rouseabouts, from any land—or none— | 55 |
YEARS AFTER THE WAR IN AUSTRALIA | |
The big rough boys from the runs out back were first where the balls flew free, | 60 |
THE OLD JIMMY WOODSER | |
The old Jimmy Woodser comes into the bar, | 67 |
THE CHRIST OF THE 'NEVER' | |
With eyes that seem shrunken to pierce | 69 |
THE CATTLE-DOG'S DEATH | |
The plains lay bare on the homeward route, | 71 |
THE SONG OF THE DARLING RIVER | |
The skies are brass and the plains are bare, | 73 |
RAIN IN THE MOUNTAINS | |
The valley's full of misty cloud,{x} | 75 |
A MAY NIGHT ON THE MOUNTAINS | |
'Tis a wonderful time when these hours begin, | 76 |
THE NEW CHUM JACKAROO | |
Let bushmen think as bushmen will, | 78 |
THE DONS OF SPAIN | |
The Eagle screams at the beck of trade, so Spain, as the world goes round, | 81 |
THE BURSTING OF THE BOOM | |
The shipping office clerks are 'short,' the manager is gruff— | 84 |
ANTONY VILLA | |
Over there, above the jetty, stands the mansion of the Vardens, | 90 |
SECOND CLASS WAIT HERE | |
On suburban railway stations—you may see them as you pass— | 96 |
THE SHIPS THAT WON'T GO DOWN | |
We hear a great commotion | 99 |
THE MEN WE MIGHT HAVE BEEN | |
When God's wrath-cloud is o'er me{xi} | 101 |
THE WAY OF THE WORLD | |
When fairer faces turn from me, | 103 |
THE BATTLING DAYS | |
So, sit you down in a straight-backed chair, with your pipe and your wife content, | 105 |
WRITTEN AFTERWARDS | |
So the days of my tramping are over, | 108 |
THE UNCULTURED RHYMER TO HIS CULTURED CRITICS | |
Fight through ignorance, want, and care— | 111 |
THE WRITER'S DREAM | |
A writer wrote of the hearts of men, and he followed their tracks afar; | 113 |
THE JOLLY DEAD MARCH | |
If I ever be worthy or famous— | 121 |
MY LITERARY FRIEND | |
Once I wrote a little poem which I thought was very fine, | 125 |
MARY CALLED HIM 'MISTER' | |
They'd parted but a year before—she never thought he'd come,{xii} | 127 |
REJECTED | |
She says she's very sorry, as she sees you to the gate; | 130 |
O'HARA, J.P. | |
James Patrick O'Hara, the Justice of Peace, | 134 |
BILL AND JIM FALL OUT | |
Bill and Jim are mates no longer—they would scorn the name of mate— | 138 |
THE PAROO | |
It was a week from Christmas-time, | 142 |
THE GREEN-HAND ROUSEABOUT | |
Call this hot? I beg your pardon. Hot!—you don't know what it means. | 146 |
THE MAN FROM WATERLOO | |
It was the Man from Waterloo, | 151 |
SAINT PETER | |
Now, I think there is a likeness | 155 |
THE STRANGER'S FRIEND | |
The strangest things, and the maddest things, that a man can do or say,{xiii} | 158 |
THE GOD-FORGOTTEN ELECTION | |
Pat M'Durmer brought the tidings to the town of God-Forgotten: | 162 |
THE BOSS'S BOOTS | |
The shearers squint along the pens, they squint along the 'shoots;' | 168 |
THE CAPTAIN OF THE PUSH | |
As the night was falling slowly down on city, town and bush, | 174 |
BILLY'S 'SQUARE AFFAIR' | |
Long Bill, the captain of the push, was tired of his estate, | 181 |
A DERRY ON A COVE | |
'Twas in the felon's dock he stood, his eyes were black and blue; | 185 |
RISE YE! RISE YE! | |
Rise ye! rise ye! noble toilers! claim your rights with fire and steel! | 187 |
THE BALLAD OF MABEL CLARE | |
Ye children of the Land of Gold,{xiv} | 190 |
CONSTABLE M'CARTHY'S INVESTIGATIONS | |
Most unpleasantly adjacent to the haunts of lower orders | 196 |
AT THE TUG-OF-WAR | |
'Twas in a tug-of-war where I—the guvnor's hope and pride— | 205 |
HERE'S LUCK! | |
Old Time is tramping close to-day—you hear his bluchers fall, | 208 |
THE MEN WHO COME BEHIND | |
There's a class of men (and women) who are always on their guard— | 211 |
THE DAYS WHEN WE WENT SWIMMING | |
The breezes waved the silver grass, | 214 |
THE OLD BARK SCHOOL | |
It was built of bark and poles, and the floor was full of holes | 216 |
TROUBLE ON THE SELECTION | |
You lazy boy, you're here at last, | 220 |
THE PROFESSIONAL WANDERER | |
When you've knocked about the country—been away from home for years;{xv} | 222 |
A LITTLE MISTAKE | |
'Tis a yarn I heard of a new-chum 'trap' | 225 |
A STUDY IN THE "NOOD" | |
He was bare—we don't want to be rude— | 228 |
A WORD TO TEXAS JACK | |
Texas Jack, you are amusin'. By Lord Harry, how I laughed | 231 |
THE GROG-AN'-GRUMBLE STEEPLECHASE | |
'Twixt the coastline and the border lay the town of Grog-an'-Grumble | 237 |
BUT WHAT'S THE USE | |
But what's the use of writing 'bush'— | 242 |
Portrait of the Author | facing title page |
The Lights of Cobb and Co. | title page |
My Literary Friend | page xvi. |