Prelude

Previous
I have gathered these stories afar,
In the wind and the rain,
In the land where the cattle camps are,
On the edge of the plain.
On the overland routes of the west,
When the watches were long,
I have fashioned in earnest and jest
These fragments of song.

They are just the rude stories one hears
In sadness and mirth,
The records of wandering years,
And scant is their worth
Though their merits indeed are but slight,
I shall not repine,
If they give you one moment's delight,
Old comrades of mine.


CONTENTS

Preface

Prelude

Contents with First Lines:

THE MAN FROM SNOWY RIVER AND OTHER VERSES

The Man from Snowy River

Old Pardon, the Son of Reprieve

Clancy of the Overflow

Conroy's Gap

Our New Horse

An Idyll of Dandaloo

The Geebung Polo Club

The Travelling Post Office

Saltbush Bill

A Mountain Station

Been There Before

The Man Who Was Away

The Man from Ironbark

The Open Steeplechase

The Amateur Rider

On Kiley's Run

Frying Pan's Theology

The Two Devines

In the Droving Days

Lost

Over the Range

Only a Jockey

How M'Ginnis Went Missing

A Voice from the Town

A Bunch of Roses

Black Swans

The All Right 'Un

The Boss of the 'Admiral Lynch'

A Bushman's Song

How Gilbert Died

The Flying Gang

Shearing at Castlereagh

The Wind's Message

Johnson's Antidote

Ambition and Art

The Daylight is Dying

In Defence of the Bush

Last Week

Those Names

A Bush Christening

How the Favourite Beat Us

The Great Calamity

Come-by-Chance

Under the Shadow of Kiley's Hill

Jim Carew

The Swagman's Rest

[From the section of Advertisements at the end of the 1911 printing.]


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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