Skip to content
Linespedia

Australian Bards And Bush Reviewers

Topics: classic

While you use your best endeavour to immortalise in verse     The gambling and the drink which are your country's greatest curse,     While you glorify the bully and take the spieler's part,     You're a clever southern writer, scarce inferior to Bret Harte.     If you sing of waving grasses when the plains are dry as bricks,     And discover shining rivers where there's only mud and sticks;     If you picture `mighty forests' where the mulga spoils the view,     You're superior to Kendall, and ahead of Gordon too.     If you swear there's not a country like the land that gave you birth,     And its sons are just the noblest and most glorious chaps on earth;     If in every girl a Venus your poetic eye discerns,     You are gracefully referred to as the `young Australian Burns'.     But if you should find that bushmen, spite of all the poets say,     Are just common brother-sinners, and you're quite as good as they,     You're a drunkard, and a liar, and a cynic, and a sneak,     Your grammar's simply awful and your intellect is weak.

AI analysis available. Enable JavaScript to interact.

About this line

"While you use your best endeavour to immortalise in verse..."

"Australian Bards And Bush Reviewers" is a quintessential example of Henry Lawson's signature style... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

Classified Tags

Related lines

"His old clay pipe stuck in his mouth,     His hat pushed from his brow,     His dress best fitted for the South,     I think I see him now;"

"There is a quiet gentleman a-motoring in France     (Oh, dont you hear the honking of a British motor-car?),     Like any quiet gentleman that"

"A fresh sweet-scented beauty     Came tripping down the street;     She was as fair a vision     As you might chance to meet.     A masher rai"

"O bard of fortune, you deem me nought     But a mark for your careless scorn.     For I am the echo-less grave of thought     That is strangled"

"Here morning in the ploughman's songs is met     Ere yet one footstep shows in all the sky,     And twilight in the east, a doubt as yet,     S"

"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

Continue Reading

"His old clay pipe stuck in his mouth,     His hat ..."

Weekly Poetic Insight

Join our literary Sanctuary

Get the most inspiring lines, poetic analysis, and secret shayaris delivered to your inbox every Sunday.