Skip to content
Linespedia

Golden Gully

Topics: classic

No one lives in Golden Gully, for its golden days are oer,     And its clay shall never sully blucher-boots of diggers more,     For the diggers long have vanished, nought but broken shafts remain,     And the bush, by diggers banished, fast reclaims its own again.     Now, when dying Daylight slowly draws her fingers from the Peak,     The Weird Empress Melancholy rises from the reedy creek,     In the gap above the gully, while the dismal curlews scream     Loud to welcome her as ruler of the dreary night supreme,     Takes her throne, and by her presence fills the strange, uncertain air     With a ghostly phosphorescence of the horrors hidden there.     None would think, by camp-fire blazy, lighting fitfully the scene,     In the seasons that are hazy, how in seasons gone between,     Diggers yarned or joined in jolly ballads of the field and foam,     Or grew sad and melancholy over songs like Home, Sweet Home,     Songs of other times, demanding sullen tears that would not start,     Every digger understanding what was in his comrades heart.     It may seem to you a riddle how a poets fancies roam,     But methinks I hear a fiddle softly playing Home, Sweet Home     Mid the trees, while meditative diggers round the camp-fire stand.     (Those were days before Australians learned to love their native land.)     Now the dismal curlew screeches round the shafts when night winds sough;     Startling murmurs, broken speeches, shake each twisted, tangled bough,     And wheneer the night comes dreary, darkened by the falling rain,     Voices, loud and dread and eerie, come again and come again,     Come like troubled souls forbidden rest until their tales are told,     Tales of deeds of darkness hidden in the whirl of days of gold,     Come like troubled spirits telling tales of dire and dread mishaps,     Kissing, falling, rising, swelling, dying in the dismal gaps.     When the coming daylight slowly lays her fingers on the Peak     Then the Empress Melancholy hurries off to swamps that reek.     But the scene is never cheery, be it sunshine, be it rain,     For the Gully keeps its dreary look till darkness comes again.     As you stand beside the broken shafts, where grass is growing thick,     You can almost hear a spoken word, or hear a thudding pick;     And your very soul seems sinking, foetid grows the morning air,     For you cannot help believing that theres something buried there.     Theres a ring amid the saplings by a travelling circus worn,     That amused the noisy diggers eer the rising race was born;     Theres a road where scrub encroaches that was once the main highway,     Over which two rival coaches dashed in glory twice a day;     Gone, all gone from Golden Gully, for its golden days are oer,     And its clay shall never sully wheels of crowded coaches more.

AI analysis available. Enable JavaScript to interact.

About this line

"No one lives in Golden Gully, for its golden days are oer,..."

"Golden Gully" 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.