The Barcoo Poem Rhyme Scheme and Analysis
Rhyme Scheme: ABABCDEEDFGFG EEEEBHEIHJKJIFrom the runs of the Narran wide dotted with sheep | A |
And loud with the lowing of cattle | B |
We speed for a land where the strange forests sleep | A |
And the hidden creeks bubble and brattle | B |
Now call on the horses and leave the blind courses | C |
And sources of rivers that all of us know | D |
For crossing the ridges and passing the ledges | E |
And running up gorges we'll come to the verges | E |
Of gullies where waters eternally flow | D |
Oh the herds they will rush down the spurs of the hill | F |
To feed on the grasses so cool and so sweet | G |
And I think that my life with delight will stand still | F |
When we halt with the pleasant Barcoo at our feet | G |
- | |
Good bye to the Barwon and brigalow scrubs | E |
Adieu to the Culgoa ranges | E |
But look for the mulga and salt bitten shrubs | E |
Though the face of the forest land changes | E |
The leagues we may travel down beds of hot gravel | B |
And clay crusted reaches where moisture hath been | H |
While searching for waters may vex us and thwart us | E |
Yet who would be quailing or fainting or failing | I |
Not you who are men of the Narran I ween | H |
When we leave the dry channels away to the south | J |
And reach the far plains we are journeying to | K |
We will cry though our lips may be glued with the drouth | J |
Hip hip and hurrah for the pleasant Barcoo | I |
Henry Kendall
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Poem topics: , Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
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