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ASF Poetry Thread

Paul Keating - The Redfern Address - Australian Labor Party
On December 10, 1992. The Hon. Paul Keating Prime Minister of Australia gave the following address to launch the International Year of the World's Indigenous People. This speech was recently voted as the most important speech ever given in Australia

Roll On A Fair Australia

I personally can’t wait to put a tick upon that square
the one that asks you who should lead "Advance Australia Fair"
and who is best and fairest, so a "Fair Go" is assured
(that day before the three years when the voter is ignored.)

I personally can’t wait to put a tick and take a chance
cos anyone is fairer - for a "Fair Oz" to "Advance"
where boils of racial overtones need learning, light and lance
(and skip the lecture please about my personal finance).

The Sorry movement needed someone capable of feeling
'Twas all about a golden chance to bring about some healing
It didn’t need a “Mein Kampf!!” speech - which brought a black rebuttal-
(which goes down in our history as the moment most un-subtle.)

The black man knows his reptiles, and he calls a snake a snake
He’s watched since Keating's Redfern speech as Canberra turned fake
He wants a white man’s true respect, prepared to have it earned
But he needs a chance – and the chance is here – ....

may the rebuttal be returned.

Howard admits failings on Indigenous issues
check the 1 minute mark
 
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2007/10/15/2059904.htm

Carer's week (could just as easily be mental health I guess - something that doesn't have the jingle of a productivity cash register attached and where less fortunate Aussies are doing it real real tough - in the case of carers, try a life sentence - closest thing you can compare it to)
http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2007/10/16/2060642.htm

THE LONELY VOICE OF CARERS IN AN ELECTION CAMPAIGN

Forget the nation's dilemnas
forget its moral soul
forget single mum's bleak Decembers
or the carers left out in the cold
forget the nation's ethics
let's go for something more bold
....
what they offer to be re-elected
are thirty odd pieces of gold
 
One of my favourites:

The Story of Mongrel Grey

This is the story the stockman told
On the cattle-camp, when the stars were bright;
The moon rose up like a globe of gold
And flooded the plain with her mellow light.
We watched the cattle till dawn of day
And he told me the story of Mongrel Grey.

He was a knock-about station hack,
Spurred and walloped, and banged and beat;
Ridden all day with a sore on his back,
Left all night with nothing to eat.
That was a matter of everyday
Normal occurrence with Mongrel Grey.

We might have sold him, but someone heard
He was bred out back on a flooded run,
Where he learnt to swim like a waterbird;
Midnight or midday were all as one --
In the flooded ground he would find his way;
Nothing could puzzle old Mongrel Grey.

'Tis a trick, no doubt, that some horses learn;
When the floods are out they will splash along
In girth-deep water, and twist and turn
From hidden channel and billabong,
Never mistaking the road to go;
for a man may guess -- but the horses know.

I was camping out with my youngest son --
Bit of a nipper, just learnt to speak --
In an empty hut on the lower run,
Shooting and fishing in Conroy's Creek.
The youngster toddled about all day
And there with our horses was Mongrel Grey.

All of a sudden a flood came down,
At first a freshet of mountain rain,
Roaring and eddying, rank and brown,
Over the flats and across the plain.
Rising and rising -- at fall of night
Nothing but water appeared in sight!

'Tis a nasty place when the floods are out,
Even in daylight; for all around
Channels and billabongs twist about,
Stretching for miles in the flooded ground.
And to move seemed a hopeless thing to try
In the dark with the storm-water racing by.

I had to risk it. I heard a roar
As the wind swept down and the driving rain;
And the water rose till it reached the floor
Of our highest room; and 'twas very plain --
The way the torrent was sweeping down --
We must make for the highlands at once, or drown.

Off to the stable I splashed, and found
The horses shaking with cold and fright;
I led them down to the lower ground,
But never a yard would they swim that night!
They reared and snorted and turned away,
And none would face it but Mongrel Grey.

I bound the child on the horse's back,
And we started off, with a prayer to heaven,
Through the rain and the wind and the pitchy black
For I knew that the instinct God has given
To prompt His creatures by night and day
Would guide the footsteps of Mongrel Grey.

He struck deep water at once and swam --
I swam beside him and held his mane --
Till we touched the bank of the broken dam
In shallow water; then off again,
Swimming in darkness across the flood,
Rank with the smell of the drifting mud.

He turned and twisted across and back,
Choosing the places to wade or swim,
Picking the safest and shortest track --
The blackest darkness was clear to him.
Did he strike the crossing by sight or smell?
The Lord that held him alone could tell!

He dodged the timber whene'er he could,
But timber brought us to grief at last;
I was partly stunned by a log of wood
That struck my head as it drifted past;
Then lost my grip of the brave old grey,
And in half a second he swept away.

I reached a tree, where I had to stay,
And did a perish for two days' hard;
And lived on water -- but Mongrel Grey,
He walked right into the homestead yard
At dawn next morning, and grazed around,
With the child strapped on to him safe and sound.

We keep him now for the wife to ride,
Nothing too good for him now, of course;
Never a whip on his fat old hide,
For she owes the child to that brave grey horse.
And not Old Tyson himself could pay
The purchase money of Mongrel Grey.

A B Banjo Paterson
 
Here you go Wayne - a going away present
must admit, I've always pictured the water a bit deeper than she's painted it here lol.

PS I agree - that is one ripper poem.
http://www.acay.com.au/~severn/illust/illust.htm
 

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Obviously some difference of opinion between Banjo Paterson and Henry Lawson (the solicitor and the sometimes-alcohol-challenged-but-loved story teller) ....

http://whitewolf.newcastle.edu.au/w...o/verse/saltbushbillandother/answerbards.html

An Answer to Various Bards
Andrew Barton ‘Banjo’ Paterson

WELL, I’ve waited mighty patient while they all came rolling in,
Mister Lawson, Mister Dyson, and the others of their kin,
With their dreadful, dismal stories of the Overlander’s camp,
How his fire is always smoky, and his boots are always damp;
And they paint it so terrific it would fill one’s soul with gloom,
But you know they’re fond of writing about “corpses” and “the tomb”.
So, before they curse the bushland they should let their fancy range,
And take something for their livers, and be cheerful for a change.

Now, for instance, Mr. Lawson—well, of course, we almost cried
At the sorrowful description how his “little ’Arvie” died,
And we lachrymosed in silence when “His Father’s Mate” was slain;
Then he went and killed the father, and we had to weep again.
Ben Duggan and Jack Denver, too, he caused them to expire,
And he went and cooked the gander of Jack Dunn, of Nevertire;
So, no doubt, the bush is wretched if you judge it by the groan
Of the sad and soulful poet with a graveyard of his own.


And he spoke in terms prophetic of a revolution’s heat,
When the world should hear the clamour of those people in the street;
But the shearer chaps who start it—why, he rounds on them in blame,
And he calls ’em “agitators” who are living on the game.
But I “over-write” the bushmen! Well, I own without a doubt
That I always see a hero in the “man from furthest out”.
I could never contemplate him through an atmosphere of gloom,
And a bushman never struck me as a subject for “the tomb”.


If it ain’t all “golden sunshine” where the “wattle branches wave”,
Well, it ain’t all damp and dismal, and it ain’t all “lonely grave”.
And, of course, there’s no denying that the bushman’s life is rough,
But a man can easy stand it if he’s built of sterling stuff;

Tho’ it’s seldom that the drover gets a bed of eider-down,
Yet the man who’s born a bushman, he gets mighty sick of town,
For he’s jotting down the figures, and he’s adding up the bills
While his heart is simply aching for a sight of Southern hills.

Then he hears a wool-team passing with a rumble and a lurch,
And, although the work is pressing, yet it brings him off his perch.
For it stirs him like a message from his station friends afar
And he seems to sniff the ranges in the scent of wool and tar;
And it takes him back in fancy, half in laughter, half in tears,
To a sound of other voices and a thought of other years,
When the woolshed rang with bustle from the dawning of the day,
And the shear-blades were a-clicking to the cry of “Wool away!”

Then his face was somewhat browner and his frame was firmer set—
And he feels his flabby muscles with a feeling of regret.
But the wool-team slowly passes, and his eyes go sadly back
To the dusty little table and the papers in the rack,
And his thoughts go to the terrace where his sickly children squall,
And he thinks there’s something healthy in the bush-life after all.
But we’ll go no more a-droving in the wind or in the sun,
For our fathers’ hearts have failed us and the droving days are done.

There’s a nasty dash of danger where the long-horned bullock wheels,
And we like to live in comfort and to get our reg’lar meals.
For to hang around the townships suits us better, you’ll agree,
And a job at washing bottles is the job for such as we.
Let us herd into the cities, let us crush and crowd and push
Till we lose the love of roving and we learn to hate the bush;
And we’ll turn our aspirations to a city life and beer,
And we’ll slip across to England—it’s a nicer place than here
;

For there’s not much risk of hardship where all comforts are in store,
And the theatres are plenty and the pubs are more and more.
But that ends it, Mr. Lawson, and it’s time to say good-bye,
We must agree to differ in all friendship, you and I;
So we’ll work our own salvation with the stoutest hearts we may,
And if fortune only favours we will take the road some day,
And go droving down the river ’neath the sunshine and the stars,
And then return to Sydney and vermilionize the bars.

('vermilionize' = paint blood red (?), colourful language perhaps?)
 
Benny's in the poo again
He's got himself arrested
But not for indecent exposure
Although he was bare-chested

Give us a sample of your blood young Ben
He heard the coppers say
But Benny flatly refused to comply
His answer was "No Way"

So they searched the car from top to bottom
Until they found the loot
They cuffed our Benny on the spot
And chucked him in the boot

The Eagles have to sack him now
They have no other choice
They have to get together
And speak with one loud voice

The trouble with these heroes is
They get paid too much money
With so much time to spend it
They flush it down the dunny

Juddy's gone to Carlton now
And Wooden has retired
Chicky's not on contract
And Benny "you are fired"

But alls not lost, do not despair
You'll have to face your 'Mockers'
You've done the crime, now do your time
And come and join the Dockers!!


yeah i think benny and the dockers deserve eachother
 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Earth_clock_hg.png

WILL THE WORLD LAST TWO MORE MILLISECONDS? (i.e. 200 more years)

It was 17 seconds to midnight
that man and his madness evolved
that he watched his first sunset sink westward
as a welcoming wide world revolved;

With a full 12 hour clock as creation
(making 4.5 billion years old)
we’ve had 17 seconds probation
(we’ve watched 1.8 million unfold).

Will we see out another second?
(that’s a THOUSAND centuries to run? -
heck the way we are going you’d reckon
we’d be lucky to see out just ONE.)


Praps mankind will miss the inventory
(if you've something to do, do it quick),
praps we’ll see out about ?? two centuries ??
that’s just two milliseconds to tick.

May all creatures between then and now
dance as two milliseconds elapse -
maybe man's final sunset somehow
will give life to the others - ? perhaps?



https://www.aussiestockforums.com/forums/showthread.php?p=158576&highlight=pleistocene#post158576
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geologic_time_scale

Note ** Although that website says that it's a 24 hourclock, I think they mean 12 hour .

easy to check
17 seconds = 1.8 million years of man
therefore 4.5 million years is only 12 hours ( not 24)

also (as I say above), 1 second = 1/17 x 1.8 million = 100,000 = one thousand centuries
and one millisecond = 1 century.
two milliseconds = 2 centuries etc
 

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FILES ARE PEOPLE

when the docs lady gets a case study
all so neat in it's red-ribboned file
praps she paws through the words all so muddied (?)
praps she'll walk in their shoes a brief mile (?)
when she reaches to grasp that brown folder
she'll imagine she's shaking their hand (?)
sunken cheeked, some in need of a shoulder
do those words cry out.... "life's so unplanned"?.
 
Beautiful regular rhythm in this ballad by Banjo Paterson...
(personally I really like these "galloping rhythmical rhymes" )

 
An Extract from Gordon's "Bush Ballads and Galloping Rhymes"

 
and again .. (ALG)
too long to post the entire poem ( which can be found here) ..
http://whitewolf.newcastle.edu.au/w...dsay/verse/SeaSpraySmokeDrift/kettledrum.html
 
WHAT DO TRADING AND ELECTIONS HAVE IN COMMON

My mate is into "control freak"
he’s taken to trading in shares
he bought oh so bold – ( and then sold meek )
seems he can’t control bovines and bears (?)
it’s not that he’s stricken with cold feet
it’s just that he treads with more care
once you’ve bought you’re up “out-of-control” creek
and no paddle except “double dare”.

many pollies can kerb their control streaks
to advance baby kissing careers
they have alternate out-of-control weeks
needing breath fresh! or breath of fresh air!?
one day they’re like god - then the polls reek
of Fed onions (unions?) (up with which we’re all fed)
but for mine it’s called national soul week
for my kids’ greener pastures ahead.

sure a few kids are "lazy lousy dole cheats"
but then a streetkid’s sole friend is a louse
once you’ve voted, swap “**** creek” for “shot crete”
and no paddle except Upper House.-
what they need is a house of rebuke
to get back to a moral core
what we needed? a reconciled spook
what we got? some Iraqi war.

first we decimate Aus R&D (editor’s note : scientists overseeing our Research & Devt)
and ignore Kyoto with others (editor’s note : USA)
now our scientists “oversee” overseas
they’re the ones that can call the world “brothers”
yes we chased out our bright sparks and finest
now in fact we are miners ! – no more !
what will happen when we no more are miners ?
guess there’s always the US and some war.

what we need are a few more lone voices
to remind what democracy’s for
so the tones that are Barnaby Joyce’s
aren’t so lonely when crossing the floor.
what they need is to feel voters’ push
thick or thin, green or brown, man or mouse
- (man or mouse when it comes to George Bush)
Green and Brown when you talk upper house.


........
Footnote on the way Politicians answer the question "Why did we go to Iraq?"

when the willing coaltion are questioned
why they went into blood-soaked iraq
they will mumble some futile regression
they will answer miles wide of the mark
they will try to escape to the future
and ignore what they did in the past
cos to talk of past sins doesn’t suit ya
when you’re nailed to a fast-sinking mast.

If the GM of BHP mining
went and set up on Fiji for oil -
spose there’s none – would he then be resigning ?
or say “trust me, and stick to your toil!!” ?
....
If John’s asked "was intelligence twisted
and were countless prime speeches all spin ?"
Can he answer “we were just ham fisted" (?)
- "we invented a war there to win".(?)
 
RUMSFELD'S LAMENT

there are things that we know we don’t know
(there’s “Iraq” where “good oil’s” all he lacked)
there are things we don’t know we don’t know
.....
(I wonder if he knew he’d be sacked. )



 
it's an interesting thing when you ask of Iraq
why they always look forward and never look back
would the manager stand up? the one in the know?
may I ask you again sir, why is it so?
 
https://www.aussiestockforums.com/forums/showthread.php?p=160645&highlight=quarter#post160645

nothing to do with the quarter moon - in fact it was pretty full last weekend.

Just that I bought this new digital camera - and I'm practicing to do my own version of the "Hubbel photo"

 

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now for the poem to go with it ...
there was a sad one back there about bushfire season ..
https://www.aussiestockforums.com/forums/showthread.php?p=100976&highlight=flailing#post100976
 

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A POSTSCRIPT TO ALVIN TOFFLER's "FUTURE SHOCK"
or
SHOULD I WORRY ABOUT HOW WE ARE GONNA CUT OUR FINGERNAILS IN THE FUTURE?
(when we've run out of fingernail cutters - having just noticed 4 pairs here, one pair of which works )

A wasteful lot us baby boomers, (X & Y are worse)
take cutting nails, with clippers steel ! (the planet's in reverse !)
why not just ONE such set of clippers? - in some drawer that's near?
we waste today - tomorrow ? - gee I bite my nails in fear.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alvin_Toffler
 
Extract from "The Adventure of English" - The Biography of a Language - by Melvyn Bragg
..
 
Is Heaven Monogamous?

Mrs Walsh was widowed
not once, two times, but thrice
and each of them thrice widowered
(and chasing marital "spice")
but personally I ponder
how they're gonna sort things out
when they go to Heaven yonder -
and they all share just one cloud
 
The Man From Snowy River - Banjo's Poem

Man From Snowy River - The Descent

My Kid Loves Man from Snowy River

Sydney 2000 Opening Ceremony - Welcome
 

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