WEST of Dubbo the west begins The land of leisure and hope and trust, Where the black man stalks with his dogs and gins And Nature visits the settlers’ sins With the Bogan shower, that is mostly dust.
When the roley-poley’s roots dry out
And the horses shudder and snort and shift . . . . .Was strange to the wild and woolly west, And he thought he would earn him some great renown When he saw, on the wastes of the open down, An emu standing beside her nest.
And he said to himself as he stalked his prey
The emu chickens made haste to flee . . . . .He made for home with a chastened mind, An old dog told him, “I thought you knew An emu kicks like a kangaroo, And you can’t get hurt—IF YOU KEEP BEHIND.” |