The Old Bush Songs

Sam Holt

Edited by

Andrew Barton ‘Banjo’ Paterson


(Air:    “Ben Bolt.”)

OH! don’t you remember Black Alice, Sam Holt—
    Black Alice, so dusky and dark,
The Warrego gin, with the straw through her nose,
    And teeth like a Moreton Bay shark.

The terrible sheepwash tobacco she smoked
    In the gunyah down there by the lake,
And the grubs that she roasted, and the lizards she stewed,
    And the damper you taught her to bake.

Oh! don’t you remember the moon’s silver sheen,
    And the Warrego sand-ridges white?
And don’t you remember those big bull-dog ants
    We caught in our blankets at night?

Oh! don’t you remember the creepers, Sam Holt,
    That scattered their fragrance around?
And don’t you remember that broken-down colt
    You sold me, and swore he was sound?

And don’t you remember that fiver, Sam Holt,
    You borrowed so frank and so free,
When the publican landed your fifty-pound cheque
    At Tambo your very last spree?

Luck changes some natures, but yours, Sammy Holt,
    Was a grand one as ever I see,
And I fancy I’ll whistle a good many tunes
    Ere you think of that fiver or me.

Oh! don’t you remember the cattle you duffed,
    And your luck at the Sandy Creek rush,
And the poker you played, and the bluffs that you bluffed,
    And your habits of holding a flush?

And don’t you remember the pasting you got
    By the boys down in Callaghan’s store,
When Tim Hooligan found a fifth ace in his hand,
    And you holding his pile upon four?

You were not the cleanest potato, Sam Holt,
    You had not the cleanest of fins.
But you made your pile on the Towers, Sam Holt,
    And that covers the most of your sins.

They say you’ve ten thousand per annum, Sam Holt,
    In England, a park and a drag;
Perhaps you forget you were six months ago
    In Queensland a-humping your swag.

But who’d think to see you now dining in state
    With a lord and the devil knows who,
You were flashing your dover, six short months ago,
    In a lambing camp on the Barcoo.

When’s my time coming?    Perhaps never, I think,
    And it’s likely enough your old mate
Will be humping his drum on the Hughenden-road
    To the end of the chapter of fate.


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