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This poem by Lawson even sounds Nazi. It refers to the Australian fear of invasion by the nearby chinks as well as the government's more obvious, poor water management in the middle of a drought. The South is all of Australia. The East and West are eastern Australia and drought-worn western Australia. The poem's double entendre is beautiful. -- Scotty Earbend
The Storm That Is To Come
by Henry Lawson
If the Bourke people, with a dyke or sandbags across the Darling River, could keep the steamers running above that town for months in the drought, what could not the government do? The Darling rises mostly from the Queensland rains, and feeds her billabongs, and the floods waste into the sea.
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By our place in the midst of the furthest seas we were fated to stand alone When the nations fly at each other's throats let Australia look to her own; Let her spend her gold on the barren west, let her keep her men at home; For the South must look to the South for strength in the storm that is to come. Now who shall gallop from cape to cape, and who shall defend our shores There may be many to man the forts in the big towns by the sea The rain comes down on the Western land and the rivers run to waste, There's a gutter of mud where there spread a flood from the land-long western
creeks, We'll fight for Britain or for Japan, we will fling the land's wealth out; I saw a vision in days gone by and would dream that dream again I have seen so long in the land I love what the land I love might be, |