Song information On this page you can find the lyrics of the song Ballad of the Drover, artist - Slim Dusty. Album song Henry Lawson and 'Banjo' Paterson, in the genre Кантри
Date of issue: 31.12.1995
Record label: EMI Recorded Music Australia
Song language: English
Ballad of the Drover |
Across the stony ridges, across the rolling plain |
Young Harry Dale, the drover, comes riding home again |
And well his stock-horse bears him, and light of heart is he |
And stoutly his old pack-horse is trotting by his knee |
Up Queensland way with cattle he travelled regions vast; |
And many months have vanished since home-folk saw him last |
He hums a song of someone he hopes to marry soon; |
And hobble-chains and camp-ware keep jingling to the tune |
Beyond the hazy dado against the lower skies |
And yon blue line of ranges the homestead station lies |
Thitherward the drover jogs through the lazy noon |
While hobble-chains and camp-ware keep jingling to a tune |
Instrumental |
An hour has filled the heavens with storm-clouds inky black; |
At times the lightning trickles around the drover’s track; |
But Harry pushes onward, his horses' strength he tries |
In hope to reach the river before the flood shall rise |
The thunder stealing o’er him goes rolling down the plain; |
And sing on thirsty pastures in past the flashing rain |
And every creek and gully sends forth its trival flood |
The river runs with anger, all stained with yellow mud |
Now Harry speaks to Rover, the best dog on the plains |
And to his hardy horses, and strokes their shaggy manes; |
«We've breasted bigger rivers when floods were at their height |
Nor shall this gutter stop us from getting home to-night!» |
Instrumental |
The thunder growls a warning, the blue fork lightnings streaks |
As the drover turns his horses to swim the fatal creek |
But, oh! |
the flood runs stronger than e’er it ran before; |
The saddle-horse is failing, and only half-way o’er! |
When flashes next the lightning, the flood’s grey breast is blank |
And a cattle dog and pack-horse are struggling up the bank |
But in the lonely homestead the girl shall wait in vain |
He’ll never pass the stations, in charge of stock again |
The faithful dog a moment lies panting on the bank |
And then pluges through the current to where his master sank |
And round and round in circles he fights with failing strength |
Till, ripped by wilder waters, he fails and sinks at length |
O’er the flooded lowlands and slopes of sodden loam |
The pack-horse struggles bravely, to take dumb tidings home |
And mud-stained, wet, and weary, he goes by rock and tree |
With flagon, chains and tinware are sounding eerily |