Song information On this page you can find the lyrics of the song Clara Waters, artist - Slim Dusty. Album song Coming Home, in the genre Поп
Date of issue: 31.12.1989
Record label: EMI Recorded Music Australia
Song language: English
Clara Waters |
I was drivin' out through Mitchell |
Heard a lonesome railroad whistle |
So I stopped beside the highway for a spell |
And in this pleasant place |
Was a notice well displayed |
With a story I am now about to tell |
The notice was a roll of those who’d paid the toll |
While working on the railroad to the west |
Wives and workers perished |
With the children that they cherished |
And in lonely graves were gently laid to rest |
Then I found my vision misted |
As among the many listed |
The name of Clara Waters caught my eye |
I imagined my own daughter |
In the place of Clara waters |
While the busy highway traffic hurtled by |
How short her life had been |
She was only seventeen |
Yet her story may be very simply told |
A doctor might have saved her |
From the fever after labour |
Her baby died when he was four days old |
Then the scene before me shifted |
As back in time I drifted |
As back in time a hundred years I went |
And through my muddled dreaming |
A morning sun came beaming |
On a battered billy steaming by a tent |
For here was pretty Clara |
With her husband there to share a |
Simple meal before their daily task |
I am anxious now to meet her |
So I hurry on to greet her |
With the questions that I feel I have to ask |
And when the day is breaking |
Is there happiness in waking |
Have you had your share of laughter joy and cheer |
You were very young to marry |
And the baby that you carry |
Does it make you wish your mother could be near |
In the coolness of the morning |
In the piccaninnie dawning |
Does your husband tell you often of his love |
While the magpies merry singing |
In the higher branches ringing |
Is bringing morning greetings from above |
Does the gentle evening breeze |
Wave the smoke up through the trees |
Do you see the shafts of sunlight drifting down |
Or has drudgery and duty |
Made you blind to every beauty |
While the camp is turning dusty bare and brown |
(spoken) |
With a bed of planks and sacking |
And with every comfort lacking |
Growing heavy as your time is drawing near |
In your shabby tent so dreary |
Are you very often weary |
And do you sometimes shed a silent lonely tear |
(sung) |
And when her son was born |
On a hot December morn |
And the deadly fever started on its quest |
Was there time for her to hold him |
And in her love enfold him |
Was there time to give him comfort at her breast |
Of course there’s no replying |
To my questions and my prying |
And suddenly I know it’s time to go |
But I reckon I’ll remember |
What happened that December |
In the summertime a hundred years ago |
And then a road train passes |
There’s a ripple through the grasses |
As if to wave a fleeting sad goodbye |
To Clara and her son |
Their lives so briefly run |
And the busy highway traffic rushes by |