| Through the Mitchell Grass, half green he sees them feeding
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| In the lead a dusty horseman scans the plain
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| Fifteen hundred shorthorn steers are bound for Queensland
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| And he’s back there on the Barkley route again
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| Fifteen hundred bush bred steers in late September
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| Fifteen hundred miles they leave their home behind
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| For the dry days and the rushes in the land swoop
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| And the freezin' south east wind comes to his mind
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| He can feel the freezin' saddle flaps at daybreak
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| He can taste the kind of breakfast drovers know
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| And the scars from saddle dees are on his knuckles
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| From some battle to stay mounted long ago
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| Fifteen hundred reds and roans and broken baldies
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| Fifteen hundred demon nostrils wide with fright
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| Cracking timber, flying hooves and straining halters
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| Fifteen hundred peals of thunder in the night
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| Fifteen hundred pairs of spreading horns and ear marks
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| Fifteen hundred mutes 'neath fifteen million stars
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| He is back there playing nursemaid on a night horse
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| But he’s a prisoner in a prison with no bars
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| Never more at dinner camp with Kort and Brownett
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| But they don’t serve Kort pot tea in Sydney clubs
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| Nevermore he’ll walk the big mobs down the Rankin
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| Or lead 'em through the Enniskillen scrubs
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| Wake him gently when you sense his dream has ended
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| When those fifteen hundred march into the haze
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| Of the long, long years since he went down the Rankin
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| Just a stripling in the good old droving days |