| He was born in the light of red oaths and nursed by the drought and the flood
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| And swaddled in sweat lined saddle cloths and christened in spur drawn blood
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| Oh he never was burdened with learnin' and many would think him a fool
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| But he’s mastered a method of turnin' that never was taught in a school
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| His manners are rugged and vulgar but his nuggets of gold in our need
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| And a lightning flash in the mulga is the man who steadies the lead
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| Now when the stockwhips are ringing behind him and the brumbies are racing
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| abreast
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| Oh it’s 50 to 1 you will find him a furlong to two from the rest
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| With the coils of his whip hanging idle, his eyes on the mob at his side
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| And the daintiest touch on the bridle for this is the man who can ride
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| And the stallions that break from the mallee will find he has courage and speed
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| For he rides the best horse in the valley this stockman who steadies the lead
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| When they’re fetching in stores to the station through tangles of broken belar
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| And the road is a rough calculation that’s based on the blaze of a star
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| When they’re quickening through sand ridge and hollow and rowels are splattered
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| with red
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| And sometimes you’ve only to follow the sound of the hoofbeat ahead
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| Then we know that he’s holding them northward oh we trust in the man and his
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| steed
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| And we hear the old brown crashing forward and his rider’s wild yell to the lead
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| (Hey!)
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| But when from a bend in the river the cattle break camp in the night
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| Oh then is the season if ever we value his services right
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| For we know that if some should be tardy and some should be should be left in
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| the race
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| Yet the spurs will be red on Coolgardie as someone swings out to his place
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| And the mulga boughs hark to them breaking in front of the maddened stampede
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| And a horse and rider are taking their time honoured place in the lead
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| Now as an honest and impartial recorder I’d fain have you all recollect
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| There are other brave men on the border entitled to every respect
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| There’s the man who thinks buckin’s a tame thing and he rides them with lighted
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| cigars
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| And the man who will drive any damn thing that’s ever been hooked to the bars
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| Oh their pluck and their powers are granted but all said and done we’ve agreed
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| That the king of 'em all when he’s wanted is the man who steadies the lead
|
| (Here we go now!)
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| He was born in the light of red oaks and nursed by the drought and the flood
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| And swaddled in sweat lined saddlecloths and christened in spur drawn blood
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| Oh he never was burdened with learnin' and many would think him a fool |