Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Mustering Song by Banjo Paterson (Andrew Barton)
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Mustering Song

    By Banjo Paterson (Andrew Barton)



        (Air: “So Early in the Morning.”)


    The boss last night in the hut did say—
    “We start to muster at break of day;
    So be up first thing, and don’t be slow;
    Saddle your horses and off you go.”

                                Chorus

        So early in the morning, so early in the morning,
        So early in the morning, before the break of day.

    Such a night in the yard there never was seen
    (The horses were fat and the grass was green);
    Bursting of girths and slipping of packs
    As the stockmen saddled the fastest hacks.

        Chorus: So early in the morning, &c.

    Across the plain we jog along
    Over gully, swamp, and billabong;
    We drop on a mob pretty lively, too
    We round ’em up and give ’em a slue.

        Chorus: So early in the morning, &c.

    Now the scrub grows thick and the cattle are wild,
    A regular caution to this ’ere child—
    A new chum man on an old chum horse,
    Who sails through the scrub as a matter of course.

        Chorus: So early in the morning, &c.

    I was close up stuck in a rotten bog;
    I got a buster jumping a log;
    I found this scouting rather hot,
    So I joined the niggers with the lot we’d got.

        Chorus: So early in the morning, &c.

    A long-haired shepherd we chanced to meet
    With a water bag, billy, and dog complete;
    He came too close to a knocked up steer,
    Who up a sapling made him clear.

        Chorus: So early in the morning, &c.

    Now on every side we faintly hear
    The crack of the stockwhip drawing near;
    To the camp the cattle soon converge,
    As from the thick scrub they emerge.

        Chorus: So early in the morning, &c.

    We hastily comfort the inner man
    With the warm contents of the billy can;
    The beef and damper are passed about
    Before we tackle the cutting out.

        Chorus: So early in the morning, &c.

    We’re at it now—that bally calf
    Would surely make a sick man laugh;
    The silly fool can’t take a joke;
    I hope some day in the drought he’ll croak.

        Chorus: So early in the morning, &c.

    We’ve ’em now—the cows and calves
    (Things here are never done by halves);
    Strangers, workers, and milkers, too,
    Of scrubbers also not a few.

        Chorus: So early in the morning, &c.

    It’s getting late, we’d better push;
    ’Tis a good long way across the bush,
    And the mob to drive are middling hard;
    I do not think we’ll reach the yard.

        Chorus: So early in the morning, &c.



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