Public Domain Poetry And Stories - My Mate Bill by Banjo Paterson (Andrew Barton)
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My Mate Bill

    By Banjo Paterson (Andrew Barton)



    That’s his saddle on the tie-beam,
        And them’s his spurs up there
    On the wall-plate over yonder—
        You ken see they ain’t a pair.

    For the daddy of all the stockmen
        As ever come mustering here
    Was killed in the flaming mulga,
        A-yarding a bald-faced steer.

    They say as he’s gone to heaven,
        And shook off all worldly cares
    But I can’t sight Bill in a halo
        Set up on three blinded hairs.

    In heaven! what next I wonder,
        For strike me pink and blue,
    If I see whatever in thunder
        They’ll find for Bill to do.

    He’d never make one of them angels,
        With faces as white as chalk,
    All wool to the toes like hoggets,
        And wings like an eagle-hawk.

    He couldn’t ’arp for apples,
        His voice had tones as jarred,
    And he’d no more ear than a bald-faced steer,
        Or calves in a branding yard.

    He could sit on a bucking brumbie
        Like a nob in an easy chair,
    And chop his name with a greenhide fall
        On the flank of a flying steer.

    He could show them saints in glory
        The way that a fall should drop,
    But sit on a throne—not William,
        Unless they could make it prop.

    He mightn’t freeze to the seraphs,
        Or chum with the cherubim,
    But if ever them seraph johnnies
        Get a-poking it like at him—

    Well! if there’s hide in heaven,
        And silk for to make a lash,
    He’ll yard ’em all in the Jasper Lake
        In a blinded lightning flash.

    If the heavenly hosts get boxed now,
        As mobs most always will,
    Who’ll cut ’em out like William,
        Or draft on a camp like Bill?

    An ’orseman would find it awkward
        At first with a push that flew,
    But blame my cats if I know what else
        They’ll find for Bill to do.

    It’s hard if there ain’t no cattle,
        And perhaps they’ll let him sleep,
    And wake him up at the judgment
        To draft those goats and sheep.

    It’s playing it low on William,
        But perhaps he’ll buckle to,
    To show them high-toned seraphs
        What a Mulga man can do.

    If they saddles a big-boned angel,
        With a turn of speed, of course,
    As can spiel like a four-year brumbie,
        And prop like an old camp horse,

    And puts Bill up with a snaffle,
        A four or five inch spur,
    And eighteen foot of greenhide
        To chop the blinded fur—

    He’ll yard them blamed Angoras
        In a way that it’s safe to swear
    Will make them tony seraphs
        Sit back on their thrones and stare.



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