Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Wallabi Joe by Banjo Paterson (Andrew Barton)
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Wallabi Joe

    By Banjo Paterson (Andrew Barton)



        (Air: “The Mistletoe Bough.”)


    The saddle was hung on the stockyard rail,
    And the poor old horse stood whisking his tail,
    For there never was seen such a regular screw
    As Wallabi Joe, of Bunnagaroo;
    Whilst the shearers all said, as they say, of course,
    That Wallabi Joe’s a fine lump of a horse;
    But the stockmen said, as they laughed aside,
    He’d barely do for a Sunday’s ride.

        Chorus: Oh! poor Wallabi Joe.
                        O—oh! poor Wallabi Joe.

    “I’m weary of galloping now,” he cried,
    “I wish I were killed for my hide, my hide;
    For my eyes are dim, and my back is sore,
    And I feel that my legs won’t stand much more.”

    Now stockman Bill, who took care of his nag,
    Put under the saddle a soojee bag,
    And off he rode with a whip in his hand
    To look for a mob of the R.J. brand.

        Chorus: Oh! poor Wallabi Joe, &c.

    Now stockman Bill camped out that night,
    And he hobbled his horse in a sheltered bight;
    Next day of old Joe he found not a track,
    So he had to trudge home with his swag on his back.
    He searched up and down every gully he knew,
    But he found not a hair of his poor old screw,
    And the stockmen all said as they laughed at his woe,
    “Would you sell us the chance of old Wallabi Joe.”

        Chorus: Oh! poor Wallabi Joe, &c.

    Now as years sped by, and as Bill grew old,
    It came into his head to go poking for gold;
    So away he went with a spade in his fist,
    To hunt for a nugget among the schist.
    One day as a gully he chanced to cross,
    He came on the bones of his poor old horse;
    The hobbles being jammed in a root below
    Had occasioned the death of poor Wallabi Joe.

        Chorus: Oh! poor Wallabi Joe, &c.



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