"We're All Australians Now"
Australia takes
her pen in hand
To write a line to you,
To let you fellows understand
How proud we are of you.
From
shearing shed and cattle run,
From Broome to Hobson's Bay,
Each native-born Australian son
Stands straighter up today.
The man who used
to "hump his drum",
On far-out Queensland runs
Is fighting side by side with some
Tasmanian farmer's sons.
The fisher-boys
dropped sail and oar
To grimly stand the test,
Along that storm-swept Turkish shore,
With miners from the west.
The old state jealousies
of yore
Are dead as Pharaoh's sow,
We're not State children any more --
We're all Australians now!
Our six-starred
flag that used to fly
Half-shyly to the breeze,
Unknown where older nations ply
Their trade on foreign seas,
Flies out to meet
the morning blue
With Vict'ry at the prow;
For that's the flag the Sydney flew,
The wide seas know it now!
The mettle that
a race can show
Is proved with shot and steel,
And now we know what nations know
And feel what nations feel.
The honoured graves
beneath the crest
Of Gaba Tepe hill
May hold our bravest and our best,
But we have brave men still.
With all our petty
quarrels done,
Dissensions overthrown,
We have, through what you boys have done,
A history of our own.
Our old world diff'rences
are dead,
Like weeds beneath the plough,
For English, Scotch, and Irish-bred,
They're all Australians now!
So now we'll toast
the Third Brigade
That led Australia's van,
For never shall their glory fade
In minds Australian.
Fight on, fight
on, unflinchingly,
Till right and justice reign.
Fight on, fight on, till Victory
Shall send you home again.
And with Australia's
flag shall fly
A spray of wattle-bough
To symbolise our unity --
We're all Australians now.
- An open letter
to the troops, 1915
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Banjo Paterson poems recorded by Wallis and Matilda
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