Song of the Wheat

By Andrew Barton Paterson

We have sung the song of the droving days,

Of the march of the travelling sheep;

By silent stages and lonely ways

Thin, white battalions creep.

But the man who now by the land would thrive

Must his spurs to a plough-share beat.

Is there ever a man in the world alive

To sing the song of the Wheat!

It's west by south of the Great Divide

The grim grey plains run out,

Where the old flock-masters lived and died

In a ceaseless fight with drought.

Weary with waiting and hope deferred

They were ready to own defeat,

Till at last they heard the master-word —

And the master-word was Wheat.

Yarran and Myall and Box and Pine —

‘ Twas axe and fire for all;

They scarce could tarry to blaze the line

Or wait for the trees to fall,

Ere the team was yoked, and the gates flung wide,

And the dust of the horses’ feet

Rose up like a pillar of smoke to guide

The wonderful march of Wheat.

Furrow by furrow, and fold by fold,

The soil is turned on the plain;

Better than silver and better than gold

Is the surface-mine of the grain;

Better than cattle and better than sheep

In the fight with drought and heat;

For a streak of stubbornness, wide and deep,

Lies hid in a grain of Wheat.

When the stock is swept by the hand of fate,

Deep down in his bed of clay

The brave brown Wheat will lie and wait

For the resurrection day:

Lie hid while the whole world thinks him dead;

But the Spring-rain, soft and sweet,

Will over the steaming paddocks spread

The first green flush of the Wheat.

Green and amber and gold it grows

When the sun sinks late in the West;

And the breeze sweeps over the rippling rows

Where the quail and the skylark nest.

Mountain or river or shining star,

There's never a sight can beat —

Away to the sky-line stretching far —

A sea of the ripening Wheat.

When the burning harvest sun sinks low,

And the shadows stretch on the plain,

The roaring strippers come and go

Like ships on a sea of grain;

Till the lurching, groaning waggons bear

Their tale of the load complete.

Of the world's great work he has done his share

Who has gathered a crop of wheat.

Princes and Potentates and Czars,

They travel in regal state,

But old King Wheat has a thousand cars

For his trip to the water-gate;

And his thousand steamships breast the tide

And plough thro’ the wind and sleet

To the lands where the teeming millions bide

That say: “Thank God for Wheat!”