The Mountain Squatter

By Andrew Barton Paterson

Here in my mountain home,

On rugged hills and steep,

I sit and watch you come,

O Riverina Sheep!

You come from fertile plains

Where saltbush ( sometimes ) grows,

And flats that ( when it rains )

Will blossom like the rose.

But, when the summer sun

Gleams down like burnished brass,

You have to leave your run

And hustle off for grass.

‘ Tis then that — forced to roam —

You come to where I keep,

Here in my mountain home,

A boarding-house for sheep.

Around me where I sit

The wary wombat goes —

A beast of little wit,

But what he knows, he knows.

The very same remark

Applies to me also;

I do n't give out a spark,

But what I know, I know.

My brain perhaps would show

No convolutions deep,

But anyhow I know

The way to handle sheep.

These Riverina cracks,

They do not care to ride

The half-inch hanging tracks

Along the mountain side.

Their horses shake with fear

When loosened boulders go,

With leaps, like startled deer,

Down to the gulfs below.

Their very dogs will shirk,

And drop their tails in fright

When asked to go and work

A mob that's out of sight.

My little collie pup

Works silently and wide;

You'll see her climbing up

Along the mountain side.

As silent as a fox

You'll see her come and go,

A shadow through the rocks

Where ash and messmate grow.

Then, lost to sight and sound

Behind some rugged steep,

She works her way around

And gathers up the sheep;

And, working wide and shy,

She holds them rounded up.

The cash ai n't coined to buy

That little collie pup.

And so I draw a screw

For self and dog and keep

To boundary-ride for you,

O Riverina Sheep!

And when the autumn rain

Has made the herbage grow,

You travel off again,

And glad — no doubt — to go.

But some are left behind

Around the mountain's spread,

For those we cannot find

We put them down as dead.

But when we say adieu

And close the boarding job,

I always find a few

Fresh ear-marks in my mob.

So what with those I sell,

And what with those I keep,

You pay me pretty well,

O Riverina Sheep!

It's up to me to shout

Before we say good-bye —

“Here's to a howlin’ drought

All west of Gundagai!”