Coomera
Henry Lawson
Coomera
THEREâS a pretty little story with a touch of moonlit glory
Comes from Beenleigh on the Logan, but we donât know if itâs true;
For we scarcely dare to credit evârything they say who edit
Those unhappy country papers âtwixt the ocean and Barcoo.
âTwas the man who owned the wherry at the first Coomera ferry
Who was sitting cold and lonely while he counted out his tin;
When the cloudy curtain lifting let the moonlight on a drifting
Boat, that floated down the river with a pallid form therein.
And they say that Sergeant Carey (with the man who ran the ferry),
Started down to save the body from the cruel heartless sea,
And in spite of wind and water, soon they reached the barque and caught her;
And they tied the boat behind them while they wondered âwho was he?â
O the moon shone bright as ever as they towed him up the river,
And they found within the pocket that was nearest to his breastâ
Just an antidote for sorrow, that would tide him oâer the morrowâ
(Flask of Brandy); but weâd better draw the curtain oâer the rest.
Yet, in case the pointâs too finely drawn (we know we joke divinely),
And the reader fails to see it with a magnifying glass,
We will say the man who floated, while the moonlight oâer him gloated,
Was not dead and gone to heavenâhe was only drunk, alas!THEREâS a pretty little
story with a touch of moonlit glory
Comes from Beenleigh on the Logan, but we donât know if itâs true;
For we scarcely dare to credit evârything they say who edit
Those unhappy country papers âtwixt the ocean and Barcoo.
âTwas the man who owned the wherry at the first Coomera ferry
Who was sitting cold and lonely while he counted out his tin;
When the cloudy curtain lifting let the moonlight on a drifting
Boat, that floated down the river with a pallid form therein.
And they say that Sergeant Carey (with the man who ran the ferry),
Started down to save the body from the cruel heartless sea,
And in spite of wind and water, soon they reached the barque and caught her;
And they tied the boat behind them while they wondered âwho was he?â
O the moon shone bright as ever as they towed him up the river,
And they found within the pocket that was nearest to his breastâ
Just an antidote for sorrow, that would tide him oâer the morrowâ
(Flask of Brandy); but weâd better draw the curtain oâer the rest.
Yet, in case the pointâs too finely drawn (we know we joke divinely),
And the reader fails to see it with a magnifying glass,
We will say the man who floated, while the moonlight oâer him gloated,
Was not dead and gone to heavenâhe was only drunk, alas!
For we scarcely dare to credit evârything they say who edit
Those unhappy country papers âtwixt the ocean and Barcoo.
âTwas the man who owned the wherry at the first Coomera ferry
Who was sitting cold and lonely while he counted out his tin;
When the cloudy curtain lifting let the moonlight on a drifting
Boat, that floated down the river with a pallid form therein.
And they say that Sergeant Carey (with the man who ran the ferry),
Started down to save the body from the cruel heartless sea,
And in spite of wind and water, soon they reached the barque and caught her;
And they tied the boat behind them while they wondered âwho was he?â
O the moon shone bright as ever as they towed him up the river,
And they found within the pocket that was nearest to his breastâ
Just an antidote for sorrow, that would tide him oâer the morrowâ
(Flask of Brandy); but weâd better draw the curtain oâer the rest.
Yet, in case the pointâs too finely drawn (we know we joke divinely),
And the reader fails to see it with a magnifying glass,
We will say the man who floated, while the moonlight oâer him gloated,
Was not dead and gone to heavenâhe was only drunk, alas!
THEREâS a pretty little story with a touch of moonlit glory
Comes from Beenleigh on the Logan, but we donât know if itâs true;
For we scarcely dare to credit evârything they say who edit
Those unhappy country papers âtwixt the ocean and Barcoo.
âTwas the man who owned the wherry at the first Coomera ferry
Who was sitting cold and lonely while he counted out his tin;
When the cloudy curtain lifting let the moonlight on a drifting
Boat, that floated down the river with a pallid form therein.
And they say that Sergeant Carey (with the man who ran the ferry),
Started down to save the body from the cruel heartless sea,
And in spite of wind and water, soon they reached the barque and caught her;
And they tied the boat behind them while they wondered âwho was he?â
O the moon shone bright as ever as they towed him up the river,
And they found within the pocket that was nearest to his breastâ
Just an antidote for sorrow, that would tide him oâer the morrowâ
(Flask of Brandy); but weâd better draw the curtain oâer the rest.
Yet, in case the pointâs too finely drawn (we know we joke divinely),
And the reader fails to see it with a magnifying glass,
We will say the man who floated, while the moonlight oâer him gloated,
Was not dead and gone to heavenâhe was only drunk, alas!THEREâS a pretty little
story with a touch of moonlit glory
Comes from Beenleigh on the Logan, but we donât know if itâs true;
For we scarcely dare to credit evârything they say who edit
Those unhappy country papers âtwixt the ocean and Barcoo.
âTwas the man who owned the wherry at the first Coomera ferry
Who was sitting cold and lonely while he counted out his tin;
When the cloudy curtain lifting let the moonlight on a drifting
Boat, that floated down the river with a pallid form therein.
And they say that Sergeant Carey (with the man who ran the ferry),
Started down to save the body from the cruel heartless sea,
And in spite of wind and water, soon they reached the barque and caught her;
And they tied the boat behind them while they wondered âwho was he?â
O the moon shone bright as ever as they towed him up the river,
And they found within the pocket that was nearest to his breastâ
Just an antidote for sorrow, that would tide him oâer the morrowâ
(Flask of Brandy); but weâd better draw the curtain oâer the rest.
Yet, in case the pointâs too finely drawn (we know we joke divinely),
And the reader fails to see it with a magnifying glass,
We will say the man who floated, while the moonlight oâer him gloated,
Was not dead and gone to heavenâhe was only drunk, alas!
For we scarcely dare to credit evârything they say who edit
Those unhappy country papers âtwixt the ocean and Barcoo.
âTwas the man who owned the wherry at the first Coomera ferry
Who was sitting cold and lonely while he counted out his tin;
When the cloudy curtain lifting let the moonlight on a drifting
Boat, that floated down the river with a pallid form therein.
And they say that Sergeant Carey (with the man who ran the ferry),
Started down to save the body from the cruel heartless sea,
And in spite of wind and water, soon they reached the barque and caught her;
And they tied the boat behind them while they wondered âwho was he?â
O the moon shone bright as ever as they towed him up the river,
And they found within the pocket that was nearest to his breastâ
Just an antidote for sorrow, that would tide him oâer the morrowâ
(Flask of Brandy); but weâd better draw the curtain oâer the rest.
Yet, in case the pointâs too finely drawn (we know we joke divinely),
And the reader fails to see it with a magnifying glass,
We will say the man who floated, while the moonlight oâer him gloated,
Was not dead and gone to heavenâhe was only drunk, alas!
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