My Country - Singing Australia Poem by Dr Ian Inkster

My Country - Singing Australia



My Country, A Poem [Dorothea Mackellar 1918]_ A Melodic Treatment

I love a sunburnt country,
A land of sweeping plains,
Of ragged mountain ranges,
Of droughts and flooding rains.
I love her far horizons,
I love her jewel sea,
Her beauty and her terror -
The wide brown land for me!

The tragic ring-barked forest
Stark white beneath the moon,
The sapphire-misted mountains,
The hot gold hush of noon.
Green tangle of the brushes,
Where lithe lianas coil,
And orchids deck the tree-tops
And ferns the warm dark soil.

Core of my heart, my country!
Her pitiless blue sky,
When sick at heart, around us,
We see the cattle die -
But then the grey clouds gather,
And we can bless again
The drumming of an army,
The steady, soaking rain.

An opal-hearted country,
A wilful, lavish land -
All you who have not loved her,
You will not understand -
Though earth holds many splendours,
Wherever I may die,
I know to what brown country
My homing thoughts will fly.

Monday, October 24, 2016
Topic(s) of this poem: song
POET'S NOTES ABOUT THE POEM
This beautiful poem by Dorothea Mackellar should really be the Australian national anthem. Written at the very end of World War I it represented so many deaths of young Australians in the name of the British colonial system, yet Mackellar kept the meaning and tone of her verse positive and meaningful. Three other verses not re-printed here for song, gave positive images of the Britain that so many [by no means all by 1918] Australians had left and then returned to in order to fight for both a principal and a connection.
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