Australian Scenery
Australian Scenery - meaning Summary
Contrasts of Australian Land
Paterson contrasts two Australian landscapes: the Mountains, depicted as solemn, watchful and almost sacred with a heavy silence; and the Plains, vast and changeable, offering both abundance and ruthless scarcity. The poem presents nature as indifferent and powerful, capable of nurturing or destroying, and frames human experience as small amid sweeping, often bleak surroundings. Its mood shifts between reverence and hard realism about life on the land.
Read Complete AnalysesThe Mountains A land of sombre, silent hills, where mountain cattle go By twisted tracks, on sidelings deep, where giant gum trees grow And the wind replies, in the river oaks, to the song of the stream below. A land where the hills keep watch and ward, silent and wide awake As those who sit by a dead campfire, and wait for the dawn to break, Or those who watched by the Holy Cross for the dead Redeemer's sake. A land where silence lies so deep that sound itself is dead And a gaunt grey bird, like a homeless soul, drifts, noiseless, overhead And the world's great story is left untold, and the message is left unsaid. The Plains A land as far as the eye can see, where the waving grasses grow Or the plains are blackened and burnt and bare, where the false mirages go Like shifting symbols of hope deferred -- land where you never know. Land of plenty or land of want, where the grey Companions dance, Feast or famine, or hope or fear, and in all things land of chance, Where Nature pampers or Nature slays, in her ruthless, red, romance. And we catch a sound of a fairy's song, as the wind goes whipping by, Or a scent like incense drifts along from the herbage ripe and dry -- Or the dust storms dance on their ballroom floor, where the bones of the cattle lie.
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