The Loveable Characters
The Loveable Characters - meaning Summary
Affection for Outback Characters
Lawson celebrates the rough, comic, and resilient people of the Australian bush. The speaker contrasts town life with the outback, admitting personal faults but expressing clear affection for 'lovable characters' who gather at pubs, sales and along tracks. The poem mixes affectionate humor with a sober nod to loss—older men who evade conscription yet are later commemorated among the dead—ending with a wish to be buried where these characters roam.
Read Complete AnalysesI long for the streets but the Lord knoweth best, For there I am never a saint; There are lovable characters out in the West, With humour heroic and quaint; And, be it Up Country, or be it Out Back, When I shall have gone to my Home, I trust to be buried ‘twixt River and Track Where my lovable characters roam. There are lovable characters drag through the scrub, Where the Optimist ever prevails; There are lovable characters hang round the pub, There are lovable jokers at sales Where the auctioneer’s one of the lovable wags (Maybe from his order estranged), And the beer is on tap, and the pigs in the bags Of the purchasing cockies are changed. There were lovable characters out in the West, Of fifty hot summers, or more, Who could not be proved, when it came to the test, Too old to be sent to the war; They were all forty-five and were orphans, they said, With no one to keep them, or keep; And mostly in France, with the world’s bravest dead, Those lovable characters sleep. I long for the streets, but the Lord knoweth best, For there I am never a saint; There are lovable characters out in the West, With humour heroic and quaint; And, be it Up Country, or be it Out Back, When I shall have gone to my Home, I trust to be buried ‘twixt River and Track Where my lovable characters roam.
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