The Stringy-Bark Tree

    By Henry Lawson



    There's the whitebox and pine on the ridges afar,
    Where the iron-bark, blue-gum, and peppermint are;
    There is many another, but dearest to me,
    And the king of them all was the stringy-bark tree.

    Then of stringy-bark slabs were the walls of the hut,
    And from stringy-bark saplings the rafters were cut;
    And the roof that long sheltered my brothers and me
    Was of broad sheets of bark from the stringy-bark tree.

    And when sawn-timber homes were built out in the West,
    Then for walls and for ceilings its wood was the best;
    And for shingles and palings to last while men be,
    There was nothing on earth like the stringy-bark tree.

    Far up the long gullies the timber-trucks went,
    Over tracks that seemed hopeless, by bark hut and tent;
    And the gaunt timber-finder, who rode at his ease,
    Led them on to a gully of stringy-bark trees.

    Now still from the ridges, by ways that are dark,
    Come the shingles and palings they call stringy-bark;
    Though you ride through long gullies a twelve months you’ll see
    But the old whitened stumps of the stringy-bark tree.



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