I hear the drums of war a-beating
Upon these Southern shores,
A sound this country once knew well
And shall know again once more.
Ushered in by Providence
Or captured by Fate
The drums of war are banging
At the sliprails, at the gate.
At the heated shimmering streets
At the minds of those awake
At the doors of those who sleep
At the sliprails, at the gate.
And Lawson’s lonely shore
changes ever on.
And Macquarie’s vision stirs, then sleeps,
Sleeps on and on and on.
And Gordon’s reckless sporting world
Is here to laugh no more.
For now our states are bound
By seas of bureaucratic law.
And I listen to the drumming
In the wide, red distance thrumming
While sunny spring and Christmas
And a lawnmower faintly buzzing
Wrest me from so foreboding a vision.
And I see the future
As through dirty windows brimming:
Hark! beyond the dirt and grime
This dream of ours is singing.
And all the greats are there
Namatjira, Banjo too.
And the common folk that made us,
The noble little they did do.
But dirt and grime they blur
The future that is bright
Before the day awakes must come
The dark and awful night.
And a silence that is thunder
Is empty through and through,
Is fraught with giving up and giving out
Awful loneliness too.
But a silence that is stirring
Is breaking through the clash
And leading willing hearts home
To Nature, God and rest.
And I hear, between the sunny breezes
Of this southern afternoon,
The crying strains of a
Travelling, lone black cockatoo.
He is crying, crying, crying
Giving reckless warning haste,
And he is hoping, hoping, hoping
Peace this nation will embrace.
And you and I will listen,
While this regaling shore,
Shall beat, shall ring, shall sound again
With the tremendous noise of war.

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