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The Bush Rangers


Four horseman rode out from the heart of the range,
Four horseman with aspects forbidding and strange.
They were booted and spurred, they were armed to the teeth,
And they frowned as they looked at the valley beneath,
As forward they rode through the rocks and the fern -
Ned Kelly, Dan Kelly, Steve Hart and Joe Byrne.

Ned Kelly drew rein and he shaded his eyes -
'The town's at our mercy! See yonder it lies!
To hell with the troopers!' - he shook his clenched fist -
'We will shoot them like dogs if they dare to resist!'
And all of them nodded, grim-visaged and stern -
Ned Kelly, Dan Kelly, Steve Hart and Joe Byrne.

Through the gullies and creeks they rode silently down;
They stuck-up the station and raided the town;
They opened the safe and they looted the bank;
They laughed and were merry, they ate and they drank.
Then off to the ranges they went with their gold -
Oh! never were bandits more reckless and bold.

But time brings its punishment, time travels fast -
And the outlaws were trapped in Glenrowan at last,
Where three of them died in the smoke and the flame,
And Ned Kelly came back - to the last he was game.
But the Law shot him down (he was fated to hang),
And that was the end of the bushranging gang.

Whatever their faults and whatever their crimes,
Their deeds lend romance to those faraway times.
They have gone from the gullies they haunted of old,
And nobody knows where they buried their gold.
To the ranges they loved they will never return -
Ned Kelly, Dan Kelly, Steve Hart and Joe Byrne.

But at times when I pass through that sleepy old town
Where the far-distant peaks of Strathbogie look down
I think of the days when those grim ranges rang
To the galloping hooves of the bushranging gang.
Though the years bring oblivion, time brings a change,
The ghosts of the Kellys still ride from the range.

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Comments


  • July 10
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    bushranger comment

    From guest jesica (contact)
    I think it means and shows, all the hard work and suffer that bushrangers like Ned Kelly went through and what they had to put up with

    • I think poems like these with their deceptive charm are at fault in glamourising robbers and killers in some peoples eyes.
      Though Harrington does have Kelly saying "'We will shoot them like dogs if they dare to resist" refering to the innocent townsfolk, the overall effect is to make heroes out of murderers in the same way as people did with outlaws in the American West.
      To paraphrase Harrington's own lines here
      Because of their faults and because of their crimes,
      Their deeds lend terror to those faraway times.


  • May 1
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    : )

    From guest chloe (contact)
    i also chose this poem for my english project, i think it is good! i have to do an oral presentation on this and i was wondering weather anyone knew something interesting that i could say about the poem or poet thanx x

    • for Chloe

      Please do read the biography we have here for Edward Harrington plus the comments below the poem which may all be helpful to you.
      Remember too that hte poem is based on an actual person whioch I'm sure you will find something interesting to say about him.
      Good Luck Von ~ Oldpoetry


  • November 10, 2007
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    great!

    From guest kylie (contact)
    this poem is really good. i have chosen to go this poem for my english assignment and it is a great poem to do


  • April 21, 2007
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    great

    From guest super duckie (contact)
    this poem i have chosen to for my assignment and my teacher also thought it would be a good poem to do!!!

  • rufina caraid Moderators member
    February 22, 2005
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    Harrington wandered throughout the Victorian outback as a rouseabout, drover and farmer after his time in the Australian Light Horse of 1914-18, saturating himself in the atmosphere of the bush. He is known as the 'last of the bush balladists, This is a fine example of his feelings about mateship, egalitarianism and as alove of the bush.
    Ned Kelly is an Icon in Australia and this poem is beautifully relayed.

    Vonnie
    Edited on Feb 22, 9:32 p.m. because ''.