Henry Lawson

Lake Eliza

The sand was heavy on our feet,
      A Christmas sky was o’er us,
And half a mile through dust and heat
      Lake ’Liza lay before us.
‘You’ll have a long and heavy tramp’—
      So said the last adviser—
‘You can’t do better than to camp
      To-night at Lake Eliza.’
 
We quite forgot our aching shanks,
      A cheerful spirit caught us;
We thought of green and shady banks,
      We thought of pleasant waters.
‘Neath sky as niggard of its rain
      As of his gold the miser,
By mulga scrub and lignum plain
      We’d tramp’d to Lake Eliza.
 
A patch to grey discoloured sand,
      A fringe of tufty grasses,
A lonely pub in mulga scrub
      Is all the stranger passes.
He’d pass the Lake a dozen times
      And yet be none the wiser;
I hope that I shall never be
      As dry as Lake Eliza.
 
No patch of green or water seen
      To cheer the weary plodder;
The grass is tough as fencing-wire,
      And just as good for fodder.
And when I see it mentioned in
      Some local Advertiser,
‘Twill make me laugh, or make me grin—
      The name of ’Lake Eliza’.
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