Henry Lawson

The Uncultured Rhymer to His Cultured Critics

Fight through ignorance, want, and care—
   Through the griefs that crush the spirit;
Push your way to a fortune fair,
   And the smiles of the world you’ll merit.
Long, as a boy, for the chance to learn—
   For the chance that Fate denies you;
Win degrees where the Life-lights burn,
   And scores will teach and advise you.
My cultured friends! you have come too late
   With your bypath nicely graded;
I’ve fought thus far on my track of Fate,
   And I’ll follow the rest unaided.
Must I be stopped by a college gate
   On the track of Life encroaching?
Be dumb to Love, and be dumb to Hate,
   For the lack of a college coaching?
 
You grope for Truth in a language dead—
   In the dust ’neath tower and steeple!
What know you of the tracks we tread?
   And what know you of our people?
‘I must read this, and that, and the rest,’
   And write as the cult expects me?—
I’ll read the book that may please me best,
   And write as my heart directs me!
 
You were quick to pick on a faulty line
   That I strove to put my soul in:
Your eyes were keen for a ‘dash’ of mine
   In the place of a semi-colon—
And blind to the rest. And is it for such
   As you I must brook restriction?
‘I was taught too little?’ I learnt too much
   To care for a pedant’s diction!
 
Must I turn aside from my destined way
   For a task your Joss would find me?
I come with strength of the living day,
   And with half the world behind me;
I leave you alone in your cultured halls
   To drivel and croak and cavil:
Till your voice goes further than college walls,
   Keep out of the tracks we travel!
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