Lyrics The Geebung Polo Club (Live) - Jack Thompson
THE
GEEBUNG
POLO
CLUB
by
A.B.
"Banjo"
Paterson
It
was
somewhere
up
the
country
in
a
land
of
rock
and
scrub,
That
they
formed
an
institution
called
the
Geebung
Polo
Club.
They
were
long
and
wiry
natives
of
the
rugged
mountainside,
And
the
horse
was
never
saddled
that
the
Geebungs
couldn′t
ride;
But
their
style
of
playing
polo
was
irregular
and
rash
-
They
had
mighty
little
science,
but
a
mighty
lot
of
dash:
And
they
played
on
mountain
ponies
that
were
muscular
and
strong,
Though
their
coats
were
quite
unpolished,
and
their
manes
and
tails
were
long.
And
they
used
to
train
those
ponies
wheeling
cattle
in
the
scrub:
They
were
demons,
were
the
members
of
the
Geebung
Polo
Club.
It
was
somewhere
down
the
country,
in
a
city's
smoke
and
steam,
That
a
polo
club
existed,
called
the
Cuff
and
Collar
Team.
As
a
social
institution
′twas
a
marvellous
success,
For
the
members
were
distinguished
by
exclusiveness
and
dress.
They
had
natty
little
ponies
that
were
nice,
and
smooth,
and
sleek,
For
their
cultivated
owners
only
rode
'em
once
a
week.
So
they
started
up
the
country
in
pursuit
of
sport
and
fame,
For
they
meant
to
show
the
Geebungs
how
they
ought
to
play
the
game;
And
they
took
their
valets
with
them
- just
to
give
their
boots
a
rub
Ere
they
started
operations
on
the
Geebung
Polo
Club.
Now
my
readers
can
imagine
how
the
contest
ebbed
and
flowed,
When
the
Geebung
boys
got
going
it
was
time
to
clear
the
road;
And
the
game
was
so
terrific
that
ere
half
the
time
was
gone
A
spectator's
leg
was
broken
- just
from
merely
looking
on.
For
they
waddied
one
another
till
the
plain
was
strewn
with
dead,
While
the
score
was
kept
so
even
that
they
neither
got
ahead.
And
the
Cuff
and
Collar
captain,
when
he
tumbled
off
to
die,
Was
the
last
surviving
player
- so
the
game
was
called
a
tie.
Then
the
captain
of
the
Geebungs
raised
him
slowly
from
the
ground,
Though
his
wounds
were
mostly
mortal,
yet
he
fiercely
gazed
around;
There
was
no
one
to
oppose
him
- all
the
rest
were
in
a
trance,
So
he
scrambled
on
his
pony
for
his
last
expiring
chance,
For
he
meant
to
make
an
effort
to
get
victory
to
his
side;
So
he
struck
at
goal
- and
missed
it
- then
he
tumbled
off
and
died.
By
the
old
Campaspe
River,
where
the
breezes
shake
the
grass,
There′s
a
row
of
little
gravestones
that
the
stockmen
never
pass,
For
they
bear
a
crude
inscription
saying,
"Stranger,
drop
a
tear,
For
the
Cuff
and
Collar
players
and
the
Geebung
boys
lie
here."
And
on
misty
moonlit
evenings,
while
the
dingoes
howl
around,
You
can
see
their
shadows
flitting
down
that
phantom
polo
ground;
You
can
hear
the
loud
collisions
as
the
flying
players
meet,
And
the
rattle
of
the
mallets,
and
the
rush
of
ponies′
feet,
Till
the
terrified
spectator
rides
like
blazes
to
the
pub
-
He's
been
haunted
by
the
spectres
of
the
Geebung
Polo
Club.
The
Antipodean,
1893
Return
to
the
A.B.
′Banjo'
Paterson
page.
Return
to
the
Geebung
Polo
Club
page.
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