Lyrics Peter Anderson & Co. - Slim Dusty
He
had
offices
in
Sydney,
many
years
ago,
And
his
shingle
bore
the
legend
"Peter
Anderson
and
Co.",
But
his
real
name
was
Careless,
as
the
fellows
understood,
And
his
relatives
decided
that
he
wasn't
any
good.
'Twas
their
gentle
tongues
that
blasted
any
'character'
he
had,
He
was
fond
of
beer
and
leisure,
and
the
Co.
was
just
as
bad.
It
was
limited
in
number
to
a
unit,
was
the
Co.
'Twas
a
bosom
chum
of
Peter
and
his
Christian
name
was
Joe.
Oh,
the
office
was
their
haven,
for
they
lived
there
when
hard-up,
A
'daily'
for
a
table
cloth,
a
jam
tin
for
a
cup;
And
if
the
chance,
the
landlord's
bailiff
happened
round
in
times
like
these,
Just
to
seize
the
office-fittings,
well,
there
wasn't
much
to
seize.
And
when
morning
brought
the
bailiff,
there'd
be
nothing
to
be
seen,
Save
a
piece
of
bevelled
cedar
where
the
tenant's
plate
had
been;
And
there'd
be
no
sign
of
Peter,
and
there'd
be
no
sign
of
Joe,
For
another
portal
boasted
"Peter
Anderson
and
Co."
Peter
always
met
you
smiling,
always
seemed
to
know
you
well,
Always
gay
and
glad
to
see
you,
always
had
a
joke
to
tell;
He
could
laugh
when
all
was
gloomy,
he
could
grin
when
all
was
blue,
Sing
a
comic
song
and
act
it,
and
appreciate
one
too.
Glorious
drunk
and
happy,
till
they
heard
the
roosters
crow,
And
the
landlady
and
neighbours
made
complaints
about
the
Co.
But
that
life!
it
might
be
likened
to
a
reckless
drinking-song,
But
it
couldn't
last
for
ever,
and
it
never
lasted
long.
Debt-collecting
ruined
Peter,
people
talked
him
round
too
oft,
For
his
heart
was
soft
as
b___er,
and
the
Co.'s
was
just
as
soft;
But,
of
course,
it
wasn't
business,
only
Peter's
careless
way;
And
perhaps
it
pays
in
heaven,
but
on
earth
it
doesn't
pay.
They
got
harder
up
than
ever,
and,
to
make
it
worse,
the
Co.
Went
more
often
round
the
corner
than
was
good
for
him
to
go.
"I
might
live,"
he
said
to
Peter,
"but
I
haven't
got
the
nerve,
I
am
going,
going,
no
reserve.
Peter's
fault
is
very
common,
very
fitting
and
bereft
Paid
the
undertaker
cash
and
then
got
drunk
on
what
was
left;
Then
he
shed
some
tears,
half-maudlin,
on
the
grave
where
lay
the
Co.,
And
he
drifted
to
a
township
where
the
city
failures
go.
In
a
town
of
wrecks
and
failures,
they
appreciated
him.
Men
who
might
have
been,
who
had
been,
but
who
were
not
in
the
swim,
They
would
ask
him
who
the
Co.
was,
that
queer
company
he
kept,
And
he'd
always
answer
vaguely,
he
would
say
his
partner
slept;
That
he
had
a
'sleeping
partner',
jesting
while
his
spirit
broke,
And
they
grinned
above
their
glasses,
for
they
took
it
for
a
joke.
Till
at
last
there
came
a
morning
when
his
smile
was
seen
no
more,
He
was
gone
from
out
the
office,
and
his
shingle
from
the
door,
And
a
boundary-rider
jogging
out
across
the
neighb'ring
run,
Was
attracted
by
a
something,
that
was
blazing
in
the
sun;
And
he
found
that
it
was
Peter,
lying
peacefully
at
rest,
With
a
bottle
close
beside
him
and
the
shingle
on
his
breast.
Yes
he
had
offices
in
Sydney,
many
years
ago,
And
his
shingle
bore
the
legend
"Peter
Anderson
and
Co.",
1 Sweeney
2 Middleton's Rouseabout
3 Bill
4 A Word to Texas Jack (with the Bushlanders)
5 As Good As New
6 Since Then
7 St. Peter
8 Callaghan's Hotel
9 A Mate Who Can Do No Wrong
10 Men Who Come Behind
11 Second Class, Wait Here
12 Peter Anderson & Co.
13 Do You Think That I Do Not Know
14 A Prouder Man Than You
15 Only the Two of Us Here
16 Ballad of the Drover
17 Written Afterwards
18 The Brass Well
19 Mount Bukaroo
20 The Old Jimmy Woodser
21 Break O'Day
22 To an Old Mate
23 Andy's Return
24 On the Night Train
25 The Man From Snowy River
26 The Man From Ironbark
27 Clancy Of The Overflow
28 Waltzing Matilda
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