paroles de chanson The Man From Snowy River (Live) - Jack Thompson
There
was
movement
at
the
station,
for
the
word
had
passed
around
That
the
colt
from
old
Regret
had
got
away,
And
had
joined
the
wild
bush
horses
- he
was
worth
a
thousand
pound,
So
all
the
cracks
had
gathered
to
the
fray.
All
the
tried
and
noted
riders
from
the
stations
near
and
far
Had
mustered
at
the
homestead
overnight,
For
the
bushmen
love
hard
riding
where
the
wild
bush
horses
are,
And
the
stockhorse
snuffs
the
battle
with
delight.
There
was
Harrison,
who
made
his
pile
when
Pardon
won
the
cup,
The
old
man
with
his
hair
as
white
as
snow
But
few
could
ride
beside
him
when
his
blood
was
fairly
up
-
He
would
go
wherever
horse
and
man
could
go.
And
Clancy
of
the
Overflow
came
down
to
lend
a
hand,
No
better
horseman
ever
held
the
reins;
For
never
horse
could
throw
him
while
the
saddle
girths
would
stand,
He
learnt
to
ride
while
droving
on
the
plains.
And
one
was
there,
a
stripling
on
a
small
and
weedy
beast,
He
was
something
like
a
racehorse
undersized,
With
a
touch
of
Timor
pony
- three
parts
thoroughbred
at
least
-
And
such
as
are
by
mountain
horsemen
prized.
He
was
hard
and
tough
and
wiry
- just
the
sort
that
won′t
say
die
-
There
was
courage
in
his
quick
impatient
tread;
And
he
bore
the
badge
of
gameness
in
his
bright
and
fiery
eye,
And
the
proud
and
lofty
carriage
of
his
head.
But
still
so
slight
and
weedy,
one
would
doubt
his
power
to
stay,
And
the
old
man
said,
"That
horse
will
never
do
For
a
long
a
tiring
gallop
- lad,
you'd
better
stop
away,
Those
hills
are
far
too
rough
for
such
as
you."
So
he
waited
sad
and
wistful
- only
Clancy
stood
his
friend
-
"I
think
we
ought
to
let
him
come,"
he
said;
"I
warrant
he′ll
be
with
us
when
he's
wanted
at
the
end,
For
both
his
horse
and
he
are
mountain
bred.
"He
hails
from
Snowy
River,
up
by
Kosciusko's
side,
Where
the
hills
are
twice
as
steep
and
twice
as
rough,
Where
a
horse′s
hoofs
strike
firelight
from
the
flint
stones
every
stride,
The
man
that
holds
his
own
is
good
enough.
And
the
Snowy
River
riders
on
the
mountains
make
their
home,
Where
the
river
runs
those
giant
hills
between;
I
have
seen
full
many
horsemen
since
I
first
commenced
to
roam,
But
nowhere
yet
such
horsemen
have
I
seen."
So
he
went
- they
found
the
horses
by
the
big
mimosa
clump
-
They
raced
away
towards
the
mountain′s
brow,
And
the
old
man
gave
his
orders,
"Boys,
go
at
them
from
the
jump,
No
use
to
try
for
fancy
riding
now.
And,
Clancy,
you
must
wheel
them,
try
and
wheel
them
to
the
right.
Ride
boldly,
lad,
and
never
fear
the
spills,
For
never
yet
was
rider
that
could
keep
the
mob
in
sight,
If
once
they
gain
the
shelter
of
those
hills."
So
Clancy
rode
to
wheel
them
- he
was
racing
on
the
wing
Where
the
best
and
boldest
riders
take
their
place,
And
he
raced
his
stockhorse
past
them,
and
he
made
the
ranges
ring
With
the
stockwhip,
as
he
met
them
face
to
face.
Then
they
halted
for
a
moment,
while
he
swung
the
dreaded
lash,
But
they
saw
their
well-loved
mountain
full
in
view,
And
they
charged
beneath
the
stockwhip
with
a
sharp
and
sudden
dash,
And
off
into
the
mountain
scrub
they
flew.
Then
fast
the
horsemen
followed,
where
the
gorges
deep
and
black
Resounded
to
the
thunder
of
their
tread,
And
the
stockwhips
woke
the
echoes,
and
they
fiercely
answered
back
From
cliffs
and
crags
that
beetled
overhead.
And
upward,
ever
upward,
the
wild
horses
held
their
way,
Where
mountain
ash
and
kurrajong
grew
wide;
And
the
old
man
muttered
fiercely,
"We
may
bid
the
mob
good
day,
No
man
can
hold
them
down
the
other
side."
When
they
reached
the
mountain's
summit,
even
Clancy
took
a
pull,
It
well
might
make
the
boldest
hold
their
breath,
The
wild
hop
scrub
grew
thickly,
and
the
hidden
ground
was
full
Of
wombat
holes,
and
any
slip
was
death.
But
the
man
from
Snowy
River
let
the
pony
have
his
head,
And
he
swung
his
stockwhip
round
and
gave
a
cheer,
And
he
raced
him
down
the
mountain
like
a
torrent
down
its
bed,
While
the
others
stood
and
watched
in
very
fear.
He
sent
the
flint
stones
flying,
but
the
pony
kept
his
feet,
He
cleared
the
fallen
timber
in
his
stride,
And
the
man
from
Snowy
River
never
shifted
in
his
seat
-
It
was
grand
to
see
that
mountain
horseman
ride.
Through
the
stringybarks
and
saplings,
on
the
rough
and
broken
ground,
Down
the
hillside
at
a
racing
pace
he
went;
And
he
never
drew
the
bridle
till
he
landed
safe
and
sound,
At
the
bottom
of
that
terrible
descent.
He
was
right
among
the
horses
as
they
climbed
the
further
hill,
And
the
watchers
on
the
mountain
standing
mute,
Saw
him
ply
the
stockwhip
fiercely,
he
was
right
among
them
still,
As
he
raced
across
the
clearing
in
pursuit.
Then
they
lost
him
for
a
moment,
where
two
mountain
gullies
met
In
the
ranges,
but
a
final
glimpse
reveals
On
a
dim
and
distant
hillside
the
wild
horses
racing
yet,
With
the
man
from
Snowy
River
at
their
heels.
And
he
ran
them
single-handed
till
their
sides
were
white
with
foam.
He
followed
like
a
bloodhound
on
their
track,
Till
they
halted
cowed
and
beaten,
then
he
turned
their
heads
for
home,
And
alone
and
unassisted
brought
them
back.
But
his
hardy
mountain
pony
he
could
scarcely
raise
a
trot,
He
was
blood
from
hip
to
shoulder
from
the
spur;
But
his
pluck
was
still
undaunted,
and
his
courage
fiery
hot,
For
never
yet
was
mountain
horse
a
cur.
And
down
by
Kosciusko,
where
the
pine-clad
ridges
raise
Their
torn
and
rugged
battlements
on
high,
Where
the
air
is
clear
as
crystal,
and
the
white
stars
fairly
blaze
At
midnight
in
the
cold
and
frosty
sky,
And
where
around
The
Overflow
the
reed
beds
sweep
and
sway
To
the
breezes,
and
the
rolling
plains
are
wide,
The
man
from
Snowy
River
is
a
household
word
today,
And
the
stockmen
tell
the
story
of
his
ride...
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