paroles de chanson The Brass Well - Slim Dusty
'Tis
a
legend
of
the
bushmen
from
the
days
of
Cunningham,
When
he
opened
up
the
country
and
the
early
squatters
came.
"Tis
the
old
tale
of
a
fortune
missed
by
men
who
did
not
seek,
And,
perhaps,
you
haven't
heard
it,
The
Brass
Well
on
Myall
Creek.
They
were
north
of
running
rivers,
they
were
south
of
Queensland
rains,
And
a
blazing
drought
was
scorching
every
grass-blade
from
the
plains;
So
the
stockmen
drove
the
cattle
to
the
range
where
there
was
grass,
And
a
couple
sunk
a
well
and
found
what
they
believed
was
brass.
"Here's
some
bloomin'
brass!"
they
muttered
when
they
found
it
in
the
clay,
And
they
thought
no
more
about
it
and
in
time
they
went
away;
But
they
heard
of
gold,
and
saw
it,
somewhere
down
by
Inverell,
And
they
felt
and
weighed
it,
crying:
"Hell!
we
found
it
in
the
well!"
And
they
worked
about
the
station
and
at
times
they
took
the
track,
Always
meaning
to
save
money,
always
meaning
to
go
back,
Always
meanin,
like
the
bushmen,
who
go
drifting
round
like
wrecks,
And
they'd
get
half
way
to
Myall,
strike
a
pub
and
blow
their
cheques.
Then
they
told
two
more
about
it
and
those
other
two
grew
old,
And
they
never
found
the
brass
well
and
they
never
found
the
gold.
For
the
scrub
grows
dense
and
quickly
and,
though
many
went
to
seek,
No
one
ever
struck
the
lost
track
to
the
Well
on
Myall
Creek.
And
the
story
is
forgotten
and
I'm
sitting
here,
alas!
With
a
woeful
load
of
trouble
and
a
woeful
lack
of
brass;
But
I
dream
at
times
that
I
might
find
what
many
went
to
seek,
That
my
luck
might
lead
my
footsteps
to
the
Well
on
Myall
Creek.
'Tis
a
legend
of
the
bushmen
from
the
days
of
Cunningham,
When
he
opened
up
the
country
and
the
early
squatters
came.
'Tis
the
old
tale
of
a
fortune
missed
by
men
who
did
not
seek,
And,
perhaps,
you
haven't
heard
it,
The
Brass
Well
on
Myall
Creek.
And,
perhaps,
you
haven't
heard
it,
The
Brass
Well
on
Myall
Creek.
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