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Title: The Free-Selector's Daughter
Author: Henry Lawson
* A Project Gutenberg of Australia eBook *
eBook No.: 2001101h.html
Language: English
Date first posted:  September 2020
Most recent update: September 2020

This eBook was produced by: Walter Moore

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The Free-Selector's Daughter

by
Henry Lawson 


A Poem Set to Music

Poem by Henry Lawson, first published in 1891

Sheet music by W R Furlong, first published in 1898



I met her on the Lachlan Side
    A darling girl I thought her,
And ere I left I swore Id win
    The free-selectors daughter.

I milked her fathers cows a month,
    I brought the wood and water,
I mended all the broken fence,
    Before I won the daughter.

I listened to her fathers yarns,
    I did just what I oughter,
And what youll have to do to win
    A free-selectors daughter.

I broke my pipe and burnt my twist,
    And washed my mouth with water;
I had a shave before I kissed
    The free-selectors daughter.

Then, rising in the frosty morn,
    I brought the cows for Mary,
And when Id milked a bucketful
    I took it to the dairy.

I poured the milk into the dish
    While Mary held the strainer,
I summoned heart to speak my wish,
    And, oh! her blush grew plainer.

I told her I must leave the place,
    I said that I would miss her;
At first she turned away her face,
    And then she let me kiss her.

I put the bucket on the ground,
    And in my arms I caught her:
Id give the world to hold again
    That free-selectors daughter!

* * *

Last lines of song suggested by the composer
as a more appropriate ending to the song:

And now for life, she's my true wife
    That free-selector's daughter

Music Sheets






THE END


 

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