<h2> On Kiley's Run </h2>
<p>The roving breezes come and go<br/>
On Kiley's Run,<br/>
The sleepy river murmurs low,<br/>
And far away one dimly sees<br/>
Beyond the stretch of forest trees —<br/>
Beyond the foothills dusk and dun —<br/>
The ranges sleeping in the sun<br/>
On Kiley's Run.<br/>
<br/>
'Tis many years since first I came<br/>
To Kiley's Run,<br/>
More years than I would care to name<br/>
Since I, a stripling, used to ride<br/>
For miles and miles at Kiley's side,<br/>
The while in stirring tones he told<br/>
The stories of the days of old<br/>
On Kiley's Run.<br/>
<br/>
I see the old bush homestead now<br/>
On Kiley's Run,<br/>
Just nestled down beneath the brow<br/>
Of one small ridge above the sweep<br/>
Of river-flat, where willows weep<br/>
And jasmine flowers and roses bloom,<br/>
The air was laden with perfume<br/>
On Kiley's Run.<br/>
<br/>
We lived the good old station life<br/>
On Kiley's Run,<br/>
With little thought of care or strife.<br/>
Old Kiley seldom used to roam,<br/>
He liked to make the Run his home,<br/>
The swagman never turned away<br/>
With empty hand at close of day<br/>
From Kiley's Run.<br/>
<br/>
We kept a racehorse now and then<br/>
On Kiley's Run,<br/>
And neighb'ring stations brought their men<br/>
To meetings where the sport was free,<br/>
And dainty ladies came to see<br/>
Their champions ride; with laugh and song<br/>
The old house rang the whole night long<br/>
On Kiley's Run.<br/>
<br/>
The station hands were friends I wot<br/>
On Kiley's Run,<br/>
A reckless, merry-hearted lot —<br/>
All splendid riders, and they knew<br/>
The 'boss' was kindness through and through.<br/>
Old Kiley always stood their friend,<br/>
And so they served him to the end<br/>
On Kiley's Run.<br/>
<br/>
But droughts and losses came apace<br/>
To Kiley's Run,<br/>
Till ruin stared him in the face;<br/>
He toiled and toiled while lived the light,<br/>
He dreamed of overdrafts at night:<br/>
At length, because he could not pay,<br/>
His bankers took the stock away<br/>
From Kiley's Run.<br/>
<br/>
Old Kiley stood and saw them go<br/>
From Kiley's Run.<br/>
The well-bred cattle marching slow;<br/>
His stockmen, mates for many a day,<br/>
They wrung his hand and went away.<br/>
Too old to make another start,<br/>
Old Kiley died — of broken heart,<br/>
On Kiley's Run.<br/>
<br/>
. . . . .<br/>
<br/>
The owner lives in England now<br/>
Of Kiley's Run.<br/>
He knows a racehorse from a cow;<br/>
But that is all he knows of stock:<br/>
His chiefest care is how to dock<br/>
Expenses, and he sends from town<br/>
To cut the shearers' wages down<br/>
On Kiley's Run.<br/>
<br/>
There are no neighbours anywhere<br/>
Near Kiley's Run.<br/>
The hospitable homes are bare,<br/>
The gardens gone; for no pretence<br/>
Must hinder cutting down expense:<br/>
The homestead that we held so dear<br/>
Contains a half-paid overseer<br/>
On Kiley's Run.<br/>
<br/>
All life and sport and hope have died<br/>
On Kiley's Run.<br/>
No longer there the stockmen ride;<br/>
For sour-faced boundary riders creep<br/>
On mongrel horses after sheep,<br/>
Through ranges where, at racing speed,<br/>
Old Kiley used to 'wheel the lead'<br/>
On Kiley's Run.<br/>
<br/>
There runs a lane for thirty miles<br/>
Through Kiley's Run.<br/>
On either side the herbage smiles,<br/>
But wretched trav'lling sheep must pass<br/>
Without a drink or blade of grass<br/>
Thro' that long lane of death and shame:<br/>
The weary drovers curse the name<br/>
Of Kiley's Run.<br/>
<br/>
The name itself is changed of late<br/>
Of Kiley's Run.<br/>
They call it 'Chandos Park Estate'.<br/>
The lonely swagman through the dark<br/>
Must hump his swag past Chandos Park.<br/>
The name is English, don't you see,<br/>
The old name sweeter sounds to me<br/>
Of 'Kiley's Run'.<br/>
<br/>
I cannot guess what fate will bring<br/>
To Kiley's Run —<br/>
For chances come and changes ring —<br/>
I scarcely think 'twill always be<br/>
Locked up to suit an absentee;<br/>
And if he lets it out in farms<br/>
His tenants soon will carry arms<br/>
On Kiley's Run.<br/></p>
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