Analysis of Coomera

Henry Lawson 1867 (Grenfell) – 1922 (Sydney)



THERE’S a pretty little story with a touch of moonlit glory
Comes from Beenleigh on the Logan, but we don’t know if it’s true;
For we scarcely dare to credit ev’rything they say who edit
Those unhappy country papers ’twixt the ocean and Barcoo.

’Twas the man who owned the wherry at the first Coomera ferry
Who was sitting cold and lonely while he counted out his tin;
When the cloudy curtain lifting let the moonlight on a drifting
Boat, that floated down the river with a pallid form therein.

And they say that Sergeant Carey (with the man who ran the ferry),
Started down to save the body from the cruel heartless sea,
And in spite of wind and water, soon they reached the barque and caught her;
And they tied the boat behind them while they wondered “who was he?”

O the moon shone bright as ever as they towed him up the river,
And they found within the pocket that was nearest to his breast—
Just an antidote for sorrow, that would tide him o’er the morrow—
(Flask of Brandy); but we’d better draw the curtain o’er the rest.

Yet, in case the point’s too finely drawn (we know we joke divinely),
And the reader fails to see it with a magnifying glass,
We will say the man who floated, while the moonlight o’er him gloated,
Was not dead and gone to heaven—he was only drunk, alas!THERE’S a pretty little story with a touch of moonlit glory
Comes from Beenleigh on the Logan, but we don’t know if it’s true;
For we scarcely dare to credit ev’rything they say who edit
Those unhappy country papers ’twixt the ocean and Barcoo.

’Twas the man who owned the wherry at the first Coomera ferry
Who was sitting cold and lonely while he counted out his tin;
When the cloudy curtain lifting let the moonlight on a drifting
Boat, that floated down the river with a pallid form therein.

And they say that Sergeant Carey (with the man who ran the ferry),
Started down to save the body from the cruel heartless sea,
And in spite of wind and water, soon they reached the barque and caught her;
And they tied the boat behind them while they wondered “who was he?”

O the moon shone bright as ever as they towed him up the river,
And they found within the pocket that was nearest to his breast—
Just an antidote for sorrow, that would tide him o’er the morrow—
(Flask of Brandy); but we’d better draw the curtain o’er the rest.

Yet, in case the point’s too finely drawn (we know we joke divinely),
And the reader fails to see it with a magnifying glass,
We will say the man who floated, while the moonlight o’er him gloated,
Was not dead and gone to heaven—he was only drunk, alas!
For we scarcely dare to credit ev’rything they say who edit
Those unhappy country papers ’twixt the ocean and Barcoo.

’Twas the man who owned the wherry at the first Coomera ferry
Who was sitting cold and lonely while he counted out his tin;
When the cloudy curtain lifting let the moonlight on a drifting
Boat, that floated down the river with a pallid form therein.

And they say that Sergeant Carey (with the man who ran the ferry),
Started down to save the body from the cruel heartless sea,
And in spite of wind and water, soon they reached the barque and caught her;
And they tied the boat behind them while they wondered “who was he?”

O the moon shone bright as ever as they towed him up the river,
And they found within the pocket that was nearest to his breast—
Just an antidote for sorrow, that would tide him o’er the morrow—
(Flask of Brandy); but we’d better draw the curtain o’er the rest.

Yet, in case the point’s too finely drawn (we know we joke divinely),
And the reader fails to see it with a magnifying glass,
We will say the man who floated, while the moonlight o’er him gloated,
Was not dead and gone to heaven—he was only drunk, alas!


Scheme aBCD AEDE AAFA FGHG AIJaBCD AEDE AAFA FGHG AIJICD AEDE AAFA FGHG AIJI
Poetic Form
Metre 101010101011110 11110101111111 11101110111110 10101010101001 10111010101110 111010101110111 101010101011010 111010101010101 0111101010111010 101110101010101 0011101011101010 011010111110111 1011111011111010 011010101110111 111011011111010 111011101010101 1010111011111010 00101111101001 111011101011110 1110111011101101010101011110 11110101111111 11101110111110 10101010101001 10111010101110 111010101110111 101010101011010 111010101010101 0111101010111010 101110101010101 0011101011101010 011010111110111 1011111011111010 011010101110111 111011011111010 111011101010101 1010111011111010 00101111101001 111011101011110 111011101110101 11101110111110 10101010101001 10111010101110 111010101110111 101010101011010 111010101010101 0111101010111010 101110101010101 0011101011101010 011010111110111 1011111011111010 011010101110111 111011011111010 111011101010101 1010111011111010 00101111101001 111011101011110 111011101110101
Closest metre Iambic octameter
Characters 3,765
Words 701
Sentences 16
Stanzas 13
Stanza Lengths 4, 4, 4, 4, 7, 4, 4, 4, 6, 4, 4, 4, 4
Lines Amount 57
Letters per line (avg) 51
Words per line (avg) 12
Letters per stanza (avg) 223
Words per stanza (avg) 53
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

3:30 min read
116

Henry Lawson

Henry Lawson 17 June 1867 - 2 September 1922 was an Australian writer and poet Along with his contemporary Banjo Paterson Lawson is among the best-known Australian poets and fiction writers of the colonial period more…

All Henry Lawson poems | Henry Lawson Books

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