Analysis of Cox's River



There’s a place I know on the Cox’s River, where the willows tickle the sand.
Where the cattle graze and the wallabies laze and the gum trees are so grand.

There are dams with ducks and perch, we think? Among the fences, mended.
Where the yabbies clawed and dingoes pawed and fishermen pretended.

There’s a dominant rock, where the lizards sun, there are grass-clad valleys too.
There are stockman’s tracks and red-belly blacks and a shack with an outside loo.

Autumn brings the Anzac Day and the smell of rabbit stew.
On an open fire, in a tin with wire and washed down with a brew.

By now, the leaves have left the trees, except those evergreens.
The land grows stark, the sky goes dark, forever, now it seems.

In the winter time on “Top Of The World” when the snows, they fall around.
The rabbits shiver, the foxes quiver as they lie in wait to bound.

The reptiles find their places, warm and mammal’s coats grow woolly.
The days are short, the men drink port and talk of past hunts, cruelly.

The spring-time is so different, but the morning dews still lie.
On the new grass roots and the sapling shoots as horses thunder by.

The bees, they start collecting the pollen for their honey.
The currawongs, they dive and bomb! Kookaburras think it’s funny.

But surely the air is heated now and the ground dries slowly out.
The cicadas hum, the crickets drum and then there is no doubt?
That summer brings the stifling heat with a punch packed to deliver,
As the trout they lay and the willows sway, along that Cox’s River.

Andy Pike
2001


Scheme AA XX BB BB XX CC DD EE DD FFGG XX
Poetic Form
Metre 10111101101011001 101010010010011111 1111101110101010 10110110100010 101001101011111101 11110110100111111 1010110011101 111010001110011101 1101110101110 01110111010111 00101111011011101 01010010101110111 010111010101110 011101110111110 011111001010111 1011100101110101 01110100101110 01110111110 1100111010011101 001010101011111 1101010110111010 101110011011110 101 1
Closest metre Iambic octameter
Characters 1,579
Words 314
Sentences 24
Stanzas 11
Stanza Lengths 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 2, 4, 2
Lines Amount 24
Letters per line (avg) 50
Words per line (avg) 12
Letters per stanza (avg) 109
Words per stanza (avg) 25

About this poem

Inspired by visiting a property west of the Blue Mountains near Sydney

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Written on January 20, 2001

Submitted by AndyPike on January 12, 2022

Modified on March 05, 2023

1:34 min read
14

Andy Pike

Andy Pike is a widely travelled part-time poet and writer, who captures places and experiences, Predominantly about Australia. more…

All Andy Pike poems | Andy Pike Books

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