Eric Bogle
Bushfire
About nine o’clock we saw the first smoke stain the far horizon
A soft rolling shroud of shifting white cloud above the mountains rising
Uneasy and afraid, we watched and we prayed as the clouds grew ever higher
But an hour before noon they’d blocked out the sun, and the mountains were on fire

Bushfire. Ah, ah, bushfire

And all through the gloom of that long afternoon, the fire fed and grew stronger
Driven by the wind, it danced ’long the mountain rims, roaring out it’s anger
Fed by the breeze and the helpless trees, consuming those who bore it
It raced pell-mell from the mouth of hell, destroying all before it

Bushfire. Ah, ah, bushfire

Our farm, our home, and all that we owned lay in the path of that fiery river
We prayed for rain, and we cursed the wind as it drove our destruction nearer
But no words of men can bring down the rain or set the wind to turning
And around midnight we’d lost the fight,and our whole farm was burning

Bushfire. Ah, ah, bushfire

Through the smoke and the heat came the crying of the sheep as the flames set their wool on fire
They ran terrified, they roasted and died, their own fleece their funeral pyre
So we packed up and ran while the fire’s red hand reached hungrily out to find us
While so long and hard to build and so quick and easily killed, our dreams burned down behind us
Bushfire. Ah, ah, bushfire

Arrogant man, he squats upon the land, he buys and sells and zones it
Plants his seeds, cuts down his weeds, and imagines that he owns it
For 20 years our land we cleared, we ploughed and we sowed and we tamed it
But where the bushfire has passed, there’s only black ash, and Nature has reclaimed it