The only national work of the blacks was a dam or dyke of stones across the Darling River at Brewarrina. The stones they carried from Lord knows where—and the Lord knows how. The people of Bourke kept up navigation for months above the town by a dam of sand-bags. The Darling rises in blazing droughts from the Queensland rains. There are banks and beds of good clay and rock along the river. |
THE SKIES are brass and the plains are bare, Death and ruin are everywhere— And all that is left of the last year’s flood Is a sickly stream on the grey-black mud; The salt-springs bubble and the quagmires quiver, And—this is the dirge of the Darling River:
‘I rise in the drought from the Queensland rain,
‘I drown dry gullies and lave bare hills,
‘I want no blistering barge aground,
The sky is brass and the scrub-lands glare, |