Union Songs

Ballad of Eureka

A Song by Helen Palmer©Helen Palmer 1950
Tune Doreen Jacobs©Doreen Jacobs 1950

- [play]

They're leaving ship and station,
They're leaving bench and fold,
And pouring out from Melbourne
To join the search for gold.

The face of town and country
Is changing ev'ry day,
But rulers keep on ruling
The old colonial way.

"How can we work the diggings
And learn how fortune feels
If all the traps forever
Are yelping at our heels?"

"If you've enough," says Lalor,
"Of all their little games,
Then go and get your licence
And throw it on the flames!"

"The law is out to get us
And make us bow in fear.
They call us foreign rebels
Who'd plant the Charter here!"

"They may be right," says Lalor,
"But if they show their braid,
We'll stand our ground and hold it
Behind a bush stockade!"

It's down with pick and shovel
A rifle's needed now
They come to raise a standard
They come to make a vow

There's not a flag in Europe
More lovely to behold,
Than floats above Eureka
Where diggers work the gold.

"There's not a flag in Europe
More lovely to the eye,
Than is the blue and silver
Against a southern sky.

Here in the name of freedom,
Whatever be our loss,
We swear to stand together
Beneath the Southern Cross."

It is a Sunday morning.
The miner's camp is still;
Two hundred flashing redcoats
Come marching to the hill

Come marching up the gully
With muskets firing low;
And diggers wake from dreaming
To hear the bugle blow.

The wounded and the dying
Lie silent in the sun,
But change will not be halted
By any redcoats gun.

There's not a flag in Europe
More rousing to the will
Then the flag of stars that flutters
Above Eureka's Hill.

Notes

Many thanks to Doreen Bridges (formerly Doreen Jacobs) for permission to add this song to the Union Songs collection.

See also the Ballad of 1891 in this collection

How many songs and poems are there about the Eureka Rebellion? You can find a comprehensive collection at the eurekaSydney website: http://eurekasydney.com/

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