Poetry about Australians and the Australian way of life. But does that mean we should only write about shearers, dying drovers and their faithful dogs? Does it mean that we should be pointed in our poems and make sure the reader knows it is about Australia?
Would anyone here deny that Henry Lawson wrote bush poetry? Poems like The Roaring Days and The Lights of Cobb and Co. are clearly about the Australian way of life - in the time of Lawson.
Take The Faces in the Street by Lawson. No where in that poem does Henry Lawson mention Australia or Australians, it could be placed anywhere and yet is is an iconic Australian bush poem. Does that then disqualify it from being a "bush poem"? While Lawson wrote a lot about the bush, he also wrote poems about the people in his life : To Jim, a poem to his son, Bertha, a poem about his daughter and To Hannah to name a few. Are they not bush poems?
Heather
