"Bullocky" | |
---|---|
by Judith Wright | |
First published in | The Bulletin |
Country | Australia |
Language | English |
Publication date | 27 September 1944 |
"Bullocky" (1944) is a poem by Australian poet Judith Wright. [1]
It was originally published in The Bulletin on 27 September 1944, [2] and was subsequently reprinted in the author's single-author collections and a number of Australian poetry anthologies. [1]
The Oxford Companion to Australian Literature states the poem "links the bullock driver in his pioneer role of unlocking the land with Moses, leading his people into the promised land...The poem indicates that the continuing fruitfulness and progress of the coiuntry depend upon the past as much as the present; that Australia of the future will be shaped by its traditions and history." [3]
In reviewing Modern Australian Poetry, edited by H. M. Green, in The Advocate (Melbourne) reviewer "L.M." called the poem "a splendid example of [Wright's] mastery over words and vigorous, unusual imagery." [4]
Critic "E.M.", writing in The Age (Melbourne) about Wright's poetry, stated that the poem "could only have been written by someone who had seen the flickering firelight on a ribbon gum or a candlebark—by one who knew many nights in the bush...And the poem is ourselves, our country, our life. It is all the memories of autumn camping, and yet it is the past, our fathers' memories too, a mature evocation of the time when the life of the bush moved to a ballad rhythm." [5]
After the poem's initial publication in The Bulletin magazine in 1944 it was reprinted as follows:
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