'Tis a legend of the bushmen from the days of Cunningham, When he opened up the country and the early squatters came. "Tis the old tale of a fortune missed by men who did not seek, And, perhaps, you haven't heard it, The Brass Well on Myall Creek. They were north of running rivers, they were south of Queensland rains, And a blazing drought was scorching every grass-blade from the plains; So the stockmen drove the cattle to the range where there was grass, And a couple sunk a well and found what they believed was brass. "Here's some bloomin' brass!" they muttered when they found it in the clay, And they thought no more about it and in time they went away; But they heard of gold, and saw it, somewhere down by Inverell, And they felt and weighed it, crying: "Hell! we found it in the well!" And they worked about the station and at times they took the track, Always meaning to save money, always meaning to go back, Always meanin, like the bushmen, who go drifting round like wrecks, And they'd get half way to Myall, strike a pub and blow their cheques. Then they told two more about it and those other two grew old, And they never found the brass well and they never found the gold. For the scrub grows dense and quickly and, though many went to seek, No one ever struck the lost track to the Well on Myall Creek. And the story is forgotten and I'm sitting here, alas! With a woeful load of trouble and a woeful lack of brass; But I dream at times that I might find what many went to seek, That my luck might lead my footsteps to the Well on Myall Creek. 'Tis a legend of the bushmen from the days of Cunningham, When he opened up the country and the early squatters came. 'Tis the old tale of a fortune missed by men who did not seek, And, perhaps, you haven't heard it, The Brass Well on Myall Creek. And, perhaps, you haven't heard it, The Brass Well on Myall Creek.