"Brisbane Ladies" is an Australian folksong and is one of many adaptations of the traditional British naval song "Spanish Ladies". The song is also known as "Augathella Station". It is numbered 21114 on the Roud Folk Song Index.[1]
Farewell and adieu to you, Brisbane ladies,
farewell and adieu, you maids of Toowong.
We've sold all our cattle and we have to get a movin',
but we hope we shall see you again before long.
Chorus: —We'll rant and we'll roar like true Queensland drovers, —we'll rant and we'll roar as onward we push —until we return to the Augathella station. —Oh, it's flamin' dry goin' through the old Queensland bush.
The first camp we make, we shall call it the Quart Pot,
Caboolture, then Kilcoy, and Colinton's Hut,
we'll pull up at the Stone House, Bob Williamson's paddock,
and early next morning we cross the Blackbutt.
Chorus
Then on to Taromeo and Yarraman Creek, lads,
it's there we shall make our next camp for the day,
where the water and grass are both plenty and sweet, lads,
and maybe we'll butcher a fat little stray.
Chorus
Then on to Nanango, that hard-bitten township[a]
where the out-of-work station-hands sit in the dust,
where the shearers get shorn by old Tim, the contractor.
Oh, I wouldn't go near there, but I flaming well must!
Chorus
The girls of Toomancie,[b] they look so entrancing,
like bawling young heifers they're out for their fun,
with the waltz and the polka and all kinds of dancing
to the rackety old banjo of Bob Anderson.
Chorus
Then fill up your glasses, and drink to the lasses,
we'll drink this town dry, then farewell to them all,
and when we've got back to the Augathella Station,
we hope you'll come by there and pay us a call.[6]