Along the Road to Gundagai
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Along The Road To Gundagai is a song written by Jack O'Hagan in 1922. It is well-known among Australians, and one of a small number of pieces which could be considered an Australian folk tune.
The town of Gundagai is a rural town of New South Wales, Australia.
The first line of the chorus is instantly recognisable, due to its use of rhyme and motif:
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- There's a track winding back
- to an old-fashioned shack,
- Along the road to Gundagai.
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- Where the gum trees are growin'
- and the Murrumbidgee's flowin'
- beneath the starry sky.
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- Oh my mother and daddy are waitin' for me
- And the pals of my childhood once more I will see
- And no more will I roam 'cos I'm headin' right for home
- Along the road to Gundagai.