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Wallis & Matilda - The Man From Ironbark

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Uploaded by on May 7, 2008

Here is another one of Wallis & Matilda's greatest hits, at least in my opinion. Don't forget to comment, rate, and most of all, Enjoy!

P.S: Sorry for the sound dropout, I have no idea how it happened. Probably happened during conversion.

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Music

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Uploader Comments (Didgeinator92)

  • thanks Didge for the song..........I played the barber in a school play years ago because I knew all the words from listening to Wallis and Matilda........and believe it or not my great great grandfather WAS the man from ironbark

  • Wow, that's certainly an interesting part of the family, and it's nice to know about how significant this song is to you.

    If I remember, my great great grandfather was an actual convict, by the name of Edward Killalea. I guess history runs somewhere through a family...

    Thanks for commenting!

  • " their eyes were dull their heads were flat"....applies to many of today's Ipodded youth

  • I may be a youth, but I can't help but agree with you. It's very common to hear stories on the news about graffiti gangs, violence and God knows what else. Oh well, here's to still holding out hope.

    Thanks for commenting!

  • There were some guilded youths who sat along the barbers wall, there eyes were dull their heads were flat, they had no brains at all!

  • To them the barber passed the wink, his dexter eyelid shut, "I'll make this bloomin yokel think, his bloomin throat is cut."

    Glad you enjoyed the song.

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All Comments (16)

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  • now called Stuart Town I think most of the people there are related to my wife :)

  • Have loved Wallis & Matilda for many years. Have a few cassettes, but yet to look for the CD (if it exists!).

  • FANTASTIC - Songs are the easiest ways to NOT lose the classical Australian Poetry - also the easiest way to learn then to.

  • "Dexter" Latin for "Right" - "Greens" were young girls. Peelers was a nickname for Police men, named after Sir Robert Peel who founded the first modern day Police force. A "Tote" - the odds or bet on a Horse rate as set by the Book Keeper - also used as "Tab" in Aussie Lingo.

  • AB Paterson from Ophir out of Orange, war correspondent and peer of Winston Churchill, Australia's best poet of the early 20th century, Henry was good too but Banjo better educated, greatest poem Waltzing Matilda

  • Do you shave mate? :-))))

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