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No Foe Shall Gather Our Harvest

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"No Foe Shall Gather Our Harvest"
by Mary Gilmore
First published in The Australian Women's Weekly
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
Publication date29 June 1940 (1940-06-29)
Preceded by Battlefields (poetry collection)
Followed by"Notes" (column)

"No Foe Shall Gather Our Harvest" is a poem by Australian poet Mary Gilmore. [1] It was first published in The Australian Women's Weekly on 29 June 1940, [2] and later in the poet's collection Fourteen Men . The final two stanzas from the poem appear as microtext on the Australian ten-dollar note. [3]

Contents

Outline

The poem is a "call to arms" to Australians, not in the sense of taking up weapons but more as a call to stand firm in the face of foreign aggression. Each stanza ends with the same two lines (italicised in the original publication): "No foe shall gather our harvest/Or sit on our stockyard rail."

Analysis

The Oxford Companion to Australian Literature notes that at the time of publication, the poem "proved a remarkable morale booster in the tense days of the Japanese threat to Australia in 1942." They also note that it "was at the time considered as a possible battle hymn, even national anthem." [4]

Further publications

See also

References

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