The Ballad of Big Bill Smith Big Bill Smith was rough and tough as a mining man could be And he said I'll blaze a trail right down those ranges to the sea And Big Bill Smith he did just that, when he found the Barron River Where the myall blacks and crocodiles, would set your bones a shiver Then he said I’ve dug too long for gold I'll find it the easy way And he built a pub there in the scrub where Smithfield is today The Thornborough miners dug their gold and the packers brought it down And they quenched their thirst in Big Bill's bar right there in Big Bill’s town Well the traders came and built a town and they named it after Bill Then the gamblers and the women came their pockets for to fill The gold came down and Smithfield boomed and a roaring town it was And it's even said that Big Bill's horse, with golden shoes were shod Big Bill was king of Smithfield town and Palmer Kate was queen And the only god they knew came down the range in a golden stream The wickedest town in Australia was its dubious claim to fame And the things they did for a bag of gold, would put the devil himself to shame And the myall blacks looked on with awe as the white men died in fights For a bag of gold or the favours of a woman for the night And Big Bill met his death that way out in that muddy street He traded lead for a bag of gold, and Big Bill Smith was beat Oh they buried Bill there in the scrub and they drank his hotel dry Was the grandest wake they'd ever had the day that Big Bill died Yes Big Bill died and his town did too in the face of old man flood For the Barron River it took the lot, and buried it deep in mud Oh there's nought to see of the old town now for they never rebuilt it there And I'll bet the ghost of Big Bill Smith is still around somewhere And if you see that sign on the northern road and you're thinking about this tale Well spare a thought for Big Bill Smith, and the men who blazed the trail