No training? No problem, I’m Australian
NO hook sorry
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“Boldly they rode and well, Into the jaws of Death, Into the mouth of Hell”. Australians are known internationally for our hardened culture, the bush battlers raised against all odds into an incredible mix of strength and boldness. From the aussie hero of Ned Kelly to the sad drama of the water diviner. This ideology supports itself in our modern media. An ideology which has created the stereotype of the modern Australian being a bush battler, but is this still the true representation of an Australian? Sentence structure
“Alright, let's give it to them.’” The legendary Siege at Glenrowan was Ned Kelly’s and his gang's last stand. This quote summarizes the mentality of the final
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They look death in the face and spat in its eyes, they showed the world why Australians have earned our reputation as fighters. Police fell in untold numbers before the gang, a massacre on the soil of Australia. The battle was fought, both sides fighting till the end. Modern day legends, these killers have become modern heroes to the average Australian. Made into a cult leaders by the media, represented as the fighters of Australia. Using skills every Australian should have. Skills found in every simple aussie battler, the grit and perseverance to push through pain and the marksmanship to protect their crops. Simple skills that when turned to war created a soldier which would fight through all odds and …show more content…
It represents the Aussie farmer, the aussie who showed up with their horses from the bush and charged. The aussie’s who with little training picked up the skills to be a fighter. These men are represented as larger than life, whose deeds will never again be seen in the world. The poem tells the story of a brutal war revolutionized by technology, won by the Australians on their horses waving their swords. It shows that even though we had minimal training and impossible odds the Australians with their horses and swords will win. To this day feats of Australians during war are immortalized in plays, novel and modern films, representing the characteristics that all Australians want to