The collection includes 48 poems by the author that are reprinted from various sources, along with a preface by Rolf Boldrewood, who defined the collection as "the best bush ballads written since the death of Lindsay Gordon".[1]
On its original publication in Australia The Sydney Morning Herald saw semblances of Rudyard Kipling's collection Barrack-Room Ballads, but agreed with Boldrewood that the major influence on the poems was the work of Adam Lindsay Gordon.[1]
The Adelaide Chronicle summed up the collection with the description: "There flits before us a wild phantasmagoria of break-neck steeplechases, conflicts of police and outlaws, hairbreadth escapes, and marvellous examples of bush, prowess, courage, and skill."[2]
The Oxford Companion to Australian Literature declared it "the most successful volume of poetry ever published in Australia".[3]
The Man from Snowy River and other verses, ca. 1895, Andrew Barton (Banjo) Paterson, manuscript, incomplete version of The Man from Snowy River and Other Verses, Angus & Robertson manuscripts , State Library of New South Wales, A 1909