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William Brighty Rands (Уильям Брайти Рэндс)


The Pedlar's Caravan


I wish I lived in a caravan,
With a horse to drive, like the pedlar man!
Where he comes from nobody knows,
Or where he goes to, but on he goes!

His caravan has windows, two,
And a chimney of tin, that the smoke comes through;
He has a wife, with a baby brown,
And they go riding from town to town!

"Chairs to mend and delf to sell!"
He clashes the basins like a bell;
Tea-trays, baskets, ranged in order,
Plates with the alphabet round the border!

The roads are brown and the sea is green,
But his house is just like a bathing machine;
The world is round and he can ride,
Rumble and splash to the other side!

With the pedlar-man I should like to roam,
And write a book when I came home;
All the people would read my book,
Just like the Travels of Captain Cook!



William Brighty Rands's other poems:
  1. A Big Noise
  2. Lilliput Levee
  3. Harold and Alice; or The Reformed Giant
  4. Clean Clara
  5. Little Miss Waver


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