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Poem by Robert William Service Bindle Stiff When I was brash and gallant-gay Just fifty years ago, I hit the ties and beat my way From Maine to Mexico; For though to Glasgow gutter bred A hobo heart had I, And followed where adventure led, Beneath a brazen sky. And as I tramped the railway track I owned a single shirt; Like canny Scot I bought it black So's not to show the dirt; A handkerchief held all my gear, My razor and my comb; I was a freckless lad, I fear, With all the world for home. Yet oh I thought the life was grand And loved my liberty! Romance was my bed-fellow and The stars my company. And I would think, each diamond dawn, "How I have forged my fate! Where are the Gorbals and the Tron, And where the Gallowgate?" Oh daft was I to wander wild, And seek the Trouble Trail, As weakly as a wayward child, And darkly doomed to fail... Aye, bindle-stiff I hit the track Just fifty years ago... Yet now... I drive my Cadillac From Maine to Mexico. Robert William Service Robert William Service's other poems:
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