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Poem by Clarence James Dennis


The Traveller


As I rode in to Burrumbeet,
I met a man with funny feet;
And, when I paused to ask him why
His feet were strange, he rolled his eye
And said the rain would spoil the wheat;
So I rode on to Burrumbeet.

As I rode in to Beetaloo,
I met a man whose nose was blue;
And when I asked him how he got
A nose like that, he answered, "What
Do bullocks mean when they say 'Moo'?"
So I rode on to Beetaloo.

As I rode in to Ballarat,
I met a man who wore no hat;
And, when I said he might take cold,
He cried, "The hills are quite as old
As yonder plains, but not so flat."
So I rode on to Ballarat.

As I rode in to Gundagai,
I met a man and passed him by
Without a nod, without a word.
He turned, and said he'd never heard
Or seen a man so wise as I.
But I rode on to Gundagai.

As I rode homeward, full of doubt,
I met a stranger riding out:
A foolish man he seemed to me;
But, "Nay, I am yourself," said he,
"Just as you were when you rode out."
So I rode homeward, free of doubt.



Clarence James Dennis


Clarence James Dennis's other poems:
  1. Going to School
  2. The White Foxglove
  3. The Band
  4. Wooloomooloo (A Riddle)
  5. The Looking Glass


Poems of the other poets with the same name:

  • Ella Wilcox The Traveller ("Who travels alone with his eyes on the heights")
  • Oliver Goldsmith The Traveller ("REMOTE, unfriended, melancholy, slow")
  • George Horton The Traveller ("When from my native clime")
  • Arthur West The Traveller ("Oh, I came singing down the road")
  • Cicely Smith The Traveller ("I've loops o' string in the place o' buttons, I've mostly holes for a shirt")

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