The Travelling Post Office
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Unfinished - individual poem - Gilmore, Lawson, Harpur, Kendall, Paterson
| "The Travelling Post Office" | |
|---|---|
| by A. B. Paterson | |
| Written | 1894 |
| First published in | The Bulletin |
| Country | Australia |
| Language | English |
| Publication date | 10 March 1894 |
| Lines | 34 |
| Full text | |
"The Travelling Post Office" is a poem by Australian bush poet Banjo Paterson (Andrew Barton Paterson).[1]
It was first published in The Bulletin on 10 March 1894.[2]
An old man's son has left home to go driving sheep along the Castlereagh. The old man asks the author to write a letter to his son and to post it "Care of Conroy's sheep along the Castlereagh," thinking that the various mailmen along the way will pass it along until it reaches the son.
Critical reception
While reviewing The Man from Snowy River and Other Verses a writer in The Sydney Morning Herald noted of this poem, among others, that it "finds the authentic transcript of the moods of inland Australia, the life of her people, and sometimes in their own words."[3]
Another critic, reviewing the same collection in Freeman's Journal, commented that in reading the poem "we feel that indefinable charm which distinguishes all true poetry, but which defies analysis."[4]
In his commentary on the poem in 60 Classic Australian Poems Geoff Page noted that while the story in the poem is "minimal" it is "no less real" than some of the poet's other works. And while the "history and scoiology of the poem are simplistic at best", the "virtues of the ballad stanza appear" timeless.[5]