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Henry Lawson - The Two Samaritans and the TrampHenry Lawson - The Two Samaritans and the Tramp
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A TRAMP was trampin’ on the road—     The afternoon was warm an’ muggy— And by-and-by he chanced to meet     A parsin ridin’ in a buggy. Said he: “As follerers ov the Loard,     To do good offices we oughter!” An’ from a water-bag he poured,     An’ guv the tramp, a drink er water. The parsin he went rattlin’ ’ome     To ware his fam-i-lee was thrivin’, The tramp went on until he met     A bullick-driver, bullick drivin’— “It’s bilin’ ’ot,” the driver sed     As soon’s the dirty tramp drawed nearer, And from a little keg he poured,     And giv the tramp a pint of beer—“ah!” (P.S.—The “ah” is meant to stand for the tramp a-drinking ov it.) I ain’t agin the temperance cause,     Nor yet no advocate ov drinkin’— I only tells the yarn because— Well, at the time it somehow seemed     Ter kind ov set me thinkin’.
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