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C. J. Dennis (1876–1938)

Author of Sentimental Bloke and Other Verses

47+ Works 682 Members 8 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Works by C. J. Dennis

Sentimental Bloke and Other Verses (1915) 219 copies, 2 reviews
A book for kids (1958) 65 copies
The moods of Ginger Mick (1916) 49 copies, 2 reviews
The Glugs of Gosh (1917) 43 copies, 2 reviews
Hist! (1991) 21 copies
Digger Smith (1918) 19 copies, 1 review
A Bush Christmas (2008) 19 copies
Doreen (1981) 15 copies
AUSTRALIAN POETRY FOR FUN (1974) 13 copies
Rose of Spadgers (1982) 7 copies
Ant explorer : poem (1988) 3 copies
Circus (1987) 2 copies
Hist! 2 copies
No title 1 copy
The Circus 1 copy
Roundabout 1 copy

Associated Works

Melba's Gift Book of Australian Art and Literature (1915) — Contributor, some editions — 8 copies
Australian pavements : an urban anthology (1964) — Contributor — 3 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

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Reviews

8 reviews
Another journey deep into the Australian vernacular. But, perhaps more importantly, into the first great war. Where it's said Australia became a country in its own right. The story of a rough bloke who joins the effort, told through the eyes of his old mate back home.

Through his letter and the reminiscing of his mate, Ginger Mick grows into a grub come good. A fully-realised human being making the best of a terrible time and a terrible place. Dennis' blending of the old Aussie lingo with show more verse draws you in a way that's hard to explain or quantify. Compared to the dry historical accounts and documentaries about the war, and Australia's coming of age, this is very different. Hearing it told the way the blokes who lived it would've told it (probably over a couple of beers) is incredibly powerful. It humanises people in a far-off time, and the cataclysm of WWI, at an intimate level I've not found elsewhere.

The conclusion is shattering. Mick gets promoted, but the toll of war is weighing heavy on hid mind. Then he's dead. A chapter break, and you've gone from reading a letter and listening to him talk, to a British officer writing to say where he was buried, and what a gentleman he was. And Dennis masterfully weaves in, as he chronicles the small, personal devastation of Mick's loss, that while it may seem like nothing, this is what was felt daily around the world.

A short, but immensely worthwhile read.
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"[Y]eh mauls King's English when yeh yaps, an 'angs flash frills on ev'rythink yeh say. I ain't no grammarist meself, per'aps, but langwidge is a 'elp, I owns," sez Unk, "when things is goin crook." An' 'ere 'e wunk.

This book is in the top three most obscenely Australian things I've ever read.

This verse novel follows the life of 'The Kid' of Little Lonsdale Street, Melbourne. Written at a time when the Australian vernacular really came into its own, this originally serialised collection of show more verse showcases the rough-edged beauty of the now-faded and globalised Australian language.

The chapter 'The Play' is reason enough to track this down. In all his colloquial glory, The Kid retells Shakespeare's ' Romeo and Juliet' as seen through his rough-and-ready eyes.

"Wot's in a name?" she sez...An' then she sighs,/An' clasps her little 'ands, an' rolls 'er eyes./"A rose," she sez, "be any other name/Would smell the same./Oh, w'erefore art you Romeo, young sir?/Chuck yer ole pot, an' change yer moniker!"


The Australian way of speaking is too readily dismissed as just an accent, or a few idiosyncratic turns of phrase, but this work showcases the breadth and beauty of which it is more than capable. And while it is certainly heavy on the sentiment, as the title may suggest, the language alone breathes new life into the trope of love won, lost, and won again.
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CJ Dennis is my favourite Australian poet. In his books such as The Sentimental Bloke, Ginger Mick and Digger Smith he depicts the ordinary working men and women of the time.

These books are written in dialect verse which can take a little to get used to but once the reading is mastered it adds more to the depicting the characters than if it had been written in plain English.

For those who have difficulty in understanding the Australian slang of the day he uses there is a glossary at the back show more of the book.

Digger Smith is the sequel to Ginger Mick who was lost at Gallipoli. Unlike Mick, Smith returns from World War 1 but has lost a leg in the war and considers himself “’arf a man”.

The story is told by the Bloke (Dennis’ character from “The Sentimental Bloke”) and through his eyes and those of his wife Doreen we understand the difficulty Smith experiences.

There is clear depiction of the attitudes of the working class of the time to WWI. However, it is not just about the war, it is about mothers and sweethearts left behind and the struggle they also endured. It is about the after effects on the men of the men who fought.

There is tenderness expressed by The Bloke, Doreen and the other characters in the way they care for their neighbours and .supporting them through hard times.

It shows the compassion and wisdom of the common people in a humorous way that you will want to read over and over again.

There are simple lessons to be learnt from each poem for example in “Over the fence” the Bloke and his neighbour ‘ole man Poole’ start arguing about politics. When they are well into the argument Digger Smith comes along and reminds them that there s a war being fought:

“We’ve seen a thing or two, us blokes ‘oove fought on many fronts;
An’ we’ve ‘ad time to think a bit between the fighting stunts.
We’ve seen big things, an’ thought big things, an’ al the silly fuss,
That used to get us rattled once, seems very small to us.

“An’ when a bloke’s fought for a land an’ gets laid on the shelf
It pains ‘im to come ‘ome an’ find it scrapping with itself;
An’ scrapping all for nothin’, or for things that look so small –
To us, ‘oo’ve been in bigger things, they don’t seem reel at all

My favourite poem in the book is “A Digger’s Tale”. It is the story of when Smith is in England on Blighty’:

“Us Aussies was the goods in London town
When I was there. If they jist twigged yer ‘at
The Dooks would ask yeh could yeh keep one down,
An’ Earls would ‘ang out ‘Welcome’ on the mat,
An’‘ sling yeh invites to their stately ‘alls
For fancy balls
A duchess asks him to tell her more about Australia. After he tells her about breeding boomerangs, driving kangaroos “four-in-‘and” and other tall tales, he discovers she is an Aussie girl, “marri’d to an Earl” when she replies:

“ ‘I reckerlect,’ she sez – ‘Now, let me see-
In Gippsland, long ago, when I was young,
I ‘ad a little pet Corroboree,’
(I sits up in me chair like I was stung)
‘On its ‘ind legs,’ she sez, ‘it used to stand.
Fed from me ‘and

This review is also available on my website www.pam.id.au
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CJ Dennis is my favourite Australian writer. I love the way he manages to get the sound of his character's speech into the written word. It can be a challenge to read but once mastered his stories are a delight to read.

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Works
47
Also by
3
Members
682
Popularity
#37,082
Rating
4.1
Reviews
8
ISBNs
129
Languages
3
Favorited
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