The poem was first published in
The Sydney Mail on 25 July 1896 It is amongst Paterson's most popular works. A 1973 reprinting of the poem illustrated by
Kilmeny &
Deborah Niland has been continuously in print since publication and won the 1973 ABPA Book Design Award and the 1974 Visual Arts Board Award. The novel by
H. G. Wells on cycling,
The Wheels of Chance: A Bicycling Idyll was published in the same year as this poem. Ordinaries- the term "
Penny-Farthings" is used interchangeably by many- were notoriously dangerous to ride on level ground, but Banjo has Mulga Bill cycling
DOWNHILL on a mountain road at which point he gains so much speed that he becomes the Ordinary's
PASSENGER, unable to stop or dismount it. On a standard bicycle one's feet could touch the ground to (inelegantly) brake their speed on a dirt road. But this being an Ordinary, once Mulga Bill sets off downhill with no previous experience riding one, he becomes a victim of his own
hubris. There is no escaping his fate and he narrowly escapes death when his ride concludes with him sailing off of a precipice and crashes into a creek. Pride indeed came before Mulga's fall The model for the character of Mulga Bill was William Henry Lewis (1880–1968), who knew Paterson in the vicinity of
Bourke, New South Wales. Lewis had bought his bicycle as a result of a
drought when there was no feed for horses. == Legacy ==