Convict Once and Other Poems (1885) is a collection of poetry by Australian poet J. Brunton Stephens.
"[2] A reviewer in The Australasian had a high opinion of Stephens's work: "...he is one of the, as yet, few Australian singers to whom the word 'poet' may be applied without any impropriety - poet in feeling and poet in expression; various in word and versatile in method; combining the essential gifts of imagination with that qualifying and restraining sense of the humorous which asserts itself with such happy effect in compositions like "My Chinee Cook," the address to a black gin, "A Piccaninny," and "Big Ben.
""[3] The Sydney Morning Herald reviewer thought along similar lines.
Others there have been who have made vagrant verses or laboured to succeed in a mission to which they had never been called, but only three who have built for themselves a shrine of poesy in which their memories will live for ever.
Gordon went first, wearied of the world in which he had lived, misunderstanding and misunderstood; Kendall next, broken as a reed whose melody had been weak and frail occasionally, but never out of tune; Brunton Stephens remains, and offers us this acceptable and beautiful volume of collected poems which we would exchange for the thinnest book of absolutely new verse.