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y separately published work icon Macquarie PEN Anthology of Australian Literature anthology   correspondence   diary   drama   essay   extract   poetry   prose   short story  
Issue Details: First known date: 2009... 2009 Macquarie PEN Anthology of Australian Literature
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Contents

* Contents derived from the Crows Nest, North Sydney - Lane Cove area, Sydney Northern Suburbs, Sydney, New South Wales,:Allen and Unwin , 2009 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Letter to Her Father, Eliza Brown , extract correspondence (p. 91-94)
From : Notes and Sketches of New South Wales, Louisa Anne Meredith , extract prose (p. 94-99)
"Where the wandering Barwin delighteth the eye," The Beautiful Squatteri"Where the wandering Barwon delighteth the eye,", Charles Harpur , single work poetry satire
'On a squatter who sdeuces aboriginal women and is eventually killed as a result.' (Webby)
(p. 100-101)
A Mid-Summer Noon in the Australian Foresti"Not a bird disturbs the air,", Charles Harpur , single work poetry (p. 101-102)
She Loves Me Love A Confession Sonneti"She loves me! From her own bliss-breathing lips", Charles Harpur , single work poetry (p. 102)
Note: With title: A Confession
The Consummationi"Mine after all - my Mary! Why should I", Charles Harpur , single work poetry (p. 102-103)
Letter to Colonial Secretary, Van Diemen's Land, Mary Anne Arthur , single work correspondence (p. 103)
Letter to Colonial Secretary, Van Diemen's Land, Walter George Arthur , single work correspondence (p. 104-105)
The Diggings (from : A Lady's Visit to the Gold Diggings of Australia in 1852-1853), Ellen Clacy , extract autobiography (p. 106-109)
The Song of Australiai"There is a land where summer skies", Caroline Carleton , Carl Linger (composer), single work lyric/song (p. 109-110)
The Flinders Island Weekly Chronicle : 17th November 1837, Thomas Brune , single work column (p. 111-112)
Weekly Chronicle : 21st December 1837, Thomas Brune , single work column (p. 112)
Letter to the Editor by the Coranderrk Aborigines, William Barak , single work correspondence (p. 113)
From : Clara Morison, Catherine Helen Spence , extract novel (p. 114-117)
From : Robbery Under Arms, Rolf Boldrewood , extract novel (p. 117-121)
Speech on Mr Wentworth's Constitutional Bill, Daniel Henry Deniehy , single work prose (p. 122-126)
The Eumerella Shorei"There's a happy little valley on the Eumerella shore,", Anonymous 3 (fl. 1861) , single work poetry (p. 126-127)
The Wild Colonial Boyi"'Tis of a wild Colonial boy, Jack Doolan was his name", single work poetry

'The Wild Colonial Boy' is a traditional Irish/Australian ballad of which there are many different versions. It has been argued that the original version was really about Jack Donahoe (variously spelled Donahoo or Donahue), an Irish transport who arrived at Sydney Cove in 1825, and was subsequently convicted of highway robbery and sentenced to death. He escaped and waged a guerrilla war against the wealthy for more than two years in the country around Sydney. On September 1st 1830 he was ambushed by a police party near Cambelltown and shot dead, his companions Webber and Warmsley escaping into the bush. This version was eventually outlawed as seditious so the name of the protagonist changed.

The resulting Irish version is about a young emigrant, named Jack Duggan, who left the town of Castlemaine, County Kerry, Ireland, for Australia in the 1800s. According to the song (and in keeping with the true story of Jack Donahoe), he spent his time there 'robbing from the rich to feed the poor'. In the song, the protagonist is fatally wounded in an ambush when his heart is pierced by the bullet of Fitzroy.

The Australian version has Jack Doolan (or sometimes Jack Dowling) as the protagonist, and here Castlemaine refers to the Australian town in Victoria. In both versions variation in the wording and language occurs across different sources.

In his Old Bush Songs, Banjo Patterson wrote: "it will be noticed that the same chorus is sung to both 'The Wild Colonial Boy' and 'Bold Jack Donahoo'. Several versions of both songs were sent in, but the same chorus was always made to do duty for both songs." This chorus, included in some (not all) Australian versions is as follows:


Come, all my hearties,

we'll roam the mountains high,

Together we will plunder,

together we will die.

We'll wander over valleys,

and gallop over plains,

And we'll scorn to live in

slavery, bound down with iron chains.

(p. 127-128)
The Sick Stock-Rider The Sick Stockrideri"Hold hard, Ned! lift me down once more, and lay me in the shade,", Adam Lindsay Gordon , single work poetry (p. 128-131)
The Spider and the Fly, Waif Wander , single work short story satire
On the fifty female applicants for a position of trust and the man who interviewed them at a Melbourne hotel. (PB)
(p. 131-138)
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