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Reference
>
Cambridge History
>
The Victorian Age, Part Two
>
The Literature of Australia and New Zealand
> Henry Kingsley and William Howitt; Marcus Clarke: Rolf Boldrewood
James Brunton Stephens
Historians
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
Volume XIV. The Victorian Age, Part Two.
XII.
The Literature of Australia and New Zealand
.
§ 5. Henry Kingsley and William Howitt; Marcus Clarke: Rolf Boldrewood.
The best literary genius of Australia turns to poetry; but good work has been done in fiction. Henry Kingsleys
Geoffrey Hamlyn,
though a story of Australia, founded on the authors experiences during his brief stay in the colony, can scarcely be considered a novel of Australian origin; and William Howitts
A Boys Adventures in the Wilds of Australia
stands in the same category. Perhaps the earliest properly Australian novels were
Clara Morison
and others by Catherine Helen Spence, who was better known as a political writer; and Charles Rowcrofts colonial stories showed that Australian fiction was struggling into being. With the fiction of Marcus Clarke a further stage is reached. His novel
Heavy Odds
is now negligible; but his chief work,
His Natural Life,
is not only a vivid and carefully substantiated tale of a penal settlement, but a powerful work of fiction. Between its serial publication in
The Australian Journal
and its issue as a book in 1874, Clarke revised his story, with the assistance, it is said, of Sir Charles Gavan Duffy; and in its final form, though a gloomy and horrible tale, it is one of the best works of fiction that have been produced in Australia. Clarkes shorter stories of Australian life in the bush and the town, idyllic, humorous or tragic, are also good and sincere pieces of fiction. The next eminent name on the list of Australian novelists is Thomas Alexander Browne, who, under the pseudonym Rolf Boldrewood, won wide popularity both in his own country and in Great Britain. Boldrewood was a squatter, a police magistrate and a warder of goldfields; and he knew thoroughly the life that he described. Those who are in a position to speak on the subject say that
A Squatters Dream
and
A Colonial Reformer
are the best pictures extant of the squatters life. To English readers, Boldrewood is best known by
Robbery Under Arms,
the story of the bushranger, Captain Starlight, which was published as a book in 1888, some years after its serial issue in
The Sydney Mail,
and
The Miners Right,
published in 1890. In these four novels lies the best of Rolf Boldrewoods work. The two last mentioned contain plenty of exciting incident; but these tales of bushranging, of gold-digging and of squatting have little in common with the merely sensational fiction of which, it must be admitted, Australia has produced a plentiful crop. They are the work of a keen observer and a man of sound commonsense. If the character-drawing is simple, it is true to nature and to the life described; and, though a finer artist in fiction would have drawn the threads of the stories closer, Boldrewoods vigour in narrative and breezy fancy give life and interest to these faithful pictures of times that are gone. Compared with Rolf Boldrewood, the many novels of Guy Boothby, though exciting in incident, are poor in conception and slipshod in execution, and the novels of Benjamin Leopold Farjeon will count for little in the development of Australian fiction.
17
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
James Brunton Stephens
Historians
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