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Banjo Paterson's People A.B. 'Banjo' Paterson Paintings by Dorothy Gauvin 1987 |
Dustjacket synopsis:
"In 1885 readers of The Bulletin were first presented with the work of a new poet who signed
himself simply "the Banjo". His was verse about city life and sporting life and bush life but, above all, it was
poetry about people, ordinary people. Drovers and drinkers and sportsmen, farmers and punters, and
clowns, bushmen newly arrived in the city and English toffs facing life outback. The Banjo was later revealed to
be A. B. Paterson and that first audience, over 100 years took his poetry to their hearts. Since then, while the
populatrity of other balladists' work may have diminished, Paterson's place in the affections of his
countrymen is as sure as ever, and today the resourceful and defiant people whom he immortalised are seen as
symbols of the nation's character.
"Now, in superb oil paintings by the highly successful Australian artist Dorothy Gauvin, Paterson's people - the Man from Ironbark, Clancy of the Overflow, Saltbush Bill and scores of others - are brought to glowing life. Here, with the verse and prose that were their inspiration, are presented pictures rich in drama, humour and fascinating detail, pictures that capture the characters of a colourful era in Australia's past with the accuracy of a camera but the wit and warmth of a very human recorder."
Contents:
The Man from Ironbark
A Bunch of Roses
Clancy of the Overflow
Song of the Wheat
The All Right 'Un
How Gilbert Died
The Geebung Polo Club
How M'Ginnis Went Missing
from In Push Society
Jim Carew
Our New Horse
An Idyll of Dandaloo
Tar and Feathers
Saltbush Bill
A Bushman's Song
The City of Dreadful Thirst
T.Y.S.O.N.
A Dream of the Melbourne Cup
Pioneers
The Riders in the Stand
In the Droving Days
When Dacey Rode the Mule
With the Cattle
The Wild Cattle from An Outback Marriage
Song of the Artesian Water
Song of the Future
Old Pardon, Son of Reprieve
From the Angus and Robertson hardback edition, 1987.
This page and its contents are copyright © 2002 by Perry Middlemiss, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Last modified: April 11, 2002.