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Anyone Help In English?? Ergent =( (1 Viewer)

coeyz

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I have to find a related material that can compare with "The Drover's wife" by Henry Lawson.

I wanna find a poem / short story that is about the ppl experience hardship (e.g. flood/bush fire/drought) in the bush.

Anyone have suggestion? THANKS A LOTTTT
 
L

lsam

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coeyz said:
I have to find a related material that can compare with "The Drover's wife" by Henry Lawson.

I wanna find a poem / short story that is about the ppl experience hardship (e.g. flood/bush fire/drought) in the bush.

Anyone have suggestion? THANKS A LOTTTT
It's not actually called "The Drover's wife". But, who cares.

I reckon tsunami article is a good story.
 

eliseliselise

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squeaker's mate by barbara baynton!!
it's in her marvellous compilation book thing - BUSH STUDIES.
it's main focus is life for women in the bush, & was/is a bit of a contrast 2 the work of lawson & paterson that was present at the time [no such 'splendid isolaton' in this short story..], as women's voices were never heard, whereas in bayntons work- its the males who are silenced.

it'd probably be better if u can get ur hands on a copy of 'bush studies' [school library or something??] but here's the google book site: http://books.google.com.au/books?id=jYcRkdiNuAIC&pg=PA8&dq=barbara+baynton+squeaker%27s+mate&sig=ACfU3U0lse_AxHGwdgeRhDFO_UfY3Cd37w#PPP1,M1
some pages are missing though [spueaker's mate starts page 8]

pretty much all of bayntons stuff deals with hardship & all that jazz... i just think that squeakers mate draws many a parallel with the drover's wife... but i'll let you work that out 4 urself ;)

eh.. hope that helps.

edit: all of the stories in bush studies are short stories.
 

Qrux

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lol how ironic, you spelt urgent wrong
 

coeyz

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ohhh thanks a lottt :D

actually i found this poem

Poetry by George Essex Evans - The Women of the West


They left the vine-wreathed cottage and the mansion on the hill,
The houses in the busy streets where life is never still,
The pleasures of the city, and the friends they cherished best:
For love they faced the wilderness -- the Women of the West.

The roar, and rush, and fever of the city died away,
And the old-time joys and faces -- they were gone for many a day;
In their place the lurching coach-wheel, or the creaking bullock chains,
O'er the everlasting sameness of the never-ending plains.

In the slab-built, zinc-roofed homestead of some lately taken run,
In the tent beside the bankment of a railway just begun,
In the huts on new selections, in the camps of man's unrest,
On the frontiers of the Nation, live the Women of the West.

The red sun robs their beauty, and, in weariness and pain,
The slow years steal the nameless grace that never comes again;
And there are hours men cannot soothe, and words men cannot say --
The nearest woman's face may be a hundred miles away.

The wide bush holds the secrets of their longing and desires,
When the white stars in reverence light their holy altar fires,
And silence, like the touch of God, sinks deep into the breast --
Perchance He hears and understands the Women of the West.

For them no trumpet sounds the call, no poet plies his arts --
They only hear the beating of their gallant, loving hearts.
But they have sung with silent lives the song all songs above --
The holiness of sacrifice, the dignity of love.

Well have we held our father's creed. No call has passed us by.
We faced and fought the wilderness, we sent our sons to die.
And we have hearts to do and dare, and yet, o'er all the rest,
The hearts that made the Nation were the Women of the West.


what i found similar is :
- they both aspire the life in city
- they both have dreams and goals, but cannot fulfill it in the bush
- their children die because of lack of medical service
"We faced and fought the wilderness, we sent our sons to die."

am i correct?
and some i duno wht does it mean
->" Well have we held our father's creed. No call has passed us by?"
and im not sure if her husband stays with her..
anything else that is similar to the drover's wife?
thanks :DDD
 

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