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y separately published work icon Quadrant periodical issue  
Issue Details: First known date: 2022... vol. 66 no. 9 September 2022 of Quadrant est. 1957 Quadrant
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Contents

* Contents derived from the , 2022 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Lethargy in the Time of Virusi"It is afternoon and the doona", Bill Rush , single work poetry (p. 80)
Burying the Ledei"Long may the masthead prosper", Bernard Lane , single work poetry (p. 93)
[Review] Intrepid Australian Women and Their Art, Douglas Hassall , single work review
— Review of Intrépide : Australian Women Artists in Early Twentieth-century France Clem Gorman , Therese Gorman , 2020 single work biography ;
'The Germans have a saying: Wie Gott in Frankreich, or more often, Leben Wie Gott in Frankreich, by which they mean “Living like God in France”. This expression seems to mean two things that are related: it parodies the belief of many that life in France, and in Paris in particular, was near to Paradise; and also the idea we express in our familiar Australian idiom as “Living the life of Riley”. Certainly, Paris was, and still is, seen by many as the greatest centre of European cultural life; and for the French, it is the centre.'

 (Introduction)

(p. 94-96)
Hand in Handi"I’m waiting for the time to come", Devika Brendon , single work poetry (p. 96)
The Cinematic Vision of Henry Lawson, Diana Figgis , single work essay

'Where Dead Men Lie is a fifteen-minute film from 1972 based on Henry Lawson's 1897 short story "The Australian Cinematograph". The film was made to mark the fiftieth anniversary of Lawson's death, at Abbotsford in Sydney, on September 2, 1922, and features the voices of the actors Jack Thompson and Max Cullen.' (Introduction)

(p. 97-101)
The Yellow Glovei"It’s Delia Bertwistle sure enough.", Trevor Bailey , single work poetry (p. 101)
Squeezedi"a room’s available it has your name tucked in the wing for disabilities", Hazel Hall , single work poetry (p. 104)
I Don’t Like Broccoli, Stephen Sewell , single work short story (p. 105-110)
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