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y separately published work icon River of Verse : A Tasmanian Journey 1800-2004 anthology   poetry   lyric/song   extract  
Issue Details: First known date: 2004... 2004 River of Verse : A Tasmanian Journey 1800-2004
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Contents

* Contents derived from the Buckland, Southeast Tasmania, Tasmania,:Back River Press , 2004 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Corroboree Songi"Pappela rayna ngonyna,", single work lyric/song (p. 1)
Spring Songi"Niggur luggarato pawe,", single work lyric/song (p. 1-2)
Van Diemen's Landi"Come all you gallant poachers that ramble free from care,", single work poetry (p. 2-3)
The Female Transporti"Come all young girls, both far and near, and listen unto me,", single work poetry (p. 3)
Note: Comprises the first four stanzas only of the poem as it appears in other works such as The New Oxford Book of Australian Verse.
Van Diemen's Land or Tasmania in 1818i"Together let us range the fields,", W. T. Moncrieff , extract lyric/song (p. 4)
Note: This extract from Van Diemen's Land: An Operatic Drama in Three Acts comprises excerpts from pages 5, 7, 11 and 15 of the published work.
The Native's Lamenti"Oh! Where are the wilds I once sported among,", Anonymous (fl. 1826) , single work poetry (p. 5-6)
The Bush Rangers 1829i"He then approached me with a monkey grin,", David Burn , extract poetry (p. 6)
Seizure of the Cyprus Brig in Recherche Bay, Aug. 1829i"Come all you sons of Freedom, a chorus join with me,", Frank the Poet , single work poetry (p. 6-9)
Note: Arrangement of lines differs from that in other sources.
The Van Diemen's Land Warriorsi"The unsuspecting Captain Snip descries", 'Pindar Juvenal' , extract poetry (p. 9-10)
Note: An extract from the Third Canto of The Van Diemen's Land Warriors - from pages 28-30 of the edition edited by George Mackaness (1944)
Verses in Sketchbook : 1831i"'We will rear new homes under trees that glow", Mary Anne Allport , single work poetry (p. 10-11)
Coat of Armsi"My name is Francis Macnamara,", Francis MacNamara , single work poetry (p. 11)
Note: The Editor titles the poem '1842 Coat of Arms' and states that it comes from 'the manuscript of James Lester Burke, ed, The Adventures of Martin Cash (1870) [and that the] lines were recited by MacNamara to his fellow convicts in Port Arthur as they celebrated Christmas of 1842.' (p.233)
On Leaving Van Diemen's Landi"Land of Lags and Kangaroo,", Francis MacNamara , single work poetry (p. 11)
Note: Editor's note: From a manuscript in the Mitchell Library. An article in the Bulletin, 10 March 1888 gives two lines of a different version: "Squatters' home and prisoners' hell / Land of Sodom, fare thee well".
The Ballad of Martin Cashi"Come all you sons of Erin's Isle that love to hear your tuneful notes -", Francis MacNamara , single work poetry (p. 12-13)
The Tasmanian Looking Glass, Thomas Lewin , selected work poetry satire (p. 13-14)
Note: This comprises extracts from the complete work. The extracts are from pages 6-7, 14, 15, 18 and 19.
A Voice from Tasmania, Edward Kemp , single work poetry (p. 15)
Note: An extract from the work (24 lines) beginning with the line: 'Isle of the South, destined for many a year,'.
An Address to the Native-Born Tasmaniansi"And must I let that sentence pass me by?", John Anthony Moore , single work poetry (p. 15-16)
Note: An extract of 22 lines from various sections of the work.
The Chained Eaglei"What now avails thy pinioned power", William Smith O'Brien , single work poetry (p. 16)
Lines Intended as an Inscription for a Sketch of Maria Island 1850i"Behold a scene in Tasman's Land", William Smith O'Brien , single work poetry (p. 17)
Journal, 1857i"In lone St Pauls remote from human view", William Smith O'Brien , extract poetry (p. 17)
The Convict Dreami"I dreamt I saw some prisoners bound,", Charles Ashton , single work poetry (p. 17-18)
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