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AustLit

The Joseph Furphy Digital Archive
Roger Osborne, Editor
(Status : Public)
  • Since 1903, Such is Life has been reprinted many times. Most editions have been offset from Angus & Robertson's second Australian edition (1944).

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    Such is Life: Being Certain Extracts from the Diary of Tom Collins. Joseph Furphy's title gives an indication of the complexity of the narrative that will unravel before a persistent reader. In chapter one, the narrator, Tom Collins, joins a group of bullockies to camp for the night a few miles from Runnymede Station. Their conversations reveal many of the issues that arise throughout the rest of the novel: the ownership of, or control of access to, pasture; ideas of providence, fate and superstition; and a concern for federation that flows into descriptions of the coming Australian in later chapters.

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  • A revised and expanded version of the fifth chapter of the 1898 typescript, Rigby's Romance was serialised by the Broken Hill weekly newspaper, the Barrier Truth, in 1905-1906. C. J. De Garis published an abridged version in 1922. An unabridged edition, based on the Barrier Truth serial, was edited by R. G. Howarth, and published by Angus & Robertson in 1946.

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    Rigby's Romance is a revised and expanded version of the original chapter five in the Such is Life typescript (1898).

    The narrator, Tom Collins, is on his way from Echuca to Yooringa to fulfil a contract to clear a Riverina run of cattle. Hoping to meet his old friend, Jefferson Rigby, Collins is surprised by an encounter with Rigby's former sweetheart, Kate Vanderdecken, who has come to Australia in search of Rigby. Collins arranges an introduction before heading to the banks of the Murray River to fish for a thirty-pound cod he has heard is in the area.

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  • A revised and expanded version of the second chapter of the 1898 typescript, The Buln-Buln and the Brolga was not published during Furphy's lifetime. Angus & Robertson published the first edition in 1948, edited and with an introduction by R. G. Howarth.

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    The Buln-buln and the Brolga is a long story that is a revised and expanded version of the second chapter of the original Such is Life. The action takes place in the township of Echuca where the narrator, Tom Collins, is waiting to meet a representative of the firm for which he works. While waiting for his associate to arrive, Collins meets a childhood friend, Fred Falkland-Pritchard, the titular buln-buln or lyrebird, so-called because of his reputation for lying. Tom also meets Barefooted Bob, the titular brolga.

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