AustLit logo

AustLit

The Three Waterholes single work   novel   romance   adventure  
Issue Details: First known date: 1931... 1931 The Three Waterholes
The material on this page is available to AustLit subscribers. If you are a subscriber or are from a subscribing organisation, please log in to gain full access. To explore options for subscribing to this unique teaching, research, and publishing resource for Australian culture and storytelling, please contact us or find out more.

AbstractHistoryArchive Description

'Our new serial story, "The Three Water Holes," by E. M. Chapman, will commence in our Issue of to-morrow, Saturday. The story deals with the adventures of a young American who, fleeing his country for urgent personal reasons, settled in Australia during the early days of colonisation.

The opening scene is set in Carolina, where the Ashley family hold many broad acres bestowed upon them by Charles II for loyalty to the Stuart cause.

A terrifying storm rages over the plantation. The negroes crouch awe-stricken with-in their cabins. Outside the wind roars in fury, howling down the chimneys and thrashing the trees to frenzy. Above the wind's roar can be heard the trembling falsetto of old Mammy Sue's voice, rising and falling as the wind varies dying as a lull occurs, to become a shriek when a gust sweeps between the crowded cabins.

"Trouble, trouble, trouble dis night comes trouble, trouble " The negroes creep closer together muttering.

"She sees, Mammy Sue sees what is coming dis night."

And trouble does come. The younger son of the House of Ashley is driven forth across the seas as the result of a duel. He leaves behind him not only his home and a noble estate but the aching heart of a charming and courageous girl. He visits England, then voyages to Australia as an immigrant. In Australia he meets with much arduous and dangerous adventure before he is able to prepare a suitable home for one whose last words to him "I will come to you though it be across the world" have always been his driving force.

 

E. M. Chapman has told this story well. It holds the readers' interest throughout and the action is supported by good dialogue and a power of description which lends life and vigour to the narrative.

The author has been most successful in capturing the atmosphere of the period not only in the portrayal of life in Sydney during the early days, but in the character sketching of those who journeyed inland to discover the unexplored stretches of fertile country.'

'Our New Story', The Sydney Morning Herald, 11 September, 1931 (pg. 3)

Notes

  • This story earned a commendation in the second Bulletin Prize for unpublished novels.

Works about this Work

'Bulletin' Prize Novels : Second Competition 1930 single work column
— Appears in: The Bulletin , 19 March vol. 51 no. 2614 1930; (p. 9)

Announcement of the results of the second Bulletin Novel Competition. The competition closed on December 31 1929 and from 275 entries the judges made the following awards: First (£400) The Passage by Vance Palmer; Second (£250) Wards of the Outer March by K. G. Taylor (Daniel Hamline); Third (£100) Cattle Camp by J. J. Hardie.

Highly Commended: 'The Sow's Ear' by Eurus; 'Blue North' by Kullinoah; 'Johnny' by Edinensis; Break o' Day by Mateewa; 'Alien Corn' by Sorcerer; 'The Silent Voice' by Toc H.

Commended: 'The White Mantle' by Max Masterman; 'Bitter Bread' by Ian Grove; 'The Involuntary Adventure' by Andrew; 'A Knight in Moleskins' by Warrego; 'The Affair at Ardee' by Alison Starr; 'Thin Smoke' by Merentio; 'Billabong Gold' by Advance Australia; 'Three Daughters' by Kinapaka; 'Holiday' by Waradgery; 'Winning Out' by 1837; 'Boy in the Dusk' by Kelburn; 'Poet Polish' by Bokhara; 'Circumstantial Evidence' by Dobroyd; 'Three Waterholes' by E. M. Hosking (E.M. Chapman); 'The Duffers' by Ellen de Lacy [it's possible that this is Kay Glasson Taylor's Pick and the Duffers]; 'Lost Valley' by Billabong; 'Morning Glory' by Koongara.

Portraits of the prize winners on page 16.

Note: The authors were required to submit their manuscripts under a writing name. In many instances, their identities remain to be established.

'Bulletin' Prize Novels : Second Competition 1930 single work column
— Appears in: The Bulletin , 19 March vol. 51 no. 2614 1930; (p. 9)

Announcement of the results of the second Bulletin Novel Competition. The competition closed on December 31 1929 and from 275 entries the judges made the following awards: First (£400) The Passage by Vance Palmer; Second (£250) Wards of the Outer March by K. G. Taylor (Daniel Hamline); Third (£100) Cattle Camp by J. J. Hardie.

Highly Commended: 'The Sow's Ear' by Eurus; 'Blue North' by Kullinoah; 'Johnny' by Edinensis; Break o' Day by Mateewa; 'Alien Corn' by Sorcerer; 'The Silent Voice' by Toc H.

Commended: 'The White Mantle' by Max Masterman; 'Bitter Bread' by Ian Grove; 'The Involuntary Adventure' by Andrew; 'A Knight in Moleskins' by Warrego; 'The Affair at Ardee' by Alison Starr; 'Thin Smoke' by Merentio; 'Billabong Gold' by Advance Australia; 'Three Daughters' by Kinapaka; 'Holiday' by Waradgery; 'Winning Out' by 1837; 'Boy in the Dusk' by Kelburn; 'Poet Polish' by Bokhara; 'Circumstantial Evidence' by Dobroyd; 'Three Waterholes' by E. M. Hosking (E.M. Chapman); 'The Duffers' by Ellen de Lacy [it's possible that this is Kay Glasson Taylor's Pick and the Duffers]; 'Lost Valley' by Billabong; 'Morning Glory' by Koongara.

Portraits of the prize winners on page 16.

Note: The authors were required to submit their manuscripts under a writing name. In many instances, their identities remain to be established.

Last amended 6 Apr 2022 08:23:49
Settings:
  • Sydney, New South Wales,
Newspapers:
    Powered by Trove
    X