Australian author and poet (1843?1912)
Joseph Furphy
(
Irish
:
Seosamh O Foirbhithe
; 26 September 1843 ? 13 September 1912) was an Australian author and poet who is widely regarded as the "Father of the Australian novel".
[1]
He mostly wrote under the pseudonym
Tom Collins
[2]
and is best known for his novel
Such Is Life
(1903), regarded as an Australian classic.
[3]
[4]
Personal life
[
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]
Furphy was born at Yering Station in
Yering
, Victoria.
[3]
His father, Samuel Furphy, was originally a tenant farmer from
Tandragee
, County Armagh, Ireland, who emigrated to Australia in
c.
1840-1841
.
[5]
[3]
Samuel Furphy was head gardener on the station. There was no school in the district and at first Joseph was educated by his mother. The only books available were the Bible and Shakespeare
[3]
[6]
and at seven years of age Furphy was already learning passages of each by heart; he never forgot them. In about 1850 the family moved to
Kangaroo Ground
, Victoria,
[3]
and here the parents of the district built a school and obtained a master. In 1852 they moved again, to Kyneton where Samuel Furphy began business as a hay and corn merchant.
[3]
A few years later he leased a farm and also bought a threshing plant.
[3]
This was worked by Joseph and a brother and both became competent engine-drivers. In 1864 Furphy bought a threshing outfit and travelled the Daylesford and surrounding districts. At Glenlyon he met Leonie Selina Germain, a girl of 16 of French extraction, and in
c.
1866-1867
they were married.
[3]
Soon after, his wife's mother went to New Zealand and Furphy for a time carried on her farm, but two years later took up a selection near Colbinabbin. The land proved to be poor and in about 1873 he sold out and soon afterwards bought a team of bullocks.
[3]
He became prosperous as the years went by, but the drought came and he had heavy losses.
[3]
Some of his bullocks and horses died from pleuro-pneumonia, and in 1884 he accepted a position in the foundry of his brother
John
at
Shepparton
.
[3]
[6]
There he worked for some 20 years doing much reading and writing in the evenings.
[3]
Late in his life, Furphy moved to Western Australia to join his sons who had established an iron foundry there.
[3]
He built a house at
Swanbourne
. Furphy died in
Claremont
on 13 September 1912 and is buried in
Karrakatta Cemetery
.
[3]
Literary career
[
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]
"I have just finished writing a full-sized novel; title,
Such is Life
; the scene, Riverina and northern Vic; temper, democratic; bias, offensively Australian."
? Furphy's famous self-introduction to
J. F. Archibald
, published in
The Bulletin
, April 1897
[7]
In his youth Furphy had written many verses and in December 1867 he had been awarded the first prize of £3 at the Kyneton Literary Society for a vigorous set of verses on 'The
Death of President Lincoln'
.
[3]
While living at Shepparton, he was encouraged in his writing by Kate Baker, a schoolteacher
[3]
who boarded with his mother. He sent a story 'The Mythical Sundowner' to
The Bulletin
under the name 'Warrigal Jack' and it was accepted for publication.
[2]
Later works were published under the pseudonym 'Tom Collins' which may have come from the slang term meaning "a fellow about town whom many sought to kill for touching them on 'sore points'".
[2]
His most famous work is
Such Is Life
, a fictional account of the life of rural dwellers, including
bullock drivers
, squatters and itinerant travellers, in southern
New South Wales
and
Victoria
, during the 1880s.
[3]
[4]
In 1897 the manuscript was sent to
The Bulletin
where
A. G. Stephens
recognised its worth,
[3]
but also that it was not a commercial proposition. He suggested cuts including the replacement of two entire chapters.
[3]
Stephens persuaded the proprietors of
The Bulletin
to publish the revised
Such Is Life
because it was a great Australian work although not commercially viable. It was published in 1903
[3]
under his pseudonym 'Tom Collins'
[2]
and only sold about a third of the print run. Later editions were brought out after Furphy's death through the efforts of Kate Baker who bought the residual copies from
The Bulletin
.
Having removed the original chapters 2 and 5 from
Such is Life
, Furphy considered joining these portions together as the basis for another novel but instead decided to focus on chapter 5 separately.
[8]
He expanded and remodeled the chapter to form
Rigby's Romance
, which was serialised in
The Barrier Truth
from 27 October 1905 to 20 July 1906. It would be released in book form in 1921.
[9]
After moving to Western Australia in 1905, Furphy commenced work on revising the original second chapter, which he titled
The Lyre Bird and the Native Companion
before retitling it
The Buln-Buln and the Brolga
. Never published in his lifetime, the manuscript was provided by Furphy's son Samuel and ultimately published in book form in 1946.
[10]
Both of these subsequent novels feature the same
protagonist
, Tom Collins, and function as adjuncts to the first novel.
Legacy
[
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]
Such is Life
has been described as Australia's
Moby Dick
because, like
Melville's
book, it was neglected for thirty or forty years before being discovered as a classic.
[6]
The novel contains possibly the first written incidence of the Australian and New Zealand idiom "ropeable". Chapter One contains the following phrase: "On't ole Martin be ropeable when he sees that fence!" The historian
Stuart MacIntyre
has said the book challenged the assumption that "nothing of significance ever happened" in Australia or that Australians lacked "creative originality".
A full biography of Furphy was written through a collaboration of Australian author
Miles Franklin
and Furphy's friend
Kate Baker
, titled
Joseph Furphy: The Legend of a Man and His Book
, in 1944.
[3]
To honour Furphy, in 1992 his and his brother's descendants established the Furphy Literary award.
[4]
[11]
On the 100th anniversary of
Such is Life
they also funded a statue in Furphy's home town.
[11]
[12]
The home which Furphy built in Swanbourne is now the headquarters of the West Australian branch of the
Fellowship of Australian Writers
.
Furphy's popularity may have influenced the usage of the Australian slang word "
furphy
", meaning a "tall story". However, scholars consider it more likely that the word originated with water carts, produced in large numbers by J. Furphy & Sons, a company owned by Furphy's brother
John
.
[4]
[11]
Works
[
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]
References
[
edit
]
- ^
Nemo, August (9 May 2020).
Essential Novelists - Joseph Furphy father of the australian novel
.
ISBN
978-3-96799-179-6
.
OCLC
1156870523
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
Hoffmann, Lois (1 May 1984).
"Joseph Furphy: An Annotated Checklist of Items in Periodicals"
.
Australian Literary Studies
.
11
(3): 409?416.
doi
:
10.20314/als.4b3ffbbd09
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
l
m
n
o
p
q
r
s
t
u
Clark, Manning (1981).
"Furphy, Joseph (1843-1912)"
. In Nairn, Bede; Serle, Geoffrey (eds.).
Australian Dictionary of Biography
. Vol. 8 1891-1939 Cl-Gib. Canberra: National Centre of Biography,
Australian National University
.
ISBN
978-0-522-84459-7
.
ISSN
1833-7538
.
OCLC
70677943
. Retrieved
29 June
2021
.
- ^
a
b
c
d
Harris, Rob (15 November 2019).
"Fifth-generation Furphys breathing new life into the Australian legend"
.
The Age
. Retrieved
17 July
2021
.
- ^
Collins Family History ? General Information
at freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com
- ^
a
b
c
Serle, Geoffrey (1973).
From Deserts the Prophets come; the creative spirit in Australia 1788-1972
. Melbourne: Heinemann. p. 66.
ISBN
0855610298
.
- ^
The Bulletin
, April 1897
- ^
Devlin-Glass, F. (1991). "Textual Note". In Devlin-Glass, F. (ed.).
The Annotated Such is Life by Joseph Furphy
. Oxford University Press. pp. 300?301.
- ^
Austlit -
Rigby's Romance
by Joseph Furphy
- ^
Furphy, Joseph (1946). Howarth, R.G. (ed.).
The Buln-Buln and the Brolga
. Sydney: Angus & Robertson. p. 2.
- ^
a
b
c
"Furphy Literary Award"
.
Furphy Story
. Retrieved
29 June
2021
.
- ^
"Joseph Furphy | Monument Australia"
.
monumentaustralia.org.au
. Retrieved
29 June
2021
.
- ^
http://sdarby.au/doku.php?id=christmas_hymn
- ^
https://find.slv.vic.gov.au/permalink/61SLV_INST/s6pvau/alma991022843607636
Further reading
[
edit
]
- A. L. Archer,
Tom Collins (Joseph Furphy) as I Knew Him
(Melb, 1941)
- Barnes, John (1990).
The Order of Things: A Life of Joseph Furphy
. South Melbourne, Australia: Oxford University Press Australia.
ISBN
0-19-553187-6
.
- Bushman and Bookworm: Letters of Joseph Furphy
edited by John Barnes and Lois Hoffmann; Melbourne: Oxford University Press 1995
- Furphy, Joseph (2013).
"The Mythical Sundowner"
(pdf)
.
Journal of the Association for the Study of Australian Literary Criticism
.
13
(1). National Library of Australia.
? this is the first article published in
The Bulletin
by Furphy, under the pseudonym "Warrigal Jack"
- Furphy papers (State Library of New South Wales).
- Julian Croft
The Life and Opinions of Tom Collins: A Study of the Works of Joseph Furphy
St Lucia, Queensland: University of Queensland Press 1991
- "Table of contents"
.
Journal of the Association for the Study of Australian Literary Criticism
.
13
(1).
National Library of Australia
. 2013.
- The annotated Such Is Life: being certain extracts from the diary of Tom Collins / by Joseph Furphy
; with an introduction and notes by Frances Devlin-Glass, Robin Eaden, Lois Hoffmann and G.W.Turner; Melbourne: Oxford University Press 1991
External links
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