My Brilliant Career by Miles Franklin (book recommendations TXT) 📕
Description
My Brilliant Career is a classic Australian work published in 1901 by Stella Miles Franklin, with an introduction by Henry Lawson. A thinly-veiled autobiographical novel, it paints a vivid and sometimes grim picture of rural Australian life in the late 19th Century.
Sybylla Melvyn is the daughter of a man who falls into grinding poverty through inadvised speculation before becoming a hopeless drunk unable to make a living from a small dairy farm. Sybylla longs for the intellectual things in life such as books and music. She wants to become a writer and rebels against the constraints of her life. For a short period she is allowed to stay with her better-off relatives, and there she attracts the attentions of a handsome and rich neighbour, Harold Beecham. The course of true love, however, does not run smoothly for this very independent young woman.
The author, like many other women writers of the time, adopted a version of her name which suggested that she was male in order to get published. Today, the Miles Franklin Award is Australia’s premier literary award, with a companion award, the Stella, open only to women authors.
My Brilliant Career was made into a well-regarded movie in 1979. Directed by Gillian Armstrong, it features Judy Davis as Sybylla and Sam Neil as Harry Beecham.
Read free book «My Brilliant Career by Miles Franklin (book recommendations TXT) 📕» - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: Miles Franklin
Read book online «My Brilliant Career by Miles Franklin (book recommendations TXT) 📕». Author - Miles Franklin
By Miles Franklin.
Table of Contents Titlepage Imprint Preface Introduction Special Notice My Brilliant Career I: I Remember, I Remember II: An Introduction to ’Possum Gully III: A Lifeless Life IV: A Career Which Soon Careered to an End V: Disjointed Sketches and Grumbles A Drought Idyll VI: Revolt VII: Was E’er a Rose Without Its Thorn? Self Analysis VIII: ’Possum Gully Left Behind. Hurrah! Hurrah! IX: Aunt Helen’s Recipe X: Everard Grey XI: Yah! XII: One Grand Passion XIII: He XIV: Principally Letters XV: When the Heart Is Young XVI: When Fortune Smiles XVII: Idylls of Youth XVIII: As Short as I Wish Had Been the Majority of Sermons to Which I Have Been Forced to Give Ear XIX: The 9th of November 1896 XX: Same Yarn (Continued) XXI: My Unladylike Behaviour Again XXII: Sweet Seventeen XXIII: “Ah, for One Hour of Burning Love, ’Tis Worth an Age of Cold Respect!” XXIV: Thou Knowest Not What a Day May Bring Forth XXV: Because? XXVI: Boast Not Thyself of Tomorrow XXVII: My Journey XXVIII: To Life XXIX: To Life (Continued) XXX: Where Ignorance Is Bliss, ’Tis Folly to Be Wise XXXI: Mr. M’Swat and I Have a Bust-Up XXXII: Ta-Ta to Barney’s Gap XXXIII: Back at ’Possum Gully XXXIV: But Absent Friends Are Soon Forgot XXXV: The 3rd of December 1898 XXXVI: Once Upon a Time, When the Days Were Long and Hot XXXVII: He That Despiseth Little Things, Shall Fall Little by Little I II XXXVIII: A Tale That Is Told and a Day That Is Done Endnotes Colophon Uncopyright ImprintThis ebook is the product of many hours of hard work by volunteers for Standard Ebooks, and builds on the hard work of other literature lovers made possible by the public domain.
This particular ebook is based on a transcription produced for Project Gutenberg and on digital scans available at Google Books.
The writing and artwork within are believed to be in the U.S. public domain, and Standard Ebooks releases this ebook edition under the terms in the CC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedication. For full license information, see the Uncopyright at the end of this ebook.
Standard Ebooks is a volunteer-driven project that produces ebook editions of public domain literature using modern typography, technology, and editorial standards, and distributes them free of cost. You can download this and other ebooks carefully produced for true book lovers at standardebooks.org.
PrefaceA few months before I left Australia I got a letter from the bush signed “Miles Franklin,” saying that the writer had written a novel, but knew nothing of editors and publishers, and asking me to read and advise. Something about the letter, which was written in a strong original hand, attracted me, so I sent for the MS., and one dull afternoon I started to read it. I hadn’t read three pages when I saw what you will no doubt see at once—that the story had been written by a girl. And as I went on I saw that the work was Australian—born of the bush. I don’t know about the girlishly emotional parts of the book—I leave that to girl readers to judge; but the descriptions of bush life and scenery came startlingly, painfully real to me, and I know that, as far as they are concerned, the book is true to Australia—the truest I ever read. I wrote to Miles Franklin, and she confessed that she was a girl. I saw her before leaving Sydney. She is just a little bush girl, barely twenty-one yet, and has scarcely ever been out of the bush in her life. She has lived her book, and I feel proud of it for the sake of the country I came from, where people toil and bake and suffer and are kind; where every second sunburnt bushman is a sympathetic humorist, with the sadness of the bush deep in his eyes and a brave grin for the worst of times, and where every third bushman is a poet, with a big heart that keeps his pockets empty.
Henry Lawson
England, April 1901
Introduction’Possum Gully, near Goulburn, NSW, Australia, 1st March, 1899
My Dear Fellow Australians,
Just a few lines to tell you that this story is all about myself—for no other purpose do I write it.
I make no apologies for being egotistical. In this particular I attempt an improvement on other autobiographies. Other autobiographies weary one with excuses for their egotism. What matters it to you if I am egotistical? What matters it to you though it should matter that I am egotistical?
This is not a romance—I have too often faced the music of life to the tune of hardship to waste time in snivelling and gushing over fancies and dreams; neither is it a novel, but simply a yarn—a real yarn. Oh! as real, as really real—provided life itself is anything beyond a heartless little chimera—it is as real in its weariness and bitter heartache as the tall gum-trees, among which I first saw the light, are real in their stateliness and substantiality.
My sphere in life is not congenial to me. Oh, how I hate this living death which has swallowed all my teens, which is greedily devouring my youth, which will sap my prime, and in which my old age, if I am cursed with any, will be worn away! As my life creeps on for ever through the long toil-laden days with its agonizing monotony, narrowness, and absolute uncongeniality, how my spirit frets and champs its unbreakable fetters—all in vain!
Comments (0)