Where the Dead Men Lie

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Where the Dead Men Lie is a poem by Australian poet Barcroft Boake. It was first published in The Bulletin magazine on 19 December 1891,[1] and later in the poet's poetry collection Where the Dead Men Lie, and Other Poems (1897).

Analysis

J. Larcombe in The Worker considered the poem "Boake's masterpiece...In it the young poet expressed his detestation of the cruel, selfish squatters, their inhuman conduct, and the tragedy for which they were responsible."[2]

The Oxford Companion to Australian Literature states "In the poem Boake uses the contemptuous name 'Moneygrub' to denote the typical wealthy absentee landlord who lives in city luxury provided for him by the ordinary men and women of the outback..."[3]

The Cambridge History of Australian Literature described the poem "as by far the bleakest poetic vision" of the Australian landscape as it evokes "a haunted frontier."[4]

Further publications

See also

References

  1. Austlit - "Where the Dead Men Lie" by Barcroft Boake
  2. "Barcroft Boake: Australian Labor Poet And Staunch Unionist" by J. Larcombe, The Worker, 29 March 1943, p3
  3. The Oxford Companion to Australian Literature, 2nd edition, p808
  4. The Cambridge History of Australian Literature, 2009, p203

External links

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