Tuesday, March 18, 2025

KISS ME NOT

Thirsty Temperance women activists of yesteryear pose after a day campaigning  against  Demon  Grog. In  modern Australia , awash  with  liquor outlets  and experiencing  massive  online gambling, many men  kiss  horses  at  Randwick, Flemington and  Fannie Bay racetracks and  as a  result  display repulsive  warts  on  their  lips . 

(Temperance. Women. Photo.)  

BUTTERFLY INVASION



 

Vallis  photos.

(Butterfly.Queensland.Vallis.)

Sunday, March 16, 2025

MINERAL AND SHELL COLLECTING

In a  follow up to the Little Darwin  recent  post about British mineralogist John Mawe , who in the early 19th century issued a guide  to  collecting the  wonders of the  New World , including  seashells  , he having bought the collection of  Captain  William Bligh's widow,  is  a  circa l811  advertisement for a business  he  ran in  London for those  keen to climb aboard  the collecting  craze, which included royalty . He personally  collected minerals  for the King of Spain and his wife, Sarah, advised Queen Victoria . 

 MINERALOGY.

The study of this useful science has been much retarded by the difficulty of obtaining a Collection, and the high prices generally asked for peculiar Specimens. With a view to obviate this, Mr. MAWE has been induced to form Portable Collections, classed and arranged, with a Catalogue, at Twelve Guineas; larger Cabinets, containing two hundred and fifty Specimens, at Fifteen Guineas; others, containing upwards of three hundred Varieties, Twenty Guineas. Collections, consisting of five hundred larger and fine Specimens (without Cabinet) Fifty Guineas.

Any Specimens may be exchanged, if required; and the Collection may be formed peculiarly rich in any given Class.

Large, elegant and rare Minerals at reduced prices. Precious Stones, Minerals and Shells, purchased.

A great Variety of elegant Vases formed and enriched after the Antique.

(Collecting. Royalty.Minerals.) 

FABULOUS AUSTRALIAN OPERA

A spectacular   opera  could  be  made  about the  life   of   Australian   collector , feminist  and  opera  fan  , the  late  Margaret  Vine ,who had  been  an   art  researcher  at   the   Australian   National  Library , Canberra.  

By Peter Simon 

Called Rocky Road, after her Magnetic Island residence,on Olympus Crescent,  it  could be bigger than the Rocky Horror  Picture  Show . Imagine  a  grand parade  featuring   her  colostomy bag  named Stanley,   rock wallabies , kookaburras  and  curlews  draped  in  jewellery  ,   dancing    books , assorted   prancing  retro clothing , a  pet  Beagle named Ponsonby   who had  a  library card ,  and   jiving  telephone  directories  ,  which   would   make  Giuseppe  Verdi's  much   raved  about   parade  in  Aida , that  included  elephants ,  giraffes and  horses , seem  prety  dull.

Some of Margaret's pet curlews  in the rocks.

To add to the spectacle of the unique opera  , because Margaret had  green fingernails   , Magnetic Island   children  wondered  if  she  were  a  witch ;  she  told them she was , but  did now  have a broomstick,  so   a   coven  of  grounded  island   witches  could   be   included , perhaps  even   Macbeth ? 


A small  number of the pet wallabies that jumped off large  granite boulders onto  her  roof  are shown above. 

 Her love  of opera  was   such  that she   had  two  cabinets  jam-packed  with  opera  CDs  and  made  special plane  trips  to  Sydney to  attend opera  performances. 

Because  she had  difficulty sitting  and the need to cope with  her  colostomy bag , she had to pay for two  airline seats  each way . 

 Little  Darwin  recently  reran   articles  about the remarkable  Margaret  Vine.  As  a  teenager, she was told that because she was a girl, who would probably get  married  early  and have children,  she  would not  be sent to university, but her  brother  would   .

She  went on to  carve out  a  distinctive career as an Australian  art  researcher,  collector , conservationist , feminist . Margaret  carried out reseach work  for  the epic tome  Documents on Australian Internationl Affairs  1901-l918  which included  Bulletin cartoons in the illustrations that could  feature  in  the  Rocky  Road  extravaganza .   

 Some books  from her  collection, in boxes which once formed the base of  her  bed , went  to   Special Collections,  Eddie Koiki  Mabo   Library  , James  Cook  University.

Recently  pulled  out of  a dark  corner were cardboard boxes   containing   a broken  run  of    National Library of  Australia  News  magazines from  the  l970s  to the l990s   that  had    belonged   to   Margaret , which  she had given me .

Some of them  contained   handwritten   annotations   and   underlining  of  text  by  her , including  question and  exclamation marks . Each volume was   closely  examined .

This  resulted  in  ideas  for  a  swag  of  follow up   stories  and  the  proposed Rocky Road  opera  brainwave.  

The  September  1994   issue featured  a  cover   photograph  of  opera  composer   Larry   Sitsky, the associated four page  article   receiving   much  attention   by  Vine, indicating she may have written a  condensed piece about him  and  his  works.

Born in China in l934, the son of Jewish White Russians , he came to Australia in 1951. After graduating in 1956 from the  New South Wales State  Conservatorium of Music in Sydney, he  studied at the San Francisco Conservatory of Music , greatly influenced by the American  music  scene , returning  to Australia in l961 to teach at the Queensland State Conservatorium of  Music . 


He is shown posing before  a poster for his opera The  Golem , based on Jewish folklore, performed  in the Sydney Opera House in October l993 in a  five performance season. In its 18 scenes over  five acts, the cast was covered  with   mud  most of  the  time .

(Opera.Vine.Sitsky.)

Saturday, March 15, 2025

ABRACADABRA ! PHOTOGRAPHIC MAGIC BY AERONAUTICAL CORRESPONDENT ABRA


Townsville and Magnetic Island . 

(Magic. Townsville, Abra.)

Friday, March 14, 2025

PROMINENT, FORGOTTEN WRITER


The  superb lists  put out  by Douglas Stewart Fine Books,Melbourne , repeatedly revive colourful , artistic  and  interesting  individuals  from the  past.  An example  is  Kathleen Watson , prominent in the Australian  literary  scene, ,especially in Brisbane and  Melbourne , a novelist, short story writer ,  playwright  and poet , who  died  in l926.

Recently,  the  bookshop  offered for $30  the above  bold signature of  Kathleen Watson , described on it as  a writer, from an autograph album compiled by a member of a pioneering family, Jane Emma Murphy (Balcombe) (1854-1924), “The Briars”, Mornington, Victoria; à Beckett family, Melbourne, by  descent.

Born in England ,the daughter of a well known medical man,Watson  was educated  mainly on the Continent, France in particular. 

 Her family was  connected to the British Army , a brother, Colonel Watson, of the Army Medical Corps, visited Queensland at the end of  World War l , after serving  for  years  in  India.

Her  first literary success was  Litanies of  Life, published in  London.

Soon after , arriving in Australia from Wales,  she  married William Dearden ,deeply involved in the Australian timber industry ,travelled with him  on the North  African coast , the scene for  a  novel, The Gaiety of Fatma. 

 Watson  spent  15 years in Brisbane  where she was a  well  known , vivacious   identity, said to  be  a   cheery, cultured and charitable woman with a wide view of the world and its problems, and intensely sympathetic. 

.She entertained  and   travelled  in  Queensland  with  the French one- armed  General  Paul Pau  when  he  toured  Australia and New Zealand  between September 1918 and January 1919 on a post-war diplomatic  visit.

A newspaper account said that when  General Pau, who had served in the Franco-Prussian War, where he lost his lower right arm ,  was in Queensland his happiest hours were with the country people, with Mrs Dearden (Watson)  as guide, mentor, and friend, and interpreter also, for she spoke French as a Parisian.

Much of her nature , it continued, had the French vivacity and general temperament, and that was not surprising since, as a little child, she had shared the privations of the siege of Paris and heard the German guns thundering on the wider environs.

It is interesting to note that when General Pau was in New Zealand a kauri tree , Agathis australis , was named after him  in his  honor .

For the  Brisbane Courier Mail , Watson  wrote  a series of short stories  under the  title Heniette Says, later made into a  small book.  These were the sayings of a French girl married to an Australian Digger soldier living a new life with him down under. 

It was said the   brave  philosphy and  great literary charm of these   stories made them very popular . They  had all the brightness of the heart of a French woman happily and devotedly linked up with Australia. 

They were  a blend of humour, bright appreciation of and bravery in new and rough surroundings, and with just a little wistfulness in the reflections upon Henriette’s native land. 

A Watson play, If Youth But Knew, set in a London morning room ,  was  performed in Melbourne , along with  other plays by   prominent  playwrights of the day, including  Louis Esson .  In  these illustrations from the program Esson  is quoted  as  saying he hoped a  playright like the famous Elizabethan  playwright and poet Christopher Marlowe  would emerge in  Melbourne .  

William Moore, journalist, art critic and playwright, promoted  Australian art and  drama,  was  involved in annual  drama nights in Melbourne  from 1909-l912.

Esther Paterson  studied at the  Melbourne National Gallery School, was a Fellow of th Royal Society of Arts,London, a member of the  Melbourne Society of Women Painters  and Sculptors and a  council  member of the Victorian  Artists' Society .  

The  James Cook University library   in  Townsville has  a  Watson  volume. 

( Watson. France . Author.)

SETTING SUN

Castle Hill, Townsville . Aeronautical Correspondent Abra .

(Sun. Townsville. Abra.)