In 1938 Xavier Herbert received the Australian Commonwealth sequi-centenary award for a novel , Capricornia , which was praised by the prominent British writer H. G. Wells .
The novel was inspired to a large extent by what Herbert experienced in and the many characters he met in the Northern Territory in the l920s and 30s working as a pharmacist, railway fettler, superintendent of an Aboriginal compound and "pox doctor " to Japanese pearldivers whom he regarded as supermen .
To prevent being sued by people in the Territory who identified themselves as thinly disguised characters in the novel, Herbert called the land Capricornia.
The Territory also provided him with the name for a later Miles Franklin Award winning epic , Poor Fellow My Country , which he proudly said was bigger than the Bible. The title was based on the anguished cry of an Aborigine who was imrisoned after he threw a spear at a policeman who shot his dog at Pine Creek .
When Herbert was a boy in Western Australia , his father , a railway worker, discussed the possibility of taking up land in the Northern Territory and breeding remounts for the Indian Army.
In Melbourne , in the l920s, Herbert, intent on becoming a doctor , with a writing itch , churned out a range of material,including short stories, for various publications. Never published was a lengthy novel ,Giants of Iron, which mentiond vast deposits of iron in Western Australia.
The above view of Cavenagh Street ,in the central business district , includes part of Gordon's Don Hotel - now an ABC studio- and the Tree of Knowledge, a major gathering spot.
Mrs Christina Gordon, was a prominent Darwin identity who owned pubs, Star Pictures and the Rendezvous Cafe. When she ran the Victoria Hotel she was dubbed the aviators ' mother because she looked after the male and female pioneering aviators who lobbed in Darwin. She even urged Herbert to open a chemist shop.
At one stage Xavier and his wife , Sadie, lived in what had had been a former Chinese gambling den. Their residence included a room decorated with spears and other items, knocked to the floor during a party .