Economy Press Economy Press i(A38860 works by) (Organisation) assertion
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1 y separately published work icon Dawn to Dusk Miriam Edwards , Sydney : Miriam Edwards , 1947 Z869873 1947 selected work poetry
1 y separately published work icon Bralgah : A Legend R. Kate , Adelaide : Jindyworobak Publications , 1944 Z823386 1944 selected work poetry
1 2 y separately published work icon The Blue Gazinta Mary Williams , Adelaide : Mary Williams , 1944 Z251131 1944 selected work poetry children's
1 5 y separately published work icon Indelible Voices : A Poem i "Disfigured, schizoid, dead or in peril", Flexmore Hudson , Lucindale : Flexmore Hudson , 1943 Z164463 1943 single work poetry
1 6 y separately published work icon With the First Soft Rain Flexmore Hudson , Lucindale : Flexmore Hudson , 1943 Z164364 1943 selected work poetry
1 y separately published work icon The Bliss of Solitude Miriam Edwards , Sydney : Miriam Edwards , 1941 Z808480 1941 selected work poetry
1 15 y separately published work icon Poetry Poetry: A Quarterly of Australian and New Zealand Verse; Poetry: The Quarterly of Australian and New Zealand Verse; Poetry: The Quarterly of Australasian Verse; Poetry: The Australian Quarterly of Verse; Poetry: The Australian International Quarterly of Verse Flexmore Hudson (editor), 1941 Adelaide : Economy Press , 1941-1947 Z824391 1941 periodical (21 issues)

In 1940 the poet Flexmore Hudson was a school teacher at Hammond in the far north of South Australia. With a growing reputation from his first two volumes of poetry, he embarked on another publishing project, founding in 1941 the magazine, Poetry: A Quarterly of Australian and New Zealand Verse.

Run with the assistance of his wife Myrle Desmond, Poetry was the only long-lasting 1940s periodical devoted entirely to poetry. Hudson had established a significant network of contacts through his involvement with the Jindyworobak movement and his regular correspondence with other writers. This enabled him to attract contributions from many of Australia's significant poets and build a healthy subscription base. Despite war-time paper shortages, Hudson and Desmond managed to maintain the quarterly appearance of Poetry, but strikes during 1945 and 1946 caused some delays. Isolated in the rural township, the couple often worked late into the night preparing each issue for publication and distribution.

Early issues of Poetry included contributions from Gina Ballantyne, John Blight, Clem Christesen, Donovan Clarke, Mary Fullerton, Harry Hooton, Rex Ingamells and Douglas Stewart. Steadily increasing circulation through word-of-mouth and the distribution of free copies to High Schools and other institutions, Poetry was able to pay contributors, a rare ability at the time. Later contributors to Poetry included Nancy Cato, Rosemary Dobson, R. D. FitzGerald, A. D. Hope, Jack Lindsay, James McAuley, Roland Robinson and Judith Wright.

By 1945, writers such as Hudson, Hope and Ingamells were contributing reviews and the magazine was set to take on a more international scope. Subtitling the magazine "The Australian International Quarterly of Verse", Hudson attracted contributions from a number of British and American writers, including Langston Hughes, William Carlos Williams, John Pudney, Sydney Goodsin and Roy McFadden. But the time and energy required to produce the magazine began to affect Hudson's health and the financial situation of the magazine weakened. Despite assistance from Clive Turnbull, Nancy Cato and Roland Robinson, a contribution from the Commonwealth Literary Fund, and a possible bulk order from a London wholesaler, Poetry was unable to continue, ceasing production with the December issue of 1947. Although proud of the magazine's ability to pay its contributors, Hudson received little financial recompense for the magazine and was left with a debt that took some four years to repay.
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