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Articles on general and literary topics and verse. Contributors include Francis Adams, Catherine Helen Spence, G. G. McRae, Marcus Clarke, W. E. Hearn, G. B. Barton, D. Blair, C. G. Duffy, E. Langton, E. E. Morris, J. T. Woods, J. Smith.
Notes
Subtitle: A Quarterly Publication Devoted to Philosophy, Theology, Science, Art, Politics and Belles-Lettres
RANGE: 1(1876)-10(1885)
FREQUENCY: Quarterly
Has separately published index: Melbourne Review Index 1876-1885
Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
yA Decade of Assessment : Being a Study in the Intellectual Life of the City of Melbourne between 1876 and 1886Jill Roe,
Canberra:1965193489031965single work thesis 'This thesis deals with six main fields of colonial thought: religious, educational, political, literary, artistic and scientific. These fields are separately discussed, but are arranged so that the discussion converges upon a central chapter, which is a description of the city of Melbourne in about 1881. This chapter describes a seventh kind of thinking fundamental to the flanking chapters, and provides a focus for, and summary of, the efforts discussed in those chapters. By dispensing with the usual introduction and conclusion, and adopting a concentric structure, the writer has wished to emphasize two things. The first is the importance of the situation, which focused the attention of the thoughtful minority here discussed (a remark meant to indicate the direction of their thinking rather than its bases or content). The second is that this rather arbitrarily selected decade admits no real conclusions, and was not chosen out of any interest in its doing so.' (Thesis description)
The Term of His Natural LifeViews, News and ReviewsC. T. Clarke,
1930single work correspondence — Appears in:
All About Books,19 Mayvol.
2no.
51930;(p. 123)C.T. Clarke was in the employ of George Robertson in the 1870s when, as a very young man, he and R.P. Raymond 'constituted the publishing department' that produced Marcus Clarke's work. In this letter to the Editor, C.T. Clarke responds to Palmer's piece on the re-issue of For the Term of His Natural Life. Clarke recounts his recollections, in some detail, of the publisher's interactions with Marcus Clarke, including the circumstances of the Bentley first edition.
The Term of His Natural LifeViews, News and ReviewsC. T. Clarke,
1930single work correspondence — Appears in:
All About Books,19 Mayvol.
2no.
51930;(p. 123)C.T. Clarke was in the employ of George Robertson in the 1870s when, as a very young man, he and R.P. Raymond 'constituted the publishing department' that produced Marcus Clarke's work. In this letter to the Editor, C.T. Clarke responds to Palmer's piece on the re-issue of For the Term of His Natural Life. Clarke recounts his recollections, in some detail, of the publisher's interactions with Marcus Clarke, including the circumstances of the Bentley first edition.
yA Decade of Assessment : Being a Study in the Intellectual Life of the City of Melbourne between 1876 and 1886Jill Roe,
Canberra:1965193489031965single work thesis 'This thesis deals with six main fields of colonial thought: religious, educational, political, literary, artistic and scientific. These fields are separately discussed, but are arranged so that the discussion converges upon a central chapter, which is a description of the city of Melbourne in about 1881. This chapter describes a seventh kind of thinking fundamental to the flanking chapters, and provides a focus for, and summary of, the efforts discussed in those chapters. By dispensing with the usual introduction and conclusion, and adopting a concentric structure, the writer has wished to emphasize two things. The first is the importance of the situation, which focused the attention of the thoughtful minority here discussed (a remark meant to indicate the direction of their thinking rather than its bases or content). The second is that this rather arbitrarily selected decade admits no real conclusions, and was not chosen out of any interest in its doing so.' (Thesis description)