y separately published work icon The Australian Journal periodical issue  
Issue Details: First known date: 1878... vol. 13 no. 158 July 1878 of The Australian Journal est. 1865 The Australian Journal
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Contents

* Contents derived from the , 1878 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
After More Hay, single work prose
Anecdote of an old famer who challenges his nephews to a hay-loading competition. Humorous. (PB).
(p. 551)
The Lime-Kiln Club, single work prose
Purported record of a negro meeting which discusses the absurdity of women's dress and self-decoration; a consolation for misery in the thought that it could be worse; an unsuccessful collection; and a report against stocking American forests with elephants, giraffes etc. Parody in quasi-dialect. (PB).
(p. 551)
The Marked Hand, single work short story
Romantic thriller set in Chenworth, England. An orphan spends Christmas with her fiancee's family, filled with foreboding from a dream of his death she had in a railway carriage on the journey there. A mysterious woman in her carriage, a ghostly apparition in the manor house, and a woman drowning at the beach together with the tale of a mad governess comprise the tale. Well-written. (PB).
(p. 557-560)
A Generous Sacrifice, A. S. P. , single work short story
Two Hobart-Town schoolfriends separate for several years, one making his fortune on the Victorian goldfields, the other as a merchant in Richmond, Tasmania. In the 1860s they meet and discover both love the one woman; she became secretly engaged to one years before but now loves the other. The fiancee breaks his engagement to render his friend happy. Stilted. (PB).
(p. 560-562)
My Photograph, James Peart , single work short story
Romance of coincidence ranging from Birmingham to London to Worthing involving a mix-up of bags, a lost sketch-book and a carriage accident. Set against a happy family background and including the narrator's rise to business success. Pleasant. (PB).
(p. 562-567)
Little Dick, Mona Noel-Paton , single work short story
Set in London, a poor little match-boy, Dick, is helped by a rich but lonely young gentleman who he inspires to study to be a doctor at Cambridge. Dick's father dies of consumption then Dick himself sickens, leaving his baby brother to support the family by sweeping crossings - the secret of their origins to be kept til his dying day. Sentiment and pathos. (PB).
(p. 567-571)
An Adventurous Zouave, single work prose
A French soldier in Algiers is arrested for selling cartridges to the Arabs - but they are blanks. (PB).
(p. 571-572)
Mary Hester Armour, W. W. , single work short story
A quarrel between neighbours - an old and a young woman in a little bush township begins with a summons and ends in a murder and revelations of bigamy. Mark Sinclair, still a strooper, helps solve the feminine affair. (PB)
(p. 572-580)
Mad Lucy, single work short story
Tale of an inmate of a lunatic asylum, driven there when her fiancee married her sister on their own appointed wedding day. (PB).
(p. 580-581)
What It May Come To, single work prose

Illustrated uses for the phonograph; lecturing an errant husband when he came home late; and addressing a church congregation (though in this case mixed up with a bullock-driver's recording). (PB).

(p. 581)
The Inconsolable, single work short story
A sculptor commissioned to erect a memorial to a rich young widow's husband has his plans reduced over the months in which her grief abates - until she remarries at last. Overworked irony. (PB).
(p. 582-583)
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