y separately published work icon The Australian Journal periodical issue  
Issue Details: First known date: 1880... vol. 15 no. 177 February 1880 of The Australian Journal est. 1865 The Australian Journal
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Contents

* Contents derived from the 1880 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Mistaken Identity, Gyp , single work short story
A country doctor in a small Victorian town rescues a young man from suicide after his release from gaol for an assault he committed defending his innocence of a crime. Questions the legal system and its administration which causes such suffering - the young man eventually dying of brain fever. Lightly but competently told. (PB)
(p. 288-290)
St Valentine's Day at Sea, Sherrill Kire , single work short story
Shipboard romance receives a set-back when a valentine is refused but a slower courtship repairs the damage and the sender eventually confesses his deed. Light - set in England and Europe. (PB)
(p. 291-293)
A Modern Cupid, single work short story
A spoiled young heiress sends a valentine to an acquaintance she and her orphan cousin made on a summer vacation - and kindles a romance. Light, US tale. (PB)
(p. 293-295)
A Big Mistake, single work prose
A new minister pays a visit, and discusses the death of a horse, but his hostess thinks he is referring to her recently dead husband. US humour. (PB)
(p. 299)
Lost and Found, Charlotte M. Stanley , single work short story
A coquette separates an engaged couple but her true nature is revealed and after several years they are reunited through a portrait. Slight, probably US. (PB)
(p. 300-301)
Very Strange, single work short story
Anecdote of a druggist who shares his hotel room with a drunken journalist who mistakenly clothes himself in the druggist's suit and spends his money. Humour - probably US. (PB)
(p. 305)
A Narrow Escape, single work prose
The fortitude of a Polish lancer in the service of the French Marshal Murat when captured by the Spanish in Russian uniform. Stresses mainly his determination to hide his knowledge of French. (PB)
(p. 307-308)
The Defeat of Dabchick, single work short story
A cockney swell courts an engaging young lady at Ramsgate without response - until he is punished by her newly arrived protector. First person narrative; humour. (PB)
(p. 308)
The Little Brown Homestead, Mary Kyle Dallas , single work short story
A fashionable city bride persuades her country doctor husband to sell his humble cottage, leave his aunt and buy a big new house. Bankruptcy and Aunt Anne's generosity restore them to their previous home, now beautiful to the eyes of the young wife. (PB)
(p. 309-310)
Seeing a Man Home, single work prose
A good samaritan is poorly repaid for seeing a drunk man home. Humour. (PB)
(p. 310)
Goodbye, single work prose
Prolonged farewells between two married women. Humour (!). (PB)
(p. 310)
Keeping Up Appearances, I. H. , single work prose
On the costs of living a lifestyle and character that is not one's own; part essay, part exemplary sketch of a couple who married without knowing their true situation. (PB)
(p. 311)
Bro. Gardner's Advice, single work prose
Presidential advice to his brother members on the uncertainties of wealth and health. US humour; partially phonetic. (PB)
(p. 311)
Fisher's Ghost The Ghost upon the Rail, John Lang , single work short story crime
The tale of Fisher's Ghost's originally from John Lang's Botany Bay, or, True Stories of the Early Days of Australia . Penrith, NSW, was the scene of Edward Smith's murder of his neighbouring farmer John Fisher, both of them ex-convicts. Smith's plan is foiled by suspicions aroused by Fisher's apparition, the skills of a black tracker, and the sagacious magistrate, Mr Cox. Smith is hanged. (PB)
(p. 312-316)
A Plea for the Players, R. L. Gentles , single work prose
Example of the calumnies made against actors and actresses by those who don't even know them - and a plea for better treatment. (PB).
(p. 317-318)
Cinderella, single work prose
Retells the story of an old French actor and a pretty young peasant girl who meet and marry in Paris in 1780 through a shoe left for repair at a street cobbler's store. (PB)
(p. 318)
A Lesson in Humility, Dot , single work short story
A practical joke played by telegraphers in the far north on one of their fellows. Slightly tedious. (PB)
(p. 320)
Twain's Best Joke, Mark Twain , single work short story

Anecdote of Twain's/Clemens' embarrassment at finding himself the centre of loud applause at a London banquet. (PB)

(p. 324)
The Blue Wesley Tea-Pot, Amelia E. Barr , single work short story
Tale of the events in the lives of Staffordshire potters in 1833 which give a John Wesley tea pot more than monetary value; of two suitors for their employer's daughter, of the murder of the father by a sacked workman, his fellow's wrongful conviction for the crime and his eventual release. Ring of authenticity with Methodist references. (PB)
(p. 1880)

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Notes:
Includes final instalment of George Musgrove's serial fiction, 'Fortune's Wheel', pp. 296-299.
Notes:
Includes first instalment of Eliza A. Dupuy's serial fiction, 'The Unwilling Bride', pp. 275-288.
Last amended 31 Jan 2006 14:29:49
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