The following articles are included in this issue of the Australian Magazine but are not indexed in AustLit:
'Administration of Sir Richard Bourke'. Unattributed. (Second part of a serialisation.) (pp. 125-133)
'Disadvantages of a Sheep Station out of the Boundaries of the Colony of New South Wales in a North-West Direction, in 1837'. Unattributed. (pp. 135-145)
'Agricultural Report for January'. Unattributed. (Editor's note: For the Australian Magazine.) (p. 158)
'Mathematical Questions' (p. 159). Includes questions by Tommy Toast and J. M. [James Martin]. Answers, dated 'Castlereagh, 20th January', by Tommy Toast to the Arithmetical question and the Algebraical question proposed in the Australian Magazine for January 1838 are included. The editor notes that: 'The above is a very obscure and round-about way of working the question;– it might be done much more simply by Quadratics.'
'Memoranda for February' including holidays, sun rise and set, high water in Sydney Cove and phases of the moon (p. 160).
Erratum: 'In the January number, page 36, 12th line from the top-for 'agriculture,' read architecture.' (p. 160
This biography of the explorer and governor of Van Diemen's Land (Tasmania) discusses Franklin's life to 1830. A sentence at the end of the account, possibly inserted by the editor of the Australian Magazine, brings Franklin's story up to date: 'In 1836 he was appointed Lieutenant-Governor of Van Diemen's Land, and on the 7th day of January, 1837, he landed at Hobart Town, and entered on the duties of that Government.' The writer, 'a gentleman now residing in New South Wales' (according to the editor's note below) has not yet been established by AustLit.
This essay briefly discusses the role of the Australian Magazine in advancing literature in Sydney. The author also discusses the imminent arrival of the new governor, George Gipps, and the future of the colony.
The story of how an Irish ex convict, a 'venerable Undertaker', received his pardon from Governor Macquarie. The story is set in Sydney in the 1810s during the governorship of Macquarie.
An essay on the origins of poverty from antiquity and the beginnings of Christianity. The author compares the 'hideous, importunate, idle, licentious poverty' of the day to the' humble, modest, frugal, robust, industrious, and laborious poverty' of 'the earlier ages'. The author opines on the reason for the increase in poverty in England and gives China as an example of where poverty is absent.
On the 6th January, probably in 1837, the author (James Martin) embarked on a journey via a steamer on the Parramatta River, to Parramatta, North Rocks and Windsor on the Hawkesbury River. The author briefly mentions the residences of John Macarthur, Richard Rouse, 'Mr Macdougall' and George Suttor.
One 'luckless evening' on the road near his former residence on the banks of the Nepean River, the ghost of Jack Bowles shows his anger over his disputed will to the executor, John Proctor.
'Another prediction of Australia's glorious future.' (Webby)