y separately published work icon The School Paper for Grades VII and VIII periodical issue   children's  
Issue Details: First known date: 1922... no. 272 September 1922 of The School Paper : Grades VII and VIII est. 1896-1932 The School Paper for Grades VII and VIII
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Notes

  • Only literary material by Australian authors individually indexed.

    Other material in this issue includes:

    • First Page Photograph: 'Some of the Members of the General Committee of the Jubilee Exhibition' by Tolra, from Punch, Melbourne, [113].
    • Poetry: 'The Teacher' by English poet and essayist Matthew Arnold (q.v.), with portrait of the author, 120-121; 'The Child' by British poet Ethel Clifford (d. 1959), with illus. 'The Child', 124-125; 'Forty Years On' by British educationalist E. E. [Edward Ernest] Bowen (1836-1901), 127-128.
    • Prose: 'The Pioneers of Empire' by English historian James Anthony Froude (1818-1894), 125-126; 'Gardens Past and Present' by E. V. B. [Mrs. Boyle], from the preface to From a Middlesex Garden (1901) by English composer and author Alfred H. Hyatt, with illus. 'A Corner of a Schoolground, Central Victoria', 126-127.
    • Non-Fiction: 'The Jubilee Exhibition', 'marking the fiftieth anniversary of the birth of free education in Victoria' (unattributed), [113]-114; 'Education : V. Education in Victoria Under a Minister of the Crown : The Second Period - a Director as Permanent Head (1902 onwards)' (unattributed), with illus. 'A Building of the Old Type', 'The Present West Hawthorn Central School on the Site of that Shown Above' by Mr. William H. T. McKimm, 'School-Buildings - The Old and the New', 'The Castlemaine High School', 'A Portable (or Sectional) School-Building of the Latest Type', and 'The South Melbourne Technical School', 115-120.
    • Science: 'Louis Pasteur : Part II' by Australian educationalist William Gillies (q.v.),121-123.
  • Preceding or following each piece is a short glossary of the longer words contained therein, as well as notes about people and places mentioned.

Contents

* Contents derived from the 1922 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Australian Engineersi"Ah, well! but the case seems hopeless, and the pen might write in vain;", Henry Lawson , single work poetry (p. 114-115)
Note: With illus. 'Pupils of the Blacksmithing Class at the West Melbourne Junior Technical School'.

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Notes:
Literary material by Australian authors in this issue:
Last amended 3 Sep 2009 14:00:59
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