
TO THE - ENGLISH MEN WHO BELIEVE IN VOTES FOR WOMEN - THIS STORY IS AFFECTIONATELY INSCRIBED, BECAUSE THE WOMEN HEREIN CHARACTERISED WERE NEVER FORCED TO BE - "SUFFRAGETTES," - THEIR COUNTRYMEN HAVING GRANTED THEM THEIR RIGHTS AS - SUFFRAGISTS - IN THE YEAR OF OUR LORD 1902.
GLOSSARY OF COLLOQUIALISMS AND SLANG TERMS.
ONE. - CLAY'S.
TWO. - AT CLAY'S.
THREE. - BECOMING ACQUAINTED WITH GRANDMA CLAY.
FOUR. - DAWN'S AMBITION.
FIVE. - MISS FLIPP'S UNCLE.
SIX. - GRANDMA CLAY'S LOVE-STORY.
SEVEN. - THE LITTLE TOWN OF NOONOON.
EIGHT. - GRANDMA TURNS NURSE.
A weary traveler steps off the afternoon express into the sweltering heat of Noonoon, a dusty river town that seems to have sprouted straight from a 1902 guidebook. The narrator’s eye is drawn to three striking figures—a rotund, flamboyantly dressed gentleman, a gaunt bearded elder, and himself—who become the lenses through which the town’s quirks are observed. The prose is peppered with local slang, turning ordinary sights like tin kangaroo weather‑cocks and sun‑baked horses into vivid, humorous snapshots of frontier life.
As the party makes its way to the ramshackle Jimmeny’s Hotel, the streets pulse with the clatter of carts laden with peaches, grapes and the unmistakable scent of ripe melons. Larrikins, dogs, and even the occasional kookaburra provide a soundtrack of lively banter, while the townsfolk—both men and women—navigate their roles with a casual confidence that hints at deeper social currents. The narrative captures the charm and rough edges of everyday folk, inviting listeners to linger in a world where language, landscape, and community intertwine.
Language
en
Duration
~9 hours (528K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Suzanne Shell, Sankar Viswanathan, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2007-06-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1879–1954
Best known for My Brilliant Career, this fiercely independent Australian writer turned sharp observations of rural life, women’s ambitions, and national identity into stories that still feel fresh. She spent decades championing Australian literature, both through her own novels and through the legacy of the Miles Franklin Literary Award.
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