
A vivid portrait of Australia’s frontier emerges from a series of candid sketches that bring the lives of squatters, whalers, convicts, diggers and other early settlers into sharp focus. The author blends wry observation with unflinching detail, revealing how the continent was claimed, populated, and endured by those who never intended to return home. Through lively anecdotes and evocative scenes, listeners hear the raw humor and harsh realities that defined life in the bush.
The narrative turns a critical eye toward the colonial project, exposing the brutal logic of transporting Britain’s “undesirables” to a land portrayed as empty and waiting. It sketches the grim conditions aboard the transport ships, the strict discipline imposed, and the uneasy coexistence with the native environment and its people. Illustrated with period drawings, the account offers a compelling, grounded glimpse into a formative era that shaped a nation’s character.
Full title
The Book of the Bush Containing Many Truthful Sketches of the Early Colonial Life of Squatters, Whalers, Convicts, Diggers, and Others Who Left Their Native Land and Never Returned
Language
en
Duration
~11 hours (636K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Amy Zellmer
Release date
2005-07-24
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1822–1903
A vivid storyteller of colonial Australia, he turned years of public service and firsthand observation into brisk, anecdotal writing about the bush, the goldfields, and settler life. His best-known work offers a colorful window into nineteenth-century Victoria.
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