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Joseph Furphy

 
Biography: Joseph Furphy

Joseph Furphy (1843-1912) was an Australian writer whose reputation rests on "Such Is Life," a major novel that gives accurate representations of the emerging national character and customs in colonial Australia's "age of gusto," the 1890s.

Joseph Furphy was born at Yering, a rural district outside Melbourne, on Sept. 26, 1843. He was educated at home, mainly by his mother, with the Bible and Shakespeare as his first readers. At 23 Furphy bought a threshing machine and at harvest time took it through wheat areas. He became a homesteader in 1868 but after 5 years of hard times became a wool carrier. This occupation took him deep into the main pastoral areas, about which he was later to write so knowledgably. In slack times he tried his hand at gold mining. In his late 30s he joined his brother at Shepparton, in central Victoria, a rural town in which he spent the 1880s and 1890s.

Here, under the pen name Tom Collins, Joseph Furphy contributed regularly to the Bulletin, a weekly established in 1880 which reflected (and helped shape) the erupting Australianism of the day. In it, writers came forward to interpret Australians to themselves rather than to English readers. The movement had its roots in the back-country, where social tensions sprang from the sheep raisers' legal struggle to hold their estates against homesteading and, more immediately, from prolonged strikes involving rural workers.

Major Work

In this atmosphere Furphy wrote Such Is Life, delineating life in the pastoral lands of southeast Australia. It was the first rounded view of the Australian inland - a record written with a conscious rejection of romanticism. Furphy completed the long novel in 1897 and submitted it to the Bulletin, where its merit was immediately recognized. Accepting editorial advice, Furphy excised large sections; the reduced text was published in 1903. Reviews were excellent, but sales were meager. Through the efforts of a family friend, Such Is Life was again published in 1917; other editions were released in England and Australia.

Shrewd, proud and tolerant, Furphy had a quiet sense of humor and was self-effacing and devoted to his family - characteristics which were reflected in his writing. The warmth of his outlook and the richness of his experience add luster to Such Is Life, and in spite of some stylistic flaws it stands as "the most original and vigorous novel to come out of Australia." Discursive and laden with quotations and erudite allusions, it is marked by real humor in the presentation of character and scene, with an unfailing belief in and affection for the common man. Such Is Life is an extraordinary book in the ambitiousness and complexity of its structure. Furphy's editorial mentor, A. G. Stephens, described it as being like a riverboat, "carrying all manner of freight for all manner of people, and tieing up at a tree every night for tea, tucker [food], tobacco, and philosophical reflections."

Furphy was absorbed with the discussion going on among those trying to shape a political and social philosophy appropriate to the developing frontier society. Supporting the view of the small landowner against that of the big sheep and cattle raisers, he admitted to something of the egalitarian approach. He picked up the prevailing views expressed in dissertations among shearers, drovers, teamsters, prospectors, and general roustabouts - men with a new political awareness sharpened by the varying "socialist" teachings of the American social writers Edward Bellamy and Henry George, whose books were being spread among ranch workers by union organizers. Furphy's writing possesses an intellectual content and background; yet it is narrow and parochial.

Two subsidiary novels taken from the great mass from which Such Is Life was quarried became Rigby's Romance and The Buln Buln and the Brolga. In 1905 Furphy submitted the former to a miners newspaper, where it was serialized; it came out in book form in 1921. The Buln Buln and the Brolga was not published until 1946. Both novels rely for their interest on their association with the greater work.

In 1905 Furphy moved to Western Australia, where two of his sons had established a business. He died at Claremont, a suburb of Perth, on Sept. 13, 1912.

Further Reading

The principal authority on Furphy's life is Miles Franklin in association with Kate Baker, Joseph Furphy: The Legend of a Man and His Book (1944 which, although sometimes vague and fragmentary, brings together good material on Furphy and his work. A concise sketch of Furphy and Such Is Life and an annotated list of his output are given (under his pen name, Tom Collins) in Edmund M. Miller, Australian Literature: A Bibliography to 1938; Extended to 1950, edited by Frederick T. Macartney (1956). A fuller appreciation of Furphy and his place in Australian literature is in H. M. Green, A History of Australian Literature, vol. 1 (1961).

Additional Sources

Barnes, John, The order of things: a life of Joseph Furphy, Melbourne; New York: Oxford University Press, 1990.

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Wikipedia: Joseph Furphy
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Joseph Furphy

Joseph Furphy
Born 26 September 1843
Yering, Victoria, Australia
Died 13 September 1912
Claremont, Western Australia
Pen name Tom Collins
Occupation Author, poet
Nationality Australian
Genres Australian literature

Joseph Furphy (26 September 1843 – 13 September 1912), is widely regarded as the "Father of the Australian novel". He mostly wrote under the pseudonym Tom Collins, and is best known for his novel Such is Life (1903), regarded as an Australian classic.

Contents

Biography

Furphy was born at Yering Station in Yering, Victoria. His father, Samuel Furphy, was originally a tenant farmer from Tanderagee, County Armagh, Ireland who emigrated to Australia in 1840.[1] Samuel Furphy was head gardener on the station. There was no school in the district and at first Joseph was educated by his mother. The only books available were the Bible and Shakespeare, and at seven years of age Furphy was already learning passages of each by heart; he never forgot them. In about 1850 the family moved to Kangaroo Ground, Victoria, and here the parents of the district built a school and obtained a master. In 1852 they moved again, to Kyneton where Samuel Furphy began business as a hay and corn merchant. A few years later he leased a farm and also bought a threshing plant. This was worked by Joseph and a brother and both became competent engine-drivers. In 1864 Furphy bought a threshing outfit and travelled the Daylesford and surrounding districts. At Glenlyon he met Leonie Germain, a girl of 16, of French extraction, and in 1866 they were married.

Soon afterwards Leonie's mother went to New Zealand and Furphy for a time carried on her farm, but two years later took up a selection near Colbinabbin. The land proved to be poor, and about 1873 he sold out and soon afterwards bought a team of bullocks. He became prosperous as the years went by, but the drought came and he had heavy losses. Some of his bullocks and horses died from pleuro-pneumonia, and in 1884 he accepted a position in the foundry of his brother John at Shepparton. There he worked for some 20 years doing much reading and writing in the evenings.

Late in his life, Furphy moved to Western Australia to join his sons who had established an iron foundry there. He died in Claremont on 13 September 1912, and is buried in Karrakatta Cemetery.

A full biography of Joseph Furphy was written by the Australian author, Miles Franklin (Joseph Furphy: The Legend of a Man and His Book in 1944).

Literary career

In his youth Furphy had written many verses and in December 1867 he had been awarded the first prize of £3 at the Kyneton Literary Society for a vigorous set of verses on "The Death of President Lincoln". While living at Shepparton, he was encouraged in his writing by Kate Baker, a schoolteacher who boarded with his mother. He sent a story 'The Mythical Sundowner' to The Bulletin under the name 'Warrigal Jack' and it was accepted for publication. His most famous work is Such is Life, a fictional account of the life of rural dwellers, including bullock drivers, squatters and itinerant travellers, in southern New South Wales and Victoria, during the 1880s. In 1897 the manuscript was sent to The Bulletin where A. G. Stephens recognised its worth, but also that it was not a commercial proposition. He suggested cuts and Furphy removed an entire section, later published in serial form as Rigby's Romance. Stephens persuaded the proprietors of the Bulletin to publish the revised Such is Life because it was a great Australian work although not commercially viable. It was published in 1903 and only sold about a third of the print run. Later editions were brought out after Furphy's death through the efforts of Kate Baker who bought the copyright from the Bulletin.

In 1905, Furphy moved to Western Australia, where his sons were living. He had made literary friends through the publication of his book, but now lost touch with them. He built a house at Swanbourne, which is now the headquarters of the West Australian branch of the Fellowship of Australian Writers.

Furphy's popularity may have influenced the usage of the Australian slang word furphy, meaning a "tall story". However, scholars consider it more likely that the word originated with water carts, produced in large numbers by J. Furphy & Sons, a company owned by Joseph's brother John.

Such Is Life contains possibly the first written incidence of the Australian and New Zealand idiom "ropeable". Chapter One contains the following phrase: "On't ole Martin be ropeable when he sees that fence!"

Bibliography

  • Such Is Life (1903)
  • The Poems of Joseph Furphy (1916)
  • Rigby's Romance (1921)
  • The Buln Buln and the Brolga (1946)

References

  1. ^ COLLINS FAMILY HISTORY - General Information at freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com

Additional resources listed by the Australian Dictionary of Biography:

A. L. Archer, Tom Collins (Joseph Furphy) as I Knew Him (Melb, 1941); J. Barnes, Joseph Furphy (Melb, 1963); Furphy papers (State Library of New South Wales).

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