Both Henry Lawson and AB 'Banjo' Paterson wrote many verses and stories depicting life and characters in Australia. Henry Lawson tended to write realistic depictions, whilst Banjo Paterson was more lighthearted and had a tendency to romanticise the bush.
Both AB 'Banjo' Paterson and Henry Lawson had significant roles in raising awareness of life in the Bush.
Henry Lawson was a realist, and portrayed life in the outback and the bush in a very negative way. He did not romanticise the bush life like 'Banjo' Paterson did, but portrayed it with grim reality, including drought and death.
Banjo Paterson was an Australian writer and poet, so it is natural to associate him with Australia. A.B. "Banjo" Paterson was passionately nationalistic, popular among many Australians in a fledgling country searching for its own identity apart from Britain. In 1890 he wrote "The Man From Snowy River", a poem which caught the heart of the nation for its sense of heroism and the way in which it put forward the concept of the "underdog" bettering all those who thought they were his superiors. This sort of writing underscored much of Paterson's work. Paterson was very much in favour of Australia being an autonomous nation, and that's why many of his heroes were from the among the "downtrodden". Unlike his contemporary Henry Lawson, Paterson presented a romanticised view of life in the bush, and many appreciated his larrikin wit more than Lawson's more realistic, drier view of life.
Henry Lawson was a writer and poet, one of Australia's best-known fiction writers of the colonial period. Most of his works dwelt on the Australian bush, accurately depicting the difficult conditions of life on dry, dusty outback stations and in bush towns.
A.B. "Banjo" Paterson was passionately nationalistic, popular among many Australians in a fledgling country searching for its own identity apart from Britain. In 1890 he wrote "The Man From Snowy River", a poem which caught the heart of the nation for its sense of heroism and the way in which it put forward the concept of the "underdog" bettering all those who thought they were his superiors. This sort of writing underscored much of Paterson's work. Paterson was very much in favour of Australia being an autonomous nation, and that's why many of his heroes were from the among the "downtrodden". Unlike his contemporary Henry Lawson, Paterson presented a romanticised view of life in the bush, and many appreciated his larrikin wit more than Lawson's more realistic, drier view of life. There is little else to suggest Paterson's personal or religious beliefs. When he died, he was cremated with Presbyterian forms.
Henry Lawson was one of Australia's best known poets and short story writers. Born on 17 June 1867, on the Grenfell goldfields in New South Wales, he became one of Australia's best-known fiction writers of the colonial period. Much of Lawson's works dwelt on the Australian bush, accurately depicting the difficult conditions of life on dry, dusty outback stations and in bush towns. Unlike his contemporary, A.B. "Banjo" Paterson, he did not romanticise life in the bush, and any humour he displayed tended to be dry and sardonic, rather than like Paterson's larrikin wit. Lawson gained a loyal following after the Bulletin started to publish his stories and poems in 1888.
Much of what we see as Australia's stereotypes, i.e. skilled bushmen, mates, Aussie battlers and so on, were generated through the writings of poets and authors such as A.B. 'Banjo' Paterson and Henry Lawson. Paterson romanticised the bush life, glorifying the men who worked on the cattle and sheep stations: men who were free to come and go where and when they liked, and to thumb their noses at the law (as in "Waltzing Matilda". Lawson was a dry realist who painted word pictures of hardworking men and women, bowed but not broken, by the harshness of the Australian outback.
Australian author Henry Lawson had tremendous admiration for the men and women of the bush and the outback who, through sheer determination, managed to eke out an existence under harsh conditions. Lawson believed their stories should be told so that their heroism could be recognised. They were the ones - the sheep and cattle station owners and workers - upon whose backs the economic prosperity of the nation depended. He wanted Australians to understand how hard their lives were. Unlike his contemporary Banjo Paterson, Lawson did not romanticise life in the bush: he told it like it was - the dust, the hard work day after day, and the death. His work "The Driver's Wife" is a good example of this.
Henry Lawson, born on the Grenfell goldfields in New South Wales in 1867, became one of Australia's best-known fiction writers of the colonial period. Most of his works dwelt on the Australian bush, accurately depicting the difficult conditions of life on dry, dusty outback stations and in bush towns. Lawson gained a loyal following when the Bulletin started to publish his stories and poems in 1888. He was best known for works such as "While the Billy Boils", "Over the Sliprails" and his prolific short stories which smacked of dry humour and often had an ironic twist. Unlike his contemporary, A.B. "Banjo" Paterson, he did not romanticise life in the bush, and the humour he displayed tended to be dry and sardonic, rather than like Paterson's larrikin wit. Lawson died in 1922.
Henry Lawson was born on June 17, 1867.
Henry Lawson was born on June 17, 1867.