Ghost Stories and Mysteries. Ernest Favenc

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Ghost Stories and Mysteries - Ernest Favenc страница 2

Ghost Stories and Mysteries - Ernest Favenc

Скачать книгу

Queenslander placed Favenc in charge of an expedition to survey a route for a railway line from Brisbane to Port Darwin. After travelling from Brisbane to Blackall in central-western Queensland, the small party set off northwest into the Northern Territory, discovering and naming natural features like creeks, lagoons and lakes as they went. Near disaster occurred in November 1878 when they were stranded on Creswell Creek due to water shortage, and they were forced to wait until rain replenished the water supplies. Their supplies almost exhausted, they reached the Overland Telegraph Line north of Powell’s Creek station in mid-January 1879.

      Although the proposed railway line was never built, the expedition had a profound influence on Favenc’s prose and verse. Of his tales of mystery and the supernatural death from thirst occurs in stories like “Blood for Blood,” and “A Haunt of the Jinkarras”, and the threat of it is present in many other tales, while the country he explored during the expedition was used in stories like “Spirit-Led.” He also wrote several accounts of the expedition that appeared in newspapers and periodicals.

      Favenc’s journalism and his successful land speculations in the Northern Territory in the early 1880s allowed him to marry and settle down in Sydney. On 15 November 1880, Ernest Favenc married Bessie Mathews, whom he had first met in Brisbane in the mid-1870s, at St John’s Baptist Church, Ashfield, Sydney. Bessie was born in Whimple, Devon, on 22 November 1860 and had come to Queensland in 1871-72 with her parents and eight siblings; her father, Benjamin, worked as a teacher for the Education Department. Ernest and Bessie had a daughter, Amy Eleanor, born on 24 September 1881, while another child was stillborn in late 1882 or early 1883.

      At this time he was working as a journalist in Sydney, contributing substantial serial essays to the Sydney Mail on topics like “The Queensland Transcontinental Railway,” “White Versus Black,” “The Far Far North,” and “The Thirsty Land.” “The Far Far North,” which appeared in August and September 1882, described an expedition Favenc took from Normanton in far north Queensland to Powell’s Creek station in order to establish cattle stations. “The Thirsty Land,” serialised in November and December 1883, describes a journey to the same region made during March to May 1883. On this occasion Favenc was accompanied by Harry Creaghe, a business associate of Favenc’s, and his wife, Caroline, who left a detailed diary of the expedition. Leaving the Creaghes at Powell’s Creek station, Favenc continued north-east with two companions, exploring the headwaters of the Macarthur River, which they followed to the coast. They then travelled west, arriving at Daly Waters on 15 July. Soon afterwards, Favenc led a survey ship, the Palmerston, commissioned by the South Australian government to chart the mouth of the Macarthur and the Sir Edward Pellew group of islands in the south-west corner of the Gulf of Carpentaria.

      The years following this flurry of activity were relatively barren, in terms of both writing and exploration. Favenc appears to have returned to Sydney where he experienced ill health, which according to Favenc’s biographer, Cheryl Taylor, could be a euphemism for the drinking problem that affected him intermittently for the rest of his life. It was not until the end of the decade that he began to write regularly again. The monograph Western Australia, Its Past History, Its Present Trade and Resources, Its Future Position was published in 1887, and resulted in a commission to explore the Gascoyne region north-east of Geraldton, which he undertook between March and June 1888. In the same year he published the magisterial The History of Australian Exploration, which has remained a classic of its kind and is still regarded as a useful source. Dedicated to the Premier of New South Wales, Sir Henry Parkes, the book reveals Favenc’s passion for exploration and adventure; he wrote in the preface that a complete history of the exploration of Australia can never be written as “[t]he story of the settlement of our continent is necessarily so intermixed with the results of private travels and adventures.” To some extent Favenc filled out his history in his fictional accounts of explorations into the outback.

      The 1890s were Favenc’s most productive period as a writer, and his best tales of mystery and the supernatural were published between 1890 and 1895. By this time he had abandoned the discursive, over-complicated plots of his early short fiction in The Queenslander in favour of tightly controlled shorter pieces like “Doomed,” “A Strange Occurrence on Huckey’s Creek,” and “The Red Lagoon.”

      The 1890s also saw the separate publication of two novels and a novella. The Secret of the Australian Desert was serialised in the Queenslander in 1890 before being published by the London publisher, Blackie & Son, in 1895. Like the best of Favenc’s fiction, the novel weaves fact, fiction and speculation. The Secret of the Australian Desert traces the fortunes of an expedition that sets out northward from Central Australia in search of fate of Ludwig Leichhardt’s famous expedition, which disappeared without trace. The novel crosses over into fantasy in its portrayal of a lost tribe of aborigines “wholly unlike any tribes known ever to have existed,” which draws heavily on contemporary interest in the lost land of Lemuria.

      Similarly, Marooned on Australia (1897) is based on fact. As indicated by its subtitle, Being the Narrative of Diedrich Buys of His Discoveries and Exploits “In Terra Australia Incognita” About the Year 1630, the story speculates about the consequences of the wreck of the Dutch ship Batavia and the depredations committed by the mutineers. The first person narrator, Diedrich Buys, is one of the two mutineers who escaped execution and were instead marooned in North West Australia. As he battles to survive in a hostile land he comes across the Quadrucos, a race distinct from the Aborigines because its technology is too advanced and culture too sophisticated.

      A novella, The Moccasins of Silence, was published by the Australian publisher, George Robertson, in 1896, and featured strange native shoes that were worn to attack enemies by stealth at night. The same shoes appear again in the late story, “The Kaditcha: A Tale of the Northern Territory” (1907).

      During the 1890s Favenc worked mainly for The Bulletin, which was edited by J. F. Archibald whose preference for the unadorned bush yarn may have influenced Favenc’s style. Known as ‘the bushman’s bible,’ The Bulletin was an important newspaper that helped shape Australia’s national literature and published important work by Henry Lawson, ‘Banjo’ Patterson, Barbara Baynton, Miles Franklin and the cartoonist Phil May, in whose Summer and Winter Annuals Favenc would contribute.

      A selection of seventeen stories published in The Bulletin between 1890 and 1890 was published in The Last of Six: Tales of the Austral Tropics (1863), the third volume of The Bulletin’s short story and verse anthologies. In 1894 the London publisher, Osgood, McIlvaine published Tales of the Austral Tropics, which dropped six stories from the earlier collection and added two others. A third collection of stories from The Bulletin, My Only Murder and Other Stories, was published by the Melbourne publisher George Robertson in 1899; this collected twenty four stories published between 1890 and 1895. Of the thirty one stories gathered here, six were published in The Last of Six: Tales of the Australia Tropics, and seven appeared in My Only Murder and Other Stories. A collection of verse, Voices of the Desert, was published in 1905.

      Favenc was a part of the acclaimed group of Bulletin writers living in Sydney during the 1890s, and was a good friend of Louis Becke who was also a master of the short form, compared in his day with Robert Louis Stevenson. In 1898 Favenc joined the Dawn and Dusk Club, a group of Bohemian writers and artists and it was around this time that his alcoholism began to take a toll on his health again. Certainly, by the end of the 1890s he was less productive and there was a marked decline in the quality of his work, although between 1899 and 1903 he did write six stories for Phil May’s Summer and Winter Annuals with Gothic and supernatural elements. At that time, the annuals were edited by Harry Thompson, who preferred tales of horror and the supernatural.

      By May 1905 Favenc was seriously ill in Royal Prince Albert Hospital, and later in year a bad fall that broke his thigh confined him to St Vincent’s Hospital. He died on 14 November 1908 in Lister Hospital in western Sydney.

      Further Reading

      Cheryl Frost, The Last Explorer, the Life and

Скачать книгу