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词条 J. H. M. Abbott
释义

  1. Bibliography

     Novels  Essays  Short Stories  Children's fiction  Autobiography 

  2. References

{{Refimprove|date=November 2017}}{{Infobox writer
| name = J. H. M. Abbott
| birth_name = John Henry Macartney Abbott
| birth_date = {{Birth date|df=yes|1874|12|26}}
| birth_place = Haydonton, New South Wales
| death_date = {{Death date and age|df=yes|1953|08|12|1874|12|26}}
| death_place = Rydalmere, New South Wales
| occupation = writer
| language = English
| nationality = Australian
| ethnicity =
| citizenship =
| education =
| alma_mater =
| notableworks = Tommy Cornstalk
| awards =
| years_active =
}}J. H. M. Abbott (1874 – 1953) was an Australian novelist and poet who was born in Haydonton, Murrurundi, New South Wales in 1874. He was the eldest son of son of (Sir) Joseph Palmer Abbott and his first wife Matilda Elizabeth, née Macartney. He was educated at The King's School, Parramatta and then attended classes at the University of Sydney before returning to the family property to work as a jackaroo. He published his first verse in The Bulletin in 1897.[1]

In January 1900 he left Australia for the Boer War where he served as a corporal in the 1st Australian Horse, and later as a second lieutenant in the Royal Field Artillery, but was invalided back to Australia in October 1900. He utilised his experiences in the war to write Tommy Cornstalk (1902), the success of which convinced him to move to London to work as a journalist. He returned to Australia in 1909 and worked for the next 40 years as a writer of novels, poetry and prose pieces for various newspapers and periodicals.[1]

According to Miller and Macartney, {{quotation|His writings consist mainly of novels and short stories of a simple kind, without subtleties or motive or characterization, against a background of the Australian past as revealed by historical records, and introducing actual personages.[2]}}

Abbott died in the Rydalmere Mental Hospital of vascular disease on 12 August 1953.[1]

Bibliography

Novels

  • Plain and Veldt : being studies, stories and sketches of my own people, in peace and at war (1903)
  • Letters from Queer Street: being some of the correspondence of the late Mr John Mason (1908)
  • The Sign of the Serpent (1910)
  • Castle Vane : A Romance of Bushranging on the Upper Hunter in the Olden Days (1916)
  • Sally : The Tale of a Currency Lass (1918)
  • The Governor's Man (1919)
  • Sydney Cove : A Romance of the First Fleet (1920)
  • Ensign Calder (1922)
  • Red O'Shaughnessy (1935)

Essays

  • Out of the Past (1944)

Short Stories

  • The King's School and Other Tales for Old Boys (1931)

Children's fiction

  • The Story of William Dampier (1911)
  • Dogsnose (1928)

Autobiography

  • Tommy Cornstalk : Being Some Account of the Less Notable Features of the South African War from the Point of View of the Australian Ranks (1902)

References

1. ^Australian Dictionary of Biography - Abbott, John Henry (Macartney) (1874–1953) by B. G. Andrews
2. ^E. Morris Miller & Frederick Macartney, Australian Literature, Angus and Robertson, Sydney, 1956, p.27.
{{Authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Abbott, J. H. M.}}{{Australia-writer-stub}}

4 : 1874 births|1953 deaths|Australian male novelists|Australian poets

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