Charles Harpur (23 January 1813 – 10 June 1868) was an Australian poet and playwright. He is regarded as "Australia's most important nineteenth-century...
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Calke Abbey (section The Harpurs)
Baroque mansion built between 1701 and 1704. The house was owned by the Harpur family for nearly 300 years until it was passed to the Trust in 1985 in...
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Jehosephat Harpur (1810 – 2 May 1878) was an Australian politician. Harpur was born in 1810 in the Hunter River district of New South Wales, to Joseph Harpur and...
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The Creek of the Four Graves (category Poetry by Charles Harpur)
"The Creek of the Four Graves" is a poem by Australian writer Charles Harpur that was first published in three parts in The Weekly Register of Politics...
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player; represented Australia Josh Cunningham – musician with The Waifs Charles Harpur – poet; a former goldfields commissioner in the Eurobodalla area; a...
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A Coast View (category Poetry by Charles Harpur)
"A Coast View" (1857) is a poem by Australian poet Charles Harpur, also known by the title "Coast Scenery". It was originally published in The Empire on...
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Melville, and The Bushrangers; or, The Tregedy of Donohoe (1835) by Charles Harpur. In the late 19th century, E. W. Hornung and Hume Nisbet created popular...
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A Storm in the Mountains (category Poetry by Charles Harpur)
"A Storm in the Mountains" (1856) is a poem by Australian poet Charles Harpur. The poem was originally published in The Empire on 15 July 1856 and subsequently...
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Coast View" — Charles Harpur 1856 in Australian literature: "A Storm in the Mountains" – Charles Harpur; It Is Never Too Late to Mend — Charles Reade 1855...
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A Mid-Summer Noon in the Australian Forest (category Poetry by Charles Harpur)
Mid-Summer Noon in the Australian Forest is a poem by Australian poet Charles Harpur. It was first published in The Empire magazine on 27 May 1851, and later...
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in Nepal Harpur College, now Binghamton University, New York, United States Ben Harpur (born 1995), Canadian ice hockey player Charles Harpur (1813-1868)...
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entitled Stolen Moments was published in Sydney in 1842. He met the poet Charles Harpur and William Augustine Duncan, the editor of a local newspaper; he mentions...
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Other Poems (1853) was the third collection of poems by Australian poet Charles Harpur. It was released in hardback by W. R. Piddington in 1853. It features...
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The Tragedy of Donohoe (redirect from The Bushrangers (Harpur))
Bush-Rangers in 1860 and Stalwart the Bushranger in 1867) is a play by Charles Harpur. It was the first play published in Australia with an Australian setting...
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(On Germany) January 23 Camilla Collett, Norwegian writer (died 1895) Charles Harpur, Australian poet (died 1868) February 11 - Otto Ludwig, German novelist...
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Spain/Puerto Rico, nf/p) Beverley Harper (1943–2002, Australia/Botswana, f) Charles Harpur (1813–1868, Australia, p) Beatrice Harraden (1864–1936, England, nf)...
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Baylebridge and the modern problem (Canberra University College, 1955) Charles Harpur (1963) Preoccupations in Australian Poetry (1965) The Poet's Pen (1965)...
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Thomas William Harpur (April 14, 1929 – January 2, 2017) was a Canadian biblical scholar, columnist, and broadcaster. An ordained Anglican priest, he was...
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The Harpur (later Crewe and Harpur Crewe) Baronetcy, of Calke Abbey, Derbyshire was a title in the Baronetage of England between 1626 and 1924. It was...
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"Australasia" (1823) and Charles Thompson's Wild Notes From the Lyre of a Native Minstrel (1826). In 1845, the radical republican Charles Harpur published Thoughts:...
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Gothic—the bush and Australian daily life assumed primacy as subjects. Charles Harpur, Henry Kendall and Adam Lindsay Gordon won fame in the mid-19th century...
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Vaughan, English historian and religious writer (born 1795) June 18 – Charles Harpur, Australian poet (tuberculosis, born 1813) July 6 – Samuel Lover, Irish...
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by explorer and author William Charles Wentworth in 1823, espousing his ideals of Australian identity. Charles Harpur and Henry Kendall were the first...
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The Beautiful Squatter (category Poetry by Charles Harpur)
"The Beautiful Squatter" (1845) is a poem by Australian poet Charles Harpur. It was originally published in The Weekly Register of Politics, Facts and...
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the Tang dynasty Thomas Hardy (1840–1928), English novelist and poet Charles Harpur (1813–1868), Australian poet Sir Theodore Wilson Harris (1921–2018)...
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Speeches of Daniel Henry Deniehy (Melbourne, 1884); J. Normington-Rawling, Charles Harpur: An Australian (Sydney, 1962); P. Loveday and A. W. Martin, Parliament...
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"Words", Charles Harpur "A Mid-Summer Noon in the Australian Forest", Charles Harpur "Andrew Marvell", Charles Harpur "A Similitude", Charles Harpur "She...
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Under Arms was serialised in 1882-83 before book publication in 1888. Charles Harpur, Henry Kendall and Adam Lindsay Gordon were prominent in attempts to...
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Bedford School (redirect from Harpur Trust Act 1826)
1552, it is the oldest of four independent schools in Bedford run by the Harpur Trust. Bedford School is one of the oldest boys' schools in the United Kingdom...
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etc.), and EusTagger (with support for Basque, English, Spanish). The Charles Harpur Critical Archive is encoded using 'multi-version documents' (MVD) to...
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