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George Lewis Becke

George Lewis Becke (or Louis Becke; 18 June 1855 – 18 February 1913) was at the turn of the nineteenth century, the most prolific, significant, and internationally renowned Australian-born writer of the South Pacific region. Having lived and worked among Pacific Islands and Islanders as a trader, ship's supercargo, and villager for some two decades, learning languages and observing natural and cultural life, Becke was prompted by J F Archibald of The Bulletin to write down his experiences, eventually becoming a popular and respected author of short stories, novellas, novels, as well as historic and ethnographic works.

George Lewis Becke
Born(1855-06-18)18 June 1855
Died18 February 1913(1913-02-18) (aged 57)
Known forshort story writer and novelist
SpouseFanny Sabina Long
ChildrenNora, Niya, Alrema

Early life

Becke was born at Port Macquarie, New South Wales, son of Frederick Becke, Clerk of Petty Sessions and his wife Caroline Matilda, née Beilby.[1] Both parents were born in England. The ninth of twelve children, the young Becke found walking the coastal headlands and beaches of his region, often in the company of local Australian Aboriginal people, along with sailing the local waters, much more interesting than formal schooling. However, the family moved to Hunters Hill, Sydney in 1867 and Becke was further educated at Fort Street High School, although he still preferred to go fishing.[1]

In 1869, Becke travelled to San Francisco with his brother William Vernon and was away for nineteen months.[1] At 16 years of age, Becke was a stowaway on a ship bound for Samoa.[1] In Apia he took a job as a book-keeper in the store of Mrs Mary Mcfarlane which he held until some time after December 1872.[2] Under orders of Mrs Mcfarlane, Becke sailed a ketch, the E.A. Williams to Mili Atoll to deliver it to William "Bully" Hayes, the notorious blackbirder. Beck arrived at Mili Atoll on 17 January 1874. Becke remained as a passenger on the Leonora, until the ship was wrecked on 15 March 1874 during a storm while in Lele harbour at Kosrae.[3] It was seven months until HMS Rosario rescued Becke and the others. Becke was later arrested for piracy, but was acquitted in Brisbane at age 19.[2] Then he tried his luck at the Palmer River goldrush, was employed at Ravenswood station and from 1878–79 worked as a bank clerk in Townsville, Queensland.[3] The story Nell of Mulliner's Camp is set in a mining camp in North Queensland.

From about April 1880 Becke was in the Ellice Islands (now Tuvalu) working with the Liverpool firm of John S. de Wolf and Co.[2] on Nanumanga until the trading-station was destroyed later that year in a cyclone.[1][3] In February 1881 he opened his own store in Nukufetau, where he married Nelea Tikena.[1] The stories that Louis Becke set in the Ellice Islands are: The Fisher Folk of Nukufetau that describes a fishing expedition, The Rangers of the Tia Kau that describes a shark attack at the Tia Kau reef between Nanumea and Nanumanga, and Kennedy the Boatsteerer that describes an attempt by a trader on Niutao to escape with a woman betrothed to a Niutaon chief, which ends in tragedy.

Later in 1881 a shipwreck on Beru Island in the Gilbert Islands caused him to lose all he had;[1][3] Becke then worked in New Britain and was in Majuro by November 1882.[1][3] For the next ten years Becke moved about the Gilbert Islands, Ellice Islands, Caroline Islands and Marshall Islands[1][3] acquiring a knowledge of the customs and beliefs of the islanders and meeting palagi traders and beachcombers that Becke later used his stories.

 
George Lewis Becke, c. 1900

Becke wrote about Bully Hayes in The Strange Adventures of James Shervinton[4] and other stories: Captain "Bully" Hayes; Concerning "Bully" Hayes; The Wreck Of The Leonora: A Memory Of "Bully" Hayes. However these stories must be read with caution as the line between fact and fiction-writing is unclear.[2][3] Becke's experiences in the Pacific provided most of the material for Becke's stories.

Becke's earliest writing on Hayes was published, without attribution to Becke, in the novel A Modern Buccaneer (1894), which was published by Thomas Alexander Browne under the pseudonym 'Rolf Boldrewood'.[5] Browne was the author of Robbery Under Arms and paid Becke for his recollections of "Bully" Hayes. Following publication of A Modern Buccaneer, Becke wrote to Browne protesting at the use of his manuscript without any significant change, and without attribution of Becke's contribution of the manuscript.[5]

Becke returned to New South Wales late in 1885 and on 10 February 1886 married Mary Elizabeth (Bessie) Maunsell, the daughter of Colonel Maunsell, of Port Macquarie.[1] On 9 November 1888 his daughter, Nora Lois, was born.[1]

On 9 June 1896 he left Sydney for London with Nora Lois and Miss Fanny Sabrina Long.[1] Becke and Fanny Long had 2 daughters, Alrema (born 30 October 1897) and Niya (born 27 September 1898).[1] Bessie obtained a divorce on the grounds of desertion on 29 October 1903.[1]

In 1908 he and his family went to Auckland, New Zealand, via Fiji; then in 1909 the family travelled to Sydney, Australia.[1]

On 7 September 1910 he was elected a member of the Royal Society of New South Wales.[1]

He died on 18 February 1913 at the Hotel York in Sydney and was buried in the Waverley Cemetery near to the graves of Henry Lawson and Henry Kendall.[1]

Literary career

In January 1892 Becke returned to Sydney and persuaded by Ernest Favenc and J. F. Archibald began to contribute stories to The Bulletin, the first of which was 'Tis in the Blood appearing in the edition of 6 May 1893.[6][7] A collection of these stories, By Reef and Palm, was published in England in 1894; His Native Wife, a novelette, was published in Australia in 1895; followed by a further collection of stories, The Ebbing of the Tide, which was published in 1896.

Becke went to London about the beginning of 1896, helped by Archibald and William Macleod of The Bulletin who advanced him the sum of £200, and he remained in Europe for around 15 years, during which time a large number of collections of short stories and a few novels and stories for boys were published.

Becke was fairly paid by the magazines for his stories, but his books were always sold outright and never on a royalty basis, he was not a wealthy man.[1]

His writings were of variable quality, but have been compared to Rudyard Kipling, Herman Melville, Joseph Conrad and Robert Louis Stevenson.[8]

Late life and legacy

Becke was in Sydney again in the middle of 1909 and died of cancer there on 18 February 1913, working up until his death. About 30 of Becke's books are listed in E. Morris Miller's Australian Literature with six other volumes written in collaboration with Walter J. Jeffrey. He was survived by his wife and a daughter.

Becke had said that any literary success he had achieved was due entirely to the training received from the editor of The Bulletin, J. F. Archibald, "who taught me the secrets of condensation and simplicity of language"[9][10] Once having learned this, Becke had a wealth of experience to draw upon and, though there was inevitably some monotony of theme, he wrote a very large number of stories that can still be read with interest, and show him to have been a writer of considerable ability.[11]

By Reef and Palm and Ebbing of the Tide received both good reviews and strong sales; with By Reef and Palm going through seven reprints between 1894 and 1924.[12] Almost all of Becke's works were published in America by J. B. Lippincott of Philadelphia. Becke was criticised by some reviewers for lapses in grammar and taste.[13] His Native Wife was unfavourably received in America because of its subject matter; J. B. Lippincott also refused to publish The Mutineer: A Romance of Pitcairn Island.[13]

Works

By Reef and Palm (Unwin, 1894) collection of stories:

  • Challis the Doubter
  • 'Tis in the Blood
  • The Revenge of Macy O'Shea
  • The Rangers of the Tia Kau[14]
  • Pallou's Tāloi
  • A Basket of Breadfruit
  • Enderby's Courtship
  • Long Charley's Good Little Wife
  • The Methodical Mr. Burr of Majura
  • A Truly Great Man
  • The Doctor's Wife
  • The Fate of the "Alida"
  • The Chilian Blue Jacket
  • Brantley of Vahitahi

Ebbing of the Tide (Unwin, 1895) collection of stories:

  • Luliban of the Pool
  • Ninia
  • Baldwin's Loisé
  • At the Kava-Drinking
  • Mrs. Liardet: A South Sea Trading Episode
  • Kennedy the Boatsteerer
  • A Dead Loss
  • Hickson: A Half-Caste
  • A Boating Party of Two
  • The Best Asset in a Fool's Estate
  • Deschard of Oneaka
  • Nell of Mulliner's Camp
  • Auriki Reef
  • At the Ebbing of the Tide
  • The Fallacies of Hilliard
  • A Tale of a Mask
  • The Cook of the "Spreetoo Santoo"
  • Lupton's Guest: A Memory of the Eastern Pacific
  • In Nouméa
  • The Feast at Pentecost
  • An Honour to the Service

Besides those mentioned above, his works include:

  • His Native Wife (Alex Lindsay, 1895; Unwin, 1896)
  • Pacific Tales (Unwin, 1897)
  • Wild Life in South Seas (Unwin, 1897)
  • Rodman the Boat-steerer and Other Stories (Unwin, 1898)
  • Ridan the Devil and Other Stories (Unwin, 1899)
  • Tom Wallis, a Tale of the South Seas (Unwin, 1900)
  • Edward Barry, South Seas Pearler (Unwin, 1900)
  • Tessa, the Trader's Wife (Unwin, 1901)
  • By Rock and Pool on an Austral Shore (Unwin, 1901)
  • York the Adventurer and Other Stories (Unwin, 1901)
  • Breachley, Black Sheep (Unwin, 1902)
  • The Strange Adventure of James Shervinton and Other Stories (Unwin, 1902)
  • The Jalasco Brig (Unwin, 1902)
  • Helen Adair (Unwin, 1903)
  • Chinkie's Flat and Other Stories (Unwin, 1903)
  • Tom Gerard (Unwin, 1904)
  • Under Tropic Skies (Unwin, 1905)
  • Notes from My South-Sea Log (T Werner Laurie, 1901)
  • The Adventures of a Supercargo (Unwin, 1906)
  • Sketches from Normandy (T Werner Laurie, 1906)
  • The Settlers of Karossa Creek and Other Stories of Australian Bush Life (Religious Tract Society, 1907)
  • The Call of the South (John Milne, 1908)
  • The Pearl Divers of Roncador Reef (James Clarke & Co, 1908)
  • The Adventures of Louis Blake (T Werner Laurie, 1909)
  • 'Neath Austral Skies (John Milne, 1908)
  • Bully Hayes: Buccaneer and Other Stories (NSW Bookstall Co Ltd, 1913) Illustrated by Norman Lindsay

Works co-authored with Walter J. Jeffrey

  • A First Fleet Family (Unwin, 1896)
  • The Mystery of the Laughlin Isles (Unwin, 1896)
  • The Mutineer: A Romance of Pitcairn Island (Unwin, 1898)
  • The Naval Pioneers of Australia (John Murray, 1899)
  • Admiral Philip: The Founding of New South Wales (Unwin, 1899)
  • The Tapir of Banderah and Other Stories (C. Arthur Pearson, 1901)

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r A. Grove Day (1967). Louis Becke. Melbourne: Hill of Content.
  2. ^ a b c d Restieaux, Alfred. Reminiscences - Alfred Restieaux Part 2 (Pacific Islands). National Library of New Zealand, MS-Papers-0061-079A.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g James A. Mitchener & A. Grove Day (1957). "Louis Beck, Adventurer and writer". Rascals in Paradise. Secker & Warburg.
  4. ^ "The Strange Adventures of James Shervinton: And Other Stories". T. F. Unwin. 1902.
  5. ^ a b A. Grove Day (1967). "Bully Hayes and His Supercargo". Louis Becke. Melbourne: Hill of Content. pp. 100–103.
  6. ^ A. Grove Day (1967). Louis Becke. Melbourne: Hill of Content. p. 40.
  7. ^ Tiffin, Chris (2012). "Louis Becke, the bulletin and by reef and palm". Kunapipi. 34 (2): 163–169.
  8. ^ A. Grove Day (1967). Louis Becke. Melbourne: Hill of Content. pp. 15 & 132–146.
  9. ^ Bulletin, 27 Feb 1913.
  10. ^ A. Grove Day (1967). Louis Becke. Melbourne: Hill of Content. p. 40.
  11. ^ A. Grove Day (1967). Louis Becke. Melbourne: Hill of Content. pp. 16 & 146.
  12. ^ A. Grove Day (1967). "Adventures in Assessment". Louis Becke. Melbourne: Hill of Content. pp. 132–136.
  13. ^ a b A. Grove Day (1967). "Adventures in Assessment". Louis Becke. Melbourne: Hill of Content. pp. 138–139.
  14. ^ "The Rangers of Tia Kau". By Reef and Palm by Louis Becke. 1893. Retrieved 6 April 2021.

Further reading

External links

Archival holdings

george, lewis, becke, louis, becke, june, 1855, february, 1913, turn, nineteenth, century, most, prolific, significant, internationally, renowned, australian, born, writer, south, pacific, region, having, lived, worked, among, pacific, islands, islanders, trad. George Lewis Becke or Louis Becke 18 June 1855 18 February 1913 was at the turn of the nineteenth century the most prolific significant and internationally renowned Australian born writer of the South Pacific region Having lived and worked among Pacific Islands and Islanders as a trader ship s supercargo and villager for some two decades learning languages and observing natural and cultural life Becke was prompted by J F Archibald of The Bulletin to write down his experiences eventually becoming a popular and respected author of short stories novellas novels as well as historic and ethnographic works George Lewis BeckeBorn 1855 06 18 18 June 1855Port Macquarie New South Wales AustraliaDied18 February 1913 1913 02 18 aged 57 Sydney New South Wales AustraliaKnown forshort story writer and novelistSpouseFanny Sabina LongChildrenNora Niya Alrema Contents 1 Early life 2 Literary career 3 Late life and legacy 4 Works 5 Works co authored with Walter J Jeffrey 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External links 8 1 Archival holdingsEarly life EditBecke was born at Port Macquarie New South Wales son of Frederick Becke Clerk of Petty Sessions and his wife Caroline Matilda nee Beilby 1 Both parents were born in England The ninth of twelve children the young Becke found walking the coastal headlands and beaches of his region often in the company of local Australian Aboriginal people along with sailing the local waters much more interesting than formal schooling However the family moved to Hunters Hill Sydney in 1867 and Becke was further educated at Fort Street High School although he still preferred to go fishing 1 In 1869 Becke travelled to San Francisco with his brother William Vernon and was away for nineteen months 1 At 16 years of age Becke was a stowaway on a ship bound for Samoa 1 In Apia he took a job as a book keeper in the store of Mrs Mary Mcfarlane which he held until some time after December 1872 2 Under orders of Mrs Mcfarlane Becke sailed a ketch the E A Williams to Mili Atoll to deliver it to William Bully Hayes the notorious blackbirder Beck arrived at Mili Atoll on 17 January 1874 Becke remained as a passenger on the Leonora until the ship was wrecked on 15 March 1874 during a storm while in Lele harbour at Kosrae 3 It was seven months until HMS Rosario rescued Becke and the others Becke was later arrested for piracy but was acquitted in Brisbane at age 19 2 Then he tried his luck at the Palmer River goldrush was employed at Ravenswood station and from 1878 79 worked as a bank clerk in Townsville Queensland 3 The story Nell of Mulliner s Camp is set in a mining camp in North Queensland From about April 1880 Becke was in the Ellice Islands now Tuvalu working with the Liverpool firm of John S de Wolf and Co 2 on Nanumanga until the trading station was destroyed later that year in a cyclone 1 3 In February 1881 he opened his own store in Nukufetau where he married Nelea Tikena 1 The stories that Louis Becke set in the Ellice Islands are The Fisher Folk of Nukufetau that describes a fishing expedition The Rangers of the Tia Kau that describes a shark attack at the Tia Kau reef between Nanumea and Nanumanga and Kennedy the Boatsteerer that describes an attempt by a trader on Niutao to escape with a woman betrothed to a Niutaon chief which ends in tragedy Later in 1881 a shipwreck on Beru Island in the Gilbert Islands caused him to lose all he had 1 3 Becke then worked in New Britain and was in Majuro by November 1882 1 3 For the next ten years Becke moved about the Gilbert Islands Ellice Islands Caroline Islands and Marshall Islands 1 3 acquiring a knowledge of the customs and beliefs of the islanders and meeting palagi traders and beachcombers that Becke later used his stories George Lewis Becke c 1900 Becke wrote about Bully Hayes in The Strange Adventures of James Shervinton 4 and other stories Captain Bully Hayes Concerning Bully Hayes The Wreck Of The Leonora A Memory Of Bully Hayes However these stories must be read with caution as the line between fact and fiction writing is unclear 2 3 Becke s experiences in the Pacific provided most of the material for Becke s stories Becke s earliest writing on Hayes was published without attribution to Becke in the novel A Modern Buccaneer 1894 which was published by Thomas Alexander Browne under the pseudonym Rolf Boldrewood 5 Browne was the author of Robbery Under Arms and paid Becke for his recollections of Bully Hayes Following publication of A Modern Buccaneer Becke wrote to Browne protesting at the use of his manuscript without any significant change and without attribution of Becke s contribution of the manuscript 5 Becke returned to New South Wales late in 1885 and on 10 February 1886 married Mary Elizabeth Bessie Maunsell the daughter of Colonel Maunsell of Port Macquarie 1 On 9 November 1888 his daughter Nora Lois was born 1 On 9 June 1896 he left Sydney for London with Nora Lois and Miss Fanny Sabrina Long 1 Becke and Fanny Long had 2 daughters Alrema born 30 October 1897 and Niya born 27 September 1898 1 Bessie obtained a divorce on the grounds of desertion on 29 October 1903 1 In 1908 he and his family went to Auckland New Zealand via Fiji then in 1909 the family travelled to Sydney Australia 1 On 7 September 1910 he was elected a member of the Royal Society of New South Wales 1 He died on 18 February 1913 at the Hotel York in Sydney and was buried in the Waverley Cemetery near to the graves of Henry Lawson and Henry Kendall 1 Literary career EditIn January 1892 Becke returned to Sydney and persuaded by Ernest Favenc and J F Archibald began to contribute stories to The Bulletin the first of which was Tis in the Blood appearing in the edition of 6 May 1893 6 7 A collection of these stories By Reef and Palm was published in England in 1894 His Native Wife a novelette was published in Australia in 1895 followed by a further collection of stories The Ebbing of the Tide which was published in 1896 Becke went to London about the beginning of 1896 helped by Archibald and William Macleod of The Bulletin who advanced him the sum of 200 and he remained in Europe for around 15 years during which time a large number of collections of short stories and a few novels and stories for boys were published Becke was fairly paid by the magazines for his stories but his books were always sold outright and never on a royalty basis he was not a wealthy man 1 His writings were of variable quality but have been compared to Rudyard Kipling Herman Melville Joseph Conrad and Robert Louis Stevenson 8 Late life and legacy EditBecke was in Sydney again in the middle of 1909 and died of cancer there on 18 February 1913 working up until his death About 30 of Becke s books are listed in E Morris Miller s Australian Literature with six other volumes written in collaboration with Walter J Jeffrey He was survived by his wife and a daughter Becke had said that any literary success he had achieved was due entirely to the training received from the editor of The Bulletin J F Archibald who taught me the secrets of condensation and simplicity of language 9 10 Once having learned this Becke had a wealth of experience to draw upon and though there was inevitably some monotony of theme he wrote a very large number of stories that can still be read with interest and show him to have been a writer of considerable ability 11 By Reef and Palm and Ebbing of the Tide received both good reviews and strong sales with By Reef and Palm going through seven reprints between 1894 and 1924 12 Almost all of Becke s works were published in America by J B Lippincott of Philadelphia Becke was criticised by some reviewers for lapses in grammar and taste 13 His Native Wife was unfavourably received in America because of its subject matter J B Lippincott also refused to publish The Mutineer A Romance of Pitcairn Island 13 Works EditBy Reef and Palm Unwin 1894 collection of stories Challis the Doubter Tis in the Blood The Revenge of Macy O Shea The Rangers of the Tia Kau 14 Pallou s Taloi A Basket of Breadfruit Enderby s Courtship Long Charley s Good Little Wife The Methodical Mr Burr of Majura A Truly Great Man The Doctor s Wife The Fate of the Alida The Chilian Blue Jacket Brantley of VahitahiEbbing of the Tide Unwin 1895 collection of stories Luliban of the Pool Ninia Baldwin s Loise At the Kava Drinking Mrs Liardet A South Sea Trading Episode Kennedy the Boatsteerer A Dead Loss Hickson A Half Caste A Boating Party of Two The Best Asset in a Fool s Estate Deschard of Oneaka Nell of Mulliner s Camp Auriki Reef At the Ebbing of the Tide The Fallacies of Hilliard A Tale of a Mask The Cook of the Spreetoo Santoo Lupton s Guest A Memory of the Eastern Pacific In Noumea The Feast at Pentecost An Honour to the ServiceBesides those mentioned above his works include His Native Wife Alex Lindsay 1895 Unwin 1896 Pacific Tales Unwin 1897 Wild Life in South Seas Unwin 1897 Rodman the Boat steerer and Other Stories Unwin 1898 Ridan the Devil and Other Stories Unwin 1899 Tom Wallis a Tale of the South Seas Unwin 1900 Edward Barry South Seas Pearler Unwin 1900 Tessa the Trader s Wife Unwin 1901 By Rock and Pool on an Austral Shore Unwin 1901 York the Adventurer and Other Stories Unwin 1901 Breachley Black Sheep Unwin 1902 The Strange Adventure of James Shervinton and Other Stories Unwin 1902 The Jalasco Brig Unwin 1902 Helen Adair Unwin 1903 Chinkie s Flat and Other Stories Unwin 1903 Tom Gerard Unwin 1904 Under Tropic Skies Unwin 1905 Notes from My South Sea Log T Werner Laurie 1901 The Adventures of a Supercargo Unwin 1906 Sketches from Normandy T Werner Laurie 1906 The Settlers of Karossa Creek and Other Stories of Australian Bush Life Religious Tract Society 1907 The Call of the South John Milne 1908 The Pearl Divers of Roncador Reef James Clarke amp Co 1908 The Adventures of Louis Blake T Werner Laurie 1909 Neath Austral Skies John Milne 1908 Bully Hayes Buccaneer and Other Stories NSW Bookstall Co Ltd 1913 Illustrated by Norman LindsayWorks co authored with Walter J Jeffrey EditA First Fleet Family Unwin 1896 The Mystery of the Laughlin Isles Unwin 1896 The Mutineer A Romance of Pitcairn Island Unwin 1898 The Naval Pioneers of Australia John Murray 1899 Admiral Philip The Founding of New South Wales Unwin 1899 The Tapir of Banderah and Other Stories C Arthur Pearson 1901 References Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r A Grove Day 1967 Louis Becke Melbourne Hill of Content a b c d Restieaux Alfred Reminiscences Alfred Restieaux Part 2 Pacific Islands National Library of New Zealand MS Papers 0061 079A a b c d e f g James A Mitchener amp A Grove Day 1957 Louis Beck Adventurer and writer Rascals in Paradise Secker amp Warburg The Strange Adventures of James Shervinton And Other Stories T F Unwin 1902 a b A Grove Day 1967 Bully Hayes and His Supercargo Louis Becke Melbourne Hill of Content pp 100 103 A Grove Day 1967 Louis Becke Melbourne Hill of Content p 40 Tiffin Chris 2012 Louis Becke the bulletin and by reef and palm Kunapipi 34 2 163 169 A Grove Day 1967 Louis Becke Melbourne Hill of Content pp 15 amp 132 146 Bulletin 27 Feb 1913 A Grove Day 1967 Louis Becke Melbourne Hill of Content p 40 A Grove Day 1967 Louis Becke Melbourne Hill of Content pp 16 amp 146 A Grove Day 1967 Adventures in Assessment Louis Becke Melbourne Hill of Content pp 132 136 a b A Grove Day 1967 Adventures in Assessment Louis Becke Melbourne Hill of Content pp 138 139 The Rangers of Tia Kau By Reef and Palm by Louis Becke 1893 Retrieved 6 April 2021 Further reading EditDay A Grove 1967 Louis Becke Melbourne Hill of Content The pioneering biography including the first complete bibliography of his writings and criticism of his works Sally O Neill Becke George Lewis Louis 1855 1913 Australian Dictionary of Biography Volume 7 Melbourne University Press 1979 pp 238 239 Serle Percival 1949 Becke George Lewis Dictionary of Australian Biography Sydney Angus amp Robertson Becke George Louis New International Encyclopedia 1905 Becke George Lewis Encyclopedia Americana 1920 External links Edit The full text of By Reef and Palm at Wikisource Dirk HR Spennemann 2000 Louis Becke 1859 1913 A biography Works by Louis Becke at Project Gutenberg Works by Louis Becke at Faded Page Canada Works by Louis Becke at Project Gutenberg Australia Works by or about George Lewis Becke at Internet Archive Works by George Lewis Becke at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Bibliographic details of Becke s works Archival holdings Edit Louis Becke George Louis Becke Papers 1880 1905 State Library of New South Wales A 1372 vols 1 2 A 1373 A 1374 A 1391 A 1807 Louis Becke George Louis Becke Papers 1880 1913 State Library of New South Wales MLMSS 248 Louis Becke George Louis Becke Papers 1881 1912 State Library of New South Wales Safe 1 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Lewis Becke amp oldid 1144723925, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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