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Robbery Under Arms

Robbery Under Arms is a bushranger novel by Thomas Alexander Browne, published under his pen name Rolf Boldrewood. It was first published in serialised form by The Sydney Mail between July 1882 and August 1883, then in three volumes in London in 1888. It was abridged into a single volume in 1889 as part of Macmillan's one-volume Colonial Library series and has not been out of print since.[1]

Robbery Under Arms
First edition of Robbery Under Arms
AuthorRolf Boldrewood
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
GenreBushranger novel
PublisherRemington & Co Publishers, London.
Publication date
1888
Media typePrint (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages300 pp

It is considered a classic of Australian colonial literature, alongside Marcus Clarke's convict novel For the Term of his Natural Life (1876) and Fergus Hume's mystery crime novel The Mystery of a Hansom Cab (1886), and has inspired numerous adaptations in film, television and theatre.

Plot introduction edit

Writing in the first person, the narrator Dick Marston tells the story of his life and loves and his association with the notorious bushranger Captain Starlight, a renegade from a noble English family. Set in the bush and goldfields of Australia in the 1850s, Starlight's gang, with Dick and his brother Jim's help, sets out on a series of escapades that include cattle theft and robbery under arms.

Plot summary edit

 
Patrick William Marony, Starlight's hold-up at the dance hall, 1894

The book begins with Dick sitting in gaol, with just under one month before his scheduled execution for his crimes. He is given writing material, and begins documenting his life's story.

He starts with his childhood, with a father (Ben) who is prone to violence, particularly when he has been drinking; his mother, his sister (Aileen) and brother, Jim. He documents his first exposure to his father's crimes, the theft of a red calf, and the disapproval of this crime by his mother, who says she thought he had given up stealing since the theft which led to his transportation as a convict from England. Dick's first active involvement in crime, comes where the brothers choose to go cattle duffing (stealing), even though an offer of solid, honest work had been made with neighbour and friend, George Storefield. The divergent lives of the brothers to that of George is a recurring theme of the book from this point forward, as they continue to meet up at different points throughout the story's course. This first theft includes their introduction to Captain Starlight, his Aboriginal assistant, Warrigal, and their hideaway, Terrible Hollow.

Further thefts follow, leading up to the brazen theft of 1000 head, driven overland to Adelaide with Starlight. After the success of this adventure, the brothers "lie low" in Melbourne, where they meet the sisters, Kate and Jeanie Morrison. The brothers return to home for Christmas, leading to incarceration and trial of Dick and Starlight. (The magistrate chooses to refer to Starlight only by this nickname, at the Captain's request). Warrigal helps Dick and Starlight escape to Terrible Hollow. The gang later has its first stage holdup.

The brothers then move to the Turon goldfields. Their prosperity through honest, hard work gives them the chance for escape from the country to start a new life overseas. Jim is re-united with Jeanie Morrison and marries her. Dick meets Kate Morrison again, but her tumultuous nature leads her, in an angry mood, to alert the police to their presence, and they narrowly escape capture and return to the safety of Terrible Hollow.

 
Charles E. Hammond, Starlight and his gang sticking up the Turon Gold Escort, c. 1898

Seeing no alternative to crime, the gang joins forces with a soon- to- be rival Dan Moran and his friends to stage a major hold up of the armed, escorted stagecoach leaving the goldfields. The robbery is a success, with the members splitting up after sharing the gold takings. Starlight's crew hears word of Moran's planned home invasion of a police informant named Mr Whitman, at a time when Mr Whitman was known to be absent. Marston and Starlight intervene, forcing Moran and his men to leave, thus preventing further harm to the women present and the home being burnt down at the end of the night.

At the height of their infamy, the gang attend the Turon horse race, where Starlight's horse, Rainbow, wins. The same weekend, they attend the wedding of a publican's daughter, Bella Barnes, where Starlight fulfils his earlier promise to dance, unrecognised, with her at her wedding, despite the presence of the entire town, including the goldfields commissioner and other dignitaries. Ben Marston is later ambushed and wounded by bounty hunters. Moran, nearby, releases him, and shoots all four bounty hunters in cold blood, again highlighting the different honour codes between the two gangs. Ben returns to Terrible Hollow, and is nursed by his daughter, Aileen. Aileen and Starlight begin a relationship, and arrange to marry.

Despite the animosity between the rivals, they team up again to rob the home of the Goldfield Commissioner, Mr Knightley, but are met with more resistance than they expected. One of Moran's associates is shot in the skirmish, and Moran is keen to kill Knightley when they later have him face to face. Starlight turns the tables by giving Mr Knightley one of his own pistols. He them proceeds to arrange for Knightley's wife to go to Bathurst and withdraw some cash, and meet Moran's men by "the Black Stump", outside of Bathurst town. Starlight passes the time gambling with Mr Knightley, sharing his food, drink and company. Starlight loses money in the gambling, and arranges to repay by direct payment into his account, as well as paying for the horse he is offered when leaving.

 
Patrick William Marony, Death of Captain Starlight with his head in Warrigal's lap, 1894

Throughout the book, there have been chance meetings with Dick's childhood friend and neighbour, George Storefield who, in contrast with the Marston boys, works hard, keeps within the law and thrives financially. Dick starts to hold up George, now a successful grazier, businessman, magistrate and landholder, before realising who it was. George offers the brothers safe haven and cattle mustering work, which would allow Dick, Starlight and Jim safer travel to Townsville in Queensland, from where they plan to leave to San Francisco. They accept the offer, but are caught, partially due to betrayal by Warrigal and Kate Morrison along the way, and Starlight and Jim are shot dead. Dick is wounded and brought to trial, bringing the story to where it began, with Dick expecting to be hanged shortly.

In a surprise ending, Dick's sentence is reduced to fifteen years imprisonment due to petitions from Storefield, Knightley and other prominent people. He serves twelve years, is visited occasionally by Gracey Storefield, whom he marries shortly after his release, before moving to a remote area of Queensland to manage a station for her brother, George Storefield.

Characters in Robbery Under Arms edit

  • Dick Marston: The narrator, an Australian bushman.
  • Jim Marston: His brother.
  • Aileen Marston: Dick and Jim's sister.
  • Mrs Marston: Ben's wife and the mother of Dick, Jim and Aileen.
  • Ben Marston: Dick, Jim and Aileen's father, a Lincolnshire man transported for poaching.
  • Jeanie Morrison/"Jeanie Marston": One of two sisters that the Marston brothers meet in Melbourne while "lying low". Later marries Jim. She is Kate's sister.
  • Kate Morrison: One of two sisters that the Marston brothers meet in Melbourne while "lying low". She is Jeanie's sister and Jim's sister-in-law.
  • George Storefield: Neighbour and friend of the Marston family.
  • Gracy Storefield: George's sister and Dick's wife after serving his prison sentence.
  • Captain Starlight: An honourable bushranger.
  • Warrigal: Starlight's Aboriginal assistant.
  • Rainbow: Starlight's horse.
  • Mr Whitman: A police informant.
  • Mr Knightley: The goldfield commissioner.
  • Mrs Knightley: Mr Knightley's wife.
  • Miss Falkland: A woman whom Starlight and his crew rescues when Dan Moran leads his men in a home invasion of Mr Whitman.
  • Bella Barnes: A friend of the bushrangers with whom Starlight vows to dance at her wedding.
  • Dan Moran: A corrupt bushranger.

Note: The spelling of the surname Marston varies in some editions/adaptations. Alternate spellings include "Marsden" and "Masterton".

Allusions/references from other works edit

The early film adaptations of the book are referenced in the title of Kathryn Heyman's 2006 novel, Captain Starlight's Apprentice.[2]

Major themes edit

The book, written in first person narrative, contains repeated regrets for the narrator's crimes, highlighting how seemingly minor crimes led to an inescapable life of further crimes. These are contrasted with the success of Dick's hardworking childhood friend, who becomes a successful landowner, merchant and magistrate.

The themes of honour and loyalty are repeated throughout the story, which eventually leads to Dick's redemption from hanging and, having served his time in gaol, a presumed peaceful, safe and legal life.

As a ripping yarn, originally told in periodical installments, the story mostly centres around the lovable villains, who are adventurers and thieves but nevertheless with high moral standards and, in some ways, trapped by circumstances of their own making.

Literary significance and criticism edit

A reviewer in The West Australian in 1889 noted its authenticity: "The book is written in an original and thrillingly interesting manner, and being from the pen of an Australian author we are spared those ludicrous mistakes which English writers so frequently fall into when describing things Antipodean."[3]

English author Thomas Wood called the novel "a classic, which for life and dash and zip and colour — all of a period — has no match in all Australian letters."[4]

Robbery Under Arms is cited as an important influence on Owen Wister's 1902 novel The Virginian, widely regarded as the first western.[5]

In her literary study, Australian Classics, Jane Gleeson-White noted that the book's use of the "colonial vernacular" bared comparison with Mark Twain's in Adventures of Huckleberry Finn: "As with Twain's novel, it is the brilliant vitality and intimacy of Dick's narrative voice, as well as the wild adventures he has with his brother Jim, Starlight and the women they love, that make Robbery Under Arms such lively reading."[6]

Allusions/references to actual history, geography and current science edit

In his December 1888 Preface to the New Edition, Browne wrote:

"...though presented in the guise of fiction, this chronicle of the Marston family must not be set down by the reader as wholly fanciful or exaggerated. Much of the narrative is literally true, as can be verified by official records."[7]

Although bushranger Frank Pearson claimed Captain Starlight was based on him, Boldrewood claims his character was a composite, based in part on Harry Redford but primarily on Thomas Law, known as Captain Midnight.[8][9] The cattle robbery follows the lifting of about a thousand head by Redford from Bowen Downs Station in 1870.[4] Some of the exploits recounted are based on actual incidents involving bushrangers Daniel Morgan, Ben Hall, Frank Gardiner and John Gilbert, although not all factual events which contributed to the novel took place during the period in which the novel is set.[9] Terrible Hollow, the gang's bush hideaway, is drawn from a sunken valley reported in the Gwydir district.[4]

Adaptations edit

Some attempts to adapt the novel in the 1920s and 30s were hindered by the bushranger ban. It has been called "the great lost film" of Ken G. Hall's career.[13]

Browne was paid twenty shillings per performance for Alfred Dampier's theatrical adaptation.[14]

'Rolfe Boldrewood' spent time camped between Warrnambool and Port Fairy in South West Victoria along the banks of the Merri River. He was particularly interested in nearby 'Tower Hill', a place not unlike the 'Terrible Hollow', which some authorities speculate may have been his inspiration for 'The Hollow'. At nearby Koroit, 'Henry Handel Richardson' aka Ethel Florence Lindesay, spent some of her childhood, and used the town to describe unfavourable places in her novels.

Release details edit

  • 1888, First edition, England, Remington and Co Publishers, Hardback (3 vols.)
  • 2006, edited by Paul Eggert and Elizabeth Webby, Australia, University of Queensland Press, Academy Editions of Australian Literature, ISBN 978-0-7022-3574-0, Pub date 31 October 2006, Hardback and paperback. (Full text of original serialised version, including the 29,000 words missing from later publications.)
  • 2023, Standard EBooks (Full text of original version, 244,712 words)[15]

See also edit

  • 1888 in Australian literature
  • Boldrewood, Rolf. Robbery Under Arms (World Classics series ed.). London: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0192505106.
  • Robbery Under Arms at Standard Ebooks
  • Robbery Under Arms at Project Gutenberg, based on the 1889 single volume edition
  •   Robbery Under Arms public domain audiobook at LibriVox
  • Rolf Boldrewood at IMDb
  • Elizabeth Webby, Killing the Narrator: National difference in adaptations of Robbery Under Arms JASAL 1, 2002

References edit

  1. ^ "Austlit — Robbery Under Arms by Rolf Boldrewood". Austlit. Retrieved 17 August 2023.
  2. ^ "Captain Starlight's Apprentice by Kathryn Heyman". National Library of Australia. Retrieved 17 August 2023.
  3. ^ ""New Books"". The West Australian, 17 July 1889, p3. Retrieved 17 August 2023.
  4. ^ a b c Browne, Thomas Alexander, Australian Dictionary of Biography Online. Retrieved 1 May 2007.
  5. ^ Graulich, Melody; Tatum, Stephen. Reading the Virginian in the New West. Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press, 2003. ISBN 0-8032-7104-2
  6. ^ Australian Classics by Jane Gleeson-White, Allen & Unwin, 2007, p10
  7. ^ Preface to the 1889 edition.
  8. ^ "Starlight, in "Robbery Under Arms."". The Sydney Mail and New South Wales Advertiser. Vol. LXX, no. 2109. New South Wales, Australia. 8 December 1900. p. 1353. Retrieved 21 April 2021 – via National Library of Australia.
  9. ^ a b   Robbery Under Arms at Wikisource.
  10. ^ Australian Broadcasting Commission. (1939), "ROBBERY UNDER ARMS", ABC Weekly, Sydney: ABC (Vol. 5 No. 1 (2 January 1943)), nla.obj-1352880557, retrieved 19 September 2023 – via Trove
  11. ^ Australian Broadcasting Commission. (1939), "Plays Robbery Under Arms", ABC Weekly, Sydney: ABC (Vol. 5 No. 1 (2 January 1943)), nla.obj-1352880389, retrieved 19 September 2023 – via Trove
  12. ^ "ABC STARS OF THE AIR". The Muswellbrook Chronicle. Vol. 23, no. 10. New South Wales, Australia. 9 February 1943. p. 4. Retrieved 19 September 2023 – via National Library of Australia.
  13. ^ Vagg, Stephen (10 August 2019). "Unmade Cinesound". Filmink.
  14. ^ Dramatic copyright in Australia to 1912, Queensland Courts. Retrieved 1 May 2007.
  15. ^ ""Robbery Under Arms"". Standard EBooks. Retrieved 17 August 2023.

robbery, under, arms, other, uses, disambiguation, bushranger, novel, thomas, alexander, browne, published, under, name, rolf, boldrewood, first, published, serialised, form, sydney, mail, between, july, 1882, august, 1883, then, three, volumes, london, 1888, . For other uses see Robbery Under Arms disambiguation Robbery Under Arms is a bushranger novel by Thomas Alexander Browne published under his pen name Rolf Boldrewood It was first published in serialised form by The Sydney Mail between July 1882 and August 1883 then in three volumes in London in 1888 It was abridged into a single volume in 1889 as part of Macmillan s one volume Colonial Library series and has not been out of print since 1 Robbery Under ArmsFirst edition of Robbery Under ArmsAuthorRolf BoldrewoodCountryAustraliaLanguageEnglishGenreBushranger novelPublisherRemington amp Co Publishers London Publication date1888Media typePrint Hardback amp Paperback Pages300 ppIt is considered a classic of Australian colonial literature alongside Marcus Clarke s convict novel For the Term of his Natural Life 1876 and Fergus Hume s mystery crime novel The Mystery of a Hansom Cab 1886 and has inspired numerous adaptations in film television and theatre Contents 1 Plot introduction 2 Plot summary 3 Characters in Robbery Under Arms 4 Allusions references from other works 5 Major themes 6 Literary significance and criticism 7 Allusions references to actual history geography and current science 8 Adaptations 9 Release details 10 See also 11 ReferencesPlot introduction editWriting in the first person the narrator Dick Marston tells the story of his life and loves and his association with the notorious bushranger Captain Starlight a renegade from a noble English family Set in the bush and goldfields of Australia in the 1850s Starlight s gang with Dick and his brother Jim s help sets out on a series of escapades that include cattle theft and robbery under arms Plot summary edit nbsp Patrick William Marony Starlight s hold up at the dance hall 1894The book begins with Dick sitting in gaol with just under one month before his scheduled execution for his crimes He is given writing material and begins documenting his life s story He starts with his childhood with a father Ben who is prone to violence particularly when he has been drinking his mother his sister Aileen and brother Jim He documents his first exposure to his father s crimes the theft of a red calf and the disapproval of this crime by his mother who says she thought he had given up stealing since the theft which led to his transportation as a convict from England Dick s first active involvement in crime comes where the brothers choose to go cattle duffing stealing even though an offer of solid honest work had been made with neighbour and friend George Storefield The divergent lives of the brothers to that of George is a recurring theme of the book from this point forward as they continue to meet up at different points throughout the story s course This first theft includes their introduction to Captain Starlight his Aboriginal assistant Warrigal and their hideaway Terrible Hollow Further thefts follow leading up to the brazen theft of 1000 head driven overland to Adelaide with Starlight After the success of this adventure the brothers lie low in Melbourne where they meet the sisters Kate and Jeanie Morrison The brothers return to home for Christmas leading to incarceration and trial of Dick and Starlight The magistrate chooses to refer to Starlight only by this nickname at the Captain s request Warrigal helps Dick and Starlight escape to Terrible Hollow The gang later has its first stage holdup The brothers then move to the Turon goldfields Their prosperity through honest hard work gives them the chance for escape from the country to start a new life overseas Jim is re united with Jeanie Morrison and marries her Dick meets Kate Morrison again but her tumultuous nature leads her in an angry mood to alert the police to their presence and they narrowly escape capture and return to the safety of Terrible Hollow nbsp Charles E Hammond Starlight and his gang sticking up the Turon Gold Escort c 1898Seeing no alternative to crime the gang joins forces with a soon to be rival Dan Moran and his friends to stage a major hold up of the armed escorted stagecoach leaving the goldfields The robbery is a success with the members splitting up after sharing the gold takings Starlight s crew hears word of Moran s planned home invasion of a police informant named Mr Whitman at a time when Mr Whitman was known to be absent Marston and Starlight intervene forcing Moran and his men to leave thus preventing further harm to the women present and the home being burnt down at the end of the night At the height of their infamy the gang attend the Turon horse race where Starlight s horse Rainbow wins The same weekend they attend the wedding of a publican s daughter Bella Barnes where Starlight fulfils his earlier promise to dance unrecognised with her at her wedding despite the presence of the entire town including the goldfields commissioner and other dignitaries Ben Marston is later ambushed and wounded by bounty hunters Moran nearby releases him and shoots all four bounty hunters in cold blood again highlighting the different honour codes between the two gangs Ben returns to Terrible Hollow and is nursed by his daughter Aileen Aileen and Starlight begin a relationship and arrange to marry Despite the animosity between the rivals they team up again to rob the home of the Goldfield Commissioner Mr Knightley but are met with more resistance than they expected One of Moran s associates is shot in the skirmish and Moran is keen to kill Knightley when they later have him face to face Starlight turns the tables by giving Mr Knightley one of his own pistols He them proceeds to arrange for Knightley s wife to go to Bathurst and withdraw some cash and meet Moran s men by the Black Stump outside of Bathurst town Starlight passes the time gambling with Mr Knightley sharing his food drink and company Starlight loses money in the gambling and arranges to repay by direct payment into his account as well as paying for the horse he is offered when leaving nbsp Patrick William Marony Death of Captain Starlight with his head in Warrigal s lap 1894Throughout the book there have been chance meetings with Dick s childhood friend and neighbour George Storefield who in contrast with the Marston boys works hard keeps within the law and thrives financially Dick starts to hold up George now a successful grazier businessman magistrate and landholder before realising who it was George offers the brothers safe haven and cattle mustering work which would allow Dick Starlight and Jim safer travel to Townsville in Queensland from where they plan to leave to San Francisco They accept the offer but are caught partially due to betrayal by Warrigal and Kate Morrison along the way and Starlight and Jim are shot dead Dick is wounded and brought to trial bringing the story to where it began with Dick expecting to be hanged shortly In a surprise ending Dick s sentence is reduced to fifteen years imprisonment due to petitions from Storefield Knightley and other prominent people He serves twelve years is visited occasionally by Gracey Storefield whom he marries shortly after his release before moving to a remote area of Queensland to manage a station for her brother George Storefield Characters in Robbery Under Arms editDick Marston The narrator an Australian bushman Jim Marston His brother Aileen Marston Dick and Jim s sister Mrs Marston Ben s wife and the mother of Dick Jim and Aileen Ben Marston Dick Jim and Aileen s father a Lincolnshire man transported for poaching Jeanie Morrison Jeanie Marston One of two sisters that the Marston brothers meet in Melbourne while lying low Later marries Jim She is Kate s sister Kate Morrison One of two sisters that the Marston brothers meet in Melbourne while lying low She is Jeanie s sister and Jim s sister in law George Storefield Neighbour and friend of the Marston family Gracy Storefield George s sister and Dick s wife after serving his prison sentence Captain Starlight An honourable bushranger Warrigal Starlight s Aboriginal assistant Rainbow Starlight s horse Mr Whitman A police informant Mr Knightley The goldfield commissioner Mrs Knightley Mr Knightley s wife Miss Falkland A woman whom Starlight and his crew rescues when Dan Moran leads his men in a home invasion of Mr Whitman Bella Barnes A friend of the bushrangers with whom Starlight vows to dance at her wedding Dan Moran A corrupt bushranger Note The spelling of the surname Marston varies in some editions adaptations Alternate spellings include Marsden and Masterton Allusions references from other works editThe early film adaptations of the book are referenced in the title of Kathryn Heyman s 2006 novel Captain Starlight s Apprentice 2 Major themes editThe book written in first person narrative contains repeated regrets for the narrator s crimes highlighting how seemingly minor crimes led to an inescapable life of further crimes These are contrasted with the success of Dick s hardworking childhood friend who becomes a successful landowner merchant and magistrate The themes of honour and loyalty are repeated throughout the story which eventually leads to Dick s redemption from hanging and having served his time in gaol a presumed peaceful safe and legal life As a ripping yarn originally told in periodical installments the story mostly centres around the lovable villains who are adventurers and thieves but nevertheless with high moral standards and in some ways trapped by circumstances of their own making Literary significance and criticism editA reviewer in The West Australian in 1889 noted its authenticity The book is written in an original and thrillingly interesting manner and being from the pen of an Australian author we are spared those ludicrous mistakes which English writers so frequently fall into when describing things Antipodean 3 English author Thomas Wood called the novel a classic which for life and dash and zip and colour all of a period has no match in all Australian letters 4 Robbery Under Arms is cited as an important influence on Owen Wister s 1902 novel The Virginian widely regarded as the first western 5 In her literary study Australian Classics Jane Gleeson White noted that the book s use of the colonial vernacular bared comparison with Mark Twain s in Adventures of Huckleberry Finn As with Twain s novel it is the brilliant vitality and intimacy of Dick s narrative voice as well as the wild adventures he has with his brother Jim Starlight and the women they love that make Robbery Under Arms such lively reading 6 Allusions references to actual history geography and current science editIn his December 1888 Preface to the New Edition Browne wrote though presented in the guise of fiction this chronicle of the Marston family must not be set down by the reader as wholly fanciful or exaggerated Much of the narrative is literally true as can be verified by official records 7 Although bushranger Frank Pearson claimed Captain Starlight was based on him Boldrewood claims his character was a composite based in part on Harry Redford but primarily on Thomas Law known as Captain Midnight 8 9 The cattle robbery follows the lifting of about a thousand head by Redford from Bowen Downs Station in 1870 4 Some of the exploits recounted are based on actual incidents involving bushrangers Daniel Morgan Ben Hall Frank Gardiner and John Gilbert although not all factual events which contributed to the novel took place during the period in which the novel is set 9 Terrible Hollow the gang s bush hideaway is drawn from a sunken valley reported in the Gwydir district 4 Adaptations edit1890 Popular stage melodrama by Garnet Walch and Alfred Dampier 1907 Robbery Under Arms black and white silent film one of Australia s earliest features produced by Charles MacMahon 1907 Robbery Under Arms silent film made by J and N Tait who had made The Story of the Kelly Gang 1911 Captain Starlight or Gentleman of the Road another black and white silent film made by Dampier s daughter Lily and her husband Alfred Rolfe 1920 Robbery Under Arms silent film written and directed by actor Kenneth Brampton who also played the role of Captain Starlight 1941 Robbery Under Arms adaptation of the book for BBC radio 1943 Robbery Under Arms the first time the book had been adapted for Australian radio 10 The adaptation was written by Peter Creswell and directed by Charles Wheeler It ran for nine episodes and was broadcast throughout Australian on the ABC network 11 and featured Mary Hoskin Aileen Harpur Marion Johns and Trilby Clark 12 1957 Robbery Under Arms sound and technicolour film version for the British Rank Organisation directed by Jack Lee starring Peter Finch as Captain Starlight 1985 Robbery Under Arms film and mini series starring Steven Vidler as Dick Marston and Sam Neill as Captain Starlight released in separate versions for screen and television Produced by Jock Blair and directed by Donald Crombie and Ken Hannam Some attempts to adapt the novel in the 1920s and 30s were hindered by the bushranger ban It has been called the great lost film of Ken G Hall s career 13 Browne was paid twenty shillings per performance for Alfred Dampier s theatrical adaptation 14 Rolfe Boldrewood spent time camped between Warrnambool and Port Fairy in South West Victoria along the banks of the Merri River He was particularly interested in nearby Tower Hill a place not unlike the Terrible Hollow which some authorities speculate may have been his inspiration for The Hollow At nearby Koroit Henry Handel Richardson aka Ethel Florence Lindesay spent some of her childhood and used the town to describe unfavourable places in her novels Release details edit1888 First edition England Remington and Co Publishers Hardback 3 vols 2006 edited by Paul Eggert and Elizabeth Webby Australia University of Queensland Press Academy Editions of Australian Literature ISBN 978 0 7022 3574 0 Pub date 31 October 2006 Hardback and paperback Full text of original serialised version including the 29 000 words missing from later publications 2023 Standard EBooks Full text of original version 244 712 words 15 See also edit1888 in Australian literature Boldrewood Rolf Robbery Under Arms World Classics series ed London Oxford University Press ISBN 0192505106 Robbery Under Arms at Standard Ebooks Robbery Under Arms at Project Gutenberg based on the 1889 single volume edition nbsp Robbery Under Arms public domain audiobook at LibriVox Rolf Boldrewood at IMDb Elizabeth Webby Killing the Narrator National difference in adaptations of Robbery Under Arms JASAL 1 2002 nbsp Wikisource has original text related to this article Robbery Under ArmsReferences edit Austlit Robbery Under Arms by Rolf Boldrewood Austlit Retrieved 17 August 2023 Captain Starlight s Apprentice by Kathryn Heyman National Library of Australia Retrieved 17 August 2023 New Books The West Australian 17 July 1889 p3 Retrieved 17 August 2023 a b c Browne Thomas Alexander Australian Dictionary of Biography Online Retrieved 1 May 2007 Graulich Melody Tatum Stephen Reading the Virginian in the New West Lincoln Nebraska University of Nebraska Press 2003 ISBN 0 8032 7104 2 Australian Classics by Jane Gleeson White Allen amp Unwin 2007 p10 Preface to the 1889 edition Starlight in Robbery Under Arms The Sydney Mail and New South Wales Advertiser Vol LXX no 2109 New South Wales Australia 8 December 1900 p 1353 Retrieved 21 April 2021 via National Library of Australia a b nbsp Robbery Under Arms at Wikisource Australian Broadcasting Commission 1939 ROBBERY UNDER ARMS ABC Weekly Sydney ABC Vol 5 No 1 2 January 1943 nla obj 1352880557 retrieved 19 September 2023 via Trove Australian Broadcasting Commission 1939 Plays Robbery Under Arms ABC Weekly Sydney ABC Vol 5 No 1 2 January 1943 nla obj 1352880389 retrieved 19 September 2023 via Trove ABC STARS OF THE AIR The Muswellbrook Chronicle Vol 23 no 10 New South Wales Australia 9 February 1943 p 4 Retrieved 19 September 2023 via National Library of Australia Vagg Stephen 10 August 2019 Unmade Cinesound Filmink Dramatic copyright in Australia to 1912 Queensland Courts Retrieved 1 May 2007 Robbery Under Arms Standard EBooks Retrieved 17 August 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robbery Under Arms amp oldid 1185550089, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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