Английская Википедия:Agnes Littlejohn

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Agnes Littlejohn (25 September 1865 – 27 December 1944) was an Australian writer.

Life

Agnes Littlejohn was born in Paddington, New South Wales on 25 September 1865.[1] Her Scottish father, Thomas Littlejohn (d.1906) and his wife Ann Austin Littlejohn (née Orsmond in Tahiti) had migrated to Australia in 1864.[2]

Littlejohn had paintings in the Australian Academy of Arts Exhibition in 1892.[3]

Her first collection of short stories was published in 1907, the year following her father's death, and was reviewed favourably by The Sydney Morning Herald.[4] It contained both new stories and others which had previously been published in the Presbyterian.[5] From November 1907 her stories appeared in the "Young Folks" and "Australian Stories" columns of The Sydney Mail.[6][7]

Following the outbreak of World War I, Littlejohn began writing patriotic poetry which was published in The Sydney Mail.[8][9][10] It was collected and re-published in a series of volumes during the war years. She also donated earnings from her writing to patriotic funds.[11][12]

Her first book of fairy stories for children, Star Dust and Sea Spray, appeared in 1918 and was illustrated by Sydney Ure Smith and Percy Leason,[13] while Pixie O'Harris illustrated her 1924 book, The Lost Emerald and other Stories.[14]

She also wrote the lyrics for the song, "To a Butterfly", composed by Raimund Pechotsch in 1925.[15] It was dedicated to and sung by Elsa Stralia.[16]

In 1931 she began to write poetry for The Sydney Morning Herald.[17]

Works

Prose

  • The Daughter of a Sailor and other stories (1907)[18]
  • A Lapse of Memory and other stories (1909)
  • Mirage of the Desert (1910)
  • The Breath of India (1914)
  • The Silver Road and other stories (1915)
  • Star Dust and Sea Spray (1918)
  • Rainbow Dreams (1919)
  • The Lost Emerald and other Stories (1924)
  • The Pipes O' Pan and other short stories (1939)

Poetry

  • Verses (1914)
  • Patriotic Poems (1915)
  • Verses (1915)
  • War Poems, dedicated to Australian soldiers (1916)
  • The Lady of the Doves and other poems (1929)
  • The Guardian of the Gate and other poems (1933)
  • The Unforgotten Watch and other poems (1935)
  • Drowsy Hours and other poems (1936)
  • Lighthouse Keepers and other poems (1938)

Prose and poetry

  • The Sleeping Sea-Nymph (1921)
  • Lyrics and Lyrical Prose (1927)
  • Lyrics and Mystic Sketches (1928)

Later life and death

Littlejohn died on 27 December 1944 at a private hospital in Epping, New South Wales.[19] She never married.[20]

References

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