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[LQE]⋙ PDF Gratis For The Term of His Natural Life A Trilogy edition by Marcus Clarke Literature Fiction eBooks

For The Term of His Natural Life A Trilogy edition by Marcus Clarke Literature Fiction eBooks



Download As PDF : For The Term of His Natural Life A Trilogy edition by Marcus Clarke Literature Fiction eBooks

Download PDF For The Term of His Natural Life A Trilogy  edition by Marcus Clarke Literature  Fiction eBooks

• TRILOGY - Three of Australian author Marcus Clarke's books are bound together in this trilogy For The Term of His Natural Life (1875), Australian Tales (1896) and Old Tales of a Young Country (1871)

For The Term of His Natural Life (1874)
A ripping yarn about convict life in early Australian history and in particular Rufus Dawes, an innocent man convicted of murder. The book conveys the inhumane treatment of convicts and graphically describes the conditions of the convicts. The novel was based on research by the author as well as a visit to a penal settlement in Tasmania.
The plot is based on the escape of Alexander Pearce, who ate his companions during two different escape attempts from the Macquarie Harbour Penal Settlement on the West Coast, Tasmania.
The book is a series of semi-fictionalised accounts of events during the era, along with the tragic story of its hero. Most of the incidents and many of the individual characters are easily identifiable from historical sources including Marcus Clarke's own non-fiction work Old Tales of a Young Country.
Typical of Victorian-era convict novels, Rufus Dawes, is a wrongfully convicted gentleman. Under the prevailing morality of the time, a murderer would have been inappropriate for a hero in popular fiction.
Marcus Clarke’s ‘For the Term of His Natural Life’, was published as a novel in 1874 and remains the best-known novelisation of convict life in early Australian history. The fictional story follows the life Rufus Dawes, a young man wrongly transported for murder.

Australian Tales (1896)
A collection of stories and articles written by Marcus Clarke and released by his widow.

Old Tales of a Young Country (1871)
A series of fifteen historical tales by Marcus Clarke, was published in 1871.

About The Author
Australian novelist Marcus Andrew Hislop Clarke (1846 – 1881) was best known for his book "For the Term of His Natural Life." He was born in England and emigrated to Australia. He farmed and wrote stories for the Australian Magazine before working at The Argus in Melbourne.
Clarke was the only child of William Hislop Clarke and Amelia Elizabeth née Mathews. In 1862 William was sent to Northumberland House because of a mental breakdown and died there a year later. At age 17 he emigrated to Australia, where his uncle, James Langton Clarke, was a county court judge. He was at first a clerk in the Bank of Australia, but showed no business ability, and soon proceeded to learn farming at a station on the Wimmera River, Victoria.
He was already writing stories for the Australian Magazine, when in 1867 he joined the staff of The Argus in Melbourne through the introduction of Dr. Robert Lewins. He briefly visited Tasmania in 1870 at the request of The Argus to experience at first hand the settings of articles he was writing on the convict period. Old Stories Retold began to appear in The Australasian from February. The following month his great novel His Natural Life (later called For the Term of His Natural Life) commenced serialisation in the Australasian Journal. He also became secretary (1872) to the trustees of the Melbourne Athenauem and later (1876) Sub (assistant) Librarian. In 1868 he founded the Yorick Club, which soon numbered among its members the chief Australian men of letters.
He also wrote The Peripatetic Philosopher (1869), a series of amusing papers reprinted from The Australasian; Long Odds (London, 1870), a novel; and numerous comedies and pantomimes, the best of which was Twinkle, Twinkle, Little Star (Theatre Royal, Melbourne; Christmas, 1873). In 1869 he married the actress Marian Dunn, with whom he had six children.

For The Term of His Natural Life A Trilogy edition by Marcus Clarke Literature Fiction eBooks

This is one of the most depressing books I have ever read. I don't want to give away the plot, but I will say that it's the story of a very unlucky man who is wrongly accused of a crime he has not committed and is deported to what is today Tasmania. Clarke wrote this book years after the deportation system had been abolished and perhaps what he is trying to say is: "That happened when the English were in charge, but now we are Australia and we don't do that." There is no hope in this book, even the clergy is unable to offer any comfort. Injustice, cruelty and abuse of power are the themes and death is the only way out. From a historical point of view, the story is very informational but it is at times really hard to believe that all that is described is true. In some chapters, the book looks like an adventure book, but in the end we are left with the impression that there is no redemption.

Product details

  • File Size 3262 KB
  • Print Length 375 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN 153473404X
  • Simultaneous Device Usage Unlimited
  • Publisher The UK Bureau; 2 edition (March 19, 2014)
  • Publication Date March 19, 2014
  • Sold by  Digital Services LLC
  • Language English
  • ASIN B00J4UF9AS

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For The Term of His Natural Life A Trilogy edition by Marcus Clarke Literature Fiction eBooks Reviews


I absolutely loved the book. But the softback I bought was almost unreadable. It was in a format which one couldn't read....the size was that of a school textbook and the font went completely across the page. I ended up buying a copy in Melbourne which was wonderful which was the "typical book" format. I loved the story. It was recommended to me by friends in Sydney, and after visiting Tasmania and Port Arthur, I think it was the most memorable book i read. I loved it.
This is not a pleasant story, but it most certainly is compelling. I learned a lot about penal colonies too. The plot and the characters are great. The author explores human nature in a most realistic way. There is something that renders this book really unique. I suppose I really liked the values, such as honour and the force of human spirit, that are prominent in it. It is a thought provoking book, but that doen not get in the way of the plot and of the tragic crescendo that few authors manage to achieve.
For English speakers who have graduated from high school after only the past 30 years, this book cannot be adequately read without a dictionary. The grammar, choice of words the mastery of English expression, not to mention the rivetting story line are incredible. For one who would want to understand the brutality of the penal settlements of Tasmania and Norfolk island, this book is a must read.
This is both a very fascinating and a very frustrating book. Its principal protagonist is Rufus Dawes, a young Englishman from a wealthy family, who allows his pride to put him into the terrifying experience of becoming a prisoner condemned to transportation. Along the way he encounters other characters - each with his or her own reasons for being (sometimes literally) in the same boat.

What makes the book fascinating is the abundance of detail about a youthful Australia and the abuses of its terrible prison system. What makes the book frustrating is that Marcus Clarke has written in Rufus Dawes a lead character who is driven almost entirely by his pride, which has the effect of trapping him in situations from which common sense would allow him to escape or at least alleviate. This is probably intended to stand in for his fatal flaw, but it gets a little old, which is one of the two reasons I give it four stars instead of five. The second reason for the lowered rating is because Clarke is BIG on coincidences - huge overwhelmingly unlikely, mind-numbing coincidences. He doesn't use the coincidence device a lot, but when he does, the use is awe-inspiring.

The book was written in the 1870s by an expatriate Englishman who had become an Australian journalist whose job allowed him to research the infamous prison system in great depth. If this makes it sound like it would be dry, don't be deceived. It is a rip-roaring adventure that I highly recommend.
I found this story engrossing-it gave me an insight into how the convicts must have suffered in the early days in Tasmania-being deported for such minor offences-then slaving under horrendous conditions-& imprisonment in harsh surroundings. Would recommend this to anyone interested in Australia's early history , I have actually been to some of the places mentioned in the book and they look just as grim now as they would have been in the period about which the book was written.
This book was very good at demonstrating the injustice and cruelty of the 19th Century, British penal system and the attitudes which propped it up. Following the fortunes, or rather misfortunes of the main character was at first interesting but became a bit monotonous,frustrating and depressing due to his dogged determination to follow one general course of action down a path of self destruction. The ending was somewhat trite and disappointing.
It really shows how badly the prisoners were treated going from England to Tasmania. The British of that time were very cruel to men who did petty crimes. The men who were hanged were the lucky ones, Far better to die than live in a prison work camp .
This is one of the most depressing books I have ever read. I don't want to give away the plot, but I will say that it's the story of a very unlucky man who is wrongly accused of a crime he has not committed and is deported to what is today Tasmania. Clarke wrote this book years after the deportation system had been abolished and perhaps what he is trying to say is "That happened when the English were in charge, but now we are Australia and we don't do that." There is no hope in this book, even the clergy is unable to offer any comfort. Injustice, cruelty and abuse of power are the themes and death is the only way out. From a historical point of view, the story is very informational but it is at times really hard to believe that all that is described is true. In some chapters, the book looks like an adventure book, but in the end we are left with the impression that there is no redemption.
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