Showing 1066 items matching " poems"
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Clunes Museum
Booklet - LEAFLET, CENTENARY OF CLUNES, VICTORIA, EASTER 1939, 1939
CENTENARY OF CLUNES, VICTORIA, HELD EASTER 1939. THIS SHOWS PHOTOS OF CLUNES TOWN HALL, HIGHER ELEMENTARY SCHOOL, KNITTING MILLS, SOLDIERS MEMORIAL, DAIRY COMPANY, HOSPITAL, ESMOND DISCOVERY OF GOLD MONUMENT. ALSO A POEM DATED 1912 BY M.J. ALSO CHINESE RIOT, CLUNES 1860, 1938. TOURELLO SCHOOL.LEAFLET REFERRING TO "BACK TO CLUNES" AND "BACK TO TOURELLO" CENTENARY OF CLUNES EASTER 1939. CONTAINING PHOTOS, SHORT HISTORY OF CLUNES, POEM COMMEMORATING EASTER 1939 CENTENARY OF CLUNESCENTENARY OF CLUNES, VICTORIA, EASTER 1939local history, events and celebrations, back to clunes, civic mementos -
Ballarat RSL Sub-Branch Inc.
Notebook
This object relates to John Leonard GROAT. He was born on 1/02/1897 in Ballarat, VIC. John Leonard served in the AIF (12458) enlisting on, 21/10/1915 in Ballarat, VIC before being killed in action on duties with the 10th FLD AMBUL as a Army Non-Commissioned Lance Corporal / Lance Bombardier (LCPL/LBDR) on 16/10/1917. John Leonard GROAT was not a prisoner of war. His next of kin is Frederick Thomas GROAT (Father). John Groat was awarded the British War Medal, Victory Medal, British Military Medal GV.With poemsfirst world war (ww1), 1914 - 1918, literature, ballarat rsl, ballarat -
Orbost & District Historical Society
first day cover, Connell, Lee, June 1987
The Man from Snowy River" is a poem by Australian bush poet Banjo Paterson. It was first published in The Bulletin, an Australian news magazine, on 26th April 1890. The poem tells the story of a horseback pursuit to recapture the colt of a prizewinning racehorse that escaped from its paddock and is living wild with the brumbies (wild horses) of the mountain ranges. Eventually the brumbies descend a seemingly impassably steep slope, at which point the assembled riders give up the pursuit, except the young hero, who spurs his pony down the "terrible descent" to catch the mob.Two characters mentioned in the early part of the poem are featured in previous Paterson poems; "Clancy of the Overflow" and Harrison from "Old Pardon, Son of Reprieve".The town of Orbost is situated on the Snowy River and the town has always been "the heart of Snowy River country".A first day cover for "The Man From Snowy River" stamps. There is a picture of a saddle in the top left-hand corner. There is a strip 5 stamps on the envelope and it has been stamped at Orbost Post Office. This strip has 5 scenes based on the Banjo Patterson legendary poem by the same name. The stamps include: At The Station, Mountain Bend, The Terrible Descent, At Their Heels and Brought Them Back.first-day-cover man-from-snowy-river stamps philately -
Mont De Lancey
Baby's Plate, 1912
1912 Dorothy Wilms is now Mrs. C.H. AdamsonWhite Winston China baby plate, with poem and drawings of individuals mentioned in the poem."Ding Dong Dell Pussy's in the well Who put her in? Little Johnny Green Who pulled her out? Little Johnny Stout."baby plates -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Lesley van Moolenbroek, Collected works of Lesley van Moolenbroek, 1984
A collection of poems.murrie, poetry -
Ballarat RSL Sub-Branch Inc.
Folder - Verses
Poems etc.literature, ballarat rsl, ballarat -
Bendigo Military Museum
Card - CARD, CHRISTMAS WW1 1918, 31 OCTOBER 1918
ISSUED POSTCARD IN WW1 SENT BY JOE FAWCETT NO 7981 ON 31 OCTOBER 1918 WITH EXTRA PAGES TO WRITE A LETTER MAY HAVE BEENPostcard- 4 pages,cardboard cover, cream in colour with the Australian Commonwealth Military Forces Rising emblem on front. Poem on page 2, Christmas/ New Year message on Page 3. Front has a blue ribbon holding the pages together.Front cover “AUSTRALIAN COMMONWEALTH MILITARY FORCES EMBLEM. A.I.F. FRANCE Page 4 - An 8 line poem Page 5 From old pal Joe Fawcett to Gordon wishing Merry Christmas and Happy New Year “ aif, postcard, france -
Phillip Island and District Historical Society Inc.
Souvenir Photographs, Education Department Koala Preservation, 1939
The boys came across from Stony Point and planted trees and were plagued by mosquitoes. The poem is quite humorous describing their venture to Cowes. They decided that Cowes derived its name - "The mosquitoes were cows down at Cowes." On the back of the folder is a note from E Murnane, one of the Supervisors, to "Dear John". The poem is most likely written by E Murnane too as it has the initials (E.M.) at the end. The Souvenir Folder was donated by Neil Lacco.A souvenir folder with two photographs included of the First School Boys' Camp at Cowes run by the Education Department. The souvenir also includes a poem called "How Cowes Got Its Name" and a list of the participants. Photograph on the front shows three boys with a koala. Photograph inside the folder shows all the boys and Camp Supervisors.As shown on the front: Education Department Koala Preservation Souvenir of theFirst School Boys' Camp at Cowes. October 1939.koala preservation, first school boys' camp cowes, e murnane, neil lacco, education department -
Melbourne Legacy
Booklet, In a Nutshell : The Book of Charm, c1918
A booklet written by Herbert Scanlon (late of the A.I.F.). It's a book of short stories and verse. The author Herbert Scanlon appears to have enlisted at 17 and returned from WW1 in 1916 due to his health. "After the war Scanlon embarked on a career as a writer, eventually publishing some 17 short collections of short stories, poems and the occasional humorous episode. While many of the stories are standard trench experience accounts, a number are written with sensitivity and passion. The booklets were sold for one shilling by door-to-door salesmen," mostly ex-servicemen (Copied from National Australian Archives record for him). Was with other World War 1 memorabilia that has come from Private John Basil McLean, 2nd Reinforcements, 37th Battalion, A.I.F. J.B. McLean (Service No. 13824) was from near Maffra, Victoria and enlisted on 22 January 1916. He embarked on 16 December 1916 for Europe. His full war record is available from AWM. He spent time with the Australian Field Artillery (Pack Section). At the end of the war he worked for a year at the A.I.F. Headquarters in London before returning to Australia on the 'Ceramic', arriving in Portsea in 1920.A record of publications made for the troops in World War 1 or made of material that came from soldiers.Booklet x 32 pages of poems and short stories for soldiers in World War 1.world war one, poem, short stories -
Hume City Civic Collection
Book - School Reader, Education Department of Victoria, Gather Round/Fourth Book, 1965
A school reader for Grade 4 children.A bound school reader with a soft dark green cloth cover with lettering and diagrams in black and white. Both front and back covers are decorated with lines and circles of children holding readers. Inside there are 248 pages containing stories, poems and illustrations. fictionA school reader for Grade 4 children.school readers, gather round, grade 4, education department of victoria, a.c. brooks, government printer -
National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM)
Document, The Glue
A photocopy of a poem possibly written by Barb O'Keefe.( Her name is hand written at the bottom of the poem).poetry, vietnam veterans -
National Vietnam Veterans Museum (NVVM)
Document, The Veteran
A photocopy of the poem, The Veteran.poetry, vietnam veteran -
Ballarat RSL Sub-Branch Inc.
Folder
Letters, Poems etc.literature, ballarat rsl, ballarat -
Lilydale RSL Sub Branch
Work on paper - Poem, The Final Inspection
Poem printed on paper -
Melbourne Legacy
Document - Poem, Fifty Years On. A Reflection by Brian. Supplement to the Melbourne Legacy Bulletin No 2340 26.9.1978
An article from a supplement to the Bulletin with a poem by Legatee Brian Armstrong written just before he passed away. It reflects on Foundation Day and the first 50 years of Service certificates that were being awarded. Legatee Armstrong had been president in 1937. The prom was called Accolade. Last Anzac Day a fine old Digger / Asked me to write him 'a sort of a letter' / Mentioning something of what he had done / As a private soldier in World War One. He had lived alone since he lost he wife / But a score of 'Grandies' adorned his life / They were always asking what he had done / As a Front Line Digger in World War One. He wanted to give them something to show / When he got his call and 'had to go' / But he couldn't remember and wasn't sure / When they fingered his medal and asked for more. He was one of our best and I knew him well / In those far off days of pain and hell / So I wrote recalling his scenes of strife / Especially one when he'd saved my life. Later I found a note at my gate / Just a line of thanks to 'my Dear Mate'. That grand old word so hardly won / In freezing trench and blinding sun / Fifty years gone but it's not too late / To be proud when a Digger still calls you Mate. Thrice in our time have the War Bells tolled / And thrice does the Legacy tale unfold. Fifty years gone but it's never too late / To guard the Kin of a fallen mate. The story is written for all to see / The 'Why' and the 'How' of Legacy / But it still rings true that it all began / With the trust in his mate of a War-Torn Man. The article was part of an album of past presidents from 1965 to 1989. The folder included biographical details and obituaries, eulogies and death notices of prominent Legatees. The items have been catalogued separately.A record of a poem made by Legatee Brian Armstrong a past president of Legacy about the mateship of Legacy. The information was collected to record the lives of prominent legatees in a folder.Yellow page from Bulletin with a poem by Legatee Brian Armstrong in 1978.Bulletin No 2430 26.9.1978past presidents, foundation day, brian amstrong, poem -
Nillumbik Shire Council
Sculpture: Liz Williams, Liz Williams, In Love, c.1996
Williams' use of the dog and poem was inspired by a print by the late Barbara Hanrahan (an artist friend) in which a women was holding a cat accompanied by a dog and in which words from a William Blake poem were included / After her mother died Williams made a work of her mother with the dog, holding the cat and using the same words in the Hanrahan print / The dog is a family pet; Dolcie, that Williams fell in love with / The dog as a symbol has been used in fifteenth and sixteenth century painting to represent fidelity in marriage / The use of the dog is also a contradiction to the themes in this work by Williams / Williams found that many of her women friends were having emotional and romantic difficulties, suffering from the same malady again and again, feeling rejected, destroyed and having unfulfilled desires / The female figure standing on her hands is not seeing things realistically / The figure is head over heels, vulnerable, with her skirt around her head revealing more than normal / The text enhances the meaning of the work and draws the viewer into experiencing the foolishness of love, demanding the viewer travel around and around to read it / Overall the dog provides structure to the work and a reliable object on which all else balances / Balance has been one of the recurring or repetitive themes within William's work / It references the physicality of clay, the difficulties in creating balance with the clay and balance in the work / Williams' work is about form rather than colour / Sometimes she uses a coloured clay like a pale terracotta / Williams likes the flatness of the surface in relationship to the marks of the text / She describes herself as a Minimalist, paring down the form to the bare essentials. 'In Love' was a finalist in the 1997 Nillumbik Art Award held at the Eltham Community and Reception Centre, Pitt Street, Eltham. A ceramic sculpture made of white stoneware clay (coated with a wash of gesso) of a girl doing a hand stand on the back of a dog (retriever?) / Her face/head is partially covered by her skirt which has come down / Her skirt is inscribed in the round with the poem "The Lady's First Song" (1938) by W.B. Yeats (see inscriptions and markings) / The dog is looking straight ahead and upwards towards the sky and his tail is pointing straight out. The dog is covered with cross-hatch incised lines to give the illusion of fur and texture / Hand written inscription of W.B. Yeats poem "The Lady's First Song" (1938) on girl's skirt / I turn round / Like a dumb beast in a show. / Neither know what I am / Nor where I go, / My language beaten / Into one name; / I am in love / And that is my shame. / What hurts the soul / My soul adores, / No better than a beast / Upon all fours.williams / yeats / love / ceramic / stoneware / dog -
Tarnagulla History Archive
Photograph: Oak Tree, Llanelly, 1922
Not clear whether Annie Heffernan is the photographer or owner of the land where tree was situated. Donald Clark Collection. A monochrome photograph of a large oak tree in Llanelly, Victoria. Accompanied by a poem by John Hurford typed on a piece of paper. Title of poem is 'The Oak'. Dated 12/02/1922. The poem is catalogued separately.Written on reverse: 'Oak Tree Annie Heffernan Llanelly 1922'.llanelly, trees, tree -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Magazine - The Australian Woman's Mirror, 1941195619591960
Pearl Hanks of No 1 Second Street, Black Rock, Victoria wrote articles and poems for these magazines.December 23 Tuesday 1941 Vol 18 No 5 The Australian Woman's Weekly. NOTE: Short Story by 'Pearl Hanka' page 3 'The Australian Christmas Tree' 4323.1|August 22 Wednesday 1956 Vol 32 No 39 NOTE: Story by 'Pearl Hanks' page 6 'Our Frankston Palm Tree' 4323.2|October 28 Wednesday1959 Story by P. Hanks page 7 'Come the Bogeyman' 4323.3|April 5 1961 Poem by Pearl Hanks page 59 'Twin Fairies' 4323.4books, magazines -
Dutch Australian Heritage Centre Victoria
Tile
A rectangular ceramic tile on which is printed a verse to honour the importance of friendship. The author is Toon Hermans, a very popular post-war entertainer.The 16 line poem is named "Vrinden" (Friends) -
Victorian Aboriginal Corporation for Languages
Book, Bruce Pascoe et al, Bulayt, bulayt : poetry in four languages, 2006
A collection of poems in four languages.wathaurong, wathaurong aboriginal cooperative, southwest victoria, cherbourg -
Whitehorse Historical Society Inc.
Book, Curly, 2003
Collection of poems by Joyce Suto.Collection of poems by Joyce Suto.Collection of poems by Joyce Suto.poetry, jpyce suto -
Running Rabbits Military Museum operated by the Upwey Belgrave RSL Sub Branch
Poem by A Scanlan
Poem by A Scanlan "A Song of ANZAC"documents, ww1, general -
Running Rabbits Military Museum operated by the Upwey Belgrave RSL Sub Branch
Poem by A. Scanlon
Poem by A. Scanlon "Unrest" Typewrittendocuments, general -
Lilydale RSL Sub Branch
Photograph, ANZAC MORNING
Framed photograph and print of poem -
Alfred Hospital Nurses League - Nursing History Collection
Literary work - Poem, Admission 1983, December 1983
Poem written by student nurse re Santa Claus admission 1983Two pages typed poemfictionPoem written by student nurse re Santa Claus admission 1983ahnl, father christmas -
Bendigo Military Museum
Magazine - THE WRANGLER WW2, J. Lyons & Sons, c1944
The Wrangler was a magazine issued during WW2 in Western Australia with proceeds going to W.A. Prisoners of War. The magazine contained stories, jokes, poems etc and were mainly contributed by readers. The readers seem to be mainly from an industry factory most likely in armaments.Small 16 page magazine stapled together on cream coloured paper. On top is a picture of a wreath with two bullet shells making up a "V". Titled "The Wrangler" and has Vol No. date and price. Contents were written in black and were message to readers gossip on workers, social news, poems and general news.Titled "The Wrangler".the wrangler, book, home front, ww2 -
Wangaratta RSL Sub Branch
Container - Princess Mary Gift Box, 1914
Containers like these containing tobacco, sweets, cigarettes were sent to allied troops at Christmas in 1914.This box also holds a poem called Far Away by De Siva (1st Battalion), which was likely placed there for safekeeping by its original owner.More than 400,000 of these gift boxes, embossed with the effigy of Princess Mary, were distributed to Commonwealth troops on Christmas Day, 1914. A gift from the Princess, they contained various items including sweets, tobacco and pencils. This box also holds a poem called Far Away by De Siva (1st Battalion), which was likely placed there for safekeeping by its original owner.Brass gift box / container with the effigy of Princess Mary, laurel leaves and elaborate border decoration. Box contains two ribbon bars, one rainbow medal ribbon (no medal), and one red, white and blue ribbon with safety pin. Also inside is a poem called 'Far Away' by De Siva (1st Battalion) printed on white paper.On tin (clockwise from top left): "Belgium / Imperium Brittannicum / Japan / Russia / Montenegro / Christmas 1914 / Servia / France"christmas tin, brass tin, brass, princess mary, princess mary christmas gift box, ribbons, far away, poem -
Lara RSL Sub Branch
Booklet, The Digger's Book of Humor 1962, 1962
A booklet of stories and poems, paper pagesClyde Press Thornbury -
Warrnambool RSL Sub Branch
Work on paper - Poem by Avis Quarrelll, Night at Mera Matruh
see pages 76-77 in Avis Quarrell's book on the history of Warrnambool RSLA response to Private Tom Meagher's sketch (358.1) written in 1958Typed poem framed behind glassC1958 -
Running Rabbits Military Museum operated by the Upwey Belgrave RSL Sub Branch
Booklet
Memories of Moresby - Poems of an Allied servicemanbooklets, ww2, general