Home » Shop » 1968 Australia Ten Dollars – SKK

1968 Australia Ten Dollars – SKK

$39.95 AUD

Availability: 1 in stock

SKU: SKK057510-14H Category:
Compare

Looking on both the top and bottom edge of this example shows some light edge wear.

There is some very light griming and some wrinkles from handling.

It is still a very pleasing example from this period and getting harder to find all the time.

This one is definately priced to sell for the start up collector.

SKU

Year

Denomination

Signatories

Serial No.

Renniks No.

Approx. Grade

Design

Obverse: Francis Howard Greenway (20 November 1777 – September 1837) was an iconic colonial architect in Australia.

Reverse:Henry Lawson (17 June 1867 – 2 September 1922) was an Australian writer and poet . Along with his contemporary Banjo Paterson, Lawson is among the best-known Australian poets and fiction writers of the colonial period, and is often called Australia’s “greatest writer”

Watermark: Captain Cook in left panel.

History

In 1890-1891 Lawson worked in Albany. He then received an offer to write for the Brisbane Boomerang in 1891, but he lasted only around 7–8 months as the Boomerang was soon in trouble. He returned to Sydney and continued to write for the Bulletin which, in 1892, paid for an inland trip where he experienced the harsh realities of drought-affected New South Wales. This resulted in his contributions to the Bulletin Debate and became a source for many of his stories in subsequent years. Elder writes of the trek Lawson took between Hungerford and Bourke as “the most important trek in Australian literary history” and says that “it confirmed all his prejudices about the Australian bush. Lawson had no romantic illusions about a ‘rural idyll’.” As Elder continues, his grim view of the outback was far removed from “the romantic idyll of brave horsemen and beautiful scenery depicted in the poetry of Banjo Paterson”.

Lawson’s most successful prose collection is While the Billy Boils, published in 1896. In it he “continued his assault on Paterson and the romantics, and in the process, virtually reinvented Australian realism”. Elder writes that “he used short, sharp sentences, with language as raw as Ernest Hemingway or Raymond Carver. With sparse adjectives and honed-to-the-bone description, Lawson created a style and defined Australians: dryly laconic, passionately egalitarian and deeply humane.” Most of his work focuses on the Australian bush, such as the desolate “Past Carin'”, and is considered by some to be among the first accurate descriptions of Australian life as it was at the time. “The Drover’s Wife” with its “heart-breaking depiction of bleakness and loneliness” is regarded as one of his finest short stories. It is regularly studied in schools and has often been adapted for film and theatre.

*All biographical details are taken from Wikipedia for education purposes only.

You may also like…

Shopping Cart
X