The Wasp and the Orchid

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The Wasp and the Orchid Page 35

by Danielle Clode


  Chapter 13: Come back in wattle time

  p333 ‘Once again war . . .’ from Edith Coleman (E.C.) 1941, ‘Wattle Time: The golden river – beauty and individuality’, The Age, 16 August, p15. pp335–336 This reconstruction is based largely on Edith Coleman (E.C.) 1942, ‘Gardens need not be ugly: Camouflage for trenches and shelters–new beds for succulents’, The Age, 7 March, p7 and comments in Edith Coleman, 1948, ‘Planning the herb garden’, Your Garden, 1, pp22–23. The use of trench shelters in Melbourne is from ‘Progress with Trench Shelters’, The Argus, 5 January 1942, p3, while the Tennyson quote is from Part V. Death and Bereavement of ‘The May Queen’. p337 ‘All the boys . . .’ Donald Macdonald, 1909, ‘Notes for Boys’, The Argus, 23 February, p5. For further discussion of the role of nature study in military preparedness, see Grant Rodwell, 1997, ‘Nature Enthusiasm, Social Planning and Eugenics in Australian State Schools, 1900–1920’, Journal of Educational Administration and History, 29, pp5–6. ‘Boys, in nature, . . .’ Tom Griffiths, 1989, ‘‘The natural history of Melbourne’: The culture of nature writing in Victoria, 1880–1945’, Australian Historical Studies, 23, p357. ‘I trod the . . .’ Eve Langley, 1942, The Pea Pickers (Angus and Robertson: Sydney) p169. p338 ‘a special appeal . . .’ Edith Coleman [E.C.] 1929. ‘Some social insects: A caterpillar company–defensive tactics’ The Age, 30 December, p10. ‘Had the early . . .’ Edith Coleman [E.C.] 1942. ‘Color from the herb garden: Dyeing with woad’, The Age, 20 June, p7. p339 ‘We are twelve . . .’ Edith Coleman [E.C.] 1940, ‘The Call for Flax: Opportunity for Hobby and Service – Garden Plots’, The Age, 6 July, p9. ‘The fine health . . .’ Edith Coleman [E.C.] 1943, ‘Greens for good health: War-time vitamins’, The Age, 11 September, p7. ‘Sunny Australia! There . . .’ Edith Coleman, 1943, Come back in wattle time: an illustrated handbook to our Australian wattles (Robertson and Mullens: Melbourne). p340 ‘a dashing suit . . .’ ‘Outre Costumes’, Woman’s Realm, The Australasian, 4 January 1930, p12. pp341–42 The anecdote and quotes about the Preston Distillery is from Kate Baker, 1942, pp20–22. pp343–345 ‘The cottage was . . .’ and ‘The four-roomed . . .’ and ‘The sight that . . .’ Ethel F. L. Richardson [Henry Handel Richardson] 1910/2013, The Getting of Wisdom (Australian Classics: Melbourne) pp202 and 204–205. ‘the only other . . .’ Jack Ritchie, 1966, ‘Back Beach – Blairgowrie (Konnya to the Divide)’, Blairgowrie: Some Blairgowrie History, http://rosevilleblairgowrie.blogspot. com.au/2009/11/back-beach-blairgowrie-koonya-to-divide.html [accessed 28.2.2017]. p345 ‘For sheer beauty . . .’ Edith Coleman, 1945, ‘Sea life at Sorrento’, Victorian Naturalist, 62, p87. ‘hidden bands of . . .’ from Acripeza reticulata Guerin-Meneville, 1838, ‘Species profile – biology’, Atlas of Living Australia, http://bie.ala.org.au/species/urn:lsid:biodiversity.org.au:afd.taxon:0cb8376f-3642-4221-8473-27a5cb1a2c2b [accessed 1.3.2017]. Edith Coleman, 1938. ‘New notes on the Australian Mountain Grasshopper (Acridopeza reticulata)’, Victorian Naturalist, 55, pp24–32. William E. Agar, 1939, ‘A Gynandromorph Grasshopper’, Proceedings of the Royal Society of Zoology A, 109, pp139–140. See also Edith Coleman, 1938, ‘Further notes on the Mountain Grasshopper Acridopeza reticulata Guerin’, 55, pp119–122. p347 ‘Foul whis’prings are . . .’ William Shakespeare, Macbeth, Act 5, scene 1. Edith Coleman [E.C.] 1942, ‘The cup that cheers: Substitutes from the herb garden–American women show the way’, The Age, 2 May, p7. p348 ‘Thorough general wanted . . .’ Casual Advertisements, Reporter (Box Hill) 27 October 1911, p7. p349 ‘I milked my . . .’ letter from Edith Coleman to Rica Sandilands, 25 February 1932, Rica Erickson Papers, SLWA. ‘We have never . . .’ and ‘It is Dorothy’s . . .’ and ‘I told you . . .’ letter from Edith Coleman to Rica Sandilands, 12 November 1931, SLWA. p350 ‘In order to . . .’ Edith Coleman, 1948, ‘Bird bogeys’, Victorian Naturalist, 65, p 137. Boletus portentosus is now known as Plebopus marginatus. p353 ‘It’s a plant . . .’ Kylie Tennant, 1941, The Battlers (Victor Gollancz: London) quoted in Alec H. Chisholm, 1964, Land of Wonder: The Best Australian Nature Writing (Angus and Robertson: Sydney) p76. ‘One might think . . .’ Edith Coleman, 1929, ‘Across the continent to Perth: Impression of colour and vast distances’, The Argus, 23 November, p10. ‘A weed is . . .’ Ralph Waldo Emerson, 1880, Fortune of the Republic: Lecture delivered at the Old South Church, 30 March 1878 (Houghton, Osgood and Co: Boston) p3. p354 ‘We are now . . .’ Ellen Clacy, 1853, A Lady’s visit to the Gold Diggings of Australia (Hurst and Blackett: London; reprinted by Sydney University Press, 2004) p27. ‘We rather like . . .’ Edith Coleman, 1928. ‘Blackburn bird notes’, Victorian Naturalist, 44, p299. ‘A plant is . . .’ Coleman, Edith [E.C.] 1940, ‘Plea for an alien weed: Teasel has a past and a future’, The Age, 17 August, p8. ‘gossamer of tenderest . . .’ Edith Coleman, 1930, ‘Wind in the willows: Nature’s Æolian harps’, The Argus, 14 June, p3. p357 ‘Every Australian would . . .’ Edith Coleman, Come back in wattle time. p359 The history of Avenues of Honour from ‘Honour Avenues’, Botanic Gardens and Parks Authority, http://www.bgpa.wa.gov.au/kings-park/visit/history/honour-avenues, last updated 17 November 2016 [accessed 22.2.2017]. p360 ‘I nurtured my . . .’ Mrs Matsuo wrote this poem to commemorate her son’s death in the midget submarine attack on Sydney Harbour on 31 May–1 June 1942. [This translation was provided by the Australia-Japan Research Project at the Australian War Memorial in Canberra] http://www.ww2australia.gov.au/underattack/ [accessed 6.6.17] pp361–362 Extract from Edith Coleman, 1930, ‘Flowers of the eucalypt: A source of national pride’, The Argus, 3 October, p4.

  Chapter 14: Winter visitors to a Blairgowrie cottage

  p363 ‘On the clear . . .’ from Edith Coleman, 1929, ‘A garden wilderness: Old fashioned favourites and familiar friends’, The Argus, 3 August, p3. p365 This reconstruction is based on the recollections of John and Peter Thomson. p366 ‘a slight deafness . . .’ Rica Erickson, ‘A thumbnail sketch of Edith Coleman, 1931–32’, FNCV archives [unpublished manuscript]. Heather Taylor Johnson, 2013, Pursuing Love and Death (Fourth Estate: Sydney) and Heather Taylor Johnson (ed) 2017, Shaping the Fractured Self: poetry of chronic illness and pain (University of Western Australia Publishing: Perth). p368 ‘long walks and . . .’ Edith Coleman to Editor, ‘Fauna and Flora Protection’, The Age, 5 August 1933, p6. pp368–369 ‘that I was . . .’ and ‘Here was the . . .’ Richard Jefferies, 1948, ‘The Season and the Stars’, The Old House at Coate (Harvard University Press: Cambridge) pp34–5. p371–373 All quotes from letters by Edith Coleman to Rica Sandilands. ‘At present I’m . . .’ 31 December 1931, ‘Please forgive pencil . . .’ 5 December 1931, ‘We are here . . .’, ‘We are camped . . .’ and ‘Just recently I . . .’ 7 January 1932, Rica Erickson Papers, SLWA. p373 ‘Mrs Edith Coleman’s . . .’ Victorian Naturalist, 1950, 67, p69. ‘The FNCV noted . . .’ James H. Willis, 1950, ‘First lady recipient of Natural History Medallion–Mrs. Edith Coleman’, Victorian Naturalist, 67, pp99–100. p374 J. Ros Garnet, 1950, ‘The Australian Natural History Medallion: A survey of the first decade’, Victorian Naturalist, 67, pp93–97. ‘Her own amazing . . .’ Willis, 1950, pp99–100. ‘An excellent supper . . .’ from the ‘August meeting minutes’ 1950, Victorian Naturalist, 67, p62. p377 Recent review of mimicry in Australia in Marie E. Herberstein, Heather J. Baldwin and Anne C. Gaskett, 2014, ‘Deception down under: is Australia a hot spot for deception?’ Behavioral Ecology, 25, pp12–16. ‘Here at my . . .’ Edith Coleman, 1949, ‘Menace of the Mistletoe’ Victorian Naturalist, 66, p24. p378 ‘In flowering times . . .’ Edith Coleman, 1950, ‘Planting Mistletoe seeds: Unorthodox methods’, Emu 50, p264. Details of Oakes Ames funeral in a letter from Albert F. Hill to Edith Coleman, 17 May 1950, John Thomson collection. ‘You are understanding . . .’ letter from Blanche Ames to Edith Coleman, 17 December 1950, John Thomson collection. ‘Last winter my . . .’ letter from Oakes Ames to Edith Coleman, 29 November 1948, John Thomson collection. p379 ‘The garden darkens . . .’ Dorothy Hewett, 1994, ‘The Last Peninsula: 5. The Garden Darkens’, Peninsula (Frema
ntle Arts Press: Fremantle). p380 ‘Just as this . . .’ Victorian Naturalist, 1951, 68, p26. pp380–381 ‘There is no . . .’ Jean Galbraith, 1951, ‘Edith Coleman: A personal appreciation’, Victorian Naturalist, 68, p46. p381 ‘I had a . . .’ H. Montague R. Rupp quoted in Lionel Gilbert, 1992, The Orchid Man: The life, work and memoirs of the Rev. H. M. R. Rupp, 1872–1956 (Kangaroo Press: Kenthurst) p99. ‘She will be . . .’ H. Montague R. Rupp, 1951, ‘In memorium– Edith Coleman’, Australian Orchid Review, December, p122. p382 Thomas S. Eliot, 1921, ‘Tradition and the individual poet’, The Sacred Wood: Essays on Poetry and Criticism (Alfred Knopf: New York) p44. ‘That her full . . .’ Mary Ann Evans [George Eliot] 1871/1985, Middlemarch (Penguin Classics: Harmondsworth) p896. p383 ‘We nature lovers . . .’ ‘The Blackbird’s Song is in her blood’, The Age, 15 April 1950, p5. pp385–386 by Edith Coleman, 1951, ‘Winter visitors to a Blairgowrie cottage’, Victorian Naturalist, 68, pp47–48.

  Epilogue

  p383 ‘Like most nature-lovers . . .’ from Edith Coleman, ‘Memorable Occurrences among Budgerigars.’ Victorian Naturalist, 1947, 64, p97. p390 ‘As I sit . . .’ Edith Coleman [E.C.] 1924, ‘Birds at Blackburn’, The Age, 29 March, p26.

  Index of names

  Ackermann, Jessie 324

  Agar, Wilfred 314, 315, 345, 347

  Allen, Grant 258, 259

  Alliston, Eleanor 100, 101

  Ames, Blanche 100, 195, 378

  Ames, Oakes 100, 166, 194–197, 378

  Anderson, James W. 64, 77, 78

  Arnold, Mavis 160

  Babbage, Charles 314

  Bacon, Francis 34–36, 245

  Baden-Powell, Robert 312, 336

  Bailey, Liberty Hyde 73

  Baker, Kate 31, 72, 198, 222, 224, 229, 240, 246, 303–307, 341

  Banfield, Edward 100

  Banfield, Bertha 100

  Barak, William 272

  Barnard, Francis G. 166

  Barrett, Charles 304, 405n

  Barrie, James M. 20, 132, 248, 371

  Bass, George 385

  Bateman, W. H. 21, 22

  Battarbee, Rex 285

  Bazerman, Charles 253

  Beebe, William 261

  Bell, Diane 276

  Bellamy, Edward 105, 248

  Blackmore, Richard 247

  Bouverie, Frances Charlotte 22

  Bright, Anna-Maria 50

  Browning, Robert 149, 167, 246

  Bryan, Margaret 313

  Bryant, Mrs E. 212, 223, 230

  Buell, Lawrence 321, 322, 324

  Burns, Robert 247

  Cambridge, Ada 53, 82, 307

  de Candolle, Augustin 313

  Cannon, Michael 56

  Chase, Athol 276

  Chisholm, Alexander Hugh (Alec) 125, 166, 175, 243, 308, 322, 374

  Church, Fran 224

  Clacy, Ellen 354

  Coleman, Dorothy xi, 5, 22, 94, 96, 102, 117, 121, 127–133 passim, 136, 137, 146, 148, 159, 160, 180, 210, 211, 221, 225, 237, 238, 269–271, 283–289, 292–295, 311, 316–318, 320, 325, 326, 335, 341–343, 345, 349, 350, 368, 370–374, 375, 376, 379, 381

  Coleman, Gladys xi, 5, 27, 94, 96, 107, 117, 121, 129, 130, 132, 133, 136, 137, 146, 148, 159, 160, 210, 269, 270, 275–283, 290, 311, 316, 317, 320, 325, 326, 328, 367, 370

  Coleman, James xi, 4, 84, 91–93, 94, 96–102, 104, 106–109, 120, 121, 125, 127, 146, 155, 157, 210, 211, 303, 304, 318, 335, 336, 341, 343, 349, 371, 372

  Comstock, Anna 147

  Conrad, Joseph 247

  Correvon, Henry 183, 184, 191

  Crisp, Louise 256

  Croll, Bob 271, 283

  Cronon, William 308

  Crosbie Morrison, Philip 166, 374

  Cross, Agnes 132, 133

  Darwin, Charles 5, 181, 182, 185, 187, 197, 258, 316

  Davis, Lizzie 272

  Dawson, John 74

  Day, Syd 92, 99, 101

  Deamer, Dulcie 129

  Dennis, Clarence M. J. S. (C. J.) 247, 307

  Dickens, Charles 20, 53, 66

  Dillard, Annie 100, 308

  Dodgson, Charles (Lewis Carroll) 20, 31, 32

  Donnelly, Hannah 273

  Double, Susan 187

  Drake-Brockman, Henrietta 285

  Duncan, Roy 305

  Durack, Elizabeth 289

  Eaves, Ethel 161, 176

  Evans, Mary Anne (George Eliot) 382

  Eliot, Thomas Stearns (T. S.) 382

  Emerson, Ralph Waldo 15, 30, 238, 245, 248, 321, 323, 353, 371

  Edmunds, George 26

  Edmunds, Maria Kaye 26

  Edmunds, Richard 26

  Endersby, Jim 258

  Erickson, Dorothy 226

  Erickson, Rica (Rica Sandilands) 10, 31, 53, 129, 166, 212, 213, 216, 217, 224–226, 228, 240, 278, 279, 349, 350, 371

  Ewart, Alfred 160, 314, 326

  Exeter, Frank 70

  Faraday, Michael 253, 313

  Fenton, Elizabeth 50, 51

  Foster, Alfred 307

  Franklin, Stella Miles (Miles) 303–306, 308

  Fraser, John 48–49

  Furphy, Joseph 31, 303–307

  Galbraith, Jean 7, 10, 79, 81, 147, 159, 166, 380, 381

  Galsworthy, John 247

  Gamble, William M. 68–70, 84

  Goadby, Bede Theodore 100, 178, 212, 213, 216

  Goadby, Mary Emma 100, 212, 213, 216

  Godfery, Hilda 183

  Godfery, Masters Johnson 182–187, 191, 194–197, 217

  Gordon, Adam Lindsay 247

  Green, T. G. 161

  Griffiths, Tom 337

  Guerin, Bella 155, 158

  Gunn, Jeannie 287, 288, Harms, Annie Maria x, 20, 33, 45,

  Harms, George Edmunds xi, 19, 20, 22, 32–34, 43–46, 51, 53, 67, 69, 349

  Harms, Harriett x, 19–21, 28, 32, 33, 36, 44, 45, 53

  Harms, Harry x, 20, 22, 28, 29, 31, 32, 33, 44, 45, 53, 54, 70, 94, 121, 133, 134, 216, 220

  Harms, Henry x, 22, 24–26, 28, 30–32, 33, 36, 44, 48, 49, 67, 75, 94, 121, 133, 134, 158, 216, 220

  Harms, Hervey Arthur xi, 19, 20, 32, 33, 44, 45, 216, 220

  Harms, Ivo 22, 53, 94, 216

  Harms, Lottie (Charlotte Bowman) x, 20, 28, 33, 45, 70, 401n

  Harms, Lottie (Charlotte Sarah Edmunds) xi, 20, 24, 26, 28, 33, 45, 94, 133, 134

  Harms, Peter x, 22, 242

  Hazlitt, William 168, 247

  Henry, Alice 307

  Hewett, Dorothy 379

  Hill, Ernestine 285

  Holmes, Oliver Wendell 247, 383

  Hood, Thomas 28

  Horner, Mary 316

  Huxley, Aldous 244, 253

  Huxley, Thomas Henry 258

  Johnson, Heather Taylor 366–368

  Kennedy, Flo 276

  Kingsley, Henry 53

  Kipling, Rudyard 55, 125, 246, 247

  Lamb, Charles 53, 247

  Lamott, Anne 249

  Langley, Eve 337

  Laplace, Pierre-Simon 185

  Lawson, Henry 305

  Lea, Arthur 185, 190, 192, 193

  Lindsay family 269, 283, 307

  Long, Charles 64, 71

  Lovelace, Ada 314

  Lyell, Charles 316

  James, Harry 92, 101, 104

  Jefferies, Richard 30, 43, 147, 245, 246, 248, 368, 369, 371

  Mack, Amy 130, 226, 227

  Maeterlinck, Maurice 247

  Marcet, Jane 313

  Mason, Mary Anne 82

  Mauk, Catherine 274, 275

  McCubbin, Frederick 117, 118, 120

  Macdonald, Donald 100, 135, 136, 166, 311, 312, 336–338

  McLennan, Ethel 132, 314, 315

  Menzies, Margaret 51

  Meyer, Lois 283, 284

  Mickle, Alan 95

 

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