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Many critics were indeed 'disgusted' by the horrors that Marcus Clarke revealed in His Natural Life. So powerful was his representation of the brutality of transportation that more than a century later historians still struggle to disentangle fact from Clarke's tragic fiction.
The novel charts the misfortunes of Richard Devine, falsely accused of murder, through the worst Australian penal settlements, the notorious Macquarie Harbour, Port Arthur, and Norfolk Island, retaining his humanity and spiritual dignity through all the degradations that cruelty and inhumanity could devise. Clarke's novel is indeed a phantasmagoria of horrors - of murder, mutiny, flogging, child-suicide, homosexual rape, and cannibalism; yet it is also a powerful story of moral courage and heroic resistance to dehumanization.
His Natural Life, usually published as For the Term of His Natural Life but here restored to the title Clarke gave it, is the grand epic of the transportation system, and has been described as the greatest nineteenth-century Australian novel.
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Published also under title: His natural life.
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- Created August 27, 2008
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August 17, 2010 | Edited by WorkBot | merge works |
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August 27, 2008 | Created by ImportBot | Imported from Western Washington University MARC record |