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About GordonIt was a
cold winter's morning in June 1870 when a despondent Adam Lindsay Gordon sat
on the Brighton Beach foreshore contemplating his circumstances. Depressed
and penniless, he needed help. But these were the days when a man down on
his luck could not turn to the Salvos or ring Lifeline. Just kindness and
courage. With Gordon that morning were some private letters, his clay pipe,
some tobacco and the lucky shilling he had when as a wild youth of
His
father, Adam Durnford Gordon ( Gordon
was amongst the first intake of pupils to Cheltenham College where he spent
only a year and then on to Dumbleton Rectory, a boarding and fighting school
and later to Shooter's Hill to prepare for the military. In 1848, he joined
the Woolwich Royal Military Academy and was removed from there in June
A cousin
of Lindsay, R. G. Gordon, had entered the Grammar School in December,
Gordon
was described as "tall, very slight, very handsome, with curling dark
chestnut hair, and used to dress in very horsey style". In spite of his
poetic after-fame, he evidently had the disposition for a life of adventure.
His time at Worcester, though brief, was marked by a typical episode, which
occurred very shortly after his arrival in the city. At a
Steeplechase Meeting at Crowle in May
As all avenues for Lindsay's advancement according to his father's wishes had now failed, in desperation, Durnford looked to Australia. A country which had graduated from its convict past to that of a prosperous colony where gold had been discovered. He wrote to the Governor of South Australia, Sir Henry Young and arranged passage for Lindsay to sail to Adelaide. Before he
left Worcester, Gordon had fallen in love with a Worcester girl, Jane
Bridges, the daughter of a substantial farmer of St. John's and Broughton
Hackett. Like Gordon himself, she was passionately fond of horses. She was
a beautiful and popular girl, and Gordon's rather highly-strung nature
deterred him from an open profession of his love. She encouraged his poetic
gift and became his chief "poetic audience". When the time arrived for his
departure to Australia, Gordon at last revealed his true feelings. She had
but to ask him to stay, he protested, and he would resign his commission.
But the girl's affections were now engaged in another quarter, and after a
dramatic farewell, Gordon departed mortified and sick at heart. He has left
a record of this last meeting in To My Sister written on 4 August
I loved a girl not long ago, And, till my suit was told, I thought her breast as fair as snow, 'Twas very near as cold ; And yet I spoke with feelings more Of recklessness than pain, Those words I never spoke before, Nor never shall again. When the barque Julia docked at Port Adelaide on 14 November 1853, there was a remarkable change in Lindsay from the wild youth who departed Gravesend in August. He neither sulked nor rebelled, but accepted his fate and got on with his life, intending to go back home in a few years. Durnford had secured Lindsay an appointment in the South Australian Mounted Police as an officer. It little appealed to Gordon who wanted to start afresh, unimpeded by social class. So instead, he enlisted as a trooper which suited his adventurous spirit. After a short period at the Thebarton barracks in Adelaide, Gordon was stationed in Mount Gambier where he met William Trainor, at the time a circus clown whom Gordon had mistakenly arrested as being drunk. Billy was to be Gordon's life-long friend. So dedicated was Trainor that he purchased the adjoining gravesite and even named his son Adam Lindsay Gordon Trainor. All the experiences that Gordon encountered in the South East of South Australia were completely foreign to him. The landscape, flora and fauna and the weather with hot dry summers and clear starry nights. Also the nearby ocean fascinated him. I would that with sleepy, soft embraces The sea would fold me—would find me rest In luminous shades of her secret places, In depths where her marvels are manifest ; So the earth beneath her should not discover My hidden couch-nor the heaven above her— As a strong love shielding a weary lover, I would have her shield me with shining breast. He was a literary genius and he set down all his sights, sounds, and feelings into the form of poetry. Mostly with a pencil whilst horse riding from station to station. But Gordon was also his own harshest critic, discarding entire poems at whim when a single word exasperated him. In
accordance with his restless nature, in November
In 1859, Gordon's mother died and two years later, Gordon received £6,944 which he used to purchase land in Mount Gambier. If Gordon was reckless on a horse, he was equally careless with money. Ten years later he was broke. In early
1862, he had a bad fall from one of his horses at a race meeting in Robe and
was taken to the Caledonian Hotel to recover. There he met Maggie
Park who nursed him back to health and they were married later that year in
Mount Gambier. In March 1864, they purchased Dingley Dell near Port
MacDonnell as a holiday house. The home is, today a tourist attraction with
a vast collection of Gordon relics. It was in July of 1864 when Lindsay
made his famous leap over a post and rail fence surrounding the Blue Lake on
to a narrow edge narrowly averting a fall of over
His first
book of poetry The Feud based on a set of illustrated plates of an
old Scottish Border ballad in the Mount Gambier Hotel was published
in 1864. Now a man of leisure, his life was monotonous. Urged by his
friends, Gordon was elected to represent the district in the
South
Australian Parliament. On polling day, 6 March 1865, the Poet not only
topped the poll, but also brought down the Blyth government by defeating the
influential sitting member, the Attorney-General Randolph Stow. As a
parliamentarian, his semi-classical speeches were colourful and entertaining
but largely irrelevant. Two years was all that he could stand in
Parliament, resigning in November
Gordon's time in politics stimulated him to greater activity – poetry, horse racing and speculation. He formed a partnership to farm sheep in Western Australia, through Bunbury to the Manjimup area, chartering a sailing ship with over 4,800 Corriedale sheep. Many died on the voyage and only a few hundred survived. Nor did it help that the land at Manjimup was heavily wooded country and unsuitable. He returned to Robe, and his wife gave birth to a daughter, Annie. They moved to Ballarat and took up a livery stable behind Craig's Hotel. Fire destroyed the livery stables, and his daughter Annie died, both within a month of each other. He had many falls from horses with many broken bones and the only cure was rest. Gordon was generous with most things that he did to the point of recklessness. He was expecting to inherit a Scottish estate, Esslemont, and he was kept going because of this knowledge. They moved to Melbourne and Gordon was by then desperate for money and rode in steeplechases, winning three races in one day at Flemington. He had to sell his favourite horse, and then news came through from England that Esslemont in Scotland would not be his. Through most of his time in Australia Gordon was never off a horse. He suffered from severe short-sightedness and confessed that everything beyond the horse's ears was mist and blur. But that didn't stop him from becoming Australia's champion amateur steeplechase jockey. Which is all the more remarkable given Gordon was tall (190.5 cm) and lean. In all of
his
The deep blue skies wax dusky, and the tall green trees grow dim, The sward beneath me seems to heave and fall ; And sickly, smoky shadows through the sleepy sunlight swim, And on the very sun's face weave their pall. Let me slumber in the hollow where the wattle blossoms wave, With never stone or rail to fence my bed ; Should the sturdy station children pull the bush flowers on my grave, I may chance to hear them romping overhead. After his death, Gordon's popularity grew to the point where thousands would attend his grave in the Brighton General Cemetery each year. Most children learnt about him in the school readers up to about the start of the Second World War. Since then his popularity has waned to the extent now that most people of a younger age have never heard of Gordon, even though he has a Tablet and Bust in the Poet's Corner of Westminster Abbey, unveiled in 1934 by the Duke of York. The aim of The Adam Lindsay Gordon Commemorative Committee Inc. is to promote the knowledge of the poet and to raise enough money to restore the monument over his grave in the Brighton General Cemetery, which has fallen into a state of neglect. References:- Follett, F., "A History of the Royal Worcester Grammar School" (1951) Day, L., "Gordon of Dingley Dell. The life of Adam Lindsay Gordon (1833-1870)" (2003) Hutton, G., "Adam Lindsay Gordon. The man and the myth" (1996) Humphris, E & Sladen, D., "Adam Lindsay Gordon and his friends in England and Australia" (1912). |