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BRERETON, JOHN LE GAY (1871-1933), scholar and poet,
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was born at Sydney on 2 September 1871. His father, John Le Gay Brereton
(1827-1886), was a well-known Sydney physician who published five volumes of
verse between 1857 and 1887. The younger Brereton was educated at Sydney Grammar
School and at the university of Sydney, where he graduated B.A. in 1894. He was
in the office of the government statistician for some years, but in 1902 was
appointed assistant librarian at the university of Sydney, and librarian a few
years later. He published in 1896 Perdita, A Sonnet Record, and The
Song of Brotherhood and Other Verses. These were followed in 1897 by
Sweetheart Mine: Lyrics of Love and Friendship and by Landlopers
in 1899, mostly prose, based on a walking tour with Dowell
O'Reilly (q.v.). The verse in Brereton's earlier volumes though pleasant
enough was not very distinguished, but Sea and Sky, which appeared in
1908, contained stronger work. In 1909 his volume Elizabethan Drama Notes and
Studies proclaimed him a scholar of unusual ability and knowledge, and his
studies in this period stimulated him to write his one-act play in blank verse
Tomorrow A Dramatic Sketch of the Character and Environment of Robert
Greene. This is possibly the best Australian poetical play of its period,
and has the merit belonging to comparatively few Australian plays that it is
actable. The war of 1914-18 led to a slender volume of verse published in 1919.
The Burning Marl, dedicated to "All who have fought nobly". In 1921 he
was appointed professor of English literature at the university of Sydney. A
volume of poems, Swags Up, appeared in 1928, and in 1930 a collection of
his prose articles and stories was published under the title of Knocking
Round. The sketches of Henry
Lawson (q.v.) and Dowell O'Reilly are of particular interest. His edition of
Lust's Dominion or the Lascivious Queen was published at Louvain in 1931.
It was in the press in 1914 and it was long supposed that the book had perished
during the destruction of Louvain. So Long, Mick! a short one-act play in
prose, was also published in 1931. Brereton died suddenly on 2 February 1933. He
married in 1900 Winifred Odd, who survived him with a daughter and four sons.
Brereton was tall and angular, with the complexion of a man who always went
hatless and lived much in the open air. He was inclined to be a mystic and had a
beautiful simplicity of character. As an Elizabethan scholar his only rival in
Australia was E. H. C.
Oliphant (q.v.). His prose work was interesting and sensitive, and the best
of his verse gives him an assured place among Australian poets. He was entirely
unselfish and did much for Lawson when he was most in need of friends. His
kindness, indeed, was extended to all with whom he came in contact. The number
of budding authors who sent him rnanuscripts must have run into hundreds, and if
there were but a gleam of talent, the writer could be sure of appreciation and
helpful criticism.
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