Skip to content

[MANUSCRIPT] Unpublished poem about a bushfire suicide, composed by an amateur Brisbane poet. Dated December 1861.

[MANUSCRIPT] Unpublished poem about a bushfire suicide, composed by an amateur Brisbane poet. Dated December 1861.

Click for full-size.

[MANUSCRIPT] Unpublished poem about a bushfire suicide, composed by an amateur Brisbane poet. Dated December 1861.

by MEE, Samuel Gill

  • Used
  • Signed
Condition
See description
Seller
Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Armadale, Victoria, Australia
Item Price
$627.86
Or just $614.64 with a
Bibliophiles Club Membership
$33.04 Shipping to USA
Standard delivery: 10 to 35 days

More Shipping Options

Payment Methods Accepted

  • Visa
  • Mastercard
  • American Express
  • Discover
  • PayPal

About This Item

Manuscript in ink on blue paper (245 x 195 mm), an untitled poem of 7 quatrains (4-line stanzas), with an extensive explanatory footnote; signed and dated at bottom margin in the same hand 'Brisbane, December 2nd 1861 / Samuel Gill Mee'; verso with newspaper cuttings from 1861, suggesting that the sheet was removed from a commonplace book at some point; well preserved and legible. The author of this unpublished manuscript poem - which is of an exceptionally early date for Brisbane or, indeed, Queensland - was Samuel Gill Mee, a compositor who from the late 1850s until his death in 1909 worked on the first three incarnations of Brisbane's most famous newpspaper: the Moreton Bay Courier, The Courier, and the Brisbane Courier. The opening quatrain reads: 'In a fierce flaming desert wild-laughing, and leaping / Into its hell with demoniac groans; / And his murderer sleeping while wild dogs are keeping / Carnival over his body and bones!' Mee's footnote, referring to these opening lines, reads: 'This is no imagination! Not a great distance from whence these lines are dated, a poor victim of delirium tremens leapt into a bush fire, and perished. He was the father of a family and its mother came looking for him! This case was known to the author, but (scarily like many others) was never chronicled! Bush taverns are rare friends to the native dogs! They save the Registrar of Deaths many a page; and deserts - like dead men - ""tell no tales"".' The poem was written prior to Mee's marriage to Catherine Mackay, which took place in Brisbane at the Fortitude Valley residence of Presbyterian minister Rev. James Love on 1 December 1862. The following obituary for Mee, accompanied by his portrait, was published in the Brisbane Courier, 11 November 1909: 'Late Mr. S. G. Mee, considered to be the oldest working compositor, who had at the time of his death completed within a few months his fifty years' service with the ""Courier."" The funeral of Mr. S. G. Mee, who for nearly 50 years was employed in the composing room of the Brisbane Newspaper Company, took place at Toowong yesterday afternoon, and was attended by many of his fellow craftsmen. At the graveside Mr. S. W. Brooks, an old and valued friend of Mr. Mee's eulogised the nobility of character and the sterling worth of the grand old comp. A number of beautiful wreaths were tenderly placed upon his grave, and included those from Mrs. S. G. Mee (widow of the deceased), the Directors of the Brisbane Newspaper Company, Limited, his fellow workers in the composing room of the Brisbane Newspaper Company, his friends on the literary staffs of the ""Courier,"" ""Observer,"" and ""Queenslander,"" Mr. and Mrs. Steinthal and family, Mr and Mrs. Ryan and family, Mr. and Mrs. Brant, Mr. Cumming and family, the members of the Queensland Typographical Association, ... and others ... The hall mark of Mr Mee's life (writes a correspondent who has been privileged to call him friend for a period of nearly 50 years) was character. While he had a deep feeling of reverence for everything that was good and true, and which tended to elevate the human mind, his nature detested all sham. He was an earnest seeker after truth, but quite apart from tradition, sect, dogma or theory and often a radiant illumination of mind and heart came to him, so grand sometimes as to be almost overwhelming in its beauty. Truly, as Emerson says, ""every book, even proverb, even byword that is meant for guidance or for comfort will come home to thee through open and winding passages."" Although poor in this world's goods. Mr Mee was rich in intellectual qualities, and his mind and his memory were embellished with some of the richest gems in the English classics. His life was happy and contented, and as peaceful as the drift of a barge with the tide. Indeed, he used to say that in his daily life he was realising to the utmost the beautiful lines of the late James Brunton Stephens in his ""Convict Once"" :- ""Pleasantly almost too pleasantly, blendeth today with tomorrow ; Hours are as moments - a twinkle of white wings, and lo ! they are gone. Day bringest work without bondage, and night bringeth dreams without sorrow. Pleasantly almost too pleasantly, life is meandering on."" His fellow workers keenly regret his passing, but they have the heritage of a beautiful life to guide them through the future years.'

Details

Bookseller
Douglas Stewart Fine Books AU (AU)
Bookseller's Inventory #
20266
Title
[MANUSCRIPT] Unpublished poem about a bushfire suicide, composed by an amateur Brisbane poet. Dated December 1861.
Author
MEE, Samuel Gill
Book Condition
Used
Quantity Available
1

Terms of Sale

Douglas Stewart Fine Books

30 day return guarantee, with full refund including original shipping costs for up to 30 days after delivery if an item arrives misdescribed or damaged.

About the Seller

Douglas Stewart Fine Books

Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Biblio member since 2022
Armadale, Victoria

About Douglas Stewart Fine Books

Douglas Stewart Fine Books is an antiquarian bookseller based in Melbourne, Australia. We buy and sell books both locally and around the world, working closely with clients to understand their collecting priorities and to source appropriate material. Our clients include libraries, galleries, museums, private collectors and fellow members of the trade.

Douglas began buying and selling books in 1995, while still in high school. He is a member of the major international trade associations, and his business is conducted according to their high ethical standards. For many years Douglas has been a Board member of the Australian and New Zealand Association of Antiquarian Booksellers (ANZAAB); he is also a Mentor for the International League of Antiquarian Booksellers.

Douglas is currently the President of ANZAAB.

Our stock at Douglas Stewart Fine Books is diverse: we have rare books across all fields, but our strengths are in travel and exploration – particularly of Australia and the Pacific – and Australian art. In addition to rare books, we deal in all types of heritage material, including photographs, manuscripts, maps and globes, and fine art. Every month we issue a new online catalogue of New Acquisitions, and recommend that you join our email list to be the first to see what's available. Please do not hesitate to contact us regarding any works you see online – we are always happy to assist with your enquiries.

We love meeting new people and welcome visitors to our shop, which is open six days a week. If you cannot make it to Melbourne, you can find us at major fairs in London, New York, Los Angeles, Amsterdam, Toronto, San Francisco, Boston, Hong Kong or Sydney. We're pleased to invite you to any of these exhibitions as our guest.

Last, but not least, we buy books – from important single items to entire libraries – and we'd be pleased to provide advice on the best way to sell your collection.

Douglas Stewart Fine Books

Glossary

Some terminology that may be used in this description includes:

Poor
A book with significant wear and faults. A poor condition book is still a reading copy with the full text still readable. Any...
Verso
The page bound on the left side of a book, opposite to the recto page.
G
Good describes the average used and worn book that has all pages or leaves present. Any defects must be noted. (as defined by AB...

This Book’s Categories

tracking-