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MURPHY, EDWIN GREENSLADE (1867-1939), journalist and poet,
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was the eldest son of E. Murphy, and was born at Castlemaine in or about the
year 1867. He was educated at a state school at South Melbourne and began to
earn his living at an early age. As he grew up he developed a good tenor voice,
and joining the J. C.
Williamson (q.v.) Opera Company, sang in the chorus and toured with it for
two or three years. Following the gold rush of 1892 Murphy went to Western
Australia and was sufficiently successful to be able to take two trips to
Europe. While on the goldfields he had begun writing verse for the press, and
about 1900 joined the staff of the Perth Sunday Times, to which he
contributed a column "Verse and Worse" for nearly 40 years. In 1904 he published
a novel, Sweet Boronia: A Story of Coolgardie, which was followed in 1908
by a selection of his verses, Jarrahland Jingles. A further selection,
Dryblowers Verses, was published in 1924. He died at Perth after an
illness of some months on 9 March 1939. His wife survived him with three sons.
Murphy wrote an enormous amount of verse which he probably made little
attempt to polish. It was inevitable that many of his poems should be little
more than jingles, as is suggested in the title of his first volume. But at his
best he was a good popular poet, and the verses he wrote when his son enlisted
during the 1914 war, "My Son", succeed in expressing the mingled pride and
anguish of the occasion, where a finer poet might have failed. Privately, Murphy
was a born joker, a first-rate teller of stories, a lover of his fellow men. In
his newspaper column he fought for many a popular cause, and his humour and
kindly satire made him the best-known and best-loved journalist of his time in
Western Australia.
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