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ROBERTS, MORLEY (1857-1942), novelist and miscellaneous
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son of H. Roberts, a superintending inspector of income tax, was born at
London on 29 December 1857, and was educated at Bedford school, and Owens
College, Manchester. Towards the end of 1876 he took a steerage passage to
Australia and landed at Melbourne in January 1877. The next three years were
spent in obtaining colonial experience, mostly on sheep stations in New South
Wales, and Roberts then returned to London. For a time he worked in the war
office and other government departments, but again went on his travels and had
varied occupations in the United States and Canada between 1884 and 1886. He
subsequently travelled in the South Seas, Australia, South Africa, and many
other parts of the world. He used his experiences freely in his books, the first
of which, The Western Avernus, appeared in 1887 and in 1890 he began his
long series of novels and short stories. Of his novels, Rachel Marr,
published in 1903 was highly praised by W. H. Hudson, and The Private Life of
Henry Maitland, based on the life of George Gissing the novelist, was
possibly his best known book. Roberts also wrote essays, biography, drama and
verse, and did some competent work in biology. He married Alice, daughter of A.
R. Selous, and died in London in his 85th year on 8 June 1942.
Roberts was a voluminous and able writer, about 80 of his books are recorded
in Miller's Australian Literature. He was only a comparatively short time
in Australia, but there are many Australian references both in his novels and
his short stories.
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