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Chapter 3 A BEGINNING AT SEVENTEEN

Word Count: 2210    |    Released on: 29/11/2017

been an unlucky speculator in foreign wheat, tempted thereto by the sliding scale, which varied from

. He took up unlucky people, whom other business men had drained. I suppose he caught at straws. He had the gentlest of manners-"the politest man in Melrose," the old shoemaker called him. My paternal grandfather was Dr. William Spence, of Melrose. His father was minister of the Established Church at Cockburn's Path, Berwickshire. His grandfather was a small landed proprietor, but he had to sell Spence's mains, and the name was changed to Chirnside. So (as my father used to say) he was sprung from the tail of the gentry; while my mother was descended from the head of the commonalty. The Brodies had been tenant farmers in East Lothian for six or seven generations, though they originally came from the north. My grandfather Brodie thought abrogation of the Corn Laws meant ruin for the farmers, who had taken 19 years' leases at war prices. But during the war times both landlords and farmers coined money, while the labourers had high prices for food and very little

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waiting till my father brought the key of the wooden house In Gilles street, in spite of the dignity of my 14 years just attained, I had a good cry. There had been such a drought that they had a dearth, almost a famine. People like ourselves with 80 acre land orders were frightened to attempt cultivation in an unknown climate, with seed wheat at 25/ a bushel or more, and stuck to the town. We lived a month in Gilles street, then we bought a large marquee, and pitched it on Brownhill Creek, above where Mitcham now stands, bought 15 cows and a pony and cart, and sold the milk in town

al representation at the option of the ratepayers. The twentieth part of the Adelaide ratepayers by uniting their votes upon one man instead of voting for 18, could on the day before the ordinary election appear and declare this their intention, and he would be a Councillor on their votes. In the first election, November, 1840, two s

xcept A. L. Elder, who had not been long established; and Murray & Greig came down too. Mr. Murray was a ready writer, and got work on The South Australian, the newspaper which supported Capt. Grey's policy of retrenchment and stoppage of public works; so, with a small salary, he managed to live. When I left Scotland I brought with me a letter of recommendation

. June

of the greatest ornaments of my school, best girl and the best scholar, and from the time you could put three letters together you have evinced a turn for teaching-so clear-headed and so patient, and so thoroughly upright in word and deed, and your knowledge of the Scriptures equal to that of many students of Divinity, so should you ever become a teacher you have nothi

mastered, and the Waverley novels down to "Quentin Durward" were well absorbed. I read in Chambers's Journal of daily governesses getting a shilling an hour, and I told my friend, Mrs. Haining, that I would go out for 6d. an hour. Although she disliked that way of putting it, it was really on that basis that I had made my beginning when I reached the age of 17. In the meantime I had taught my younger sister Mary (afterwards Mrs. W. J. Wren) all I knew, and in the columns of The South Australian I wrote an occasional letter or a few verses. Through Mr. George Tinline we made the acquaintance of Mrs. Samuel Stephens her brother, Thomas Hudson Beare, and his family, who had all come out in the Duke of York, and lived six months on Kangaroo Island before South Australia was proclaimed a British province. I have been mixed up so much with this family that it is often supposed that they were

y, and the shyness which, in spite of all her instructions and encouragement, I had felt with all strangers, disappeared when I felt independent. When a girl is very poor, and feels herself badly dressed, she cannot help being shy, especially if she has a good deal of Scotch pride. I think mother felt more sorry for me in those early days than for the others, because I was so ambitious, and took religious difficulties so hard. How old I fel

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Contents

An Autobiography
Chapter 1 EARLY LIFE IN SCOTLAND.
29/11/2017
An Autobiography
Chapter 2 TOWARDS AUSTRALIA.
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An Autobiography
Chapter 3 A BEGINNING AT SEVENTEEN
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An Autobiography
Chapter 4 LOVERS AND FRIENDS.
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An Autobiography
Chapter 5 NOVELS AND A POLITICAL INSPIRATION.
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An Autobiography
Chapter 6 A TRIP TO ENGLAND.
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An Autobiography
Chapter 7 MELROSE REVISITED.
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An Autobiography
Chapter 8 I VISIT EDINBURGH AND LONDON.
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An Autobiography
Chapter 9 MEETING WITH J. S. MILL AND GEORGE ELIOT.
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An Autobiography
Chapter 10 RETURN FROM THE OLD COUNTRY.
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An Autobiography
Chapter 11 WARDS OF THE STATE.
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An Autobiography
Chapter 12 PREACHING, FRIENDS, AND WRITING.
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An Autobiography
Chapter 13 MY WORK FOR EDUCATION.
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An Autobiography
Chapter 14 SPECULATION, CHARITY, AND A BOOK.
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An Autobiography
Chapter 15 JOURNALISM AND POLITICS.
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An Autobiography
Chapter 16 SORROW AND CHANGE.
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An Autobiography
Chapter 17 IMPRESSIONS OF AMERICA.
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An Autobiography
Chapter 18 BRITAIN, THE CONTINENT, AND HOME AGAIN.
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An Autobiography
Chapter 19 PROGRESS OF EFFECTIVE VOTING.
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An Autobiography
Chapter 20 WIDENING INTERESTS.
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An Autobiography
Chapter 21 PROPORTIONAL REPRESENTATION AND FEDERATION.
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An Autobiography
Chapter 22 A VISIT TO NEW SOUTH WALES.
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An Autobiography
Chapter 23 MORE PUBLIC WORK.
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An Autobiography
Chapter 24 THE EIGHTIETH MILESTONE AND THE END.
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