Table of Contents

The Marroon Magazine

No III, August 1866.

The Marroon Magazine was no light undertaking - this issue was 159 pages long, with numerous contributions by M.M.P (Matilda) and her daughter Rosa, the future novelist. Some note of contents:


Lizzie had four little dolls she loves so well
Edith and Amy, Jessie and Bell
They have four little servants their errands to go
Thomas and Matthew, William and Joe

A coach they have got with harness so neat
Fine horses and livery all complete
Saddles they have too, and habits so gay
No ladies in town so fine as they

She has made them gay dresses with trimmings of green
and bonnets and mantles fit for a queen
Such stylish young ladies you never would meet
As her four little dolls when drest for the street

A house they have got with mirrors so fine
And curtains and carpets quite divine
They've a tea service too, of crimson and white
And their friends to drink tea they often invite

She has a dear little brother who helps her to play
With her four little dolls on a rainy day
Some time he happens to pull out an eye
But he gives her his pence another to buy

Lizzie and Reddy are good children ever
Though not very bright, nor yet very clever
When Hervey and Hugh are making a noise
They quietly play with their dolls and their toys.

You may take pleasure in sailing
A horse for me with a pace like the wind
That leaves all my rivals far behind …

Number IV (September 1866)

This issue too is a lively and varied collection of the children's sketches and writing - particularly by Rosa - along with that of their mother. 'His Holiness the Pope' gets a further teasing reference to his return to Maroon, and his courting of a 'fair young mademoiselle' who lives at Kangaroo Point. If this was Florence Moor, the courtship had another 12 years to go before they married. This issue also noted a play the children performed to celebrate the 20th wedding anniversary of the 'Heads of this Family' - in this time of Victorian patriarchy, the plural ('Heads') is another indication that the family viewed women to be equal, at least within the family, to men.

New Series No. I May 1867

One poem cannot be read without awareness that Matilda would die the following year:
friends are gone, and mother tho art gone with my sister and my brother 'And I am left alone to mourn\ That dearest, holiest(?) best, my mother'. C.R. The poignancy of that sentiment is enforced by a poem Matilda contributed, to her eldest daughter (Rosa) on her 16th birthday. It ended, 'But ne'er shall fonder heart caress thee/ Than hers who now bids God to bless thee.'1)

Source: Praed papers, JOLQ, … Box 3. Need to check as going on old notes.

1)
Roderick, In Mortal Bondage, p.46.