The Chosen Vessel

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"The Chosen Vessel"
Short story by Barbara Baynton
CountryAustralia
LanguageEnglish
Genre(s)Drama
Publication
Published inThe Bulletin
Media typeprint (magazine)
Publication date12 December 1896

"The Chosen Vessel" is a dramatic short story by the Australian writer Barbara Baynton, first published in The Bulletin on 12 December 1896. It recounts the story of an outback woman left alone with her baby in a bush hut as she awaits attack by a swagman who has called there during the day.[1]

"The Chosen Vessel" originally appeared under the title "The Tramp". It was subsequently published in the author's 1902 collection Bush Studies, under the preferred title and with some previously excised scenes restored.[2]

Plot summary

The woman hears a horse on the road and flees the house looking for assistance. But the horseman, a young catholic passing through the district, thinks the white-robed figure is a vision from God, and rides off in terror. The woman is later attacked by the swagman and murdered.[1]

Analysis

  • The Brisbane Courier stated that the story came "to paint the backblocks in the colours of hell. Compare this horrible nightmare with Lawson's '"The Drover's Wife," and you will realise the difference between the relentless, the strained, and the terrible, and that which is human."[3]
  • The Oxford Companion to Australian Literature noted that the story is "reminiscent of Henry Lawson's "The Drover's Wife"."[1]

Further publications

  • Australian Short Stories edited by George Mackaness (1928)
  • Australian Round-Up : Stories From 1790 to 1950 edited by Colin Roderick (1953)
  • It Could Be You edited by Hal Porter (1972)
  • The Old Bulletin Reader : The Best Stories from The Bulletin 1881-1901 (1973)
  • Australian Horror Stories edited by Bill Wannan (1983)
  • Macquarie PEN Anthology of Australian Literature edited by Nicholas Jose, Kerryn Goldsworthy, Anita Heiss, David McCooey, Peter Minter, Nicole Moore and Elizabeth Webby (2009)
  • Macabre : A Journey Through Australia's Darkest Fears edited by Angela Challis and Marty Young (2010)

Critical reception

Early reviews of the collection Bush Studies were not kind. The Clarence and Richmond Examiner stated, "If Barbara Baynton's manuscript had got into the hands of Colonial editors the expression would never have been allowed to appear in print; but being dealt with by Englishmen, who are not expected to be versed in Australian bush etymology, it has been allowed to pass." They concluded that the stories were "superfluous exaggerations and misconceived ideas of youthful inexperience".[4]

The Australian Town and Country Journal went further by stating, "It seems a pity that a writer with Barbara Baynton's keen observation, incisive pen, and dramatic sense, should not turn her powers to better account than she has done in Bush Studies", later referring to the stories as "harrowing" and "mercilessly tragic".[5]

External links

  • "Inside the Deserted Hut: The Representation of Motherhood in Bush Mythology" by Sue Rowley [1]
  • "Barbara Baynton: An Australian Jocasta" by Joan Kirkby [2]
  • "Reading Rape in Colonial Australia: Barbara Baynton's "The Tramp", The Bulletin and Cultural Criticism" by Nina Philadelphoff-Puren [3]
  • "No Place for a woman? Barbara Baynton's Bush Studies" [4]

References