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Der Sydney Writers Walk ist ein Fussweg am Circular Quay in Sydney New South Wales Australien auf dem 60 kreisformige Metalltafeln zu Ehren von Schriftstellern eingebettet sind Plakette mit der Widmung fur den Sydney Writers Walk vom 13 Februar 1991Sydney Writers Walk am Museum of Contemporary Art mit der Sydney Harbour Bridge im Hintergrund Im Jahr 1991 wurden vom Kunstministerium des australischen Bundesstaates New South Wales auf einem Fussweg zwischen dem Kreuzfahrtterminal und dem Sydney Opera House 49 Metallplaketten angebracht um das Leben und Werk bekannter australischer Schriftsteller sowie namhafter auslandischer Autoren wie D H Lawrence Joseph Conrad und Mark Twain die in Australien lebten oder Australien besuchten zu ehren 1 Auf jeder Plakette kann man Zitate aus einem bedeutenden Werk und einige biografische Informationen uber den Schriftsteller lesen Im Jahr 2011 wurde der Sydney Writers Walk erweitert und elf weitere Plaketten hinzugefugt 2 Einige der biografischen Informationen auf den Metallplaketten sind nicht mehr aktuell Es wurde bisher versaumt bei zwischenzeitlich verstorbenen Schriftstellern das Sterbejahr auf der Plakette zu erganzen 3 Liste der geehrten Schriftsteller BearbeitenMit einem Sternchen gekennzeichnete Schriftsteller wurden 2011 hinzugefugt 2 Plakette Autor Lebensdaten Zitat Werk nbsp Jessica Anderson 1916 2010 In Sydney I became conscious for the first time of the points of the compass and felt for the first time the airs of three other climates borne onto my skin by the three prevailing winds Tirra Lirra by the River 1978 nbsp Thea Astley 1925 2004 Queensland isn t the home of the tall yarn It s where the tall yarn happens acted out on a stage where despite its vastness the oddballs see and recognise each other across the no miles and wave their understanding Being a Queenslander 1976 nbsp Faith Bandler 1918 2015 The blueness of the sky folded into the sea and it was never ending It was always like this Everything was eternal The moons came and went and came again The sun came every day When the dark thick clouds which brought the rain covered the sun there was no need to think about them even to notice them because the sun would come again Wacvie 1977 nbsp C E W Bean 1879 1968 Australia is a big blank map and the whole people is constantly sitting over it like a committee trying to work out the best way to fill it in The Dreadnought of the Darling 1911 nbsp Christopher Brennan 1870 1932 I know I am the wanderer of the ways of all the worlds to whom the sunshine and the rain are one and one to stay or hasten because he knows no ending of the way no home no goal The Wanderer 1913 nbsp Peter Carey 1943 glass is a thing in disguise an actor is not solid at all but a liquid and while it is as frail as the ice on a Parramatta puddle it is stronger under compression than Sydney sandstone it is invisible solid a joyous and paradoxical thing Oscar and Lucinda 1988 nbsp Marcus Clarke 1846 1881 All the wealth in the world could not purchase the self respect which had been cut out of him by the lash or banish from his brain the memory of his degradation For the Term of His Natural Life 1874 nbsp Manning Clark 1915 1991 The proposals for the use of a southern continent had a history almost as long though by no means so distinguished as the history of its discovery Some saw it as land dedicated to the Holy Spirit some saw it as a land fit only for the refuse of society A History of Australia Volume 1 1962 nbsp Joseph Conrad 1857 1924 Sydney Harbour one of the finest most beautiful vast and safe bays the sun had ever shone upon Mirror of the Sea 1906 nbsp Peter Corris 1942 2018 The sun was going down as I stop started along in the lane for drivers who didn t have the right money to pay the toll The sky was clear and the water turned red gold The ferries and sailing ships seemed to be skating across a sheet of beaten bronze Wet Graves 1981 nbsp Dymphna Cusack 1902 1981 Around them the jacaranda broke in a purplish shower motionless airy and unreal as though all the bright morning was caught up in a fragile net of blossom Jungerau 1936 nbsp Eleanor Dark 1901 1985 Silence ruled this land Out of silence mystery comes and magic and the delicate awareness of unreasoning things The Timeless Land 1941 nbsp Charles Darwin 1809 1882 This is really a wonderful Colony ancient Rome in her Imperial grandeur would not have been ashamed of such an offspring Letter from Charles Darwin 1836 nbsp C J Dennis 1876 1938 It appened this way I ad jist come down After long years to look at Sydney town An struth Was I knocked endways Fair su prised I never dreamed That arch that cut the skies The Bridge I Dips Me Lid 1936 nbsp Arthur Conan Doyle 1859 1930 We all devoted ourselves to surf bathing spending a good deal of our day in the water as is the custom of the place It is a real romp with Nature for the great Pacific rollers come sweeping in and break over you rolling you over on the sand if they can catch you unawares It was a golden patch in our restless lives The Wanderings of a Spiritualist 1921 nbsp Umberto Eco 1932 2016 L Australia non e solo agli antipodi e lontana da tutto talora anche da se stessa Australia is not only at the Antipodes she is far away from everything sometimes even from herself L Espresso 1982 nbsp A B Facey 1894 1982 I have lived a very good life it has been very rich and full I have been very fortunate and I am thrilled by it when I look back A Fortunate Life 1981 nbsp Miles Franklin 1879 1954 The sun came up through the Heads and stole its way to the Quay far over the bay Each of the tiny waves turned to flame and as the sun rose higher it left pearly tracks across the water A month would not be long enough to imbibe such beauty My Career Goes Bung 1946 nbsp May Gibbs 1877 1969 Humans are as strong as the Wind swift as the River fierce as the Sun They whistle like the birds they are as cruel as the snake They have many skins which they take off many times When all the skins are off the Human looks like a pale frog Tales of Snugglepot and Cuddlepie 1939 nbsp Mary Gilmore 1865 1962 Old Botany BayTaking the sunShame on the mouthThat would denyThe knotted handsThat set us high Old Botany Bay 1918 nbsp Germaine Greer 1939 Australia is my birthplace but I cannot call it my own as well as my native land for I have no right to live there Until a treaty is agreed with the original inhabitants I shall be homeless in the world Journal Of The Plague Year 1988 nbsp Xavier Herbert 1901 1984 Like a city in a dream that Capital to which I was bound rose out of verdant plains to meet my seeking eye to become as I neared it like a lovely woman extending jewelled arms to draw me to her bosom Disturbing Element 1963 nbsp Dorothy Hewett 1923 2002 I had a tremendous world in my head and more than three quarters of it will be buried with me The Chapel Perilous 1971 nbsp A D Hope 1907 2000 Yet there are some like me turn gladly home from the lush jungle of modern thought to find The Arabian desert of the human mind hoping if still from the deserts the prophets come Such savage and scarlet as no green hills dare Springs in that waste some spirit which escapes The learned doubt the chatter of cultured apes Which is called civilization over there Australia 1939 nbsp Donald Horne 1921 2005 The good qualities of Australians their non doctrinaire tolerance their sense of pleasure their sense of fair play their interest in material things their sense of family their identity with nature their scepticism their talent for improvisation their courage and stoicism These are great qualities that could constitute the beginnings of a great nation The Lucky Country 1964 nbsp Robert Hughes 1938 2012 Would Australians have done anything differently if their country had not been settled as the jail of infinite space Certainly they would They would have remembered more of their own history The Fatal Shore 1987 nbsp Barry Humphries 1934 2023 I think that I could never spyA poem lovely as a pie A banquet in a single courseBlushing with rich tomato sauce Neglected Poems and Other Creatures 1991 nbsp Clive James 1939 2019 In Sydney Harbour the yachts will be racing on the crushed diamond water under a sky the texture of powdered sapphires It would be churlish not to concede that the same abundance of natural blessings which gave us the energy to leave has every right to call us back Unreliable Memoirs 1980 nbsp George Johnston 1912 1970 Sydney is a city of light and wind more than of architecture The majesties of nature and the monstrosities of man have a cheek by jowl evidence in Sydney more insistent I think than in any other city in the world Clean Straw for Nothing 1969 nbsp Elizabeth Jolley 1923 2007 One day poets will come and teach the inhabitants of this strange country to look on the loveliness around them Each of us creates his own vision of Australia and we see with our minds and our memories as much as with our eyes Central Mischief 1992 nbsp Thomas Keneally 1935 The place which had been chosen for this far off commonwealth and prison and named Sydney Cove in the spirit of events faced the sun which was always in the north The land on either side of the cove was divided down the middle by a freshwater stream flowing out of a low hinterland among cabbage tree palms native cedars the strange obdurate eucalyptus trees of a type which occurred nowhere else in all creation The Playmaker 1987 nbsp Rudyard Kipling 1865 1936 Sydney was populated by leisured multitudes all in their shirt sleeves and all picnicking all the day They volunteered that they were new and young but would do wonderful things some day Something of Myself 1937 nbsp Ray Lawler 1921 How about that Roo We ve been goin to the same places for so long and doin the same things that we ve started to run ourselves into the ground And there s a whole bloody country out there wide open before us Summer of the Seventeenth Doll 1955 nbsp D H Lawrence 1885 1930 Australia has a marvellous sky and air and blue clarity and a hoary sort of land beneath is like a Sleeping Princess on whom the dust of ages has settled Wonder if she ll ever get up Letter from D H Lawrence 1922 nbsp Henry Lawson 1867 1922 And of afternoons in cities when the rain is on the land Visions come to me of Sweeney with his bottle in his hand With the stormy night behind him and the pub verandah post And I wonder why he haunts me more than any other ghost Sweeney 1893 nbsp Jack London 1876 1916 I would rather be ashes than dust a spark burnt out in a brilliant blaze than be stifled in dry rot For man s chief purpose is to live not to exist I shall not waste my days trying to prolong them I shall use my time South Sea Tales 1911 nbsp Colleen McCullough 1937 2015 The bird with the thorn in its breast it follows and immutable law it is driven by it knows not what to impale itself and die singing But we when we put the thorns in our breasts we know We understand And still we do it Still we do it The Thorn Birds 1977 nbsp Dorothea Mackellar 1885 1968 I love a sunburnt country A land of sweeping plains Of ragged mountain ranges Of droughts and flooding rains I love her far horizons I love her jewel sea Her beauty and her terror The wide brown land for me My Country 1911 nbsp David Malouf 1934 Australia is still revealing itself to us We oughtn t to close off possibilities by declaring too early what we have already become Lugarno Postscript Notes and Furphies 1979 nbsp James A Michener 1907 1997 Mankind was destined to live on the edge of perpetual disaster We are mankind because we survive We do it in a half assed way but we do it Chesapeake 1978 nbsp Oodgeroo Noonuccal 1920 1993 I could tell you of the heartbreak hatred blind I could tell of crimes that shape mankind Of brutal wrongs and deeds malign Of rape and murder son of mine But I ll tell instead of brave and fineWhen lives of black and white entwine And men in brotherhood combine This would I tell you son of mine Son of Mine 1964 nbsp Ruth Park 1917 2010 To walk into the Opera House is to walk inside a sculpture or perhaps a seashell maybe an intricate half translucent nautilus Morphology and the computers have composed a world of strange breathless shapes vast individual quite unlike any other architecture The Companion Guide to Sydney 1973 nbsp A B Banjo Paterson 1864 1941 It s grand to be an unemployedAnd lie in the Domain And wake up every second day And go to sleep again It s Grand 1902 nbsp Henry Handel Richardson 1870 1946 No one is less lenient towards romantic longings than he who has suffered disappointment in them who has failed to transmute them into reality Maurice Guest 1908 nbsp Nevil Shute 1899 1960 It s a funny thing Jean said You go to a new country and you expect everything to be different and then you find there s such a lot that stays the same A Town Like Alice 1950 nbsp Kenneth Slessor 1901 1971 The red globes of light the liquor green The pulsing arrows and the running fireSpilt on the stones go deeper than the stream You find this ugly I find it lovely Ghost s trousers like the dangle of hung men In pawnshop windows bumping knee by knee But none inside to suffer or condemnYou find this ugly I find it lovely William Street 1939 nbsp Christina Stead 1902 1983 This land was last discovered why A ghost land this continent of mystery Its heart is made of salt it suddenly oozes from its burning pores gold which will destroy men in greed but not water to give them drink Seven Poor Men of Sydney 1934 nbsp Robert Louis Stevenson 1850 1894 there is material for a dozen buccaneering stories to be picked up in the hotels at Circular Quay Robert Louis Stevenson His Association With Australia Mackaness 1935 nbsp Douglas Stewart 1913 1985 Australia s the violent country the earth itselfSuffers cries out in anger against the sunlightFrom the cracked lips of the plains I have come to understand it in love and pity Not horror now I understand the Kellys Ned Kelly 1943 nbsp Watkin Tench 1758 1833 The wind was now fair the sky serene the temperature of the air delightfully pleasant joy sparkled in every countenance and congratulations issued from every mouth Ithaca itself was scarcely more longed for by Ulysses than Botany Bay by the adventurers who had traversed so many thousand miles to take possession of it A Narrative of the Expedition to Botany Bay 1789 nbsp Kylie Tennant 1912 1988 To be born is to be lucky Later life may prove a failure or a success depending on the outlook of whoever is living it but that life is there should be a matter of congratulation daily renewed So many find life a slender chance Ride On Stranger 1943 nbsp P L Travers 1899 1996 Then the shape tossed and bent under the wind lifted the latch of the gate and they could see that it belonged to a woman who was holding her hat on with one hand and carrying a bag in the other Mary Poppins 1934 nbsp Anthony Trollope 1815 1882 The idea that Englishmen are made of paste whereas the Australian native or thoroughly acclimatized is steel all through I found to be universal Australia and New Zealand 1873 nbsp Ethel Turner 1872 1958 In Australia a model child is I say it not without thankfulness an unknown quantity There is a lurking sparkle of joyousness and rebellion and mischief in nature here and therefore in children Seven Little Australians 1894 nbsp Mark Twain 1835 1910 Australian history is almost always picturesque indeed it is so curious and strange that it is itself the chiefest novelty the country has to offer It does not read like history but like the most beautiful lies And all of a fresh sort not mouldy old stale ones It is full of surprises and adventures and incongruities and incredibilities but they are all true they all happened Following the Equator 1897 nbsp Morris West 1916 1999 I claimNo private lien on the truth onlyA liberty to seek it prove it in debate And to be wrong a thousand times to reachA single rightness The Heretic 1969 nbsp Patrick White 1912 1990 When man is truly humbled when he has learnt that he is not God then he is nearest to becoming so In the end he may ascend Voss 1957 nbsp David Williamson 1942 In Melbourne all views are equally depressing so there s no point in having one No one in Sydney ever wastes time debating the meaning of life it s getting yourself a water frontage People devote a lifetime to the quest Emerald City 1987 nbsp Judith Wright 1915 2000 I am born of the conquerors you of the persecuted Raped by rum and an alien law progress and economics are you and I and a once loved landpeopled by tribes and trees doomed by traders and stock exchanges bought by faceless strangers Two Dreamtimes 1973 nbsp Patricia Wrightson 1921 2010 And something else lives in the swamp something sly and secret half as old as the mountain On a still day you may hear it chuckle The Nargun and the Stars 1973 Weblinks Bearbeiten nbsp Commons Sydney Writers Walk Sammlung von Bildern Sydney Writers Walk bei Monument Australia englisch Einzelnachweise Bearbeiten Sydney Writers Walk In Weekend Notes 31 Mai 2015 abgerufen am 13 Juni 2020 englisch a b Media Release PDF 53 KB Minister for the Arts 24 Oktober 2011 abgerufen am 13 Juni 2020 englisch Outdated plaques along Circular Quay Writers Walk to finally get attention In The Daily Telegraph 27 Juli 2017 abgerufen am 13 Juni 2020 englisch 33 859747 151 212847 Koordinaten 33 51 35 1 S 151 12 46 2 O Abgerufen von https de wikipedia org w index php title Sydney Writers Walk amp oldid 233062225