Between Two Tides (1952) is a long narrative poem by Australian poet R. D. Fitzgerald, which included illustrations by Norman Lindsay. It won the Grace Leven Prize for Poetry in 1952.[1]

Between Two Tides
AuthorR. D. Fitzgerald
LanguageEnglish
PublisherHalstead Press, Sydney
Publication date
1952
Publication placeAustralia
Media typePrint (hardcover)
Pages79
Preceded byHeemskerck Shoals 
Followed byThis Night's Orbit : Verses 

Outline

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The poem is "drawn from An Account of the Natives of the Tongan Islands by J. M. Martin (1817)", which "Fitzgerald had worked on intermittently over many years". "In five parts, the poem relates and discusses the life and exploits of Will Mariner, a young sailor on the privateer Port au Prince, which was attacked and burned by Tongan natives in 1806."[2]

Reviews

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A reviewer in The Sydney Morning Herald noted that the "theme of the eternally troubled mind with which man regards his destiny is not too profound to overload a simple narrative. Here is a story-poem which will please those whose palates have never become too sophisticated to reject the flavour of Treasure Island or Masefield's Dauber."[3]

Awards

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See also

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References

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