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・ John Pezzenti
・ John Pfahl
・ John Pfeiffer
・ John Phair
・ John Pham
・ John Phan
・ John Phelan
・ John Phelps
・ John Phelps (regicide)
・ John Phifer Farm
・ John Phil Gilbert
・ John Philbin
・ John Philip
・ John Philip (missionary)
・ John Philip Bagwell
John Philip Bourke
・ John Philip Cohane
・ John Philip Davis
・ John Philip Du Cane
・ John Philip Elers
・ John Philip Falter
・ John Philip Holland
・ John Philip II, Wild- and Rhinegrave of Salm-Dhaun
・ John Philip III, Wild- and Rhinegrave of Salm-Dhaun
・ John Philip Kemble
・ John Philip Lewin
・ John Philip Morier
・ John Philip Newell
・ John Philip Newman
・ John Philip Nolan


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John Philip Bourke : ウィキペディア英語版
John Philip Bourke

John Philip Bourke (5 August 1860 – 13 January 1914) was an Australian poet.
Bourke was born in Nundle, New South Wales, on the Peel River diggings, New South Wales, the son of William David Bourke, butcher, and his wife Jane, ''née'' Shepherd. After a primary education, he became a prospector with his father. At 17 years of age, he sold a claim for £600. He then became a school teacher in September 1882 and occasionally contributed verse to ''The Bulletin''. He retired from the education department in 1887 after being found drunk by a school inspector. In 1894 he went to the recently discovered goldfields in Western Australia, prospected in various parts of the west, and at variously made and lost a considerable sums of money. About the turn of the 20th century Bourke took up journalism and was a regular contributor to the ''Kalgoorlie Sun''. He was a writer of vigorous prose and verse which gave him a local reputation, but he was comparatively little known away from the gold-mining towns. He visited the eastern states of Australia for medical advice and to seek a publisher for his books in 1913.
Bourke died at Boulder, Western Australia, on 13 January 1914. A selection from his verse, ''Off the Bluebush'', edited by A. G. Stephens, was published in Sydney in 1915.
'Bluebush' Bourke was a popular poet, one of the leading poets of the goldfields along with E. B. Murphy. In his own phrase they were "singers standing on the outer rim, who touch the fringe of poetry at times". Murphy wrote more and had the larger audience, but Bourke was the more musical and more often did succeed in touching the fringe of poetry.
Bourke's own estimation of his talent was modest:
:We singers standing on the outer rim
:Who touched the fringe of poesy at times
:With half-formed thoughts, rough-set in halting rhymes,
:Through which no airy flights of fancy skim —
:We write "just so", an hour to while away,
:And turn the well-thumbed stock still o'er and o'er …〔
==References==

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