Sunday, April 19, 2020
Thorn Birds Essays - The Thorn Birds, Drogheda, Colleen McCullough
  Thorn Birds  The novel, The Thorn Birds, is a very well written story about a family living  in a poorer section of New Zealand whose livelihood is shearing sheep. The money  for the family depends almost solely on the sheep. In the family, there is    Padraic Cleary (Paddy), the father of the clan. He is a likable man who commands  respect from his children and from those who know him. His wife, Fiona Cleary  (Fee), is a woman with a past who loves her children, respects her husband but  is living in a world that she did not want, but accepted it as her only possible  way of life. Then there are Fee and Paddy's children, Frank, Meghann (Meggie),    Hughie, Jack, Stuart (Stu), Bob, and the twins, Jims and Patsy, but the story  revolves almost entirely around their only girl, Meggie. When Meggie was about    10 years old, Paddy's older sister, Mary Carson, beckoned Paddy to come work for  her on her very large, very wealthy ranch in New South Wales, Australia,    Drogheda. The family fell in love with Drogheda, even though they had to put up  with drought, fire, and a climate that they were not used to. The boys in the  family lived for Drogheda, and were the main work force of the ranch, herding  sheep and cattle from one paddock to another, and working very hard during the  most profitable time of the year, the shearing season, and the most hectic, the  lambing season. Paddy was an immigrant from Ireland to New Zealand and was a  devout Catholic, along with most Australians. Upon arriving to Drogheda, the    Cleary family met Father Ralph, a friend of Mary Carson, a constant visitor to    Drogheda, and the local priest of the closest town to Drogheda, Gillabon. The  rest of the story rotates around the relationship between Father Ralph who later  became Bishop Ralph and finally, Cardinal Ralph, and Meggie. The Cleary family  lived through one of the worst droughts in Australia, and the terrible fire that  followed, destroying most of Drogheda's outer pastures and killing Paddy, and    Stuart in the process. They also had to deal with the problem of rabbits. The  rabbits were foreigners to Australia, and once introduced, reproduced out of  control due to the fact that there were no natural predators in Australia to  kill them. The rabbits, along with the kangaroos, were devouring most of    Drogheda's grazing land. Through it all though, Drogheda remained a constant  source of pleasure and money for the Cleary family. Meggie had two children,    Justine and Dane. Both very different in personality, and in looks. Meggie  marries a shearer turned stockman fo Drogheda, Luke O'Neill, and from their  marriage, Justine was born. Dane was from another man, but, the father, nor Dane  or Justine knew who it was, only Fee and Meggie knew that secret. The author of    Thorn Birds, Colleen McCullough, is a highly talented writer. Throughout the  novel, she describes the scenery with much detail. She should be an expert on  the topic, since New South Wales, Australia is her home. The detail and  description of the people and the places, which she goes deeply into, makes the  reader feel as if she is actually experiencing the same things as the  characters. She goes explains throughly as to how Drogheda is managed and how it  looks. Mrs. McCullough definitely knows what she's talking about and her writing  shows it. For work with the sheep never, never ended; as one job finished it  became time for another. They were mustered and graded, moved from one paddock  to another, bred and unbred, shorn and crutched, dipped and drenched,  slaughtered and shipped off to be sold. Drogheda carried about a thousand head  of prime beef cattle as well as its sheep, but sheep were far more profitable,  so in good times Drogheda carried about one sheep for every two acres of its  land, or about 125,000 altogether. Being merinos, they were never sold for meat;  at the end of a merino's wool-producing years it was shipped off to become  skins, lanolin, tallow and glue, useful only to the tanneries and the  knackeries. Mrs. McCullough's purpose for writing The Thorn Birds is not  entirely clear. She could have written the book to tell about the ways of the    Australian people like the outback stockmen. She could have intended to explain  what life in Australia is really like, the climate, the animals, etc. Another  alternative is that she could have written this novel to talk about the Catholic    Church and how man's    
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