Voss (novel)
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Voss
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First edition
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Author
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Cover artist
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Country
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Australia
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Language
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English
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Publisher
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Publication date
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1957
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Media type
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Print (hardback & paperback)
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Pages
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478 pp
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Preceded by
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Followed by
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Voss (1957) is the fifth
published novel of Patrick White. It is based upon the
life of the nineteenth-century Prussian explorer and naturalist Ludwig Leichhardt who disappeared
whilst on an expedition into the Australian outback.
Contents
The novel centres on two characters: Voss,
a German, and Laura, a young woman, orphaned and new to the colony of New South
Wales. It opens as they meet for the first time in the house of Laura's uncle
and the patron of Voss's expedition, Mr Bonner.
Johann Ulrich Voss sets out to cross the
Australian continent in 1845. After collecting a party of settlers and two
Aborigines, his party heads inland from the coast only to meet endless
adversity. The explorers cross drought-plagued desert then waterlogged lands
until they retreat to a cave where they lie for weeks waiting for the rain to
stop. Voss and Laura retain a connection despite Voss's absence and the story
intersperses developments in each of their lives. Laura adopts an orphaned
child and attends a ball during Voss's absence.
The travelling party splits in two and
nearly all members eventually perish. The story ends some twenty years later at
a garden party hosted by Laura's cousin Belle Radclyffe (née Bonner) on the day
of the unveiling of a statue of Voss. The party is also attended by Laura
Trevelyan and the one remaining member of Voss's expeditionary party, Mr Judd.
The strength of the novel comes not from
the physical description of the events in the story but from the explorers'
passion, insight and doom. The novel draws heavily on the complex character of
Voss.
The novel uses extensive religious
symbolism. Voss is compared repeatedly to God, Christ and the Devil. Like
Christ he goes into the desert, he is a leader of men and he tends to the sick.
Voss and Laura have a meeting in a garden prior to his departure that could be
compared to the Garden of Eden.
A metaphysical thread unites the novel.
Voss and Laura are permitted to communicate through visions. White presents the
desert as akin to the mind of man, a blank landscape in which pretensions to
godliness are brought asunder. In Sydney, Laura's adoption of the orphaned
child, Mercy, represents godliness through a pure form of sacrifice.
There is a continual reference to duality
in the travelling party, with a group led by Voss and a group led by Judd
eventually dividing after the death of the unifying agent, Mr Palfreyman. The
intellect and pretensions to godliness of Mr Voss are compared unfavourably
with the simplicity and earthliness of the pardoned convict Judd. Mr Judd, it
is implied, has accepted the blankness of the desert of the mind, and in doing
so, become more 'godlike'.
The spirituality of Australia's indigenous
people also infuses the sections of the book set in the desert...
Voss has also been
adapted into an opera
of the same name written by Richard Meale[1] with the libretto
by David
Malouf.[1] The world premiere
was at the 1986 Adelaide Festival of Arts conducted by Stuart Challender.[1]
David Lumsdaine's 'Aria for Edward John
Eyre' also draws inspiration from Voss, in relating Eyre's journey across
Australia's Great Australian Bight (that is, along the southern coast from what
is now the Eyre Peninsula to King George's Sound, the site of modern Albany),
as documented in his journals, but doing so in a psychologised form similar to
the relationship White depicts between Voss and Laura Trevelyan.
White wanted Voss to be
produced as a film and Sydney musical promoter Harry M. Miller bought the
rights. Ken
Russell and
then Joseph
Losey were
White's choice for director. Losey and scriptwriter David Mercer arrived in Sydney
in 1977 but after a few days in the desert scouting locations the director was
hospitalised with viral pneumonia. Miller wanted to cast Donald Sutherland as Voss and Mia Farrow as Laura Trevelyan
but White disagreed saying that Farrow was too soft and of Sutherland,
"That flabby wet mouth is entirely wrong. Voss was dry and ascetic – he
had a thin mouth like a piece of fence-wire. I do think a whole
characterisation can go astray on a single physical feature like that."Maximilian Schell was cast to play
the explorer and the script was finalised but Miller was unable to raise
sufficient capital for production and the film was never made.[2]

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