The Glugs of Gosh explained

The Glugs of Gosh
Author:C. J. Dennis
Illustrator:Hal Gye
Cover Artist:Hal Gye
Country:Australia
Language:English
Genre:Satire
Set In:Gosh
Publisher:Angus & Robertson
Pub Date:1917
Pages:130
Preceded By:The Moods of Ginger Mick
Followed By:Doreen

The Glugs of Gosh is a book of satirical verse written by Australian author C. J. Dennis, published by Angus & Robertson in 1917. The book's 13 poems are vignettes of life in a fictional kingdom called Gosh, inhabited by an arboreal race (that is to say, climbers) known as Glugs. Dennis describes the Glugs as a "stupid race of docile folk".[1] The illustrations, by Dennis's regular collaborator Hal Gye, depict the Glugs as short humanoids with large heads. Written in the style of children's nonsense poetry, the work attacks free trade, along with what Dennis saw as Australia's social conformity, intellectual cowardice and rampant bureaucracy. Although the book has greater literary merit than the larrikin-inspired doggerel verse for which Dennis is famed, it was a commercial failure.[2] According to one biographer, "the veiled political and economic satirical verse was lost on the public."[3] The book is dedicated to his wife.

Background

Dennis wrote the poem "Joi, the Glug" for the youngest son of his friend and patron Garry Roberts, presenting it in June 1914. Developing the idea further, he published seven Glug poems in the Bulletin magazine, starting with "Joi, the Glug" on 3 June 1915. Following the success of The Songs of a Sentimental Bloke in 1915, publisher Angus & Robertson commissioned Dennis to expand the poems into a book.

The work became a platform for Dennis's political views, notably protectionism, pacifism and republicanism. Drawing on his unhappy experiences working in the federal Attorney-General's Department, he devoted much of the text to lampooning the growth of bureaucracy.[4] So trenchant is the author's critique that, McQueen observes, "only his public reputation as a patriotic versifier enabled Dennis's anti-war republicanism to pass unnoticed" by the wartime censors.[5]

Structure and content

The book is made up of 13 poems:

  1. The Glug Quest
  2. Joi, the Glug
  3. The Stones of Gosh
  4. Sym, the Son of Joi
  5. The Growth of Sym
  6. The End of Joi
  7. The Swanks of Gosh
  8. The Seer
  9. The Rhymes of Sym
  10. The Debate
  11. Ogs
  12. Emily Ann
  13. The Little Red Dog.

The poems are connected by references to the recurring characters of Joi, an iconoclastic advocate of protectionism and import substitution; and his son Sym, a tramp, tinker and reclusive poet loosely modelled on Dennis himself.[6] The book tells of a small constitutional monarchy under King Splosh I, whose government is led by Stodge, the "Lord High Swank". The character of Stodge is an amalgam of three of Australia's founding fathers, Alfred Deakin, Sir John Forrest and Sir George Reid. Stodge's administration is composed of other "swanks":

Together with Splosh, Stodge promotes free trade with Gosh's neighbours and sometime enemies, the Ogs of Podge. In return, Gosh exports the entirety of its principal natural resource, stones.

Joi is hanged, but later vindicated: Gosh experiences a balance of payments crisis and ultimately an inconclusive war with Podge. Chastened at having become victims of their own exported stones, the Glugs invite Sym to take over from Stodge. But he declines the appointment, like Dennis preferring a quiet married life in the countryside.

Reception and legacy

The book is not without its critics. One biographer considered that, despite "considerable promise", "the narrative gets bogged down in a complicated plot and loses its satirical focus." Some reviewers of the time considered that the "shallow and pretentious" narrative "labours the obvious"; others found its "humorous and lyrical dexterity" to be "amusing and intelligent".

Though the poetry retains the romanticism of the bush ballads,[7] in moving from the celebration of Australian larrikinism to pointed social and political criticism, Dennis confounded his readers' expectations.[8] McQueen writes:

The picture of the typical Australian to emerge from The Glugs totally contradicts the one popularly taken from The Bloke and Ginger Mick, where we are independent, resourceful, haters of authority and good mates. By contrast, Glugs are bound together by mindless conformism; they anticipate A. F. Davies' view that, above all, "Australians have a characteristíc talent for bureaucracy".
Thus the work, which Dennis considered to be his best, never won the popularity or influence of Songs of a Sentimental Bloke. Nevertheless, commentators occasionally note the continued relevance of his words to debates over trade policy and foreign investment.[9] [10]

The book was reprinted in 1918, 1919 and 1980. Dennis wrote one further poem about Glugs, The Griefs of Ancient Gosh, in 1935. Two of the original poems were republished in 1974 as a children's book, also called The Glugs of Gosh.

See also

References

  1. Book: Dennis, C. J.. The Glugs of Gosh. Angus & Robertson. 1917. Sydney. 43.
  2. Web site: 2018. The Glugs of Gosh. 22 May 2021. AustLit.
  3. Web site: McLaren. Ian F.. 1981. Dennis, Clarence Michael James (1876–1938). 22 May 2020. Australian Dictionary of Biography.
  4. Book: Butterss, Philip. Australian Writers, 1915-1950. Gale. 2002. Samuels. Selina. C(larence) (Michael) J(ames) Dennis.
  5. McQueen. Humphrey. 1977. "We Are Not Safe, Clarence; We Are Not Safe": Sentimental Thoughts on "A Moody Bloke". Meanjin. 36. 343–353. Informit.
  6. Web site: Gallacher. Lyn. 14 May 2008. Poetry special: The Glugs of Gosh by CJ Dennis. 22 May 2021. Australian Broadcasting Corporation.
  7. Nyland. Berenice. March 2001. Looking backward, looking forward: Australian early childhood trends since 1960. Australian Journal of Early Childhood. 26. 8. Informit.
  8. Book: Glynn, Sean. Urbanisation in Australian history, 1788–1900. Thomas Nelson. 1975. Melbourne.
  9. News: Lane. Terry. 29 October 1995. Why own Australia when we can rent?. 14. The Sunday Age.
  10. News: Longworth. Ken. 21 April 2011. A play on sentiments. 30. The Newcastle Herald.

External links