The Timeless Land (1941) is a work of historical fiction by Eleanor Dark (1901–1985). The novel The Timeless Land is the first of The Timeless Land trilogy of novels about European settlement and exploration of Australia.
Story and characters
The narrative is told from European and Aboriginal points of view. The novel begins with two Aboriginal men watching the arrival of the First Fleet at Sydney Harbour on 26 January 1788. The novel describes the first years of the colony and the diplomacy of captain Arthur Phillip, famine and the effects of outside diseases on the previously unexposed Aboriginal population. The novel ends in a dramatic climax when troops encounter an escaped convict. Dark conducted her historical research at the Mitchell Library in Sydney. Watkin Tench, author of The Complete Account of the Settlement at Port Jackson, is a key character in The Timeless Land. The book was reprinted in 2002 and the novel was on the curriculum for high school students in Australia in the mid-twentieth century.
The subsequent books in The Timeless Land trilogy are Storm of Time (1948) and No Barrier (1953).
Production of the series had first been announced in 1976 but was postponed due to the large budget required.[3] International rights to the series were sold to Paramount for $1 million.[4] Shooting took place in Kellyville, an outer suburb of Sydney.[5]
The 8 episodes of The Timeless Land commenced with a movie-length premiere:[6]
A ship with white wings
Unsuitable company
The fabric of liberty
Double standards
Smell of rebellion
A declaration of war
Prisoner at the bar
A new order
In 2006, the Australian Broadcasting Commission released the television series on 3 DVDs, the episodes totalling 424 minutes.[7]
^Australia. Department of Education.; Australia. Department of Education and Science.; Australia. Commonwealth Office of Education. (February 1969) [1957], "THE BOOKS AUSTRALIANS READ", Section v. : ill. (some col.); 28 cm., Hemisphere, 4 (2), North Sydney, N.S.W: Dept. of Education and Science, ISSN0018-0300, nla.obj-3135886198, retrieved 1 June 2023 – via Trove
^Ed. Scott Murray, Australia on the Small Screen 1970-1995, Oxford Uni Press, 1996 p241
The Timeless Land, Eleanor Dark. Introduction by Barbara Brooks and Humphrey McQueen. Pymble, NSW. HarperCollins Publishers Australia. 2002. ISBN0-207-19877-2