Who are the celebrities in Australia?

Celebrities in Australia are:

I. henry lawson

Henry lawson (1867, June 17 to September 2 1922)

He was a famous poet and prose writer during the colonial period in Australia, and was born in a worker's family. He began to work at the age of seventeen and loved literature and art at the same time.

He studied hard and was diligent in writing, and wrote fourteen books of poetry and prose, including henry lawson's Poems, Popular Poems and Humorous Poems, On the Road, Joe Wilson and His Companions, Jungle Children and Passing the Hat. Lawson's works have a wide range of themes and are full of patriotic passion, expressing the Australian people's desire for independence and opposition to oppression. The plot is touching, the language is simple and humorous, and the life is strong.

Second, mary gilmore.

Mary gilmore (Mary

Gilmore 1865- 1962), a famous early Australian poetess. She occupies an important position in the history of Australian literature because she quotes the words of Australian aborigines to express their lives. He has published many poems such as Marriage and Others, Passionate Heart and Battlefield.

Her poems are full of patriotism and humanitarianism, and exude the fragrance and earthy atmosphere of the Australian jungle. Rich imagination, concise style, frank and enthusiastic, concise and clear words.

Third, Miles Franklin.

Franklin was born in a peasant family in Australia. He was educated at home at first, and then he began to try writing with the encouragement of his teacher. When I was young, I was a freelance journalist. 1906 moved to the United States, went to Britain during World War I, and worked in the Scottish women's hospital and the army.

1933 returned to Australia to settle down after leaving his native land for 30 years and engaged in professional writing. Most of the heroines in her books are smart and determined, showing the author's own feminist tendency. Miles Franklin wrote twelve novels in his life, but My Brilliant Life is recognized as the most influential and literary one.

Fourth, Banjo Paterson.

Banjo Paterson's name is almost unknown in Australia. Mathilde, a song he wrote in 1895, is a household name. 100 has been widely circulated for many years and is recognized as the unofficial national anthem of Australia.

The 2000 Sydney Olympic Games kicked off the opening ceremony with the knight image described in Banjo Paterson's long poem Snow River Man. The closing ceremony of this Olympic Games ended with a song written by his short poem Mathilde, which showed the true Australian flavor.

Christopher Brennan

He was a scholar, depressed all his life and eventually died of cancer. His poems are delicate, delicate and hazy, and love metaphors show the influence of French symbolist poets, especially Malamei. His main works are poems: 19 13. He was hardly taken seriously before his death, and his evaluation has been getting higher and higher since the fifties and sixties. He is regarded as one of the few important poets in modern Australia.

Baidu Encyclopedia-Australian Literature