Cumner & South Sea Folk, by G. 
Parker, Entire 
 
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Title: Cumner & South Sea Folk, Complete 
Author: Gilbert Parker 
Release Date: August, 2004 [Etext #6201] [Yes, we are more than one 
year ahead of schedule] [This file was first posted on September 19,
2002] 
Edition: 10 
Language: English 
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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CUMNER & 
SOUTH SEA FOLK, ENTIRE *** 
 
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CUMNER'S SON AND OTHER SOUTH SEA FOLK, Complete 
by Gilbert Parker 
 
CONTENTS 
Volume 1. CUMNER'S SON 
Volume 2. THE HIGH COURT OF BUDGERY-GAR AN EPIC IN 
YELLOW DIBBS, R.N. A LITTLE MASQUERADE DERELICT 
OLD ROSES MY WIFE'S LOVERS THE STRANGERS' HUT 
Volume 3. THE PLANTER'S WIFE BARBARA GOLDING THE 
LONE CORVETTE 
Volume 4. A SABLE SPARTAN A VULGAR FRACTION HOW 
PANGO WANGO WAS ANNEXED AN AMIABLE REVENGE THE 
BLIND BEGGAR AND THE LITTLE RED PEG A FRIEND OF THE 
COMMUNE
Volume 5. A PAGAN OF THE SOUTH 
 
INTRODUCTION 
In a Foreword to Donovan Pasha, published in 1902, I used the 
following words: 
"It is now twelve years since I began giving to the public tales of life in 
lands well known to me. The first of them were drawn from Australia 
and the islands of the southern Pacific, where I had lived and roamed in 
the middle and late eighties. . . . Those tales of the Far South were 
given out with some prodigality. They did not appear in book form, 
however; for at the time I was sending out these antipodean sketches I 
was also writing--far from the scenes where they were laid--a series of 
Canadian tales, many of which appeared in the 'Independent' of New 
York, in the 'National Observer', edited by Mr. Henley, and in the 
'Illustrated London News'. On the suggestion of my friend Mr. Henley, 
the Canadian tales, Pierre and His People, were published first; with the 
result that the stories of the southern hemisphere were withheld from 
publication, though they have been privately printed and duly 
copyrighted. Some day I may send them forth, but meanwhile I am 
content to keep them in my care." 
These stories made the collection published eventually under the title of 
Cumner's Son, in 1910. They were thus kept for nearly twenty years 
without being given to the public in book form. In 1910 I decided, 
however, that they should go out and find their place with my readers. 
The first story in the book, Cumner's Son, which represents about four 
times the length of an ordinary short story, was published in Harper's 
Weekly, midway between 1890 and 1900. All the earlier stories 
belonged to 1890, 1891, 1892, and 1893. The first of these to be 
published was 'A Sable Spartan', 'An Amiable Revenge', 'A Vulgar 
Fraction', and 'How Pango Wango Was Annexed'. They were written 
before the Pierre series, and were instantly accepted by Mr. Frederick 
Greenwood, that great journalistic figure of whom the British public 
still takes note, and for whom it has an admiring memory, because of
his rare gifts as an editor and publicist, and by a political section of the 
public, because Mr. Greenwood recommended to Disraeli the purchase 
of the Suez Canal shares. Seventeen years after publishing these stories 
I had occasion to write to Frederick Greenwood, and in my letter I said: 
"I can never forget that you gave me a leg up in my first struggle for 
recognition in the literary world." His reply was characteristic; it was in 
keeping with the modest, magnanimous nature of the man. He said: "I 
cannot remember that there was any day when you required a leg up." 
While still contributing to the 'Anti-Jacobin', which had a short life and 
not a very merry one, I turned my attention to a weekly called 'The