“Your love-story possesses merit," wrote a tender-hearted magazine editor, in returning a lengthy manuscript to -a struggling young author; “but you have embellished it with too much description, atmosphere, and other irrelevent stuff. What we want is a story setting out the simple facts, and refraining from twaddle. If you will revise your story according to our ideas, we may be able to accept and pay for it.” A few- days later the editor got the following from the young author: “Herewith revised story. Please semi cheek by return mail, as I very much need the money.” And this was the storv, as rewritten: “Jocelyn loved Eliza, but he was poor, and her wealthy father would not favour the match. Jocelyn went on the Stock Exchange and made a million, bankrupt ing Eliza’s fattier. Then Eliza went to the seaside, and fell off the pier. Jocelyn fished her out. Papa relented, and borrowed a hundred thousand from Jocelyn. Marriage.”
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZGRAP19090224.2.72
Bibliographic details
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New Zealand Graphic, Volume XLII, Issue 8, 24 February 1909, Page 45
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159Untitled New Zealand Graphic, Volume XLII, Issue 8, 24 February 1909, Page 45
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AcknowledgementsNgā mihiThis material was digitised in partnership with Auckland Libraries. You can find high resolution images on Kura Heritage Collections Online.
Ngā mihiThis material was digitised in partnership with Auckland Libraries. You can find high resolution images on Kura Heritage Collections Online.
This material was digitised in partnership with Auckland Libraries. You can find high resolution images on Kura Heritage Collections Online.