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    • Having to make do with second best

      • The title Poor Man’s Orange refers to having to make do with second best. This is the choice facing Dola after her sister’s death. She is prepared to follow in the footsteps of her beloved sister and marry Charlie although she realises she can never replace Roie for Charlie.
      aso.gov.au/titles/tv/poor-mans-orange/notes/
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  2. Poor Man's Orange is a novel by New Zealand born Australian author Ruth Park. Published in 1949, the book is the sequel to The Harp in the South (1948) and continues the story of the Darcy family, living in the Surry Hills area of Sydney.

    • Ruth Park
    • 1949
  3. Jan 29, 2008 · I found a recipe in an old cookbook that is called Poor Man's orange marmalade or Pomelo marmalade. I have never heard of pomelos referred to by this name but my mother made marmalade from pomelos for years and it was suberb. The flavour was tart and the marmalde was very easy to make. Time: 19th May 2009 9:27am

  4. Until the 1970s and the advent of fluoridation, it was still common for a poor family to offer their prospective son-in-law the present of a new set of false teeth for his bride. The idea was to save the husband the expense of any future dental work for his wife. Poor Man's Orange synopsis

  5. Poor Man's Orange: With Anne Phelan, Martyn Sanderson, Kaarin Fairfax, Anna Hruby. It is the early '50s and the Darcy family continues their struggle to build a better life despite the forces lined up against them in this sequel to the popular made-for-TV film Harp in the South.

    • (69)
    • 1987-09-14
    • Drama
    • 190
  6. 1. a tropical or subtropical cultivated evergreen rutaceous tree, Citrus paradisi. 2. the large round edible fruit of this tree, which has yellow rind and juicy slightly bitter pulp. Collins English Dictionary. Copyright © HarperCollins Publishers.

  7. Dec 19, 2023 · Ruth Park’s novels The Harp in the South (1948) and Poor Man’s Orange (1949) portray a fictional Irish-Australian family living in the actual inner-city neighbourhood of Surry Hills.

  8. The title Poor Man’s Orange refers to having to make do with second best. This is the choice facing Dola after her sister’s death. She is prepared to follow in the footsteps of her beloved sister and marry Charlie although she realises she can never replace Roie for Charlie.

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