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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of On the Track, by Henry Lawson
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: On the Track
+
+Author: Henry Lawson
+
+Posting Date: August 26, 2008 [EBook #1231]
+Release Date: March, 1998
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ON THE TRACK ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Alan R. Light
+
+
+
+
+
+ON THE TRACK
+
+by Henry Lawson
+
+
+Author of "While the Billy Boils", and "When the World was Wide"
+
+
+[Note on text: Italicized words or phrases are CAPITALISED. Some obvious
+errors have been corrected after being confirmed.]
+
+
+
+
+Preface
+
+ Of the stories in this volume many have already appeared
+ in (various periodicals), while several now appear in print
+ for the first time.
+
+ H. L.
+ Sydney, March 17th, 1900.
+
+
+
+
+
+Contents
+
+ The Songs They used to Sing
+ A Vision of Sandy Blight
+ Andy Page's Rival
+ The Iron-Bark Chip
+ "Middleton's Peter"
+ The Mystery of Dave Regan
+ Mitchell on Matrimony
+ Mitchell on Women
+ No Place for a Woman
+ Mitchell's Jobs
+ Bill, the Ventriloquial Rooster
+ Bush Cats
+ Meeting Old Mates
+ Two Larrikins
+ Mr. Smellingscheck
+ "A Rough Shed"
+ Payable Gold
+ An Oversight of Steelman's
+ How Steelman told his Story
+
+
+
+
+
+ON THE TRACK
+
+
+
+
+The Songs They used to Sing
+
+
+
+On the diggings up to twenty odd years ago--and as far back as I can
+remember--on Lambing Flat, the Pipe Clays, Gulgong, Home Rule, and so
+through the roaring list; in bark huts, tents, public-houses, sly grog
+shanties, and--well, the most glorious voice of all belonged to a bad
+girl. We were only children and didn't know why she was bad, but we
+weren't allowed to play near or go near the hut she lived in, and we
+were trained to believe firmly that something awful would happen to us
+if we stayed to answer a word, and didn't run away as fast as our legs
+could carry us, if she attempted to speak to us. We had before us the
+dread example of one urchin, who got an awful hiding and went on bread
+and water for twenty-four hours for allowing her to kiss him and give
+him lollies. She didn't look bad--she looked to us like a grand and
+beautiful lady-girl--but we got instilled into us the idea that she was
+an awful bad woman, something more terrible even than a drunken man, and
+one whose presence was to be feared and fled from. There were two other
+girls in the hut with her, also a pretty little girl, who called her
+"Auntie", and with whom we were not allowed to play--for they were all
+bad; which puzzled us as much as child-minds can be puzzled. We couldn't
+make out how everybody in one house could be bad. We used to wonder why
+these bad people weren't hunted away or put in gaol if they were so
+bad. And another thing puzzled us. Slipping out after dark, when the bad
+girls happened to be singing in their house, we'd sometimes run against
+men hanging round the hut by ones and twos and threes, listening. They
+seemed mysterious. They were mostly good men, and we concluded they were
+listening and watching the bad women's house to see that they didn't
+kill anyone, or steal and run away with any bad little boys--ourselves,
+for instance--who ran out after dark; which, as we were informed, those
+bad people were always on the lookout for a chance to do.
+
+We were told in after years that old Peter McKenzie (a respectable,
+married, hard-working digger) would sometimes steal up opposite the bad
+door in the dark, and throw in money done up in a piece of paper, and
+listen round until the bad girl had sung the "Bonnie Hills of Scotland"
+two or three times. Then he'd go and get drunk, and stay drunk two or
+three days at a time. And his wife caught him throwing the money in one
+night, and there was a terrible row, and she left him; and people always
+said it was all a mistake. But we couldn't see the mistake then.
+
+But I can hear that girl's voice through the night, twenty years ago:
+
+ Oh! the bloomin' heath, and the pale blue bell,
+ In my bonnet then I wore;
+ And memory knows no brighter theme
+ Than those happy days of yore.
+ Scotland! Land of chief and song!
+ Oh, what charms to thee belong!
+
+And I am old enough to understand why poor Peter McKenzie--who was
+married to a Saxon, and a Tartar--went and got drunk when the bad girl
+sang "The Bonnie Hills of Scotland."
+
+ His anxious eye might look in vain
+ For some loved form it knew!
+
+ . . . . .
+
+And yet another thing puzzled us greatly at the time. Next door to the
+bad girl's house there lived a very respectable family--a family of good
+girls with whom we were allowed to play, and from whom we got lollies
+(those hard old red-and-white "fish lollies" that grocers sent home with
+parcels of groceries and receipted bills). Now one washing day, they
+being as glad to get rid of us at home as we were to get out, we went
+over to the good house and found no one at home except the grown-up
+daughter, who used to sing for us, and read "Robinson Crusoe" of nights,
+"out loud", and give us more lollies than any of the rest--and with
+whom we were passionately in love, notwithstanding the fact that she was
+engaged to a "grown-up man"--(we reckoned he'd be dead and out of the
+way by the time we were old enough to marry her). She was washing.
+She had carried the stool and tub over against the stick fence which
+separated her house from the bad house; and, to our astonishment and
+dismay, the bad girl had brought HER tub over against her side of the
+fence. They stood and worked with their shoulders to the fence between
+them, and heads bent down close to it. The bad girl would sing a few
+words, and the good girl after her, over and over again. They sang very
+low, we thought. Presently the good grown-up girl turned her head and
+caught sight of us. She jumped, and her face went flaming red; she laid
+hold of the stool and carried it, tub and all, away from that fence in
+a hurry. And the bad grown-up girl took her tub back to her house. The
+good grown-up girl made us promise never to tell what we saw--that she'd
+been talking to a bad girl--else she would never, never marry us.
+
+She told me, in after years, when she'd grown up to be a grandmother,
+that the bad girl was surreptitiously teaching her to sing "Madeline"
+that day.
+
+I remember a dreadful story of a digger who went and shot himself
+one night after hearing that bad girl sing. We thought then what a
+frightfully bad woman she must be. The incident terrified us; and
+thereafter we kept carefully and fearfully out of reach of her voice,
+lest we should go and do what the digger did.
+
+ . . . . .
+
+I have a dreamy recollection of a circus on Gulgong in the roaring days,
+more than twenty years ago, and a woman (to my child-fancy a being from
+another world) standing in the middle of the ring, singing:
+
+ Out in the cold world--out in the street--
+ Asking a penny from each one I meet;
+ Cheerless I wander about all the day,
+ Wearing my young life in sorrow away!
+
+That last line haunted me for many years. I remember being frightened by
+women sobbing (and one or two great grown-up diggers also) that night in
+that circus.
+
+"Father, Dear Father, Come Home with Me Now", was a sacred song then,
+not a peg for vulgar parodies and more vulgar "business" for fourth-rate
+clowns and corner-men. Then there was "The Prairie Flower". "Out on the
+Prairie, in an Early Day"--I can hear the digger's wife yet: she was the
+prettiest girl on the field. They married on the sly and crept into
+camp after dark; but the diggers got wind of it and rolled up with
+gold-dishes, shovels, &c., &c., and gave them a real good tinkettling in
+the old-fashioned style, and a nugget or two to start housekeeping on.
+She had a very sweet voice.
+
+ Fair as a lily, joyous and free,
+ Light of the prairie home was she.
+
+She's a "granny" now, no doubt--or dead.
+
+And I remember a poor, brutally ill-used little wife, wearing a black
+eye mostly, and singing "Love Amongst the Roses" at her work. And they
+sang the "Blue Tail Fly", and all the first and best coon songs--in the
+days when old John Brown sank a duffer on the hill.
+
+ . . . . .
+
+The great bark kitchen of Granny Mathews' "Redclay Inn". A fresh
+back-log thrown behind the fire, which lights the room fitfully. Company
+settled down to pipes, subdued yarning, and reverie.
+
+Flash Jack--red sash, cabbage-tree hat on back of head with nothing
+in it, glossy black curls bunched up in front of brim. Flash Jack
+volunteers, without invitation, preparation, or warning, and through his
+nose:
+
+ Hoh!--
+ There was a wild kerlonial youth,
+ John Dowlin was his name!
+ He bountied on his parients,
+ Who lived in Castlemaine!
+
+and so on to--
+
+ He took a pistol from his breast
+ And waved that lit--tle toy--
+
+"Little toy" with an enthusiastic flourish and great unction on Flash
+Jack's part--
+
+ "I'll fight, but I won't surrender!" said
+ The wild Kerlonial Boy.
+
+Even this fails to rouse the company's enthusiasm. "Give us a song, Abe!
+Give us the 'Lowlands'!" Abe Mathews, bearded and grizzled, is lying
+on the broad of his back on a bench, with his hands clasped under his
+head--his favourite position for smoking, reverie, yarning, or singing.
+He had a strong, deep voice, which used to thrill me through and
+through, from hair to toenails, as a child.
+
+They bother Abe till he takes his pipe out of his mouth and puts it
+behind his head on the end of the stool:
+
+ The ship was built in Glasgow;
+ 'Twas the "Golden Vanitee"--
+Lines have dropped out of my memory during the thirty years gone
+between--
+
+ And she ploughed in the Low Lands, Low!
+
+The public-house people and more diggers drop into the kitchen, as all
+do within hearing, when Abe sings.
+
+"Now then, boys:
+
+ And she ploughed in the Low Lands, Low!
+
+"Now, all together!
+
+ The Low Lands! The Low Lands!
+ And she ploughed in the Low Lands, Low!"
+
+Toe and heel and flat of foot begin to stamp the clay floor, and horny
+hands to slap patched knees in accompaniment.
+
+ "Oh! save me, lads!" he cried,
+ "I'm drifting with the current,
+ And I'm drifting with the tide!
+ And I'm sinking in the Low Lands, Low!
+
+ The Low Lands! The Low Lands!"--
+
+The old bark kitchen is a-going now. Heels drumming on gin-cases under
+stools; hands, knuckles, pipe-bowls, and pannikins keeping time on the
+table.
+
+ And we sewed him in his hammock,
+ And we slipped him o'er the side,
+ And we sunk him in the Low Lands, Low!
+ The Low Lands! The Low Lands!
+ And we sunk him in the Low Lands, Low!
+
+Old Boozer Smith--a dirty gin-sodden bundle of rags on the floor in the
+corner with its head on a candle box, and covered by a horse rug--old
+Boozer Smith is supposed to have been dead to the universe for hours
+past, but the chorus must have disturbed his torpor; for, with a
+suddenness and unexpectedness that makes the next man jump, there comes
+a bellow from under the horse rug:
+
+ Wot though!--I wear!--a rag!--ged coat!
+ I'll wear it like a man!
+
+and ceases as suddenly as it commenced. He struggles to bring his ruined
+head and bloated face above the surface, glares round; then, no one
+questioning his manhood, he sinks back and dies to creation; and
+subsequent proceedings are only interrupted by a snore, as far as he is
+concerned.
+
+Little Jimmy Nowlett, the bullock-driver, is inspired. "Go on, Jimmy!
+Give us a song!"
+
+ In the days when we were hard up
+ For want of wood and wire--
+Jimmy always blunders; it should have been "food and fire"--
+
+ We used to tie our boots up
+ With lit--tle bits--er wire;
+
+and--
+
+ I'm sitting in my lit--tle room,
+ It measures six by six;
+ The work-house wall is opposite,
+ I've counted all the bricks!
+
+"Give us a chorus, Jimmy!"
+
+Jimmy does, giving his head a short, jerky nod for nearly every word,
+and describing a circle round his crown--as if he were stirring a pint
+of hot tea--with his forefinger, at the end of every line:
+
+ Hall!--Round!--Me--Hat!
+ I wore a weepin' willer!
+
+Jimmy is a Cockney.
+
+"Now then, boys!"
+
+ Hall--round--me hat!
+
+How many old diggers remember it?
+
+And:
+
+ A butcher, and a baker, and a quiet-looking quaker,
+ All a-courting pretty Jessie at the Railway Bar.
+
+I used to wonder as a child what the "railway bar" meant.
+
+And:
+
+ I would, I would, I would in vain
+ That I were single once again!
+ But ah, alas, that will not be
+ Till apples grow on the willow tree.
+
+A drunken gambler's young wife used to sing that song--to herself.
+
+A stir at the kitchen door, and a cry of "Pinter," and old Poynton,
+Ballarat digger, appears and is shoved in; he has several drinks aboard,
+and they proceed to "git Pinter on the singin' lay," and at last talk
+him round. He has a good voice, but no "theory", and blunders worse than
+Jimmy Nowlett with the words. He starts with a howl--
+
+ Hoh!
+ Way down in Covent Gar-ar-r-dings
+ A-strolling I did go,
+ To see the sweetest flow-ow-wers
+ That e'er in gardings grow.
+
+He saw the rose and lily--the red and white and blue--and he saw the
+sweetest flow-ow-ers that e'er in gardings grew; for he saw two lovely
+maidens (Pinter calls 'em "virgings") underneath (he must have meant on
+top of) "a garding chair", sings Pinter.
+
+ And one was lovely Jessie,
+ With the jet black eyes and hair,
+
+roars Pinter,
+
+ And the other was a vir-ir-ging,
+ I solemn-lye declare!
+
+"Maiden, Pinter!" interjects Mr. Nowlett.
+
+"Well, it's all the same," retorts Pinter. "A maiden IS a virging,
+Jimmy. If you're singing, Jimmy, and not me, I'll leave off!" Chorus of
+"Order! Shut up, Jimmy!"
+
+ I quicklye step-ped up to her,
+ And unto her did sa-a-y:
+ Do you belong to any young man,
+ Hoh, tell me that, I pra-a-y?
+
+Her answer, according to Pinter, was surprisingly prompt and
+unconventional; also full and concise:
+
+ No; I belong to no young man--
+ I solemnlye declare!
+ I mean to live a virging
+ And still my laurels wear!
+
+Jimmy Nowlett attempts to move an amendment in favour of "maiden",
+but is promptly suppressed. It seems that Pinter's suit has a happy
+termination, for he is supposed to sing in the character of a "Sailor
+Bold", and as he turns to pursue his stroll in "Covent Gar-ar-dings":
+
+ "Oh, no! Oh, no! Oh, no!" she cried,
+ "I love a Sailor Bold!"
+
+"Hong-kore, Pinter! Give us the 'Golden Glove', Pinter!"
+
+Thus warmed up, Pinter starts with an explanatory "spoken" to the effect
+that the song he is about to sing illustrates some of the little ways of
+woman, and how, no matter what you say or do, she is bound to have her
+own way in the end; also how, in one instance, she set about getting it.
+
+Hoh!
+
+ Now, it's of a young squoire near Timworth did dwell,
+ Who courted a nobleman's daughter so well--
+
+The song has little or nothing to do with the "squire", except so far as
+"all friends and relations had given consent," and--
+
+ The troo-soo was ordered--appointed the day,
+ And a farmer were appointed for to give her away--
+
+which last seemed a most unusual proceeding, considering the wedding was
+a toney affair; but perhaps there were personal interests--the nobleman
+might have been hard up, and the farmer backing him. But there was an
+extraordinary scene in the church, and things got mixed.
+
+ For as soon as this maiding this farmer espied:
+ "Hoh, my heart! Hoh, my heart!
+ Hoh, my heart!" then she cried.
+
+Hysterics? Anyway, instead of being wed--
+
+ This maiden took sick and she went to her bed.
+
+(N.B.--Pinter sticks to 'virging'.)
+
+Whereupon friends and relations and guests left the house in a body (a
+strange but perhaps a wise proceeding, after all--maybe they smelt a
+rat) and left her to recover alone, which she did promptly. And then:
+
+ Shirt, breeches, and waistcoat this maiding put on,
+ And a-hunting she went with her dog and her gun;
+ She hunted all round where this farmier did dwell,
+ Because in her own heart she love-ed him well.
+
+The cat's out of the bag now:
+
+ And often she fired, but no game she killed--
+
+which was not surprising--
+
+ Till at last the young farmier came into the field--
+
+No wonder. She put it to him straight:
+
+ "Oh, why are you not at the wedding?" she cried,
+ "For to wait on the squoire, and to give him his bride."
+
+He was as prompt and as delightfully unconventional in his reply as the
+young lady in Covent Gardings:
+
+ "Oh, no! and oh, no! For the truth I must sa-a-y,
+ I love her too well for to give her a-w-a-a-y!"
+
+which was satisfactory to the disguised "virging".
+
+ ".... and I'd take sword in hand,
+ And by honour I'd win her if she would command."
+
+Which was still more satisfactory.
+
+ Now this virging, being--
+(Jimmy Nowlett: "Maiden, Pinter--" Jim is thrown on a stool and sat on
+by several diggers.)
+
+ Now this maiding, being please-ed to see him so bold,
+ She gave him her glove that was flowered with gold,
+
+and explained that she found it in his field while hunting around with
+her dog and her gun. It is understood that he promised to look up
+the owner. Then she went home and put an advertisement in the local
+'Herald'; and that ad. must have caused considerable sensation. She
+stated that she had lost her golden glove, and
+
+ The young man that finds it and brings it to me,
+ Hoh! that very young man my husband shall be!
+
+She had a saving clause in case the young farmer mislaid the glove
+before he saw the ad., and an OLD bloke got holt of it and fetched it
+along. But everything went all right. The young farmer turned up with
+the glove. He was a very respectable young farmer, and expressed his
+gratitude to her for having "honour-ed him with her love." They were
+married, and the song ends with a picture of the young farmeress milking
+the cow, and the young farmer going whistling to plough. The fact that
+they lived and grafted on the selection proves that I hit the right nail
+on the head when I guessed, in the first place, that the old nobleman
+was "stony".
+
+In after years,
+
+ ... she told him of the fun,
+ How she hunted him up with her dog and her gun.
+
+But whether he was pleased or otherwise to hear it, after years of
+matrimonial experiences, the old song doesn't say, for it ends there.
+
+Flash Jack is more successful with "Saint Patrick's Day".
+
+ I come to the river, I jumped it quite clever!
+ Me wife tumbled in, and I lost her for ever,
+ St. Patrick's own day in the mornin'!
+
+This is greatly appreciated by Jimmy Nowlett, who is suspected,
+especially by his wife, of being more cheerful when on the roads than
+when at home.
+
+ . . . . .
+
+"Sam Holt" was a great favourite with Jimmy Nowlett in after years.
+
+ Oh, do you remember Black Alice, Sam Holt?
+ Black Alice so dirty and dark--
+ Who'd a nose on her face--I forget how it goes--
+ And teeth like a Moreton Bay shark.
+
+Sam Holt must have been very hard up for tucker as well as beauty then,
+for
+
+ Do you remember the 'possums and grubs
+ She baked for you down by the creek?
+
+Sam Holt was, apparently, a hardened flash Jack.
+
+ You were not quite the cleanly potato, Sam Holt.
+
+Reference is made to his "manner of holding a flush", and he is asked
+to remember several things which he, no doubt, would rather forget,
+including
+
+ ... the hiding you got from the boys.
+
+The song is decidedly personal.
+
+But Sam Holt makes a pile and goes home, leaving many a better and worse
+man to pad the hoof Out Back. And--Jim Nowlett sang this with so much
+feeling as to make it appear a personal affair between him and the
+absent Holt--
+
+ And, don't you remember the fiver, Sam Holt,
+ You borrowed so careless and free?
+ I reckon I'll whistle a good many tunes
+
+(with increasing feeling)
+
+ Ere you think of that fiver and me.
+
+For the chances will be that Sam Holt's old mate
+
+ Will be humping his drum on the Hughenden Road
+ To the end of the chapter of fate.
+
+ . . . . .
+
+An echo from "The Old Bark Hut", sung in the opposition camp across the
+gully:
+
+ You may leave the door ajar, but if you keep it shut,
+ There's no need of suffocation in the Ould Barrk Hut.
+
+ . . . . .
+
+ The tucker's in the gin-case, but you'd better keep it shut--
+ For the flies will canther round it in the Ould Bark Hut.
+
+However:
+
+ What's out of sight is out of mind, in the Ould Bark Hut.
+
+ . . . . .
+
+ We washed our greasy moleskins
+ On the banks of the Condamine.--
+
+Somebody tackling the "Old Bullock Dray"; it must be over fifty verses
+now. I saw a bushman at a country dance start to sing that song; he'd
+get up to ten or fifteen verses, break down, and start afresh. At last
+he sat down on his heel to it, in the centre of the clear floor, resting
+his wrist on his knee, and keeping time with an index finger. It was
+very funny, but the thing was taken seriously all through.
+
+Irreverent echo from the old Lambing Flat trouble, from camp across the
+gully:
+
+ Rule Britannia! Britannia rules the waves!
+ No more Chinamen will enter Noo South Wales!
+
+and
+
+ Yankee Doodle came to town
+ On a little pony--
+ Stick a feather in his cap,
+ And call him Maccaroni!
+
+All the camps seem to be singing to-night:
+
+ Ring the bell, watchman!
+ Ring! Ring! Ring!
+ Ring, for the good news
+ Is now on the wing!
+
+Good lines, the introduction:
+
+ High on the belfry the old sexton stands,
+ Grasping the rope with his thin bony hands!...
+ Bon-fires are blazing throughout the land...
+ Glorious and blessed tidings! Ring! Ring the bell!
+
+ . . . . .
+
+Granny Mathews fails to coax her niece into the kitchen, but persuades
+her to sing inside. She is the girl who learnt 'sub rosa' from the bad
+girl who sang "Madeline". Such as have them on instinctively take their
+hats off. Diggers, &c., strolling past, halt at the first notes of the
+girl's voice, and stand like statues in the moonlight:
+
+ Shall we gather at the river,
+ Where bright angel feet have trod?
+ The beautiful--the beautiful river
+ That flows by the throne of God!--
+
+Diggers wanted to send that girl "Home", but Granny Mathews had the
+old-fashioned horror of any of her children becoming "public"--
+
+ Gather with the saints at the river,
+ That flows by the throne of God!
+
+ . . . . .
+
+But it grows late, or rather, early. The "Eyetalians" go by in the
+frosty moonlight, from their last shift in the claim (for it is Saturday
+night), singing a litany.
+
+"Get up on one end, Abe!--stand up all!" Hands are clasped across the
+kitchen table. Redclay, one of the last of the alluvial fields, has
+petered out, and the Roaring Days are dying.... The grand old song that
+is known all over the world; yet how many in ten thousand know more than
+one verse and the chorus? Let Peter McKenzie lead:
+
+ Should auld acquaintance be forgot,
+ And never brought to min'?
+
+And hearts echo from far back in the past and across wide, wide seas:
+
+ Should auld acquaintance be forgot,
+ And days o' lang syne?
+
+Now boys! all together!
+
+ For auld lang syne, my dear,
+ For auld lang syne,
+ We'll tak' a cup o' kindness yet,
+ For auld lang syne.
+
+ We twa hae run about the braes,
+ And pu'd the gowans fine;
+ But we've wandered mony a weary foot,
+ Sin' auld lang syne.
+
+The world was wide then.
+
+ We twa hae paidl't i' the burn,
+ Frae mornin' sun till dine:
+
+the log fire seems to grow watery, for in wide, lonely Australia--
+ But seas between us braid hae roar'd,
+ Sin' auld lang syne.
+
+The kitchen grows dimmer, and the forms of the digger-singers seemed
+suddenly vague and unsubstantial, fading back rapidly through a misty
+veil. But the words ring strong and defiant through hard years:
+
+ And here's a hand, my trusty frien',
+ And gie's a grup o' thine;
+ And we'll tak' a cup o' kindness yet,
+ For auld lang syne.
+
+ . . . . .
+
+And the nettles have been growing for over twenty years on the spot
+where Granny Mathews' big bark kitchen stood.
+
+
+
+
+A Vision of Sandy Blight
+
+
+I'd been humping my back, and crouching and groaning for an hour or so
+in the darkest corner of the travellers' hut, tortured by the demon
+of sandy blight. It was too hot to travel, and there was no one there
+except ourselves and Mitchell's cattle pup. We were waiting till after
+sundown, for I couldn't have travelled in the daylight, anyway. Mitchell
+had tied a wet towel round my eyes, and led me for the last mile or two
+by another towel--one end fastened to his belt behind, and the other in
+my hand as I walked in his tracks. And oh! but this was a relief! It was
+out of the dust and glare, and the flies didn't come into the dark hut,
+and I could hump and stick my knees in my eyes and groan in comfort. I
+didn't want a thousand a year, or anything; I only wanted relief for my
+eyes--that was all I prayed for in this world. When the sun got down a
+bit, Mitchell started poking round, and presently he found amongst the
+rubbish a dirty-looking medicine bottle, corked tight; when he rubbed
+the dirt off a piece of notepaper that was pasted on, he saw "eye-water"
+written on it. He drew the cork with his teeth, smelt the water, stuck
+his little finger in, turned the bottle upside down, tasted the top of
+his finger, and reckoned the stuff was all right.
+
+"Here! Wake up, Joe!" he shouted. "Here's a bottle of tears."
+
+"A bottler wot?" I groaned.
+
+"Eye-water," said Mitchell.
+
+"Are you sure it's all right?" I didn't want to be poisoned or have my
+eyes burnt out by mistake; perhaps some burning acid had got into
+that bottle, or the label had been put on, or left on, in mistake or
+carelessness.
+
+"I dunno," said Mitchell, "but there's no harm in tryin'."
+
+I chanced it. I lay down on my back in a bunk, and Mitchell dragged my
+lids up and spilt half a bottle of eye-water over my eye-balls.
+
+The relief was almost instantaneous. I never experienced such a quick
+cure in my life. I carried the bottle in my swag for a long time
+afterwards, with an idea of getting it analysed, but left it behind at
+last in a camp.
+
+Mitchell scratched his head thoughtfully, and watched me for a while.
+
+"I think I'll wait a bit longer," he said at last, "and if it doesn't
+blind you I'll put some in my eyes. I'm getting a touch of blight myself
+now. That's the fault of travelling with a mate who's always catching
+something that's no good to him."
+
+As it grew dark outside we talked of sandy-blight and fly-bite, and
+sand-flies up north, and ordinary flies, and branched off to Barcoo rot,
+and struck the track again at bees and bee stings. When we got to bees,
+Mitchell sat smoking for a while and looking dreamily backwards
+along tracks and branch tracks, and round corners and circles he had
+travelled, right back to the short, narrow, innocent bit of track that
+ends in a vague, misty point--like the end of a long, straight, cleared
+road in the moonlight--as far back as we can remember.
+
+ . . . . .
+
+"I had about fourteen hives," said Mitchell--"we used to call them
+'swarms', no matter whether they were flying or in the box--when I left
+home first time. I kept them behind the shed, in the shade, on tables
+of galvanised iron cases turned down on stakes; but I had to make legs
+later on, and stand them in pans of water, on account of the ants. When
+the bees swarmed--and some hives sent out the Lord knows how many swarms
+in a year, it seemed to me--we'd tin-kettle 'em, and throw water on 'em,
+to make 'em believe the biggest thunderstorm was coming to drown the
+oldest inhabitant; and, if they didn't get the start of us and rise,
+they'd settle on a branch--generally on one of the scraggy fruit trees.
+It was rough on the bees--come to think of it; their instinct told
+them it was going to be fine, and the noise and water told them it was
+raining. They must have thought that nature was mad, drunk, or gone
+ratty, or the end of the world had come. We'd rig up a table, with a box
+upside down, under the branch, cover our face with a piece of mosquito
+net, have rags burning round, and then give the branch a sudden jerk,
+turn the box down, and run. If we got most of the bees in, the rest
+that were hanging to the bough or flying round would follow, and then
+we reckoned we'd shook the queen in. If the bees in the box came out and
+joined the others, we'd reckon we hadn't shook the queen in, and go for
+them again. When a hive was full of honey we'd turn the box upside down,
+turn the empty box mouth down on top of it, and drum and hammer on the
+lower box with a stick till all the bees went up into the top box. I
+suppose it made their heads ache, and they went up on that account.
+
+"I suppose things are done differently on proper bee-farms. I've heard
+that a bee-farmer will part a hanging swarm with his fingers, take out
+the queen bee and arrange matters with her; but our ways suited us,
+and there was a lot of expectation and running and excitement in
+it, especially when a swarm took us by surprise. The yell of 'Bees
+swarmin'!' was as good to us as the yell of 'Fight!' is now, or 'Bolt!'
+in town, or 'Fire' or 'Man overboard!' at sea.
+
+"There was tons of honey. The bees used to go to the vineyards at
+wine-making and get honey from the heaps of crushed grape-skins thrown
+out in the sun, and get so drunk sometimes that they wobbled in their
+bee-lines home. They'd fill all the boxes, and then build in between and
+under the bark, and board, and tin covers. They never seemed to get the
+idea out of their heads that this wasn't an evergreen country, and it
+wasn't going to snow all winter. My younger brother Joe used to put
+pieces of meat on the tables near the boxes, and in front of the holes
+where the bees went in and out, for the dogs to grab at. But one old
+dog, 'Black Bill', was a match for him; if it was worth Bill's while,
+he'd camp there, and keep Joe and the other dogs from touching the
+meat--once it was put down--till the bees turned in for the night. And
+Joe would get the other kids round there, and when they weren't looking
+or thinking, he'd brush the bees with a stick and run. I'd lam him when
+I caught him at it. He was an awful young devil, was Joe, and he grew up
+steady, and respectable, and respected--and I went to the bad. I never
+trust a good boy now.... Ah, well!
+
+"I remember the first swarm we got. We'd been talking of getting a few
+swarms for a long time. That was what was the matter with us English
+and Irish and English-Irish Australian farmers: we used to talk so much
+about doing things while the Germans and Scotch did them. And we even
+talked in a lazy, easy-going sort of way.
+
+"Well, one blazing hot day I saw father coming along the road, home
+to dinner (we had it in the middle of the day), with his axe over his
+shoulder. I noticed the axe particularly because father was bringing it
+home to grind, and Joe and I had to turn the stone; but, when I noticed
+Joe dragging along home in the dust about fifty yards behind father, I
+felt easier in my mind. Suddenly father dropped the axe and started
+to run back along the road towards Joe, who, as soon as he saw father
+coming, shied for the fence and got through. He thought he was going to
+catch it for something he'd done--or hadn't done. Joe used to do so many
+things and leave so many things not done that he could never be sure
+of father. Besides, father had a way of starting to hammer us
+unexpectedly--when the idea struck him. But father pulled himself up in
+about thirty yards and started to grab up handfuls of dust and sand and
+throw them into the air. My idea, in the first flash, was to get hold of
+the axe, for I thought it was sun-stroke, and father might take it into
+his head to start chopping up the family before I could persuade him
+to put it (his head, I mean) in a bucket of water. But Joe came running
+like mad, yelling:
+
+"'Swarmer--bees! Swawmmer--bee--ee--es!
+Bring--a--tin--dish--and--a--dippera--wa-a-ter!'
+
+"I ran with a bucket of water and an old frying-pan, and pretty soon
+the rest of the family were on the spot, throwing dust and water,
+and banging everything, tin or iron, they could get hold of. The only
+bullock bell in the district (if it was in the district) was on the old
+poley cow, and she'd been lost for a fortnight. Mother brought up the
+rear--but soon worked to the front--with a baking-dish and a big spoon.
+The old lady--she wasn't old then--had a deep-rooted prejudice that she
+could do everything better than anybody else, and that the selection
+and all on it would go to the dogs if she wasn't there to look after it.
+There was no jolting that idea out of her. She not only believed that
+she could do anything better than anybody, and hers was the only right
+or possible way, and that we'd do everything upside down if she wasn't
+there to do it or show us how--but she'd try to do things herself or
+insist on making us do them her way, and that led to messes and rows.
+She was excited now, and took command at once. She wasn't tongue-tied,
+and had no impediment in her speech.
+
+"'Don't throw up dust!--Stop throwing up dust!--Do you want to smother
+'em?--Don't throw up so much water!--Only throw up a pannikin at a
+time!--D'yer want to drown 'em? Bang! Keep on banging, Joe!--Look at
+that child! Run, someone!--run! you, Jack!--D'yer want the child to be
+stung to death?--Take her inside!... Dy' hear me?... Stop throwing up
+dust, Tom! (To father.) You're scaring 'em away! Can't you see they want
+to settle?' [Father was getting mad and yelping: 'For Godsake shettup
+and go inside.'] 'Throw up water, Jack! Throw up--Tom! Take that bucket
+from him and don't make such a fool of yourself before the children!
+Throw up water! Throw--keep on banging, children! Keep on banging!'
+[Mother put her faith in banging.] 'There!--they're off! You've lost
+'em! I knew you would! I told yer--keep on bang--!'
+
+"A bee struck her in the eye, and she grabbed at it!
+
+"Mother went home--and inside.
+
+"Father was good at bees--could manage them like sheep when he got to
+know their ideas. When the swarm settled, he sent us for the old washing
+stool, boxes, bags, and so on; and the whole time he was fixing the bees
+I noticed that whenever his back was turned to us his shoulders would
+jerk up as if he was cold, and he seemed to shudder from inside, and now
+and then I'd hear a grunting sort of whimper like a boy that was
+just starting to blubber. But father wasn't weeping, and bees weren't
+stinging him; it was the bee that stung mother that was tickling father.
+When he went into the house, mother's other eye had bunged for sympathy.
+Father was always gentle and kind in sickness, and he bathed mother's
+eyes and rubbed mud on, but every now and then he'd catch inside, and
+jerk and shudder, and grunt and cough. Mother got wild, but presently
+the humour of it struck her, and she had to laugh, and a rum laugh it
+was, with both eyes bunged up. Then she got hysterical, and started to
+cry, and father put his arm round her shoulder and ordered us out of the
+house.
+
+"They were very fond of each other, the old people were, under it
+all--right up to the end.... Ah, well!"
+
+Mitchell pulled the swags out of a bunk, and started to fasten the
+nose-bags on.
+
+
+
+
+Andy Page's Rival
+
+
+
+ Tall and freckled and sandy,
+ Face of a country lout;
+ That was the picture of Andy--
+ Middleton's rouseabout.
+ On Middleton's wide dominions
+ Plied the stock-whip and shears;
+ Hadn't any opinions------
+
+And he hadn't any "ideers"--at least, he said so himself--except
+as regarded anything that looked to him like what he called "funny
+business", under which heading he catalogued tyranny, treachery,
+interference with the liberty of the subject by the subject, "blanky"
+lies, or swindles--all things, in short, that seemed to his slow
+understanding dishonest, mean or paltry; most especially, and above all,
+treachery to a mate. THAT he could never forget. Andy was uncomfortably
+"straight". His mind worked slowly and his decisions were, as a rule,
+right and just; and when he once came to a conclusion concerning any
+man or matter, or decided upon a course of action, nothing short of an
+earthquake or a Nevertire cyclone could move him back an inch--unless a
+conviction were severely shaken, and then he would require as much time
+to "back" to his starting point as he did to come to the decision.
+
+Andy had come to a conclusion with regard to a selector's
+daughter--name, Lizzie Porter--who lived (and slaved) on her father's
+selection, near the township corner of the run on which Andy was a
+general "hand". He had been in the habit for several years of calling
+casually at the selector's house, as he rode to and fro between the
+station and the town, to get a drink of water and exchange the time of
+day with old Porter and his "missus". The conversation concerned the
+drought, and the likelihood or otherwise of their ever going to get
+a little rain; or about Porter's cattle, with an occasional enquiry
+concerning, or reference to, a stray cow belonging to the selection,
+but preferring the run; a little, plump, saucy, white cow, by-the-way,
+practically pure white, but referred to by Andy--who had eyes like a
+blackfellow--as "old Speckledy". No one else could detect a spot or
+speckle on her at a casual glance. Then after a long bovine silence,
+which would have been painfully embarrassing in any other society, and
+a tilting of his cabbage-tree hat forward, which came of tickling and
+scratching the sun-blotched nape of his neck with his little finger,
+Andy would slowly say: "Ah, well. I must be gettin'. So-long, Mr.
+Porter. So-long, Mrs. Porter." And, if SHE were in evidence--as she
+generally was on such occasions--"So-long, Lizzie." And they'd shout:
+"So-long, Andy," as he galloped off from the jump. Strange that those
+shy, quiet, gentle-voiced bushmen seem the hardest and most reckless
+riders.
+
+But of late his horse had been seen hanging up outside Porter's for an
+hour or so after sunset. He smoked, talked over the results of the last
+drought (if it happened to rain), and the possibilities of the next one,
+and played cards with old Porter; who took to winking, automatically, at
+his "old woman", and nudging, and jerking his thumb in the direction of
+Lizzie when her back was turned, and Andy was scratching the nape of his
+neck and staring at the cards.
+
+Lizzie told a lady friend of mine, years afterwards, how Andy popped
+the question; told it in her quiet way--you know Lizzie's quiet way
+(something of the old, privileged house-cat about her); never a sign in
+expression or tone to show whether she herself saw or appreciated the
+humour of anything she was telling, no matter how comical it might be.
+She had witnessed two tragedies, and had found a dead man in the bush,
+and related the incidents as though they were common-place.
+
+It happened one day--after Andy had been coming two or three times a
+week for about a year--that she found herself sitting with him on a log
+of the woodheap, in the cool of the evening, enjoying the sunset breeze.
+Andy's arm had got round her--just as it might have gone round a post he
+happened to be leaning against. They hadn't been talking about anything
+in particular. Andy said he wouldn't be surprised if they had a
+thunderstorm before mornin'--it had been so smotherin' hot all day.
+
+Lizzie said, "Very likely."
+
+Andy smoked a good while, then he said: "Ah, well! It's a weary world."
+
+Lizzie didn't say anything.
+
+By-and-bye Andy said: "Ah, well; it's a lonely world, Lizzie."
+
+"Do you feel lonely, Andy?" asked Lizzie, after a while.
+
+"Yes, Lizzie; I do."
+
+Lizzie let herself settle, a little, against him, without either seeming
+to notice it, and after another while she said, softly: "So do I, Andy."
+
+Andy knocked the ashes from his pipe very slowly and deliberately, and
+put it away; then he seemed to brighten suddenly, and said briskly:
+"Well, Lizzie! Are you satisfied!"
+
+"Yes, Andy; I'm satisfied."
+
+"Quite sure, now?"
+
+"Yes; I'm quite sure, Andy. I'm perfectly satisfied."
+
+"Well, then, Lizzie--it's settled!"
+
+ . . . . .
+
+But to-day--a couple of months after the proposal described above--Andy
+had trouble on his mind, and the trouble was connected with Lizzie
+Porter. He was putting up a two-rail fence along the old log-paddock on
+the frontage, and working like a man in trouble, trying to work it off
+his mind; and evidently not succeeding--for the last two panels were out
+of line. He was ramming a post--Andy rammed honestly, from the bottom of
+the hole, not the last few shovelfuls below the surface, as some do. He
+was ramming the last layer of clay when a cloud of white dust came along
+the road, paused, and drifted or poured off into the scrub, leaving long
+Dave Bentley, the horse-breaker, on his last victim.
+
+"'Ello, Andy! Graftin'?"
+
+"I want to speak to you, Dave," said Andy, in a strange voice.
+
+"All--all right!" said Dave, rather puzzled. He got down, wondering what
+was up, and hung his horse to the last post but one.
+
+Dave was Andy's opposite in one respect: he jumped to conclusions, as
+women do; but, unlike women, he was mostly wrong. He was an old chum and
+mate of Andy's who had always liked, admired, and trusted him. But
+now, to his helpless surprise, Andy went on scraping the earth from the
+surface with his long-handled shovel, and heaping it conscientiously
+round the butt of the post, his face like a block of wood, and his lips
+set grimly. Dave broke out first (with bush oaths):
+
+"What's the matter with you? Spit it out! What have I been doin' to you?
+What's yer got yer rag out about, anyway?"
+
+Andy faced him suddenly, with hatred for "funny business" flashing in
+his eyes.
+
+"What did you say to my sister Mary about Lizzie Porter?"
+
+Dave started; then he whistled long and low. "Spit it all out, Andy!" he
+advised.
+
+"You said she was travellin' with a feller!"
+
+"Well, what's the harm in that? Everybody knows that--"
+
+"If any crawler says a word about Lizzie Porter--look here, me and you's
+got to fight, Dave Bentley!" Then, with still greater vehemence, as
+though he had a share in the garment: "Take off that coat!"
+
+"Not if I know it!" said Dave, with the sudden quietness that comes to
+brave but headstrong and impulsive men at a critical moment: "Me and you
+ain't goin' to fight, Andy; and" (with sudden energy) "if you try it on
+I'll knock you into jim-rags!"
+
+Then, stepping close to Andy and taking him by the arm: "Andy, this
+thing will have to be fixed up. Come here; I want to talk to you." And
+he led him some paces aside, inside the boundary line, which seemed a
+ludicrously unnecessary precaution, seeing that there was no one within
+sight or hearing save Dave's horse.
+
+"Now, look here, Andy; let's have it over. What's the matter with you
+and Lizzie Porter?"
+
+"I'M travellin' with her, that's all; and we're going to get married in
+two years!"
+
+Dave gave vent to another long, low whistle. He seemed to think and make
+up his mind.
+
+"Now, look here, Andy: we're old mates, ain't we?"
+
+"Yes; I know that."
+
+"And do you think I'd tell you a blanky lie, or crawl behind your back?
+Do you? Spit it out!"
+
+"N--no, I don't!"
+
+"I've always stuck up for you, Andy, and--why, I've fought for you
+behind your back!"
+
+"I know that, Dave."
+
+"There's my hand on it!"
+
+Andy took his friend's hand mechanically, but gripped it hard.
+
+"Now, Andy, I'll tell you straight: It's Gorstruth about Lizzie Porter!"
+
+They stood as they were for a full minute, hands clasped; Andy with his
+jaw dropped and staring in a dazed sort of way at Dave. He raised his
+disengaged hand helplessly to his thatch, gulped suspiciously, and asked
+in a broken voice:
+
+"How--how do you know it, Dave?"
+
+"Know it? Andy, I SEEN 'EM MESELF!"
+
+"You did, Dave?" in a tone that suggested sorrow more than anger at
+Dave's part in the seeing of them.
+
+"Gorstruth, Andy!"
+
+ . . . . .
+
+"Tell me, Dave, who was the feller? That's all I want to know."
+
+"I can't tell you that. I only seen them when I was canterin' past in
+the dusk."
+
+"Then how'd you know it was a man at all?"
+
+"It wore trousers, anyway, and was as big as you; so it couldn't have
+been a girl. I'm pretty safe to swear it was Mick Kelly. I saw his horse
+hangin' up at Porter's once or twice. But I'll tell you what I'll do:
+I'll find out for you, Andy. And, what's more, I'll job him for you if I
+catch him!"
+
+Andy said nothing; his hands clenched and his chest heaved. Dave laid a
+friendly hand on his shoulder.
+
+"It's red hot, Andy, I know. Anybody else but you and I wouldn't have
+cared. But don't be a fool; there's any Gorsquantity of girls knockin'
+round. You just give it to her straight and chuck her, and have done
+with it. You must be bad off to bother about her. Gorstruth! she ain't
+much to look at anyway! I've got to ride like blazes to catch the coach.
+Don't knock off till I come back; I won't be above an hour. I'm goin' to
+give you some points in case you've got to fight Mick; and I'll have to
+be there to back you!" And, thus taking the right moment instinctively,
+he jumped on his horse and galloped on towards the town.
+
+His dust-cloud had scarcely disappeared round a corner of the paddocks
+when Andy was aware of another one coming towards him. He had a
+dazed idea that it was Dave coming back, but went on digging another
+post-hole, mechanically, until a spring-cart rattled up, and stopped
+opposite him. Then he lifted his head. It was Lizzie herself, driving
+home from town. She turned towards him with her usual faint smile. Her
+small features were "washed out" and rather haggard.
+
+"'Ello, Andy!"
+
+But, at the sight of her, all his hatred of "funny
+business"--intensified, perhaps, by a sense of personal injury--came to
+a head, and he exploded:
+
+"Look here, Lizzie Porter! I know all about you. You needn't think
+you're goin' to cotton on with me any more after this! I wouldn't be
+seen in a paddock with yer! I'm satisfied about you! Get on out of
+this!"
+
+The girl stared at him for a moment thunderstruck; then she lammed into
+the old horse with a stick she carried in place of a whip.
+
+She cried, and wondered what she'd done, and trembled so that she could
+scarcely unharness the horse, and wondered if Andy had got a touch of
+the sun, and went in and sat down and cried again; and pride came to her
+aid and she hated Andy; thought of her big brother, away droving, and
+made a cup of tea. She shed tears over the tea, and went through it all
+again.
+
+Meanwhile Andy was suffering a reaction. He started to fill the hole
+before he put the post in; then to ram the post before the rails were
+in position. Dubbing off the ends of the rails, he was in danger of
+amputating a toe or a foot with every stroke of the adze. And, at last,
+trying to squint along the little lumps of clay which he had placed in
+the centre of the top of each post for several panels back--to assist
+him to take a line--he found that they swam and doubled, and ran off in
+watery angles, for his eyes were too moist to see straight and single.
+
+Then he threw down the tools hopelessly, and was standing helplessly
+undecided whether to go home or go down to the creek and drown himself,
+when Dave turned up again.
+
+"Seen her?" asked Dave.
+
+"Yes," said Andy.
+
+"Did you chuck her?"
+
+"Look here, Dave; are you sure the feller was Mick Kelly?"
+
+"I never said I was. How was I to know? It was dark. You don't expect
+I'd 'fox' a feller I see doing a bit of a bear-up to a girl, do you? It
+might have been you, for all I knowed. I suppose she's been talking you
+round?"
+
+"No, she ain't," said Andy. "But, look here, Dave; I was properly gone
+on that girl, I was, and--and I want to be sure I'm right."
+
+The business was getting altogether too psychological for Dave Bentley.
+"You might as well," he rapped out, "call me a liar at once!"
+
+"'Taint that at all, Dave. I want to get at who the feller is; that's
+what I want to get at now. Where did you see them, and when?"
+
+"I seen them Anniversary night, along the road, near Ross' farm; and
+I seen 'em Sunday night afore that--in the trees near the old
+culvert--near Porter's sliprails; and I seen 'em one night outside
+Porter's, on a log near the woodheap. They was thick that time, and
+bearin' up proper, and no mistake. So I can swear to her. Now, are you
+satisfied about her?"
+
+But Andy was wildly pitchforking his thatch under his hat with all ten
+fingers and staring at Dave, who began to regard him uneasily; then
+there came to Andy's eyes an awful glare, which caused Dave to step back
+hastily.
+
+"Good God, Andy! Are yer goin' ratty?"
+
+"No!" cried Andy, wildly.
+
+"Then what the blazes is the matter with you? You'll have rats if you
+don't look out!"
+
+"JIMMINY FROTH!--It was ME all the time!"
+
+"What?"
+
+"It was me that was with her all them nights. It was me that you seen.
+WHY, I POPPED ON THE WOODHEAP!"
+
+Dave was taken too suddenly to whistle this time.
+
+"And you went for her just now?"
+
+"Yes!" yelled Andy.
+
+"Well--you've done it!"
+
+"Yes," said Andy, hopelessly; "I've done it!"
+
+Dave whistled now--a very long, low whistle. "Well, you're a bloomin'
+goat, Andy, after this. But this thing'll have to be fixed up!" and he
+cantered away. Poor Andy was too badly knocked to notice the abruptness
+of Dave's departure, or to see that he turned through the sliprails on
+to the track that led to Porter's.
+
+ . . . . .
+
+Half an hour later Andy appeared at Porter's back door, with an
+expression on his face as though the funeral was to start in ten
+minutes. In a tone befitting such an occasion, he wanted to see Lizzie.
+
+Dave had been there with the laudable determination of fixing the
+business up, and had, of course, succeeded in making it much worse than
+it was before. But Andy made it all right.
+
+
+
+
+The Iron-Bark Chip
+
+
+
+Dave Regan and party--bush-fencers, tank-sinkers, rough carpenters,
+&c.--were finishing the third and last culvert of their contract on
+the last section of the new railway line, and had already sent in their
+vouchers for the completed contract, so that there might be no excuse
+for extra delay in connection with the cheque.
+
+Now it had been expressly stipulated in the plans and specifications
+that the timber for certain beams and girders was to be iron-bark and
+no other, and Government inspectors were authorised to order the removal
+from the ground of any timber or material they might deem inferior,
+or not in accordance with the stipulations. The railway contractor's
+foreman and inspector of sub-contractors was a practical man and a
+bushman, but he had been a timber-getter himself; his sympathies were
+bushy, and he was on winking terms with Dave Regan. Besides, extended
+time was expiring, and the contractors were in a hurry to complete the
+line. But the Government inspector was a reserved man who poked round
+on his independent own and appeared in lonely spots at unexpected
+times--with apparently no definite object in life--like a grey kangaroo
+bothered by a new wire fence, but unsuspicious of the presence of
+humans. He wore a grey suit, rode, or mostly led, an ashen-grey horse;
+the grass was long and grey, so he was seldom spotted until he was
+well within the horizon and bearing leisurely down on a party of
+sub-contractors, leading his horse.
+
+Now iron-bark was scarce and distant on those ridges, and another
+timber, similar in appearance, but much inferior in grain and "standing"
+quality, was plentiful and close at hand. Dave and party were "about
+full of" the job and place, and wanted to get their cheque and be gone
+to another "spec" they had in view. So they came to reckon they'd get
+the last girder from a handy tree, and have it squared, in place, and
+carefully and conscientiously tarred before the inspector happened
+along, if he did. But they didn't. They got it squared, and ready to be
+lifted into its place; the kindly darkness of tar was ready to cover a
+fraud that took four strong men with crowbars and levers to shift; and
+now (such is the regular cussedness of things) as the fraudulent piece
+of timber lay its last hour on the ground, looking and smelling, to
+their guilty imaginations like anything but iron-bark, they were aware
+of the Government inspector drifting down upon them obliquely, with
+something of the atmosphere of a casual Bill or Jim who had dropped out
+of his easy-going track to see how they were getting on, and borrow a
+match. They had more than half hoped that, as he had visited them pretty
+frequently during the progress of the work, and knew how near it was to
+completion, he wouldn't bother coming any more. But it's the way with
+the Government. You might move heaven and earth in vain endeavour to
+get the "Guvermunt" to flutter an eyelash over something of the most
+momentous importance to yourself and mates and the district--even to
+the country; but just when you are leaving authority severely alone, and
+have strong reasons for not wanting to worry or interrupt it, and not
+desiring it to worry about you, it will take a fancy into its head to
+come along and bother.
+
+"It's always the way!" muttered Dave to his mates. "I knew the beggar
+would turn up!... And the only cronk log we've had, too!" he added, in
+an injured tone. "If this had 'a' been the only blessed iron-bark in the
+whole contract, it would have been all right.... Good-day, sir!" (to the
+inspector). "It's hot?"
+
+The inspector nodded. He was not of an impulsive nature. He got down
+from his horse and looked at the girder in an abstracted way; and
+presently there came into his eyes a dreamy, far-away, sad sort of
+expression, as if there had been a very sad and painful occurrence in
+his family, way back in the past, and that piece of timber in some way
+reminded him of it and brought the old sorrow home to him. He blinked
+three times, and asked, in a subdued tone:
+
+"Is that iron-bark?"
+
+Jack Bentley, the fluent liar of the party, caught his breath with a
+jerk and coughed, to cover the gasp and gain time. "I--iron-bark? Of
+course it is! I thought you would know iron-bark, mister." (Mister was
+silent.) "What else d'yer think it is?"
+
+The dreamy, abstracted expression was back. The inspector, by-the-way,
+didn't know much about timber, but he had a great deal of instinct, and
+went by it when in doubt.
+
+"L--look here, mister!" put in Dave Regan, in a tone of innocent
+puzzlement and with a blank bucolic face. "B--but don't the plans and
+specifications say iron-bark? Ours does, anyway. I--I'll git the papers
+from the tent and show yer, if yer like."
+
+It was not necessary. The inspector admitted the fact slowly. He
+stooped, and with an absent air picked up a chip. He looked at it
+abstractedly for a moment, blinked his threefold blink; then, seeming to
+recollect an appointment, he woke up suddenly and asked briskly:
+
+"Did this chip come off that girder?"
+
+Blank silence. The inspector blinked six times, divided in threes,
+rapidly, mounted his horse, said "Day," and rode off.
+
+Regan and party stared at each other.
+
+"Wha--what did he do that for?" asked Andy Page, the third in the party.
+
+"Do what for, you fool?" enquired Dave.
+
+"Ta--take that chip for?"
+
+"He's taking it to the office!" snarled Jack Bentley.
+
+"What--what for? What does he want to do that for?"
+
+"To get it blanky well analysed! You ass! Now are yer satisfied?" And
+Jack sat down hard on the timber, jerked out his pipe, and said to Dave,
+in a sharp, toothache tone:
+
+"Gimmiamatch!"
+
+"We--well! what are we to do now?" enquired Andy, who was the hardest
+grafter, but altogether helpless, hopeless, and useless in a crisis like
+this.
+
+"Grain and varnish the bloomin' culvert!" snapped Bentley.
+
+But Dave's eyes, that had been ruefully following the inspector,
+suddenly dilated. The inspector had ridden a short distance along the
+line, dismounted, thrown the bridle over a post, laid the chip (which
+was too big to go in his pocket) on top of it, got through the fence,
+and was now walking back at an angle across the line in the direction
+of the fencing party, who had worked up on the other side, a little more
+than opposite the culvert.
+
+Dave took in the lay of the country at a glance and thought rapidly.
+
+"Gimme an iron-bark chip!" he said suddenly.
+
+Bentley, who was quick-witted when the track was shown him, as is a
+kangaroo dog (Jack ran by sight, not scent), glanced in the line of
+Dave's eyes, jumped up, and got a chip about the same size as that which
+the inspector had taken.
+
+Now the "lay of the country" sloped generally to the line from both
+sides, and the angle between the inspector's horse, the fencing party,
+and the culvert was well within a clear concave space; but a couple
+of hundred yards back from the line and parallel to it (on the side on
+which Dave's party worked their timber) a fringe of scrub ran to within
+a few yards of a point which would be about in line with a single tree
+on the cleared slope, the horse, and the fencing party.
+
+Dave took the iron-bark chip, ran along the bed of the water-course into
+the scrub, raced up the siding behind the bushes, got safely, though
+without breathing, across the exposed space, and brought the tree into
+line between him and the inspector, who was talking to the fencers. Then
+he began to work quickly down the slope towards the tree (which was a
+thin one), keeping it in line, his arms close to his sides, and working,
+as it were, down the trunk of the tree, as if the fencing party were
+kangaroos and Dave was trying to get a shot at them. The inspector,
+by-the-bye, had a habit of glancing now and then in the direction of his
+horse, as though under the impression that it was flighty and restless
+and inclined to bolt on opportunity. It was an anxious moment for all
+parties concerned--except the inspector. They didn't want HIM to be
+perturbed. And, just as Dave reached the foot of the tree, the inspector
+finished what he had to say to the fencers, turned, and started to walk
+briskly back to his horse. There was a thunderstorm coming. Now was the
+critical moment--there were certain prearranged signals between Dave's
+party and the fencers which might have interested the inspector, but
+none to meet a case like this.
+
+Jack Bentley gasped, and started forward with an idea of intercepting
+the inspector and holding him for a few minutes in bogus conversation.
+Inspirations come to one at a critical moment, and it flashed on Jack's
+mind to send Andy instead. Andy looked as innocent and guileless as he
+was, but was uncomfortable in the vicinity of "funny business", and
+must have an honest excuse. "Not that that mattered," commented Jack
+afterwards; "it would have taken the inspector ten minutes to get at
+what Andy was driving at, whatever it was."
+
+"Run, Andy! Tell him there's a heavy thunderstorm coming and he'd better
+stay in our humpy till it's over. Run! Don't stand staring like a blanky
+fool. He'll be gone!"
+
+Andy started. But just then, as luck would have it, one of the fencers
+started after the inspector, hailing him as "Hi, mister!" He wanted to
+be set right about the survey or something--or to pretend to want to be
+set right--from motives of policy which I haven't time to explain here.
+
+That fencer explained afterwards to Dave's party that he "seen what you
+coves was up to," and that's why he called the inspector back. But he
+told them that after they had told their yarn--which was a mistake.
+
+"Come back, Andy!" cried Jack Bentley.
+
+Dave Regan slipped round the tree, down on his hands and knees, and made
+quick time through the grass which, luckily, grew pretty tall on the
+thirty or forty yards of slope between the tree and the horse. Close to
+the horse, a thought struck Dave that pulled him up, and sent a shiver
+along his spine and a hungry feeling under it. The horse would
+break away and bolt! But the case was desperate. Dave ventured an
+interrogatory "Cope, cope, cope?" The horse turned its head wearily and
+regarded him with a mild eye, as if he'd expected him to come, and come
+on all fours, and wondered what had kept him so long; then he went
+on thinking. Dave reached the foot of the post; the horse obligingly
+leaning over on the other leg. Dave reared head and shoulders cautiously
+behind the post, like a snake; his hand went up twice, swiftly--the
+first time he grabbed the inspector's chip, and the second time he put
+the iron-bark one in its place. He drew down and back, and scuttled off
+for the tree like a gigantic tailless "goanna".
+
+A few minutes later he walked up to the culvert from along the creek,
+smoking hard to settle his nerves.
+
+The sky seemed to darken suddenly; the first great drops of the
+thunderstorm came pelting down. The inspector hurried to his horse, and
+cantered off along the line in the direction of the fettlers' camp.
+
+He had forgotten all about the chip, and left it on top of the post!
+
+Dave Regan sat down on the beam in the rain and swore comprehensively.
+
+
+
+
+"Middleton's Peter"
+
+
+ I.
+
+ The First Born
+
+
+The struggling squatter is to be found in Australia as well as the
+"struggling farmer". The Australian squatter is not always the mighty
+wool king that English and American authors and other uninformed people
+apparently imagine him to be. Squatting, at the best, is but a game of
+chance. It depends mainly on the weather, and that, in New South Wales
+at least, depends on nothing.
+
+Joe Middleton was a struggling squatter, with a station some distance
+to the westward of the furthest line reached by the ordinary "new chum".
+His run, at the time of our story, was only about six miles square, and
+his stock was limited in proportion. The hands on Joe's run consisted
+of his brother Dave, a middle-aged man known only as "Middleton's Peter"
+(who had been in the service of the Middleton family ever since Joe
+Middleton could remember), and an old black shepherd, with his gin and
+two boys.
+
+It was in the first year of Joe's marriage. He had married a very
+ordinary girl, as far as Australian girls go, but in his eyes she was an
+angel. He really worshipped her.
+
+One sultry afternoon in midsummer all the station hands, with the
+exception of Dave Middleton, were congregated about the homestead door,
+and it was evident from their solemn faces that something unusual was
+the matter. They appeared to be watching for something or someone across
+the flat, and the old black shepherd, who had been listening intently
+with bent head, suddenly straightened himself up and cried:
+
+"I can hear the cart. I can see it!"
+
+You must bear in mind that our blackfellows do not always talk the
+gibberish with which they are credited by story writers.
+
+It was not until some time after Black Bill had spoken that the
+white--or, rather, the brown--portion of the party could see or even
+hear the approaching vehicle. At last, far out through the trunks of the
+native apple-trees, the cart was seen approaching; and as it came nearer
+it was evident that it was being driven at a break-neck pace, the horses
+cantering all the way, while the motion of the cart, as first one
+wheel and then the other sprang from a root or a rut, bore a striking
+resemblance to the Highland Fling. There were two persons in the cart.
+One was Mother Palmer, a stout, middle-aged party (who sometimes did the
+duties of a midwife), and the other was Dave Middleton, Joe's brother.
+
+The cart was driven right up to the door with scarcely any abatement of
+speed, and was stopped so suddenly that Mrs. Palmer was sent sprawling
+on to the horse's rump. She was quickly helped down, and, as soon as
+she had recovered sufficient breath, she followed Black Mary into the
+bedroom where young Mrs. Middleton was lying, looking very pale and
+frightened. The horse which had been driven so cruelly had not done
+blowing before another cart appeared, also driven very fast. It
+contained old Mr. and Mrs. Middleton, who lived comfortably on a small
+farm not far from Palmer's place.
+
+As soon as he had dumped Mrs. Palmer, Dave Middleton left the cart and,
+mounting a fresh horse which stood ready saddled in the yard, galloped
+off through the scrub in a different direction.
+
+Half an hour afterwards Joe Middleton came home on a horse that had been
+almost ridden to death. His mother came out at the sound of his arrival,
+and he anxiously asked her:
+
+"How is she?"
+
+"Did you find Doc. Wild?" asked the mother.
+
+"No, confound him!" exclaimed Joe bitterly. "He promised me faithfully
+to come over on Wednesday and stay until Maggie was right again. Now
+he has left Dean's and gone--Lord knows where. I suppose he is drinking
+again. How is Maggie?"
+
+"It's all over now--the child is born. It's a boy; but she is very weak.
+Dave got Mrs. Palmer here just in time. I had better tell you at once
+that Mrs. Palmer says if we don't get a doctor here to-night poor Maggie
+won't live."
+
+"Good God! and what am I to do?" cried Joe desperately.
+
+"Is there any other doctor within reach?"
+
+"No; there is only the one at B----; that's forty miles away, and he is
+laid up with the broken leg he got in the buggy accident. Where's Dave?"
+
+"Gone to Black's shanty. One of Mrs. Palmer's sons thought he remembered
+someone saying that Doc. Wild was there last week. That's fifteen miles
+away."
+
+"But it is our only hope," said Joe dejectedly. "I wish to God that I
+had taken Maggie to some civilised place a month ago."
+
+Doc. Wild was a well-known character among the bushmen of New South
+Wales, and although the profession did not recognise him, and denounced
+him as an empiric, his skill was undoubted. Bushmen had great faith in
+him, and would often ride incredible distances in order to bring him
+to the bedside of a sick friend. He drank fearfully, but was seldom
+incapable of treating a patient; he would, however, sometimes be found
+in an obstinate mood and refuse to travel to the side of a sick person,
+and then the devil himself could not make the doctor budge. But for all
+this he was very generous--a fact that could, no doubt, be testified to
+by many a grateful sojourner in the lonely bush.
+
+
+
+ II.
+
+ The Only Hope
+
+
+Night came on, and still there was no change in the condition of
+the young wife, and no sign of the doctor. Several stockmen from
+the neighbouring stations, hearing that there was trouble at Joe
+Middleton's, had ridden over, and had galloped off on long, hopeless
+rides in search of a doctor. Being generally free from sickness
+themselves, these bushmen look upon it as a serious business even in its
+mildest form; what is more, their sympathy is always practical where
+it is possible for it to be so. One day, while out on the run after
+an "outlaw", Joe Middleton was badly thrown from his horse, and the
+break-neck riding that was done on that occasion from the time the horse
+came home with empty saddle until the rider was safe in bed and attended
+by a doctor was something extraordinary, even for the bush.
+
+Before the time arrived when Dave Middleton might reasonably have been
+expected to return, the station people were anxiously watching for him,
+all except the old blackfellow and the two boys, who had gone to yard
+the sheep.
+
+The party had been increased by Jimmy Nowlett, the bullocky, who had
+just arrived with a load of fencing wire and provisions for Middleton.
+Jimmy was standing in the moonlight, whip in hand, looking as anxious as
+the husband himself, and endeavouring to calculate by mental arithmetic
+the exact time it ought to take Dave to complete his double journey,
+taking into consideration the distance, the obstacles in the way, and
+the chances of horse-flesh.
+
+But the time which Jimmy fixed for the arrival came without Dave.
+
+Old Peter (as he was generally called, though he was not really old)
+stood aside in his usual sullen manner, his hat drawn down over his
+brow and eyes, and nothing visible but a thick and very horizontal
+black beard, from the depth of which emerged large clouds of very strong
+tobacco smoke, the product of a short, black, clay pipe.
+
+They had almost given up all hope of seeing Dave return that night, when
+Peter slowly and deliberately removed his pipe and grunted:
+
+"He's a-comin'."
+
+He then replaced the pipe, and smoked on as before.
+
+All listened, but not one of them could hear a sound.
+
+"Yer ears must be pretty sharp for yer age, Peter. We can't hear him,"
+remarked Jimmy Nowlett.
+
+"His dog ken," said Peter.
+
+The pipe was again removed and its abbreviated stem pointed in the
+direction of Dave's cattle dog, who had risen beside his kennel with
+pointed ears, and was looking eagerly in the direction from which his
+master was expected to come.
+
+Presently the sound of horse's hoofs was distinctly heard.
+
+"I can hear two horses," cried Jimmy Nowlett excitedly.
+
+"There's only one," said old Peter quietly.
+
+A few moments passed, and a single horseman appeared on the far side of
+the flat.
+
+"It's Doc. Wild on Dave's horse," cried Jimmy Nowlett. "Dave don't ride
+like that."
+
+"It's Dave," said Peter, replacing his pipe and looking more unsociable
+than ever.
+
+Dave rode up and, throwing himself wearily from the saddle, stood
+ominously silent by the side of his horse.
+
+Joe Middleton said nothing, but stood aside with an expression of utter
+hopelessness on his face.
+
+"Not there?" asked Jimmy Nowlett at last, addressing Dave.
+
+"Yes, he's there," answered Dave, impatiently.
+
+This was not the answer they expected, but nobody seemed surprised.
+
+"Drunk?" asked Jimmy.
+
+"Yes."
+
+Here old Peter removed his pipe, and pronounced the one word--"How?"
+
+"What the hell do you mean by that?" muttered Dave, whose patience had
+evidently been severely tried by the clever but intemperate bush doctor.
+
+"How drunk?" explained Peter, with great equanimity.
+
+"Stubborn drunk, blind drunk, beastly drunk, dead drunk, and damned well
+drunk, if that's what you want to know!"
+
+"What did Doc. say?" asked Jimmy.
+
+"Said he was sick--had lumbago--wouldn't come for the Queen of England;
+said he wanted a course of treatment himself. Curse him! I have no
+patience to talk about him."
+
+"I'd give him a course of treatment," muttered Jimmy viciously, trailing
+the long lash of his bullock-whip through the grass and spitting
+spitefully at the ground.
+
+Dave turned away and joined Joe, who was talking earnestly to his mother
+by the kitchen door. He told them that he had spent an hour trying to
+persuade Doc. Wild to come, and, that before he had left the shanty,
+Black had promised him faithfully to bring the doctor over as soon as
+his obstinate mood wore off.
+
+Just then a low moan was heard from the sick room, followed by the sound
+of Mother Palmer's voice calling old Mrs. Middleton, who went inside
+immediately.
+
+No one had noticed the disappearance of Peter, and when he presently
+returned from the stockyard, leading the only fresh horse that remained,
+Jimmy Nowlett began to regard him with some interest. Peter transferred
+the saddle from Dave's horse to the other, and then went into a small
+room off the kitchen, which served him as a bedroom; from it he soon
+returned with a formidable-looking revolver, the chambers of which he
+examined in the moonlight in full view of all the company. They thought
+for a moment the man had gone mad. Old Middleton leaped quickly behind
+Nowlett, and Black Mary, who had come out to the cask at the corner for
+a dipper of water, dropped the dipper and was inside like a shot. One of
+the black boys came softly up at that moment; as soon as his sharp eye
+"spotted" the weapon, he disappeared as though the earth had swallowed
+him.
+
+"What the mischief are yer goin' ter do, Peter?" asked Jimmy.
+
+"Goin' to fetch him," said Peter, and, after carefully emptying his pipe
+and replacing it in a leather pouch at his belt, he mounted and rode off
+at an easy canter.
+
+Jimmy watched the horse until it disappeared at the edge of the flat,
+and then after coiling up the long lash of his bullock-whip in the dust
+until it looked like a sleeping snake, he prodded the small end of the
+long pine handle into the middle of the coil, as though driving home a
+point, and said in a tone of intense conviction:
+
+"He'll fetch him."
+
+
+
+ III.
+
+ Doc. Wild
+
+
+Peter gradually increased his horse's speed along the rough bush track
+until he was riding at a good pace. It was ten miles to the main road,
+and five from there to the shanty kept by Black.
+
+For some time before Peter started the atmosphere had been very close
+and oppressive. The great black edge of a storm-cloud had risen in the
+east, and everything indicated the approach of a thunderstorm. It was
+not long coming. Before Peter had completed six miles of his journey,
+the clouds rolled over, obscuring the moon, and an Australian
+thunderstorm came on with its mighty downpour, its blinding lightning,
+and its earth-shaking thunder. Peter rode steadily on, only pausing now
+and then until a flash revealed the track in front of him.
+
+Black's shanty--or, rather, as the sign had it, "Post Office and General
+Store"--was, as we have said, five miles along the main road from the
+point where Middleton's track joined it. The building was of the usual
+style of bush architecture. About two hundred yards nearer the creek,
+which crossed the road further on, stood a large bark and slab stable,
+large enough to have met the requirements of a legitimate bush "public".
+
+The reader may doubt that a "sly grog shop" could openly carry on
+business on a main Government road along which mounted troopers were
+continually passing. But then, you see, mounted troopers get thirsty
+like other men; moreover, they could always get their thirst quenched
+'gratis' at these places; so the reader will be prepared to hear that
+on this very night two troopers' horses were stowed snugly away in the
+stable, and two troopers were stowed snugly away in the back room of the
+shanty, sleeping off the effects of their cheap but strong potations.
+
+There were two rooms, of a sort, attached to the stables--one at each
+end. One was occupied by a man who was "generally useful", and the other
+was the surgery, office, and bedroom 'pro tem.' of Doc. Wild.
+
+Doc. Wild was a tall man, of spare proportions. He had a cadaverous
+face, black hair, bushy black eyebrows, eagle nose, and eagle eyes. He
+never slept while he was drinking. On this occasion he sat in front of
+the fire on a low three-legged stool. His knees were drawn up, his toes
+hooked round the front legs of the stool, one hand resting on one knee,
+and one elbow (the hand supporting the chin) resting on the other. He
+was staring intently into the fire, on which an old black saucepan
+was boiling and sending forth a pungent odour of herbs. There seemed
+something uncanny about the doctor as the red light of the fire fell on
+his hawk-like face and gleaming eyes. He might have been Mephistopheles
+watching some infernal brew.
+
+He had sat there some time without stirring a finger, when the door
+suddenly burst open and Middleton's Peter stood within, dripping wet.
+The doctor turned his black, piercing eyes upon the intruder (who
+regarded him silently) for a moment, and then asked quietly:
+
+"What the hell do you want?"
+
+"I want you," said Peter.
+
+"And what do you want me for?"
+
+"I want you to come to Joe Middleton's wife. She's bad," said Peter
+calmly.
+
+"I won't come," shouted the doctor. "I've brought enough horse-stealers
+into the world already. If any more want to come they can go to blazes
+for me. Now, you get out of this!"
+
+"Don't get yer rag out," said Peter quietly. "The hoss-stealer's come,
+an' nearly killed his mother ter begin with; an' if yer don't get yer
+physic-box an' come wi' me, by the great God I'll----"
+
+Here the revolver was produced and pointed at Doc. Wild's head. The
+sight of the weapon had a sobering effect upon the doctor. He rose,
+looked at Peter critically for a moment, knocked the weapon out of his
+hand, and said slowly and deliberately:
+
+"Wall, ef the case es as serious as that, I (hic) reckon I'd better
+come."
+
+Peter was still of the same opinion, so Doc. Wild proceeded to get his
+medicine chest ready. He explained afterwards, in one of his softer
+moments, that the shooter didn't frighten him so much as it touched his
+memory--"sorter put him in mind of the old days in California, and made
+him think of the man he might have been," he'd say,--"kinder touched
+his heart and slid the durned old panorama in front of him like a flash;
+made him think of the time when he slipped three leaden pills into 'Blue
+Shirt' for winking at a new chum behind his (the Doc.'s) back when he
+was telling a truthful yarn, and charged the said 'Blue Shirt' a hundred
+dollars for extracting the said pills."
+
+Joe Middleton's wife is a grandmother now.
+
+Peter passed after the manner of his sort; he was found dead in his
+bunk.
+
+Poor Doc. Wild died in a shepherd's hut at the Dry Creeks. The shepherds
+(white men) found him, "naked as he was born and with the hide half
+burned off him with the sun," rounding up imaginary snakes on a dusty
+clearing, one blazing hot day. The hut-keeper had some "quare" (queer)
+experiences with the doctor during the next three days and used, in
+after years, to tell of them, between the puffs of his pipe, calmly
+and solemnly and as if the story was rather to the doctor's credit than
+otherwise. The shepherds sent for the police and a doctor, and sent word
+to Joe Middleton. Doc. Wild was sensible towards the end. His interview
+with the other doctor was characteristic. "And, now you see how far I
+am," he said in conclusion--"have you brought the brandy?" The other
+doctor had. Joe Middleton came with his waggonette, and in it the
+softest mattress and pillows the station afforded. He also, in his
+innocence, brought a dozen of soda-water. Doc. Wild took Joe's hand
+feebly, and, a little later, he "passed out" (as he would have said)
+murmuring "something that sounded like poetry", in an unknown tongue.
+Joe took the body to the home station. "Who's the boss bringin'?" asked
+the shearers, seeing the waggonette coming very slowly and the boss
+walking by the horses' heads. "Doc. Wild," said a station hand. "Take
+yer hats off."
+
+They buried him with bush honours, and chiselled his name on a slab of
+bluegum--a wood that lasts.
+
+
+
+
+The Mystery of Dave Regan
+
+
+
+"And then there was Dave Regan," said the traveller. "Dave used to die
+oftener than any other bushman I knew. He was always being reported
+dead and turnin' up again. He seemed to like it--except once, when his
+brother drew his money and drank it all to drown his grief at what he
+called Dave's 'untimely end'. Well, Dave went up to Queensland once with
+cattle, and was away three years and reported dead, as usual. He was
+drowned in the Bogan this time while tryin' to swim his horse acrost
+a flood--and his sweetheart hurried up and got spliced to a worse man
+before Dave got back.
+
+"Well, one day I was out in the bush lookin' for timber, when the
+biggest storm ever knowed in that place come on. There was hail in it,
+too, as big as bullets, and if I hadn't got behind a stump and crouched
+down in time I'd have been riddled like a--like a bushranger. As it was,
+I got soakin' wet. The storm was over in a few minutes, the water run
+off down the gullies, and the sun come out and the scrub steamed--and
+stunk like a new pair of moleskin trousers. I went on along the track,
+and presently I seen a long, lanky chap get on to a long, lanky horse
+and ride out of a bush yard at the edge of a clearin'. I knowed it was
+Dave d'reckly I set eyes on him.
+
+"Dave used to ride a tall, holler-backed thoroughbred with a body and
+limbs like a kangaroo dog, and it would circle around you and sidle away
+as if it was frightened you was goin' to jab a knife into it.
+
+"''Ello! Dave!' said I, as he came spurrin' up. 'How are yer!'
+
+"''Ello, Jim!' says he. 'How are you?'
+
+"'All right!' says I. 'How are yer gettin' on?'
+
+"But, before we could say any more, that horse shied away and broke off
+through the scrub to the right. I waited, because I knowed Dave would
+come back again if I waited long enough; and in about ten minutes he
+came sidlin' in from the scrub to the left.
+
+"'Oh, I'm all right,' says he, spurrin' up sideways; 'How are you?'
+
+"'Right!' says I. 'How's the old people?'
+
+"'Oh, I ain't been home yet,' says he, holdin' out his hand; but, afore
+I could grip it, the cussed horse sidled off to the south end of the
+clearin' and broke away again through the scrub.
+
+"I heard Dave swearin' about the country for twenty minutes or so, and
+then he came spurrin' and cursin' in from the other end of the clearin'.
+
+"'Where have you been all this time?' I said, as the horse came curvin'
+up like a boomerang.
+
+"'Gulf country,' said Dave.
+
+"'That was a storm, Dave,' said I.
+
+"'My oath!' says Dave.
+
+"'Get caught in it?'
+
+"'Yes.'
+
+"'Got to shelter?'
+
+"'No.'
+
+"'But you're as dry's a bone, Dave!'
+
+"Dave grinned. '------and------and------the--------!' he yelled.
+
+"He said that to the horse as it boomeranged off again and broke away
+through the scrub. I waited; but he didn't come back, and I reckoned
+he'd got so far away before he could pull up that he didn't think it
+worth while comin' back; so I went on. By-and-bye I got thinkin'. Dave
+was as dry as a bone, and I knowed that he hadn't had time to get to
+shelter, for there wasn't a shed within twelve miles. He wasn't only
+dry, but his coat was creased and dusty too--same as if he'd been
+sleepin' in a holler log; and when I come to think of it, his face
+seemed thinner and whiter than it used ter, and so did his hands and
+wrists, which always stuck a long way out of his coat-sleeves; and there
+was blood on his face--but I thought he'd got scratched with a twig.
+(Dave used to wear a coat three or four sizes too small for him, with
+sleeves that didn't come much below his elbows and a tail that scarcely
+reached his waist behind.) And his hair seemed dark and lank, instead
+of bein' sandy and stickin' out like an old fibre brush, as it used
+ter. And then I thought his voice sounded different, too. And, when
+I enquired next day, there was no one heard of Dave, and the chaps
+reckoned I must have been drunk, or seen his ghost.
+
+"It didn't seem all right at all--it worried me a lot. I couldn't make
+out how Dave kept dry; and the horse and saddle and saddle-cloth was
+wet. I told the chaps how he talked to me and what he said, and how he
+swore at the horse; but they only said it was Dave's ghost and nobody
+else's. I told 'em about him bein' dry as a bone after gettin' caught in
+that storm; but they only laughed and said it was a dry place where Dave
+went to. I talked and argued about it until the chaps began to tap their
+foreheads and wink--then I left off talking. But I didn't leave off
+thinkin'--I always hated a mystery. Even Dave's father told me that Dave
+couldn't be alive or else his ghost wouldn't be round--he said he knew
+Dave better than that. One or two fellers did turn up afterwards that
+had seen Dave about the time that I did--and then the chaps said they
+was sure that Dave was dead.
+
+"But one fine day, as a lot of us chaps was playin' pitch and toss at
+the shanty, one of the fellers yelled out:
+
+"'By Gee! Here comes Dave Regan!'
+
+"And I looked up and saw Dave himself, sidlin' out of a cloud of dust on
+a long lanky horse. He rode into the stockyard, got down, hung his horse
+up to a post, put up the rails, and then come slopin' towards us with
+a half-acre grin on his face. Dave had long, thin bow-legs, and when he
+was on the ground he moved as if he was on roller skates.
+
+"''El-lo, Dave!' says I. 'How are yer?'
+
+"''Ello, Jim!' said he. 'How the blazes are you?'
+
+"'All right!' says I, shakin' hands. 'How are yer?'
+
+"'Oh! I'm all right!' he says. 'How are yer poppin' up!'
+
+"Well, when we'd got all that settled, and the other chaps had asked how
+he was, he said: 'Ah, well! Let's have a drink.'
+
+"And all the other chaps crawfished up and flung themselves round the
+corner and sidled into the bar after Dave. We had a lot of talk, and he
+told us that he'd been down before, but had gone away without seein' any
+of us, except me, because he'd suddenly heard of a mob of cattle at a
+station two hundred miles away; and after a while I took him aside and
+said:
+
+"'Look here, Dave! Do you remember the day I met you after the storm?'
+
+"He scratched his head.
+
+"'Why, yes,' he says.
+
+"'Did you get under shelter that day?'
+
+"'Why--no.'
+
+"'Then how the blazes didn't yer get wet?'
+
+"Dave grinned; then he says:
+
+"'Why, when I seen the storm coming I took off me clothes and stuck 'em
+in a holler log till the rain was over.'
+
+"'Yes,' he says, after the other coves had done laughin', but before
+I'd done thinking; 'I kept my clothes dry and got a good refreshin'
+shower-bath into the bargain.'
+
+"Then he scratched the back of his neck with his little finger, and
+dropped his jaw, and thought a bit; then he rubbed the top of his head
+and his shoulder, reflective-like, and then he said:
+
+"'But I didn't reckon for them there blanky hailstones.'"
+
+
+
+
+Mitchell on Matrimony
+
+
+
+"I suppose your wife will be glad to see you," said Mitchell to his
+mate in their camp by the dam at Hungerford. They were overhauling their
+swags, and throwing away the blankets, and calico, and old clothes, and
+rubbish they didn't want--everything, in fact, except their pocket-books
+and letters and portraits, things which men carry about with them
+always, that are found on them when they die, and sent to their
+relations if possible. Otherwise they are taken in charge by the
+constable who officiates at the inquest, and forwarded to the Minister
+of Justice along with the depositions.
+
+It was the end of the shearing season. Mitchell and his mate had been
+lucky enough to get two good sheds in succession, and were going to take
+the coach from Hungerford to Bourke on their way to Sydney. The morning
+stars were bright yet, and they sat down to a final billy of tea, two
+dusty Johnny-cakes, and a scrag of salt mutton.
+
+"Yes," said Mitchell's mate, "and I'll be glad to see her too."
+
+"I suppose you will," said Mitchell. He placed his pint-pot between his
+feet, rested his arm against his knee, and stirred the tea meditatively
+with the handle of his pocket-knife. It was vaguely understood that
+Mitchell had been married at one period of his chequered career.
+
+"I don't think we ever understood women properly," he said, as he took
+a cautious sip to see if his tea was cool and sweet enough, for his lips
+were sore; "I don't think we ever will--we never took the trouble to
+try, and if we did it would be only wasted brain power that might just
+as well be spent on the blackfellow's lingo; because by the time you've
+learnt it they'll be extinct, and woman 'll be extinct before you've
+learnt her.... The morning star looks bright, doesn't it?"
+
+"Ah, well," said Mitchell after a while, "there's many little things
+we might try to understand women in. I read in a piece of newspaper the
+other day about how a man changes after he's married; how he gets short,
+and impatient, and bored (which is only natural), and sticks up a wall
+of newspaper between himself and his wife when he's at home; and how it
+comes like a cold shock to her, and all her air-castles vanish, and
+in the end she often thinks about taking the baby and the clothes she
+stands in, and going home for sympathy and comfort to mother.
+
+"Perhaps she never got a word of sympathy from her mother in her life,
+nor a day's comfort at home before she was married; but that doesn't
+make the slightest difference. It doesn't make any difference in your
+case either, if you haven't been acting like a dutiful son-in-law.
+
+"Somebody wrote that a woman's love is her whole existence, while a
+man's love is only part of his--which is true, and only natural and
+reasonable, all things considered. But women never consider as a rule. A
+man can't go on talking lovey-dovey talk for ever, and listening to his
+young wife's prattle when he's got to think about making a living, and
+nursing her and answering her childish questions and telling her he
+loves his little ownest every minute in the day, while the bills are
+running up, and rent mornings begin to fly round and hustle and crowd
+him.
+
+"He's got her and he's satisfied; and if the truth is known he loves
+her really more than he did when they were engaged, only she won't be
+satisfied about it unless he tells her so every hour in the day. At
+least that's how it is for the first few months.
+
+"But a woman doesn't understand these things--she never will, she
+can't--and it would be just as well for us to try and understand that
+she doesn't and can't understand them."
+
+Mitchell knocked the tea-leaves out of his pannikin against his boot,
+and reached for the billy.
+
+"There's many little things we might do that seem mere trifles and
+nonsense to us, but mean a lot to her; that wouldn't be any trouble
+or sacrifice to us, but might help to make her life happy. It's just
+because we never think about these little things--don't think them worth
+thinking about, in fact--they never enter our intellectual foreheads.
+
+"For instance, when you're going out in the morning you might put your
+arms round her and give her a hug and a kiss, without her having to
+remind you. You may forget about it and never think any more of it--but
+she will.
+
+"It wouldn't be any trouble to you, and would only take a couple of
+seconds, and would give her something to be happy about when you're
+gone, and make her sing to herself for hours while she bustles about her
+work and thinks up what she'll get you for dinner."
+
+Mitchell's mate sighed, and shifted the sugar-bag over towards Mitchell.
+He seemed touched and bothered over something.
+
+"Then again," said Mitchell, "it mightn't be convenient for you to go
+home to dinner--something might turn up during the morning--you might
+have some important business to do, or meet some chaps and get invited
+to lunch and not be very well able to refuse, when it's too late, or you
+haven't a chance to send a message to your wife. But then again, chaps
+and business seem very big things to you, and only little things to the
+wife; just as lovey-dovey talk is important to her and nonsense to you.
+And when you come to analyse it, one is not so big, nor the other so
+small, after all; especially when you come to think that chaps can
+always wait, and business is only an inspiration in your mind, nine
+cases out of ten.
+
+"Think of the trouble she takes to get you a good dinner, and how she
+keeps it hot between two plates in the oven, and waits hour after hour
+till the dinner gets dried up, and all her morning's work is wasted.
+Think how it hurts her, and how anxious she'll be (especially if you're
+inclined to booze) for fear that something has happened to you. You
+can't get it out of the heads of some young wives that you're liable to
+get run over, or knocked down, or assaulted, or robbed, or get into one
+of the fixes that a woman is likely to get into. But about the dinner
+waiting. Try and put yourself in her place. Wouldn't you get mad under
+the same circumstances? I know I would.
+
+"I remember once, only just after I was married, I was invited
+unexpectedly to a kidney pudding and beans--which was my favourite grub
+at the time--and I didn't resist, especially as it was washing day and
+I told the wife not to bother about anything for dinner. I got home an
+hour or so late, and had a good explanation thought out, when the wife
+met me with a smile as if we had just been left a thousand pounds. She'd
+got her washing finished without assistance, though I'd told her to get
+somebody to help her, and she had a kidney pudding and beans, with a lot
+of extras thrown in, as a pleasant surprise for me.
+
+"Well, I kissed her, and sat down, and stuffed till I thought every
+mouthful would choke me. I got through with it somehow, but I've never
+cared for kidney pudding or beans since."
+
+Mitchell felt for his pipe with a fatherly smile in his eyes.
+
+"And then again," he continued, as he cut up his tobacco, "your wife
+might put on a new dress and fix herself up and look well, and you might
+think so and be satisfied with her appearance and be proud to take her
+out; but you want to tell her so, and tell her so as often as you think
+about it--and try to think a little oftener than men usually do, too."
+
+ . . . . .
+
+"You should have made a good husband, Jack," said his mate, in a
+softened tone.
+
+"Ah, well, perhaps I should," said Mitchell, rubbing up his tobacco;
+then he asked abstractedly: "What sort of a husband did you make, Joe?"
+
+"I might have made a better one than I did," said Joe seriously, and
+rather bitterly, "but I know one thing, I'm going to try and make up for
+it when I go back this time."
+
+"We all say that," said Mitchell reflectively, filling his pipe. "She
+loves you, Joe."
+
+"I know she does," said Joe.
+
+Mitchell lit up.
+
+"And so would any man who knew her or had seen her letters to you," he
+said between the puffs. "She's happy and contented enough, I believe?"
+
+"Yes," said Joe, "at least while I was there. She's never easy when I'm
+away. I might have made her a good deal more happy and contented without
+hurting myself much."
+
+Mitchell smoked long, soft, measured puffs.
+
+His mate shifted uneasily and glanced at him a couple of times, and
+seemed to become impatient, and to make up his mind about something;
+or perhaps he got an idea that Mitchell had been "having" him, and
+felt angry over being betrayed into maudlin confidences; for he asked
+abruptly:
+
+"How is your wife now, Mitchell?"
+
+"I don't know," said Mitchell calmly.
+
+"Don't know?" echoed the mate. "Didn't you treat her well?"
+
+Mitchell removed his pipe and drew a long breath.
+
+"Ah, well, I tried to," he said wearily.
+
+"Well, did you put your theory into practice?"
+
+"I did," said Mitchell very deliberately.
+
+Joe waited, but nothing came.
+
+"Well?" he asked impatiently, "How did it act? Did it work well?"
+
+"I don't know," said Mitchell (puff); "she left me."
+
+"What!"
+
+Mitchell jerked the half-smoked pipe from his mouth, and rapped the
+burning tobacco out against the toe of his boot.
+
+"She left me," he said, standing up and stretching himself. Then, with a
+vicious jerk of his arm, "She left me for--another kind of a fellow!"
+
+He looked east towards the public-house, where they were taking the
+coach-horses from the stable.
+
+"Why don't you finish your tea, Joe? The billy's getting cold."
+
+
+
+
+Mitchell on Women
+
+
+
+"All the same," said Mitchell's mate, continuing an argument by the
+camp-fire; "all the same, I think that a woman can stand cold water
+better than a man. Why, when I was staying in a boarding-house in
+Dunedin, one very cold winter, there was a lady lodger who went down to
+the shower-bath first thing every morning; never missed one; sometimes
+went in freezing weather when I wouldn't go into a cold bath for a
+fiver; and sometimes she'd stay under the shower for ten minutes at a
+time."
+
+"How'd you know?"
+
+"Why, my room was near the bath-room, and I could hear the shower and
+tap going, and her floundering about."
+
+"Hear your grandmother!" exclaimed Mitchell, contemptuously. "You don't
+know women yet. Was this woman married? Did she have a husband there?"
+
+"No; she was a young widow."
+
+"Ah! well, it would have been the same if she was a young girl--or an
+old one. Were there some passable men-boarders there?"
+
+"_I_ was there."
+
+"Oh, yes! But I mean, were there any there beside you?"
+
+"Oh, yes, there were three or four; there was--a clerk and a----"
+
+"Never mind, as long as there was something with trousers on. Did it
+ever strike you that she never got into the bath at all?"
+
+"Why, no! What would she want to go there at all for, in that case?"
+
+"To make an impression on the men," replied Mitchell promptly. "She
+wanted to make out she was nice, and wholesome, and well-washed,
+and particular. Made an impression on YOU, it seems, or you wouldn't
+remember it."
+
+"Well, yes, I suppose so; and, now I come to think of it, the bath
+didn't seem to injure her make-up or wet her hair; but I supposed she
+held her head from under the shower somehow."
+
+"Did she make-up so early in the morning?" asked Mitchell.
+
+"Yes--I'm sure."
+
+"That's unusual; but it might have been so where there was a lot of
+boarders. And about the hair--that didn't count for anything, because
+washing-the-head ain't supposed to be always included in a lady's bath;
+it's only supposed to be washed once a fortnight, and some don't do it
+once a month. The hair takes so long to dry; it don't matter so much if
+the woman's got short, scraggy hair; but if a girl's hair was down to
+her waist it would take hours to dry."
+
+"Well, how do they manage it without wetting their heads?"
+
+"Oh, that's easy enough. They have a little oilskin cap that fits tight
+over the forehead, and they put it on, and bunch their hair up in it
+when they go under the shower. Did you ever see a woman sit in a sunny
+place with her hair down after having a wash?"
+
+"Yes, I used to see one do that regular where I was staying; but I
+thought she only did it to show off."
+
+"Not at all--she was drying her hair; though perhaps she was showing
+off at the same time, for she wouldn't sit where you--or even a
+Chinaman--could see her, if she didn't think she had a good head of
+hair. Now, I'LL tell you a yarn about a woman's bath. I was stopping
+at a shabby-genteel boarding-house in Melbourne once, and one very cold
+winter, too; and there was a rather good-looking woman there, looking
+for a husband. She used to go down to the bath every morning, no matter
+how cold it was, and flounder and splash about as if she enjoyed it,
+till you'd feel as though you'd like to go and catch hold of her and
+wrap her in a rug and carry her in to the fire and nurse her till she
+was warm again."
+
+Mitchell's mate moved uneasily, and crossed the other leg; he seemed
+greatly interested.
+
+"But she never went into the water at all!" continued Mitchell. "As soon
+as one or two of the men was up in the morning she'd come down from her
+room in a dressing-gown. It was a toney dressing-gown, too, and set her
+off properly. She knew how to dress, anyway; most of that sort of women
+do. The gown was a kind of green colour, with pink and white flowers
+all over it, and red lining, and a lot of coffee-coloured lace round the
+neck and down the front. Well, she'd come tripping downstairs and along
+the passage, holding up one side of the gown to show her little
+bare white foot in a slipper; and in the other hand she carried her
+tooth-brush and bath-brush, and soap--like this--so's we all could see
+'em; trying to make out she was too particular to use soap after anyone
+else. She could afford to buy her own soap, anyhow; it was hardly ever
+wet.
+
+"Well, she'd go into the bathroom and turn on the tap and shower; when
+she got about three inches of water in the bath, she'd step in, holding
+up her gown out of the water, and go slithering and kicking up and down
+the bath, like this, making a tremendous splashing. Of course she'd turn
+off the shower first, and screw it off very tight--wouldn't do to let
+that leak, you know; she might get wet; but she'd leave the other tap
+on, so as to make all the more noise."
+
+"But how did you come to know all about this?"
+
+"Oh, the servant girl told me. One morning she twigged her through a
+corner of the bathroom window that the curtain didn't cover."
+
+"You seem to have been pretty thick with servant girls."
+
+"So do you with landladies! But never mind--let me finish the yarn. When
+she thought she'd splashed enough, she'd get out, wipe her feet, wash
+her face and hands, and carefully unbutton the two top buttons of her
+gown; then throw a towel over her head and shoulders, and listen at the
+door till she thought she heard some of the men moving about. Then
+she'd start for her room, and, if she met one of the men-boarders in the
+passage or on the stairs, she'd drop her eyes, and pretend to see for
+the first time that the top of her dressing-gown wasn't buttoned--and
+she'd give a little start and grab the gown and scurry off to her room
+buttoning it up.
+
+"And sometimes she'd come skipping into the breakfast-room late, looking
+awfully sweet in her dressing-gown; and if she saw any of us there,
+she'd pretend to be much startled, and say that she thought all the men
+had gone out, and make as though she was going to clear; and someone 'd
+jump up and give her a chair, while someone else said, 'Come in, Miss
+Brown! come in! Don't let us frighten you. Come right in, and have
+your breakfast before it gets cold.' So she'd flutter a bit in pretty
+confusion, and then make a sweet little girly-girly dive for her chair,
+and tuck her feet away under the table; and she'd blush, too, but I
+don't know how she managed that.
+
+"I know another trick that women have; it's mostly played by private
+barmaids. That is, to leave a stocking by accident in the bathroom for
+the gentlemen to find. If the barmaid's got a nice foot and ankle, she
+uses one of her own stockings; but if she hasn't she gets hold of
+a stocking that belongs to a girl that has. Anyway, she'll have one
+readied up somehow. The stocking must be worn and nicely darned; one
+that's been worn will keep the shape of the leg and foot--at least
+till it's washed again. Well, the barmaid generally knows what time the
+gentlemen go to bath, and she'll make it a point of going down just as
+a gentleman's going. Of course he'll give her the preference--let her go
+first, you know--and she'll go in and accidentally leave the stocking
+in a place where he's sure to see it, and when she comes out he'll go in
+and find it; and very likely he'll be a jolly sort of fellow, and when
+they're all sitting down to breakfast he'll come in and ask them to
+guess what he's found, and then he'll hold up the stocking. The barmaid
+likes this sort of thing; but she'll hold down her head, and pretend
+to be confused, and keep her eyes on her plate, and there'll be much
+blushing and all that sort of thing, and perhaps she'll gammon to be
+mad at him, and the landlady'll say, 'Oh, Mr. Smith! how can yer? At the
+breakfast table, too!' and they'll all laugh and look at the barmaid,
+and she'll get more embarrassed than ever, and spill her tea, and make
+out as though the stocking didn't belong to her."
+
+
+
+
+No Place for a Woman
+
+
+
+He had a selection on a long box-scrub siding of the ridges, about half
+a mile back and up from the coach road. There were no neighbours that
+I ever heard of, and the nearest "town" was thirty miles away. He grew
+wheat among the stumps of his clearing, sold the crop standing to a
+Cockie who lived ten miles away, and had some surplus sons; or, some
+seasons, he reaped it by hand, had it thrashed by travelling "steamer"
+(portable steam engine and machine), and carried the grain, a few bags
+at a time, into the mill on his rickety dray.
+
+He had lived alone for upwards of 15 years, and was known to those who
+knew him as "Ratty Howlett".
+
+Trav'lers and strangers failed to see anything uncommonly ratty about
+him. It was known, or, at least, it was believed, without question, that
+while at work he kept his horse saddled and bridled, and hung up to the
+fence, or grazing about, with the saddle on--or, anyway, close handy
+for a moment's notice--and whenever he caught sight, over the scrub and
+through the quarter-mile break in it, of a traveller on the road, he
+would jump on his horse and make after him. If it was a horseman
+he usually pulled him up inside of a mile. Stories were told of
+unsuccessful chases, misunderstandings, and complications arising out of
+Howlett's mania for running down and bailing up travellers. Sometimes he
+caught one every day for a week, sometimes not one for weeks--it was a
+lonely track.
+
+The explanation was simple, sufficient, and perfectly natural--from a
+bushman's point of view. Ratty only wanted to have a yarn. He and the
+traveller would camp in the shade for half an hour or so and yarn and
+smoke. The old man would find out where the traveller came from, and
+how long he'd been there, and where he was making for, and how long
+he reckoned he'd be away; and ask if there had been any rain along the
+traveller's back track, and how the country looked after the drought;
+and he'd get the traveller's ideas on abstract questions--if he had any.
+If it was a footman (swagman), and he was short of tobacco, old Howlett
+always had half a stick ready for him. Sometimes, but very rarely, he'd
+invite the swagman back to the hut for a pint of tea, or a bit of meat,
+flour, tea, or sugar, to carry him along the track.
+
+And, after the yarn by the road, they said, the old man would ride back,
+refreshed, to his lonely selection, and work on into the night as long
+as he could see his solitary old plough horse, or the scoop of his
+long-handled shovel.
+
+And so it was that I came to make his acquaintance--or, rather, that he
+made mine. I was cantering easily along the track--I was making for the
+north-west with a pack horse--when about a mile beyond the track to the
+selection I heard, "Hi, Mister!" and saw a dust cloud following me. I
+had heard of "Old Ratty Howlett" casually, and so was prepared for him.
+
+A tall gaunt man on a little horse. He was clean-shaven, except for
+a frill beard round under his chin, and his long wavy, dark hair
+was turning grey; a square, strong-faced man, and reminded me of one
+full-faced portrait of Gladstone more than any other face I had seen.
+He had large reddish-brown eyes, deep set under heavy eyebrows, and with
+something of the blackfellow in them--the sort of eyes that will peer
+at something on the horizon that no one else can see. He had a way of
+talking to the horizon, too--more than to his companion; and he had a
+deep vertical wrinkle in his forehead that no smile could lessen.
+
+I got down and got out my pipe, and we sat on a log and yarned awhile on
+bush subjects; and then, after a pause, he shifted uneasily, it seemed
+to me, and asked rather abruptly, and in an altered tone, if I was
+married. A queer question to ask a traveller; more especially in my
+case, as I was little more than a boy then.
+
+He talked on again of old things and places where we had both been, and
+asked after men he knew, or had known--drovers and others--and whether
+they were living yet. Most of his inquiries went back before my time;
+but some of the drovers, one or two overlanders with whom he had been
+mates in his time, had grown old into mine, and I knew them. I notice
+now, though I didn't then--and if I had it would not have seemed
+strange from a bush point of view--that he didn't ask for news, nor seem
+interested in it.
+
+Then after another uneasy pause, during which he scratched crosses in
+the dust with a stick, he asked me, in the same queer tone and without
+looking at me or looking up, if I happened to know anything about
+doctoring--if I'd ever studied it.
+
+I asked him if anyone was sick at his place. He hesitated, and said
+"No." Then I wanted to know why he had asked me that question, and
+he was so long about answering that I began to think he was hard of
+hearing, when, at last, he muttered something about my face reminding
+him of a young fellow he knew of who'd gone to Sydney to "study for a
+doctor". That might have been, and looked natural enough; but why didn't
+he ask me straight out if I was the chap he "knowed of"? Travellers do
+not like beating about the bush in conversation.
+
+He sat in silence for a good while, with his arms folded, and looking
+absently away over the dead level of the great scrubs that spread
+from the foot of the ridge we were on to where a blue peak or two of a
+distant range showed above the bush on the horizon.
+
+I stood up and put my pipe away and stretched. Then he seemed to wake
+up. "Better come back to the hut and have a bit of dinner," he said.
+"The missus will about have it ready, and I'll spare you a handful of
+hay for the horses."
+
+The hay decided it. It was a dry season. I was surprised to hear of a
+wife, for I thought he was a hatter--I had always heard so; but
+perhaps I had been mistaken, and he had married lately; or had got a
+housekeeper. The farm was an irregularly-shaped clearing in the scrub,
+with a good many stumps in it, with a broken-down two-rail fence
+along the frontage, and logs and "dog-leg" the rest. It was about
+as lonely-looking a place as I had seen, and I had seen some
+out-of-the-way, God-forgotten holes where men lived alone. The hut was
+in the top corner, a two-roomed slab hut, with a shingle roof, which
+must have been uncommon round there in the days when that hut was built.
+I was used to bush carpentering, and saw that the place had been put
+up by a man who had plenty of life and hope in front of him, and for
+someone else beside himself. But there were two unfinished skilling
+rooms built on to the back of the hut; the posts, sleepers, and
+wall-plates had been well put up and fitted, and the slab walls were
+up, but the roof had never been put on. There was nothing but burrs
+and nettles inside those walls, and an old wooden bullock plough and a
+couple of yokes were dry-rotting across the back doorway. The remains of
+a straw-stack, some hay under a bark humpy, a small iron plough, and an
+old stiff coffin-headed grey draught horse, were all that I saw about
+the place.
+
+But there was a bit of a surprise for me inside, in the shape of a clean
+white tablecloth on the rough slab table which stood on stakes driven
+into the ground. The cloth was coarse, but it was a tablecloth--not
+a spare sheet put on in honour of unexpected visitors--and perfectly
+clean. The tin plates, pannikins, and jam tins that served as sugar
+bowls and salt cellars were polished brightly. The walls and fireplace
+were whitewashed, the clay floor swept, and clean sheets of newspaper
+laid on the slab mantleshelf under the row of biscuit tins that held the
+groceries. I thought that his wife, or housekeeper, or whatever she was,
+was a clean and tidy woman about a house. I saw no woman; but on the
+sofa--a light, wooden, batten one, with runged arms at the ends--lay a
+woman's dress on a lot of sheets of old stained and faded newspapers.
+He looked at it in a puzzled way, knitting his forehead, then took it
+up absently and folded it. I saw then that it was a riding skirt and
+jacket. He bundled them into the newspapers and took them into the
+bedroom.
+
+"The wife was going on a visit down the creek this afternoon," he said
+rapidly and without looking at me, but stooping as if to have another
+look through the door at those distant peaks. "I suppose she got tired
+o' waitin', and went and took the daughter with her. But, never mind,
+the grub is ready." There was a camp-oven with a leg of mutton and
+potatoes sizzling in it on the hearth, and billies hanging over the
+fire. I noticed the billies had been scraped, and the lids polished.
+
+There seemed to be something queer about the whole business, but then he
+and his wife might have had a "breeze" during the morning. I thought
+so during the meal, when the subject of women came up, and he said one
+never knew how to take a woman, etc.; but there was nothing in what he
+said that need necessarily have referred to his wife or to any woman in
+particular. For the rest he talked of old bush things, droving, digging,
+and old bushranging--but never about live things and living men, unless
+any of the old mates he talked about happened to be alive by accident.
+He was very restless in the house, and never took his hat off.
+
+There was a dress and a woman's old hat hanging on the wall near the
+door, but they looked as if they might have been hanging there for a
+lifetime. There seemed something queer about the whole place--something
+wanting; but then all out-of-the-way bush homes are haunted by that
+something wanting, or, more likely, by the spirits of the things that
+should have been there, but never had been.
+
+As I rode down the track to the road I looked back and saw old Howlett
+hard at work in a hole round a big stump with his long-handled shovel.
+
+I'd noticed that he moved and walked with a slight list to port, and put
+his hand once or twice to the small of his back, and I set it down to
+lumbago, or something of that sort.
+
+Up in the Never Never I heard from a drover who had known Howlett that
+his wife had died in the first year, and so this mysterious woman, if
+she was his wife, was, of course, his second wife. The drover seemed
+surprised and rather amused at the thought of old Howlett going in for
+matrimony again.
+
+ . . . . .
+
+I rode back that way five years later, from the Never Never. It was
+early in the morning--I had ridden since midnight. I didn't think the
+old man would be up and about; and, besides, I wanted to get on home,
+and have a look at the old folk, and the mates I'd left behind--and the
+girl. But I hadn't got far past the point where Howlett's track joined
+the road, when I happened to look back, and saw him on horseback,
+stumbling down the track. I waited till he came up.
+
+He was riding the old grey draught horse this time, and it looked very
+much broken down. I thought it would have come down every step, and
+fallen like an old rotten humpy in a gust of wind. And the old man was
+not much better off. I saw at once that he was a very sick man. His face
+was drawn, and he bent forward as if he was hurt. He got down stiffly
+and awkwardly, like a hurt man, and as soon as his feet touched the
+ground he grabbed my arm, or he would have gone down like a man who
+steps off a train in motion. He hung towards the bank of the road,
+feeling blindly, as it were, for the ground, with his free hand, as I
+eased him down. I got my blanket and calico from the pack saddle to make
+him comfortable.
+
+"Help me with my back agen the tree," he said. "I must sit up--it's no
+use lyin' me down."
+
+He sat with his hand gripping his side, and breathed painfully.
+
+"Shall I run up to the hut and get the wife?" I asked.
+
+"No." He spoke painfully. "No!" Then, as if the words were jerked out of
+him by a spasm: "She ain't there."
+
+I took it that she had left him.
+
+"How long have you been bad? How long has this been coming on?"
+
+He took no notice of the question. I thought it was a touch of rheumatic
+fever, or something of that sort. "It's gone into my back and sides
+now--the pain's worse in me back," he said presently.
+
+I had once been mates with a man who died suddenly of heart disease,
+while at work. He was washing a dish of dirt in the creek near a claim
+we were working; he let the dish slip into the water, fell back, crying,
+"O, my back!" and was gone. And now I felt by instinct that it was poor
+old Howlett's heart that was wrong. A man's heart is in his back as well
+as in his arms and hands.
+
+The old man had turned pale with the pallor of a man who turns faint in
+a heat wave, and his arms fell loosely, and his hands rocked helplessly
+with the knuckles in the dust. I felt myself turning white, too, and the
+sick, cold, empty feeling in my stomach, for I knew the signs. Bushmen
+stand in awe of sickness and death.
+
+But after I'd fixed him comfortably and given him a drink from the water
+bag the greyness left his face, and he pulled himself together a bit; he
+drew up his arms and folded them across his chest. He let his head rest
+back against the tree--his slouch hat had fallen off revealing a broad,
+white brow, much higher than I expected. He seemed to gaze on the azure
+fin of the range, showing above the dark blue-green bush on the horizon.
+
+Then he commenced to speak--taking no notice of me when I asked him if
+he felt better now--to talk in that strange, absent, far-away tone that
+awes one. He told his story mechanically, monotonously--in set words, as
+I believe now, as he had often told it before; if not to others, then to
+the loneliness of the bush. And he used the names of people and places
+that I had never heard of--just as if I knew them as well as he did.
+
+"I didn't want to bring her up the first year. It was no place for a
+woman. I wanted her to stay with her people and wait till I'd got the
+place a little more ship-shape. The Phippses took a selection down the
+creek. I wanted her to wait and come up with them so's she'd have some
+company--a woman to talk to. They came afterwards, but they didn't stop.
+It was no place for a woman.
+
+"But Mary would come. She wouldn't stop with her people down country.
+She wanted to be with me, and look after me, and work and help me."
+
+He repeated himself a great deal--said the same thing over and over
+again sometimes. He was only mad on one track. He'd tail off and
+sit silent for a while; then he'd become aware of me in a hurried,
+half-scared way, and apologise for putting me to all that trouble, and
+thank me. "I'll be all right d'reckly. Best take the horses up to the
+hut and have some breakfast; you'll find it by the fire. I'll foller
+you, d'reckly. The wife'll be waitin' an'----" He would drop off, and be
+going again presently on the old track:--
+
+"Her mother was coming up to stay awhile at the end of the year, but the
+old man hurt his leg. Then her married sister was coming, but one of the
+youngsters got sick and there was trouble at home. I saw the doctor in
+the town--thirty miles from here--and fixed it up with him. He was a
+boozer--I'd 'a shot him afterwards. I fixed up with a woman in the town
+to come and stay. I thought Mary was wrong in her time. She must have
+been a month or six weeks out. But I listened to her.... Don't argue
+with a woman. Don't listen to a woman. Do the right thing. We should
+have had a mother woman to talk to us. But it was no place for a woman!"
+
+He rocked his head, as if from some old agony of mind, against the
+tree-trunk.
+
+"She was took bad suddenly one night, but it passed off. False alarm. I
+was going to ride somewhere, but she said to wait till daylight. Someone
+was sure to pass. She was a brave and sensible girl, but she had a
+terror of being left alone. It was no place for a woman!
+
+"There was a black shepherd three or four miles away. I rode over while
+Mary was asleep, and started the black boy into town. I'd 'a shot him
+afterwards if I'd 'a caught him. The old black gin was dead the week
+before, or Mary would a' bin alright. She was tied up in a bunch with
+strips of blanket and greenhide, and put in a hole. So there wasn't even
+a gin near the place. It was no place for a woman!
+
+"I was watchin' the road at daylight, and I was watchin' the road at
+dusk. I went down in the hollow and stooped down to get the gap agen the
+sky, so's I could see if anyone was comin' over.... I'd get on the horse
+and gallop along towards the town for five miles, but something would
+drag me back, and then I'd race for fear she'd die before I got to the
+hut. I expected the doctor every five minutes.
+
+"It come on about daylight next morning. I ran back'ards and for'ards
+between the hut and the road like a madman. And no one come. I was
+running amongst the logs and stumps, and fallin' over them, when I saw
+a cloud of dust agen sunrise. It was her mother an' sister in the
+spring-cart, an' just catchin' up to them was the doctor in his buggy
+with the woman I'd arranged with in town. The mother and sister was
+staying at the town for the night, when they heard of the black boy. It
+took him a day to ride there. I'd 'a shot him if I'd 'a caught him ever
+after. The doctor'd been on the drunk. If I'd had the gun and known she
+was gone I'd have shot him in the buggy. They said she was dead. And the
+child was dead, too.
+
+"They blamed me, but I didn't want her to come; it was no place for a
+woman. I never saw them again after the funeral. I didn't want to see
+them any more."
+
+He moved his head wearily against the tree, and presently drifted on
+again in a softer tone--his eyes and voice were growing more absent and
+dreamy and far away.
+
+"About a month after--or a year, I lost count of the time long ago--she
+came back to me. At first she'd come in the night, then sometimes when
+I was at work--and she had the baby--it was a girl--in her arms. And
+by-and-bye she came to stay altogether.... I didn't blame her for going
+away that time--it was no place for a woman.... She was a good wife to
+me. She was a jolly girl when I married her. The little girl grew up
+like her. I was going to send her down country to be educated--it was no
+place for a girl.
+
+"But a month, or a year, ago, Mary left me, and took the daughter, and
+never came back till last night--this morning, I think it was. I thought
+at first it was the girl with her hair done up, and her mother's skirt
+on, to surprise her old dad. But it was Mary, my wife--as she was when
+I married her. She said she couldn't stay, but she'd wait for me on the
+road; on--the road...."
+
+His arms fell, and his face went white. I got the water-bag. "Another
+turn like that and you'll be gone," I thought, as he came to again. Then
+I suddenly thought of a shanty that had been started, when I came that
+way last, ten or twelve miles along the road, towards the town. There
+was nothing for it but to leave him and ride on for help, and a cart of
+some kind.
+
+"You wait here till I come back," I said. "I'm going for the doctor."
+
+He roused himself a little. "Best come up to the hut and get some grub.
+The wife'll be waiting...." He was off the track again.
+
+"Will you wait while I take the horse down to the creek?"
+
+"Yes--I'll wait by the road."
+
+"Look!" I said, "I'll leave the water-bag handy. Don't move till I come
+back."
+
+"I won't move--I'll wait by the road," he said.
+
+I took the packhorse, which was the freshest and best, threw the
+pack-saddle and bags into a bush, left the other horse to take care of
+itself, and started for the shanty, leaving the old man with his back to
+the tree, his arms folded, and his eyes on the horizon.
+
+One of the chaps at the shanty rode on for the doctor at once, while the
+other came back with me in a spring-cart. He told me that old Howlett's
+wife had died in child-birth the first year on the selection--"she was a
+fine girl he'd heered!" He told me the story as the old man had told it,
+and in pretty well the same words, even to giving it as his opinion that
+it was no place for a woman. "And he 'hatted' and brooded over it till
+he went ratty."
+
+I knew the rest. He not only thought that his wife, or the ghost of his
+wife, had been with him all those years, but that the child had lived
+and grown up, and that the wife did the housework; which, of course, he
+must have done himself.
+
+When we reached him his knotted hands had fallen for the last time, and
+they were at rest. I only took one quick look at his face, but could
+have sworn that he was gazing at the blue fin of the range on the
+horizon of the bush.
+
+Up at the hut the table was set as on the first day I saw it, and
+breakfast in the camp-oven by the fire.
+
+
+
+
+Mitchell's Jobs
+
+
+
+"I'm going to knock off work and try to make some money," said Mitchell,
+as he jerked the tea-leaves out of his pannikin and reached for the
+billy. "It's been the great mistake of my life--if I hadn't wasted all
+my time and energy working and looking for work I might have been an
+independent man to-day."
+
+"Joe!" he added in a louder voice, condescendingly adapting his language
+to my bushed comprehension. "I'm going to sling graft and try and get
+some stuff together."
+
+I didn't feel in a responsive humour, but I lit up and settled back
+comfortably against the tree, and Jack folded his arms on his knees and
+presently continued, reflectively:
+
+"I remember the first time I went to work. I was a youngster then.
+Mother used to go round looking for jobs for me. She reckoned, perhaps,
+that I was too shy to go in where there was a boy wanted and barrack for
+myself properly, and she used to help me and see me through to the best
+of her ability. I'm afraid I didn't always feel as grateful to her as I
+should have felt. I was a thankless kid at the best of times--most kids
+are--but otherwise I was a straight enough little chap as nippers go.
+Sometimes I almost wish I hadn't been. My relations would have thought
+a good deal more of me and treated me better--and, besides, it's a
+comfort, at times, to sit and watch the sun going down in the bed of the
+bush, and think of your wicked childhood and wasted life, and the way
+you treated your parents and broke their hearts, and feel just properly
+repentant and bitter and remorseful and low-spirited about it when it's
+too late.
+
+"Ah, well!... I generally did feel a bit backward in going in when I
+came to the door of an office or shop where there was a 'Strong Lad', or
+a 'Willing Youth', wanted inside to make himself generally useful. I
+was a strong lad and a willing youth enough, in some things, for that
+matter; but I didn't like to see it written up on a card in a shop
+window, and I didn't want to make myself generally useful in a close
+shop in a hot dusty street on mornings when the weather was fine and the
+great sunny rollers were coming in grand on the Bondi Beach and down at
+Coogee, and I could swim.... I'd give something to be down along there
+now."
+
+Mitchell looked away out over the sultry sandy plain that we were to
+tackle next day, and sighed.
+
+"The first job I got was in a jam factory. They only had 'Boy Wanted' on
+the card in the window, and I thought it would suit me. They set me to
+work to peel peaches, and, as soon as the foreman's back was turned,
+I picked out a likely-looking peach and tried it. They soaked those
+peaches in salt or acid or something--it was part of the process--and
+I had to spit it out. Then I got an orange from a boy who was slicing
+them, but it was bitter, and I couldn't eat it. I saw that I'd been had
+properly. I was in a fix, and had to get out of it the best way I could.
+I'd left my coat down in the front shop, and the foreman and boss were
+there, so I had to work in that place for two mortal hours. It was about
+the longest two hours I'd ever spent in my life. At last the foreman
+came up, and I told him I wanted to go down to the back for a minute. I
+slipped down, watched my chance till the boss' back was turned, got my
+coat, and cleared.
+
+"The next job I got was in a mat factory; at least, Aunt got that for
+me. I didn't want to have anything to do with mats or carpets. The worst
+of it was the boss didn't seem to want me to go, and I had a job to get
+him to sack me, and when he did he saw some of my people and took me
+back again next week. He sacked me finally the next Saturday.
+
+"I got the next job myself. I didn't hurry; I took my time and picked
+out a good one. It was in a lolly factory. I thought it would suit
+me--and it did, for a while. They put me on stirring up and mixing stuff
+in the jujube department; but I got so sick of the smell of it and so
+full of jujube and other lollies that I soon wanted a change; so I had
+a row with the chief of the jujube department and the boss gave me the
+sack.
+
+"I got a job in a grocery then. I thought I'd have more variety there.
+But one day the boss was away, sick or something, all the afternoon, and
+I sold a lot of things too cheap. I didn't know. When a customer came in
+and asked for something I'd just look round in the window till I saw
+a card with the price written up on it, and sell the best quality
+according to that price; and once or twice I made a mistake the other
+way about and lost a couple of good customers. It was a hot, drowsy
+afternoon, and by-and-bye I began to feel dull and sleepy. So I looked
+round the corner and saw a Chinaman coming. I got a big tin garden
+syringe and filled it full of brine from the butter keg, and, when he
+came opposite the door, I let him have the full force of it in the ear.
+
+"That Chinaman put down his baskets and came for me. I was strong for my
+age, and thought I could fight, but he gave me a proper mauling.
+
+"It was like running up against a thrashing machine, and it wouldn't
+have been well for me if the boss of the shop next door hadn't
+interfered. He told my boss, and my boss gave me the sack at once.
+
+"I took a spell of eighteen months or so after that, and was growing
+up happy and contented when a married sister of mine must needs come
+to live in town and interfere. I didn't like married sisters, though I
+always got on grand with my brothers-in-law, and wished there were more
+of them. The married sister comes round and cleans up the place and
+pulls your things about and finds your pipe and tobacco and things, and
+cigarette portraits, and "Deadwood Dicks", that you've got put away all
+right, so's your mother and aunt wouldn't find them in a generation of
+cats, and says:
+
+"'Mother, why don't you make that boy go to work. It's a scandalous
+shame to see a big boy like that growing up idle. He's going to the bad
+before your eyes.' And she's always trying to make out that you're a
+liar, and trying to make mother believe it, too. My married sister got
+me a job with a chemist, whose missus she knew.
+
+"I got on pretty well there, and by-and-bye I was put upstairs in the
+grinding and mixing department; but, after a while, they put another
+boy that I was chummy with up there with me, and that was a mistake.
+I didn't think so at the time, but I can see it now. We got up to all
+sorts of tricks. We'd get mixing together chemicals that weren't related
+to see how they'd agree, and we nearly blew up the shop several times,
+and set it on fire once. But all the chaps liked us, and fixed things up
+for us. One day we got a big black dog--that we meant to take home that
+evening--and sneaked him upstairs and put him on a flat roof outside the
+laboratory. He had a touch of the mange and didn't look well, so we gave
+him a dose of something; and he scrambled over the parapet and slipped
+down a steep iron roof in front, and fell on a respected townsman that
+knew my people. We were awfully frightened, and didn't say anything.
+Nobody saw it but us. The dog had the presence of mind to leave at once,
+and the respected townsman was picked up and taken home in a cab; and
+he got it hot from his wife, too, I believe, for being in that drunken,
+beastly state in the main street in the middle of the day.
+
+"I don't think he was ever quite sure that he hadn't been drunk or
+what had happened, for he had had one or two that morning; so it didn't
+matter much. Only we lost the dog.
+
+"One day I went downstairs to the packing-room and saw a lot of
+phosphorus in jars of water. I wanted to fix up a ghost for Billy, my
+mate, so I nicked a bit and slipped it into my trouser pocket.
+
+"I stood under the tap and let it pour on me. The phosphorus burnt clean
+through my pocket and fell on the ground. I was sent home that night
+with my leg dressed with lime-water and oil, and a pair of the boss's
+pants on that were about half a yard too long for me, and I felt
+miserable enough, too. They said it would stop my tricks for a while,
+and so it did. I'll carry the mark to my dying day--and for two or three
+days after, for that matter."
+
+ . . . . .
+
+I fell asleep at this point, and left Mitchell's cattle pup to hear it
+out.
+
+
+
+
+Bill, the Ventriloquial Rooster
+
+
+
+"When we were up country on the selection, we had a rooster at our
+place, named Bill," said Mitchell; "a big mongrel of no particular
+breed, though the old lady said he was a 'brammer'--and many an argument
+she had with the old man about it too; she was just as stubborn and
+obstinate in her opinion as the governor was in his. But, anyway, we
+called him Bill, and didn't take any particular notice of him till a
+cousin of some of us came from Sydney on a visit to the country, and
+stayed at our place because it was cheaper than stopping at a pub. Well,
+somehow this chap got interested in Bill, and studied him for two or
+three days, and at last he says:
+
+"'Why, that rooster's a ventriloquist!'
+
+"'A what?'
+
+"'A ventriloquist!'
+
+"'Go along with yer!'
+
+"'But he is. I've heard of cases like this before; but this is the first
+I've come across. Bill's a ventriloquist right enough.'
+
+"Then we remembered that there wasn't another rooster within five
+miles--our only neighbour, an Irishman named Page, didn't have one at
+the time--and we'd often heard another cock crow, but didn't think
+to take any notice of it. We watched Bill, and sure enough he WAS
+a ventriloquist. The 'ka-cocka' would come all right, but the
+'co-ka-koo-oi-oo' seemed to come from a distance. And sometimes the
+whole crow would go wrong, and come back like an echo that had been lost
+for a year. Bill would stand on tiptoe, and hold his elbows out, and
+curve his neck, and go two or three times as if he was swallowing
+nest-eggs, and nearly break his neck and burst his gizzard; and then
+there'd be no sound at all where he was--only a cock crowing in the
+distance.
+
+"And pretty soon we could see that Bill was in great trouble about it
+himself. You see, he didn't know it was himself--thought it was another
+rooster challenging him, and he wanted badly to find that other bird.
+He would get up on the wood-heap, and crow and listen--crow and listen
+again--crow and listen, and then he'd go up to the top of the paddock,
+and get up on the stack, and crow and listen there. Then down to the
+other end of the paddock, and get up on a mullock-heap, and crow and
+listen there. Then across to the other side and up on a log among the
+saplings, and crow 'n' listen some more. He searched all over the place
+for that other rooster, but, of course, couldn't find him. Sometimes
+he'd be out all day crowing and listening all over the country, and then
+come home dead tired, and rest and cool off in a hole that the hens had
+scratched for him in a damp place under the water-cask sledge.
+
+"Well, one day Page brought home a big white rooster, and when he let
+it go it climbed up on Page's stack and crowed, to see if there was any
+more roosters round there. Bill had come home tired; it was a hot day,
+and he'd rooted out the hens, and was having a spell-oh under the cask
+when the white rooster crowed. Bill didn't lose any time getting out and
+on to the wood-heap, and then he waited till he heard the crow again;
+then he crowed, and the other rooster crowed again, and they crowed at
+each other for three days, and called each other all the wretches they
+could lay their tongues to, and after that they implored each other
+to come out and be made into chicken soup and feather pillows. But
+neither'd come. You see, there were THREE crows--there was Bill's crow,
+and the ventriloquist crow, and the white rooster's crow--and each
+rooster thought that there was TWO roosters in the opposition camp, and
+that he mightn't get fair play, and, consequently, both were afraid to
+put up their hands.
+
+"But at last Bill couldn't stand it any longer. He made up his mind to
+go and have it out, even if there was a whole agricultural show of prize
+and honourable-mention fighting-cocks in Page's yard. He got down from
+the wood-heap and started off across the ploughed field, his head down,
+his elbows out, and his thick awkward legs prodding away at the furrows
+behind for all they were worth.
+
+"I wanted to go down badly and see the fight, and barrack for Bill. But
+I daren't, because I'd been coming up the road late the night before
+with my brother Joe, and there was about three panels of turkeys
+roosting along on the top rail of Page's front fence; and we brushed 'em
+with a bough, and they got up such a blessed gobbling fuss about it that
+Page came out in his shirt and saw us running away; and I knew he was
+laying for us with a bullock whip. Besides, there was friction between
+the two families on account of a thoroughbred bull that Page borrowed
+and wouldn't lend to us, and that got into our paddock on account of me
+mending a panel in the party fence, and carelessly leaving the top
+rail down after sundown while our cows was moving round there in the
+saplings.
+
+"So there was too much friction for me to go down, but I climbed a tree
+as near the fence as I could and watched. Bill reckoned he'd found that
+rooster at last. The white rooster wouldn't come down from the stack,
+so Bill went up to him, and they fought there till they tumbled down the
+other side, and I couldn't see any more. Wasn't I wild? I'd have given
+my dog to have seen the rest of the fight. I went down to the far side
+of Page's fence and climbed a tree there, but, of course, I couldn't
+see anything, so I came home the back way. Just as I got home Page came
+round to the front and sung out, 'Insoid there!' And me and Jim went
+under the house like snakes and looked out round a pile. But Page was
+all right--he had a broad grin on his face, and Bill safe under his arm.
+He put Bill down on the ground very carefully, and says he to the old
+folks:
+
+"'Yer rooster knocked the stuffin' out of my rooster, but I bear no
+malice. 'Twas a grand foight.'
+
+"And then the old man and Page had a yarn, and got pretty friendly after
+that. And Bill didn't seem to bother about any more ventriloquism; but
+the white rooster spent a lot of time looking for that other rooster.
+Perhaps he thought he'd have better luck with him. But Page was on the
+look-out all the time to get a rooster that would lick ours. He did
+nothing else for a month but ride round and enquire about roosters; and
+at last he borrowed a game-bird in town, left five pounds deposit on
+him, and brought him home. And Page and the old man agreed to have a
+match--about the only thing they'd agreed about for five years. And they
+fixed it up for a Sunday when the old lady and the girls and kids were
+going on a visit to some relations, about fifteen miles away--to stop
+all night. The guv'nor made me go with them on horseback; but I knew
+what was up, and so my pony went lame about a mile along the road, and
+I had to come back and turn him out in the top paddock, and hide the
+saddle and bridle in a hollow log, and sneak home and climb up on the
+roof of the shed. It was a awful hot day, and I had to keep climbing
+backward and forward over the ridge-pole all the morning to keep out of
+sight of the old man, for he was moving about a good deal.
+
+"Well, after dinner, the fellows from roundabout began to ride in and
+hang up their horses round the place till it looked as if there was
+going to be a funeral. Some of the chaps saw me, of course, but I tipped
+them the wink, and they gave me the office whenever the old man happened
+around.
+
+"Well, Page came along with his game-rooster. Its name was Jim. It
+wasn't much to look at, and it seemed a good deal smaller and weaker
+than Bill. Some of the chaps were disgusted, and said it wasn't a
+game-rooster at all; Bill'd settle it in one lick, and they wouldn't
+have any fun.
+
+"Well, they brought the game one out and put him down near the
+wood-heap, and rousted Bill out from under his cask. He got interested
+at once. He looked at Jim, and got up on the wood-heap and crowed and
+looked at Jim again. He reckoned THIS at last was the fowl that had been
+humbugging him all along. Presently his trouble caught him, and then
+he'd crow and take a squint at the game 'un, and crow again, and
+have another squint at gamey, and try to crow and keep his eye on the
+game-rooster at the same time. But Jim never committed himself, until
+at last he happened to gape just after Bill's whole crow went wrong, and
+Bill spotted him. He reckoned he'd caught him this time, and he got down
+off that wood-heap and went for the foe. But Jim ran away--and Bill ran
+after him.
+
+"Round and round the wood-heap they went, and round the shed, and round
+the house and under it, and back again, and round the wood-heap and over
+it and round the other way, and kept it up for close on an hour. Bill's
+bill was just within an inch or so of the game-rooster's tail feathers
+most of the time, but he couldn't get any nearer, do how he liked. And
+all the time the fellers kept chyackin Page and singing out, 'What price
+yer game 'un, Page! Go it, Bill! Go it, old cock!' and all that sort of
+thing. Well, the game-rooster went as if it was a go-as-you-please, and
+he didn't care if it lasted a year. He didn't seem to take any interest
+in the business, but Bill got excited, and by-and-by he got mad. He held
+his head lower and lower and his wings further and further out from his
+sides, and prodded away harder and harder at the ground behind, but it
+wasn't any use. Jim seemed to keep ahead without trying. They stuck
+to the wood-heap towards the last. They went round first one way for a
+while, and then the other for a change, and now and then they'd go over
+the top to break the monotony; and the chaps got more interested in the
+race than they would have been in the fight--and bet on it, too. But
+Bill was handicapped with his weight. He was done up at last; he slowed
+down till he couldn't waddle, and then, when he was thoroughly knocked
+up, that game-rooster turned on him, and gave him the father of a
+hiding.
+
+"And my father caught me when I'd got down in the excitement, and wasn't
+thinking, and HE gave ME the step-father of a hiding. But he had a
+lively time with the old lady afterwards, over the cock-fight.
+
+"Bill was so disgusted with himself that he went under the cask and
+died."
+
+
+
+
+Bush Cats
+
+
+
+"Domestic cats" we mean--the descendants of cats who came from the
+northern world during the last hundred odd years. We do not know the
+name of the vessel in which the first Thomas and his Maria came out
+to Australia, but we suppose that it was one of the ships of the
+First Fleet. Most likely Maria had kittens on the voyage--two lots,
+perhaps--the majority of which were buried at sea; and no doubt the
+disembarkation caused her much maternal anxiety.
+
+ . . . . .
+
+The feline race has not altered much in Australia, from a physical point
+of view--not yet. The rabbit has developed into something like a cross
+between a kangaroo and a possum, but the bush has not begun to develop
+the common cat. She is just as sedate and motherly as the mummy cats
+of Egypt were, but she takes longer strolls of nights, climbs gum-trees
+instead of roofs, and hunts stranger vermin than ever came under the
+observation of her northern ancestors. Her views have widened. She is
+mostly thinner than the English farm cat--which is, they say, on account
+of eating lizards.
+
+English rats and English mice--we say "English" because everything which
+isn't Australian in Australia, IS English (or British)--English rats and
+English mice are either rare or non-existent in the bush; but the hut
+cat has a wider range for game. She is always dragging in things which
+are unknown in the halls of zoology; ugly, loathsome, crawling abortions
+which have not been classified yet--and perhaps could not be.
+
+The Australian zoologist ought to rake up some more dead languages, and
+then go Out Back with a few bush cats.
+
+The Australian bush cat has a nasty, unpleasant habit of dragging
+a long, wriggling, horrid, black snake--she seems to prefer black
+snakes--into a room where there are ladies, proudly laying it down in
+a conspicuous place (usually in front of the exit), and then looking up
+for approbation. She wonders, perhaps, why the visitors are in such a
+hurry to leave.
+
+Pussy doesn't approve of live snakes round the place, especially if
+she has kittens; and if she finds a snake in the vicinity of her
+progeny--well, it is bad for that particular serpent.
+
+This brings recollections of a neighbour's cat who went out in the
+scrub, one midsummer's day, and found a brown snake. Her name--the cat's
+name--was Mary Ann. She got hold of the snake all right, just within an
+inch of its head; but it got the rest of its length wound round her body
+and squeezed about eight lives out of her. She had the presence of mind
+to keep her hold; but it struck her that she was in a fix, and that if
+she wanted to save her ninth life, it wouldn't be a bad idea to go home
+for help. So she started home, snake and all.
+
+The family were at dinner when Mary Ann came in, and, although she
+stood on an open part of the floor, no one noticed her for a while. She
+couldn't ask for help, for her mouth was too full of snake. By-and-bye
+one of the girls glanced round, and then went over the table, with a
+shriek, and out of the back door. The room was cleared very quickly. The
+eldest boy got a long-handled shovel, and in another second would have
+killed more cat than snake; but his father interfered. The father was
+a shearer, and Mary Ann was a favourite cat with him. He got a pair of
+shears from the shelf and deftly shore off the snake's head, and one
+side of Mary Ann's whiskers. She didn't think it safe to let go yet. She
+kept her teeth in the neck until the selector snipped the rest of the
+snake off her. The bits were carried out on a shovel to die at sundown.
+Mary Ann had a good drink of milk, and then got her tongue out and
+licked herself back into the proper shape for a cat; after which she
+went out to look for that snake's mate. She found it, too, and dragged
+it home the same evening.
+
+Cats will kill rabbits and drag them home. We knew a fossicker whose cat
+used to bring him a bunny nearly every night. The fossicker had rabbits
+for breakfast until he got sick of them, and then he used to swap them
+with a butcher for meat. The cat was named Ingersoll, which indicates
+his sex and gives an inkling to his master's religious and political
+opinions. Ingersoll used to prospect round in the gloaming until he
+found some rabbit holes which showed encouraging indications. He would
+shepherd one hole for an hour or so every evening until he found it was
+a duffer, or worked it out; then he would shift to another. One day he
+prospected a big hollow log with a lot of holes in it, and more going
+down underneath. The indications were very good, but Ingersoll had no
+luck. The game had too many ways of getting out and in. He found that he
+could not work that claim by himself, so he floated it into a company.
+He persuaded several cats from a neighbouring selection to take shares,
+and they watched the holes together, or in turns--they worked shifts.
+The dividends more than realised even their wildest expectations, for
+each cat took home at least one rabbit every night for a week.
+
+A selector started a vegetable garden about the time when rabbits were
+beginning to get troublesome up country. The hare had not shown itself
+yet. The farmer kept quite a regiment of cats to protect his garden--and
+they protected it. He would shut the cats up all day with nothing to
+eat, and let them out about sundown; then they would mooch off to the
+turnip patch like farm-labourers going to work. They would drag the
+rabbits home to the back door, and sit there and watch them until the
+farmer opened the door and served out the ration of milk. Then the cats
+would turn in. He nearly always found a semi-circle of dead rabbits and
+watchful cats round the door in the morning. They sold the product of
+their labour direct to the farmer for milk. It didn't matter if one cat
+had been unlucky--had not got a rabbit--each had an equal share in the
+general result. They were true socialists, those cats.
+
+One of those cats was a mighty big Tom, named Jack. He was death on
+rabbits; he would work hard all night, laying for them and dragging them
+home. Some weeks he would graft every night, and at other times every
+other night, but he was generally pretty regular. When he reckoned he
+had done an extra night's work, he would take the next night off and go
+three miles to the nearest neighbour's to see his Maria and take her out
+for a stroll. Well, one evening Jack went into the garden and chose a
+place where there was good cover, and lay low. He was a bit earlier than
+usual, so he thought he would have a doze till rabbit time. By-and-bye
+he heard a noise, and slowly, cautiously opening one eye, he saw two big
+ears sticking out of the leaves in front of him. He judged that it was
+an extra big bunny, so he put some extra style into his manoeuvres. In
+about five minutes he made his spring. He must have thought (if cats
+think) that it was a whopping, old-man rabbit, for it was a pioneer
+hare--not an ordinary English hare, but one of those great coarse, lanky
+things which the bush is breeding. The selector was attracted by an
+unusual commotion and a cloud of dust among his cabbages, and came along
+with his gun in time to witness the fight. First Jack would drag the
+hare, and then the hare would drag Jack; sometimes they would be down
+together, and then Jack would use his hind claws with effect; finally he
+got his teeth in the right place, and triumphed. Then he started to drag
+the corpse home, but he had to give it best and ask his master to lend a
+hand. The selector took up the hare, and Jack followed home, much to
+the family's surprise. He did not go back to work that night; he took
+a spell. He had a drink of milk, licked the dust off himself, washed it
+down with another drink, and sat in front of the fire and thought for a
+goodish while. Then he got up, walked over to the corner where the hare
+was lying, had a good look at it, came back to the fire, sat down again,
+and thought hard. He was still thinking when the family retired.
+
+
+
+
+Meeting Old Mates
+
+
+
+ I.
+
+ Tom Smith
+
+
+You are getting well on in the thirties, and haven't left off being a
+fool yet. You have been away in another colony or country for a year or
+so, and have now come back again. Most of your chums have gone away or
+got married, or, worse still, signed the pledge--settled down and got
+steady; and you feel lonely and desolate and left-behind enough for
+anything. While drifting aimlessly round town with an eye out for some
+chance acquaintance to have a knock round with, you run against an old
+chum whom you never dreamt of meeting, or whom you thought to be in some
+other part of the country--or perhaps you knock up against someone who
+knows the old chum in question, and he says:
+
+"I suppose you know Tom Smith's in Sydney?"
+
+"Tom Smith! Why, I thought he was in Queensland! I haven't seen him for
+more than three years. Where's the old joker hanging out at all? Why,
+except you, there's no one in Australia I'd sooner see than Tom Smith.
+Here I've been mooning round like an unemployed for three weeks, looking
+for someone to have a knock round with, and Tom in Sydney all the time.
+I wish I'd known before. Where'll I run against him--where does he
+live?"
+
+"Oh, he's living at home."
+
+"But where's his home? I was never there."
+
+"Oh, I'll give you his address.... There, I think that's it. I'm not
+sure about the number, but you'll soon find out in that street--most of
+'em'll know Tom Smith."
+
+"Thanks! I rather think they will. I'm glad I met you. I'll hunt Tom up
+to-day."
+
+So you put a few shillings in your pocket, tell your landlady that
+you're going to visit an old aunt of yours or a sick friend, and mayn't
+be home that night; and then you start out to hunt up Tom Smith and have
+at least one more good night, if you die for it.
+
+ . . . . .
+
+This is the first time you have seen Tom at home; you knew of his home
+and people in the old days, but only in a vague, indefinite sort of way.
+Tom has changed! He is stouter and older-looking; he seems solemn and
+settled down. You intended to give him a surprise and have a good old
+jolly laugh with him, but somehow things get suddenly damped at the
+beginning. He grins and grips your hand right enough, but there seems
+something wanting. You can't help staring at him, and he seems to look
+at you in a strange, disappointing way; it doesn't strike you that you
+also have changed, and perhaps more in his eyes than he in yours. He
+introduces you to his mother and sisters and brothers, and the rest of
+the family; or to his wife, as the case may be; and you have to suppress
+your feelings and be polite and talk common-place. You hate to be polite
+and talk common-place. You aren't built that way--and Tom wasn't either,
+in the old days. The wife (or the mother and sisters) receives you
+kindly, for Tom's sake, and makes much of you; but they don't know you
+yet. You want to get Tom outside, and have a yarn and a drink and a
+laugh with him--you are bursting to tell him all about yourself, and get
+him to tell you all about himself, and ask him if he remembers things;
+and you wonder if he is bursting the same way, and hope he is. The old
+lady and sisters (or the wife) bore you pretty soon, and you wonder
+if they bore Tom; you almost fancy, from his looks, that they do. You
+wonder whether Tom is coming out to-night, whether he wants to get out,
+and if he wants to and wants to get out by himself, whether he'll be
+able to manage it; but you daren't broach the subject, it wouldn't be
+polite. You've got to be polite. Then you get worried by the thought
+that Tom is bursting to get out with you and only wants an excuse; is
+waiting, in fact, and hoping for you to ask him in an off-hand sort of
+way to come out for a stroll. But you're not quite sure; and besides, if
+you were, you wouldn't have the courage. By-and-bye you get tired of
+it all, thirsty, and want to get out in the open air. You get tired of
+saying, "Do you really, Mrs. Smith?" or "Do you think so, Miss Smith?"
+or "You were quite right, Mrs. Smith," and "Well, I think so too, Mrs.
+Smith," or, to the brother, "That's just what I thought, Mr. Smith."
+You don't want to "talk pretty" to them, and listen to their wishy-washy
+nonsense; you want to get out and have a roaring spree with Tom, as you
+had in the old days; you want to make another night of it with your
+old mate, Tom Smith; and pretty soon you get the blues badly, and feel
+nearly smothered in there, and you've got to get out and have a beer
+anyway--Tom or no Tom; and you begin to feel wild with Tom himself; and
+at last you make a bold dash for it and chance Tom. You get up, look
+at your hat, and say: "Ah, well, I must be going, Tom; I've got to meet
+someone down the street at seven o'clock. Where'll I meet you in town
+next week?"
+
+But Tom says:
+
+"Oh, dash it; you ain't going yet. Stay to tea, Joe, stay to tea. It'll
+be on the table in a minute. Sit down--sit down, man! Here, gimme your
+hat."
+
+And Tom's sister, or wife, or mother comes in with an apron on and her
+hands all over flour, and says:
+
+"Oh, you're not going yet, Mr. Brown? Tea'll be ready in a minute. Do
+stay for tea." And if you make excuses, she cross-examines you about the
+time you've got to keep that appointment down the street, and tells you
+that their clock is twenty minutes fast, and that you have got plenty of
+time, and so you have to give in. But you are mightily encouraged by
+a winksome expression which you see, or fancy you see, on your side of
+Tom's face; also by the fact of his having accidentally knocked his foot
+against your shins. So you stay.
+
+One of the females tells you to "Sit there, Mr. Brown," and you take
+your place at the table, and the polite business goes on. You've got to
+hold your knife and fork properly, and mind your p's and q's, and when
+she says, "Do you take milk and sugar, Mr. Brown?" you've got to say,
+"Yes, please, Miss Smith--thanks--that's plenty." And when they press
+you, as they will, to have more, you've got to keep on saying, "No,
+thanks, Mrs. Smith; no, thanks, Miss Smith; I really couldn't; I've done
+very well, thank you; I had a very late dinner, and so on"--bother such
+tommy-rot. And you don't seem to have any appetite, anyway. And you
+think of the days out on the track when you and Tom sat on your
+swags under a mulga at mid-day, and ate mutton and johnny-cake with
+clasp-knives, and drank by turns out of the old, battered, leaky billy.
+
+And after tea you have to sit still while the precious minutes are
+wasted, and listen and sympathize, while all the time you are on the
+fidget to get out with Tom, and go down to a private bar where you know
+some girls.
+
+And perhaps by-and-bye the old lady gets confidential, and seizes an
+opportunity to tell you what a good steady young fellow Tom is now that
+he never touches drink, and belongs to a temperance society (or the
+Y.M.C.A.), and never stays out of nights.
+
+Consequently you feel worse than ever, and lonelier, and sorrier that
+you wasted your time coming. You are encouraged again by a glimpse of
+Tom putting on a clean collar and fixing himself up a bit; but when you
+are ready to go, and ask him if he's coming a bit down the street
+with you, he says he thinks he will in such a disinterested,
+don't-mind-if-I-do sort of tone, that he makes you mad.
+
+At last, after promising to "drop in again, Mr. Brown, whenever you're
+passing," and to "don't forget to call," and thanking them for their
+assurance that they'll "be always glad to see you," and telling them
+that you've spent a very pleasant evening and enjoyed yourself, and are
+awfully sorry you couldn't stay--you get away with Tom.
+
+You don't say much to each other till you get round the corner and
+down the street a bit, and then for a while your conversation is mostly
+common-place, such as, "Well, how have you been getting on all this
+time, Tom?" "Oh, all right. How have you been getting on?" and so on.
+
+But presently, and perhaps just as you have made up your mind to chance
+the alleged temperance business and ask Tom in to have a drink, he
+throws a glance up and down the street, nudges your shoulder, says "Come
+on," and disappears sideways into a pub.
+
+ . . . . .
+
+"What's yours, Tom?" "What's yours, Joe?" "The same for me." "Well,
+here's luck, old man." "Here's luck." You take a drink, and look over
+your glass at Tom. Then the old smile spreads over his face, and it
+makes you glad--you could swear to Tom's grin in a hundred years. Then
+something tickles him--your expression, perhaps, or a recollection of
+the past--and he sets down his glass on the bar and laughs. Then you
+laugh. Oh, there's no smile like the smile that old mates favour each
+other with over the tops of their glasses when they meet again after
+years. It is eloquent, because of the memories that give it birth.
+
+"Here's another. Do you remember----? Do you remember----?" Oh, it all
+comes back again like a flash. Tom hasn't changed a bit; just the same
+good-hearted, jolly idiot he always was. Old times back again! "It's
+just like old times," says Tom, after three or four more drinks.
+
+ . . . . .
+
+And so you make a night of it and get uproariously jolly. You get as
+"glorious" as Bobby Burns did in the part of Tam O'Shanter, and have a
+better "time" than any of the times you had in the old days. And you see
+Tom as nearly home in the morning as you dare, and he reckons he'll get
+it hot from his people--which no doubt he will--and he explains that
+they are very particular up at home--church people, you know--and, of
+course, especially if he's married, it's understood between you that
+you'd better not call for him up at home after this--at least, not till
+things have cooled down a bit. It's always the way. The friend of the
+husband always gets the blame in cases like this. But Tom fixes up a
+yarn to tell them, and you aren't to "say anything different" in case
+you run against any of them. And he fixes up an appointment with you for
+next Saturday night, and he'll get there if he gets divorced for it.
+But he MIGHT have to take the wife out shopping, or one of the girls
+somewhere; and if you see her with him you've got to lay low, and be
+careful, and wait--at another hour and place, perhaps, all of which is
+arranged--for if she sees you she'll smell a rat at once, and he won't
+be able to get off at all.
+
+And so, as far as you and Tom are concerned, the "old times" have come
+back once more.
+
+ . . . . .
+
+But, of course (and we almost forgot it), you might chance to fall in
+love with one of Tom's sisters, in which case there would be another and
+a totally different story to tell.
+
+
+
+ II.
+
+ Jack Ellis
+
+
+Things are going well with you. You have escaped from "the track", so to
+speak, and are in a snug, comfortable little billet in the city. Well,
+while doing the block you run against an old mate of other days--VERY
+other days--call him Jack Ellis. Things have gone hard with Jack. He
+knows you at once, but makes no advance towards a greeting; he acts as
+though he thinks you might cut him--which, of course, if you are a true
+mate, you have not the slightest intention of doing. His coat is yellow
+and frayed, his hat is battered and green, his trousers "gone" in
+various places, his linen very cloudy, and his boots burst and innocent
+of polish. You try not to notice these things--or rather, not to seem
+to notice them--but you cannot help doing so, and you are afraid he'll
+notice that you see these things, and put a wrong construction on it.
+How men will misunderstand each other! You greet him with more than the
+necessary enthusiasm. In your anxiety to set him at his ease and make
+him believe that nothing--not even money--can make a difference in your
+friendship, you over-act the business; and presently you are afraid that
+he'll notice that too, and put a wrong construction on it. You wish that
+your collar was not so clean, nor your clothes so new. Had you known you
+would meet him, you would have put on some old clothes for the occasion.
+
+You are both embarrassed, but it is YOU who feel ashamed--you are
+almost afraid to look at him lest he'll think you are looking at his
+shabbiness. You ask him in to have a drink, but he doesn't respond
+so heartily as you wish, as he did in the old days; he doesn't like
+drinking with anybody when he isn't "fixed", as he calls it--when he
+can't shout.
+
+It didn't matter in the old days who held the money so long as there was
+plenty of "stuff" in the camp. You think of the days when Jack stuck to
+you through thick and thin. You would like to give him money now, but
+he is so proud; he always was; he makes you mad with his beastly pride.
+There wasn't any pride of that sort on the track or in the camp in
+those days; but times have changed--your lives have drifted too widely
+apart--you have taken different tracks since then; and Jack, without
+intending to, makes you feel that it is so.
+
+You have a drink, but it isn't a success; it falls flat, as far as Jack
+is concerned; he won't have another; he doesn't "feel on", and presently
+he escapes under plea of an engagement, and promises to see you again.
+
+And you wish that the time was come when no one could have more or less
+to spend than another.
+
+ . . . . .
+
+P.S.--I met an old mate of that description once, and so successfully
+persuaded him out of his beastly pride that he borrowed two pounds off
+me till Monday. I never got it back since, and I want it badly at
+the present time. In future I'll leave old mates with their pride
+unimpaired.
+
+
+
+
+Two Larrikins
+
+
+
+"Y'orter do something, Ernie. Yer know how I am. YOU don't seem to care.
+Y'orter to do something."
+
+Stowsher slouched at a greater angle to the greasy door-post, and
+scowled under his hat-brim. It was a little, low, frowsy room opening
+into Jones' Alley. She sat at the table, sewing--a thin, sallow girl
+with weak, colourless eyes. She looked as frowsy as her surroundings.
+
+"Well, why don't you go to some of them women, and get fixed up?"
+
+She flicked the end of the table-cloth over some tiny, unfinished
+articles of clothing, and bent to her work.
+
+"But you know very well I haven't got a shilling, Ernie," she said,
+quietly. "Where am I to get the money from?"
+
+"Who asked yer to get it?"
+
+She was silent, with the exasperating silence of a woman who has
+determined to do a thing in spite of all reasons and arguments that may
+be brought against it.
+
+"Well, wot more do yer want?" demanded Stowsher, impatiently.
+
+She bent lower. "Couldn't we keep it, Ernie?"
+
+"Wot next?" asked Stowsher, sulkily--he had half suspected what was
+coming. Then, with an impatient oath, "You must be gettin' ratty."
+
+She brushed the corner of the cloth further over the little clothes.
+
+"It wouldn't cost anything, Ernie. I'd take a pride in him, and keep him
+clean, and dress him like a little lord. He'll be different from all the
+other youngsters. He wouldn't be like those dirty, sickly little brats
+out there. He'd be just like you, Ernie; I know he would. I'll look
+after him night and day, and bring him up well and strong. We'd train
+his little muscles from the first, Ernie, and he'd be able to knock 'em
+all out when he grew up. It wouldn't cost much, and I'd work hard and be
+careful if you'd help me. And you'd be proud of him, too, Ernie--I know
+you would."
+
+Stowsher scraped the doorstep with his foot; but whether he was
+"touched", or feared hysterics and was wisely silent, was not apparent.
+
+"Do you remember the first day I met you, Ernie?" she asked, presently.
+
+Stowsher regarded her with an uneasy scowl: "Well--wot o' that?"
+
+"You came into the bar-parlour at the 'Cricketers' Arms' and caught a
+push of 'em chyacking your old man."
+
+"Well, I altered that."
+
+"I know you did. You done for three of them, one after another, and two
+was bigger than you."
+
+"Yes! and when the push come up we done for the rest," said Stowsher,
+softening at the recollection.
+
+"And the day you come home and caught the landlord bullying your old
+mother like a dog----"
+
+"Yes; I got three months for that job. But it was worth it!" he
+reflected. "Only," he added, "the old woman might have had the knocker
+to keep away from the lush while I was in quod.... But wot's all this
+got to do with it?"
+
+"HE might barrack and fight for you, some day, Ernie," she said softly,
+"when you're old and out of form and ain't got no push to back you."
+
+The thing was becoming decidedly embarrassing to Stowsher; not that he
+felt any delicacy on the subject, but because he hated to be drawn into
+a conversation that might be considered "soft".
+
+"Oh, stow that!" he said, comfortingly. "Git on yer hat, and I'll take
+yer for a trot."
+
+She rose quickly, but restrained herself, recollecting that it was not
+good policy to betray eagerness in response to an invitation from Ernie.
+
+"But--you know--I don't like to go out like this. You can't--you
+wouldn't like to take me out the way I am, Ernie!"
+
+"Why not? Wot rot!"
+
+"The fellows would see me, and--and----"
+
+"And... wot?"
+
+"They might notice----"
+
+"Well, wot o' that? I want 'em to. Are yer comin' or are yer ain't?
+Fling round now. I can't hang on here all day."
+
+They walked towards Flagstaff Hill.
+
+One or two, slouching round a pub. corner, saluted with "Wotcher,
+Stowsher!"
+
+"Not too stinkin'," replied Stowsher. "Soak yer heads."
+
+"Stowsher's goin' to stick," said one privately.
+
+"An' so he orter," said another. "Wish I had the chanst."
+
+The two turned up a steep lane.
+
+"Don't walk so fast up hill, Ernie; I can't, you know."
+
+"All right, Liz. I forgot that. Why didn't yer say so before?"
+
+She was contentedly silent most of the way, warned by instinct, after
+the manner of women when they have gained their point by words.
+
+Once he glanced over his shoulder with a short laugh. "Gorblime!" he
+said, "I nearly thought the little beggar was a-follerin' along behind!"
+
+When he left her at the door he said: "Look here, Liz. 'Ere's half a
+quid. Git what yer want. Let her go. I'm goin' to graft again in the
+mornin', and I'll come round and see yer to-morrer night."
+
+Still she seemed troubled and uneasy.
+
+"Ernie."
+
+"Well. Wot now?"
+
+"S'posin' it's a girl, Ernie."
+
+Stowsher flung himself round impatiently.
+
+"Oh, for God's sake, stow that! Yer always singin' out before yer
+hurt.... There's somethin' else, ain't there--while the bloomin' shop's
+open?"
+
+"No, Ernie. Ain't you going to kiss me?... I'm satisfied."
+
+"Satisfied! Yer don't want the kid to be arst 'oo 'is father was, do
+yer? Yer'd better come along with me some day this week and git spliced.
+Yer don't want to go frettin' or any of that funny business while it's
+on."
+
+"Oh, Ernie! do you really mean it?"--and she threw her arms round his
+neck, and broke down at last.
+
+ . . . . .
+
+"So-long, Liz. No more funny business now--I've had enough of it. Keep
+yer pecker up, old girl. To-morrer night, mind." Then he added suddenly:
+"Yer might have known I ain't that sort of a bloke"--and left abruptly.
+
+Liz was very happy.
+
+
+
+
+Mr. Smellingscheck
+
+
+
+I met him in a sixpenny restaurant--"All meals, 6d.--Good beds, 1s."
+That was before sixpenny restaurants rose to a third-class position,
+and became possibly respectable places to live in, through the
+establishment, beneath them, of fourpenny hash-houses (good beds, 6d.),
+and, beneath THEM again, of THREE-penny "dining-rooms--CLEAN beds, 4d."
+
+There were five beds in our apartment, the head of one against the foot
+of the next, and so on round the room, with a space where the door and
+washstand were. I chose the bed the head of which was near the foot of
+his, because he looked like a man who took his bath regularly. I
+should like, in the interests of sentiment, to describe the place as a
+miserable, filthy, evil-smelling garret; but I can't--because it wasn't.
+The room was large and airy; the floor was scrubbed and the windows
+cleaned at least once a week, and the beds kept fresh and neat, which
+is more--a good deal more--than can be said of many genteel private
+boarding-houses. The lodgers were mostly respectable unemployed, and
+one or two--fortunate men!--in work; it was the casual boozer,
+the professional loafer, and the occasional spieler--the
+one-shilling-bed-men--who made the place objectionable, not the
+hard-working people who paid ten pounds a week for the house; and, but
+for the one-night lodgers and the big gilt black-and-red bordered and
+"shaded" "6d." in the window--which made me glance guiltily up and down
+the street, like a burglar about to do a job, before I went in--I was
+pretty comfortable there.
+
+They called him "Mr. Smellingscheck", and treated him with a peculiar
+kind of deference, the reason for which they themselves were doubtless
+unable to explain or even understand. The haggard woman who made the
+beds called him "Mr. Smell-'is-check". Poor fellow! I didn't think, by
+the look of him, that he'd smelt his cheque, or anyone else's, or that
+anyone else had smelt his, for many a long day. He was a fat man, slow
+and placid. He looked like a typical monopolist who had unaccountably
+got into a suit of clothes belonging to a Domain unemployed, and hadn't
+noticed, or had entirely forgotten, the circumstance in his business
+cares--if such a word as care could be connected with such a calm,
+self-contained nature. He wore a suit of cheap slops of some kind of
+shoddy "tweed". The coat was too small and the trousers too short, and
+they were drawn up to meet the waistcoat--which they did with painful
+difficulty, now and then showing, by way of protest, two pairs of brass
+buttons and the ends of the brace-straps; and they seemed to blame the
+irresponsive waistcoat or the wearer for it all. Yet he never gave way
+to assist them. A pair of burst elastic-sides were in full evidence, and
+a rim of cloudy sock, with a hole in it, showed at every step.
+
+But he put on his clothes and wore them like--like a gentleman. He had
+two white shirts, and they were both dirty. He'd lay them out on
+the bed, turn them over, regard them thoughtfully, choose that which
+appeared to his calm understanding to be the cleaner, and put it on, and
+wear it until it was unmistakably dirtier than the other; then he'd
+wear the other till it was dirtier than the first. He managed his three
+collars the same way. His handkerchiefs were washed in the bathroom, and
+dried, without the slightest disguise, in the bedroom. He never hurried
+in anything. The way he cleaned his teeth, shaved, and made his toilet
+almost transformed the place, in my imagination, into a gentleman's
+dressing-room.
+
+He talked politics and such things in the abstract--always in the
+abstract--calmly in the abstract. He was an old-fashioned Conservative
+of the Sir Leicester Deadlock style. When he was moved by an extra
+shower of aggressive democratic cant--which was seldom--he defended
+Capital, but only as if it needed no defence, and as if its opponents
+were merely thoughtless, ignorant children whom he condescended to set
+right because of their inexperience and for their own good. He stuck
+calmly to his own order--the order which had dropped him like a foul
+thing when the bottom dropped out of his boom, whatever that was. He
+never talked of his misfortunes.
+
+He took his meals at the little greasy table in the dark corner
+downstairs, just as if he were dining at the Exchange. He had a
+chop--rather well-done--and a sheet of the 'Herald' for breakfast. He
+carried two handkerchiefs; he used one for a handkerchief and the other
+for a table-napkin, and sometimes folded it absently and laid it on the
+table. He rose slowly, putting his chair back, took down his battered
+old green hat, and regarded it thoughtfully--as though it had just
+occurred to him in a calm, casual way that he'd drop into his hatter's,
+if he had time, on his way down town, and get it blocked, or else send
+the messenger round with it during business hours. He'd draw his stick
+out from behind the next chair, plant it, and, if you hadn't quite
+finished your side of the conversation, stand politely waiting until you
+were done. Then he'd look for a suitable reply into his hat, put it
+on, give it a twitch to settle it on his head--as gentlemen do a
+"chimney-pot"--step out into the gangway, turn his face to the door, and
+walk slowly out on to the middle of the pavement--looking more placidly
+well-to-do than ever. The saying is that clothes make a man, but HE
+made his almost respectable just by wearing them. Then he'd consult his
+watch--(he stuck to the watch all through, and it seemed a good one--I
+often wondered why he didn't pawn it); then he'd turn slowly, right
+turn, and look down the street. Then slowly back, left-about turn, and
+take a cool survey in that direction, as if calmly undecided whether to
+take a cab and drive to the Exchange, or (as it was a very fine morning,
+and he had half an hour to spare) walk there and drop in at his club
+on the way. He'd conclude to walk. I never saw him go anywhere in
+particular, but he walked and stood as if he could.
+
+Coming quietly into the room one day, I surprised him sitting at the
+table with his arms lying on it and his face resting on them. I heard
+something like a sob. He rose hastily, and gathered up some papers which
+were on the table; then he turned round, rubbing his forehead and
+eyes with his forefinger and thumb, and told me that he suffered
+from--something, I forget the name of it, but it was a well-to-do
+ailment. His manner seemed a bit jolted and hurried for a minute or so,
+and then he was himself again. He told me he was leaving for Melbourne
+next day. He left while I was out, and left an envelope downstairs for
+me. There was nothing in it except a pound note.
+
+I saw him in Brisbane afterwards, well-dressed, getting out of a cab at
+the entrance of one of the leading hotels. But his manner was no more
+self-contained and well-to-do than it had been in the old sixpenny
+days--because it couldn't be. We had a well-to-do whisky together, and
+he talked of things in the abstract. He seemed just as if he'd met me in
+the Australia.
+
+
+
+
+"A Rough Shed"
+
+
+
+A hot, breathless, blinding sunrise--the sun having appeared suddenly
+above the ragged edge of the barren scrub like a great disc of molten
+steel. No hint of a morning breeze before it, no sign on earth or sky to
+show that it is morning--save the position of the sun.
+
+A clearing in the scrub--bare as though the surface of the earth were
+ploughed and harrowed, and dusty as the road. Two oblong huts--one for
+the shearers and one for the rouseabouts--in about the centre of the
+clearing (as if even the mongrel scrub had shrunk away from them) built
+end-to-end, of weatherboards, and roofed with galvanised iron. Little
+ventilation; no verandah; no attempt to create, artificially, a breath
+of air through the buildings. Unpainted, sordid--hideous. Outside, heaps
+of ashes still hot and smoking. Close at hand, "butcher's shop"--a bush
+and bag breakwind in the dust, under a couple of sheets of iron, with
+offal, grease and clotted blood blackening the surface of the
+ground about it. Greasy, stinking sheepskins hanging everywhere with
+blood-blotched sides out. Grease inches deep in great black patches
+about the fireplace ends of the huts, where wash-up and "boiling" water
+is thrown.
+
+Inside, a rough table on supports driven into the black, greasy ground
+floor, and formed of flooring boards, running on uneven lines the length
+of the hut from within about 6ft. of the fire-place. Lengths of single
+six-inch boards or slabs on each side, supported by the projecting ends
+of short pieces of timber nailed across the legs of the table to serve
+as seats.
+
+On each side of the hut runs a rough framework, like the partitions in a
+stable; each compartment battened off to about the size of a manger, and
+containing four bunks, one above the other, on each side--their ends,
+of course, to the table. Scarcely breathing space anywhere between.
+Fireplace, the full width of the hut in one end, where all the cooking
+and baking for forty or fifty men is done, and where flour, sugar, etc.,
+are kept in open bags. Fire, like a very furnace. Buckets of tea and
+coffee on roasting beds of coals and ashes on the hearth. Pile of
+"brownie" on the bare black boards at the end of the table. Unspeakable
+aroma of forty or fifty men who have little inclination and less
+opportunity to wash their skins, and who soak some of the grease out
+of their clothes--in buckets of hot water--on Saturday afternoons or
+Sundays. And clinging to all, and over all, the smell of the dried,
+stale yolk of wool--the stink of rams!
+
+ . . . . .
+
+"I am a rouseabout of the rouseabouts. I have fallen so far that it
+is beneath me to try to climb to the proud position of 'ringer' of the
+shed. I had that ambition once, when I was the softest of green hands;
+but then I thought I could work out my salvation and go home. I've got
+used to hell since then. I only get twenty-five shillings a week (less
+station store charges) and tucker here. I have been seven years west of
+the Darling and never shore a sheep. Why don't I learn to shear, and
+so make money? What should I do with more money? Get out of this and go
+home? I would never go home unless I had enough money to keep me for
+the rest of my life, and I'll never make that Out Back. Otherwise, what
+should I do at home? And how should I account for the seven years, if
+I were to go home? Could I describe shed life to them and explain how
+I lived. They think shearing only takes a few days of the year--at the
+beginning of summer. They'd want to know how I lived the rest of the
+year. Could I explain that I 'jabbed trotters' and was a 'tea-and-sugar
+burglar' between sheds. They'd think I'd been a tramp and a beggar all
+the time. Could I explain ANYTHING so that they'd understand? I'd have
+to be lying all the time and would soon be tripped up and found out.
+For, whatever else I have been I was never much of a liar. No, I'll
+never go home.
+
+"I become momentarily conscious about daylight. The flies on the track
+got me into that habit, I think; they start at day-break--when the
+mosquitoes give over.
+
+"The cook rings a bullock bell.
+
+"The cook is fire-proof. He is as a fiend from the nethermost sheol
+and needs to be. No man sees him sleep, for he makes bread--or worse,
+brownie--at night, and he rings a bullock bell loudly at half-past
+five in the morning to rouse us from our animal torpors. Others, the
+sheep-ho's or the engine-drivers at the shed or wool-wash, call him, if
+he does sleep. They manage it in shifts, somehow, and sleep somewhere,
+sometime. We haven't time to know. The cook rings the bullock bell and
+yells the time. It was the same time five minutes ago--or a year ago.
+No time to decide which. I dash water over my head and face and slap
+handfuls on my eyelids--gummed over aching eyes--still blighted by the
+yolk o' wool--grey, greasy-feeling water from a cut-down kerosene
+tin which I sneaked from the cook and hid under my bunk and had the
+foresight to refill from the cask last night, under cover of warm,
+still, suffocating darkness. Or was it the night before last? Anyhow, it
+will be sneaked from me to-day, and from the crawler who will collar it
+to-morrow, and 'touched' and 'lifted' and 'collared' and recovered by
+the cook, and sneaked back again, and cause foul language, and fights,
+maybe, till we 'cut-out'.
+
+"No; we didn't have sweet dreams of home and mother, gentle poet--nor
+yet of babbling brooks and sweethearts, and love's young dream. We are
+too dirty and dog-tired when we tumble down, and have too little time to
+sleep it off. We don't want to dream those dreams out here--they'd only
+be nightmares for us, and we'd wake to remember. We MUSTN'T remember
+here.
+
+"At the edge of the timber a great galvanised-iron shed, nearly all
+roof, coming down to within 6ft. 6in. of the 'board' over the 'shoots'.
+Cloud of red dust in the dead timber behind, going up--noon-day dust.
+Fence covered with skins; carcases being burned; blue smoke going
+straight up as in noonday. Great glossy (greasy-glossy) black crows
+'flopping' around.
+
+"The first syren has gone. We hurry in single files from opposite ends
+of rouseabouts' and shearers' huts (as the paths happen to run to the
+shed) gulping hot tea or coffee from a pint-pot in one hand and biting
+at a junk of brownie in the other.
+
+"Shed of forty hands. Shearers rush the pens and yank out sheep and
+throw them like demons; grip them with their knees, take up machines,
+jerk the strings; and with a rattling whirring roar the great
+machine-shed starts for the day.
+
+"'Go it, you----tigers!' yells a tar-boy. 'Wool away!' 'Tar!' 'Sheep
+Ho!' We rush through with a whirring roar till breakfast time.
+
+"We seize our tin plate from the pile, knife and fork from the
+candle-box, and crowd round the camp-oven to jab out lean chops, dry as
+chips, boiled in fat. Chops or curry-and-rice. There is some growling
+and cursing. We slip into our places without removing our hats. There's
+no time to hunt for mislaid hats when the whistle goes. Row of hat
+brims, level, drawn over eyes, or thrust back--according to characters
+or temperaments. Thrust back denotes a lucky absence of brains, I fancy.
+Row of forks going up, or jabbing, or poised, loaded, waiting for last
+mouthful to be bolted.
+
+"We pick up, sweep, tar, sew wounds, catch sheep that break from the
+pens, jump down and pick up those that can't rise at the bottom of
+the shoots, 'bring-my-combs-from-the-grinder-will-yer,' laugh at dirty
+jokes, and swear--and, in short, are the 'will-yer' slaves, body and
+soul, of seven, six, five, or four shearers, according to the distance
+from the rolling tables.
+
+"The shearer on the board at the shed is a demon. He gets so much a
+hundred; we, 25s. a week. He is not supposed, by the rules of the shed,
+the Union, and humanity, to take a sheep out of the pen AFTER the bell
+goes (smoke-ho, meals, or knock-off), but his watch is hanging on the
+post, and he times himself to get so many sheep out of the pen BEFORE
+the bell goes, and ONE MORE--the 'bell-sheep'--as it is ringing. We have
+to take the last fleece to the table and leave our board clean. We go
+through the day of eight hours in runs of about an hour and 20 minutes
+between smoke-ho's--from 6 to 6. If the shearers shore 200 instead of
+100, they'd get 2 Pounds a day instead of 1 Pound, and we'd have twice
+as much work to do for our 25s. per week. But the shearers are racing
+each other for tallies. And it's no use kicking. There is no God here
+and no Unionism (though we all have tickets). But what am I growling
+about? I've worked from 6 to 6 with no smoke-ho's for half the wages,
+and food we wouldn't give the sheep-ho dog. It's the bush growl, born of
+heat, flies, and dust. I'd growl now if I had a thousand a year. We MUST
+growl, swear, and some of us drink to d.t.'s, or go mad sober.
+
+"Pants and shirts stiff with grease as though a couple of pounds of soft
+black putty were spread on with a painter's knife.
+
+"No, gentle bard!--we don't sing at our work. Over the whirr and roar
+and hum all day long, and with iteration that is childish and irritating
+to the intelligent greenhand, float unthinkable adjectives and adverbs,
+addressed to jumbucks, jackaroos, and mates indiscriminately. And worse
+words for the boss over the board--behind his back.
+
+"I came of a Good Christian Family--perhaps that's why I went to the
+Devil. When I came out here I'd shrink from the man who used foul
+language. In a short time I used it with the worst. I couldn't help it.
+
+"That's the way of it. If I went back to a woman's country again I
+wouldn't swear. I'd forget this as I would a nightmare. That's the
+way of it. There's something of the larrikin about us. We don't exist
+individually. Off the board, away from the shed (and each other) we are
+quiet--even gentle.
+
+"A great-horned ram, in poor condition, but shorn of a heavy fleece,
+picks himself up at the foot of the 'shoot', and hesitates, as if
+ashamed to go down to the other end where the ewes are. The most
+ridiculous object under Heaven.
+
+"A tar-boy of fifteen, of the bush, with a mouth so vile that
+a street-boy, same age (up with a shearing uncle), kicks him
+behind--having proved his superiority with his fists before the shed
+started. Of which unspeakable little fiend the roughest shearer of a
+rough shed was heard to say, in effect, that if he thought there was
+the slightest possibility of his becoming the father of such a boy
+he'd----take drastic measures to prevent the possibility of his becoming
+a proud parent at all.
+
+"Twice a day the cooks and their familiars carry buckets of
+oatmeal-water and tea to the shed, two each on a yoke. We cry, 'Where
+are you coming to, my pretty maids?'
+
+"In ten minutes the surfaces of the buckets are black with flies. We
+have given over trying to keep them clear. We stir the living cream
+aside with the bottoms of the pints, and guzzle gallons, and sweat it
+out again. Occasionally a shearer pauses and throws the perspiration
+from his forehead in a rain.
+
+"Shearers live in such a greedy rush of excitement that often a strong
+man will, at a prick of the shears, fall in a death-like faint on the
+board.
+
+"We hate the Boss-of-the-Board as the shearers' 'slushy' hates the
+shearers' cook. I don't know why. He's a very fair boss.
+
+"He refused to put on a traveller yesterday, and the traveller knocked
+him down. He walked into the shed this morning with his hat back and
+thumbs in waistcoat--a tribute to man's weakness. He threatened to
+dismiss the traveller's mate, a bigger man, for rough shearing--a
+tribute to man's strength. The shearer said nothing. We hate the boss
+because he IS boss, but we respect him because he is a strong man. He is
+as hard up as any of us, I hear, and has a sick wife and a large, small
+family in Melbourne. God judge us all!
+
+"There is a gambling-school here, headed by the shearers' cook. After
+tea they head-'em, and advance cheques are passed from hand to hand, and
+thrown in the dust until they are black. When it's too dark to see with
+nose to the ground, they go inside and gamble with cards. Sometimes
+they start on Saturday afternoon, heading 'em till dark, play cards all
+night, start again heading 'em Sunday afternoon, play cards all Sunday
+night, and sleep themselves sane on Monday, or go to work ghastly--like
+dead men.
+
+"Cry of 'Fight'; we all rush out. But there isn't much fighting. Afraid
+of murdering each other. I'm beginning to think that most bush crime is
+due to irritation born of dust, heat, and flies.
+
+"The smothering atmosphere shudders when the sun goes down. We call it
+the sunset breeze.
+
+"Saturday night or Sunday we're invited into the shearers' hut. There
+are songs that are not hymns and recitations and speeches that are not
+prayers.
+
+"Last Sunday night: Slush lamps at long intervals on table. Men playing
+cards, sewing on patches--(nearly all smoking)--some writing, and
+the rest reading Deadwood Dick. At one end of the table a Christian
+Endeavourer endeavouring; at the other a cockney Jew, from the hawker's
+boat, trying to sell rotten clothes. In response to complaints, direct
+and not chosen generally for Sunday, the shearers' rep. requests both
+apostles to shut up or leave.
+
+"He couldn't be expected to take the Christian and leave the Jew, any
+more than he could take the Jew and leave the Christian. We are just
+amongst ourselves in our hell.
+
+ . . . . .
+
+"Fiddle at the end of rouseabouts' hut. Voice of Jackeroo, from upper
+bunk with apologetic oaths: 'For God's sake chuck that up; it makes a
+man think of blanky old things!'
+
+"A lost soul laughs (mine) and dreadful night smothers us."
+
+
+
+
+Payable Gold
+
+
+
+Among the crowds who left the Victorian side for New South Wales about
+the time Gulgong broke out was an old Ballarat digger named Peter
+McKenzie. He had married and retired from the mining some years
+previously and had made a home for himself and family at the village of
+St. Kilda, near Melbourne; but, as was often the case with old diggers,
+the gold fever never left him, and when the fields of New South Wales
+began to blaze he mortgaged his little property in order to raise funds
+for another campaign, leaving sufficient behind him to keep his wife and
+family in comfort for a year or so.
+
+As he often remarked, his position was now very different from what it
+had been in the old days when he first arrived from Scotland, in the
+height of the excitement following on the great discovery. He was a
+young man then with only himself to look out for, but now that he was
+getting old and had a family to provide for he had staked too much on
+this venture to lose. His position did certainly look like a forlorn
+hope, but he never seemed to think so.
+
+Peter must have been very lonely and low-spirited at times. A young
+or unmarried man can form new ties, and even make new sweethearts if
+necessary, but Peter's heart was with his wife and little ones at home,
+and they were mortgaged, as it were, to Dame Fortune. Peter had to lift
+this mortgage off.
+
+Nevertheless he was always cheerful, even at the worst of times, and
+his straight grey beard and scrubby brown hair encircled a smile which
+appeared to be a fixture. He had to make an effort in order to look
+grave, such as some men do when they want to force a smile.
+
+It was rumoured that Peter had made a vow never to return home until
+he could take sufficient wealth to make his all-important family
+comfortable, or, at least, to raise the mortgage from the property, for
+the sacrifice of which to his mad gold fever he never forgave himself.
+But this was one of the few things which Peter kept to himself.
+
+The fact that he had a wife and children at St. Kilda was well known to
+all the diggers. They had to know it, and if they did not know the age,
+complexion, history and peculiarities of every child and of the "old
+woman" it was not Peter's fault.
+
+He would cross over to our place and talk to the mother for hours about
+his wife and children. And nothing pleased him better than to discover
+peculiarities in us children wherein we resembled his own. It pleased us
+also for mercenary reasons. "It's just the same with my old woman,"
+or "It's just the same with my youngsters," Peter would exclaim
+boisterously, for he looked upon any little similarity between the two
+families as a remarkable coincidence. He liked us all, and was always
+very kind to us, often standing between our backs and the rod that
+spoils the child--that is, I mean, if it isn't used. I was very
+short-tempered, but this failing was more than condoned by the fact that
+Peter's "eldest" was given that way also. Mother's second son was very
+good-natured; so was Peter's third. Her "third" had a great aversion
+for any duty that threatened to increase his muscles; so had Peter's
+"second". Our baby was very fat and heavy and was given to sucking her
+own thumb vigorously, and, according to the latest bulletins from home,
+it was just the same with Peter's "last".
+
+I think we knew more about Peter's family than we did about our own.
+Although we had never seen them, we were as familiar with their features
+as the photographer's art could make us, and always knew their domestic
+history up to the date of the last mail.
+
+We became interested in the McKenzie family. Instead of getting bored by
+them as some people were, we were always as much pleased when Peter got
+a letter from home as he was himself, and if a mail were missed, which
+seldom happened--we almost shared his disappointment and anxiety. Should
+one of the youngsters be ill, we would be quite uneasy, on Peter's
+account, until the arrival of a later bulletin removed his anxiety, and
+ours.
+
+It must have been the glorious power of a big true heart that gained for
+Peter the goodwill and sympathy of all who knew him.
+
+Peter's smile had a peculiar fascination for us children. We would
+stand by his pointing forge when he'd be sharpening picks in the early
+morning, and watch his face for five minutes at a time, wondering
+sometimes whether he was always SMILING INSIDE, or whether the smile
+went on externally irrespective of any variation in Peter's condition of
+mind.
+
+I think it was the latter case, for often when he had received bad news
+from home we have heard his voice quaver with anxiety, while the old
+smile played on his round, brown features just the same.
+
+Little Nelse (one of those queer old-man children who seem to come into
+the world by mistake, and who seldom stay long) used to say that Peter
+"cried inside".
+
+Once, on Gulgong, when he attended the funeral of an old Ballarat
+mate, a stranger who had been watching his face curiously remarked that
+McKenzie seemed as pleased as though the dead digger had bequeathed him
+a fortune. But the stranger had soon reason to alter his opinion, for
+when another old mate began in a tremulous voice to repeat the words
+"Ashes to ashes, an' dust to dust," two big tears suddenly burst from
+Peter's eyes, and hurried down to get entrapped in his beard.
+
+Peter's goldmining ventures were not successful. He sank three duffers
+in succession on Gulgong, and the fourth shaft, after paying expenses,
+left a little over a hundred to each party, and Peter had to send the
+bulk of his share home. He lived in a tent (or in a hut when he could
+get one) after the manner of diggers, and he "did for himself", even to
+washing his own clothes. He never drank nor "played", and he took little
+enjoyment of any kind, yet there was not a digger on the field who would
+dream of calling old Peter McKenzie "a mean man". He lived, as we know
+from our own observations, in a most frugal manner. He always tried to
+hide this, and took care to have plenty of good things for us when he
+invited us to his hut; but children's eyes are sharp. Some said that
+Peter half-starved himself, but I don't think his family ever knew,
+unless he told them so afterwards.
+
+Ah, well! the years go over. Peter was now three years from home, and he
+and Fortune were enemies still. Letters came by the mail, full of little
+home troubles and prayers for Peter's return, and letters went back by
+the mail, always hopeful, always cheerful. Peter never gave up. When
+everything else failed he would work by the day (a sad thing for a
+digger), and he was even known to do a job of fencing until such time
+as he could get a few pounds and a small party together to sink another
+shaft.
+
+Talk about the heroic struggles of early explorers in a hostile country;
+but for dogged determination and courage in the face of poverty,
+illness, and distance, commend me to the old-time digger--the truest
+soldier Hope ever had!
+
+In the fourth year of his struggle Peter met with a terrible
+disappointment. His party put down a shaft called the Forlorn Hope near
+Happy Valley, and after a few weeks' fruitless driving his mates jibbed
+on it. Peter had his own opinion about the ground--an old digger's
+opinion, and he used every argument in his power to induce his mates to
+put a few days' more work in the claim. In vain he pointed out that the
+quality of the wash and the dip of the bottom exactly resembled that of
+the "Brown Snake", a rich Victorian claim. In vain he argued that in the
+case of the abovementioned claim, not a colour could be got until the
+payable gold was actually reached. Home Rule and The Canadian and that
+cluster of fields were going ahead, and his party were eager to shift.
+They remained obstinate, and at last, half-convinced against his
+opinion, Peter left with them to sink the "Iawatha", in Log Paddock,
+which turned out a rank duffer--not even paying its own expenses.
+
+A party of Italians entered the old claim and, after driving it a few
+feet further, made their fortune.
+
+ . . . . .
+
+We all noticed the change in Peter McKenzie when he came to "Log
+Paddock", whither we had shifted before him. The old smile still
+flickered, but he had learned to "look" grave for an hour at a time
+without much effort. He was never quite the same after the affair of
+Forlorn Hope, and I often think how he must have "cried" sometimes
+"inside".
+
+However, he still read us letters from home, and came and smoked in
+the evening by our kitchen-fire. He showed us some new portraits of his
+family which he had received by a late mail, but something gave me
+the impression that the portraits made him uneasy. He had them in his
+possession for nearly a week before showing them to us, and to the best
+of our knowledge he never showed them to anybody else. Perhaps they
+reminded him of the flight of time--perhaps he would have preferred his
+children to remain just as he left them until he returned.
+
+But stay! there was one portrait that seemed to give Peter infinite
+pleasure. It was the picture of a chubby infant of about three years
+or more. It was a fine-looking child taken in a sitting position on
+a cushion, and arrayed in a very short shirt. On its fat, soft, white
+face, which was only a few inches above the ten very podgy toes, was a
+smile something like Peter's. Peter was never tired of looking at and
+showing the picture of his child--the child he had never seen. Perhaps
+he cherished a wild dream of making his fortune and returning home
+before THAT child grew up.
+
+ . . . . .
+
+McKenzie and party were sinking a shaft at the upper end of Log Paddock,
+generally called "The other end". We were at the lower end.
+
+One day Peter came down from "the other end" and told us that his party
+expected to "bottom" during the following week, and if they got no
+encouragement from the wash they intended to go prospecting at the
+"Happy Thought", near Specimen Flat.
+
+The shaft in Log Paddock was christened "Nil Desperandum". Towards the
+end of the week we heard that the wash in the "Nil" was showing good
+colours.
+
+Later came the news that "McKenzie and party" had bottomed on payable
+gold, and the red flag floated over the shaft. Long before the first
+load of dirt reached the puddling machine on the creek, the news was all
+round the diggings. The "Nil Desperandum" was a "Golden Hole"!
+
+ . . . . .
+
+We will not forget the day when Peter went home. He hurried down in the
+morning to have an hour or so with us before Cobb and Co. went by. He
+told us all about his little cottage by the bay at St. Kilda. He had
+never spoken of it before, probably because of the mortgage. He told us
+how it faced the bay--how many rooms it had, how much flower garden, and
+how on a clear day he could see from the window all the ships that came
+up to the Yarra, and how with a good telescope he could even distinguish
+the faces of the passengers on the big ocean liners.
+
+And then, when the mother's back was turned, he hustled us children
+round the corner, and surreptitiously slipped a sovereign into each
+of our dirty hands, making great pantomimic show for silence, for the
+mother was very independent.
+
+And when we saw the last of Peter's face setting like a good-humoured
+sun on the top of Cobb and Co.'s, a great feeling of discontent and
+loneliness came over all our hearts. Little Nelse, who had been Peter's
+favourite, went round behind the pig-stye, where none might disturb him,
+and sat down on the projecting end of a trough to "have a cry", in his
+usual methodical manner. But old "Alligator Desolation", the dog, had
+suspicions of what was up, and, hearing the sobs, went round to offer
+whatever consolation appertained to a damp and dirty nose and a pair of
+ludicrously doleful yellow eyes.
+
+
+
+
+An Oversight of Steelman's
+
+
+
+Steelman and Smith--professional wanderers--were making back for
+Wellington, down through the wide and rather dreary-looking Hutt Valley.
+They were broke. They carried their few remaining belongings in two
+skimpy, amateurish-looking swags. Steelman had fourpence left. They were
+very tired and very thirsty--at least Steelman was, and he answered for
+both. It was Smith's policy to feel and think just exactly as Steelman
+did. Said Steelman:
+
+"The landlord of the next pub. is not a bad sort. I won't go in--he
+might remember me. You'd best go in. You've been tramping round in the
+Wairarapa district for the last six months, looking for work. You're
+going back to Wellington now, to try and get on the new corporation
+works just being started there--the sewage works. You think you've got a
+show. You've got some mates in Wellington, and they're looking out for
+a chance for you. You did get a job last week on a sawmill at
+Silverstream, and the boss sacked you after three days and wouldn't pay
+you a penny. That's just his way. I know him--at least a mate of mine
+does. I've heard of him often enough. His name's Cowman. Don't forget
+the name, whatever you do. The landlord here hates him like poison;
+he'll sympathize with you. Tell him you've got a mate with you; he's
+gone ahead--took a short cut across the paddocks. Tell him you've got
+only fourpence left, and see if he'll give you a drop in a bottle. Says
+you: 'Well, boss, the fact is we've only got fourpence, but you might
+let us have a drop in a bottle'; and very likely he'll stand you a
+couple of pints in a gin-bottle. You can fling the coppers on the
+counter, but the chances are he won't take them. He's not a bad sort.
+Beer's fourpence a pint out here, same's in Wellington. See that
+gin-bottle lying there by the stump; get it and we'll take it down to
+the river with us and rinse it out."
+
+They reached the river bank.
+
+"You'd better take my swag--it looks more decent," said Steelman. "No,
+I'll tell you what we'll do: we'll undo both swags and make them into
+one--one decent swag, and I'll cut round through the lanes and wait for
+you on the road ahead of the pub."
+
+He rolled up the swag with much care and deliberation and considerable
+judgment. He fastened Smith's belt round one end of it, and
+the handkerchiefs round the other, and made a towel serve as a
+shoulder-strap.
+
+"I wish we had a canvas bag to put it in," he said, "or a cover of some
+sort. But never mind. The landlord's an old Australian bushman, now
+I come to think of it; the swag looks Australian enough, and it might
+appeal to his feelings, you know--bring up old recollections. But you'd
+best not say you come from Australia, because he's been there, and he'd
+soon trip you up. He might have been where you've been, you know, so
+don't try to do too much. You always do mug-up the business when you
+try to do more than I tell you. You might tell him your mate came from
+Australia--but no, he might want you to bring me in. Better stick to
+Maoriland. I don't believe in too much ornamentation. Plain lies are the
+best."
+
+"What's the landlord's name?" asked Smith.
+
+"Never mind that. You don't want to know that. You are not supposed to
+know him at all. It might look suspicious if you called him by his name,
+and lead to awkward questions; then you'd be sure to put your foot into
+it."
+
+"I could say I read it over the door."
+
+"Bosh. Travellers don't read the names over the doors, when they go into
+pubs. You're an entire stranger to him. Call him 'Boss'. Say 'Good-day,
+Boss,' when you go in, and swing down your swag as if you're used to
+it. Ease it down like this. Then straighten yourself up, stick your hat
+back, and wipe your forehead, and try to look as hearty and independent
+and cheerful as you possibly can. Curse the Government, and say the
+country's done. It don't matter what Government it is, for he's always
+against it. I never knew a real Australian that wasn't. Say that you're
+thinking about trying to get over to Australia, and then listen to
+him talking about it--and try to look interested, too! Get that damned
+stone-deaf expression off your face!... He'll run Australia down most
+likely (I never knew an Other-sider that had settled down over here who
+didn't). But don't you make any mistake and agree with him, because,
+although successful Australians over here like to run their own country
+down, there's very few of them that care to hear anybody else do it....
+Don't come away as soon as you get your beer. Stay and listen to him for
+a while, as if you're interested in his yarning, and give him time to
+put you on to a job, or offer you one. Give him a chance to ask how you
+and your mate are off for tobacco or tucker. Like as not he'll sling you
+half a crown when you come away--that is, if you work it all right.
+Now try to think of something to say to him, and make yourself a bit
+interesting--if you possibly can. Tell him about the fight we saw back
+at the pub. the other day. He might know some of the chaps. This is a
+sleepy hole, and there ain't much news knocking round.... I wish I could
+go in myself, but he's sure to remember ME. I'm afraid he got left the
+last time I stayed there (so did one or two others); and, besides, I
+came away without saying good-bye to him, and he might feel a bit sore
+about it. That's the worst of travelling on the old road. Come on now,
+wake up!"
+
+"Bet I'll get a quart," said Smith, brightening up, "and some tucker for
+it to wash down."
+
+"If you don't," said Steelman, "I'll stoush you. Never mind the bottle;
+fling it away. It doesn't look well for a traveller to go into a pub.
+with an empty bottle in his hand. A real swagman never does. It looks
+much better to come out with a couple of full ones. That's what you've
+got to do. Now, come along."
+
+Steelman turned off into a lane, cut across the paddocks to the road
+again, and waited for Smith. He hadn't long to wait.
+
+Smith went on towards the public-house, rehearsing his part as
+he walked--repeating his "lines" to himself, so as to be sure of
+remembering all that Steelman had told him to say to the landlord, and
+adding, with what he considered appropriate gestures, some fancy touches
+of his own, which he determined to throw in in spite of Steelman's
+advice and warning. "I'll tell him (this)--I'll tell him (that). Well,
+look here, boss, I'll say you're pretty right and I quite agree with you
+as far as that's concerned, but," &c. And so, murmuring and mumbling
+to himself, Smith reached the hotel. The day was late, and the bar was
+small, and low, and dark. Smith walked in with all the assurance he
+could muster, eased down his swag in a corner in what he no doubt
+considered the true professional style, and, swinging round to the bar,
+said in a loud voice which he intended to be cheerful, independent, and
+hearty:
+
+"Good-day, boss!"
+
+But it wasn't a "boss". It was about the hardest-faced old woman that
+Smith had ever seen. The pub. had changed hands.
+
+"I--I beg your pardon, missus," stammered poor Smith.
+
+It was a knock-down blow for Smith. He couldn't come to time. He and
+Steelman had had a landlord in their minds all the time, and laid
+their plans accordingly; the possibility of having a she--and one like
+this--to deal with never entered into their calculations. Smith had no
+time to reorganise, even if he had had the brains to do so, without the
+assistance of his mate's knowledge of human nature.
+
+"I--I beg your pardon, missus," he stammered.
+
+Painful pause. She sized him up.
+
+"Well, what do you want?"
+
+"Well, missus--I--the fact is--will you give me a bottle of beer for
+fourpence?"
+
+"Wha--what?"
+
+"I mean----. The fact is, we've only got fourpence left, and--I've got a
+mate outside, and you might let us have a quart or so, in a bottle, for
+that. I mean--anyway, you might let us have a pint. I'm very sorry to
+bother you, missus."
+
+But she couldn't do it. No. Certainly not. Decidedly not! All her drinks
+were sixpence. She had her license to pay, and the rent, and a family to
+keep. It wouldn't pay out there--it wasn't worth her while. It wouldn't
+pay the cost of carting the liquor out, &c., &c.
+
+"Well, missus," poor Smith blurted out at last, in sheer desperation,
+"give me what you can in a bottle for this. I've--I've got a mate
+outside." And he put the four coppers on the bar.
+
+"Have you got a bottle?"
+
+"No--but----"
+
+"If I give you one, will you bring it back? You can't expect me to give
+you a bottle as well as a drink."
+
+"Yes, mum; I'll bring it back directly."
+
+She reached out a bottle from under the bar, and very deliberately
+measured out a little over a pint and poured it into the bottle, which
+she handed to Smith without a cork.
+
+Smith went his way without rejoicing. It struck him forcibly that he
+should have saved the money until they reached Petone, or the city,
+where Steelman would be sure to get a decent drink. But how was he to
+know? He had chanced it, and lost; Steelman might have done the same.
+What troubled Smith most was the thought of what Steelman would say; he
+already heard him, in imagination, saying: "You're a mug, Smith--Smith,
+you ARE a mug."
+
+But Steelman didn't say much. He was prepared for the worst by seeing
+Smith come along so soon. He listened to his story with an air of gentle
+sadness, even as a stern father might listen to the voluntary confession
+of a wayward child; then he held the bottle up to the fading light of
+departing day, looked through it (the bottle), and said:
+
+"Well--it ain't worth while dividing it."
+
+Smith's heart shot right down through a hole in the sole of his left
+boot into the hard road.
+
+"Here, Smith," said Steelman, handing him the bottle, "drink it, old
+man; you want it. It wasn't altogether your fault; it was an oversight
+of mine. I didn't bargain for a woman of that kind, and, of course, YOU
+couldn't be expected to think of it. Drink it! Drink it down, Smith.
+I'll manage to work the oracle before this night is out."
+
+Smith was forced to believe his ears, and, recovering from his surprise,
+drank.
+
+"I promised to take back the bottle," he said, with the ghost of a
+smile.
+
+Steelman took the bottle by the neck and broke it on the fence.
+
+"Come on, Smith; I'll carry the swag for a while."
+
+And they tramped on in the gathering starlight.
+
+
+
+
+How Steelman told his Story
+
+
+
+It was Steelman's humour, in some of his moods, to take Smith into his
+confidence, as some old bushmen do their dogs.
+
+"You're nearly as good as an intelligent sheep-dog to talk to,
+Smith--when a man gets tired of thinking to himself and wants a relief.
+You're a bit of a mug and a good deal of an idiot, and the chances are
+that you don't know what I'm driving at half the time--that's the main
+reason why I don't mind talking to you. You ought to consider yourself
+honoured; it ain't every man I take into my confidence, even that far."
+
+Smith rubbed his head.
+
+"I'd sooner talk to you--or a stump--any day than to one of those
+silent, suspicious, self-contained, worldly-wise chaps that listen to
+everything you say--sense and rubbish alike--as if you were trying to
+get them to take shares in a mine. I drop the man who listens to me all
+the time and doesn't seem to get bored. He isn't safe. He isn't to be
+trusted. He mostly wants to grind his axe against yours, and there's
+too little profit for me where there are two axes to grind, and no
+stone--though I'd manage it once, anyhow."
+
+"How'd you do it?" asked Smith.
+
+"There are several ways. Either you join forces, for instance, and find
+a grindstone--or make one of the other man's axe. But the last way is
+too slow, and, as I said, takes too much brain-work--besides, it doesn't
+pay. It might satisfy your vanity or pride, but I've got none. I had
+once, when I was younger, but it--well, it nearly killed me, so I
+dropped it.
+
+"You can mostly trust the man who wants to talk more than you do; he'll
+make a safe mate--or a good grindstone."
+
+Smith scratched the nape of his neck and sat blinking at the fire, with
+the puzzled expression of a woman pondering over a life-question or the
+trimming of a hat. Steelman took his chin in his hand and watched Smith
+thoughtfully.
+
+"I--I say, Steely," exclaimed Smith, suddenly, sitting up and scratching
+his head and blinking harder than ever--"wha--what am I?"
+
+"How do you mean?"
+
+"Am I the axe or the grindstone?"
+
+"Oh! your brain seems in extra good working order to-night, Smith. Well,
+you turn the grindstone and I grind." Smith settled. "If you could
+grind better than I, I'd turn the stone and let YOU grind, I'd never go
+against the interests of the firm--that's fair enough, isn't it?"
+
+"Ye-es," admitted Smith; "I suppose so."
+
+"So do I. Now, Smith, we've got along all right together for years, off
+and on, but you never know what might happen. I might stop breathing,
+for instance--and so might you."
+
+Smith began to look alarmed.
+
+"Poetical justice might overtake one or both of us--such things have
+happened before, though not often. Or, say, misfortune or death might
+mistake us for honest, hard-working mugs with big families to keep, and
+cut us off in the bloom of all our wisdom. You might get into trouble,
+and, in that case, I'd be bound to leave you there, on principle; or
+I might get into trouble, and you wouldn't have the brains to get me
+out--though I know you'd be mug enough to try. I might make a rise and
+cut you, or you might be misled into showing some spirit, and clear out
+after I'd stoushed you for it. You might get tired of me calling you a
+mug, and bossing you and making a tool or convenience of you, you know.
+You might go in for honest graft (you were always a bit weak-minded) and
+then I'd have to wash my hands of you (unless you agreed to keep me)
+for an irreclaimable mug. Or it might suit me to become a respected and
+worthy fellow townsman, and then, if you came within ten miles of me
+or hinted that you ever knew me, I'd have you up for vagrancy, or
+soliciting alms, or attempting to levy blackmail. I'd have to fix
+you--so I give you fair warning. Or we might get into some desperate
+fix (and it needn't be very desperate, either) when I'd be obliged to
+sacrifice you for my own personal safety, comfort, and convenience.
+Hundreds of things might happen.
+
+"Well, as I said, we've been at large together for some years, and I've
+found you sober, trustworthy, and honest; so, in case we do part--as we
+will sooner or later--and you survive, I'll give you some advice from my
+own experience.
+
+"In the first place: If you ever happen to get born again--and it
+wouldn't do you much harm--get born with the strength of a bullock and
+the hide of one as well, and a swelled head, and no brains--at least
+no more brains than you've got now. I was born with a skin like
+tissue-paper, and brains; also a heart.
+
+"Get born without relatives, if you can: if you can't help it, clear out
+on your own just as soon after you're born as you possibly can. I hung
+on.
+
+"If you have relations, and feel inclined to help them any time when
+you're flush (and there's no telling what a weak-minded man like you
+might take it into his head to do)--don't do it. They'll get a down on
+you if you do. It only causes family troubles and bitterness. There's
+no dislike like that of a dependant. You'll get neither gratitude
+nor civility in the end, and be lucky if you escape with a character.
+(You've got NO character, Smith; I'm only just supposing you have.)
+There's no hatred too bitter for, and nothing too bad to be said of, the
+mug who turns. The worst yarns about a man are generally started by his
+own tribe, and the world believes them at once on that very account.
+Well, the first thing to do in life is to escape from your friends.
+
+"If you ever go to work--and miracles have happened before--no matter
+what your wages are, or how you are treated, you can take it for granted
+that you're sweated; act on that to the best of your ability, or you'll
+never rise in the world. If you go to see a show on the nod you'll be
+found a comfortable seat in a good place; but if you pay the chances
+are the ticket clerk will tell you a lie, and you'll have to hustle for
+standing room. The man that doesn't ante gets the best of this world;
+anything he'll stand is good enough for the man that pays. If you try to
+be too sharp you'll get into gaol sooner or later; if you try to be too
+honest the chances are that the bailiff will get into your house--if you
+have one--and make a holy show of you before the neighbours. The honest
+softy is more often mistaken for a swindler, and accused of being one,
+than the out-and-out scamp; and the man that tells the truth too much
+is set down as an irreclaimable liar. But most of the time crow low
+and roost high, for it's a funny world, and you never know what might
+happen.
+
+"And if you get married (and there's no accounting for a woman's taste)
+be as bad as you like, and then moderately good, and your wife will
+love you. If you're bad all the time she can't stand it for ever, and if
+you're good all the time she'll naturally treat you with contempt. Never
+explain what you're going to do, and don't explain afterwards, if you
+can help it. If you find yourself between two stools, strike hard for
+your own self, Smith--strike hard, and you'll be respected more than if
+you fought for all the world. Generosity isn't understood nowadays, and
+what the people don't understand is either 'mad' or 'cronk'. Failure has
+no case, and you can't build one for it.... I started out in life very
+young--and very soft."
+
+ . . . . .
+
+"I thought you were going to tell me your story, Steely," remarked
+Smith.
+
+Steelman smiled sadly.
+
+
+
+
+[End of original text.]
+
+
+
+
+
+About the author:
+
+
+
+Henry Lawson was born near Grenfell, New South Wales, Australia on
+17 June 1867. Although he has since become Australia's most acclaimed
+writer, in his own lifetime his writing was often "on the side"--his
+"real" work being whatever he could find. His writing was frequently
+taken from memories of his childhood, especially at Pipeclay/Eurunderee.
+In his autobiography, he states that many of his characters were
+taken from the better class of diggers and bushmen he knew there.
+His experiences at this time deeply influenced his work, for it is
+interesting to note a number of descriptions and phrases that are
+identical in his autobiography and in his stories and poems. He died at
+Sydney, 2 September 1922. He is most famous for his short stories.
+
+"On the Track" and "Over the Sliprails" were both published at Sydney
+in 1900, the prefaces being dated March and June respectively--and so,
+though printed separately, a combined edition was printed the same
+year (the two separate, complete works were simply put together in one
+binding); hence they are sometimes referred to as "On the Track and Over
+the Sliprails".
+
+ . . . . .
+
+An incomplete Glossary of Australian terms and concepts which may prove
+helpful to understanding this book:
+
+ Anniversary Day: Alluded to in the text, is now known as Australia
+ Day. It commemorates the establishment of the first English
+ settlement in Australia, at Port Jackson (Sydney Harbour), on 26
+ January 1788.
+
+ Billy: A kettle used for camp cooking, especially to boil water for
+ tea.
+
+ Cabbage-tree/Cabbage-tree hat: A wide-brimmed hat made with the
+ leaves of the cabbage tree palm (Livistona australis). It was a
+ common hat in early colonial days, and later became associated with
+ patriotism.
+
+ Gin: An aboriginal woman; use of the term is analogous to "squaw"
+ in N. America. May be considered derogatory in modern usage.
+
+ Graft: Work; hard work.
+
+ Humpy: (Aboriginal) A rough or temporary hut or shelter in the bush,
+ especially one built from bark, branches, and the like. A gunyah,
+ wurley, or mia-mia.
+
+ Jackeroo/Jackaroo: At the time Lawson wrote, a Jackeroo was a "new
+ chum" or newcomer to Australia, who sought work on a station to
+ gain experience. The term now applies to any young man working as a
+ station hand. A female station hand is a Jillaroo.
+
+ Jumbuck: A sheep.
+
+ Larrikin: A hoodlum.
+
+ Lollies: Candy, sweets.
+
+ 'Possum/Possum: In Australia, a class of marsupials that were
+ originally mistaken for the American animal of the same name. They
+ are not especially related to the possums of North and South
+ America, other than being marsupials.
+
+ Public/Pub.: The traditional pub. in Australia was a hotel with a
+ "public" bar--hence the name. The modern pub has often (not always)
+ dispensed with the lodging, and concentrated on the bar.
+
+ Push: A group of people sharing something in common; Lawson uses the
+ word in an older and more particular sense, as a gang of violent
+ city hoodlums.
+
+ Ratty: Shabby, dilapidated; somewhat eccentric, perhaps even
+ slightly mad.
+
+ Selector: A free selector, a farmer who selected and settled land
+ by lease or license from the government.
+
+ Shout: To buy a round of drinks.
+
+ Sliprails/slip-rails: movable rails, forming a section of fence,
+ which can be taken down in lieu of a gate.
+
+ Sly grog shop or shanty: An unlicensed bar or liquor-store,
+ especially one selling cheap or poor-quality liquor.
+
+ Squatter: A person who first settled on land without government
+ permission, and later continued by lease or license, generally to
+ raise stock; a wealthy rural landowner.
+
+ Station: A farm or ranch, especially one devoted to cattle or sheep.
+
+ Stoush: Violence; to do violence to.
+
+ Tea: In addition to the regular meaning, Tea can also mean a light
+ snack or a meal (i.e., where Tea is served). In particular, Morning
+ Tea (about 10 AM) and Afternoon Tea (about 3 PM) are nothing more
+ than a snack, but Evening Tea (about 6 PM) is a meal. When just
+ "Tea" is used, it usually means the evening meal. Variant: Tea-
+ time.
+
+ Tucker: Food.
+
+
+ Also: a hint with the seasons--remember that the seasons are
+ reversed from those in the northern hemisphere, hence June may be
+ hot, but December is even hotter. Australia is at a lower latitude
+ than the United States, so the winters are not harsh by US
+ standards, and are not even mild in the north. In fact, large parts
+ of Australia are governed more by "dry" versus "wet" than by Spring-
+ Summer-Fall-Winter.
+
+
+(Alan Light, Monroe, North Carolina, March 1998.)
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of On the Track, by Henry Lawson
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