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+Project Gutenberg Etext of The Eureka Stockade, by Raffaello Carboni
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+Title: The Eureka Stockade
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+Author: Carboni Raffaello
+Real name was Raffaello Carboni
+
+Official Release Date: November, 2002 [Etext #3546]
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+
+
+The Eureka Stockade
+
+
+
+
+
+NOTA BENE
+
+In Person I solicit no subscription--in writing I hereby
+ask no favour from my reader. A book must stand or fall
+by the truth contained in it.
+
+What I wish to note is this: I was taught the English
+language by the Very Reverend W. Vincent Eyre, Vice Rector
+of the English College, Rome. It has cost me immense
+pains to rear my English up to the mark; but I could never
+master the language to perfection. Hence, now and then,
+probably to the annoyance of my Readers, I could not help
+the foreign idiom. Of course, a proper edition,
+in Italian, will be published in Turin.
+
+I have nothing further to say.
+
+Carboni Raffaello.
+
+Prince Albert Hotel, Bakery Hill,, Ballaarat,
+Anniversary of the Burning of Bentley's Eureka Hotel, 1855.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter I.
+
+
+
+Favete Linguis.
+
+
+Mendacium sibi, sicut turbinis, viam augustam in urbe et orbe terrarum aperuit.
+Stultus dicit in corde suo, "non est Deus."
+Veritas vero lente passu passu sicut puer, tandem aliquando janunculat
+ ad lucem.
+Tunc justus ut palma florescit.*
+
+
+[*Listen to me--
+The lie, like the whirlwind, clears itself a royal road, either in town
+ or country, through the whole face of the earth.
+The fool in his heart says, "There is no God."
+The truth, however slow, step by step, like a little child, someday, at last,
+ finds a footpath to light.
+Then the righteous flourish like a palm tree.]
+
+
+I undertake to do what an honest man should do, let it thunder or rain.
+He who buys this book to lull himself to sleep had better spend his money
+in grog. He who reads this book to smoke a pipe over it, let him provide
+himself with Plenty of tobacco--he will have to blow hard. A lover of truth--
+that's the man I want--and he will have in this book the truth,
+and nothing but the truth.
+
+Facts, from the "stubborn-things" store, are here retailed and related--
+contradiction is challenged from friend or foe. The observation on,
+and induction from the facts, are here stamped with sincerity: I ask for no
+other credit. I may be mistaken: I will not acknowledge the mistake
+unless the contrary be proved.
+
+When two boys are see-sawing on a plank, balanced on its centre, whilst
+the world around them is "up" with the one it is "down" with the other.
+The centre, however, is stationary. I was in the centre. I was an actor,
+and therefore an eye-witness. The events I relate, I did see them pass
+before me. The persons I speak of, I know them face to face. The words
+I quote, I did hear them with my own ears. Others may know more or less
+than I; I mean to tell all that I know, and nothing more.
+
+Two reasons counsel me to undertake the task of publishing this work;
+but a third reason is at the bottom of it, as the potent lever; and they are--
+
+1st. An honourable ambition urging me to have my name remembered among
+the illustrious of Rome. I have, on reaching the fortieth year of my age,
+to publish a work at which I have been plodding the past eighteen years.
+An ocean of grief would overwhelm me if then I had to vindicate my character:
+how, under the hospitality of the British flag, I was put in the felon's dock
+of a British Supreme Court to be tried for high treason.
+
+2nd. I have the moral courage to show the truth of my text above,
+because I believe in the resurrection of life.
+
+3rd. Brave comrades in arms who fell on that disgraced Sabbath morning,
+December 3rd, worthy of a better fate, and most certainly of a longer
+remembrance, it is in my power to drag your names from an ignoble oblivion,
+and vindicate the unrewarded bravery of one of yourselves! He was once
+my mate, the bearer of our standard, the "Southern Cross." Shot down by
+a murderous hand, he fell and died struggling like a man in the cause
+of the diggers. But he was soon forgotten. That he was buried is known
+by the tears of a few true friends! the place of his burial is little known,
+and less cared for.
+
+'Sunt tempora nostra; non mutabimur nec mutamur in illis; jam perdidi spem.'
+
+The work will be published on the 1st of December next, and given to each
+subscriber by the Author's own hand, on the site of the Eureka Stockade,
+from the rising to the setting of the sun, on the memorable third.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter II.
+
+
+
+A Jove Principum.
+
+
+"Wanted a governor. Apply to the People of Victoria:" that was the
+extraordinary advertisement, a new chum in want of employment, did meet
+in the usual column of 'The Argus', December 1852. Many could afford to laugh
+at it, the intelligent however, who had immigrated here, permanently to better
+his condition, was forced to rip up in his memory a certain fable of Aesop.
+Who would have dared then to warn the fatted Melbourne frogs weltering in grog,
+their colonial glory, against their contempt for King Log? Behold King Stork
+is your reward. 'Tout comme chez nous.'
+
+One remark before I start for the gold-fields. As an old European traveller
+I had set apart a few coppers for the poor at my landing. I had no opportunity
+for them. "We shall do well in this land;" was my motto. Who is going to be
+the first beggar? Not I! My care for the poor would have less disappointed
+me, if I had prepared myself against falling in the unsparing clutches
+of a shoal of land-sharks, who swarmed at that time the Yarra Yarra wharfs.
+Five pounds for landing my luggage, was the A, followed by the old colonial C,
+preceded by the double D. Rapacity in Australia is the alpha and omega.
+Yet there were no poor! a grand reflection for the serious. Adam Smith,
+settled the question of "the wealth of nations." The source of pauperism
+will be settled in Victoria by any quill-driver, who has the pluck to write
+the history of public-houses in the towns, and sly-grog sellers
+on the gold-fields.
+
+Let us start for Ballaarat, Christmas, December 1852.--'Vide'--'tempore suo'--
+'Julii Caesaris junioris. De Campis Aureis, Australia Felix Commentaria.'
+
+For the purpose, it is now sufficient to say that I had joined a party;
+fixed our tent on the Canadian Flat; went up to the Camp to get our gold
+licence; for one pound ten shilling sterling a head we were duly licensed
+for one month to dig, search for, and remove gold, etc.--We wanted to drink
+a glass of porter to our future success, but there was no Bath Hotel
+at the time.--Proceeded to inspect the famous Golden Point (a sketch of which
+I had seen in London in the 'Illustrated News'). The holes all around,
+three feet in diameter, and five to eight feet in depth, had been abandoned!
+we jumped into one, and one of my mates gave me the first lesson
+in "fossiking,"--In less than five minutes I pounced on a little pouch--
+the yellow boy was all there,--my eyes were sparkling,--I felt a sensation
+identical to a first declaration of love in by-gone times.--"Great works,"
+at last was my bursting exclamation. In old Europe I had to take off my hat
+half a dozen times, and walk from east to west before I could earn one pound
+in the capacity of sworn interpreter, and translator of languages in the city
+of London. Here, I had earned double the amount in a few minutes,
+without crouching or crawling to Jew or Christian. Had my good angel
+prevailed on me to stick to that blessed Golden Point, I should have now
+to relate a very different story: the gold fever, however, got the best of
+my usual judgment, and I dreamt of, and pretended nothing else, than a hole
+choked with gold, sunk with my darling pick, and on virgin ground.--I started
+the hill right-hand side, ascending Canadian Gully, and safe as the
+Bank of England I pounced on gold--seventeen and a half ounces, depth ten feet.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter III.
+
+
+
+Jupiter Tonans.
+
+
+One fine morning (Epiphany week), I was hard at work (excuse old chum,
+if I said hard: though my hand had been scores of times compelled in London
+to drop the quill through sheer fatigue, yet I never before handled a pick
+and shovel), I hear a rattling noise among the brush. My faithful dog,
+Bonaparte, would not keep under my control. "What's up?" "Your licence,
+mate." was the peremptory question from a six-foot fellow in blue shirt,
+thick boots, the face of a ruffian armed with a carbine and fixed bayonet.
+The old "all right" being exchanged, I lost sight of that specimen of colonial
+brutedom and his similars, called, as I then learned, "traps" and "troopers."
+I left off work, and was unable to do a stroke more that day.
+
+"I came, then, 16,000 miles in vain to get away from the law of the sword!"
+was my sad reflection. My sorrow was not mitigated by my mates and neighbours
+informing me, that Australia was a penal settlement. Inveterate murderers,
+audacious burglars, bloodthirsty bushrangers, were the ruling triumvirate,
+the scour of old Europe, called Vandemonians, in this bullock-drivers' land.
+Of course I felt tamed, and felt less angry, at the following search
+for licence. At the latter end of the month, one hundred and seventy
+seven pounds troy, in two superb masses of gold, were discovered at the depth
+of sixty feet, on the hill opposite where I was working. The talk was soon
+Vulcanish through the land. Canadian Gully was as rich in lumps as other
+gold-fields are in dust. Diggers, whom the gold fever had rendered
+stark blind, so as to desert Ballaarat for Mount Alexander and Bendigo,
+now returned as ravens to the old spot; and towards the end of February, '53,
+Canadian Gully was in its full glory.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter IV.
+
+
+
+Incipit Lamentatio.
+
+
+The search for licences, or "the traps are out to-day"--their name at the
+time--happened once a month. The strong population now on this gold-field had
+perhaps rendered it necessary twice a month. Only in October, I recollect
+they had come out three times. Yet, "the traps are out" was annoying,
+but not exasperating. Not exasperating, because John Bull, 'ab initio et
+ante secula', was born for law, order, and safe money-making on land and sea.
+They were annoying, because, said John, not that he likes his money more
+than his belly, but he hates the bayonet: I mean, of course, he does not want
+to be bullied with the bayonet. To this honest grumbling of John,
+the drunkard, that is the lazy, which make the incapables, joined their cant,
+and the Vandemonians pulled up with wonted audacity. In a word, the
+thirty shillings a month for the gold licence became a nuisance.
+
+A public meeting was announced on Bakery-hill. It was in November, 1853.
+Four hundred diggers were present. I recollect I heard a "Doctor Carr"
+poking about among the heaps of empty bottles all round the Camp, and asked
+who paid for the good stuff that was in them, and whither was it gone.
+Of course, Doctor Carr did not mention, that one of those bottles, corked
+and sealed with the "Crown," was forced open with Mr. Hetherington's corkscrew;
+and that said Dr. Carr had then to confess that the bottle aforesaid contained
+a nobbler some 250 pounds worth for himself. Great works already at Toorak.
+'Tout cela soit dit en passant.' Mr. Hetherington, then a storekeeper
+on the Ballaarat Flat, and now of the Cladendon Hotel, Ballaarat Township,
+is a living witness. For the fun of the thing, I spoke a few words
+which merited me a compliment from the practitioner, who also honoured me
+with a private precious piece of information--"'Nous allons bientot avoir
+la Republique Australienne! Signore.'" "'Quelle farce! repondis je.'" The
+specimen of man before me impressed me with such a decided opinion
+of his ability for destroying sugarsticks, that at once I gave him credit
+as the founder of a republic for babies to suck their thumbs.
+
+In short, here dates the Victorian system of 'memorialising.' The diggers
+of Ballaarat sympathised with those of Bendigo in their common grievances,
+and prayed the governor that the gold licence be reduced to thirty shillings
+a month. There was further a great waste of yabber-yabber about the diggers
+not being represented in the Legislative Council, and a deal of fustian
+was spun against the squatters. I understood very little of those matters
+at the time: the shoe had not pinched my toe yet.
+
+Every one returned to his work; some perhaps not very peacefully, on account
+of a nobbler or two over the usual allowance.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter V.
+
+
+
+Risum Teneatis Amici.
+
+
+I recollect towards this time I followed the mob to Magpie Gully. It was
+a digger's life. Hard work by day, blazing fire in the evening, and sound
+sleep by night at the music of drunken quarrels all around, far and near.
+I had marked my claim in accordance with the run of the ranges, and safe
+as the Bank of England I bottomed on gold. No search for licence ever
+took place. What's the matter? Oh, the diggers of Bendigo, by sheer
+moral force, in the shape of some ten thousand in a mob, had inspired
+with better sense the red-tape there and somewhere else, so I took out
+my licence at the reasonable rate of two pounds for three months,
+my contribution for the support of gold-lace. So far so good. I had no fault
+to find with our governor Joseph Latrobe, Esquire; nor do I believe
+that the diggers cared about anything else from him. Was it then his being
+an esquire that brought his administration into contempt? The fact is,
+a clap of "The Thunder" from Printing House-square boomed on the tympanum
+of my ear. We diggers got the gracious title of "vagabonds," and our massa
+"Joe," for his pains to keep friends with us, was put down "an incapable;"
+all for the honour of British rule, of course.
+
+"Wanted a Governor," was now no longer a dummy in 'The Argus'; but, unhappily,
+no application was made to the people of Victoria.
+
+Give a dog a bad name--and the old proverb holds good even at the antipodes.
+My trampings are now transcribed from my diary.
+
+With the hot winds whirled in the Vandemonian rush to the Ballaarat Flat.
+My hole was next to the one which was jumped by the Eureka mob, and where
+one man was murdered in the row. At sixty-five feet we got on a blasted log
+of a gum-tree that had been mouldering there under a curse, since the times
+of Noah! The whole flat turned out an imperial shicer. (You do not sink
+deep enough, Signore Editor.) Slabs that had cost us some eight pounds
+a hundred would not fetch, afterwards, one pound. We left them to sweat
+freely in the hole; and all the mob got on the fuddle. My mate and myself
+thought we had been long enough together, and got asunder for a change.
+I was soon on the tramp again. Bryant's Ranges was the go of the day,
+and I started thither accordingly. December, 1853. Oh, Lord! what a pack
+of ragamuffins over that way! I got acquainted with the German party
+who found out the Tarrangower den; shaped my hole like a bathing tub,
+and dropped "on it" right smart. Paid two pounds to cart one load down
+the Loddon, and left two more loads of washing stuff, snug and wet
+with the sweat of my brow over the hole. Got twenty-eight pennyweights
+out of the load. Went back the third day, brisk and healthy, to cart down
+the other two loads. Washing stuff! gone: hole! gone: the gully itself!
+gone: the whole face of it had been clean shaved. Never mind, go ahead again.
+Got another claim on the surface-hill. No search for licence: thank God,
+had none. Nasty, sneaky, cheeky little things of flies got into my eyes:
+could see no more, no ways. Mud water one shilling a bucket! Got the
+dysentery; very bad. Thought, one night, to reef the yards and drop
+the anchor. Got on a better tack though. Promenaded up to the famous Bendigo.
+Had no particular objection to Celestials there, but had no particular taste
+for their tartaric water. Made up my mind to remember my days of innocence,
+and turned shepherd. Fine landscape this run on the Loddon: almost a match
+for Bella Italia, but there are too many mosquitoes. Dreamt, one day,
+I was drinking a tumbler of Loddon wine; and asserted that Providence
+was the same also in the south. It was a dream. The lands lay waste
+and desolate: not by nature; oh no; by hand of man. Bathing in these
+Loddon water-holes, superb. Tea out of this Loddon water magnificent.
+In spite of these horrible hot winds, this water is always fresh and delicious:
+how kind is Providence! One night lost the whole blessed lot of my flock.
+Myself, the shepherd, did not know, in the name of heavens, which way to turn.
+Got among the blacks, the whole Tarrang tribe in corrobory. Lord,
+what a rum sight for an old European traveller. Found natives very humane,
+though. My sheep right again, only the wild dogs had given them a good shake.
+Was satisfied that the Messiah the Jews are looking for will not be born
+in this bullock-drivers' land; any how, the angels won't announce the happy
+event of his birth to the shepherds. No more truck with sheep, and went
+to live with the blacks for a variation. Picked up, pretty soon, bits
+of their yabber-yabber. For a couple of years had tasted no fish;
+now I pounced on a couple of frogs, every couple of minutes. Thought
+their 'lubras' ugly enough; not so, however, the slender arms and small hands
+of their young girls, though the fingers be rather too long.
+
+That will do now, in as much as the end of the story is this: That portion
+in my brains called "acquisitiveness" got the gold-fever again, and I started
+for old Ballaarat.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VI.
+
+
+
+Sua Cuique Voluntas.
+
+
+I was really delighted to see the old spot once more; Easter, 1854.
+I do not mean any offence to my fellow-diggers elsewhere; it struck me
+very forcibly, however, that our Ballaarat men look by far more decent, and
+our storekeepers, or grog-sellers if you like, undoubtedly more respectable.
+
+Of a constitution not necessarily savage, I did not fail to observe
+that the fair ones had ventured now on a large scale to trust their virtue
+among us vagabonds, and on a hot-wind day, I patronized of course some
+refreshment room.
+
+I met my old mate, and we determined to try the old game; but this time
+on the old principle of 'labor omnia vincit'--I pitched my tent right in
+the bush, and prophesied, that from my door I would see the golden hole
+in the gully below.
+
+I spoke the truth, and such is the case this very day. Feast of the
+Assumption, 1855:--What sad events, however, were destined to pass exactly
+before the very door of my tent! Who could have told me on that Easter Sunday,
+that the unknown hill which I had chosen for my rest, would soon be called
+the Massacre Hill! That next Christmas, my mate would lie in the grave,
+somewhere forgotten: and I in the gaol! the rope round my neck!!
+
+Let us keep in good spirits, good reader, we shall soon have to weep
+together enough.
+
+Gravel Pits, famous for its strong muster of golden holes, and blasting
+shicers, was too deep for me. The old Eureka was itself again. The jewellers
+shops, which threatened to exhaust themselves in Canadian Gully, were again
+the talk of the day: and the Eureka gold dust was finer, purer, brighter,
+immensely darling. The unfaithful truants who had rushed to Bryant's Ranges,
+to knock their heads against blocks of granite, now hastened for the third time
+to the old spot, Ballaarat, determined to stick to it for life or death.
+English, German, and Scotch diggers, worked generally on the Gravel Pits,
+the Irish had their stronghold on the Eureka. The Americans fraternised
+with all the wide-awake, 'ubi caro ibi vultures.'
+
+Here begins as a profession the precious game of 'shepherding,' or keeping
+claims in reserve; that is the digger turning squatter. And, as this happened
+under the reign of a gracious gold commissioner, so I am brought to speak of
+the gold licence again. First I will place the man before my reader, though.
+
+Get a tolerable young pig, make it stand on his hind legs, put on its head
+a cap trimmed with gold-lace, whitewash its snout, and there you have the ass
+in the form of a pig; I mean to say a "man," with this privilege, that he
+possesses in his head the brains of both the above-mentioned brutes.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VII.
+
+
+
+Ludi Ballaaratenses.
+
+
+Eureka was advancing fast to glory. Each day, and not seldom twice a day,
+the gutter gammoned and humbugged all us 'vagabonds' so deucedly, that the rush
+to secure a claim "dead on it" rose to the standard of 'Eureka style,' that is,
+'Ring, ring,' was the yell from some hundred human dogs, and soon hill and flat
+poured out all spare hands to thicken the "ring."
+
+
+By this time, two covies--one of them generally an Irishman had stripped
+to their middle, and were "shaping" for a round or two. A broken nose,
+with the desired accomplishment of a pair of black eyes, and in all cases,
+when manageable, a good smash in the regions either of the teeth, or of
+the ribs--both, if possible, preferred--was supposed to improve the transaction
+so much, that, what with the tooth dropping, or the rib cracking, or both,
+as aforesaid, it was considered 'settled.' Thus originated the special title
+of 'rowdy mob,' or Tipperary, in reference to the Irish. Let us have the
+title clear.
+
+The 'shepherding,' that is the squatting by one man women and children
+had not got hold of this 'Dolce far niente' yet--the ground allotted by law
+to four men; and the astuteness of our primitive shepherds having found it
+cheap and profitable to have each claim visibly separated from the other
+by some twenty-feet wall, which was mutually agreed upon by themselves alone,
+to call it 'spare ground,' was now a grown-up institution. Hence, whenever
+the gutter, 120 feet below, took it into its head to bestir and hook it,
+the faithful shepherds would not rest until they were sure to snore in peace
+a foot and a half under ground from the surface, and six score feet
+from 'bang on the gutter.'
+
+This Ballaarat dodge would have been innocent enough, were it not for
+'Young Ireland,' who, having fixed headquarters on the Eureka, was therefore
+accused of monopolising the concern. Now, suppose Paddy wanted to relish
+a 'tip,' that is, a drop of gin on the sly, then Scotty, who had just
+gulped down his 'toddy,' which was a drop of auld whisky, would take upon
+himself the selfish trouble to sink six inches more in Paddy's hole,
+which feat was called 'jumping;' and thus, broken noses, and other
+accomplishments, as aforesaid, grew in proportion to tips, and 'toddy'
+drunk on the sly.
+
+I frequently saw horrid scenes of blood; but I was now an old chum and
+therefore knew what was what in colonial life.
+
+I had a Cameleon for a neighbour, who, in the garb of an Irishman,
+flung his three half-shovels out of a hole on the hill punctually every
+morning, and that was his work before breakfast. Then, a red shirt
+on his back, and a red cap on his head, he would, in the subsequent hour,
+give evidence of his scorning to be lazy by putting down some three inches
+deeper another hole below in the gully. 'Full stop;' he must have a 'blow,'
+but the d----d things--his matches--had got damp, and so in a rage he must
+hasten to his tent to light the pipe; that is, to put on the Yankee garb
+and complete his forenoon work in a third hole of his, whose depth and shape
+recommended him as a first rate grave-digger.
+
+And what has all this bosh to do with the Eureka Stockade?
+
+
+
+
+Chapter VIII.
+
+
+
+Fiat Fustitia, Ruat Coelum.
+
+
+As an old Ballaarat hand, I hereby assert, that much of the odium of the mining
+community against red-tape, arose from the accursed practice of jumping.
+
+One fact from the 'stubborn-things' store. The Eureka gutter was fast
+progressing down hill towards the Eureka gully. A party of Britishers
+had two claims; the one, on the slope of the hill, was bottomed on heavy gold;
+the other, some four claims from it, and parallel with the range, was some
+ninety feet deep, and was worked by day only, by three men: a fourth man
+would now and then bring a set of trimmed slabs from the first hole aforesaid,
+where he was the principal 'chips.' There was a Judas Iscariot among the party.
+One fine morning, a hole was bottomed down the gully, and proved a scheisser.
+A rush, Eureka style, was the conseqence; and it was pretended now that
+the gutter would keep with the ranges, towards the Catholic church.
+
+A party of Yankees, with revolvers and Mexican knives--the garb of 'bouncers'
+in those days--jumped the second hole of the Britishers, dismantled
+the windlass, and Godamn'd as fast as the Britishers cursed in the colonial
+style. The excitement was awful. Commissioner Rede was fetched to settle
+the dispute. An absurd and unjust regulation was then the law; no party
+was allowed to have an interest in two claims at one and the same time,
+which was called 'owning two claims.' The Yankees carried the day.
+I, a living witness, do assert that, from that day, there was a 'down'
+on the name of Rede.
+
+For the commissioners, this jumping business was by no means an agreeable job.
+They were fetched to the spot: a mob would soon collect round the disputed
+claim; and for 'fair play,' it required the wisdom of Solomon, because
+the parties concerned set the same price on their dispute, as the two harlots
+on the living child.
+
+I. The conflicting evidence, in consequence of hard swearing, prompted by
+gold-thirst, the most horrible demon that depraves the human heart,
+even a naturally honest heart.--II. The incomprehensible, unsettled,
+impracticable ordinances for the abominable management of the gold-fields;
+which ordinances, left to the discretion--that is, the caprice; and
+to the good sense--that is, the motto, 'odi profanum vulgus et arceo;'
+and to the best judgment--that is the proverbial incapability of all
+aristocractical red-tape, HOW TO RULE US VAGABONDS. Both those reasons,
+I say, must make even the most hardened bibber of Toorak small-beer acknowledge
+and confess, that the perfidious mistake at head-quarters was, their persisting
+to make the following Belgravian 'billet-doux' the 'sine qua non'
+recommendation for gold-lace on Ballaarat (at the time):--
+
+
+(ADDRESS)
+
+"To the Victorian Board of Small Beer,
+
+"Toorak (somewhere in Australasia, i.e., Australia Felix--inquire from
+the natives, reported to be of blackskin, at the southern end of the globe.)
+
+"Belgravia, First year of the royal projecting the Great Exhibition, Hyde Park.
+
+"LADY STARVESEMPSTRESS, great-grand-niece of His Grace the
+Duke Of CURRY-POWDER, begs to introduce to FORTYSHILLING TAKEHIMAWAY, Esquire,
+of Toorak, see address, her brother-in-law, POLLIPUSS, WATERLOOBOLTER,
+tenth son of the venerable Prebendary of North and South Palaver, Canon of
+St. Sebastopol in the east, and Rector of Allblessedfools, West End--URGENT."
+
+
+In justice, however, to Master Waterloobolter, candidate for gold-lace,
+it must not be omitted that he is a Piccadilly young sprat, and so at Julien's
+giant 'bal-masque', was ever gracious to the lady of his love.
+
+"Miss Smartdeuce, may I beg the honour of your hand for the next waltz? surely
+after a round or two you will relish your champagne."
+
+"Yes," with a smothered "dear," was the sigh-drawn reply.
+
+Who has the power to roar the command, "Thus far shalt thou go, and no
+further," to the flood of tears from forlorn Smartdeuce, when her soft
+Waterloobolter bolted for the gold-fields of Australia Felix.
+
+To be serious. How could any candid mind otherwise explain the honest
+boldness of eight out of nine members of the first Local Court, Ballaarat,
+who, one and all, I do not say dared, but I say called upon their fellow miners
+to come forward to a public meeting on the old spot, Bakery-hill. September,
+Saturday, 30th, 1855. Said members had already settled at that time
+201 disputes, and given their judgement, involving some half a million sterling
+altogether, for all what they knew, and yet not one miner rose one finger
+against them, when they imperatively desired to know whether they had done
+their duty and still possessed the confidence of their fellow diggers!
+They (said members) are practical men, of our own adopted class,
+elected by ourselves from among ourselves, to sit as arbitrators of our
+disputes, and our representatives at the Local Court. That's the key, for any
+future Brougham, for the history of the Local Courts on the gold-fields.
+
+It has fallen to my lot, however, to put the Eureka Stockade on record;
+and, from the following 'Joe' chapter must begin any proper history
+of that disgracefully memorable event.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter IX.
+
+
+
+Abyssus, Abyssum Invocat.
+
+
+"Joe, Joe!" No one in the world can properly understand and describe this
+shouting of "Joe," unless he were on this El Dorado of Ballaarat at the time.
+
+It was a horrible day, plagued by the hot winds. A blast of the hurricane
+winding through gravel pits whirled towards the Eureka this shouting of "Joe."
+It was the howl of a wolf for the shepherds, who bolted at once towards
+the bush: it was the yell of bull-dogs for the fossikers who floundered
+among the deep holes, and thus dodged the hounds: it was a scarecrow
+for the miners, who now scrambled down to the deep, and left a licensed mate
+or two at the windlass. By this time, a regiment of troopers, in full gallop,
+had besieged the whole Eureka, and the traps under their protection ventured
+among the holes. An attempt to give an idea of such disgusting and
+contemptible campaigns for the search of licences is really odious to an honest
+man. Some of the traps were civil enough; aye, they felt the shame
+of their duty; but there were among them devils at heart, who enjoyed the fun,
+because their cupidity could not bear the sight of the zig-zag uninterrupted
+muster of piles of rich-looking washing stuff, and the envy which blinded
+their eyes prevented them from taking into account the overwhelming number
+of shicers close by, round about, all along. Hence they looked upon
+the ragged muddy blue shirt as an object of their contempt.
+
+Are diggers dogs or savages, that they are to be hunted on the diggings,
+commanded, in Pellissier's African style, to come out of their holes,
+and summoned from their tents by these hounds of the executive? Is the garb
+of a digger a mark of inferiority? 'In sudore vultus lue vesceris panem'*
+is then an infamy now-a-days!
+
+[* In the sweat of thy brow thou shalt eat bread.]
+
+Give us facts, and spare us your bosh, says my good reader.--Very well.
+
+I, CARBONII RAFFAELLO, da Roma, and late of No. 4, Castle-court, Cornhill,
+City of London, had my rattling 'Jenny Lind' (the cradle) at a water-hole
+down the Eureka Gully. Must stop my work to show my licence. 'All right.'
+
+I had then to go a quarter of a mile up the hill to my hole, and fetch
+the washing stuff. There again--"Got your licence?" "All serene, governor."
+On crossing the holes, up to the knees in mullock, and loaded like a dromedary,
+"Got your licence?" was again the cheer-up from a third trooper or trap.
+Now, what answer would you have given, sir?
+
+I assert, as a matter of fact, that I was often compelled to produce my licence
+twice at each and the same licence hunt. Any one who knows me personally,
+will readily believe that the accursed game worried me to death.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter X.
+
+
+
+Jam Non Estis Hospites Et Advenoe
+
+
+It is to the purpose to say a few words more on the licence-hunting,
+and have done with it. Light your pipe, good reader, you have to blow hard.
+
+Our red-tape, generally obtuse and arrogant, this once got rid of the usual
+conceit in all things, and had to acknowledge that the digger who remained
+quietly at his work, always possessed his licence. Hence the troopers
+were despatched like bloodhounds, in all directions, to beat the bush;
+and the traps who had a more confined scent, creeped and crawled among
+the holes, and sneaked into the sly-grog tents round about, in search of
+the swarming unlicensed game. In a word, it was a regular hunt. Any one
+who in Old England went fox-hunting, can understand pretty well,
+the detestable sport we had then on the goldfields of Victoria.
+Did any trooper succeed in catching any of the 'vagabonds' in the bush,
+he would by the threat of his sword, confine him round a big gum-tree;
+and when all the successful troopers had done the same feat, they took
+their prisoners down the gully, where was the grand depot, because the traps
+were generally more successful. The commissioner would then pick up one pound,
+two pounds, or five pounds, in the way of bail, from any digger that could
+afford it, or had friends to do so, and then order the whole pack
+of the penniless and friendless to the lock-up in the camp. I am a living
+eye-witness, and challenge contradiction.
+
+This job of explaining a licence-hunt is really so disgusting to me,
+that I prefer to close it with the following document from my subsequently
+gaol-bird mate, then reporter of the 'Ballaarat Times':--
+
+
+Police Court, Tuesday, October 24th.
+
+HUNTING THE DIGGER.--Five of these fellows were fined in the mitigated trifle
+of 5 pounds, for being without licences. The nicest thing imaginable is to see
+one of these clumsy fellows with great beards, shaggy hair, and oh! such nasty
+rough hands, stand before a fine gentleman on the bench with hands
+of shiny whiteness, and the colour of whose cambric rivals the Alpine snow.
+There the clumsy fellow stands, faltering out an awkward apology, "my licence
+is only just expired, sir--I've only been one day from town, sir--I have
+no money, sir, for I had to borrow half a bag of flour the other day,
+for my wife and children." Ahem, says his worship, the law makes
+no distinctions--fined 5 pounds. Now our reporter enjoys this exceedingly,
+for he is sometimes scarce of news; and from a strange aberration of intellect,
+with which, poor fellow, he is afflicted, has sometimes, no news at all for us;
+but he is sure of not being dead beat at any time, for digger-hunting
+is a standing case at the police office, and our reporter is growing
+so precocious with long practice, that he can tell the number of diggers fined
+every morning, without going to that sanctuary at all.--'Ballaarat Times',
+Saturday, October 28, 1854.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XI.
+
+
+
+Salvum Fac Populum Tuum Domine.
+
+
+The more the pity--I have not done yet with the accursed gold licence.
+I must prevail on myself to keep cooler and in good temper.
+
+Two questions will certainly be put to me:-
+
+1st. Did the camp officials give out the licence to the digger at the place
+of his work, whenever required, without compelling him to leave off work,
+and renew his licence at the camp?
+
+2nd. It was only one day in each month that there was a search for licences,
+was it not? Why therefore did not the diggers make it a half-holiday
+on the old ground, that "all work and no play, makes Jack a dull boy."
+
+The first question is a foolish one, from any fellow-colonist who knows
+our silver and gold lace; and is a wicked one, from any digger who was
+on Ballaarat at the time.
+
+'Fellah' gave the proper answer through the 'Ballaarat Times',
+October 14th;--here it is:--
+
+
+To the Editor of the 'Ballaarat Times', October 14, 1854.
+
+Sir,
+
+Permit me to call your attention to the miserable accommodation
+provided for the miner, who may have occasion to go to the Camp
+to take out a licence. Surely, with the thousands of pounds
+that have been expended in government buildings, a little better
+accommodation might be afforded to the well disposed digger,
+who is willing to pay the odious tax demanded of him by government,
+and not be compelled to stand in the rain or sun, or treated as if
+the 'distinguished government official' feared that the digger
+was a thing that would contaminate him by a closer proximity;
+so the 'fellah' is kept by a wooden rail from approaching within
+a couple of yards of the tent. In consequence, many persons
+mistaking the licence-office for the commissioner's water-closet,
+a placard has been placed over the door.
+
+I am, Sir, yours &c.,
+
+FELLAH DIGGER,
+
+Who had to walk a few miles to pay away the money he had worked
+hard for, and was kept a few hours standing by a rail--not sitting
+on a rail, Mary.
+
+
+Now I mean to tackle in right earnest with the second question, provided I can
+keep in sufficiently good temper.
+
+On the morning of Thursday, the 22nd June, in the year of Grace,
+One thousand eight hundred and fifty-four,
+His Excellency SIR CHARLES HOTHAM,
+Knight Commander of the Most Noble Military Order of the Bath, landed on
+the shores of this fair province, as its Lieutenant-Governor, the chosen
+and commissioned representative of Her Most Gracious Majesty, the QUEEN!
+Never (writes the Melbourne historian of that day) never in the history
+of public ovations, was welcome more hearty, never did stranger meet with
+warmer welcome, on the threshold of a new home:
+
+VICTORIA WELCOMES VICTORIA'S CHOICE, was the Melbourne proclamation.
+
+The following is transcribed from my diary:-
+
+
+"Saturday, August 26th, 1854: His Excellency dashed in among us 'vagabonds'
+on a sudden, at about five o'clock p.m., and inspected a shaft immediately
+behind the Ballaarat Dining Rooms, Gravel-pits. A mob soon collected
+round the hole; we were respectful, and there was no 'joeing.'
+On His Excellency's return to the camp, the miners busily employed themselves
+in laying down slabs to facilitate his progress. I was among the zealous ones
+who improvised this shabby foot-path. What a lack! we were all of us
+as cheerful as fighting-cocks.--A crab-hole being in the way, our Big-Larry
+actually pounced on Lady Hotham, and lifting her up in his arms, eloped
+with her ladyship safely across, amid hearty peals of laughter, however
+colonial they may have been.--Now Big Larry kept the crowd from annoying
+the couple, by properly laying about him with a switch all along the road.
+
+"His Excellency was hailed with three-times-three, and was proclaimed on the
+Camp, now invaded by some five hundred blue shirts, the 'Diggers' Charley.'
+
+"His Excellency addressed us miners as follows:-
+
+"Diggers I feel delighted with your reception--I shall not neglect your
+interests and welfare--again I thank you.
+
+"It was a short but smart speech we had heard elsewhere, he was not fond
+of 'twaddle,' which I suppose meant 'bosh.' After giving three hearty cheers,
+old Briton's style to 'Charley,' the crowd dispersed to drink a nobbler
+to his health and success. I do so this very moment. Eureka, under my
+snug tent on the hill, August 26, 1854. C.R."
+
+
+Within six short months, five thousand citizens of Melbourne, receive the name
+of this applauded ruler with a loud and prolonged outburst of indignation!
+
+Some twenty Ballaarat miners lie in the grave, weltering in their gore!
+double that number are bleeding from bayonet wounds; thirteen more
+have the rope round their necks, and two more of their leading men are priced
+four hundred pounds for their body or carcase.
+
+'Tout cela, n'est pas precisement comme chez nous, pas vrai?'
+
+Please, give me a dozen puffs at my black-stump, and then I will proceed
+to the next chapter.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XII.
+
+
+
+Sufficit Diei Sua Vexatio.
+
+
+Either this chapter must be very short, or I had better give it up
+without starting it at all.
+
+Up to the middle of September, 1854, the search for licences happened
+once a month; at most twice: perhaps once a week on the Gravel Pits,
+owing to the near neighbourhood of the Camp. Now, licence-hunting became
+the order of the day. Twice a week on every line; and the more the diggers
+felt annoyed at it, the more our Camp officials persisted in goading us,
+to render our yoke palatable by habit. I assert, as an eye-witness
+and a sufferer, that both in October and November, when the weather allowed it,
+the Camp rode out for the hunt every alternate day. True, one day they would
+hunt their game on Gravel-pits, another day, they pounced on the foxes
+of the Eureka; and a third day, on the Red-hill: but, though working
+on different leads, are we not all fellow diggers? Did not several of us
+meet again in the evening, under the same tent, belonging to the same party?
+It is useless to ask further questions.
+
+Towards the latter end of October and the beginning of November we had such
+a set of scoundrels camped among us, in the shape of troopers and traps,
+that I had better shut up this chapter at once, or else whirl the whole
+manuscript bang down a shicer.
+
+"Hold hard, though, take your time, old man: don't let your Roman blood
+hurry you off like the hurricane, and thus damage the merits of your case.
+Answer this question first," says my good reader.
+
+"If it be a fair one, I will."
+
+"Was, then, the obnoxious mode of collecting the tax the sole cause
+of discontent: or was the tax itself (two pounds for three months)
+objected to at the same time?"
+
+"I think the practical miner, who had been hard at work night and day,
+for the last four or six months, and, after all, had just bottomed a shicer,
+objected to the tax itself, because he could not possibly afford to pay it.
+And was it not atrocious to confine this man in the lousy lock-up at the Camp,
+because he had no luck?"
+
+Allow me, now, in return, to put a very important question, of the old
+Roman stamp, 'Cui bono?' that is, Where did our licence money go to?
+That's a nut which will be positively cracked by-and-bye.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XIII.
+
+
+
+Ubi Caro, Ibi Vultures.
+
+
+One morning, I woke all on a sudden.--What's up? A troop of horse galloping
+exactly towards my tent, and I could hear the tramping of a band of traps.
+I got out of the stretcher, and hastened out of my tent. All the neighbours,
+in night-caps and unmentionables, were groping round the tents, to inquire
+what was the matter. It was not yet day-light. There was a sly-grog seller
+at the top of the hill; close to his store he had a small tent, crammed with
+brandy cases and other grog, newly come up from town. There must have been
+a spy, who had scented such valuable game.
+
+The Commissioner asked the storekeeper, who by this time was at the door
+of his store: "Whose tent is that?" indicating the small one in question.
+
+"I don't know," was the answer.
+
+"Who lives in it? who owns it? is anybody in?" asked the Commissioner.
+
+"An old man owns it, but he is gone to town on business, and left it
+to the care of his mate who is on the nightshift," replied the storekeeper.
+
+"I won't peck up that chaff of yours, sir. Halloo! who is in? Open the tent;"
+shouted the Commissioner.
+
+No answer.
+
+"I say, cut down this tent, and we'll see who is in;" was the order
+of the Commissioner to two ruffianly looking troopers.
+
+No sooner said than done; and the little tent was ripped up by their swords.
+A government cart was, of course, ready in the gully below, and in less than
+five minutes the whole stock of grog, some two hundred pounds sterling worth,
+or five hundred pounds worth in nobblers, was carted up to the Camp,
+before the teeth of some hundreds of diggers, who had now collected
+round about. We cried "Shame! shame!" sulkily enough, but we did not
+interfere; first, because the store had already annoyed us often enough
+during the long winter nights; second, because the plunderers were such
+Vandemonian-looking traps and troopers, that we were not encouraged
+to say much, because it would have been of no use.
+
+As soon, however, as the sun was up, and all hands were going to work,
+the occurrence not only increased the discontent that had been brewing
+fast enough already, but it rose to excitement; and such a state of
+exasperated feelings, however vented in the shouting of 'Joe,' did certainly
+not prepare the Eureka boys to submit with patience to a licence-hunt
+in the course of the day.
+
+First and foremost: it is impossible to prevent the sale of spirits
+on the diggings; and not any laws, fines, or punishment the government
+may impose on the dealers or consumers can have an effect towards putting
+a stop to sly-grog selling. A miner working, as during the past winter,
+in wet and cold, must and will have his nobbler occasionally; and very
+necessary, too, I think. No matter what the cost, he will have it;
+and it cannot be dispensed with, if he wish to preserve his health: he won't
+go to the Charley Napier Hotel, when he can get his nobbler near-handy,
+and thereby give a lift to Pat or Scotty.
+
+Secondly: I hereby assert that the breed of spies in this colony prospered
+by this sly-grog selling. "We want money," says some of the 'paternals'
+at Toorak.
+
+"Oh! well, then," replies another at Ballaarat, "come down on a few
+storekeepers and unlicensed miners and raise the wind. We can manage a
+thousand or two that way. Let the blood-hounds on the scent, and it is done."
+
+And so a scoundrel, in the disguise of an honest man, takes with him
+another worse devil than himself, and goes round like a roaring lion,
+seeking what he may devour.
+
+If I had half the fifty pounds fine inflicted on sly-grog sellers,
+and five pounds fine on unlicensed diggers, raised on Ballaarat at this time,
+I think my fellow-colonists would bow their heads before me. Great works!
+
+Thirdly: An act of silver and gold lace humanity was going the rounds
+of our holes, above and below.
+
+A person is found in an insensible state, caused by loss of blood,
+having fallen, by accident, on a broken bottle and cut an artery in his head.
+He is conveyed to the Camp hospital.
+
+After some few hours, because he raves from loss of blood, and at a time
+when he requires the closest attention, he is unceremoniously carried
+into the common lock-up, and there left, it is said, for ten hours,
+lying on the floor, without any attention being paid to his condition
+by the hospital authorities, and then it was only by repeated representations
+of his sinking state, to other officials, that he was conveyed to the hospital,
+where he expired in two hours afterwards!
+
+"Below!"
+
+"Haloo!"
+
+"Jim; the miners of Ballaarat demand an investigation."
+
+"And they must have it, Joe."
+
+Such was the scene in those days, performed at every shaft, in Gravel-pits,
+as well as on the Eureka.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XIV.
+
+
+
+Flagitur Vulcano Si Fulmina Parata.
+
+
+Here is a short resume of events which led to the popular demonstration
+on Tuesday, October 17th, 1854.
+
+Two men, old friends, named Scobie and Martin, after many years separation,
+happened to meet each other in Ballaarat. Joy at the meeting, led them
+to indulge in a wee drop for 'Auld lang Syne.' In this state of happy feeling,
+they call at the Eureka Hotel, on their way home, intending to have
+a finishing glass. They knock at the door, and are refused admittance,
+very properly, on account of their drunkenness. They leave, and proceed
+on their way, not, perhaps without the usual colonial salutations.
+At about fifty yards from the hotel, they hear a noise behind them,
+and retrace their steps. They are met by persons, unknown, who inflict blows
+on them, which render one insensible and the other lifeless.
+
+A coroner's inquest was held on the body, the verdict of which was,
+"that deceased had died from injuries inflicted by persons unknown;"
+but public feeling seemed to point to Mr. Bentley, the proprietor of the
+Eureka Hotel; who, together with his wife and another party,
+were charged with the murder, tried at the police court, and acquitted.
+
+The friends of deceased, considering that both the inquest and the trial
+were unfairly conducted, agreed to meet on Tuesday, October 17th, on the spot
+where the man was murdered, and devise measures to discover the guilty parties,
+and to bring them to justice.
+
+Accordingly, at an early hour, the hill on which is situated the Eureka Hotel
+was thronged by thousands; so great was the excitement.
+
+THOMAS KENNEDY, was naturally enough the lion of the day. A thick head, bold,
+but bald, the consequence perhaps not of his dissipation; but of his worry
+in by gone days. His merit consists in the possession of the chartist slang;
+hence his cleverness in spinning, a yarn never to the purpose, but blathered
+with long phrases and bubbling with cant. He took up the cause of the diggers,
+not so much for the evaporation of his gaseous heroism, as eternally to hammer
+on the unfortunate death of his country-man Scobie, for the sake of
+'auld lang syne.'
+
+When pressed by the example of others to burn his license, at the subsequent
+monster meeting, he had none to burn, because he had a wife and four children
+dependent on him for support, and therefore I do not know what to say further.
+
+These and other resolutions were carried unanimously:-
+
+"That this meeting, not being satisfied with the manner in which the
+proceedings connected with the death of the late James Scobie, have been
+conducted, either by the magistrates or by the coroner, pledges itself to use
+every lawful means to have the case brought before other, and more competent
+authorities.
+
+"That this meeting deems it necessary to collect subscriptions for the purpose
+of offering a reward for the conviction of the murderers, and defraying
+all other expenses connected with the prosecution of the case."
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XV.
+
+
+
+Nam Tua Res Agitur, Paries Cum Proximus Ardet.
+
+
+The one pervading opinion among the multitude of miners and others who had been
+attracted thither, appeared to be that Bentley was the murderer; and loud
+were the cries, the hooting, and groans against him. It would appear
+that the Camp authorities contemplated some little disturbance,
+and consequently all the available force of police and mounted troopers
+were on guard at the hotel and made a very injudicious display of their
+strength. Not only did they follow, but ride through, the crowd of people
+at the meeting; and it is to this display of their strength that must be
+attributed the fire, and other outbursts of indignation. Miners who have stood
+the working of a Canadian or Gravel-pit shicer, scorn danger in any form.
+
+The crowd, excessively irritated on seeing the large display of the hated
+police force began to shout and yell. Presently, a stone came from
+the mass, and passing near the head of one of the officials, broke a pane
+of glass in one of the windows of the hotel. The sound of the falling glass
+appeared to act like magic on the multitude; and bottles, stones, sticks,
+and other missiles, were speedily put in requisition to demolish the windows,
+until not a single pane was left entire, while every one that was broken
+drew a cheer from the crowd. The police, all this time, were riding round
+and round the hotel, but did not take any vigorous measures to deter the people
+from the sport they appeared to enjoy so much. The crowd advance nearer--near
+enough to use sticks to beat in the casements. They make an entrance,
+and, in a moment, furniture, wearing apparel, bedding, drapery, are tossed out
+of the windows; curtains, sheets, etc., are thrown in the air, frightening
+the horses of the troopers, who have enough to do to keep their saddles;
+the weather-boards are ripped off the side of the house, and sent spinning
+in the air. A real Californian takes particular care of, and delights in
+smashing the crockery.
+
+Mr. Rede, the resident Commissioner, arrives, and endeavours to pacify
+the people by speechifying, but it will not do. He mounts the sill of where
+was once a window, and gesticulates to the crowd to hear him. An egg is thrown
+from behind a tent opposite, and narrowly misses his face, but breaks
+on the wall of the house close to him. The Commissioner becomes excited,
+and orders the troopers to take the man in charge; but no trooper appears
+to relish the business.
+
+A cry of "Fire!" is raised; a horse shies and causes commotion. Smoke is seen
+to issue from one of the rooms of the ground-floor. The police extinguish it;
+and an attempt is made to form a cordon round the building. But it is
+too late. Whilst the front of the hotel occupies the attention of the majority
+of the crowd, a few are pulling down the back premises.
+
+Mr. Rede sends for the detachment of the gallant 40th now stationed
+on Ballaarat.
+
+A shout is raised:--"The 40th are coming."
+
+"Don't illuminate till they come."
+
+"They shall see the sight."
+
+"Wait till they come."
+
+Smash go the large lamps in front of the hotel. The troopers ride round
+and caracole their horses.
+
+"Where's the red-coats?"
+
+"There they come, yonder up the hill!"
+
+"Hurrah! three cheers."
+
+The 40th arrive; they form into line in front of the hotel, swords drawn.
+"Hurrah! boys! no use waiting any longer."--"Down she comes." The bowling alley
+is on fire.--Police try to extinguish the flames--rather too warm.--It's
+too late.--The hotel is on fire at the back corner; nothing can save it.--"Hip,
+hip hurrah!" is the universal shout.
+
+I had opportunities enough to observe in London, that a characteristic
+of the British race is to make fun of the calamity of fire, hence I did not
+wonder, how they enjoyed this, their real sport on the occasion.
+
+A gale of wind, which blowed at this exact time, announcing the hurricane
+that soon followed, was the principal helper to the devouring of the building,
+by blowing in the direction most favourable to the purpose.
+
+The red-coats wheel about, and return to the Camp. Look out! the roof
+of the back part of the hotel, falls in! "Hurrah! boys, here's the porter
+and ale with the chill off."
+
+Bottles are handed out burning hot--the necks of two bottles are knocked
+together!--Contents drunk in colonial style.--Look out! the roof,
+sides and all fall in!--An enormous mass of flame and smoke arises
+with a roaring sound.--Sparks are carried far, far into the air,
+and what was once the Eureka Hotel, is now a mass of burning embers!
+
+The entire diggings, in a state of extreme excitement.--The diggers are lords
+and masters of Ballaarat; and the prestige of the Camp is gone for ever.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XVI.
+
+
+
+Loquar In Amaritudine Animoe. Meoe
+
+
+Now my peace of mind being destroyed, I had recourse to the free British press,
+for information, wishing to hear what they said in Melbourne. At this time
+the Morning Herald was in good demand; but the 'Geelong Advertiser' had
+the swayn on the goldfields. Geelong had a rattling correspondent on
+Ballaarat, who helped to hasten the movement fast enough. As I did not
+know this correspondent of the 'Geelong Advertiser' personally, so I can
+only guess at his frame of mind. I should say the following ingredients
+entered into the factory of his ideas:-
+
+1st. The land is the Lord's and all therein; but man must earn his bread
+by the sweat of his brow. Therefore, in the battle of life, every man
+must fight his way on the old ground, "help yourself and God will help you."
+
+2nd. In olden times, wherever there was a Roman there was life. In our times,
+wherever there is a Britain there is trade, and trade is life. But with
+the lazy,--who, either proud or mean, is always an incapable, because
+generally he is a drunkard, and therefore a beggar, there is no possible
+barter; and, inasmuch as man does not live on bread alone, for a fried sole
+is a nice thing for breakfast, so also it must be confessed that the loaves
+and fishes do not condescend to jump into one's mouth all dressed
+as they ought to be. Therefore--and this is the zenith of the
+'Geelong Advertiser's' practical correspondent--be not perplexed, if the loaves
+and fishes wont pop fast enough into your mouth particularly; let Mahomed's
+example be instantly followed: go yourself to the loaves and fishes,
+and you will actually find that they are subject to the same laws of matter
+and motion as everything else on earth.
+
+3rd. The application. For what did any one emigrate to this colony?
+To sweat more? Well, times were hard enough for the poor in old Europe.
+Let him sweat more, but for whom? For himself of course, and good luck to him.
+Is there not plenty of Victoria land for every white man or black man
+that intends to grow his potatoes? Oh! leave the greens-growing to the
+well-disposed, to the well affected, ye sturdy sons who pant after
+the yellow-boy. "Take your chance, out of a score of shicers, there is one
+'dead on it,'" says old Mother Earth from the deep.
+
+Sum total.--With the hard-working gold-digger, there is a solid barter
+possible. Hurrah! for the diggers.
+
+'The Argus' persisting in 'our own conceit,' and misrepresenting, perverting,
+and slandering the cause of the diggers, ran foul, and went fast to leeward.
+Experience having instructed me at my own costs, that there cannot possibly
+exist much sympathy between flunkies and blueshirts, I can only guess
+at the compound materials hammered in the mortar of 'The Argus' reporter
+on Ballaarat:--
+
+lst. The land is the Queen's, and the inheritance of the Crown.
+
+2nd. Who dares to teach the golden-lace the idea how to shoot?
+
+3rd. Let learning, commerce, even manners die, But leave us our old nobility.
+
+4th. 'Sotto voce':--In this colony, however, make money; honestly if possible,
+of course, but make money; or else the 'vagabonds' here would humble down
+a gentleman to curry-powder diet.
+
+5th. To put on a blue shirt, and rush in with the Eureka mob! fudge:
+'odi profanum vulgus et arceo.' There are millions of tons of gold dug out
+already, as much anyhow, as anyone can carry to Old England, and live
+as a lord, with an occasional trip to Paris and Naples, to make up for
+the time wasted in this colony.
+
+Sum total.--Screw out of the diggers as much as circumstances will admit;
+they have plenty of money for getting drunk, and making beasts of themselves,
+the brutes!
+
+To be serious; should a copy of this book be forgotten somewhere, and thereby
+be spared for the use of some southern Tacitus, let him bewail the perfidious
+mendacity of our times, whose characteristic is SLANDER, which proceeds
+from devil GROG; and the pair generate THE PROSPERITY OF THE WICKED.
+Here is a sample:-
+
+On Saturday, September 29th, 1854, the members of the Local Court, Ballaarat,
+held a public meeting on the usual spot, Bakery-hill, for the purpose of
+taking the sense of their fellow miners, respecting the admittance
+or nonadmittance of the legal profession to advise or plead in said court.--
+See report in The Star, a new local paper, No. V, Tuesday, October 2nd.
+
+Messrs. Ryce and Wall having addressed the meeting in their usual honest,
+matter-of-fact way:-
+
+
+"Great Works" was shouted and immediately appeared
+C. Raffaello, member of the Local Court. He hoped,
+that if there were any Goodenough present that they
+would see and not mislay their notes while he briefly
+brought three things before the meeting; the first
+concerned the meeting and himself, the second concerned
+himself, and the third concerned those present. The
+first was easily disposed of--have I, as I promised,
+done my duty as member of the Local Court to your
+satisfaction? (Yes, and cheers.) Very well, the second
+matter concerns myself--personally he was under no
+obligations to the lawyers--the services he received
+at the trial was done to him as a state prisoner,
+and not to Carboni Raffaello individually; when
+individually, he requested to be supplied with six
+pennyworth of snuff by Mr. Dunne, it was promised,
+but it never came to him. It would not have cost much
+to have supplied him, and it would have greatly obliged
+him, as habit had rendered snuff-taking necessary to him.
+With the permission of those present he would take
+a pinch now. (He took a pinch amidst laughter and cheers.)
+
+The admission of lawyers into the Local Court would give
+rise to endless feuds, where valuable interests were
+concerned, and so much time would be lost in useless
+litigation. As he had no wish through any personal
+obligation to see the lawyers in the Local Court,
+and as he considered that it was for the advantage of
+the miners that they should not be admitted, he opposed
+their entrance.
+
+The third matter concerned those present. What did they
+come to Australia for? Why, to improve their prospects
+in reality, though on shipboard they might say it was to
+get rid of the 'governor,' or to get clear of an ugly wife,
+and now that you are here are you to allow the Ballaarat
+lawyers to fleece you of your hard earnings? Not being
+fond of yabber-yabber he would simply ask: are you fairly
+represented by us? (Yes, yes.) If so then support us,
+and if we do not represent you we will resign. Don't say
+yes if you don't mean it, for I do not like yabber-yabber.
+
+
+I beg to assert, that the above report is correct, as far as it goes. Some
+five hundred diggers were present. Now for the perversion from the reporter
+of 'The Argus', Melbourne, Tuesday, October 2.
+
+"Carboni Raffaello, a foreigner [a foreign anarchist, if you please,
+Mr. Editor], then spoke in his usual style [that is, sedition, revolution,
+and rebellion, that's it], the principal (sic) points of his remarks being,
+that while incarcerated in the Melbourne gaol [was it for common felony,
+or high treason?] he was not supplied with snuff, though he had entreated
+his learned counsel, Mr. J. H. Dunne, for sixpenny worth. He [Please,
+Raffaello or Dunne? fine pair together] did not consider himself under
+any obligation to the lawyers: he [but who? Dunne or Raffaello?] was not fond
+of yabber-yabber."
+
+Thus an honest man is brayed at by asses in this colony! The fun is odious
+and ridiculous enough.
+
+When such reporters of the British press prostitute British ink, the only ink
+that dares to register black on white the name, word and deed of any tyrant
+through the whole face of the earth, and for the sake of a pair of
+Yankee boots, lower themselves to the level of a scribbler, thus affording
+to be audacious because anonymous, the British press in the southern hemisphere
+will be brought to shame, and Victoria cannot possibly derive any benefit
+from it.
+
+Let the above observation stand good, I proceed with my work.
+
+'The Age' was then just budding, and was considered, on the diggings the organ
+of the new chum Governor. 'The Age' soon mustered a Roman courage in the cause
+of the diggers, and jumped the claims both of The Herald and 'The Argus';
+and though the 'own correspondent,' under the head of Ballaarat, be such a dry,
+soapy concern that will neither blubber nor blather, yet 'The Age' remained
+the diggers' paper.
+
+The 'Ballaarat Times' was all the go, on the whole extent of the diggings.
+Soon enough the reporter, aye, the editor himself, will both appear
+'in propria persona'.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XVII.
+
+
+
+Arcane, Impenetrabili, Profunde,
+Son Le Vie Di Chi Die L'Esser Al Niente.
+
+
+When our southern sky is overloaded with huge, thick, dark masses, and claps
+of thunder warn us of the pending storm, then a gale of wind is roaring
+in space, doing battle with the bush, cowing down man and beast, sweeping away
+all manner of rottenness. This fury spares not, and desolation is the threat
+of the thunder.
+
+A kind Providence must be blessed even in the whirlwind. Big, big drops
+of rain fight their way through the gale; soon the drops muster in legions,
+and the stronger the storm, the stronger those legions. At last they conquer;
+then it pours down--that is, the flood is made up of legions of torrents.
+
+Is the end of the world now at hand? Look at the victorious rainbow!
+it reminds man of the covenant of our God with Noah, not far from this
+southern land. The sun restores confidence that all is right again as before,
+and nature, refreshed and bolder, returns again to her work.
+
+Hence, the storm is life.
+
+Not so is the case with fire. Devouring everything, devouring itself,
+fire seems to leave off its frenzy, only to devour the sooner any mortal thing
+that comes in the way to retard destruction. A few embers, then a handful
+of ashes, are the sole evidence of what was once kingly or beggarly.
+
+Fire may destroy, consume, devour, but has no power to reduce to 'nothing.'
+
+Hence the calamity of fire is death.
+
+The handful of ashes lie lifeless until a storm forces them into the living
+order of nature, which, when refreshed, has the power to ingraft those
+ashes to, and make them prosper with, the grain of mustard seed.
+
+Hence death is life.
+
+Such is the order of Providence. Now, good reader, watch the handful of ashes
+of what was once Bentley's Eureka Hotel.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XVIII.
+
+
+
+Pecunia Omnia Vincit.
+
+
+In the dead of the night after the burning of the Eureka Hotel, three men
+had been taken into custody, charged with riot, and subsequently committed
+to take their trial in Melbourne.
+
+I think the diggers at this time seriously contemplated to burn down the Camp,
+and thus get rid in a blaze of all their grievances.
+
+A committee for the defence of these men, met at the Star Hotel, and sent round
+to all the tents on Ballaarat for subscriptions. I contributed my mite,
+and then learned that VERN, KENNEDY, and HUMFFRAY were the triumvirate
+of said committee.
+
+The following placard was posted throughout the goldfields:-
+
+
+500 POUNDS REWARD
+
+for the discovery, apprehension and conviction
+of the murderer of James Scobie, found dead near
+the late Eureka Hotel, etc., etc.
+
+
+At one and at the same time, also, the following placards were posted
+at each prominent gum-tree on the goldfield:-
+
+
+500 POUNDS REWARD
+
+increased by Government to
+
+1,600 POUNDS!!
+
+for the apprehension and conviction of the robbers
+of the Bank of Victoria.
+
+
+A desperate deed was committed in broad mid-day; Monday, October 16th,
+in the Ballaarat township.
+
+Four men in the garb of diggers, wearing sou'-wester hats, and having
+crepe over their faces, entered the Bank of Victoria, and succeeded
+in carrying off property in notes and gold, to the amount
+of about 15,000 pounds.
+
+Who would have told me then, that soon I should be messmate to those
+unknown audacious robbers, in the same gaol!!
+
+Let's go to the public meeting in the next chapter.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XIX.
+
+
+
+Una Scintilla, Sparasi La Bomba,
+Spalanca A Multitudini La Tomba.
+
+
+The following story was going the rounds of the Eureka. There was a
+licence-hunt; the servant of the Rev. P. Smyth, the priest of the Catholic
+church, Bakery-hill, went to a neighbouring tent to visit a sick man.
+While inside, a trooper comes galloping up at the tent-door, and shouts out,
+"Come out here, you d----d wretches! there's a good many like you on the
+diggings." The man came outside, and was asked if "he's got a licence?"
+The servant, who is a native of Armenia, answers, in imperfect English,
+that he is a servant to the priest. The trooper says, "Damn you and
+the priest," and forthwith dismounts for the purpose of dragging
+Johannes M'Gregorius, the servant, along with him. The servant remonstrates
+by saying he is a disabled man, unable to walk over the diggings.
+This infuriates the trooper, he strikes and knocks down the poor disabled
+foreigner, drags him about, tears his shirt--in short, inflicting such injuries
+on the poor fellow, that all the diggers present cried out "shame! shame!"
+
+Commissioner Johnson rides up, and says to the crowd about him, that he should
+not be interrupted in the execution of his 'dooty.' The priest hears
+of his servant's predicament, comes to the spot, hands a five-pound note to
+Johnson as bail for his servant's appearance the next day at the police-office.
+
+The following morning, Johannes M`Gregorius is charged with being on
+the gold-fields without a licence. The poor foreigner tries to make a defence,
+but was fined five pounds. Commissioner Johnson now comes in and says,
+M`Gregorius is not charged with being without a licence, but with assaulting
+the trooper Lord--ridiculous! This alters the case. The trooper is called,
+and says the old story about the execution of 'dooty,' that is,
+licence-hunting.
+
+A respectable witness takes his oath that he saw the trooper strike
+the foreigner with his clenched fist, and knock him down.
+
+The end of the story is in the Ballaarat tune, then in vogue: "Fined 5 pounds;
+take him away."
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XX.
+
+
+
+Public Meeting
+Held at the Catholic Chapel, Bakery-hill, Wednesday, October 25th.
+
+
+After a good deal of pretty intelligible talk about the 'helpless Armenian,'
+the trooper Lord, and our respected priest; Thomas Kennedy, pouncing on
+the thing of the day proposed:--
+
+"That it is the opinion of this meeting that the conduct of Mr. Commissioner
+Johnson towards the Rev. Mr. Smyth has been calculated to awaken the highest
+feeling of indignation on the part of his devoted flock: and to call upon
+the government to institute an inquiry into his (gold-lace) character,
+and to desire to have him at once removed from Ballaarat."
+
+Carried unanimously.
+
+The priest was requested to address the meeting.
+
+Father Patricius Smyth, a native of Mayo, looks some thirty-five years old,
+and belongs to the unadulterated Irish caste--half-curled hair, not abundant,
+anxious semicircular forehead, keen and fiery eyes, altogether a lively
+interesting head. He is a Latin and Celtic scholar; and that excuses him
+for his moderate proficiency in modern languages. He was educated at Maynooth,
+the eye-sore of Sabbatarians, and therefore believes it incontestable
+that the authority conferred on him by the Bishop must needs be derived
+from God; because the Bishop had been consecrated by the Pope, who--inasmuch
+as a second branch of the Prince of the Apostles never was heard of at the time
+of St. Augustin--is the successor of St. Peter, the corner stone on which
+OUR LORD did build the Christian church, and our Lord's warrant is written
+in St. John, chapter xiv, 24: 'Sermo quem auditis non est meus,
+sed ejus qui misit me, nempe Patris.' And so Father Smyth feels himself
+entitled to adopt what was said of the Divine Master, 'Docebat enim eos
+ut habens auctoritatem, non autem ut scribae.' St. Matthew, chap. vii, 29.
+Hence his preaching, though not remarkable for much eloquence,
+does not lull to sleep. There is no cant, and strange as it may appear,
+there is little argument in his short-framed sentences, because they are
+the decided opinion of his mind and the warm expression of his heart,
+anxious for the salvation of his flock, as he believes he will be called
+to account if any be lost. He, out of civility, may not object to hear
+what Paley or Butler has to say, but he scorns any conversation with Voltaire,
+and would see the fellow burnt, as in the times of old. His character
+was never impeached, because his conduct is an example to all of the strength
+of his faith. Either at the altar or at the table he forgets not
+that he belongs to the priesthood of Ireland, the 'proved gold' of the Catholic
+church. His song is, 'Erin, my country,' and 'I love thy green bowers,'
+is the end of his story, which is a hint to me that this is not the place
+to say more for the peace of John Bull. Hence Ireland produced a
+Daniel O'Connell, but has not yet got the repeal.
+
+Father Smyth, in addressing the meeting, spoke with coolness and forbearance,
+yet commendatory of the constitutional manner in which his congregation sought
+redress from the government, for the insult offered them, through his person,
+in the abuse of his servant by the trooper Lord. On concluding his address,
+he was warmly cheered, when the reverend gentleman and his friends adjourned
+to the parsonage, to partake of some refreshments.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXI.
+
+
+
+Public Meeting
+Held on Bakery-hill, November llth.
+
+
+Political changes contemplated by THE REFORM LEAGUE.
+
+1. A full and fair representation.--Don't you wish you may get it?
+
+2. Manhood suffrage.--Thanks to the Eureka-boys, it costs now one pound.
+Cheap!
+
+3. No property qualification of members for the Legislative Council.--The
+identical thing for 'starring' on stumps to a fellow's heart's content.
+
+4. Payment of members.--That's the accommodation!
+
+5. Short duration of Parliament.--Increase the chances of accommodation,
+that's it.
+
+What was the freight per ton, of this sort of worn out twaddle imported
+from old England?
+
+How much does this new chum's bosh fetch in the southern markets,
+and in the Victorian market particularly?
+
+For my part I decline to answer, because I want to attend at the meeting.
+J. B. Humffray, is the Secretary of the League; his name is going now
+the round of the diggings; I wish to see the man in person; is he a great,
+grand, or big man? that's the question.
+
+When you seen JOHN BASSON HUMFFRAY, you have at once before you a gentleman,
+born of a good old family; his manners confirm it, and his words indicate
+an honest benevolent heart, directed by a liberal mind, entangled perhaps
+by too much reading of all sorts, perplexed at the prosperity of the vicious,
+and the disappointment of the virtuous in this mysterious world of ours,
+but could never turn wicked, because he believes in the resurrection of life.
+He is looking some thirty five years old, his person is well proportioned,
+but inclining to John Bull's. His prepossessing countenance is made up of
+a fine forehead, denoting astuteness, not so much as shrewdness, how,
+when and whither to shift his pegs in the battle of life; of a pair of eyes
+which work the spell; of a Grecian nose; of a mouth remarkable for the
+elasticity of the lips, that make him a model in the pronunciation
+of the English language. His voice, that of a tenor, undulating and clear,
+never obstreperous, enables his tongue to work the intended charm,
+when his head puts that member into motion; but the semi-earnestness
+of his address, his cool sort of John Bull smile, betray that his heart
+does not go always with his head. Hence he has many enemies, and yet not one
+ever dared to substantiate a charge against his character; he has as many
+friends, but not one friend, because it is his policy ever to keep friendly,
+with redcoats and gold-lace, at one and the same time as with blueshirts
+and sou'-westers.
+
+As I cannot possibly mean any thing dishonourable to our old mate,
+John Basson Humffray, I may here relate what his foes do say of him.
+
+Suppose any given square and the four pegs to be:
+
+
+C-------D
+| |
+| W |
+| |
+B-------E
+
+C., that is, the Camp; E., that is, the Eureka; D., that is, the doodledom
+of red-tape., and B., that is, blue-shirts.
+
+Let W., that is work, be the central point at C, E, and D, B. Now: John is
+sinking at Eureka with the red cap; and Basson cracks some yabber-yabber at D,
+that is, getting a sip of Toorak small-beer, as aforesaid. Again: when
+Basson puts on a sou'-wester to go through the main-drift with blue-shirts,
+then John feels entitled to tramp up to Camp, and there, somewhere not far off,
+toast on the fourth of July a Doctor Kenworthy; soon after, however,
+said Johnny bends his way to shake hands with Signor Raffaello, at the old peg
+Eureka, and helps him to rock the cradle. Further, to give evidence
+of his consistency, Humffray himself will express his sorrow to Peter Lalor
+for his loss of the left arm at the same peg Eureka; and, to atone for
+past transgressions, he will soon after call in both the prodigal John
+and yabbering Basson, and with his whole heart and voice, strike up,
+'God Save the Queen,' at peg Camp. As for bottoming his shaft at the central
+point Work, that's a different thing altogether; and yet it must be admitted
+that he is 'all there' in his claim, when the hole is bottomed, especially
+if a drive is to be put in with his quill. Sum total:--He was, is, and
+ever will be, John Basson Humffray, Esquire, of Ballaarat;
+'Honi soi qui mal y pense', because his friends want him in St. Patrick's Hall.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXII.
+
+
+
+Strike Off A Medal In Commemoration.
+
+
+We are on Bakery-hill, though, attention. Immediate objects of
+the Reform League.
+
+I. An immediate change in the management of the goldfields, by disbanding
+the Commissioners (undoubtedly the unanimous demand, or 'desire'--if the word
+suit better the well-affected--of all blue-shirts). Three cheers for Vern!
+Go it hearty! Fine fellow! Legs rather too long! Never mind.
+
+II. The total abolition of the diggers' and storekeeper's licence tax.
+(Ah! ah! prick John Bull at his pounds, shillings and pence,
+that's the dodge to make him stir.)
+
+Three cheers for Humffray! Hurrah!
+
+The whole of the grand talk of these Bakery reformers leagued together on its
+hill, can properly be framed in, on a 'copper;' thus doing justice to all.
+
+Image.
+LET
+a course of
+action be decided on
+and carried out unswervingly
+until the heel of our oppressors
+be removed from our necks.
+DON'T LET THE THING DROP THROUGH,
+for want of co-operation and support
+NOTA BENE.
+2s. 6d. gentleman's ticket.
+No admission for ladies at present. 'Durum sed levius fit Patientia.'
+REMEMBER!
+GOD HELPS HIM WHO HELPS HIMSELF (to the 2s. 6d.)
+DO NOT LET
+the word 'British' become a bye-word.
+AND ABOVE ALL LEAVE OFF SINGING
+'Britons never, never shall be slaves,'
+until you leave fondling
+the chains which
+prove the song
+a lie,
+a mockery,
+a delusion,
+a snare.
+----
+Great works!
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXIII.
+
+
+
+Ortica ensis: Prima.
+
+
+Here is a plant of Cayenne pepper, growing in those days on Ballaarat:
+it withered some three months in limbo, but...oh yes, butt at it again.
+
+
+'Ballaarat Times', November 18, 1854.
+
+"THE REFORM LEAGUE.
+
+"There is something strange, and to the government of this country,
+something not quite comprehensible, in this League. For the first time
+in the southern hemisphere, a Reform League is to be inaugurated.
+There is something ominous in this; the word 'League,' in a time of such
+feverish excitement as the present, is big with immense purport (indeed!)
+Indeed, it would ill become 'The Times' to mince in matter of such weighty
+importance. This League is not more or less that the germ of Australian
+independence (sic). The die is cast, and fate has stamped upon the movement
+its indelible signature. No power on earth can restrain the united might
+and headlong strides for freedom of the people of this country, and we are
+lost in amazement while contemplating the dazzling panorama of the Australian
+future (Great works). We salute the League [but not the trio, Vern, Kennedy,
+Humffray], and tender our hopes and prayers for its prosperity [in the shape
+of a goodly pile of half-crowns]. The League has undertaken a mighty task
+[the trio'll shirk it though], fit only for a great people--that of changing
+the dynasty of the country (Great works). The League does not exactly
+propose, nor adopt such a scheme, but we know what it means, the principles
+it would inculcate, and that eventually it will resolve itself into
+an Australian Congress." (Great Works!!)
+
+
+Vote for
+HUMFFRAY to be Auctioneer,
+KENNEDY to be Bellman,
+VERN to be Runner,
+of the 'Starring league.'
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXIV.
+
+
+
+Ortica ensis: Secunda.
+
+
+Out came the 'Ballaarat Times', Saturday, November 25, 1854. Work was stopped
+at every hole: the miners left the deep and mobbed together round any reader
+of the full report of the--
+
+
+Trial of
+MR. AND MRS. BENTLEY,
+Hanse, and Farrel,
+FOR THE MURDER OF
+JAMES SCOBIE.
+----
+Supreme Court, Melbourne.
+----
+GUILTY! of Manslaughter.
+Mrs. Bentley scot-free.
+
+His Honour considered their conduct
+was wanton and reckless. He should
+mark his sense of the outrage of which
+they have been found guilty, by passing
+on each of them a sentence of
+THREE (!) YEARS' IMPRISONMENT
+WITH HARD LABOUR ON THE ROADS.
+
+Great Works!
+
+
+Trial of
+Fletcher, M`Intyre and Westerby,
+for BURNING THE EUREKA HOTEL.
+----
+Supreme Court, Melbourne.
+Criminal Sittings.
+----
+GUILTY, with a recommendation
+to mercy!!
+
+The Foreman of the Jury appended
+the following rider to the verdict:--
+
+"The jury feel, in giving their verdict
+against the prisoners at the bar,
+that in all probability, they (the jury)
+should never have had that painful
+duty to Perform, if those entrusted
+with the government offices at Ballaarat
+had done theirs properly."
+
+His Honour said: THE SENTENCE
+of the Court is, that you,
+M`Intyre be confined in H.M. gaol,
+at Melbourne, for THREE MONTHS,
+but I shall not subject you to labour.
+(Great works!) You, Fletcher, to four
+months; and you, Westerby, to six
+months confinement...
+...The Executive was sufficiently
+strong to punish those who outrage
+the law! (Great works at Toorak!)
+
+
+-------------
+
+La vita in grammatica,
+Facil declinazione;
+La vita poi in pratica,
+Storta congiugazione:
+Della vita lo spello dal mondo sciolto,
+Al mondo vivi, poiche non sei sepolto.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXV.
+
+
+
+Epistolam Hanc Misi, Tunc Bene, Nunc Valde Ad Opus.
+
+
+Prepaid.
+To W. H. ARCHER, Esq.
+Acting Registrar General,
+Melbourne.
+Ballaarat Gold-fields,
+Eureka, November 30, 1854.
+
+
+My dear Mr. Archer,
+
+I was in some anxiety about you; not receiving any answer to my letter
+of the 17th October, and especially to that of the 22nd ditto. I was
+at Creswick's Creek, when I was informed that Father Smyth had a letter for me,
+and last Monday I returned to Ballaarat, where I received, through
+Messrs. Muir Brothers, your letter of the 20th October. I am heartily glad
+to learn that you are well, and now I suppose a few lines from me are
+as welcome to you as ever.
+
+Somehow or other, verging towards the fortieth year of my age, having
+witnessed strange scenes in this strange world, very, very different from
+my dream of youth, I feel now more disposed to the sober reality of the things
+of this life.
+
+However desponding and humiliating may be, as it really is, the sad
+reflection, that at the enormous distance of sixteen thousand miles
+from dear homes and dearer friends, people should be called upon to assemble,
+NOT to thank God Almighty for any special mercy, or rejoice over the first
+good harvest or vintage on this golden land; but melancholy is it to say,
+for the old purpose, as in olden times in the old country,
+'FOR THE REDRESS OF GRIEVANCES;' and so yesterday we had a monster meeting
+on Bakery-hill, and I was the delegate of upwards of one thousand foreigners,
+or 'aliens,' according to the superlative wisdom of your Legislative Council.
+
+The Camp was prepared to stand for the Colonial Secretary Foster! Yes;
+you may judge of the conduct of some officers sent to protect the Camp
+by the following:--
+
+On Tuesday Evening (November 28th), about eight o'clock, the Twelfth Regiment
+arrived from Melbourne. The expert cleverness of the officer in command,
+made the soldiers, riding in carts drawn by three horses each, cross the line
+exactly at the going-a-head end of the Eureka. An injudicious triumphant
+riding, that by God's mercy alone, was not turned into a vast funeral.
+
+From my tent, I soon heard the distant cries of 'Joe!' increasing in vehemence
+at each second. The poor soldiers were pelted with mud, stones, old stumps,
+and broken bottles. The hubbub was going on pretty desperate westward
+of the Hill and WE had hard work to preserve the peace; but at the upper end
+of the Hill, the game was going on upon a far more desperate scale. It appears
+that a party of Gravel-pits men had been in the bush for the purpose.
+They stopped a cart, pulled the soldiers out, robbed them of their ammunition
+and bayonets; in short, it was a hell of a row. All of us camping on the Hill
+were talking about this cowardly attack, when a detachment of said soldiers
+came up again, and the officer, a regular incapable, that is, a bully,
+with drawn sword began to swear at us, and called all of us a pack
+of scoundrels. He was, however, soon put to rights, by the whole of us
+then present offering ourselves to look out for the missing soldiers;
+and eventually, one of them was discovered in a deserted tent, another
+was found in a hole lower down the Warrenheip Gully, and so on.
+This disgraceful occurrence, coupled with the firing of guns and pistols, kept
+up the whole of the night, did not give us cheering hopes for the next day.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXVI.
+
+
+
+The Monster Meeting.
+
+
+Bakery-hill, Wednesday, November 29th.
+
+
+(Letter continued.)
+
+"All the diggings round about were deserted, and swelled the meeting,
+the greatest I ever witnessed in this Colony. At two o'clock there were
+about ten thousand men present! The Report of the Deputation appointed
+by the League to wait upon his Excellency, relative to the release
+of the three prisoners, M`Intyre, Fletcher, and Yorkie, was listened to
+with great anxiety."
+
+
+George Black was the man of the day, and was received by the people
+with three hearty cheers.
+
+From his outward appearance, one would take him for a parson, a Christian one,
+I mean; not a prebendary or a bishop. His English is elegant, and conscious
+of having received an education, and being born a gentleman, he never
+prostitutes his tongue to colonial phraseology. His reading must have been
+sober from his youth, for in conversation he indulges in neither cant
+nor romance; though, in addressing the people, he may use a touch
+of declamation stronger than argument. From the paleness of his cheeks,
+and the dryness of his lips, you might see that the spirit was indeed willing,
+though the flesh was weak. The clearness of his eyes, the sharpness
+of his nose, the liveliness of his forehead, lend to his countenance
+a decided expression of his belief in the resurrection of life.
+His principles are settled, not so much because that is required
+for the happiness of a good conscience, but because the old serpent
+has crammed the ways of man with so many deceits in this world of vanity
+and vexation of spirit, that a heart of the honesty of George Black,
+cannot possibly have any sympathy with the crooked ways of rogues
+and vagabonds; and so he is afflicted at their number and audacity,
+especially in this Colony. His disposition of mind makes him enthusiastic
+for the virtuous, his benevolent heart prevents him from proceeding
+to extremities with the vicious. Hence the Diggers' Advocate, of which
+he was the editor, though conducted with ability, failed, because he thought
+that gold-diggers interested themselves with true religion, as laid down
+in Saint James' Catholic Epistle; but he made a greater mistake in not taking
+into consideration that men, though digging for gold, do still pretend
+to some religious denomination or other. However, let him now address
+the Monster Meeting.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXVII.
+
+
+
+Divide Et Impera.
+
+
+
+
+(Letter continued,)
+
+"Mr. Black explained the results of his mission by stating, that
+the Deputation was received by the Governor with much courtesy and urbanity,
+and that personally his Excellency had no objection to grant the public prayer.
+He further stated, that so far as he had an opportunity of judging
+of the Governor's disposition, his Excellency was in favour of the people,
+but that he was so surrounded by injudicious advisers, as to leave him
+entirely impotent in state matters. The great objection his Excellency
+seemed to entertain against the Deputation's claim, was what is termed
+want of courtesy in wording--for it must be understood that the Committee sent,
+not to petition and pray, but demand the release of the state prisoners;
+and the word demand was said to operate more against the Deputation
+than the very object of their mission. Upon hearing all these reasons,
+it was proposed to adopt the form of a memorial, and petition the Governor;
+but this proposition was furiously scouted, on the ground that it did not
+comport with the dignity of the League, first to demand and afterwards to pray.
+
+"Kennedy, along with the music of his rubbing the nails of the right hand
+against those of the left, blathered away in a masterly style for the benefit
+of the League.
+
+"It was evident that there was a 'split' among the three Delegates;
+yet Mr. Humffray, who had been received by His Excellency, in an interview
+as a private digger, found favour among the assembly. J. B. Humffray plainly
+explained, and calmly made us understand, that Sir Charles was with us,
+and was determined to put an end to our grievances; and that he had appointed
+to this effect, a Commission of Inquiry, of popular men well known to us,
+and His Excellency had made up his mind to 'act accordingly.' The feverish
+excitement was subdued, and three hearty cheers were given for the
+New Chum Governor, amid the discharging of several guns and pistols."
+
+
+I must here interrupt the meeting, drop the letter, and hereby assert:-
+
+lst. Peter Lalor and myself, had never addressed any of the meetings,
+before this monster one.
+
+2nd. Having made up my mind to return to Rome, the following Christmas,
+in accordance with my brother's desire; I had to attend to my work; hence,
+I had never taken any part in the agitation and to my knowledge,
+Peter Lalor neither.
+
+3rd. I never was present at the Star Hotel and therefore, personally I know
+nothing of the boisterous Committee of the vaunting Reform League held there.
+
+Corolarium.--I am not dead yet!
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXVIII.
+
+
+
+L'Union Fait La Force.
+
+
+We had better proceed with the meeting first, and with the letter afterwards.
+
+Peter Lalor proposed the following resolution:-
+
+"That a meeting of the members of the Reform League be called at the
+Adelphi Theatre, on next Sunday, at 2 o'clock, to elect a Central Committee;
+and that each forty members have the power to elect one member for
+the Central Committee."
+
+Being an old acquaintance of Peter, I supported the above resolution.
+He gave me his hand and pulled me up on the platform, from among the multitude.
+The whole of that Wednesday morning, my tent on the Eureka had been
+a regular Babel. Foreigners from all quarters of the globe and of
+the diggings, came to inquire from me what was the matter concerning
+so much excitement as then prevailed on Ballaarat. I translated for them
+the news from our 'Ballaarat Times', or from The 'Geelong Advertiser's' clever
+correspondent. Thus, and thus alone, I became honourably their delegate,
+and subsequently interpreter to Lalor, the Commander-in-Chief; and I hereby
+express the hope that in time, Peter Lalor, though mutilated, may find
+at Toorak, a little more credit for his testimony than did that infernal spy,
+Goodenough. Anyhow, for the present, 'Le Pere Duprat', a well-known old hand,
+and respected French miner on Ballaarat, who was with me within the
+Eureka Stockade, and whose proposed plan for the defence, I interpreted
+to Lalor, is a living witness to the above. We must, however, attend to
+our Monster Meeting.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXIX.
+
+
+
+Heu Mihi! Sermo Meus, Veritas.
+
+
+My friends had requested me to come forward at the meeting, and here is
+my speech according to notes I had previously taken in my tent.
+
+Gold-laced Webster, I challenge contradiction.
+
+I came from old Europe, 16,000 miles across two oceans, and I thought
+it a respectable distance from the hated Austrian rule. Why, then,
+this monster meeting to-day, at the antipodes? We wrote petitions,
+signed memorials, made remonstrances by dozens; no go: we are compelled
+to demand, and must prepare for the consequences.
+
+The old style: oppressors and oppressed. A sad reflection, very sad
+reflection, for any educated and honest man.
+
+For what did we come into this colony? 'Chi sta bene non si move,'
+is an old Roman proverb. If then in old Europe, we had a bird in hand,
+what silly fools we were to venture across two oceans, and try to catch
+two jackasses in the bush of Australia!
+
+I had a dream, a happy dream, I dreamed that we had met here together
+to render thanks unto our Father in heaven for a plentiful harvest,
+such that for the first time in this, our adopted land, we had our own food
+for the year; and so each of us holding in our hands a tumbler of Victorian
+wine, you called on me for a song. My harp was tuned and in good order:
+cheerfully struck up,
+
+'Oh, let us be happy together.'
+
+Not so, Britons, not so! We must meet as in old Europe--old style--improved
+by far in the south--for the redress of grievances inflicted on us,
+not by crowned heads, but blockheads, aristocratical incapables,
+who never did a day's work in their life. I hate the oppressor, let him wear
+a red, blue, white, or black coat.--And here certainly, I tackled
+in right earnest with our silver and gold lace on Ballaarat, and called on all
+my fellow-diggers, irrespective of nationality, religion, and colour,
+to salute the 'Southern Cross' as the refuge of all the oppressed
+from all countries on earth.--The applause was universal, and accordingly
+I received my full reward:
+
+Prison and Chains! Old style.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXX.
+
+
+
+The Reform League, Grappling With The Right 'Stars'.
+
+
+Monster Meeting continued:--
+
+Proposed and seconded by blather reformers; of course, Vern had his go:--
+
+
+"That this meeting being convinced that the obnoxious
+licence-fee is an imposition and an unjustifiable tax
+on free labour, pledges itself to take immediate steps
+to abolish the same by at once burning all their licences;
+that in the event of any party being arrested for having
+no licence, that the united people will, under all
+circumstances, defend and protect them."
+
+"That this meeting will not feel bound to protect any
+man after the 15th of December who shall not be a member
+of the Reform League by that day."
+
+
+The Rev. Mr. Downing proposed as an amendment, that the licences should not
+be burned. Although the rev. gentleman was heard with patience and respect,
+a sullen excitement pervaded the whole assemblage while he spoke.
+Those even of his most devoted followers were of the opinion that
+his sentiments did not accord with the spirit of the times, and the result was
+that the rev. gentleman's amendment fell to the ground.
+
+Here must not be forgotten a peculiar colonial habit. There was on the
+platform a sly-grog seller, who plied with the black-bottle all the folks
+there, and the day was very hot, the sun was almost burning.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXXI.
+
+
+
+Si Cessi Il Pianto, L'Ira Si Gusti.
+Lo Schiavo Che Vuol Finir Le Sue Pene,
+Vendetta Gridando Al Dio De Giusti,
+Deve Schiantar Le Proprie Catene.
+Cuore! Si Vada, Vedasi, Si Vinca. (bis.)
+
+
+In Spite of all that, however, Timothy Hayes, the chairman--who by-the-bye,
+discharged the duties of the chair in that vast assemblage, with ability
+and tact, spoke like a man, as follows:--
+
+"Gentlemen, many a time I have seen large public meetings pass resolutions
+with as much earnestness and unanimity as you show this day; and yet,
+when the time came to test the sincerity, and prove the determination
+necessary for carrying out those resolutions, it was found then that
+'the spirit, indeed, is willing, but the flesh is weak.' Now, then,
+before I put this resolution from the chair, let me point out to you
+the responsibility it will lay upon you (hear, hear). And so I feel bound
+to ask you, gentlemen, to speak out your mind. Should any member of the League
+be dragged to the lock-up for not having the licence, will a thousand of you
+volunteer to liberate the man?"
+
+"Yes! Yes!"
+
+"Will two thousand of you come forward?"
+
+"Yes! Yes! Yes!"
+
+"Will four thousand of you volunteer to march up to the Camp, and open
+the lock-up to liberate the man?"
+
+"Yes! yes!" (the clamour was really deafening.)
+
+"Are you ready to die?" shouted out our worthy chairman, stretching forth
+his right hand, clenched all the while; "Are you ready to die?"
+
+"Yes, Yes! Hurrah!"
+
+This general decided clamour put out Tim in such good spirits, that,
+in spite of the heat of the sun and the excitement of the day, he launched
+in the realm of crowned poets, and bawled as loud as if he wanted
+the head-butler at Toorak to take him a quart-pot of smallbeer--
+
+"On to the field, our doom is sealed,
+To conquer or be slaves;
+The sun shall see our country free.
+Or set upon our graves."
+
+(Great works!)
+
+No one who was not present at that monster meeting, or never saw any
+Chartist meeting in Copenhagen-fields, London, can possibly form an idea
+of the enthusiasm of the miners of Ballaarat on that 29th of November.
+A regular volley of revolvers and other pistols now took place, and a good
+blazing up of gold-licences. When the original resolutions had
+all been passed, Mr. Humffray moved a vote of thanks to Mr. Ireland,
+for his free advocacy of the state prisoners. The meeting then dissolved,
+many of them having previously burned their licences, and thus virtually
+pledging themselves to the resolution adopted, which might be said to have been
+the business of the day. Nothing could exceed the order and regularity
+with which the people, some fifteen thousand in number, retired.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXXII.
+
+
+
+Ecco Troncato Il Canto Per Ritornare Al Pianto.
+
+
+My letter to Mr. Archer continued:-
+
+Thanks be to God, the day passed 'unstained,' a glorious day for Victoria
+when the SOUTHERN CROSS was first unfolded on Ballaarat; gathering round
+itself all the oppressed of the world.
+
+The whole purpose of the meeting was, that a Reform League be formed
+and fully organised to carry out the clearance of all our grievances,
+on the old style of the Corn Law League in Great Britain.
+
+Next Sunday, we leaguers--( I took out a ticket of membership from Reynolds,
+one of the treasurers, and paid my 2s. 6d. on that very day, November 29th,
+precisely, on the platform of the meeting)--have a meeting at two o'clock
+at the Adelphi to organise the people and appoint a responsible
+executive committee. I am the old delegate to it, and therefore I shall
+be able to give you, Mr. Archer, a full answer to your letter of the
+24th instant.
+
+Mark this, good reader!
+
+1. Meanwhile, privately, as an old Ballaarat hand, I beg respectfully
+to convey to you, to employ your influence and reach the ears of
+the Lieutenant Governor. The licence-fee, as a tax, is perhaps a cause
+of growling like any other tax in Great Britain or elsewhere in the world;
+but, on the gold-fields, has become an 'abomination.' The inconvenience
+in the Camp-insolence at our getting it, the annoyance and bore
+for showing it, when asked by some 'pup' of a trap whilst at our work;
+the imbecility and arrogance of so many commissioners and troopers
+uselessly employed for the purpose, etc., etc.; make the gold-licence
+an abomination to the honest digger. The Vandemonian, you know, never dreamt
+of taking out a licence, of course not.
+
+Paramount is this grand consideration: John Bull, rather of a doggish nature,
+will growl to himself if left alone picking his bone: the passport system
+is a bone that he will not pick; no, no ways and under no shape whatever--
+I know it by experience.
+
+2. A memorial to his Excellency for the release of the three prisoners
+under sentence for burning the Eureka Hotel, is, through Humffray,
+in course of signature. It is our earnest desire that his Excellency
+may show mercy; though it may appear, that he would do thus an act of justice
+to the diggers, considering how rightly they guessed the Bentley affair.
+
+3. The whole pack, commissioners, troopers and traps on the Ballaarat Camp,
+with the exception of magistrate Hackett, are detested by the diggers:
+there will be eternal discontent as long as Rede and fraternity are
+lodging over that way. The whole Camp had better be changed at once,
+and entrusted to good experienced hands and honest men. Perhaps Sir Charles
+may turn into a Diogenes in vain--'nil desperandum.' There are now and then
+honest men to be found even in this colony.
+
+Good reader, listen to me: I shall tell you no lie: do not lose sight
+of the above letter: I intend to give the end in the next chapter:
+meanwhile, fill the pipe, let's have a 'blow' together.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXXIII.
+
+
+
+Mistero! S'Apre Mendacia, Violente
+Strada Maestra In Citta E Campagna:
+La Verita, Se Docile, Quadagna
+A Passo Lo Stradello Lentamente.
+
+
+(Translated in the text of my first chapter.)
+
+On Thursday morning, November 30th, at sunrise, I was at my work, as usual.
+
+I assert, as an eye-witness, that most of the hands on the Eureka came
+to their work, and worked as usual.
+
+Whilst having a 'blow,' we would talk over again about the monster meeting
+of yesterday, thus spinning a yarn in the usual colonial style.
+
+The general impression was, that as soon as government knew in Melbourne
+the real state of the excited feelings of the diggers, the licence-hunt
+would be put a stop to.
+
+Towards ten o'clock was my hour for a working-man's breakfast.
+I used to retire to my tent from the heat of the mid-day, and on that same
+Thursday I set about, at once, to end my letter to Mr. Archer,
+because I was anxious to forward it immediately to Melbourne.
+
+Good reader, I copy now, word for word, the scrawl then penned,
+in great haste and excitement.
+
+
+Thursday, November 30th, 1854.
+
+Just on my preparing to go and post this letter, we are worried by the usual
+Irish cry, to run to Gravel-pits. The traps are out for licences,
+and playing hell with the diggers. If that be the case, I am not inclined
+to give half-a-crown for the whole fixtures at the Camp.
+
+I must go and see 'what's up.
+
+Always your affectionate,
+(Signed) CARBONI RAFFAELLO.
+(To) W. H. ARCHER, Esq., Acting Registrar-General, Melbourne.
+
+-----
+
+Why this identical letter of mine--now in the hands of James Macpherson Grant,
+M.L.C., Solicitor, Collins-street, where it will remain till Christmas
+for inspection, to be then returned to the owner--was not produced
+at my STATE TRIAL, was, and is still, a MYSTERY to me!
+
+Let's run to Bakery-hill.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXXIV.
+
+
+
+Quos Vult Perdere Deus Dementat.
+
+
+What's up? a licence hunt; old game. What's to be done? Peter Lalor was
+on the stump, his rifle in his hand, calling on volunteers to 'fall in'
+into ranks as fast as they rushed to Bakery-hill, from all quarters,
+with arms in their hands, just fetched from their tents. Alfred,
+George Black's brother, was taking down in a book the names of divisions
+in course of formation, and of their captains.
+
+I went up to Lalor, and the moment he saw me, he took me by the hand saying,
+"I want you, Signore: tell these gentlemen, (pointing to old acquaintances
+of ours, who were foreigners) that, if they cannot provide themselves
+with fire-arms, let each of them procure a piece of steel, five or six inches
+long, attached to a pole, and that will pierce the tyrants' hearts."
+Peter of course spoke thus in his friendly way as usual towards me.
+He was in earnest though. The few words of French he knows, he can pronounce
+them tolerably well, but Peter is no scholar in modern languages; therefore
+he then appointed me his aide-de-camp, or better to say his interpreter,
+and now I am proud to be his historian.
+
+Very soon after this, all the diggers 'fell in' in file of two-a-breast,
+and marched to the Eureka.
+
+Captain Ross of Toronto, was our standard-bearer. He hoisted down the
+Southern Cross from the flag-staff and headed the march.
+
+Patrick Curtain, the chosen captain of the pikemen, gave me his iron pike,
+and took my sword to head his division; I 'fell in' with John Manning who also
+had a pike, and all of us marched in order to the Eureka.
+
+I assert as an eye-witness, that we were within one thousand in the rank
+with all sort of arms, down to the pick and shovel.
+
+We turned by the Catholic church, and went across the gully. Of this I have
+perfect recollection: when the 'Southern Cross' reached the road leading to
+the Eureka on the opposite hill, the file of two-a-breast crossing the gully,
+extended backwards up to the hill where the Catholic church stands.
+I took notice of the circumstance at the time.
+
+We reached the hill where was my tent. How little did we know that some
+of the best among us had reached the place of their grave! Lalor gave
+the proper orders to defend ourselves among the holes in case the hunt
+should be attempted in our quarters.
+
+The red-tape was by far too cunning this time; redcoats, traps and troopers
+had retired to the Ballaarat Camp, and wanted a 'spell.'
+
+We determined, however, to put an end to their accursed licence-hunting,
+mock riot-act chopping, Vandemonian shooting down our mates in Gravel-pits.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXXV.
+
+
+
+Ad Opus Concilium Statutum.
+
+
+Peter Lalor, at our request, called in all the captains of division,
+then present, and the chief persons who had taken part in the movement.
+We entered a room some twelve feet square, in Diamond's store. An old
+European fox for such occasions, I took the right sort of precautions,
+that no spy might creep in among us. Black bottles and tumblers were placed on
+the table, as a blind to any intruder; 'et nunc satis, profani vulgus causa,'
+we proceeded to business.
+
+Present--
+
+1. There was one, whom it is not prudent to mention just now.
+
+2. Near him was a thick, short-necked, burly individual; his phisiog
+indicated at once that he was a priest-ridden. I won't trouble myself
+about his name.
+
+3. I'll begin with TIMOTHY HAYES. He was born in Ireland, but his outward
+appearance is that of a noble fellow--tall, stout, healthy-looking man,
+giving himself the airs of a high-born gentleman, fit to rule, direct,
+superintend, not to work; that's quite another thing. Of a liberal mind,
+however, and, above all, of a kind heart, and that covers a multitude of sins.
+
+4. EDWARD THONEN, a native of Elbertfeld, Prussia, five feet high,
+some thirty years old, thin, but robust, of vigorous health, used no razor.
+His eyes spoke determination and independence of character. One day
+in November, 1853, he called with his lemonade kegs at my hole in
+Sailor's Gully. A mate was served with a glass of lemonade--halloo!
+he must help at the windlass just at the moment he was tendering payment,
+and the shilling fell to the ground. Some words passed to the effect
+that six-pence a glass should be enough for lemonade. Thonen asked
+for his shilling; my mate directed him where the shilling lay; Thonen
+would see him d----d first before picking up his money like a dustman,
+and went away. I sent that identical shilling (stamped 1844), along with
+my little gold, to Rome; most astonishing! I had the presentiment at the time
+that I should have had occasion to relate the story. There was no mate
+on the gold-fields to match Thonen at chess-playing. He would turn his head,
+allow his opponent the move, and then he would give such a glance
+on the chess board, that the right piece would jump to the right place,
+as it were of its own accord. Shrewd, yet honest; benevolent, but scorning
+the knave; of deep thought, though prompt in action; Thonen possessed the head
+belonging to that cast of men whose word is their bond.
+
+5. JOHN MANNING, born in Ireland, and an Irishman to the back-bone,
+appeared above forty years of age. His head was bald, perhaps from thinking
+three times more than he ought; his forehead showed intelligence, but care
+was there with the plough--the plough of dreaming too much of virtue,
+believing the knaves are not the majority on earth. He had come young
+to this colony, had passed hard days, and so he had got the colonial habit,
+now and then, 'Divo jucundo Baccho cultum prestare;' hence his hair was
+fast turning grey. He was a self-educated man, but wanted judgment
+to discipline his fermenting brain, for the control of his heart,
+which was good, honest, always warm, affectionate to man, woman, and child.
+When he took his quill he was 'all there,' but soon manifested the sort
+of reading of his youth; and experience, however hard, had not yet taught him
+the sober reality of the things of the world--that is, he had remained
+an Irishman, not John Bullised.
+
+6. Oh! you long-legged VERN! with the eyes of an opossum, a common nose,
+healthy-looking cheeks, not very small mouth, no beard, long neck
+for Jack Ketch, broad shoulders, never broken down by too much work,
+splendid chest, long arms--the whole of your appearance makes you a lion
+amongst the fair sex, in spite of your bad English, worse German,
+abominable French. They say you come from Hanover, but your friends have seen
+too much in you of the Mexico-Peruvian. You belong to the school of the
+'Illuminated Cosmopolitans;' you have not a dishonest heart, but you believe
+in nothing except the gratification of your silly vanity, or ambition,
+as you call it.
+
+7. The next was a skinny bouncing curl who affected the tone and manners
+of a Californian; he acted throughout the part of a coward, I scorn to mention
+his name.
+
+8. Thank God there is among us a man; not so tall as thick, of a strong frame,
+some thirty five years old, honest countenance, sober forehead, penetrating
+look, fine dark whiskers. His mouth and complexion denote the Irish,
+and he is the earnest, well-meaning, no-two-ways, non-John-Bullised Irishman,
+PETER LALOR, in whose eyes, the gaseous heroism of demagogues, or the knavery
+of peg-shifters is an abomination, because his height of impudence consisted
+in giving the diggers his hand, and leaving with them his arm in pawn,
+for to jump the Ballaarat claim in St. Patrick's Hall. More power to you
+Peter! Old chummy, smother the knaves! they breed too fast in this colony.
+
+9. Myself, CARBONI RAFFAELLO, DA ROMA; Member of the College of Preceptors
+(1850), Bloomsbury-square, professor, interpreter and translator of
+the Italian, French, Spanish and German Language into English or vice versa
+late of 4, Castle-court, Birchin-lane, Cornhill, London; now, gold-digger
+of Ballaarat, was present.
+
+10. PATRICK CURTAIN, an old digger, well known among us; at the time
+a storekeeper; husband and father of a beloved family. His caste is that
+of the Irishman-Johnbull; tall, robust, some forty years old; he is no friend
+to much yabber-yabber; of deep thinking, though very few can guess what
+he is thinking of. He smiles but never laughs to his heart's content.
+Curtain was captain, and subsequently lieutenant of the pikemen division,
+when they chose HANRAHAN for their captain. Said pikemen division was among
+the first that took up arms on Thursday, November 30th, immediately after
+the licence-hunt. It was formed on Bakery-hill, and received Lalor
+on the stump with acclamation. It increased hourly and permanently;
+was the strongest division in the Eureka stockade; in comparison to others,
+it stood the most true to the 'Southern Cross,' and consequently suffered
+the greatest loss on the morning of the massacre. Now, to explain how both
+its gallant leaders escaped unhurt, safe as the Bank, so that a few weeks
+afterwards, both were working happy and jolly in broad day-light
+on Gravel-pits, within a rifle shot from the Camp, that would be a job
+of a quite different kind just at present: sufficient the trouble to mention;
+that when I came out of gaol, I met them both in a remunerative hole
+in Gravel-pits, as aforesaid.
+
+11. 12. There were two other individuals of the John-bull caste,
+perhaps cross-breed, who had taken up arms in the cause of the diggers,
+because their sly-trade was flagging; but, as a rotten case abides no handling,
+I will let them pass.
+
+Manning, handed over to Lalor the motion drawn up in my tent. Here it is:-
+
+Proposed by John Manning,
+
+Seconded by Carboni Raffaello,
+
+I. That Peter Lalor has acted worthy of the miners of Ballaarat,
+in organizing the armed men on Bakeryhill, against the wanton aggression
+from the Camp this morning.
+
+II. That he be desired to call in all captains of division now present
+on the spot, as well as other persons of importance, well-known good-wishers
+to the cause of the diggers.
+
+III. That said parties constitute the council-of-war for the defence.
+
+IV. Lalor to be the president pro. tem.
+
+V. That he proceed at once to the election of the Commander-in-Chief,
+by the majority of votes.
+
+Lalor tore up immediately the slip of paper containing the above motion,
+because he did not think it prudent to leave written things about in a
+public store. I transcribe it from the scrap left among the papers in my tent.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXXVI.
+
+
+
+Quousque Tandem Abutere, Toorak, Patientia Nostra?
+
+
+Lalor rose, and said:
+
+"Gentlemen, I find myself in the responsible position I now occupy,
+for this reason. The diggers, outraged at the unaccountable conduct
+of the Camp officials in such a wicked licence-hunt at the point
+of the bayonet, as the one of this morning, took it as an insult
+to their manhood, and a challenge to the determination come to at
+the monster meeting of yesterday. The diggers rushed to their tents for arms,
+and crowded on Bakery-hill. They wanted a leader. No one came forward,
+and confusion was the consequence. I mounted the stump, where you saw me,
+and called on the people to 'fall in' into divisions, according to
+the fire-arms they had got, and to chose their own captains out of the best men
+they had among themselves. My call was answered with unanimous acclamation,
+and complied to with willing obedience. The result, is, that I have been
+able to bring about that order, without which it would be folly to face
+the pending struggle like men. I make no pretensions to military knowledge.
+I have not the presumption to assume the chief command, no more than any other
+man who means well in the cause of the diggers. I shall be glad to see
+the best among us take the lead. In fact, gentlemen, I expected some one
+who is really well known (J. B. Humffray?) to come forward and direct
+our movement! However, if you appoint me your commander-in-chief, I shall not
+shrink; I mean to do my duty as a man. I tell you, gentlemen, if once I pledge
+my hand to the diggers, I will neither defile it with treachery, nor render it
+contemptible by cowardice."
+
+
+Brave Peter, you gave us your hand on the Eureka, and left there your arm:
+an incontestable evidence of Lalor's Pledge.
+
+Manning then proposed Raffaello, and pointed at his scars as an evidence
+of his tiger-pluck against the hated Austrian rule, which was now attempted,
+in defiance of God and man, to be transplanted into this colony.
+
+I declined, because, during the past winter, I had over-tasked my physical
+strength, and did not possess that vigour essential to such an emergency.
+Confidence is the bond necessary between the soldier and his officer.
+It was my decided opinion, however much a foreigner may be respected
+on the gold-fields, that the right man should be taken from among Britons.
+
+Vern here began a portentous lecture on military science, military discipline,
+military tactics, and other sorts of militaryism, but his English was
+so wretched, his ideas so sky-blathering, his martial ardour so knocking down,
+that no one could make anything out of his blabberdom.
+
+Of this I have perfect recollection. He was boasting eternally of his German
+rifle-brigade! 500 strong. That he had this brigade he urgently asserted;
+but where it was, that's the rub!
+
+No possible inquiry from Lalor could get at the bottom of Vern's prodigal
+brigade. Is, then, the grand secret buried within Vern's splendid chest?
+No; I mean to reveal it at four o'clock, Saturday, December 2nd.
+
+Carboni Raffaello, who had heard heaps of cant in old Europe, did count
+for nothing the oceanic military knowledge of Vern, in spite of his big
+trail-sword, that made more jingling than enough.
+
+I commended, in high terms, the conduct of Lalor during the morning,
+and it was my impression that he possessed the confidence of the diggers
+and should be their Commander-in-chief.
+
+Thonen seconded the motion. The first 'unnamed,' shewed approbation,
+and the appointment was carried by a majority of eleven to one.
+
+Peter Lalor thanked the council for the honour conferred on him,
+assured the members that he was determined to prepare the diggers
+to resist force by force.
+
+It was perfectly understood, and openly declared, in this first council-of-war,
+that we meant to organise for defence, and that we had taken up arms
+for no other purpose.
+
+The council adjourned to five o'clock in the evening.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXXVII.
+
+
+
+Lalor Stump, Bakery-Hill.
+
+
+Brave LALOR--
+Was found 'all there,'
+With dauntless dare,
+His men inspiring;
+To wolf or bear,
+Defiance bidding,
+He made us swear,
+Be faithful to the Standard, )
+For Victory or Death! ) (bis)
+
+-----
+
+On that Thursday, November 30th, more memorable than the disgraced Sunday,
+December 3rd, the SUN was on its way towards the west: in vain some scattered
+clouds would hamper its splendour--the god in the firmament generously
+ornamented them with golden fringes, and thus patches of blue sky far off
+were allowed to the sight, through the gilded openings among the clouds.
+
+The 'SOUTHERN CROSS' was hoisted up the flagstaff--a very splendid pole,
+eighty feet in length, and straight as an arrow. This maiden appearance
+of our standard, in the midst of armed men, sturdy, self-overworking
+gold-diggers of all languages and colours, was a fascinating object to behold.
+There is no flag in old Europe half so beautiful as the 'Southern Cross'
+of the Ballaarat miners, first hoisted on the old spot, Bakery-hill.
+The flag is silk, blue ground, with a large silver cross, similar to the one
+in our southern firmament; no device or arms, but all exceedingly chaste
+and natural.
+
+Captain Ross, of Toronto, was the bridegroom of our flag, and sword in hand,
+he had posted himself at the foot of the flag-staff, surrounded by
+his rifle division.
+
+Peter Lalor, our Commander-in-chief, was on the stump, holding with his
+left hand the muzzle of his rifle, whose butt-end rested on his foot.
+A gesture of his right hand, signified what he meant when he said,
+"It is my duty now to swear you in, and to take with you the oath
+to be faithful to the Southern Cross. Hear me with attention. The man who,
+after this solemn oath does not stand by our standard, is a coward in heart.
+
+"I order all persons who do not intend to take the oath,
+to leave the meeting at once.
+
+"Let all divisions under arms 'fall in' in their order
+round the flag-staff."
+
+The movement was made accordingly. Some five hundred armed diggers advanced
+in real sober earnestness, the captains of each division making the military
+salute to Lalor, who now knelt down, the head uncovered, and with the
+right hand pointing to the standard exclaimed a firm measured tone:
+
+"WE SWEAR BY THE SOUTHERN CROSS TO STAND TRULY BY EACH OTHER,
+AND FIGHT TO DEFEND OUR RIGHTS AND LIBERTIES."
+
+An universal well rounded AMEN, was the determined reply; some five hundred
+right hands stretched towards our flag.
+
+The earnestness of so many faces of all kinds of shape and colour;
+the motley heads of all sorts of size and hair; the shagginess of so many
+beards of all lengths and thicknesses; the vividness of double the number
+of eyes electrified by the magnetism of the southern cross; was one of those
+grand sights, such as are recorded only in the history of
+'the Crusaders in Palestine.'
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXXVIII.
+
+
+
+Un Bon Calcio, E La Canaglia,
+Stronga Va Come La Paglia.
+
+
+The drill afterwards was gone through with eagerness.
+
+Another scene, though of a different kind all together, was going on
+at a corner of the above picture.
+
+Judas Iscariot, 'Goodenough,' was among us, in the garb of a fossiker;
+he appeared to me, then, to be under the influence of drink;
+so Vandemonian-like were his shouts about standing up and fighting for rights
+and liberties; and burning down the camp in a blaze like the late Eureka Hotel.
+
+Mind good reader, I tell you no joke, I am not in humour just now to spin
+a yarn.--I wished to shame the fellow for his villainy on such a solemn
+occasion. The fellow persisted in his drunken shouts. I lost my temper,
+and gave the scoundrel such a respectable kick, in a less respectable region,
+with a most respectable boot of mine, that it served me right when both
+my new watertight boots were robbed from my shins by Goodenough's satellites
+on the subsequent Sunday, at the Ballaarat Camp.
+
+The Thursday's sun is setting: we returned to the Eureka. I had to attend
+the 'Council for the Defence.'
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XXXIX.
+
+
+
+Disciplina, Suprema Lex In Bello.
+
+
+In the afternoon, our camp on the Eureka was enclosed in by slabs,
+near-handy thrown down at random. All diggers who had been able to procure
+fire-arms kept coming in, in right earnest, and formed new divisions.
+The pikemen grew stronger and stronger. Drilling was tolerably progressing.
+We were of all nations and colours. Lalor gave me his consent and order
+to direct all foreigners in their respective language, however little
+they knew of the English, to fall in in divisions according to the arms
+they had got; and here I solemnly declare, to whomsoever it may concern,
+that up to four o'clock of Saturday there was not one single division
+distinguished by nationality or religion.
+
+The armed men numbered now (six o'clock) about five hundred.
+
+Vern's gall was fermenting, but on PETER LALOR being proclaimed
+Commander-in-chief, the appointment was ratified by hurrah! from the diggers.
+
+There was such a decided intention to do 'something' with the strong arm,
+and at once, that I was called on the stump. I requested the diggers
+to give us time for deliberation, and pledged my word that I would inform them
+of the result. 'Go a-head! Great works!' was the shout.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XL.
+
+
+
+Beati Qui Sunt Pacifici, Quoniam Filii Dei Vocabuntur.
+
+
+It was dark: myself took the light in the council room.
+
+Father P. Smyth and Mr. George Black were present; both looking serious
+and anxious.
+
+All of us were much concerned, and felt the responsibility of our position.
+By this time the diggers from all parts had swelled to the number of
+eight hundred. They were not clamorous, they wanted to know what
+was determined on by the leaders.
+
+Proposed by Black, seconded by Manning...That a deputation from
+the armed diggers, should be forthwith sent to the Camp--
+
+1. To demand--that was our temper in those days--the immediate release
+of those diggers who had been dragged to the lock-up in the morning hunt,
+for want of the licence.
+
+2. To demand from Commissioner Rede a pledge not to come out any more
+for licence-hunting.
+
+Two of us were to form the deputation, and proceed at once.
+
+Father Smyth proposed Mr. Black, Lalor proposed Signor Raffaello:
+agreed to unanimously. This news, being made public to the diggers,
+was well received by all; and the council kept sitting until our return.
+
+The deputation was accompanied by Father Smyth. It was a starry night,
+and rather cold; the moon shone in all its southern splendour.
+On approaching the main road, the noisy band of Row's Circus, and the colonial
+cursing and shouting from inveterate grog-bibbers, forced into my mind
+the meditation, 'Unde bella et pugna infer vos?' etc.--James, chap. iv.
+
+We met here and there several groups, who were anxiously discussing the events
+of the day, and the probable consequences. Mr. Black kindly and plainly
+informed them of our mission. On reaching the bridge, we found it guarded
+by the police. Father Smyth had an easy pass, and went by himself to speak
+first at head-quarters, for the safety of our persons.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XLI.
+
+
+
+The Eureka Stockade.
+The Consequence Of Some Pirates Wanting On Quarter-Deck A Rebellion.
+
+
+
+At last the deputation was before King Rede, whose shadow by moonshine,
+as he held his arm a la Napoleon, actually inspired me with reverence;
+but behold! only a marionette was before us. Each of his words,
+each of his movements, was the vibration of the telegraphic wires directed
+from Toorak. He had not a wicked heart; some knew him for his benevolence,
+and he helped many an honest digger out of trouble. Once I had seen him
+with my mate, Paul Brentani, about manufacturing bricks from the splendid clay
+of Gravel-pits. Mr. Rede received us as a gentleman, and, by way of
+encouragement, said to Paul, 'Je veux bien vous aider, car tout est encore
+a batir a Ballaarat, et il nous faut des briques--revenez me voir.'
+And yet, on the gold-field, this man was feared by the few who could not
+help it, respected by the many--detested by all, because he was the
+Resident Commissioner--that is, all the iniquities of officialdom at the time
+were indiscriminately visited on his gold-lace cap, which fact so infatuated
+his otherwise not ordinary brains, that they protruded through his eyes,
+whenever he was sure he had to perform a dooty. I would willingly
+turn burglar to get hold of the whole of the correspondence between him
+and Toorak. I feel satisfied I would therein unravel the mystery
+of the Eureka massacre.
+
+Rede, after all, was neither the right man, nor in the right place,
+for Sir Charles Hotham.
+
+Sub-inspector Taylor, with his silver-lace cap, blue frock, and jingling sword,
+so precise in his movement, so Frenchman-like in his manners,
+such a puss-in-boots, after introducing the deputation, placed himself
+at the right of the Commissioner, and never spoke; though, on accompanying us
+from the bridge, having recognised me, he said, "We have been always
+on good terms with the diggers, and I hope we may keep friends still;"--
+and gave me a smile of sincerity. He, perhaps, was ignorant, as well as
+the deputation, that, on quarter-deck, some pirates wanted a rebellion.
+
+At the left of Mr. Rede, there was a gentleman who inspired us with confidence.
+His amiable countenance is of the cast that commands respect, not fear.
+The ugliness of his eyes prejudices you against him at first; let him,
+however, turn them upon you in his own benevolent way, you are sure
+they mean no harm: within a pair of splendid whiskers, of the finest blond,
+there is such a genteel nose and mouth, such a fine semi-serious forehead,
+that the whole is the expression of his good sound heart, that loves truth,
+even from devils. It was Charles Henry Hackett, police magistrate.
+
+The place of our palaver was exactly one yard down hill, near the old gum tree,
+in front of the present Local Court.
+
+Mr. Rede asked our names, and cautioned us that our message would be reported
+at head-quarters. He who had a gang of the vilest spies at his bidding,
+perhaps, indeed, forced upon him, now suspected us as such, and told us
+pretty plainly, that he thought it not prudent to take us to his residence,
+the camp being prepared against a supposed attack from the diggers.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XLII.
+
+
+
+Invanum Laboravimus.
+
+
+Mr. Black began, in plain and straightforward language, to make
+a truthful statement of the exasperated feelings of the diggers, courageously
+censuring the conduct of the Commissioner in his licence-hunt of the morning,
+reminding him of the determination with which the diggers had passed
+the resolutions at the monster meeting of yesterday. "To say the least,
+it was very imprudent of you, Mr. Rede, to challenge the diggers at the point
+of the bayonet. Englishmen will not put up with your shooting down
+any of our mates, because he has not got a licence."
+
+Mr. Rede: "Now Mr. Black, how can you say that I ever gave such an order
+as to shoot down any digger for his not having a licence?" and he proceeded
+to give his version of the occurrence. Master Johnson wanted a little play,
+and rode licence-hunting; was met with impertinent shouts of "Joe, Joe,"
+and reported a riot. Daddy Rede must share in the favourite game,
+and rode to crack the riot act. The red-coats turned out. The diggers
+mobbed together among the holes, and several shots were fired at the traps.
+The conclusion: Three of the ring-leaders of the mob had been pounced upon,
+and were safe in chokey.
+
+Mr. Black manfully vindicated the diggers, by observing how they had been
+insulted; that Britons hated to be bullied by the soldiery, and concluded
+by stating our first 'demand.'
+
+Mr. Rede, startled at our presumption, breathed out "Demand!--First of all,
+I object to the word, because, myself, I am only responsible to government,
+and must obey them only: and secondly, were those men taken prisoners
+because they had not licences? Not at all. This is the way in which
+the honest among the diggers are misled. Any bad character gets up
+a false report: t soon finds it way in certain newspapers, and the
+Camp officials are held up as the cause of all the mischief."
+
+Mr. Black would not swallow such a perfidious insinuation.
+
+Mr. Rede continued: "Now, Mr. Black, look at the case how it really stands.
+Those men are charged with rioting; they will be brought before the magistrate,
+and it is out of my power to interfere with the course of justice."
+
+Mr. Hackett spoke his approbation to the Commissioner.
+
+Mr. Black: "Will you accept bail for them to any amount you please
+to mention?"
+
+A consultation ensued between Rede and Hackett. Bail would be accepted
+for two of the prisoners. Father Smyth would bring the required sureties
+tomorrow morning.
+
+Mr. Black proceeded to our second demand.
+
+Mr. Rede took that for a full stop; and launched into declamation:
+"What do you think, gentlemen, Sir Charles Hotham would say to me,
+if I were to give such a pledge? Why Sir Charles Hotham would have at once
+to appoint another Resident Commissioner in my place!" and concluded
+with the eternal cant of all silver and gold lace, "I have a dooty to perform,
+I know my duty, I must 'nolens volens' adhere to it."
+
+In vain Mr. Black entered the pathetic; and expostulated with the Commissioner,
+who had it in his power to prevent bloodshed.
+
+Mr. Rede: "It is all nonsense to make me believe that the present agitation
+is intended solely to abolish the licence. Do you really wish
+to make me believe that the diggers of Ballaarat won't pay any longer
+two pounds for three months? The licence is a mere cloak to cover
+a democratic revolution."
+
+Mr. Black acknowledged that the licence fee, and especially the disreputable
+mode of collecting it at the point of the bayonet, were not the only grievances
+the diggers complained of. They wanted to be represented in the
+Legislative Council; they wanted to 'unlock the lands.'
+
+Carboni Raffaello, who had yet not opened his mouth, said: "Mr. Rede,
+I beg you would allow me to state, that the immediate object of the diggers
+taking up arms, was to resist any further licence-hunting. I speak
+for the foreign diggers whom I here represent. We object to the Austrian rule
+under the British flag. If you would pledge yourself not to come out
+any more for the licence, until you have communicated with Son Excellence,
+I would give you my pledge...--(I meant to say, that I was willing
+to pledge myself, and try if possible to assuage the excitement,
+and wait till 'our Charley' had sent up a decided answer...")--but I was
+instantly interrupted by Father Smyth who addressed me imperatively:
+"Give no pledge: sir, you have no power to do so."
+
+This interruption, which I perfectly recollect, and the circumstance that
+on our going and returning, the said Father Smyth continually kept on a 'sotto
+voce' conversation with Mr. Black only, were, and are still, mysteries to me.
+
+Mr. Rede, who had not failed to remark the abruptness with which
+Father Smyth had cut me short; joined both his hands, and with the stretched
+forefinger tapping me on both hands, which were clenched as in prayer,
+addressed to me these identical remarkable words, "My dear fellow,
+the licence is a mere watchword of the day, and they make a cat's-paw of you."
+
+Mr. Black undertook my defence: the words above stuck in my throat, though.
+
+Mr. Hackett, on being consulted, assented that Mr. Rede could promise us
+to take into consideration the present excited feelings of the diggers,
+and use his best judgment as to a further search for licences on the morrow.
+
+Mr. Rede: "Yes, yes; but, understand me, gentlemen. I give no pledge."
+
+The usual ceremonies being over, Sub-inspector Taylor kindly escorted us
+to the bridge, gave the pass-word, and to go--just as any one else will go
+in this land, who puts his confidence in red-tape--disappointed.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XLIII.
+
+
+
+La Volpe Cambia Il Pelo, Ma Non La Pelle;
+Cambia La Pelle Il Serpe, Non Il Veleno:
+Il Cane Non Abbaia Col Ventre Pieno;
+Vestesi Il Lupo In Pecora Tra Liagnelle.
+Antica Storia;
+Ma Senza Gloria.
+
+
+By this time, the main road was crowded. The men were anxiously waiting
+to know our success. Mr. Black calmed their excitement as kindly
+as circumstances admitted. We returned to our camp at the Eureka. Mr. Black
+rendered an account of our mission with that candour which characterises him
+as a gentleman. I wished to correct him in one point only, and said,
+my impression was, that the Camp, choked with red-coats, would quash
+Mr. Rede's 'good judgment,' get the better of his sense, if he had any
+of either, and that he would come out licence-hunting on an improved style.
+
+Peter Lalor adjourned the meeting to five o'clock in the morning.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XLIV.
+
+
+
+Accingere Gladio Tuo Super Femur Tuum.
+
+
+On Friday, December 1st, the sun rose as usual. The diggers came in armed,
+voluntarily, and from all directions: and soon they were under drill,
+as the day before. So far as I know, not one digger had turned to work.
+It may have happened, that certain Cornishmen, well known for their
+peculiar propensity, of which they make a boast to themselves, to pounce
+within an inch of their neighbour's shaft, were not allowed to indulge in
+'encroaching.' This, however, I assert as a matter of fact, that the Council
+of the Eureka Stockade never gave or hinted at any order to stop the
+usual work on the gold-field.
+
+Towards ten o'clock, news reached our camp that the red coats were under arms,
+and there would be another licence-hunting.
+
+The flames did not devour the Eureka Hotel with the same impetuosity
+as we got up our stockade. Peter Lalor gave the order: Vern had the charge,
+and was all there with his tremendous sword. "Wo ist der Raffaello!
+Du, Baricaden bauen," and all heaps of slabs, all available timber
+was soon higgledy-piggledy thrown all round our camp. Lalor then gave
+directions as to the position each division should take round the holes,
+and soon all was on the 'qui vive.'
+
+Had Commissioner Rede dared to rehearse the farce of the riot-act
+cracking as on Gravel-pits, he would have met with a warm reception
+from the Eureka boys. It was all the go that morning.
+
+No blue or red coat appeared.--It was past one o'clock: John Bull
+must have his dinner. Lalor spoke of the want of arms and ammunition,
+requested that every one should endeavour to procure of both as much
+as possible, but did certainly not counsel or even hint that stores
+should be pressed for it.
+
+A German blacksmith, within the stockade was blazing, hammering and pointing
+pikes as fast as his thick strong arms allowed him: praising the while
+his past valour in the wars of Mexico, and swearing that his pikes would fix
+red-toads and blue pissants especially. He was making money as fast
+any Yankee is apt on such occasions, and it was a wonder to look at
+his coarse workmanship, that would hardly stick an opossum, though his pikes
+were meant for kangaroos and wild dogs.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XLV.
+
+
+
+Populus Ex Terra Crescit: Multitudo Hominum Est Populus;
+Ergo, Multitudo Hominum Ex Terra Crescit.
+
+
+Between four and five o'clock of same afternoon, we became aware of
+the silly blunder, which proved fatal to our cause. Some three or four hundred
+diggers arrived from Creswick-creek, a gold-field famous for its pennyweight
+fortunes--grubbed up through hard work, and squandered in dissipation
+among the swarm of sly-grog sellers in the district.
+
+We learned from this Creswick legion that two demagogues had been stumping
+at Creswick, and called the diggers there to arms to help their brothers
+on Ballaarat, who were worried by scores, by the perfidious hounds of the Camp.
+They were assured that on Ballaarat there was plenty of arms, ammunitions,
+forage, and provisions, and that preparations on a grand scale were making
+to redress once for all the whole string of grievances. They had only
+to march to Ballaarat, and would find there plenty of work, honour, and glory.
+
+I wonder how honest Mr. Black could sanction with his presence,
+such suicidal rant, such absurd bosh of that pair of demagogues,
+who hurried down these four hundred diggers from Creswick, helpless, grog-worn,
+that is, more or less dirty and ragged, and proved the greatest nuisance.
+One of them, MICHAEL TUEHY, behaved valiantly and so I shall say no more.
+
+Of course something must be done. Thonen was the purveyor. The Eureka butcher
+on the hill gave plenty of meat, and plenty of bread was got from all
+the neighbouring stores, and paid for. A large fire was lit in the middle
+of the stockade, and thus some were made as comfortable as circumstances
+admitted; others were quartered at the tents of friends; the greater part,
+soon guessing how they had been humbugged, returned to their old quarters.
+
+Arms and ammunition were our want. Men were there enough; each and all ready
+to fight: such was the present excitement; but blue and red coats cannot
+be driven off with fists alone. Lalor gave all his attention to the subject,
+but would not consent yet to press stores for it.
+
+Vern was perpetually expecting every moment his German Rifle Brigade.
+Have patience till to-morrow.
+
+In the evening a report was made to the Council, that a reinforcement
+of soldiers from Melbourne was on the road. Captains Ross and Nealson
+hastened with their divisions across the bush to intercept the expected troops,
+so as to get at their arms and ammunition. All proved in vain.
+
+When a revolution explodes as conspired and planned by able leaders,
+it is usually seen that it was their care from the very beginning,
+that arms and ammunition should be at hand when and wherever required;
+while usury, ambition, or vengeance lavishly provide the money to render
+the revolution popular: but we had never dreamed of making any preparation,
+because we diggers had taken up arms solely in self-defence; and as up to
+Saturday the Council of the Eureka Stockade counted in the majority honest men,
+themselves hard-working diggers, they would not turn burglars
+or permit anybody to do so in their name.
+
+Truly, I heard from Manning, that a certain committee kept on their
+hallucinated yabber-yabber at the Star Hotel. I never was there,
+and know nothing about Star blabs. They, with the exception of Vern,
+were not with us, thank God; up to Saturday four o'clock any how.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XLVI.
+
+
+
+Non Irascimini.
+
+
+Saturday morning. The night had been very cold, we had kept watch for fear
+of being surprised; every hour the cry, was "The military are coming."
+
+Vern had enlarged the stockade across the Melbourne road,
+and down the Warrenheip Gully.
+
+Suppose, even that all diggers who had fire arms had been present and plucky,
+yet no man in his right senses will ever give Vern the credit
+for military tactics, if that gallant officer had thought that an acre
+of ground on the surface of a hill accessible with the greatest ease
+on every side, simply fenced in by a few slabs placed at random,
+could be defended by a handful of men, for the most part totally destitute
+of military knowledge, against a disciplined soldiery, backed by swarms
+of traps and troopers.
+
+Such, however, was our infatuation, that now we considered the stockade
+stronger, because it looked more higgledy-piggledy.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XLVII.
+
+
+
+Non Nobis, Non Nobis, Sed Pax Vobiscum.
+
+
+It was eight o'clock. Drilling was going on as on the previous day.
+Father Smyth came inside the stockade: it was my watch. He looked
+very earnest, a deep anxiety about the hopelessness of our struggle,
+must have grieved his Irish heart. He obtained permission from Lalor
+to speak to those under arms, who belonged to his Congregation.
+Vern consented, and Manning announced it to the men. Father Smyth told them,
+that the government Camp was under arms, some seven or eight hundred strong;
+that he had received positive information, that government had sent
+other reinforcements from Melbourne, which would soon reach Ballaarat;
+warned them against useless bloodshed; reminded them that they were Christians;
+and expressed his earnest desire to see all of them at Mass
+on the following (Sunday) morning.
+
+Father Smyth, your advice was kindly received; if it did not thrive,
+was it because you sowed it on barren ground?
+
+The following document may in time help to bring forth truth to light:-
+
+
+Colonial Secretary's Office,
+Melbourne, lst December, 1854.
+Rev. Sir,
+
+In acknowledging the receipt of your letter of
+yesterday's date, I am desired by his Excellency
+to thank you for the earnest efforts which, in your
+professional calling, you are making to allay the
+disturbances. Unless the government enforce the
+laws which may be in operation, disorder and
+licentiousness must prevail.
+
+You know a commission is issued for the purpose
+of inquiring into the state and condition of the
+digging population: until they make their report,
+the laws his Excellency found in force must be
+obeyed.
+
+I have the honour to be, Rev. Sir,
+Your most obedient servant,
+J. MOORE, A.C.S.
+The Rev. Patrick Smyth,
+Catholic Priest, Ballaarat.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XLVIII.
+
+
+The Things We Ardently Wish For In This Life, Either Never Come To Pass,
+Or If They Do It Is Too Late. Hence, 'Better Late Than Never.'
+
+
+The whole of the morning passed off as quietly as any well wisher to our cause
+could desire. Towards twelve o'clock it was our decision that licence-hunting
+was over, for the day any how, since no digger recollected a search for licence
+taking place on a Saturday afternoon. Our talk was of the coming meeting
+of the reform league at two o'clock on Sunday, at the Adelphi, as announced
+at the monster meeting on Wednesday.
+
+The impression was almost general, that 'Charley' would soon dismiss
+the hated brood of our commissioners, and things would then be 'all right.'
+'Off to get a bite,' was the pass-word.
+
+I assert as a matter of fact, and a living eye-witness, that between
+one and two o'clock on Saturday, December 2nd, 1854, the Eureka stockade
+was comparatively deserted. Those who remained (some one hundred) were such,
+as either had a long distance to go to reach their tents, and the day
+was very hot, or such as had no tent or friend on Ballaarat. I took notice
+of this very circumstance from my tent, the second from the stockade,
+on the hill, west, whilst frying a bit of steak on the fire of my tent chimney,
+facing said stockade: Manning was peeling an onion. I transcribe the above
+from the identical note I had taken down on my diary, at the identical hour
+aforesaid, and can afford to challenge contradiction.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XLVIX.
+
+
+
+Taedet Animam Meam Vitae Meae.
+
+
+The news of our private, though never acknowledged, disbandment
+must soon have reached the Camp.
+
+THE LORD GOD OF ISRAEL UNRAVEL THE MYSTERY.
+
+What a nonsense of mine to endeavour to swell up the Eureka stockade
+to the level of a Sebastopol!!
+
+Good reader, I have to relate the story of a shocking murder, a disgrace
+to the Christian name.
+
+I am a Catholic, and believe in the life everlasting. On the day of judgment
+it will go milder with the Emperor Nicholas, than with the man
+whoever he may be, that prompted and counted on the Eureka massacre
+on the Sunday morning, December 3rd, 1854.
+
+At four o'clock, the diggers crowded again towards the stockade.
+The divisions of Ross and Nealson had returned from their excursions
+and were under arms. The scene became soon animated, and the usual drilling
+was pushed on with more ardour than ever.
+
+John Basson Humffray, of whom nothing was seen or heard since the previous
+Wednesday, now introduced, through a letter in his own handwriting;
+addressed 'To the Commander-in-Chief of the armed diggers, Eureka,'
+a Doctor Kenworthy, as surgeon, because he (Humffray) feared that a collision
+between the diggers and the military would soon take place.
+
+Peters, the spy, was at the same time within the stockade.
+
+The 'surgeon' had his Yankee face under a bell-top (French hat): he entered
+into conversation with me in person. I had my sword in hand, and was on watch.
+We began to talk about MAZZINI and Captain FORBES: this latter,
+a brave American officer, fought in the late struggle at Rome (1848).
+I perfectly recollect, that, pointing with a smile to our barricade,
+I told this Kenworthy, we had thrown them up for our defence against
+licence-hunting. There is a living witness to the above circumstance,
+a countryman of mine, whose name I do not remember just now, but he wore
+at the time a red shirt, with picks and shovels all over it.
+
+Previous to this, Vern, whose silly vanity would by no means allow him
+to put up with his not having been elected Commander-in-Chief, all on a sudden
+cried out in his sort of bombast, "Here they are coming, boys: now I will
+lead you to death or victory!"--actually a band of men was tramping
+full speed towards the stockade.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter L
+
+
+
+Narravere Patres Nostri
+Et Nos Narravimus Omnes.
+
+
+Was it then the long, long-looked for German Rifle Brigade? Here is
+it's four-horned name--I copy from a slip of paper I wrote in pencil
+on that very Saturday, as the name was too long and difficult for me
+to remember--'The Independent Californian Rangers' Revolver Brigade.'
+
+I should say they numbered a couple of hundred, looking Californian enough,
+armed with a Colt's revolver of large size, and many had a Mexican knife
+at the hip.
+
+Here is the very circumstance when M`Gill made his appearance for the first
+time within the stockade; I recollect perfectly well the circumstance
+when a Mr. Smith, of the American Adams's Express, was holding the bridle
+of the horse, from which said M`Gill dismounted.
+
+James M`Gill is of the breed on the other side of the Pacific. He is thought
+to have been educated in a military academy, and certainly, he has the manners
+of a young gentleman of our days. He is rather short, not so much
+healthy-looking as wide awake. 'What's up?' is his motto. This colony
+will sober him down, and then he will attend more to 'what's to be done.'
+His complexion bears the stamp of one born of a good family, but you can read
+in the white of his eyes, in the colouring of his cheeks, in the paleness
+of his lips, that his heart is for violence. When he gets a pair
+of solid whiskers, he may pass for a Scotchman, for he has already a nose
+as if moulded in Scotland. He speaks the English language correctly,
+and when not prompted by the audacity of his heart, shows good sense,
+delicate feelings, a pleasing way of conversation. His honour was impeached
+by Vern, who never came up to the scratch, though; witness, Mr. John Campbell,
+of 'The Age' office.
+
+When a man is dead, there and then he is himself the horrible evidence
+of corruption; but, as long as he lives there is hopes for fair play,
+and hear his evidence on the resurrection of life: hence the moral courage
+to assert the truth, shuts out the physical strength for blather to shampoo
+the lie; and an honest upright man of education and a Christian leaves
+'duelering' to fools.
+
+M`Gill is not wicked in heart, though he may not yet have settled-principles.
+If this world be such a puzzle even for grey-heads, who have seen enough of it,
+what then must it be for one, come out of College and learning life
+on the gold-fields? Hence, if I say that he helped with others to draw
+the chestnuts out of the Eureka Stockade, for some old Fox, I cannot
+offend him.--Who was the accursed old Fox? Patience, there is a God.--
+When I was in gaol, I was not vexed at hearing him at liberty and happy:
+I could not possibly wish my misery to any one; but his boast on Ballaarat
+that his friend Dr. Kenworthy had procured him a 'written free pardon'
+did smother me with bitterness.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LI.
+
+
+
+Tota Domus Duo Sunt, Iidem Parentque Jubentque!
+
+
+A confusion ensued which baffles description; marching, counter-marching,
+orders given by everybody, attended to by nobody. This blustering concern,
+when brought forward on the stage at the State Trials, appeared so much
+to the heart's content of his Honour, of his and my learned friend Mr. Ireland,
+that I must offer it here, 'nolens volens', for the confirmation of the
+Cracker-of-high-treason-indictments' approbation.
+
+Thomas Allen examined.--(See Report of the Nigger-Rebel State Trial,
+in 'The Age', February 24th, 1855.)
+
+"This witness was so very deaf that the Attorney-General
+had actually to bawl out (oh! pity the lungs!) the
+questions necessary to his examination. He stated,
+he kept the Waterloo coffee-house and store at the
+Eureka. He had just returned from Melbourne on the
+Saturday, December 2nd. He heard inside the stockade
+the word to 'fall in' for drill. Saw them go through
+several military evolutions. They did not exactly go
+through them in a military manner, but in the way in
+which what call an 'awkward squad' might do.--
+(I believe you, Old Waterloo; go a-head). He had been
+at the battle of Waterloo, and knew what military
+evolutions were. Saw one squad with pikes and another
+with rifles. He heard one of them say, 'Shoulder poles,'
+then he said, 'Order poles,' 'Ground arms,'
+'Stand at ease,' 'Pick up poles,' 'Shoulder arms,'
+'Right face,' 'Quick march,' 'Right counter march,'
+and they were then marched for more than two hours.
+After that he saw them 'fall in three deep,' and were
+then told (by Captain Hanrahan) to prepare to
+'receive cavalry,' and 'charge cavalry'--Poke your pike
+into the guts of the horse, and draw it out from under
+their tail.
+
+" After that, in the evening, he saw the man who was in
+command again form his men around him, and he seemed to
+be reading a general order for the night. After it got
+night, one of them came up to him and said, 'Now,
+Old Waterloo, you must come and join us,' and he threw
+down a pike which he told him to take. He said, 'No;
+it is such a d----d ugly one, I'll have nothing to do
+with it.' Another came, and witness asked what bounty
+he gave, saying 50 pounds was little enough for an old
+Waterloo man. Because he would not join them he was
+taken into custody by them, and was guarded by three
+men with pikes at his door. (Great works!) All this
+was on Saturday. His tent was the second inside the
+stockade. His tent and all his property was destroyed
+by fire, it all amounted to 200 pounds. He believed it
+was set fire to by the police." (And so it was, old
+Waterloo-no-bolter, good-hearted old man as ever lived
+in the world. If you wish call for a copy of this
+book; do.)
+
+
+NOTICE
+
+GREAT WORKS!!
+
+This day, Saturday, November 10th, 1855. A glorious day for Ballaarat:
+Peter Lalor, our late Commander-in-Chief, being elected by unanimous
+acclamation, Member of the Legislative Council for this 'El Dorado.'
+I spoke at the Camp face to face with James M`Gill. We shook hands
+with mutual respect and friendship.
+
+M`Gill, at my request, looked full in my eyes, and assured me, that the order
+old Waterloo speaks of, was to the effect of appointing officers for watch
+at the stockade, for 'out-posts' to keep a sharp look-out, for march to
+intercept reinforcements; in short, an order for military discipline,
+very necessary under the prevailing excitement. Said order for the night
+(Saturday, December 2nd) was drawn up by his command, and written black
+on white by Alfred, the brother of George Black.
+
+M`Gill further stated that the supposed 'Declaration of Independence,'
+on the model of the American one, is a gratuitous falsehood, which must have
+originated from some well-disposed for, or well-affected to, Toorak small-beer.
+Hence,
+
+James M`Gill hereby directs me to challenge the production of the document
+in question, either the original or copy of it, of course with satisfactory
+evidence of its being a genuine article.
+
+I express the hope that H. R. Nicholls, ex-member of the Local Court,
+Ballaarat, will take notice of the above.
+
+Let us return to the Eureka stockade.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LII.
+
+
+
+Quadrupedante Putrem Sonitu Quatit Ungula Campum.
+
+
+The excitement was of Satan. It was reported, the whole of the Melbourne road
+was swarming with fresh reinforcements. The military would soon attack
+the stockade, but Vern would lead the diggers to death or glory.
+
+I went out to get positive information, and I did see some two hundred
+red-coats stationed under arms at the foot of Black hill. The general
+impression spread like wild-fire that the diggers would now all be slaughtered.
+I returned, and was anxious to communicate with Lalor. The council room
+was guarded by Californian faces, perfect strangers to me. The 'pass-word'
+had been changed, and I was refused admittance.
+
+Old colonial-looking fellows rode to and fro from all parts: some brought
+canisters of gunpowder and bags of shot; others, fire-arms and boxes of caps.
+They had been pressing stores.
+
+All at once burst out a clamorous shouting. Captain Ross was entering
+the stockade in triumph with some old fire-arms and a splendid horse.
+They had been sticking up some three or four tents, called the Eureka
+government camp. Great Works! that could have been done long before,
+without so much fuss about it; and, forsooth, what a benefit to mankind
+in general, that Commissioner Amos, ever since, was so frightened as to get
+his large eyes involuntary squinting after his mare!!
+
+Sly-grog sellers got also a little profit out of the Eureka Stockade.
+A fellow was selling nobblers out of a keg of brandy hanging from his neck.
+It required Peter Lalor in person to order this devil-send out of the stockade.
+
+'Press for,' was the order of the hour. Two men on horseback were crossing
+the gully below. Young Black--the identical one with a red shirt and blue cap,
+who took down the names round Lalor's stump, on Bakery-hill on
+Thursday morning, and who, to the best of my knowledge never had yet been
+within the stockade--came out of the committee-room, and hastened up to me
+with the order to pick out some men and press those two horses in.
+
+I gave him a violent look, and made him understand that 'I won't do
+the bushranger yet.' The order was however executed by fresh hands
+entirely unknown to me, who rushed towards the horsemen, shouted to both
+of them to stop, and with the threat of the revolver compelled them
+to ride their horses within the stockade. I felt disgusted at the violence.
+
+The reign of terror will not strike root among Britons because the
+Austrian rule does not thrive under the British flag; and so here is
+a crab-hole that brave Lalor alone can properly log up.
+
+I asked in German from Vern the 'pass-word,' and on whispering 'Vinegar-hill'
+to the sentinels, I was allowed to get out of the Stockade.
+
+"Nein, sagte ich mirselbst, nein, eine solche eckliche Wirthschaft
+habe ich noch nie geseh'n.
+
+"Nom d'un nom! c'est affreux. Ces malheureuf sont-ils donc possedes?
+
+"Odi profanum vulgus et arceo.
+
+"Por vida deDios! por supuesto jo fuera el Duke de Alba, esos Gavachos,
+carajo, yo los pegaria de bueno.
+
+"Che casa del diavolo, per Dio! Che ti pare! niente meno si spalanca
+l'inferno. Alla larga! Sor Fattorone: Pronti denari, Fan patti chiari.
+Minca coglione!"
+
+Such were more or less the expressions to give vent to my feelings
+on my way to the Prince Albert Hotel, Bakery-hill, to meet there a friend
+or two, especially my old mate, Adolphus Lessman, Lieutenant of the Rifle-men.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LIII.
+
+
+
+Turbatus Est A Furore Oculus Meus.
+
+
+The following is the scene, so characteristic of the times, as it was
+going on at the Prince Albert:--
+
+"Who's the landlord here?" was the growl from a sulky ruffian,
+some five feet high, with the head of a bull-dog, the eyes of a vulture,
+sunken in a mass of bones, neglected beard, sun-burnt, grog-worn,
+as dirty as a brute,--the known cast, as called here in this colony,
+of a 'Vandemonian,' made up of low, vulgar manners and hard talk,
+spiked at each word, with their characteristic B, and infamous B again;
+whilst a vile oath begins and ends any of their foul conceits. Their glory
+to stand oceans of grog, joined to their benevolence of 'shouting'
+for all hands, and their boast of black-eye giving, nose-smashing,
+knocking in of teeth, are the three marks of their aristocracy.
+Naturally cowards, they have learned the secret that 'Pluck,' does just as well
+for their foul jobs. Grog is pluck, and the more grog they swallow,
+the more they count on success. Hence their frame, however robust by nature,
+wears out through hard drink, and goes the way of all flesh, rarely with
+grey hairs. It is dangerous to approach them; they know the dodge
+how to pick up a quarrel for the sake of gratifying their appetite
+for fighting. You cannot avoid them in this colony; they are too numerous.
+I saw hundreds of these Vandemonians, during my four months in gaol.
+Their heart must be of the same stuff as that of vultures, because they are
+of the same trade. In a word, they are the living witnesses among us,
+of the terrible saying of Isaiah, 'The heart of man is desperately wicked.'
+
+Through such did Satan plant his standard to rule this southern land,
+before Christ could show his Cross; hence, before famous Ballaarat could point
+at a barn, and call it a church, on the township, old Satan had three palaces
+to boast of, the first of which--a match for any in the world--has made
+the landlord as wealthy and proud as a merchant-prince of the City of London.
+'Non ex illis Mecoenates,'--that's the secret how this land has produced
+so many first-rate bullock-drivers.
+
+The scene at the Prince Albert is now more interesting.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LIV.
+
+
+
+In Vino Veritas.
+
+
+The Vandemonian was, of course, accompanied by nine more of his pals,
+all of them armed to the teeth with revolvers, swords, pikes, and knives.
+
+Carl Wiesenhavern, a man of noble character, and, therefore a man who hates
+knavery, and has no fear of a knave, answered with his peculiar
+German coolness, "Here I am, what do you want?"
+
+"Nobblers round," was the eager reply.
+
+"If that's what you want," replied Wiesenhavern, "you shall have it
+with pleasure."
+
+"We got no money."
+
+"I did not ask for any: understand me well, though;" pointing at each of them
+with the forefinger of his clenched right hand, "you will have a nobbler
+a-piece, and no more: afterwards you will go your way. Are you satisfied
+with my conditions?"
+
+"Yes, yes! we agree to that: go on you b----."
+
+Wiesenhavern scorned to notice the fellow, and, according to the old custom
+of the house, placed two decanters of brandy, together with the tumblers,
+on the bar, saying, "Help yourselves, gentlemen."
+
+They fell at once upon the brandy, and their mean rascality was shown
+by some seizing the glass and covering it with the full hand to conceal
+their greediness. Nobbler-drinking is an old colonial habit; it gives pluck
+to the coward when he is 'up to something;' so happened it with these fellows.
+
+"Well, landlord, your brandy is d---d good--the real sort of stuff,
+and no b----y mistake. You shouted nobblers round for all hands--that's
+all right; it's no more than fair and square now for the boys to shout
+for you:" and, with a horrible curse, "Fill up the bottles; let's have
+another round."
+
+Wiesenhavern kept himself quiet. One of the ruffians showed his intention
+to enter the bar, and play the landlord within. Wiesenhavern coolly
+persuaded him back by the promise he would fetch from his room,
+"something rowdy, the right old sort of stuff--Champagne Cognac, 'tres vieux'."
+The fellows presumed their 'bouncing' was all the go now, and laughed
+and cursed in old colonial style.
+
+Wiesenhavern fetched his pistols, and his partner, Johan Brandt,
+a double-barrelled gun. Now Mr. Brandt is one of those short,
+broad-shouldered, sound, dog-headed Germans, with such a determinate look
+when his otherwise slow wrath is stirred up, that it is not advisable
+to tackle with his fists, and much less with his rifle. Wiesenhavern,
+with that precision of manners, which always gains the point on such occasions,
+placed a decanter full of brandy on the bar, and, with cocked pistols
+in both hands, said, "Touch it, if you dare; if any one among you got the pluck
+to put in his tumbler one drop out of that bottle there, he is a dead man;"
+and Mr. Brandt backed him by simply saying:-
+
+"I'll shoot the fellow, like a dog."
+
+What was the result? Of course the same, whenever you deal with knaves--
+and you make them understand what you mean. They were cowed;
+and as by this time, the high words had called in several old customers
+of the house who wished well to it, because they knew it deserved it,
+so the ruffians had to cut for fear of their own dear lives.
+
+Then it was related with sorrow, that several similar bands were scouring
+the gold-fields in all directions and in the name of the committee
+of the Eureka stockade, under cover pressing for fire-arms and ammunition,
+plundered the most respectable stores of all they could lay their hands upon.
+
+One instance, as reported there and then by parties who had just witnessed
+the transaction.
+
+A similar gang, four strong, had entered the store of D. O'Conner,
+on the Golden Point, and asked in the name of the committee, powder and shot,
+but the vagabonds did not care so much for ammunition for their guns,
+as for the stuff for their guts, what tempted them most was fine good
+Yorkshire hams, and coffee to wash it down. In short, they ransacked
+the whole store; and each took care of 'something,' the best of course,
+and therefore the cash-box, worth some twenty pounds was not forgotten.
+
+The above are facts. I do not assert that such were the orders
+of the committee, got up after four o'clock of same Saturday at the Eureka
+stockade. I had no part or portion in the committee, and know nothing
+of it personally.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LV.
+
+
+
+Non Sit Nobis Vanum, Mane Surgere Ante Lucem.
+
+
+I ran up to the stockade to remonstrate with Peter Lalor, for whom I had
+too much respect to think for one moment, that he had any hand, and much less
+that he had sanctioned, such suicidal proceedings.
+
+Thanks to the password; I entered within the stockade. It must have been
+not far from midnight. I found everything comparatively quiet; the majority
+were either asleep of warming themselves round the big fire. I spoke
+in German face to face, for the last time, with Thonen. M`Gill and two-thirds
+of the Independent Californian Rangers' Rifle Brigade, in accordance with
+the avocation expressed in the title, were out 'starring' to intercept
+reinforcements reported on the road from Melbourne. Nealson and his division
+were off for the same purpose. Was their lot that of Lot's wife?
+
+Sir Charles Hotham must have possessed the rod of Moses to convert the quartz
+of Victoria into red coats, as numerous as the locusts that plagued
+Pharaoh's land. The Local Court of Ballaarat should recommend His Excellency
+to carry out the 'abolition of shepherding at Sebastopol.'
+
+I asked Thonen to see Lalor. I was answered that Peter, from sheer exhaustion,
+must rest for an hour or two, and was asleep.
+
+Myself not having closed an eye since Thursday, I felt severely the want
+of sleep. Is not sabbath-keeping our day's cant in the English language?
+Anyhow it must be admitted, in justice to both silver and gold lace,
+that they take it in good earnest: to keep the sabbath is a holy and wholesome
+thing for them. I do not remember what was my frame of mind at the time
+I wished Thonen good night; very probably, "Enough for the day, the morrow
+will have its own troubles:" at any rate, Thonen gave word to the 'outposts,'
+chiefly Californians to let me pass to my tent: and having thrown myself
+on my stretcher, with every thing quiet round about, I soon fell asleep.
+
+On the afternoon of Sunday, the following notice was posted up:-
+
+
+V. R.
+NOTICE.
+No light will be allowed to be kept burning in any
+tent within musket-shot of the line of sentries after
+8 o'clock p.m. No discharge of fire-arms in the
+neighbourhood of the Camp will be permitted for any
+purpose whatever.
+The sentries have orders to fire upon any person
+offending against these rules.
+(By order),
+T. BAILEY RICHARDS,
+Lieut. 40th Regt., Garrison Adjutant.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LVI.
+
+
+
+Remember This Sabbath Day (December Third), To Keep It Holy.
+
+
+I awoke. Sunday morning. It was full dawn, not daylight. A discharge
+of musketry--then a round from the bugle--the command 'forward'--and another
+discharge of musketry was sharply kept on by the red-coats (some 300 strong)
+advancing on the gully west of the stockade, for a couple of minutes.
+
+The shots whizzed by my tent. I jumped out of the stretcher and rushed
+to my chimney facing the stockade. The forces within could not muster
+above 150 diggers.
+
+The shepherds' holes inside the lower part of the stockade had been turned
+into rifle-pits, and were now occupied by Californians of the
+I.C. Rangers' Brigade, some twenty or thirty in all, who had kept watch
+at the 'out-posts' during the night.
+
+Ross and his division northward, Thonen and his division southward,
+and both in front of the gully, under cover of the slabs, answered
+with such a smart fire, that the military who were now fully within range,
+did unmistakably appear to me to swerve from their ground: anyhow the command
+"forward" from Sergeant Harris was put a stop to. Here a lad was really
+courageous with his bugle. He took up boldly his stand to the left
+of the gully and in front: the red-coats 'fell in' in their ranks to the right
+of this lad. The wounded on the ground behind must have numbered a dozen.
+
+Another scene was going on east of the stockade. Vern floundered across
+the stockade eastward, and I lost sight of him. Curtain whilst making coolly
+for the holes, appeared to me to give directions to shoot at Vern;
+but a rush was instantly made in the same direction (Vern's) and a whole pack
+cut for Warrenheip.
+
+There was, however, a brave American officer, who had the command
+of the rifle-pit men; he fought like a tiger; was shot in his thigh
+at the very onset, and yet, though hopping all the while, stuck to Captain Ross
+like a man. Should this notice be the means to ascertain his name,
+it should be written down in the margin at once.
+
+The dragoons from south, the troopers from north, were trotting in full speed
+towards the stockade.
+
+Peter Lalor, was now on the top of the first logged-up hole within
+the stockade, and by his decided gestures pointed to the men to retire
+among the holes. He was shot down in his left shoulder at this identical
+moment: it was a chance shot, I recollect it well.
+
+A full discharge of musketry from the military, now mowed down all
+who had their heads above the barricades. Ross was shot in the groin.
+Another shot struck Thonen exactly in the mouth, and felled him on the spot.
+
+Those who suffered the most were the score of pikemen, who stood their ground
+from the time the whole division had been posted at the top, facing the
+Melbourne road from Ballaarat, in double file under the slabs,
+to stick the cavalry with their pikes.
+
+The old command, "Charge!" was distinctly heard, and the red-coats rushed
+with fixed bayonets to storm the stockade. A few cuts, kicks and pulling down,
+and the job was done too quickly for their wonted ardour, for they actually
+thrust their bayonets on the body of the dead and wounded strewed about
+on the ground. A wild "hurrah!" burst out and 'the Southern Cross'
+was torn down, I should say, among their laughter, such as if it had been
+a prize from a May-pole.
+
+Of the armed diggers, some made off the best way they could, others surrendered
+themselves prisoners, and were collected in groups and marched down the gully.
+The Indian dragoons, sword in hand, rifle-pistols cocked, took charge
+of them all, and brought them in chains to the lock-up.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LVII.
+
+
+
+Dirigat Dominus Reginum Nostram.
+
+
+The red-coats were now ordered to 'fall in;' their bloody work was over,
+and were marched off, dragging with them the 'Southern Cross.'
+
+Their dead, as far as I did see, were four, and a dozen wounded,
+including Captain Wise, the identical one, I think whom I speak of in relating
+the events of Tuesday evening, November 28.
+
+Dead and wounded had been fetched up in carts, waiting on the road, and all
+red-things hastened to Ballaarat. The following is for the edification of all
+the well-affected and well-disposed of the present and future generation:-
+
+
+V. R.
+NOTICE.
+Government Camp,
+Ballaarat, Dec. 3rd, 1854.
+Her Majesty's forces were this morning fired upon by a
+large body of evil-disposed persons of various nations,
+who had entrenched themselves in a stockade on the
+Eureka, and some officers and men killed.
+
+Several of the rioters have paid the penalty of their
+crime, and a large number are in custody.
+
+All well-disposed persons are earnestly requested to
+return to their ordinary occupations, and to abstain
+from assembling in large groups, and every protection
+will be afforded to them by the authorities.
+ROBT. REDE,
+Resident Commissioner.
+God save the Queen.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LVIII.
+
+
+
+Veritatem Dico Non Menitor.
+
+
+Here begins a foul deed, worthy of devils, and devils they were.
+The accursed troopers were now within the stockade. They dismounted,
+and pounced on firebrands from the large fire on the middle of the stockade,
+and deliberately set in a blaze all the tents round about. I did see
+with both eyes one of those devils, a tall, thick-shouldered, long-legged,
+fast Vandemonian-looking trooper, purposely striking a bundle of matches,
+and setting fire at the corner end, north of the very store of Diamond,
+where we had kept the council for the defence. The howling and yelling
+was horrible. The wounded are now burnt to death; those who had laid down
+their arms, and taken refuge within the tents, were kicked like brutes,
+and made prisoners.
+
+At the burning of the Eureka Hotel, I expressed it to be my opinion that
+a characteristic of the British race is to delight in the calamity of a fire.
+
+The troopers, enjoying the fun within the stockade, now spread it without.
+The tent next to mine (Quinn's) was soon in a blaze. I collected in haste
+my most important papers, and rushed out to remonstrate against such
+a wanton cruelty. Sub-inspector Carter pointing with his pistol ordered me
+to fall in with a batch of prisoners. There were no two ways: I obeyed.
+In the middle of the gully, I expostulated with Captain Thomas,
+he asked me whether I had been made a prisoner within the stockade.
+"No, sir," was my answer. He noticed my frankness, my anxiety and grief.
+After a few words more in explanation, he, giving me a gentle stroke
+with his sword, told me "If you really are an honest digger, I do not want you,
+sir; you may return to your tent."
+
+Mr. Gordon--of the store of Gordon and M`Callum, on the left of the gully,
+near the stockade--who had been made prisoner, and was liberated in the same
+way, and at the same time as myself, was and is a living witness to the above.
+
+On crossing the gully to return to my tent, an infernal trooper trotting
+on the road to Ballaarat, took a deliberate aim at me, and fired
+his Minie rifle pistol with such a tolerable precision, that the shot
+whizzed and actually struck the brim of my cabbage-tree hat, and blew it
+off my head. Mrs. Davis, who was outside her tent close by,
+is a living witness to the above.
+
+At this juncture I was called by name from Doctor Carr, and Father Smyth,
+directed me by signs to come and help the wounded within the stockade.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LIX.
+
+
+
+Quis Dabit Capiti Meo, Aquam Et Oculis Meis Fontem
+Lacrymarum Et Plorabo Die Ac Nocte!
+
+
+I hastened, and what a horrible sight! Old acquaintances crippled with shots,
+the gore protruding from the bayonet wounds, their clothes and flesh burning
+all the while. Poor Thonen had his mouth literally choked with bullets;
+my neighbour and mate Teddy More, stretched on the ground, both his thighs
+shot, asked me for a drop of water. Peter Lalor, who had been concealed
+under a heap of slabs, was in the agony of death, a stream of blood
+from under the slabs, heavily forcing its way down hill.
+
+The tears choke my eyes, I cannot write any further.
+
+Americans! your Doctor Kenworthy was not there, as he should have been,
+according to Humffray's letter.
+
+Catholics! Father Smyth was performing his sacred duty to the dying, in spite
+of the troopers who threatened his life, and forced him at last to desist.
+
+Protestants! spare us in future with your sabbath cant. Not one of your
+ministers was there, helping the digger in the hour of need.
+
+John Bull! you wilfully bend your neck to any burden for palaver and war
+to protect you in your universal shop-keeping, and maintain your sacred rights
+of property; but human life is to you as it was to Napoleon: for him,
+fodder for the cannon; for you, tools to make money. A dead man needs
+no further care, and human kind breeds fast enough everywhere after all,--
+'Cetera quando rursum scribam'.
+
+On my reaching the stockade with a pannikin of water for Teddy, I was amazed
+at the apathy showed by the diggers, who now crowded from all directions
+round the dead and wounded. None would stir a finger.
+
+All on a sudden a fresh swarm of troopers cleared the stockade of all moving
+things with the mere threat of their pistols.
+
+All the diggers scampered away and entered all available tents, crouching
+within the chimneys or under stretchers. The valorous, who had given
+such a proof of their ardour in smothering with stones, bats, and broken
+bottles, the 12th Regiment on their orderly way from Melbourne on Tuesday,
+November 28, at the same identical spot on the Eureka, now allowed themselves
+to be chained by dozens, by a handful of hated traps, who, a few days before,
+had been kept at bay on the whole of the diggings, by the mere shouting
+of 'Joe!' A sad reflection, indeed; a very sad reflection.
+
+Myself and a few neighbours now procured some stretchers, and at the direction
+of Doctor Carr, converted the London Hotel into an hospital,
+and took there the wounded.
+
+Said Doctor Carr despatched me to fetch his box of surgical instruments
+from Dr. Glendinning's hospital on Pennyweight-hill, a distance of a full mile.
+
+I hastened to return, with Dr. Glendinning himself, and I did my best
+to assist the helpless, and dress their wounds.
+
+IMPORTANT--I must call the attention of my reader to the following fact:--
+When I entered the stockade with Dr. Carr's surgical box, Mr. Binney,
+an old acquaintance since the times of Canadian Gully, took me warmly
+by the hand, and said, "Old fellow, I am glad to see you alive! everybody
+thinks (pointing to a dead digger among the heap) that's poor Great Works!"
+
+The state of mind in which I was, gave me no time to take much notice
+of the circumstances, and must have answered, "Thank God, I am alive,"
+and proceeded to my duty.
+
+The identical Mr. Binney, of the firm of Binney and Gillot, now storekeepers
+on the Ballaarat township, is a living witness to the above statement.
+
+Solicitor Lynn told me, 'in propria persona' in the Ballaarat prison,
+that he would take care to bring forward evidence of the above,
+as he had heard it himself, that such was the case; but I forgot to fee
+this Lynn, and so he left me to the chance of being 'lynched.'
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LX.
+
+
+
+The Southern Cross, In Digger's Gore Imbrued,
+Was Torn Away, And Left The Digger Mourning.
+
+
+The following Letter, from the able pen of the spirited correspondent
+of the 'Geelong Advertiser' who most undoubtedly must be a digger--that is,
+one of ourselves, from among ourselves,--is here transcribed as a document
+confirming the truths of this book:-
+
+
+THE EUREKA MASSACRE
+[From a Correspondent.]
+To the Editor of the 'Geelong Advertiser' and Intelligencer.
+Bakery-hill, December 3rd, 1854.
+
+Friday you know all about; I will pass that over, and give you a faint outline
+of what passed under my own eyes. During Saturday, there was a great deal
+of gloom among the most orderly, who complained much of the parade of soldiery,
+and the same cause excited a great deal of exasperation in the minds
+of more enthusiastic persons, who declared that all parties ought to show
+themselves, and declare whether they were for or against the diggers.
+Then came a notice from the Camp, that all lights were to be extinguished
+after eight o'clock, within half-a-mile from the Camp. At this time
+it was reported that there were two thousand organised men at the Eureka
+barricade. I was sitting in my tent, and several neighbours dropped in
+to talk over affairs, and we sat down to tea, when a musket was heard
+to go off, and the bullet whizzed close by us; I doused the light,
+and we crept out on our hands and knees, and looked about. Between the Camp
+and the barricade there was a fire we had not seen before, and occasionally
+lights appeared to be hoisted, like signals, which attracted the attention
+of a good many, some of whom said that they saw other lights like
+return signals. It grew late. TO-MORROW, I FEAR ME, WILL PROVE A DAY
+OF SORROW, IF THE AFFAIR BE NOT SETTLED BEFORE THEN. I and R---- lay down
+in our clothes, according to our practice for a week past; and worn out
+with perpetual alarms, excitement, and fatigue, fell fast asleep.
+I didn't wake up till six o'clock on Sunday morning. The first thing
+that I saw was a number of diggers enclosed in a sort of hollow square,
+many of them were wounded, the blood dripping from them as they walked;
+some were walking lame, pricked on by the bayonets of the soldiers
+bringing up the rear. The soldiers were much excited, and the troopers
+madly so, flourishing their swords, and shouting out--"We have waked up Joe!"
+and others replied, "And sent Joe to sleep again!" The diggers' Standard
+was carried by in triumph to the Camp, waved about in the air,
+then pitched from one to another, thrown down and trampled on.
+The scene was awful--twos and threes gathered together, and all felt stupefied.
+I went with R---- to the barricade, the tents all around were in a blaze;
+I was about to go inside, when a cry was raised that the troopers
+were coming again. They did come with carts to take away the bodies,
+I counted fifteen dead, one G----, a fine well-educated man, and a great
+favourite. [Here, I think, the Correspondent alluded to me. My friends,
+nick-named me--Carbonari Great works. ]--I recognised two others,
+but the spectacle was so ghastly that I feel a loathing at the remembrance.
+They all lay in a small space with their faces upwards, looking like lead,
+several of them were still heaving, and at every rise of their breasts,
+the blood spouted out of their wounds, or just bubbled out and trickled away.
+One man, a stout-chested fine fellow, apparently about forty years old,
+lay with a pike beside him: e had three contusions in the head,
+three strokes across the brow, a bayonet wound in the throat under the ear,
+and other wounds in the body--I counted fifteen wounds in that single carcase.
+Some were bringing handkerchiefs, others bed furniture, and matting
+to cover up the faces of the dead. O God! sir, it was a sight for
+a sabbath morn that, I humbly implore Heaven, may never be seen again.
+Poor women crying for absent husbands, and children frightened into quietness.
+I, sir, write disinterestedly, and I hope my feelings arose from
+a true principle; but when I looked at that scene, my soul revolted
+at such means being so cruelly used by a government to sustain the law.
+A little terrier sat on the, breast of the man I spoke of, and kept up
+a continuous howl: it was removed, but always returned to the same spot;
+and when his master's body was huddled, with the other corpses, into the cart,
+the little dog jumped in after him, and lying again on his dead master's
+breast, began howling again.----was dead there also, and----, who escaped,
+had said, that when he offered his sword, he was shot in the side
+by a trooper, as he was lying on the ground wounded. He expired
+almost immediately. Another was lying dead just inside the barricade,
+where he seemed to have crawled. Some of the bodies might have been removed--
+I counted fifteen. A poor woman and her children were standing outside a tent;
+she said that the troopers had surrounded the tent and pierced it
+with their swords. She, her husband, and children, were ordered out
+by the troopers, and were inspected in their night-clothes outside,
+whilst the troopers searched the tent. Mr. Haslam was roused from sleep
+by a volley of bullets fired through his tent; he rushed out, and was shot down
+by a trooper, and handcuffed. He lay there for two hours bleeding
+from a wound in his breast, until his friends sent for a black-smith,
+who forced off the handcuffs with a hammer and cold chisel. When I last heard
+of Mr. Haslam, a surgeon was attending him, and probing for the ball.
+R----, from Canada, [Captain Ross, of Toronto, once my mate] escaped
+the carnage; but is dead since, from the wounds. R---- has effected
+his escape. [ Johnny Robertson, who had a striking resemblance to me,
+not so much in size as in complexion and colour of the beard especially:
+Poor Johnny was shot down dead on the stockade; and was the identical body
+which Mr. Binney mistook for me. Hence the belief by many, that I was dead.]
+V---- is reported to be amongst the wounded [Oh! no his legs were too long
+even for a Minie rifle ]. One man was seen yesterday trailing along the road:
+he said he could not last much longer, and that his brother was shot
+along-side of him. All whom I spoke to were of one opinion, that it was
+a cowardly massacre. There were only about one hundred and seventy diggers,
+and they were opposed to nearly six hundred military. I hope all is over;
+but I fear not: or amongst many, the feeling is not of intimidation,
+but a cry for vengeance, and an opportunity to meet the soldiers
+with equal numbers. There is an awful list of casualties yet to come in;
+and when uncertainty is made certain, and relatives and friends know the worst,
+there will be gaps that cannot be filled up. I have little knowledge
+of the gold-fields; but I fear that the massacre at Eureka is only a skirmish.
+I bid farewell to the gold-fields, and if what I have seen is a specimen
+of the government of Victoria, the sooner I am out of it the better for myself
+and family. Sir, I am horrified at what I witnessed, and I did not see
+the worst of it. I could not breathe the blood-tainted air of the diggings,
+and I have left them for ever.
+
+You may rely upon this simple statement, and submit it if you approve of it,
+to your readers.
+
+I am, Sir.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXI.
+
+
+
+Ab Initio Usque Ad Finem Horribile Dictu.
+
+-----
+
+Avanit Il Tuo Cospetto, Dio Potente! Grida Vendetta Il Sangue Innocente.
+
+
+I. Document.
+
+As I want to be believed, so I transcribed the following document
+from 'The Argus' of Friday, December 15th, 1854.--Gordon Evans,
+one of H.M. Captains in the Eureka massacre, now acts in the capacity
+of magistrate!--
+
+DEPOSITION OF HENRY POWELL.
+
+The deceased deposed to the following effect:--My name
+is Henry Powell, I am a digger residing at Creswick-creek.
+I left Creswick-creek about noon on Saturday, December 2nd.
+I said to my mates, 'You'll get the slabs ready. I will
+just go over to see Cox and his family at Ballaarat.'
+I arrived at Ballaarat about half-past four, or thereabouts.
+I saw armed men walking about in parties of twenty or
+thirty; went to Cox's tent; put on another pair of
+trousers, and walked down the diggings. Looked in the
+ring (the stockade). After that, went home, went to bed
+in the tent at the back of Cox's tent, about half-past
+nine. On Sunday morning about four or half-past,
+was awoke by the noise of firing. Got up soon after,
+and walked about twenty yards, when some trooper rode
+up to me. The foremost one was a young man whom I knew
+as the Clerk of the Peace. He was of a light, fair
+complexion, with reddish hair. He told me to "stand in
+the Queen's name! You are my prisoner." I said "Very good,
+Sir." Up came more troopers. I cannot say how many.
+Believe about twenty or thirty. I said, "Very well,
+gentlemen (!) don't be in a hurry, there are plenty of
+you," and then the young man struck me on the head with
+a crooked knife, about three feet and a half long,
+in a sheath. I fell to the ground. They then fired
+at me, and rode over me several times. I never had
+any hand in the disturbance. There, that's all.
+
+Ballaarat, Dec. 11, 1854.
+
+-----
+
+FIRST CASE of an inquest which has taken place since
+the massacre of the memorable 3rd. The evidence as to
+the murder of Powell (writes 'The Argus' express
+correspondent) is but a specimen of the recitals heard
+on every hand of the reckless brutality of the troopers
+that morning.
+
+VERDICT OF THE JURY.
+
+The death of deceased, Henry Powell, gold-digger, was
+caused by sabre cuts and gun shot wounds, wilfully
+and feloniously, and of their malice aforethought
+inflicted and fired by ARTHUR PURCELL AKEHURST, Clerk
+of the Peace, Ballaarat bench, and other persons unknown.
+
+The jury return a verdict of Wilful Murder against
+A. P. Akehurst and other persons unknown.
+
+The jury express their condemnation of the conduct of
+Captain Evans, in not swearing deceased at the time
+of taking his statement after having been cautioned
+by Dr. Wills of his immediate danger. The jury
+view with extreme horror the brutal conduct of the
+mounted police in firing at and cutting down unarmed
+and innocent persons of both sexes, at a distance from
+the scene of disturbance, on December 3rd, 1854.
+
+WILLIAMS, Coroner.
+
+-----
+
+Mind, good reader, the above is a legal document.
+
+After my trial, on my way to Ballaarat, I met in Geelong the identical
+Akehurst, cracking some nuts with (I mean, speaking to) some young ladies.
+
+I DESPAIR OF THIS COLONY.
+
+May it please HER MAJESTY to cause inquiry to be made into the character
+of such that have branded the miners of Ballaarat as disloyal to their QUEEN.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXII.
+
+
+
+Tempora Nostra.
+
+
+The following documents are put in here as evidence of 'our times.'
+
+
+II. Document.
+
+BALLAARAT.
+THE STATEMENT OF FRANK ARTHUR HASLEHAM.
+(Now lying wounded at Ballaarat.)
+
+"Whereas I, Frank Arthur Hasleham, a native of the good town of Bedford,
+and son of a military officer, to wit, William Gale Hasleham, who bore
+His Majesty's commission in the 48th Foot at Talavera, and afterwards
+retired from the 6th veteran battallion:
+
+"Whereas I, the aforesaid, having, in my capacity of newspaper correspondent
+at Ballaarat, shown, on all proper occasions in general, so especially
+during the late insurrectionary movement here, a strong instinctive leaning
+to the side of law, authority, and loyalty, was, on the morning of the
+3rd instant, fired at and wounded at a time when the affray was over,
+and the forces with their prisoners were on the point of returning to the camp,
+and in a place whence the scene of action was invisible, and when
+no other bloodshed had taken place;
+
+"On these considerations I desire to make on oath the following statements
+of facts as they occurred, and as witnessed by others:-
+
+"Shortly after daybreak in the morning mentioned, my three mates and myself
+were aroused from sleep by the fire of musketry, a great proportion
+of the balls whistling over our tents. The tent is pitched on a rising ground
+about 500 yards south of the stockade; the tent and stockade, each situated
+on an eminence, are separated by a large gully running east and west,
+and comprising in its breadth nearly the whole of the distance above specified.
+Considerably alarmed at the continuance of the firing, we at last got up
+and went outside, thinking to find a place of shelter of comparative security.
+After I had gone outside the firing gradually fell off, the stockade
+was unoccupied, the insurgents' flag was struck, and whatever fighting
+was then going on was confined to the further slope of the hill on which
+the stockade was situated. As some desultory firing was still going on,
+I advanced about fifty yards down the gully, in order to insure safety
+by getting upon lower ground; by this time, with the exception of
+an occasional cheer from the military or police, everything was perfectly
+quiet, and from where I stood neither soldier nor trooper was to be seen.
+A few minutes after a small detachment of mounted police made its appearance
+on the hill, and drew up in a line on the either side of the stockade,
+the officer in command appeared to be haranguing them. I was standing
+about three hundred yards from them, several other people being near at hand.
+I saw three troopers leave the ranks and advance towards me; when one of them
+who rode considerably ahead of the other two arrived within hailing distance,
+he hailed me as a friend. Having no reason to think otherwise of him,
+I walked forward to meet him. After he had lured me within safe distance,
+namely about four paces, he levelled his holster pistol at my breast
+and shot me. Previous to this, and while advancing towards each other,
+he asked me if I wished to join his force; I told him I was unarmed,
+and in a weak state of health, which must have been plain to him at the time,
+but added that I hoped this madness on the part of the diggers would soon
+be over; upon that he fired."
+
+-----
+
+The trooper be d----d; but I congratulate poor Frank, of the good town
+of Bedford, for 'this madness on the part of the diggers' procuring him 400
+pounds sterling from Toorak; so that he can afford to spare me the trouble
+of encroaching any further into his 'statement.' Great works!
+
+
+III. Document more important, by far.
+
+On the 28th November, when some military and ammunition came on the ground,
+the detachment was set on at Eureka, near the site of the stockade,
+and in the hubbub consequent the troops were somewhat at fault,
+and the officer in command called at the London Hotel to inquire the way
+to the Camp. The owner of the hotel, Mr. Hassall, on being asked,
+came out of his establishment to point out the way to the officer in command
+of the detachment, while so doing he received a ball in his leg, and was
+for a while laid up by the wound. After a long time of suffering,
+and a great loss of money directly and indirectly, he applied
+for compensation--with what success may be seen from the following letter
+just come to hand:-
+
+-----
+
+Colonial Secretary's Office,
+Melbourne, 26th October, 1855.
+
+Gentlemen.--The memorial of the miners on behalf of Mr. B. S. Hassall,
+wounded during the disturbances at Ballaarat, having been by the governor's
+directions referred to the board appointed to investigate such claims,
+the board reported, that from the evidence, it appears impossible Mr. Hassall
+could have received his wound from the military, and that they could not see
+anything to justify their recommending any compensation for him.
+His Excellency cannot therefore entertain the petition as he has not power
+to award compensation except on the recommendation of the board.
+
+I have the honour to be, gentlemen,
+Your most obedient servant,
+J. MOORE, A.C.S.
+(To) SAMUEL IRWIN, and
+A. C. BRUNNING, Esqrs.
+
+
+-----
+
+'Great works' this time at Toorak, eh! oh! dear.
+
+So far so good, for the present; because spy 'Goodenough' wants me
+in the next chapter.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXIII.
+
+
+
+Et Scias Quia Nihil Impium Fecerim.
+
+
+It was now between eight and nine o'clock. A patrol of troopers and traps
+stopped before the London Hotel.
+
+Spy Goodenough, entered panting, a cocked pistol in his hand, looking as wild
+as a raven. He instantly pounced on me as his prey, and poking the pistol
+at my face, said in his rage, "I want you."
+
+"What for?"
+
+"None of your d----d nonsense, or I shoot you down like a rat."
+
+"My good fellow don't you see? I am assisting Dr. Carr to dress the wounds
+of my friends!"--I was actually helping to bandage the thigh of an American
+digger, whose name, if I recollected it, I should now write down with pleasure,
+because he was a brave fellow. He had on his body at least half-a-dozen shots,
+all in front, an evident proof, he had stood his ground like a man.
+
+Spy Goodenough would not listen to me. Dr. Carr. spoke not a word
+in my behalf, though I naturally enough had appealed to him, who knew me
+these two years, to do so. This circumstance, and his being the very first
+to enter the stockade, after the military job was over, though he had
+never before been on the Eureka during the agitation, his appointment
+to attend the wounded diggers that were brought up to the Camp, and especially
+his absence at my trial, were and are still a mystery to me.
+
+I was instantly dragged out, and hobbled to a dozen more of prisoners outside,
+and we were marched to the Camp. The main road was clear, and the diggers
+crawled among the holes at the simple bidding of any of the troopers
+who rode at our side.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXIV.
+
+
+
+Sic Sinuerunt Fata.
+
+
+On reaching the Camp, I recognized there the identical American Kenworthy.
+I gave him a fearful look. I suspected my doom to be sealed.
+
+The soldiers were drinking 'ad libitum' from a pannikin which they dipped
+into a pail-bucket full of brandy. I shall not prostitute my hand,
+and write down the vile exultations of a mob of drunkards. It was of the
+ordinary colonial sort, whenever in a fight the 'ring' is over.
+
+Inspector Foster, commanded us to strip to the bare shirt. They did not
+know how to spell my name. I pulled out a little bag containing some
+Eureka gold-dust, and my licence; Mr. Foster took care of my bag, and just
+as my name was copied from my licence; a fresh batch of prisoners
+had arrived, and Mr. Foster was called outside the room where I was
+stripping. Now, some accursed trooper pretended to recognize me as one
+of the 'spouts' at the monster meeting. I wanted to keep my waistcoat
+on account of some money, and papers I had in the breast pocket;
+my clothes were literally torn into rags. I attempted to remonstrate,
+but I was kicked for my pains, knocked down in the bargain, and thrown
+naked and senseless into the lock-up.
+
+The prison was crammed to suffocation. We had not space enough to lie
+down, and so it was taken in turns to stand or lie down. Some kind friend
+sent me some clothes, and my good angel had directed him to bury
+my hand-writings he had found in my tent, under a tent in Gravel-pits.
+
+Fleas, lice, horse-stealers, and low thieves soon introduced themselves
+to my notice. This vermin, and the heat of the season, and the stench
+of the place, and the horror at my situation, had rendered life
+intolerable to me. Towards midnight of that Sunday I was delirious.
+Our growls and howling reached Commissioner Rede, and about two o'clock
+in the morning the doors were opened, and all the prisoners from
+the Eureka stockade, were removed between two files of soldiers
+to the Camp store-house a spacious room, well ventilated and clean.
+Commissioner Rede came in person to visit us. Far from any air of
+exultation, he appeared to me to feel for our situation. As he passed
+before me, I addressed him in French, to call his attention to my misery.
+He answered very kindly, and concluded thus:-
+
+"'Je ne manquerai pas de parler au Docteur Carr, et si ce que vous venez
+de me dire e trouve vrai, je veux bien m'interesser pour vous.'
+
+"'Vous etez bien bon, Monsieur le Commissionaire, repondis-je.'
+
+"'Il faut donc que j'aie eu des ennemis bien cruels au Camp! Avaient-ils
+soif de mon sang, ou etaient-ils de mercenaires? Voila bien un secret,
+et je donnerai de coeur ma vie pour le percer. Dieu leur pardonne, moi,
+je le voudrais bien! mais je ne saurai les pardonner jamais.'"
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXV.
+
+
+
+Ecce Homo.
+
+
+On Monday morning, the fresh air had restored me a little strength.
+We had an important arrival among us. It was the Editor of 'The Times'
+newspaper, arrested for sedition. All silver and gold lace, blue and red
+coats in the Camp rushed in to gaze on this wild elephant, whose trunk
+it was supposed, had stirred up the hell on Ballaarat.
+
+Henry Seekamp is a short, thick, rare sort of man, of quick and precise
+movements, sardonic countenance; and one look from his sharp round set
+of eyes, tells you at once that you must not trifle with him. Of a temper
+that must have cost him some pains to keep under control, he hates humbug
+and all sort of yabber-yabber. His round head of tolerable size,
+is of German mould, for the earnestness of his forehead is corrected
+by the fullness of his cheeks, and a set of moustachios is the padlock
+of his mouth, whose key is kept safe in his head, and his heart is the
+turn-key. When his breast is full, and he must make it clean, its gall
+will burn wherever it falls, and set the place a blazing. To keep friends
+with such a cast of mind, whose motto is Nelson's, you must do your duty;
+never mind if you sink a shicer, bottom your shaft any how. You are
+his enemy if you are or play the flunky; he will call you a 'thing,'
+and has a decided contempt for 'incapables.' Hence, his energy was never
+abated, though the whole legion of Victorian red-tape wanted to dry
+his inkstand, and smother his lamp in gaol. That there are too many fools
+at large, he knows, because he has travelled half the world, what he can
+not put up with, is their royal cant, religious bosh, Toorak small-beer,
+and first and foremost, their money-grubbing expertness. Hence, now
+and then, his ink turns sour, and thereby its vitriol burns stronger.
+'The Times', of which he is the founder, is the Overseer of Ballaarat,
+and the 'Dolce far niente' will not prosper.
+
+Our literary prisoner was literally insulted, and could not look with
+enough contempt on all those accursed asses braying (at him)
+'The Times!' 'The Times!'
+
+I felt for him very much, and joined conversation with him in French.
+I state it as a matter of fact, that there and then I had the presentiment
+that all the spies pointed me out there, and only there and then as his
+accomplice. Towards ten o'clock we were ordered to fall in, in four rows.
+Now the Camp officials and their myrmidons were in their glory.
+They came to number their prey, and mark out a score of heads to make
+an 'example' of, for the better conduct of future generations.
+Unfortunately for my red hair, fizzing red beard, and fizzing red
+moustachios, my name was taken down after the armed ruffian and the
+anonymous scribbler, and followed by that of the nigger-rebel.
+
+It was odious to see honourable, honest, hard-working men made the gazing
+stock of a parcel of pampered perverted fools, for the fun of `a change'
+to gratify their contempt for the blue-shirt and thick boots who had
+dared, mucky and muddy, to come out of their deep wet holes to hamper
+these gods of the land in their dog's game of licence-hunting!
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXVI.
+
+
+
+Then the following document was shown for our edification:-
+
+
+VICTORIA GOVERNMENT GAZETTE EXTRAORDINARY.
+(Published by Authority.)
+MARTIAL LAW
+DECLARED IN THE DISTRICT OF BUNINYONG
+PROCLAMATION
+By his Excellency Sir Charles Hotham, Knight-Commander of the Most
+Honourable Military Order of the Bath Lieutenant--Governor
+of Victoria, &c., &c., &c.
+
+WHEREAS bodies of armed men have arrayed themselves against Her Majesty's
+forces and the constituted authorities, and have committed acts of open
+rebellion: and whereas, for the effectual suppression thereof it is
+imperatively necessary that Martial Law should be administered and
+executed within the limits hereinafter described; now I,
+the Lieutenant-Governor of the said Colony with the advice of the
+Executive Council thereof, do hereby command and Proclaim that
+MARTIAL LAW from and after twelve of the clock at noon on Wednesday,
+the sixth day of December instant, shall and may be administered against
+every person and persons within the said limits, who shall at any time
+after the said hour commit any act of rebellion, any treason, treasonable
+or seditious practices, or other outrage or misdemeanor whatsoever within
+the following limits, that is to say: arrowee...Lal Lal...Moorabool...
+Ran Rip...Yarrowee aforesaid. And I do hereby, with the advice
+aforesaid, order and authorize all officers commanding Her Majesty's
+forces to employ them with the utmost vigour and decision for the
+immediate suppression of the said rebellion and offences, and to proceed
+against and punish every person and persons acting, aiding, or in any
+manner assisting in the said rebellion and offences, according to
+Martial Law, as to them shall seem expedient for the punishment of all
+such persons: And I do hereby especially declare and proclaim, that no
+sentence of death shall be carried into execution against any such person
+without my express consent thereto: ['Great works!'] And I do hereby
+with the advice aforesaid, notify this my Proclamation to all subjects
+of Her Majesty in the Colony of Victoria.
+
+Given under my Hand and the Seal of the Colony, at Melbourne, this fourth
+day of December, in the year of Our Lord one thousand eight hundred
+and fifty-four, and in the eighteenth year of Her Majesty's Reign.
+
+(L.S.) CHARLES HOTHAM,
+By His Excellency's Command,
+JOHN FOSTER.
+God save the Queen!
+
+-----
+
+Great works!
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXVII.
+
+
+
+Ecce Amaritudo Mea Amarissima.
+
+
+We were frightened by the report that a gang of red-coats were sinking
+a large pit in the Camp.
+
+"Are they going to bury us alive without any flogging? That's not half
+so merciful as Haynau's rule in Austria;" was my observation to a mate
+prisoner--a shrewd Irishman.
+
+"Where did you read in history that the British Lion was ever merciful
+to a fallen foe?" was his sorrowfully earnest reply.
+
+Oh! days and nights of the 3rd, 4th, 5th, and 6th of December, 1854,
+your remembrance will not end, no, not even in my grave.
+
+They were happy days in my youth, when I thought with Rousseau, that
+the heart of man is from nature good. It was a sad fatality now that
+compelled me to feel the truth from the prophet Isaiah, that the heart
+of man is desperately wicked.
+
+I was really thunderstruck at the savage eagerness with which spies and
+red-coats sprang out of their ranks to point me out. Though a British
+soldier was not ashamed to swear and confess his cowardice of running away
+from before my pike, which I never had on the stockade, where the fellow
+never could have seen me; I shall not prostitute my intelligence and
+comment on the 'evidence' against me from a gang of bloodthirsty mercenary
+spies. The printer will copy my trial from the public newspaper,
+'The Age'.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXVIII.
+
+
+
+Condemn The Wicked, And Bring His Way Upon His Head, Oh,
+Lord God Of Israel!
+
+
+The first witness against me was such a rum sort of old colonial bird of
+the jackass tribe, and made such a fool of himself for Her Majesty's dear
+sake, about the monster meeting, where as it appeared, he had volunteered
+as reporter of the Camp; that now God has given him his reward. He is a
+gouty cripple, still on 'Her Majesty's fodder' at the Camp, Ballaarat.
+
+Who will sharpen my quill and poison my inkstand, that I may put to
+confusion the horrible brood of red-tape that ruled on Ballaarat at the
+time. To administer justice in the sacred name of Her Most Gracious
+Majesty, they squandered the sweat of self-over-working diggers, on a set
+of devils, such that they actually competed with one another, in vomiting
+like sick dogs! Their multitude was taken as a test of their veracity,
+on the Mosaical ground, that 'out of the mouth of two witnesses shall the
+guilty be condemned;' and yet, with the exception of spy Goodenough,
+and spy Peters, none other to my knowledge ever did see my face before.
+
+I assert and declare as an honest man and a Christian, that my eyes never
+did see the witnesses against me, before I was under arrest at the Camp.
+My soul was drowned in an ocean of bitterness when of that brood of Satan,
+one did swear he had run from before my pike; another had fired at me,
+but his pistol 'snapped;' a third made me prisoner within the stockade;
+a fourth took me up chained to other prisoners who had surrendered,
+from the stockade to the Camp.
+
+Such, then, is the perversity of the human heart! In vain did I point out
+to the sitting magistrate the absurdness of their evidence, and the fact
+that Sub-inspector Carter and Dr. Carr could prove the contradiction.
+I was so embittered and broken-hearted at the wickedness of so many
+infuriated mercenary rascals, that had made up their mind to sell the
+blood of an honest man, in as much as I had repeatedly told each and all
+of them, when they came to 'recognize' in our prison, that they must
+mistake me for another as I was not within the stockade that Sunday
+morning; that I...but it is too humiliating to say any more.
+
+Mr. Sturt, with an odious face, whose plumpness told me at once he was no
+friend to fasting, strutted to the magisterial chair, and committeed me
+and the nigger-rebel, to whom I was kindly hobbled, to take our trial
+for high treason!
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXIX.
+
+
+
+Vox Populi, Vox Dei.
+
+
+In the course of the day (December 7th), in spite of all the bayonets and
+blunderbusses, the report reached us that the Melbourne people had had
+a Monster Meeting of their own, equal to ours of November 29th, and that
+Mr. Foster, the 'Jesuit,' had been dismissed from office.
+
+The tragical act on Ballaarat was over; the scenery changed; and the
+comedy now proceeded to end in the farce of the State Trials in Melbourne.
+
+Between Wednesday and Thursday, all the 160 prisoners were liberated,
+with the necessary exception of thirteen, reserved to confirm the title
+of this book.
+
+I do not wish to omit one significant circumstance. On Tuesday night,
+December 5th, I was hobbled for the night to young Fergusson, an American,
+and shared with him his blankets. I felt very much for this young man,
+for he suffered from consumption; and as I do respect him, so I shall not
+disclose our private conversation. This, however, is to the purpose.
+He was among us, and with us at four o'clock on Saturday, at one and the
+same time when spy Peters was within the stockade.
+
+No spy, no trap, no trooper appeared against young Fergusson. Doctor
+Kenworthy, his countryman, had the management of getting him off. I was
+glad at his obtaining his liberty, because he was a brave, kind-hearted,
+republican-minded young American, and I intend to keep his blue blankets
+he left to me in prison for my comfort, in his remembrance.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXX.
+
+
+
+Audi Alteram Partem.
+'Fair Play'.
+
+
+As I wish to be believed, so I transcribe the following from 'The Argus',
+Friday, December 15, 1854;
+
+MAINTENANCE OF LAW AND ORDER.
+
+The Lieutenant-Governor received a deputation from, with an address signed
+by, five hundred bankers, merchants, and other classes resident in
+Melbourne, placing themselves, their services, and their influence
+unreservedly at His Excellency's disposal, for the maintenance or order
+and upholding of the paramount authority of existing (!) law.
+
+His Excellency listened with marked attention to the address, to which he
+gave the following answer:--
+
+"Gentlemen...
+
+"...It is necessary to look its (the Colony's) difficulty full in the face.
+
+"Here we have persons from all parts of the globe,--men who come to look
+for gold and gold alone; men of adventurous spirit, of resolution, and of
+firm purpose to carry out the principles which actuate them. If gold
+fails, or the season is unfavourable, we must expect such outbreaks and
+such dangers as have given rise to the most loyal and valuable address
+which you present to me. ['Pardon, Monsiegneur, apres lecture des versets
+28, 29, du chap. I., et versets 17, 18, 19, du chap. III., de la Genese,
+favorisez s'il vous plait l'exploitation de l'activite de tous ces
+gaillards la, par la Charrue: l n'y a pas mal de terres ici, et bien
+pour tout le monde. Audaces fortuna juvat.']
+
+"I desire to govern by the people, and through the people: and by the
+people I mean through the intelligence of the people. ['Elle est fameuse,
+Monseigneur l'intelligence de ceux, qui vous ont conseille l'affaire de
+Ballaarat! surtout in farce odieuse de haute-trahison!']
+
+"In Ballaarat it was not a particular law, against which objection was
+raised, nor was there a particular complaint made. ['Oh, pardon,
+Monseigneur: ou l'on vous a toujours mal informe; ou l'on vous a souvent
+cache la verite: alheureusement, cela n'a pas beaucoup change meme
+aujourd'hui'.' Vide 'The Times', Ballaarat, Saturday, September 29, 1855,
+and Saturday, November 10th--Local Court.]
+
+"...It was not exactly the licence fee, that caused the outbreak, though
+that was made the 'nom de guerre,' the 'cheval de bataille,' this was not
+the real cause. I consider that the masses were urged on by designing men
+who had ulterior views, and who hoped to profit by anarchy and confusion.
+['Comment se fait il Monseigneur que vous mettez le prix de 500 pounds
+sur la tete du chef de ces blagueurs du Star Hotel, a Ballaarat; et puis
+vous lassiez courir le malin a son aise! Avez-vous, oui ou non,
+Monseigneur, accorde votre pardon a M`Gill? et les autres Americains
+donc?']
+
+"Then we have active, designing, intriguing foreigners, who also desire
+to bring about disorder and confusion." ['Cependant, moi, bon garcon apres
+tout, et d'une ancienne famille Romaine, j'ai ete VOLE sous arret au
+Camp de Ballaarat par VOS gens et avec impunite, Monseigneur. Vous me
+faites l'honneur d'avouer par votre lettre la chose, mais vous n'avez
+point fait de restitution. Ce n'est pas comme cela que j'entends le vieux
+mot Anglais, Fair-play.']"
+
+Hence, I had better address myself to the five hundred gentlemen, who
+belong to the brave Melbourne people after all.
+
+Gentlemen,
+
+Five hundred copies of this work, which costs me an immense labour,
+for the sake of the cause of truth, will be left with
+
+MESSRS. MUIR, BROTHERS AND CO.,
+Merchants, Flinders-lane, Melbourne--
+
+of the same firm much respected on Ballaarat, to whom I am personally
+known long ago, having been their neighbour on the Massacre-hill, Eureka.
+Ten shillings is my price for each copy: and, as Messrs. Muir render this
+service to me gratuitously, so I hereby authorise them to keep
+half-a-crown from each ten shillings, and in the spirit of St. Matthew,
+verses 1, 2, 3, 4, chap. vi.,share said halfcrowns in the following
+proportion: one shilling to the Benevolent Asylum; one shilling to the
+Melbourne Hospital, and sixpence to the Miners' Hospital, Ballaarat.
+
+I hope thus to understand 'Fair-play' better than Toorak.
+
+I have not yet done with His Excellency's answer.
+
+"The part which the bankers, merchants, tradesmen and others in Melbourne
+and in Geelong ['pas a Ballaarat, Monseigneur'], have taken in coming
+forward to support me, I shall be careful to represent properly at home,
+where perhaps these occurrences may attract more attention than they
+deserve. ['Pour votre bonheur, Monseigneur, Sebastopol leur donne assez
+d'occupation pour le moment.']
+
+"I shall declare my opinion that the mass of the community does not
+sympathise with these violators of the law." ['Est-ce donc un reve,
+Monseigneur, que votre gouvernment en voulait a ma tete, aussi, bien
+qu'a celle de douze autres prisonnier, d'etat, et que le peuple nous
+a acquitte glorieusement par'
+SEVEN BRITISH JURIES!]
+
+'Mon ardent desir, mon tourment presque, c'est d'avoir vite l'honneur
+de parler, encore une fois sur la terre, a SA MAJESTE LA REINE VICTORIA.'
+
+'AINSI-SOIT-IL.'
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXXI.
+
+
+
+The State Prisoners.
+
+
+I Beg to say at once, that with the exception of Hayes and Manning, of the
+remaining ten, seven were perfect strangers to me; three I had simply met
+at work on the gold-fields; and I won't say anything further.
+
+Yes, though, MICHAEL TUHEY was the stoutest heart among us, an Irishman
+in word and deed, young, healthy, good-hearted chap, that hates all the
+ways of John Bull, he had been misled by honest George Black countenancing
+the two demagogues at Creswick-creek, and had hastened with his
+double-barrelled guns to Ballaarat, and stood his ground like an Irishman,
+against the red-coats. He never was sorry for it. His brother paid some
+forty pounds to a certain solicitor for his defence, but when Mic was
+tried for his neck, the Hog was not there. GOD SAVE THE PEOPLE!
+
+THOMAS DIGNAM, a serious-looking, short, tight-built young chap, a native
+of Sydney, who hated all sort of rogues, because he was honest in heart.
+He brunted courageously the mob fury on Tuesday evening, November 28th,
+on the Eureka, and actually saved at the risk of his own life, the life
+of a soldier of the 12th regiment on its way to Ballaarat; he took up
+arms in the cause of the diggers in Thursday's licence-hunt, was
+subsequently under drill at the stockade; fought like a tiger on Sunday
+morning; repented not of having put on stretchers a couple of red-coats;
+was always cheerful, contented and kind-hearted during the four months
+in gaol; paid his last farthing out of the honest sweat of his brow,
+to Stephens his solicitor for the defence (above thirty pounds) and when
+put in the dock to take his trial for high-treason, lo! there was no
+charge against him; the prosecution was dropped. GOD SAVE THE QUEEN!
+
+We are however still in chokey at Ballaarat. We were put under the
+officious care of Sergeant Harris, who condescended to show some affection
+for Joseph, to prove that his Christian love could extend even to niggers;
+but the red-coat wanted to draw worms from the black rebel. We were nigh
+bursting for laughter, when Joseph during his two days' trial came into
+our yard for his meals, and related to us with such eye-twinklings,
+widening of nostrils, trumping up the lips, scratching all the while his
+black wool so desperately, and the doodle music of his unearthly whistle!
+"how old chappyman and a tother smart 'un of spin-all did fix that there
+mob of traps; 'specially that godammed hirpocrit of sergeant, I guess."
+
+JOHN JOSEPH, a native of New York, under a dark skin possessed a warm,
+good, honest, kind, cheerful heart; a sober, plain-matter-of-fact
+contented mind; and that is more than what can be said of some
+half-a-dozen grumbling, shirking, snarling, dog-natured state prisoners.
+
+Sergeant Harris took it into his head to humble Hayes--humility is also a
+Christian virtue--and so honoured him with the perfumery job of clearing
+the tub at the corner, full of urine and solids. Hayes, for the lark did
+it once, but found it against his principles to practise on said tub
+again, and thus got into disgrace with our overkind sergeant.
+
+To be serious: Timothy Hayes, our chairman at the monster meeting,
+aristocratically dressed among us, had like the rest his plump body
+literally bloated with lice from the lock-up. Poor Manning was the worst.
+Myself, I was plagued with that disgusting vermin, all through those
+ignominious four months in gaol.
+
+It were odious to say many, many other things.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXXII.
+
+
+
+Is There A Mortal Eye That Never Wept?
+
+
+On Sunday afternoon, we witnessed a solemn scene, which must be recorded
+with a tear wherever this book may find a reader.
+
+The sun was far towards the west. All had felt severely the heat of the
+day. The red-coats themselves, that were of the watch, felt their ardour
+flagging. Of twelve prisoners, some gazed as in 'a fix,' and were
+stationary; others, 'acursing,' swept up and down the prison; the rest,
+cast down, desponding, doing violence to themselves, to dam their flooded
+eyes. I was among the broken-hearted.
+
+Mrs. Hayes, who in the days of her youth must have made many young Irish
+hearts ache 'for something,' had brought now a bundle of clean clothing,
+and a stock of provisions, to make her husband's journey to Melbourne as
+comfortable as possible. There she was, holding her baby sucking at her
+breast; her eyes full on her husband, which spoke that she passionately
+loved him. Six children, neatly dressed, and the image of their father,
+were around. Timothy Hayes forced himself to appear as cheerful as his
+honourable heart and proud mind would allow. He pressed his little
+daughter, who wanted to climb his shoulder; he pronounced his blessing
+on the younger of his sons. The eldest (twelve years old) was kissing
+his father's left hand, bathing it all the while with such big tears,
+that dropped down so one by one, and so after the other!
+
+Good boy, your sorrows have begun soon enough for your sensible heart!
+Strengthen it by time with Christian courage, or else you will smother it
+with grief, long before your hair has turned grey! There are too many
+troubles to go through in this world. Take courage; there is a God,
+and therefore learn by heart the Psalm, 'Beatus vir qui timet Dominum.'
+My head has still the red hair of my youth, and yet I am a living witness
+of many truths in that Psalm; meditate, therefore, especially on the last
+verse, ending 'Desiderium peccatorum peribit.'
+
+Had I in younger years cultivated painting, I feel satisfied that I could
+produce now such a tableau as to match any of my countryman, Raffaelle;
+so much an all-wise Providence has been pleased, perhaps for the trial of
+my heart, to endow me with a cast of mind that, on similar occasions as
+the solemn one above, whenever my electric fluid is called into action,
+it is actually a daguerreotype.
+
+
+
+Chapter LXXIII.
+
+
+
+Amare Rimembranze.
+
+
+At four o'clock on Tuesday morning, we were commanded to fall in, dressed
+and hobbled as we were. Captain Thomas, with the tone and voice of a
+country parson, read to us his 'Order of the day,' to the effect that we
+were now under his charge for our transit to Melbourne; that if any of us
+stirred a finger, or moved a lip--especially across the diggings--his
+orders were that the transgressor should be shot on the spot. This
+arrangement, so Austrian-like, and therefore unworthy of a British officer,
+did not frighten us, and I cried, loud enough, "God save the Queen!"
+
+Inspector Foster sprang up to me with his hopping leg, put on me tighter
+darbies, and together with the mulatto-rebel put us in front of the cart,
+giving strict orders to shoot us both down if we attempted to turn our
+heads. 'Veritatem dico, non mentior'; and so Messrs, Haynau, Jellachich,
+and Co., from that morning my hatred for you is on the decline.
+
+They rode us through the main road as fast is it was safe for the
+preservation of our necks--the only thing they wanted to preserve
+inviolate for head-quarters.
+
+Though it was clear daylight, yet I did see only one digger on the whole
+of the main road.
+
+On passing through the Eureka, I got a glance of my snug little tent,
+where I had passed so many happy hours, and was sacred to me on a Sunday.
+There it lay deserted, uncared for! My eyes were choked with tears,
+and at forty years of age a man does not cry for little.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXXIV
+
+
+
+Della Vita Lo Spello Dal Mondo Sciolto,
+Al Mondo Vivo Perche Non Son Sepolto.
+
+
+We were soon in Ballan. Good reader, please enter now within my mind.
+The lesson, if read, learned, and inwardly digested, will be of good use
+for the future. The troubles of this colony have begun.
+
+It is eight o'clock of a fine morning; the spring season is in its full:
+the sun in his splendour is all there on the blue sky. Nature all around
+is life. The landscape is superb. It reminded me 'della Bella Cara
+Itallia'. The bush around was crammed with parrots, crows, and other
+chattering birds of the south. They were not prevented from singing
+praises each in its own language to the Creator, and all was joy and
+happiness with them. Unfortunately those lands lay uncultivated by the
+hand of man; but were not left idle by nature. Lively, pretty little
+flowers of the finest blue, teemed here, there, and everywhere, through
+the splendid grass, wafed to and fro by a gentle wind.
+
+Look now at the foot of the picture.
+
+There were thirteen of us all healthy, honest, able-bodied men, chained
+together on three carts. A dozen of dragoons, strong, sound-looking men,
+were riding on horseback as sharp-shooters, in all directions, before our
+carts in the bush. Their horses were really splendid animals. A score
+of troopers of the accursed stamp we had then on Ballaarat, sword
+unsheathed, carbines cocked, kept so close to our carts that one of these
+Vandemonians was half jammed on riding by a large gum-tree; was thrown
+from his horse, and disabled, but not killed. We are at last in Ballan,
+for change of horses. Captain Thomas and a stout healthy-looking man,
+with a pair of the finest black whiskers I ever saw, in the garb of a
+digger, who gave such orders to the coachman, as were always attended to,
+with the usual colonial oaths as a matter of course, were regaling
+themselves with bottled porter on a stump of a tree outside the
+public-house. The dragoons and troopers had biscuit, cheese, and ale
+served to them, though paid for by themselves, before our teeth.
+
+There was no breakfast for the poor state prisoners, in chains, and lying
+on the bare ground. They had some trouble before they could obtain from
+the red-coats watching over them, and blowing heaps of smoke from stump
+pipes, a drop of cold water--I mean actually a drop of cold water.
+
+Good reader, you know WHOM I did bless, whom I did curse.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXXV.
+
+
+
+Petite, Sed Non Accipietis, Quia Petistis.
+
+
+The following document, which does honour and justice to its writer,
+J. Basson Humffray, to 4500 of our fellow-miners of Ballaarat, who signed
+it, to the state prisoners themselves, is now here transcribed as
+necessary to the purpose of this book.
+
+
+THE BALLAARAT DELEGATES, AND THEIR INTERVIEW WITH
+HIS EXCELLENCY SIR CHARLES HOTHAM, K.C.B., &c
+
+The public has already seen the written reply of His
+Excellency to the petition from Ballaarat, signed by
+nearly 4500 of the inhabitants of that important, but
+'officially' ridden place.
+
+We deem it our duty to the public, and especially to
+those whose delegates we are, to state the main reasons
+urged by us for a general amnesty, and to make some general
+remarks thereon, and also upon the reply. We have delayed
+doing this, as we expected to have returned immediately
+to Ballaarat, and we did not wish to forestall our intended
+statement at a public meeting, which would have been held
+on our return; but as circumstances interfere with this
+arrangement, we now give our report.
+
+We were very kindly and respectfully received by His
+Excellency.
+
+We thought it right to state that we repudiated physical
+force as a means of obtaining constitutional redress,
+believing that the British constitution had sufficient
+natural elasticity to adapt itself to the wants of the
+age, and would yield under proper pressure. But the
+arming of the diggers of Ballaarat, however reprehensible
+it might have been in itself, claims to be judged on
+special grounds, inasmuch as they had special provocation.
+The diggers of Ballaarat were attacked by a military
+body under the command of civil (!) officers, for the
+production of licence-papers, and, if they refused to
+be arrested, deliberately shot at. The diggers did not
+take up arms, properly speaking, against the government,
+but to defend themselves against the bayonets, bullets,
+and swords of the insolent officials in their unconstitutional
+attack, who were a class that would disgrace any government,
+by their mal-administration of the law.
+
+The diggers did not take up arms against British rule,
+but against the mis-rule of those who were paid to administer
+the law properly; and however foolish their conduct might
+be, it was an ungenerous libel on the part of one of the
+military officers to designate outraged British subjects
+as 'foreign anarchists and armed ruffians.'
+
+The diggers were goaded on to take the stand they did
+by the 'digger-hunt,' of the 30th November, which, we
+are sustained in saying, was a base piece of gold and
+silver lace revenge. Facts will no doubt appear by-and-bye,
+elucidating and confirming this statement.
+
+We reminded His Excellency of the fact, that the public
+had asked for or sanctioned a general amnesty; and although
+we were prepared to admit that it was unbecoming the
+dignity of any government to give way to what was termed
+'popular clamour,' yet, in this case, the good and the
+wise amongst all classes, forming a very large proportion
+of the inhabitants, had asked for it, and we thought the
+general wish should not be lightly treated. His Excellency
+observed, "Certainly not." We argued that an amnesty would
+restore general confidence, and secure support to the
+government in any emergency; and, even supposing there
+was any one in the movement who sought to overturn the
+government, instead of overturning corruption, and establishing
+a better system of administration, a general amnesty would
+silence such, as the great majority of the diggers were
+content to live under British law, if properly administered;
+and every one knows there has been much to condemn in
+the administration of the laws, on the Ballaarat gold-fields
+especially; and we endeavoured to impress upon the mind
+of the Lieutenant-Governor, that it was equally true
+that the majority of those who were proud of being British
+subjects, were growing tired of waiting for simple justice.
+And if the executive wish to secure their confidence
+and support, they must give better evidence of their
+good intentions of making better laws, or laws better
+suited to the wants of the people, and securing 'equal
+justice to all.' Their recent conduct has created disaffection
+amongst the ranks of the best disposed; in fact, those
+who disapproved of the resort to arms on the part of
+the diggers, condemn in the most unqualified manner the
+conduct of the Ballaarat officials in collecting a tax
+(obnoxious at the best) at the bayonet's point, and of
+the late Colonial Secretary, who could unblushingly write
+to Commissioner Rede (who superintended the digger-hunt
+on the 30th November, and, no doubt, counselled the Sunday
+morning's butchery), thanking him for his conduct on those
+occasions! And that if His Excellency would allow us to
+strip the matter of its official colouring, he would see
+things in a very different light than they had been officially
+represented.
+
+That an amnesty would not only secure the confidence of
+the people in the Governor, but it would show the confidence
+of the Governor in the people--it would be looked upon as
+a proof of the strength and vigour of the British constitution,
+instead of weakness in those that administer the laws under
+its guidance.
+
+That His Excellency could well afford to be generous.
+
+That, in asking for an amnesty, we were aware it was asking
+for much, and what a statesman should not do without due
+deliberation. But at the same time, we submitted we did
+not ask anything inconsistent with the true interests of
+the colony, or derogatory to the dignity and honour of
+the throne itself.
+
+That a general amnesty to the state prisoners would tend
+much to consolidate the power of the British government
+in this colony, and show that the representative of Majesty
+here can afford to be just--to be generous; with the full
+confidence that such an act would meet with the full
+concurrence of the Queen of England, and the approbation
+of the whole British empire. That in this he would act
+wiser far in listening to the voice of the people than
+to the short-sighted counsel of the law-advisers of the
+Crown. Humanity has higher claims than the mere demands
+and formalities of human law.
+
+We forbear saying all that might be said as to the spies
+being sent from the Camp to enrol themselves amongst the
+insurgents, and who, report says, urged them to attack
+the Camp, which was repudiated by the diggers--they
+saying they would act upon the defensive.
+
+That we believed the enforcement of the law in this case
+would have the most pernicious effect, not only upon the
+commerce of the colony, but would retard, if not prevent,
+the accomplishment of those schemes of reform that His
+Excellency had promised.
+
+That if he valued the good opinions of the people--the
+peace and prosperity of the colony, he would be giving
+the best evidence of it by granting the amnesty we prayed
+for; but that, if His Excellency punished these men, it
+would be calling into existence an agitation which would,
+we feared, end in civil commotion, if not in the disseverance
+of the colony from the mother country.
+
+That we thought there were reasons sufficiently important
+to justify an amnesty, on the grounds of state policy alone.
+
+But even supposing there were no legitimate grounds for
+an amnesty, and that the government have been right in
+all that they have done--which would be saying what facts
+do not warrant--surely the slaughter of some fifty people
+is blood enough to expiate far greater crimes than the
+diggers of Ballaarat have been guilty of, without seeking
+the lives of thirteen more victims. The government would
+act wisely in not pursuing so suicidal a course.
+
+His Excellency states, in his written reply, that the
+diggers, notwithstanding his promise of inquiry into all
+their grievances, had forestalled all inquiry.
+
+On this head, we would wish to remark, that the fault
+lies at the door of the government, in prostituting the
+military, by making them tax collectors, and placing them
+at the disposal of a few vain officials, who were not
+over-stocked with brains, and ignorant of the functions
+of constitutional government. But one fact they seemed
+fully sensible of, viz.: That 'Othello' occupation would
+indeed soon 'be gone,' and they were determined to 'crush
+the scoundrels' who dared to question the policy, or even
+justice, or a government keeping up such an expensive army
+of La Trobian idlers as strut about in borrowed plumes
+with all the insolence of office; who, in fact, have proved
+themselves, with a few honourable exceptions, fit for
+little else than bringing the colony into debt; creating
+disaffection amongst the people, and stamping indelible
+disgrace upon any government that would uphold the system
+that tolerates them. One of these 'retiring' gentlemen
+stated on the morning of the famed 'digger-hunt' of the
+30th November, in reply to one of the refractory diggers:
+"If you do not pay your licences, how are we to be supported
+at the Camp?" and further, "There are some disaffected
+scoundrels I am determine to arrest!" To crush! for what?
+For daring to refuse to pay taxes except they had a voice
+in the expending of them for the public weal; public taxes
+are public property. Some of these 'gentlemanly' officials
+made use of language on the occasion alluded to, that not
+only gave evidence of considerable malignity, but of a
+vulgarity that a gentleman would scorn to use; and we think
+it not an unfair inference to draw from the foregoing facts,
+that the digger-hunt of the 30th of November, and the cruel
+slaughter of the 3rd December, were unmistakable acts of
+petty official revenge; and, therefore, instead of the
+diggers forestalling the Commission of Inquiry, appointed
+by His Excellency, we advisedly say it was Commissioner
+Rede and Co. who forestalled the inquiry by endeavouring
+to crush the '500 scoundrels' he complained of--a scoundrel
+in that gentleman's estimation seems to be one who thinks
+that some 12 pounds per head per annum is rather too heavy
+a tax for an Englishman to pay, especially if used in
+supporting men so unfit for office as he has proved himself
+to be. This gentleman was the arch-rioter of the 30th
+November; in this we are confirmed (if confirmation of
+well-known facts were needed) by the verdict of acquittal
+of the so called 'Ballaarat Rioters,' partially on the
+evidence of Mr. Rede himself.
+
+In the latter part of His Excellency's reply, he very
+properly lays it down as 'the duty of government to administer
+equal justice to all;' which is no doubt the noblest principle
+of the English constitution, and we certainly have no fears
+for the peace of even colonial society, with all its supposed
+discordant elements, so long as that principle is practically
+carried out; but we are under well founded apprehension
+if the reverse is to be the order of the day.
+
+There is a paragraph in our petition to the effect, that
+if 'His Excellency had found sufficient extenuation in
+the conduct of American citizens,' we thought there were
+equally good grounds for extending similar clemency to
+all, irrespective of nationality; and that it was unbecoming
+the dignity of any government to make such exceptions;
+and if such have been done (and that something tantamount
+to it has been done, there is ample proof), it is a violation
+of the very principle enunciated by His Excellency in his
+report viz., 'That it is the duty of a government to
+administer equal justice to all.' What we contend for is
+this:--If it be just to grant an amnesty to a citizen of
+one country, 'equal justice' claims an amnesty for all.
+We wish it to be distinctly understood by our American
+friends, that we do not for a moment find fault with His
+Excellency for allowing their countrymen to go free, but
+we do complain, in sorrow, that he does not display the
+same liberality to others--that he does not wisely and
+magnanimously comply with the prayer of our petition by
+granting a general amnesty.
+
+But it is stated further in the reply, that 'no exception
+had been made in favour of any person against whom a charge
+was preferred.' With all becoming deference to His Excellency,
+we think this does not meet the point. If the gentleman
+were innocent, why guarantee him against arrest? And if
+his friends (and we give them credit for good tact) anticipated
+the 'preferment of a charge,' it does not create any special
+grounds for an amnesty in contradistinction to a general amnesty.
+
+Again, upon whom lies the onus of 'preferring charge?'
+500 pounds was offered for Vern, 'DEAD OR ALIVE' and
+400 pounds for Lalor and Black; and yet we presume there
+was no charge, or charges, 'preferred' against them any
+more than the gentleman alluded to. We yet trust that
+the same good feeling that induced His Excellency to give
+James M`Gill his liberty will increase sufficiently strong
+to unbar the prison-doors, and set the state captives free,
+that they may be restored to their homes, their sorrowing
+families, and sympathising countrymen. By such an act,
+the Lieutenant-Governor will secure the peace of society,
+and the respect and support of the people, and be carrying
+out the glorious principle he has proclaimed of 'Equal
+Justice to All.'
+
+J. BASSON HUMFFRAY,
+C. F. NICHOLLS,
+(of Ballaarat.)
+Melbourne, 23rd January, 1855.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXXVI.
+
+
+
+Quid Sum Miser, Nunc Dicturus.
+
+
+At Bacchus Marsh we were thrown into a dark lockup, by far cleaner than
+the lousy one of Ballaarat. Captain Thomas, who must have acknowledged
+that we had behaved as men, sent us a gallon of porter, and plenty of
+damper; he had no occasion to shoot down any of us. I write now this his
+kindness with thanks.
+
+At last, after a long, long day, smothered with dust, burning with thirst,
+such that the man in the garb of a digger had compassion on us, and
+shouted a welcome glass of ale to all of us--we arrived before the
+Melbourne gaol at eight o'clock at night.
+
+From the tender mercies of our troopers, we were given up to the gentle
+grasp of the turnkeys. The man in the garb of a digger introduced us to
+the governor, giving such a good account of us all, that said governor,
+on hearing we had had nothing to eat since mid-day, was moved to let us
+have some bread and cheese.
+
+We were commanded to strip to the bare shirt--the usual ignomy to begin a
+prison life with--and then we were shown our cell--a board to lie down on,
+a blanket--and the heavy door was bolted on us.
+
+Within the darkness of our cell, we now gave vent to our grief, each in
+his own way.
+
+Sleep is not a friend to prisoners, and so my mind naturally wandered back
+to the old spot on the Eureka.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXXVII.
+
+
+
+Requiescant In Pace.
+
+
+Lalor's Report of the Killed and Wounded at the Eureka Massacre, on the
+morning of the memorable Third of December, 1854:-
+
+
+The following lists are as complete as I can make them. The numbers are
+well known, but there is a want of names. I trust that the friends or
+acquaintances of these parties may forward particulars to 'The Times'
+office, Ballaarat, to be made available in a more lengthened narrative.
+
+
+KILLED.
+
+1 JOHN HYNES, County Clare, Ireland.
+2 PATRICK GITTINS, Kilkenny, do.
+3---- MULLINS, Kilkenny, Limerick, Ireland.
+4 SAMUEL GREEN, England.
+5 JOHN ROBERTSON, Scotland.
+6 EDWARD THONEN (lemonade man), Elbertfeldt, Prussia.
+7 JOHN HAFELE, Wurtemberg.
+8 JOHN DIAMOND, County Clare, Ireland.
+9 THOMAS O'NEIL, Kilkenny, do.
+10 GEORGE DONAGHEY, Muff, County Donegal, do.
+11 EDWARD QUIN, County Cavan, do.
+12 WILLIAM QUINLAN, Goulbourn, N.S.W.
+13 and 14 Names unknown. One was usually known on Eureka as 'Happy Jack.'
+
+
+WOUNDED AND SINCE DEAD.
+
+1 LIEUTENANT ROSS, Canada.
+2 THADDEUS MOORE, County Clare, Ireland.
+3 JAMES BROWN, Newry, do.
+4 ROBERT JULIEN, Nova Scotia.
+5 ----CROWE, unknown.
+6 ----FENTON, do.
+7 EDWARD M`GLYN, Ireland.
+8 No particulars.
+
+
+WOUNDED AND SINCE RECOVERED.
+
+1 PETER LALOR, Queen's County, Ireland.
+2 Name unknown, England.
+3 PATRICK HANAFIN, County Kerry, Ireland.
+4 MICHAEL HANLY, County Tipperary, do.
+5 MICHAL O'NEIL, County Clare, do.
+6 THOMAS CALLANAN, do. do.
+7 PATRICK CALLANAN, do. do.
+8 FRANK SYMMONs, England.
+9 JAMES WARNER, County Cork, Ireland.
+10 LUKE SHEEHAN, County Galway, do.
+11 MICHAEL MORRISON, County Galway, do.
+12 DENNIS DYNAN, County Clare, do.
+
+
+(Signed) PETER LALOR,
+Commander-in-Chief.
+
+
+What has become of GEORGE BLACK, was, and is still, a MYSTERY to me.
+I lost sight of him since his leaving for Creswick-creek, on
+December 1, 1854.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXXVIII.
+
+
+
+Homo Natus De Muliere, Brevi Vivens Tempore Repletur Multis Miseriis.
+Qui Quasi Flos Conterritur Et Egreditur; Postea Velut Umbra Disperditur.
+
+
+It is not the purpose of this book, to begin a lamentation about my four
+long, long months in the gaol. My health was ruined for ever: if that be
+a consolation to any one; let him enjoy it. To say more is disgusting to
+me and would prove so to any one, whose motto is 'Fair-play.'
+
+A dish of 'hominy' (Indian meal), now and then fattened with grubs,
+was my breakfast.
+
+A dish of scalding water, with half a dozen grains of rice, called soup,
+a morsel of dry bullock's flesh, now and then high-flavoured, a bit of
+bread eternally sour--any how the cause of my suffering so much of
+dysentery, and a couple of black murphies were my dinner.
+
+For tea, a similar dish of hominy as in the morning, with the privilege
+of having now and then a bushranger or a horse-stealer for my mess-mate,
+and often I enjoyed the company of the famous robbers of the Victoria Bank.
+
+But the Sunday! Oh the Sunday! was the most trying day. The turnkeys,
+of course, must enjoy the benefit of the sabbath cant, let the prisoners
+pray or curse in their cells. I was let out along with the catholics,
+to hear mass. I really felt the want of Christian consolation. Our
+priest was always in a hurry, twice did not come, once said half the mass
+without any assistant; never could I hear two words together out of his
+short sermon. Not once ever came to see us prisoners.
+
+After mass, I returned to my cell, and was let out again for half an hour
+among all sorts of criminals, some convicted, some waiting their trial,
+in the large yard, to eat our dinner, and again shut up in the cell till
+the following Monday.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXXIX.
+
+
+
+'Souvenirs' De Melbourne.
+
+
+Five things I wish to register: the first for shame; the second for
+encouragement; the third for duty; the fourth for information; the fifth
+for record.
+
+1. We were one afternoon taken by surprise by the whole gang of turnkeys,
+ordered to strip, and subjected to an ignominious search. The very
+private parts were discovered and touched. 'Veritatem dico, non mentior.'
+
+2. Manning felt very much the want of a chew of tobacco. He and Tuhey
+would make me strike up some favourite piece out of the Italian opera,
+and the charm succeeded. A gentle tap at the door of our cell was the
+signal to get from a crack below a stick of tobacco, and then we were all
+jolly. We decreed and proclaimed that even in hell there must be some
+good devils.
+
+3. Mr. Wintle, the governor, inclining to the John Bull in corporation,
+had preserved even in a Melbourne gaol, crammed as it is at the end of
+each month with the worst class of confirmed criminals, his good, kind
+heart. With us state prisoners, without relaxing discipline, he used no
+cruelty--spoke always kindly to us--was sorry at our position, and wished
+us well. He had regard for me, on account of my bad health; that I shall
+always remember.
+
+4. Some day in January we received a New-Year's Present--that is a copy
+of the indictment. I protest at once against recording it here: it is
+the coarsest fustian ever spun by Toorak Spiders. I solemnly declare that
+to my knowledge the name of Her Most Gracious Majesty was never mentioned
+in any way, shape, or form whatever, during the whole of the late
+transactions on Ballaarat. I devoured the whole of the indictment with
+both my eyes, expecting to meet with some count charging us with riot.
+The disappointment was welcome, and I considered myself safe. Not so,
+however, by a parcel of shabby solicitors. They said it would go hard
+with any one if found guilty. The government meant to make an example of
+some of of us, as a lesson to the ill-affected, in the shape of some
+fifteen years in the hulks. They had learned from Lynn of Ballaarat that
+there were no funds collected from the diggers for the defence. 'Cetera
+quando rursum scribam'--and thus they won some 200 pounds out of the
+frightened state prisoners, who possessed ready cash.
+
+"What will be the end of us, Joe?" was my question to the nigger-rebel.
+
+"Why, if the jury lets us go, I guess we'll jump our holes again on the
+diggings. If the jury won't let us go, then"--and bowing his head over
+the left shoulder, poking his thumb between the windpipe and the
+collarbone, opened wide his eyes, and gave such an unearthly whistle,
+that I understood perfectly well what he meant.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXXX.
+
+
+
+The State Prisoners.
+(From 'The Age', February 14th, 1855.)
+
+
+The following is the copy of a letter addressed by the state prisoners now
+awaiting their trial in the Melbourne Gaol, to the Sheriff, complaining
+of the treatment they have received:-
+
+
+Her Majesty's Gaol, Melbourne,
+February 6th, 1855.
+To the Sheriff of the Colony of Victoria:-
+
+Sir--As the chief officer of the government, regulating
+prison discipline in Victoria, we, the undersigned Ballaarat
+state prisoners, respectfully beg to acquaint you with
+the mode of our treatment since our imprisonment in this
+gaol, in the hope that you will be pleased to make some
+alteration for the better.
+
+At seven o'clock in the morning we are led into a small
+yard of about thirty yards long and eight wide, where
+we must either stand, walk or seat ourselves upon the
+cold earth (no seats or benches being afforded us), and
+which at meal times serves as chair, table, etc., with
+the additional consequence of having our food saturated
+with sand, dust, and with every kind of disgusting filth
+which the wind may happen to stir up within the yard.
+
+We are locked in, about three o'clock in the afternoon,
+four or five of us together, in a cell whose dimensions
+are three feet by twelve, being thus debarred from the
+free air of heaven for sixteen hours out of the twenty-four.
+The food is of the very worst description ever used by
+civilized beings. We are debarred the use of writing
+materials, except for purposes of pressing necessity; are
+never permitted to see a newspaper; and strictly prohibited
+the use of tobacco and snuff. We have been subjected to
+the annoyance of being stripped naked, a dozen men together,
+when a process of 'searching' takes place that is debasing
+to any human being, but perfectly revolting to men whose
+sensibilities have never been blunted by familiarity with
+crime--an ordeal of examination, and the coarse audacity
+with which it is perpetrated, as would make manhood blush,
+and which it would assuredly resent, as an outrage upon
+common decency, in any other place than a prison. And again,
+when the visiting justice makes his rounds, we are made
+to stand bareheaded before him, as if--etc.
+
+We give the government the credit of believing that it is
+not its wish we should be treated with such apparent malignity
+and apparent malice; and also believe that if you, sir,
+the representative of government in this department, had
+been previously made acquainted with this mode of treatment,
+you would have caused it to be altered. But we have hitherto
+refrained from troubling the government on the subject,
+in expectation of a speedy trial, which now appears to be
+postponed sine die.
+
+We, each of us, can look back with laudable pride upon
+our lives, and not a page in the record of the past can
+unfold a single transgression which would degrade us before
+man, or for which we would be condemned before our Maker.
+And we naturally ask why we should be treated as if our
+lives had been one succession of crime, or as if society
+breathed freely once more at being rid of our dangerous
+and demoralising presence. Even the Sunday, that to all
+men in Christendom is a day of relaxation and comparative
+enjoyment, to us is one of gloom and weariness, being locked
+up in a dreary cell from three o'clock Saturday evening
+till seven on Monday morning (except for about an hour
+and a half on Sunday); thus locked up in a narrow dungeon
+for forty consecutive hours! We appeal to you, and ask,
+was there ever worse treatment, in the worst days of the
+Roman inquisition, for men whose reputation had never
+been sullied with crime?
+
+We therefore humbly submit, that, as the state looks only
+at present to our being well secured, we ought to be treated
+with every liberality consistent with our safe custody;
+and that any unnecessary harshness, or arrogant display
+of power, is nothing more or less than wanton cruelty.
+
+Some of us, for instance, could wile away several hours
+each day in writing, an occupation which, while it would
+fill up the dreary vacuum of a prison life, as would the
+moderate use of snuff and tobacco cheer it, and soothe
+that mental irritation consequent upon seclusion. But that
+system of discipline which would paralyse the mind and
+debilitate the body--that would destroy intellectual as
+well as physical energy and vigour, cannot certainly be
+of human origin.
+
+Trusting you will remove these sources of annoyance and
+complaint,
+
+We beg to subscribe ourselves,
+Sir
+Your obedient servants.
+[Here follow the names.]
+
+-----
+
+Sheriff CLAUDE FARIE, Inspector PRICE, Turnkey HACKETT, they will praise
+your names in hell!
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXXXI.
+
+
+
+Quem Patronem Rogaturus.
+
+
+The brave people of Melbourne remembered the state prisoners, forgotten by
+the Ballaarat diggers, who now that the storm was over, considered
+themselves luckily cunning to have got off safe; and therefore could
+afford to 'joe' again; the red-streak near Golden-point, having put every
+one in the good old spirits of the good old times.
+
+
+Yourself devoting to the public cause,
+You ask the people if they be 'there' to die:
+Yes, yes hurrah the thund'ring applause,
+Too soon, alas! you find out the lie!
+Cast in a gaol, at best you are thought a fool,
+Red hot grows your foe; your friend too cool.
+
+An angel, however, was sent to the undefended state prisoners. Hayes and
+myself were the first, who since our being in trouble, did grasp the hand
+of a gentleman, volunteering to be our friend.
+
+JAMES MACPHERSON GRANT, solicitor, is a Scotchman of middle-size,
+middle-height; and the whole makes the man, an active man of business,
+a shrewd lawyer, and up to all the dodges of his profession. His forehead
+announces that all is sound within; his benevolent countenance assures
+that his heart is for man or woman in trouble. He hates oppression; so
+say his eyes. He scorns humbug; so says his nose. His manners declare
+that he was born a gentleman.
+
+I very soon gave him hints for my defence, quite in accordance with what
+I have been stating above, and his clerk took the whole down in short-hand.
+He encouraged me to be of good cheer, "You need not fear," said he,
+"you will soon be out, all of you."
+
+God bless you, Mr. Grant! For the sake of you and Mr. Aspinall, the
+barrister, I smother now my bitterness, and pass over all that I suffered
+on account of so many postponements.
+
+Timothy Hayes, when we returned broken-hearted for the FIFTH(!) time to
+our gaol, did we not curse the lawyers!
+
+A wild turn of mind now launched my soul to the old beloved spot on the
+Eureka, and there I struck out the following anthem.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXXXII.
+
+
+
+Victoria's 'Southern Cross'.
+Tune--The 'Standard Bearer'
+
+I.
+
+WHEN Ballaarat unfurled the 'Southern Cross,'
+Of joy a shout ascended to the heavens;
+The bearer was Toronto's Captain Ross;
+And frightened into fits red-taped ravens.
+
+
+Chorus. For brave Lalor--
+ Was found 'all there,'
+ With dauntless dare:
+ His men inspiring:
+ To wolf or bear,
+ Defiance bidding,
+ He made them swear--
+Be faithful to the Standard, for victory or death. (Bis.)
+
+II.
+
+Blood-hounds were soon let loose, with grog imbued,
+And murder stained that Sunday! Sunday morning;
+The Southern Cross in digger's gore imbrued,
+Was torn away, and left the diggers mourning!
+
+Chorus.
+
+Victoria men, to scare, stifle, or tame,
+Ye quarter-deck monsters are too impotent;
+The Southern Cross will float again the same,
+UNITED Britons, ye are OMNIPOTENT.
+
+Chorus.
+
+
+Thus I had spanned the strings of my harp, but the strain broke them
+asunder in the gaol.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXXXIII.
+
+
+Initium Sapientie Est Timor Domini.
+
+
+There are circumstances in life, so inexplicable for the understanding;
+so intricate for the counsel; so overwhelming for the judgment; so
+tempting for the soul; so clashing with common sense; so bewildering for
+the mind; so crushing for the heart; that even the honest man cannot help
+at moments to believe in FATE. Hence the 'sic sinuerunt Fata,' will dash
+the fatalist ahead, and embolden him to knock down friend or foe, so as
+to carry out his conceit. If successful, he is a Caesar; if unsuccessful,
+ignominy and a violent grave are the reward of his worry.
+
+If this be true, as far as it goes, whilst
+
+Through living hosts and changing scenes we rove,
+The mart, the court, the sea, the battle-plain,
+As passions sway, or accident may move;
+
+it holds not true in a gaol. There you must meet yourself, and you find
+that you are not your God. Hence these new strings in my harp.
+
+
+TO THE POINT.
+
+I.
+
+Gay is the early bloom of life's first dawn,
+But darker colours tinge maturer years;
+Our days as they advance grow more forlorn,
+Hope's brightest dreams dissolve away in tears
+Which were the best, to be or not to have been?
+The question may be asked, no answer can be seen.
+
+II.
+
+On earth we live, within our thoughts--the slaves,
+Of our conceptions in each varied mood,
+Gay or melancholy;--it is the waves
+Of our imaginings, become the food
+The spirit preys upon; and laughs or raves
+With madness or with pleasure, as it would
+If drunk with liquids. WE EXIST AND DWELL
+AS THE MIND MAY DISPOSE, IN HEAVEN OR IN HELL.
+
+THEME.
+
+Death which we dread so much, is but a name.
+
+
+SONNET.
+
+He who never did eat his bread in tears;
+Who never passed a dreary bitter night,
+And in his bed of sorrow, the hard fight
+Of pending troubles saw, with anxious fears:
+Who never an exile forlorn for years,
+And never wept with Israel 'at the sight
+Of the waters of Babylon' (Psalm 137), the might
+Of Heaven's word is unknown to his ears.
+IS THERE A MORTAL EYE THAT NEVER WEPT?
+WITH tears the child begins his wants to show
+In tears the man out of the earth is swept.
+Whether we bless or grumble here below,
+HIM who ever in His hand the world has kept
+In dark affliction's school we learn to know.
+
+(Of course my original is in Italian.)
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXXXIV.
+
+
+
+Judica Me Deus, Et Discarne Causam Meam De Gente Non Sancta;
+Ab Homine Iniquo Et Doloso Erue Me.
+
+
+SUPREME COURT
+Melbourne, Victoria, Australia Felix,
+Wednesday, March 21st, 1855.
+
+(Before his Honour Mr. Justice Barry.)
+
+
+MY STATE TRIAL His HONOUR took his seat shortly after ten o'clock.
+The prisoner, that is myself, was placed in the dock, and the following
+Jury sworn (after the usual challenging):-
+
+PHILLIP BRAGG, Gore-street, Farmer,
+ALEXANDER BARTHOLOMEW, Brighton-road, Joiner,
+JAMES BLACK, Greville-street, Butcher,
+CHARLES BUTT, Lennox-street, Carpenter,
+THOMAS BELL, Lennox-street, Carpenter,
+FREDERICK BAINES, Richmond-road, Painter,
+CHARLES BELFORD, Kew, Gardener,
+WILLIAM BROADHURST, Wellington-street, Grocer,
+JOSEPH BERRY, Hawthorne, Farmer,
+DAVID BOYLE, Kew, Gardener,
+WILLIAM BARNETT, Heidelberg, Gardener,
+JOHN BATES, Rowena-street, Baker.
+
+'Brava gente. Dio vi benedica. Mio Fratello desidera veder ciascuno
+di Voi, nella nostra Bella Itallia.'
+
+For the first time in my life (37 years old), I was placed in a felon's
+dock, and before a British jury.
+
+The first glance I gave to the foreman made me all serene. I was sure
+that the right man was in the right place.
+
+JAMES MACPHERSON GRANT, my attorney for the defence, was 'all there.'
+
+RICHARD DAVIS IRELAND, barrister, my counsel, was heavy with thunder.
+Thick, sound, robust, round-headed as he is, the glance of his eyes is
+irresistible. A pair of bushy whiskers frame in such a shrewd forehead,
+astute nose, thundering mouth; that one had better keep at a respectful
+distance from drakes. His whole head and strong-built frame tell that he
+is ready to settle at once with anybody; either with the tongue or with
+the fist. His eloquence savours pretty strongly of Daniel O'Connell,
+and is flavoured with colonial pepper; hence Mr. Ireland will always
+exercise a potent spell over a jury. If he were the Attorney-General,
+the colony would breath freer from knaves, rogues, and vagabonds. The
+'sweeps,' especially, could not possibly prosper with Ireland's pepper.
+
+According to promise, another lawyer, a man of flesh, had to be present:
+but, as he was not there, so he is not here.
+
+Mr. ASPINALL, barrister, totally unknown to me before, volunteered his
+services as my counsel to assist Mr. Ireland.
+
+'In memoria eterna manet amicus' BUTLER COLE ASPINALL. The print of
+generous frankness in your forehead, of benevolence in your eyes, of
+having no-two-ways in your nose, of sincere boldness in your mouth;
+your height, fine complexion, noble deportment, indicate in you the
+gentleman and the scholar. If now and then you fumble among papers,
+whilst addressing the jury, that is perhaps for fear it should be observed
+that you have no beard; in order that proper attention may be paid to your
+learning, which is that of a grey-headed man; and though it may be said,
+that the Eureka Stockade was hoggledy enough, yet your pop, pop, pop, was
+also doggledy.
+
+You know a tree by its fruits; and so you may know, if you like, the
+Attorney-General by his High-Treason Indictment. I have not the patience
+to go through it a second time. There are too many Fosters, fostering and
+festering in this Victorian land.
+
+JUDGE BARRY presided; a man of the old-gentleman John Bull's stamp.
+Nothing in his face of the cast of a Jefferies. He can manage his temper,
+even among the vexations of law.
+
+His Honour addressed me always with kindness. If he shampooed his
+summing-up, with parson's solemnity, indicating not little
+self-congratulation, His Honour had reason to be proud of the following
+remarks, which I here record for that purpose:-
+
+
+"They had been told (said His Honour to the jury), that the
+prisoner in the dock had come sixteen thousand miles to
+get off from the Austrian rule--from the land of tyranny
+to that of liberty; and so he had, in the truest sense of
+the word, and that liberty which he enjoyed imposed upon
+him a local respect for Her Majesty, and a respect for her
+laws. He had the privilege of being tried by a jury, who
+would form their verdict solely from the facts adduced
+on the trial."
+
+
+A fair hint; equal to saying, that under the British flag I was not going
+to be tried before the Holy (read, Infernal) Inquisition.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXXXV.
+
+
+
+Sunt Miserie In Vita Hominus, Viro Probo Dolosis Circumdari!
+Nulla Miseria Pejor.
+
+
+MY TRIAL proceeded, before the British Jury aforesaid.
+
+Vandemonians:
+HENRY GOODENOUGH, Spy-Major.
+ANDREW PETERS, Sub-Spy.
+
+As an honest man, I scorn to say anything of either of you; but address
+myself to my God, the Lord God of Israel, in the words of Solomon:-
+
+'If any man trespass against his neighbour, and an oath be laid upon him
+to cause him to swear, and the oath come before thine altar in this house:
+
+'Then hear thou in heaven, and do, and judge thy servants, condemning the
+wicked to bring his way upon his head.'--(1 Kings viii. 31, 32.)
+
+GEORGE WEBSTER examined:-
+"I attended the meeting at Bakery-hill on the afternoon of the 29th
+November, Mr. Hayes was chairman, and the prisoner was on the platform.
+He made a speech to the effect, that he had come 16,000 miles to escape
+tyranny, and they (THE DIGGERS) should put down the tyrants here (POINTING
+TO THE CAMP). PRISONER ALSO TORE UP HIS LICENCE and threw it towards the
+fire recommending the others to do as he did."
+
+N.B.--At the next state trial of Jamas Beattie, and Michael Tuhey, said
+witness George Webster, on his oath, was cross examined by Mr. Ireland,
+and stated:-
+
+"Mr. RAFFAELLO, was at the meeting on the 29th November.--(A gold licence
+was here handed to the witness.)--This licence is in the name of
+CARBONI RAFFAELLO, and the date covers the period at which the licences
+were burned."--(Sensation in the Court!)
+
+I was present in person, and a free man. 'AB UNO DISCE OMNES: JAM SATIS
+DIXI.' I hereby assert that I did not burn any paper or anything at all
+at the monster meeting; I challenge contradiction from any bona fide
+miner, who was present at said meeting. I paid two pounds for my licence
+on the 15th of October, 1854, to Commissioner Amos, and I have it still
+in my possession.*
+
+[* The original document of the following Gold-license, as well as the
+documents from Davis Burwash, Esq., the eminent notary-public, of
+4, Castlecourt, Birchin-lane, City, London; and Signor Carboni Raffaello's
+College Diploma, and Certificate as sworn interpreter in said City of
+London; together with the Originals of all other Documents, especially
+the letters from C Raffaello to H. W. Archer, inserted in this book,
+are now in the hands of J MacPherson Grant, Esq., M.L.C., Solicitor,
+and will remain in his office, Collins-street, Melbourne, till Christmas
+for inspection.--The Printers]
+
+-----
+
+V.R.
+Printed by John Ferres at the Government Printing Office
+NOT TRANSFERABLE
+2 POUNDS
+GOLD LICENSE.--THREE MONTHS.
+No. 134. 17th October 1854.
+
+The Bearer, Carboni Raffaello, having paid the Sum of TWO
+Pounds on account of the General Revenue of the Colony,
+I hereby License him to mine or dig for Gold, reside at,
+or carry on, or follow any trade or calling, except that
+of Storekeeper, on such Crown Lands within the Colony of
+Victoria as shall be assigned to him for these purposes
+by any one duly authorized in that behalf.
+
+This License to be in force for THREE Months ending 16th
+January, and no longer.
+
+G. A. Amos.
+Commissioner.
+
+REGULATIONS TO BE OBSERVED BY THE PERSONS DIGGING FOR GOLD
+OR OTHERWISE EMPLOYED AT THE GOLD FIELDS.
+
+1. This License is to be carried on the person, to be
+produced whenever demanded by any Commissioner, Peace
+Officer, or other duly authorised person.
+
+2. It is especially to be observed that this License is
+not transferable, and that the holder of a transferred
+Licence is liable to the penalty for a misdemeanour.
+
+3. No Mining will be permitted where it would be destructive
+of any line of road which it is necessary to maintain,
+and which shall be determined by any Commissioner, nor
+within such distance round any more as it may be necessary
+to reserve for access to it.
+
+4. It is enjoined that all persons on the Gold Fields
+maintain a due and proper observance of Sundays.
+
+5. The extent of claim allowed to each Licensed Miner
+is twelve foot square, or 144 square &c.,&c.,&c.,
+
+-----
+
+Examination of this gold-laced witness continued:--'The prisoner was the
+most violent speaker at the meeting.'
+
+Good reader, see my speech at the monster meeting. I am sick of this
+witness and I will make no further comments.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXXXVI.
+
+
+
+Coglione, Il Lazzarone In Paragone.
+
+
+CHARLES HENRY HACKETT, police magistrate, cross examined by Mr. Ireland:-
+
+"There was a deputation admitted to an interview with Mr. Rede, on
+Thursday night, November 30th. The prisoner was one of the deputation.
+I think Black was the principal party in the deputation. The deputatation
+as well as I remember, said, that they thought in case Mr. Rede would give
+an assurance that he would not go out again with the police and military
+to collect licences, they could undertake that no disturbance would take
+place. Mr. Rede replied, that as threats were held out to the effect,
+that in case of refusal, the bloodshed would be on their (the authorities')
+own heads, he could not make any such engagement at the time, nor had he
+the power of refraining from collecting the licence fee."
+
+By the prisoner:
+"I recollect Commissioner Rede saying, that the word 'licences' was merely
+a cloak used by the diggers, and that this movement was in reality a
+democratic one. You (prisoner) assured him that amongst the foreigners
+whom you conversed with there was no democratic feeling, but merely a
+spirit of resistance to the licence fee."
+
+Mr. C. H. HACKETT you are a lover of truth: God bless you!
+
+JAMES GORE, examined by the Attorney-General:--
+"I am a private in the 40th, I was in the attack on the Eureka stockade.
+The prisoner and two other men followed me when I entered the stockade,
+and compelled me to go out. Prisoner was armed with a pike."
+
+Cross examined by Mr. Ireland:--
+"It was day-light at the time, but not broad day-light; I had fired my
+musket but not used my bayonet. I ran because there were three against
+me. I was one of the first men in the stockade. There was no other
+soldier or policeman near me when the prisoner and the other men
+pursued me."
+
+PATRICK SYNOTT, examined by the Attorney-General:--
+"I am a private in the 40th regiment, I saw the prisoner and two other men
+pursuing Gore from the stockade on the morning of the attack. It was
+almost as lightsome at the time as it is now. I could distinguish a man
+at fifty yards off, and the prisoner was not fifteen yards from me. He
+was six or seven minutes in my sight."
+
+JOHN CONCRITT, examined by the Attorney-General:--
+This witness was a mounted policeman and corroborated in all particulars
+the evidence of the previous witnesses.
+
+Cross examined by Mr. Ireland:--
+"I fired my pistol at the prisoner. It was very good daylight. From what
+I saw of the soldier that morning, I should have known him again, for he
+stood with me for some minutes afterwards."
+
+JOHN DONNELLY, examined by the Attorney-General:--
+"I am a private of the 40th regiment. I was at the stockade on the
+3rd December; I saw the prisoner there. I had a distinct opportunity
+of seeing."
+
+Cross examined by Mr. Ireland:-
+"I saw him for about a minute at first, and I saw him again in about ten
+minutes afterwards. I also saw him at the Camp the following day."
+
+JOHN BADCOCK, trooper, examined by the Attorney-General:--
+"I was at the stockade on the morning of the 3rd December. I was on foot.
+I snapped my musket at the prisoner, and it missed fire. I was quite
+close to him. I saw him again at the lock-up next day."
+
+JOHN DOGHERTY, trooper, examined by the Attorney-General:--
+"I was at the attack on the stockade. I saw the prisoner there. I knew
+him personally before. I have no doubt that he is the man. I saw the
+prisoner run towards the guard tent, and in a few minutes after, I saw him
+again brought back as a prisoner."
+
+Sergeant HAGARTEY, examined by the Attorney-General:--
+"I am a sergeant in the 40th. I was in the attack on the stockade.
+I was beside Captain Wise when he was shot. He (Captain Wise) was shot
+from the stockade. I saw the prisoner at the stockade. I was in the
+guard which took him to the Camp. The prisoner did not get away, I know.
+I saw him a prisoner in the Camp about five o'clock."
+
+Cross examined by Mr. Ireland:--
+"I do not know that the prisoner did not escape on his way from the
+stockade to the lock-up."
+
+ROBERT TULLY, sworn and examined:--
+"He was inside the stockade on the Sunday morning: saw the prisoner there
+armed with a pike; he was in the act of running away; saw him twice in the
+stockade; was sure the prisoner is the man."
+
+Cross examined by Mr. Ireland:--
+"Never saw the man before this; he was running in company with two other
+men; it was very early in the morning; it was some time after the stockade
+was taken that he was arrested; the firing then had not wholly ceased."
+
+Private DON-SYN-GORE, drilled by sergeant HAG.
+
+Trooper CON(S)CRIT-BAD-DOG, mobbed by Bob-tulip.
+
+The pair of you are far below the ebb of our Neopolitan Lazzaroni!
+
+Why did you not consult with spy Goodenough?
+
+This having closed the case for the Crown, the Court adjourned at
+half-past two.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXXXVII.
+
+
+
+Viri Probi, Spes Mea In Vobis; Nam Fides Nostra In Deo Optimo Maximo.
+
+
+To be serious. I am a Catholic, born of an old Roman family, whose honour
+never was questioned; I hereby assert before God and man, that previous to
+my being under arrest at the Camp, I never had seen the face of 1, Gore,
+2, Synnot, 3, Donnelly, 4, Concritt, 5, Dogherty, 6, Badcock, 7, Hagartey,
+and 8, Tully.
+
+I CHALLENGE CONTRADICTION from any 'bona fide' digger, who was present
+at the stockade during the massacre on the morning of December 3rd, 1854.
+
+As a man of education and therefore a member of the Republic of Letters,
+I hereby express the hope that the Press throughout the whole of Australia
+will open their columns to any bona fide contradiction to my solemn
+assertions above. I cannot possibly say anything more on such a sad
+subject.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXXXVIII.
+
+
+
+Sunt Leges: Vis Ultima Lex: Tunc Aut Libertas Aut Servitudo;
+Mors Enim Benedicta.
+
+
+On the reassembling of the Court, at three o'clock, Mr. Ireland rose to
+address the Jury for the defence.
+
+The learned Counsel spent a heap of dry yabber-yabber on the law of
+high-treason, to show its absurdity and how its interpretation had ever
+proved a vexation even to lawyers, then he tackled with some more tangible
+solids. The British law, the boast of 'urbis et orbis terrarum',
+delivered a traitor to be practised upon by a sanguinary
+Jack Ketch:--I., to hang the beggar until he be dead, dead, dead;
+II., then to chop the carcase in quarters; III., never mind the stench,
+each piece of the treacherous flesh must remain stuck up at the top of
+each gate of the town, there to dry in spite of occasional pecking from
+crows and vultures. The whole performance to impress the young generation
+with the fear of God and teach them to honour the King.
+
+I soon reconciled myself to my lot, and remembering my younger days at
+school, I argued thus:--
+
+Where there are no bricks, there are no walls: but, walls are required
+to enclose the gates; therefore, in Ballaarat there are no gates.
+Corolarium--How the deuce can they hang up my hind-quarters on the gates
+of Ballaarat Township? Hence, Toorak must possess a craft which passes
+all understanding of Traitors.
+
+The jury, however, appeared frightened at this powerful thundering from
+Mr. Ireland, who now began to turn the law towards a respectable and more
+congenial quarter, and proved, that if the prisoner at the bar had burnt
+down all the brothels not kept on the sly in Her Majesty's dominions,
+he would be a Traitor; yet, if he had left one single brothel
+standing--say, in the Sandwich Islands--for the accommodation of any of
+Her Majesty's well-affected subjects, then the high treason was not
+high--high enough and up to the mark, that is, my fore-quarter could not
+be legally stuck up on the imaginary gates of Ballaarat.
+
+His Honour appeared to me, to assent to the line of argument of the
+Learned Counsel, who concluded a very lengthy but most able address,
+by calling on the jury to put an end by their verdict to the continued
+incarceration of the man, and to teach the government that they could not
+escape from the responsibilities they had incurred by their folly, by
+trying to obtain a verdict, which would brand the subjects of Her Majesty
+in this Colony with disloyalty.
+
+The jury now appeared to me to be ready to let the high traitor go
+his way in bodily integrity.
+
+Mr. ASPINALL then rose to address the jury on behalf of the prisoner.
+His speech was spirited, cutting, withering; but could only cover the
+falsehood, and NOT bring to light the truth: hence to record his speech
+here cannot possibly serve the purpose of this Book: hence the four
+documents, and my important observation on them in the following chapter.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter LXXXIX.
+
+
+
+Melior Nunc Lingua Favere.
+
+
+Document I.
+
+SUPREME COURT
+(Before his Honour the Chief Justice,)
+
+"The prisoner, Raffaello, on his trial being postponed, wished to address
+His Honour. He said that he was a native of Rome, and hoped that the same
+good feeling would be shown towards him in this colony as in old England.
+If his witnesses were there, he would be able to leave the dock at that
+moment. He hoped that His Honour would protect him by seeing that his
+witnesses were served with subpoenas.
+
+"His Honour was not responsible for this. Prisoner's attorney was the
+party, and he must speak to him. It is the business of your attorney
+to get these witnesses."
+
+The following advertisement appeared in 'The Age', February 24th, 1855,
+immediately above the leading article of said day:-
+
+
+Document II.
+
+State Trials.
+
+"The trial of Raffaello has been postponed on account of the absence of
+Dr. Alfred Carr, Mr. Gordon, of the store of Gordon and M`Callum, and
+other witnesses for the defence. It is earnestly requested that they
+will be in attendance on Monday morning at latest.
+
+"J. MACPHERSON GRANT,
+"Solicitor for the defence."
+
+
+The following letter, and comment on it, appeared in 'The Age',
+March 16th, 1855:-
+
+
+Document III.
+
+..."I was, Mr. Editor, present at Ballaarat on the memorable morning of
+the 3rd December, and in the pursuit of my usual avocation, happened to
+meet Raffaello, now one of the state prisoners, on the Redhill, he being
+then in search of Dr. Carr's hospital... We were directed the hospital,
+and soon returned to the Eureka, Raffaello bringing Dr. Carr's surgical
+instruments. We entered the stockade, and saw many lying almost dead for
+want of assistance and from loss of blood, caused by gun-shot and bayonet
+wounds. I did not remain long in the stockade, fearing if found there at
+that time I would be arrested. I made my escape; but poor Raffaello,
+who remained rendering an act of mercy to the dying, would not leave.
+He might, during that time, have easily made his escape, if he wished to
+do so; and I am sure, ran no inconsiderable risk of being shot, through
+the constant explosion of fire-arms left in the stockade by the diggers
+in their retreat.
+
+"J.B."
+
+
+"Melbourne, 15th March, 1854.
+
+"The writer of the above states, in a private note, that he wishes his
+name kept secret; but we trust that his intimacy with the Camp officials
+will not prevent him from coming forward to save the life of a fellow
+creature, when the blood-hounds of the government are yelling with anxiety
+to fasten their fangs upon their victims."--Ed. A.
+
+'The Age' who certainly never got drunk yet on Toorak small-beer, had an
+able leading article, headed, 'The State Trials'--see January 15th--
+concluding, "If they be found guilty, then Heaven help the poor State
+Prisoners." Now turn the medal, and 'The Age' of March 26th--always the
+same year, 1855--that is, the day after my acquittal, gives copy of a Bill
+of the 'LAST PERFORMANCE; or, the Plotters Outwitted.'
+
+
+Document IV.
+
+"To-day, the familiar farce of 'STATE PROSECUTIONS; or, the Plotters
+Outwitted,' will be again performed, and positively for the last time;
+on which occasion that first-rate performer, Mr. W. F. Stawell, will
+(by special desire of a distinguished personage) repeat his well-known
+impersonation of Tartuffe, with all the speeches, the mock gravity, etc.,
+which have given such immense satisfaction to the public on former
+occasions. This eminent low comedian will be ably supported by
+Messrs. Goodenough and Peters, so famous for their successful
+impersonations of gold-diggers; and it is expected that they will both
+appear in full diggers' costume, such as they wore on the day when they
+knelt before the 'Southern Cross,' and swore to protect their rights and
+liberties. The whole will be under the direction of that capital stage
+manager, Mr. R. Barry, who will take occasion to repeat his celebrated
+epilogue, in which he will--if the audience demand it--introduce again his
+finely melodramatic apostrophe to the thunder.
+
+"With such a programme, what but an exceedingly successful farce can be
+anticipated? A little overdone by excessive repetition, it may be said;
+but still an admirable farce; and, as we have said, this is positively
+the last performance. Therefore, let it go on; or as Jack Falstaff says,
+'play out the play.'"
+
+
+Of course, I leave it to my good reader to guess, whether after four long
+months in gaol, which ruined my health for ever, I did laugh or curse on
+reading the above.
+
+Concerning the four documents above, so far so good for the present;
+and the Farce will be produced on the stage of 'Teatro' Argentina, Roma,
+by Great-works. The importance of the following observation, however,
+is obvious to any reader who took the proper trouble to understand the
+text of the first chapter of this book.
+
+Why Dr. A. Carr, Sub-inspector Carter, Messrs. Gordon and Binney were not
+present as witnesses on my trial, was, and is still, a MYSTERY to me.
+
+'Sunt tempora nostra! nam perdidi spem: Melior nunc lingua favere.'
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XC.
+
+
+
+Peccator Videbit Et Irascetur; Dentibus Suis Fremet Et Tabescet:
+Desiderium Peccatorum Peribit.
+
+
+AT the end of Mr. Aspinall's able oration, the jury appeared to me, to be
+decidedly willing to let me go, with an admonition to sin no more:
+because Mr. Aspinall took the same line of defence as Mr. Michie, the
+counsel in the trial of John Manning; that is, he confessed to the riot,
+but laughed at the treason. However rashly the diggers had acted in
+taking up arms, however higgledy-piggledy had been the management of the
+stockade, yet they were justified in resisting unconstitutional force
+by force.
+
+His Honour tried the patience of the jury; well knowing by experience,
+that twelve true-born Britons can always afford to put up with a good
+long yarn.
+
+The jury retired at nine o'clock. My first thought was directed to the
+Lord my God and my Redeemer. Then naturally enough, to sustain my
+courage, I was among my dear friends at Rome and London.
+
+To remain in the felon's dock whilst your JURY consult on your fate,
+is a sensation very peculiar in its kind. To be or not to be; that is the
+actual matter-of-fact question. Three letters making up the most
+important monosyllable in the language, which if pronounced is life, if
+omitted is death: an awkward position for an innocent man especially.
+
+The jury, after twenty minutes past nine, were again in the jury-box.
+I was satisfied by their countenances that 'the People' were victorious.
+
+The Clerk of the Court: "Gentlemen of the Jury, have you considered
+your verdict?"
+
+Foreman: "We have."
+
+The Clerk: "Do you find the prisoner at the bar Guilty or Not Guilty?"
+
+Foreman, with a firm voice: "NOT GUILTY!"
+
+'Magna opera Domini'--(God save the People)--thus my chains sprang
+asunder. The people inside telegraphed the good news to the crowd
+outside, and "Hurrah!" rent the air in the old British style.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XCI.
+
+
+
+Accidenti Alle Spie.
+
+
+I WAS soon at the portal of the Supreme Court, a free man. I thought the
+people would have smothered me in their demonstrations of joy. Requesting
+silence, I stretched forth my right hand towards heaven, and with the
+earnestness of a Christian did pray as follows:--I hereby transcribe the
+prayer as written in pencil on paper whilst in gaol in the lower cell,
+No. 33.
+
+"LORD GOD OF ISRAEL, our Father in Heaven! we acknowledge our
+transgressions since we came into this our adopted land. Intemperance,
+greediness, the pampering of many bad passions, have provoked Thee against
+us; yet, Oh, Lord our God, if in thy justice, Thou are called upon to
+chastise us, in Thy mercy save this land of Victoria from the curse of the
+'spy system.'"
+
+Timothy Hayes answered, "Amen," and so did all the people, present, and so
+will my good reader answer, Amen.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XCII. & XCIII.
+
+
+
+TO LET, No. 33, LOWER CRIBS, IN WINTLE'S HOTEL, NORTH MELBOURNE.
+
+
+See 'Geelong Advertiser', November 18th.
+MACKAY v. HARRISON.
+'Merci bien, je sors d'en prendre.'
+
+The pair of chapters will see darkness 'SINE DIE'; that is, if under
+another flag, also in another language.
+
+GREAT-WORKS.
+
+'Hesperia! Quando Ego te Auspiciam? Quandoque Licebit Nunc Veterum Libris,
+Nunc Somno Et Inertibus Horis, Ducere Solicitae Licunda Oblivia Vitae.'
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XCIV.
+
+
+
+EXPLANATION,
+TO BE SUBMITTED TO
+HER MOST GRACIOUS MAJESTY
+QUEEN VICTORIA, LONDON,
+AND TO
+HIS HOLINESS PIUS IX., PONTIFEX MAXIMUS,
+ROME.
+BY
+MY BROTHER DON ANTONIO CARBONI, D.D.,
+Head-master of the Grammar School, Coriano, Romagna.
+
+-----
+
+'Homo Sum, Nil Humani a me Alienum Puto.'
+
+How do I explain, that I allowed one full year to pass away before
+publishing my story, whilst many, soon after my acquittal, heard me in
+person, corroborate, not indeed boastingly, the impression that I was the
+identical brave fellow before whose pike a British soldier was coward
+enough to run away.
+
+I have one excuse, and 'it is an excuse.'
+
+The cast of mind which Providence was pleased to assign me was terribly
+shaken during four long, long months suffering in gaol, especially,
+considering the company I was in, which was my misery. The excitement
+during my trial, my glorious acquittal by a British jury, the hearty
+acclamations of joy from the people, made me put up with the ignominy
+and the impotent teeth-gnashing of silver and gold lace; and for the cause
+of the diggers to which I was sincerely attached, I was not sorry at the
+Toorak spiders having lent me the wings of an hero--the principal foreign
+hero of the Eureka stockade. My credit consists now in having the moral
+courage to assert the truth among living witnesses.
+
+"And I proposed in my mind to seek and search out wisely concerning all
+things that are done under the sun. This painful occupation hath God
+given to the children of men to be exercised therein. I have seen all
+things that are done under the sun, and behold all is vanity and vexation
+of spirit."--The Preacher, chap. 1st, v. 13, 14.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XCV.
+
+
+
+Qui Potest Capere Capiat.
+
+
+ELECTION.
+OLD SPOT, BAKERY-HILL, BALLAARAT.
+
+According to notice, a Public Meeting was held on Saturday, July 14th,
+1855, for the election of nine fit and proper men to act as Members of
+the Local Court--the offspring of the Eureka Stockade.
+
+The Resident Warden in the Chair. Names of the Members elected for the
+FIRST LOCAL COURT, Ballaarat:-
+
+I. JAMES RYCE, elected Unanimously.
+II. ROBERT DONALD, elected Unanimously.
+III. CARBONI RAFFAELLO, elected Unanimously.
+IV. JOHN YATES, elected Unanimously.
+V. WILLIAM GREEN, elected Unanimously.
+VI. EDWARD MILLIGAN, elected by a majority of 287 votes.
+VII. JOHN WALL, elected by a majority of 240 votes.
+VIII. THOMAS CHIDLOW, elected by a majority of 187 votes.
+IX. H. R. NICHOLLS, elected by a majority of 163 votes.
+
+
+The first time I went to our Court, I naturally stopped under the
+gum-tree--before the Local Court Building--at the identical spot where
+Father P. Smyth, George Black, and myself delivered to the Camp
+authorities our message of peace, for preventing bloodshed, on the night
+of Thursday, November 30th, 1854, by moonlight. We were then not
+successful.
+
+Now, I made a covenant with the Lord God of Israel that if I comparatively
+regained my former health and good spirits, I would speak out the truth;
+and further, during my six months' sitting in the Court, I would give
+right to whom right was due, and smother the knaves, irrespective of
+nationality, religion, or colour.
+
+I kept my word--that is, my bond is now at an end.
+
+I hereby resign into the hands of my fellow-diggers the trust reposed in
+me as one of their arbitrators: after Christmas, 1855, I shall not sit
+in the Local Court. With clean hands I came in, with clean hands I go
+out: that is the testimony of my conscience. I look for no other reward.
+
+(Signed) CARBONI RAFFAELLO.
+Dec. 1st, 1855.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XCVI.
+
+
+
+Est Modus In Rebus: Sunt Certi Denique Fines, Quos Ultrae,
+Citraque Nequit Consistere Rectum.
+
+
+Have I anything more to say? Oh! yes, mate; a string of the realities of
+the things of this world.
+
+Some one who had been spouting, stumping, and blathering--known as
+moral-force 'starring'--in 'urbe et argo', for the benefit of the state
+prisoners, had for myself personally not humanity enough to attend to a
+simple request. He could afford to ride 'on coachey,' I had to tramp my
+way to Ballaarat. I wished him to call at my tent on the Eureka, and see
+that my stretcher was ready for my weary limbs.
+
+Full stop. My right hand shakes like a reed in a storm; my eyes swell
+from a flood of tears. I can control the bitterness of my heart, and say,
+"So far shalt thou go;" but I cannot control its ebb and flow: just now
+is springtide.
+
+If I must again name a noble-hearted German, Carl Wiesenhavern, of the
+Prince Albert Hotel, who was my good Samaritan, I must also annex the
+following three documents, because my friends in Rome and Turin may take
+my wrongs too much to heart!
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XCVII.
+
+
+
+The End Of Men Whose Word Is Their Bond.
+
+(Per favour of 'The Times'.)
+
+
+"On the disgraced Sunday morning, December 3rd, whilst attending the
+wounded diggers at the London Hotel, I was arrested by seven troopers,
+handcuffed, and dragged to the Camp. On my arrival there, I was commanded
+to strip to the bare shirt; whilst so doing I was kicked, knocked about,
+and at last thrown into the lock-up by half-drunken troopers and soldiers.
+My money, clothes, and watertight boots, which were quite new, could
+nowhere be found at the Camp. Gaoler Nixon had bolted.
+
+"From the confusion and excitement of that morning, I cannot say with
+certainty the whole extent of my loss; but I can conscientiously declare
+that it amounted to 30 pounds. The only thing which I saved was a little
+bag, containing some Eureka dust, and my 'Gold-licence', which Inspector
+Foster, who knew me, took charge of previous to my ill-treatment, and has
+subsequently handed over to Father P. Smyth for me.
+
+"Awaiting my trial in the Melbourne gaol, I made my 'complaint' to the
+visiting justice, for the recovery of my property; but as I had not even
+a dog to visit me in prison, so my complaint remained unnoticed. After
+all, said worshipful the visiting justice (who was ushered into our yard
+with 'Fall in, hats off!'), needs more power to him, as Joseph, the
+nigger-rebel, for the 8 pounds, which had been robbed from him in due form
+at the Camp, had the consolation to be informed by his worshipful that
+gaoler Nixon had bolted.
+
+"The glorious 'Not Guilty' from a British jury having restored me to my
+former position in society, I embodied my 'claim' for restitution in a
+constitutional form, and had it presented by a gentleman to the Colonial
+Secretary, to be submitted for his Excellency's KIND Consideration.
+His Excellency, soon after my trial, on being assured of my testimonials
+to character and education, condescended to say, 'He was glad to hear I
+was so respectable;' but His Excellency has not yet been pleased to
+command the restitution of my property.
+
+"Disappointed, in bad health, and worse spirits, I tramped for Ballaarat,
+where I found that my tent, on the Eureka, had been robbed of everything
+that was worth literally a sixpence--cradle, two tubs, digging tools,
+cooking utensils, all gone, even my very blankets! and, of course, all my
+little gold in specimens and dust, as well as my belt with money in it.
+
+"From my account-book I can positively say, that on the fatal morning I
+was arrested, the money I had on my possession, and what I had in my tent
+in real cash, was 49 pounds. ALL OF WHICH I had earned by the sweat of
+my brow, honestly, through downright hard work.
+
+"During the whole of last season, on the Eureka, who was the first every
+morning, between four and five to sing out 'Great works?' Who was the last
+dilly-dallying at the cradle after sunset? I appeal to my fellow-diggers,
+and with confidence.
+
+"Brooding over the strange ups and down of life, I found some consolation
+in the hearty cheers with which I was saluted at the Adelphi Theatre for
+my song--
+
+ 'When Ballaarat unfurled the Southern Cross;'
+
+and I had the peculiar sensation on that particular night to lie down on
+my stretcher very hungry!
+
+"'Heu mihi! pingui quam macer est mihi taurus in arvo!' and it must be
+acknowledged that it would have been paying an honest and educated man
+a better compliment if my neighbours on the Eureka had found less
+edification in witnessing my nice snug tent converted into a gambling
+house by day, and a brothel by night. A sad reflection! however merry
+some scoundrels may have made in getting drunk with my private brandy
+in the tent.
+
+"Never mind! the diggers have now a legion of friends. So I prevailed on
+myself to tell, half-a-dozen times over to most of the 'well-disposed
+and independent' yabber-yabber leaders on Ballaarat, how I had been robbed
+at the Camp, how for my sorrows every mortal thing had been stolen from my
+tent, and concluded with the remark, 'that in each case the thieves were
+neither Vandemonians nor Chinese.'
+
+"I met with grand sympathy in 'words,' superlatively impotent even to move
+for the restitution of my watertight boots!
+
+"Hurrah! glorious things will be told of thee, Victoria!
+
+"These waterhole skippers, who afford buzzing and bamboozling when the
+rainbow dazzles their dull eyes, bask in their 'well-affected' brains,
+the flaring presumption that 'shortly' there will be a demand for sheeps'
+heads! (Great works!) and pointing at several of us, it is given unto them
+to behold with glory 'the end of men whose word is their bond!'
+
+"(Great works!)
+
+"Let us sing with Horace--
+
+TUNE--Old Style.
+
+
+Quando prosperus et jucundus,
+Amicorum es fecundus,
+Si fortuna perit,
+Nullus amicus erit.
+ Chorus--Cives! Cives!
+ Querenda pecunia primum,
+ Post nummos virtus.
+
+"Which in English may mean this--
+
+
+'A friend in need is a friend indeed,' that's true,
+But love now-a-days is left on the shelf,
+The best of friends, by G---- in serving you
+Takes precious care first to help himself.
+Ancestors, learning, talent, what we call
+Virtue, religion--MONEY beats them all.
+
+"I must now try the power of my old quill, perhaps it has not lost
+the spell--
+
+"In Rome, by my position in society, and thorough knowledge of the English
+language, I was now and then of service to Englishmen THERE; in my
+adversity is there a generous-hearted Englishman HERE who would give me
+the hand and see that the government enjoins the restitution of the
+property I was robbed of at the Camp. Let the restitution come from a
+Board of Inquiry, a Poor-law Board, a Court-Martial, or any Board except
+a Board (full) of Petitions. The eternal petitioning looks so 'Italian'
+to me! And, especially, let the restitution of my new water-tight boots
+be done this winter!
+
+"As for the ignominy I was subjected to, my immense sufferings during four
+long, long months in gaol, the prospects of my life smothered for a while,
+we had better leave that alone for the present.
+
+"Were I owned by the stars and stripes, I should not require assistance,
+of course not; unhappily for the sins of my parents, I was born under
+the keys which verily open the gates of heaven and hell; but Great Britain
+changed the padlocks long ago! hence the dreaded 'Civis Romanus sum'
+has dwindled into 'bottomed on mullock.'
+
+"CARBONI RAFFAELLO,
+"By the grace of spy Goodenough Captain of Foreign Anarchist.
+"Prince Albert Hotel, Ballaarat,
+"Corpus Christi, 1855."
+
+-----
+
+No one did condescend to notice the above letter. I do not wonder
+at it, and why?
+
+I read in the Saturday's issue of 'The Star', Ballaarat, October 6th,
+1855, how a well-known digger and now a J.P., did, in a
+'Ballaarat smasher,' toast the good exit of a successful money-maker--an
+active, wide-awake man of business certainly, but nothing else to the
+diggers of Ballaarat--'Cela n'est pas tout-a-fait comme chez nous.'
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XCVIII.
+
+
+
+Sunt Tempora Nostra!
+That Is The Following From Toorak.
+
+
+Colonial Secretary's Office, Melbourne,
+October 8th, 1855.
+
+Sir,--Advertising to your correspondence (September 30th), in reply to my
+letter of the 20th ultimo, I am directed by His Excellency to state that
+government are compelled to adhere to fixed rules--THEY BY NO MEANS DOUBT
+THE VERACITY OF YOUR STATEMENT, but they have a duty to the public to
+perform, which imposes the necessity of never granting money in
+compensation, except when the clearest evidence of the loss is given,
+and that a personal statement no matter by whom given, is never accepted
+as sufficient testimony.
+
+I have the honour to be,
+SIR,
+J. MOORE, A.C.S."
+(To) Mr. CARBONI RAFFAELLO,
+Gravel-pits, Ballaarat-flat.
+
+-----
+
+A 'Cheer-up' written for the MAGPIE of BALLAARAT, perched on the Southern
+Cross Hotel, Magpie-gully.
+
+No more from MOORE;
+Too dear! his store.
+Hang the 'Compensation:'
+Speak of 'RESTITUTION!'
+'Do not steal!'
+'Restiuere?'
+'s an old Institution,
+Popish innovation.
+CHORUS.
+COO-HEE! Great works at Toorak!
+COO-HEE! Keep clear of th' WOOL-pack.
+
+
+WATERLOOBOLTER CHIMES.
+SIP sop stir-up Toorak small beer
+do si la sol fa me re do
+Nip nap wash down chops nacks oh! dear.
+
+
+
+
+Chapter XCIX.
+
+
+
+Suppose I give now the kind (!) answer from Police-inspector HENRY FOSTER!
+it will give general satisfaction, I think:-
+
+
+Police Department,
+Ballaarat, Nov. 2, 1854.
+
+Sir,--In reply to your communication, dated 26th ultimo, on the subject of
+your having been deprived of your clothing during your arrest at this
+Camp, in December, 1855 [I think, Mr. Foster, it was in 1854] I have the
+honour to inform you, that to the best of my recollection, the clothing
+you wore when you were brought to the Camp consisted of a wide-awake hat,
+or cap, a red shirt, corduroy or moleskin trousers, and a pair of boots.
+
+Of these articles, the cap, shirt, and boots were put amongst the surplus
+clothing taken from the other prisoners, and I am not aware how they were
+disposed of afterwards.
+
+I must add, that the shirt alluded to was made of wool, under which you
+wore a cotton one, the latter of which you retained during your
+confinement.
+
+I have the honour to be, Sir,
+Your obedient servant,
+HENRY FOSTER,
+Inspector of Police.
+
+(To) SIGNOR CARBONI RAFFAELLO.
+Ballaarat.
+
+-----
+
+My money is not mentioned though! Very clever: and yet I know it was not
+Foster who did rob me.
+
+However, good reader, if you believe that a Ballaarat miner, of sober
+habits and hard at work, has not got about his person, say a couple of
+one pound rags, well...there let's shut up the book at once, and here
+is the
+
+END
+
+
+P.S. If John Bull, cross-breed or pure blood, had been robbed in Italy,
+half less wantonly, and twice less cruelly, than myself, the whole British
+press and palaver 'in urbe or orbe terrarum' would have rung the chimes
+against Popish gendarmes and the holy (!) inquisition of the scarlet city.
+So far so good.
+
+A friendless Italian is ROBBED under arrest on British ground, close by
+the British flag, by British troopers and traps: oh! that alters the case.
+
+What business have these foreign beggars to come and dig for gold on
+British Crown lands?
+
+BASTA COSI; 'that is', Great works!
+
+
+
+
+Chapter C.
+
+
+
+WANTED--Stuff, Anyhow, For The Last Chapter.
+
+
+If 'The Age', always foremost in the cause of the digger, never mind his
+language or colour; if 'The Argus' would drop the appending 'a foreigner'
+to my name, and extend even unto me the old motto 'fair-play;' if
+'The Herald' would set up the pedestal for me whom it has erected as a
+'MONUMENT OF GRATITUDE;' I say, if the gentlemen Editors of the Melbourne
+Press, on the score of my being an old Collaborateur of the European
+Press, would for once give a pull, a strong pull, and a pull altogether,
+to drag out of the Toorak small-beer jug, the correspondence on the above
+matter between
+
+1. SIR CHARLES HOTHAM, K.C.B.
+2. W. C. HAINES, C.S.
+3. W. FOSTER STAWELL, A.G.
+4. Mr. STURT, Police Magistrate.
+5. W. H. ARCHER, A.R.G.
+6. CAPTAIN M`MAHON.
+7. POLICE-INSPECTOR H. FOSTER.
+8. Another whom I detest to name, and
+9. SIGNOR CARBONI RAFFAELLO, M.L.C. of Ballaarat,
+
+it would astonish the natives, teach what emigration is, and I believe
+the colony at large would be benefited by it.
+
+There are scores of cases similar to mine, and more important by far,
+because widows and orphans are concerned in them. 'Sunt tempora nostra!'
+
+Master Punch, do join the chorus; spirited little dear! won't you give a
+lift to Great-works? Spare not, young chip, or else, the jackasses in the
+Australian bush will breed as numerous as the locusts in the African desert.
+
+It is not FEAR that makes me shake at chapters XCII and XCIII.
+Good reader, to the last line of this book, my quill shall stick to my
+word as given in the first chapter. Hence, for the present, this is the
+LAST. Put by carefully the pipe, we may want it again: meanwhile,
+FAREWELL.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg Etext of The Eureka Stockade, by Raffaello Carboni
+
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