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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #51209 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/51209)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Babes in the Bush, by Rolf Boldrewood
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: Babes in the Bush
-
-
-Author: Rolf Boldrewood
-
-
-
-Release Date: February 13, 2016 [eBook #51209]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BABES IN THE BUSH***
-
-
-E-text prepared by KD Weeks, MWS, and the Online Distributed Proofreading
-Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by
-Internet Archive/American Libraries (https://archive.org/details/americana)
-
-
-
-Note: Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive/American Libraries. See
- https://archive.org/details/babesinbush00boldrich
-
-
-Transcriber’s note:
-
- Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
-
- Please see the transcriber’s note at the end of this text
- for details regarding the handling of any textual issues
- encountered during its preparation.
-
-
-
-
-
-BABES IN THE BUSH
-
-
-[Illustration: Publisher's logo]
-
-
-BABES IN THE BUSH
-
-by
-
-ROLF BOLDREWOOD
-
-Author of
-‘Robbery Under Arms,’ ‘The Miner’s Right,’ ‘The Squatter’s Dream,’
-‘A Colonial Reformer,’ etc.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-London
-Macmillan and Co., Limited
-New York: The Macmillan Company
-1900
-All rights reserved
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
- CHAPTER I
- PAGE
-
- ‘FRESH FIELDS—AND PASTURES NEW’ 1
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- THE FIRST CAMP 21
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- THE NEW HOME 43
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
- MR. HENRY O’DESMOND OF BADAJOS 59
-
- CHAPTER V
-
- ‘CALLED ON BY THE COUNTY’ 77
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
- AN AUSTRALIAN YEOMAN 93
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
- TOM GLENDINNING, STOCK-RIDER 111
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
- MR. WILLIAM ROCKLEY OF YASS 125
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
- HUBERT WARLEIGH, YR., OF WARBROK 139
-
- CHAPTER X
-
- A PROVINCIAL CARNIVAL 149
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
- MR. BOB CLARKE SCHOOLS KING OF THE VALLEY 161
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
- STEEPLECHASE DAY 173
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
- MISS VERA FANE OF BLACK MOUNTAIN 189
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-
- THE DUEL 204
-
- CHAPTER XV
-
- THE LIFE STORY OF TOM GLENDINNING 220
-
- CHAPTER XVI
-
- ‘SO WE’LL ALL GO A-HUNTING TO-DAY’ 238
-
- CHAPTER XVII
-
- THE FIRST MEET OF THE LAKE WILLIAM HUNT CLUB 251
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
-
- THE MAJOR DISCOVERS HIS RELATIVE 265
-
- CHAPTER XIX
-
- BLACK THURSDAY 282
-
- CHAPTER XX
-
- AN UNEXPECTED DEVELOPMENT 296
-
- CHAPTER XXI
-
- A GREEN HAND 312
-
- CHAPTER XXII
-
- INJUN SIGN 328
-
- CHAPTER XXIII
-
- THE BATTLE OF ROCKY CREEK 339
-
- CHAPTER XXIV
-
- GYP’S LAND 352
-
- CHAPTER XXV
-
- BOB CLARKE ONCE MORE WINS ON THE POST 366
-
- CHAPTER XXVI
-
- THE RETURN FROM PALESTINE 387
-
- CHAPTER XXVII
-
- THE DUEL IN THE SNOW 401
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
- ‘FRESH FIELDS AND PASTURES NEW’
-
-
-‘What letter are you holding in your hand all this time, my dear?’ said
-Captain Howard Effingham to his wife during a certain family council.
-
-‘Really, I had almost forgotten it. A foreign postmark—I suppose it is
-from your friend Mr. Sternworth, in Australia or New Zealand.’
-
-‘Sternworth lives in New South Wales, not New Zealand,’ returned he
-rather testily. ‘I have told you more than once that the two places are
-a thousand miles apart by sea. Yes! it is from old Harley. When he was
-chaplain to our regiment he was always hankering after a change from
-routine duty. Now he has got it with a vengeance. He was slightly
-eccentric, but a better fellow, a stauncher friend, never stepped.’
-
-‘Don’t people go to Australia to make money?’ asked Rosamond Effingham,
-a girl of twenty, with ‘eldest daughter’ plainly inscribed upon her
-thoughtful features. ‘I saw in a newspaper that some one had come home
-after making a fortune, or it may have been that he died there and left
-it to his relatives.’
-
-‘Sternworth has not made a fortune. He is not the man to want one.
-Still, he seems wonderfully contented and raves about the beauty of the
-climate and the progress of his colony.’
-
-‘Let me read his letter out,’ pleaded the anxious wife softly, and, with
-a gesture of assent, the father and daughter sat expectant.
-
-Mrs. Effingham had the gift of reading aloud with effect, which, with
-that of facile, clear-cut composition, came to her as naturally as the
-notes of a song-bird, which indeed her tuneful voice resembled.
-
-‘The letter is dated from Yass—(what a funny name! a native one, I
-suppose)—in New South Wales, and June the 20th, 1834. Nearly six months
-ago! Does it take all that time to come? What a long, long way off it
-must be. Now then for the contents.
-
-
-‘MY DEAR EFFINGHAM—I have not written for an age—though I had your last
-in reply to mine in due course—partly because, after my first
-acknowledgment, I had nothing particular to say, nor any counsel to
-offer you, suitable for the situation in which you appear to have landed
-yourself. When you were in the old regiment you were always a bad
-manager of your money, and the Yorkshireman had to come to your
-assistance with his hard head more than once. I thought all that sort of
-thing was over when you succeeded to a settled position and a good
-estate. I was much put out to find by your last letter that you had
-again got among the shallows of debt. I doubt it is chronic with you.
-But it is a serious matter for the family. If I were near you I would
-scold you roundly, but I am too far off to do it effectually.
-
-‘My reason for writing now—for I am too busy a man to send the
-compliments of the season across the globe—is that a tempting investment
-in land—a perfect gift, as the phrase is—has come to my knowledge.
-
-‘Now, I am not hard-natured enough to tempt you to come here with your
-amiable wife, whose praises, not always from yourself, I have often
-heard—[really, my dear, I had no idea you paid me compliments in your
-letters to your friends]—and your tenderly nurtured family; that is, if
-you can retain your position, or one in any way approaching it. But I
-know that the loss of fortune in the old country entails a more complete
-stripping of all that men hold dear, than in this new land, where
-aristocratic poverty, or rather, scantiness of money, is the rule, and
-wealth, as yet, the exception.
-
-‘I cannot believe that you are _totally_ without means. Here, cash is at
-a premium. Therefore, if you have but the shreds and fragments of your
-fortune left, you may still have capital available from the wreck
-sufficient to make a modest venture, which I shall explain.
-
-‘A family long resident near this rising town—say forty or fifty miles
-distant—have been compelled, like you, to offer their estate for sale. I
-will not enter into the circumstances or the causes of the step. The
-fact that we are concerned with is, that a valuable property—as fair
-judges consider it—comprising a decent house and several thousand acres
-of good land, may be bought for three or four thousand pounds.
-
-‘I do not hide from you that many people consider that the present bad
-times are likely to last, even to become more pressing. _I_ fully expect
-a reaction. If you can do better in any way I do not ask you for one
-moment to consider this matter, much as I should like to see my old
-comrade and his family here.
-
-‘But if otherwise, and the melancholy life of the ruined middle-aged
-Briton stares you in the face, I say boldly, do not go to Boulogne, or
-other refuge for the shady destitute, where a man simply counts the days
-which he must linger out in cheap lodgings and cheese-paring idleness,
-but come to Australia and try a more wholesome, more manly, if
-occasionally ruder life. I know what you home-keeping English think of a
-colony. But you may find here a career for your boys—even suitable
-marriages for your girls, whose virtues and accomplishments would
-doubtless invest them with distinction.
-
-‘If you can get this sum together, and a few hundreds to have in your
-pocket at landing, I can guarantee you a livelihood—you know my caution
-of old—with many of the essentials, God forbid I should say _all_, of
-“the gentle life.” Still, you may come to these by and by. The worst of
-my adopted country is that there is a cruel uncertainty of seasons, at
-times sore on man and beast. That you must risk, like other people. If
-you come, you will have one friend here in old Harley Sternworth, who,
-without chick or child, will be proud to pour out whatever feelings of
-affection God has given him, into the lap of your family. If you decide
-on coming, send a draft for three thousand pounds payable to my order at
-once. I will manage the rest, and have Warbrok ready to receive you in
-some plain way on your arrival. So farewell for the present. God bless
-you and yours, says your old friend,
-
- HARLEY STERNWORTH.’
-
-
-As the letter disclosed this positive invitation and plan of emigration
-which, whether possible or impossible, was now brought into tangible
-form, the clasp in which lay the father’s hand and the daughter’s
-slightly tightened. Their eyes met, their faces gradually softened from
-the expression of pained endurance which had characterised them, and as
-the clear tones of the reader came to an end, Rosamond, rising to her
-feet, exclaimed, ‘God has sent us a friend in our need. If we go to this
-far land we may work together and live and love undivided. But oh,
-mother, it breaks my heart to think of _you_. We are young, it should
-matter little to us; but how will you bear to be taken away from this
-pleasant home to a rude, waste country, such as Australia must be?’
-
-‘My darling,’ said the matron, as she folded the letter with an
-instinctive habit of neatness, and handed it to her husband, ‘the
-sacrifice to me will be great, far greater than at one time I should
-have thought it possible to bear. But with my husband and children are
-my life and my true dwelling-place. Where they are, I abide thankfully
-to life’s close. Strength, I cannot doubt, will be given to us all to
-bear our—our——’
-
-Here the thought, the inevitable, unimaginable woe of quitting the loved
-home of youth, the atmosphere of early friendship, the intertwining ties
-of relationship, completely overcame the courage of the speaker. Her
-eyes overflowed as, burying her face in her husband’s arms, which were
-opened to receive her, she wept long and silently.
-
-‘How could we think of such a thing, my darling, for one moment?’ said
-Effingham. ‘It would kill you to part, at one blow, from a whole
-previous existence. I hardly foresaw what a living death it would be for
-you, more than all, to leave England _for ever_. There is a world of
-agony in that thought alone! I certainly gave Sternworth a full account
-of my position in my last letters. It was a relief. He has always been a
-true friend. But he has rashly concluded that we were prepared to go to
-his wild country. It would be your death-blow, darling wife; and then,
-what good would our lives be to us? Some of our friends will help us,
-surely. Let us live quietly for a year or two. I may get some
-appointment.’
-
-‘It relieves my bursting heart to weep; yet it will fit me for future
-duty. No, Howard, we must not falter or draw back. You can trust, I
-know, in Mr. Sternworth’s practical wisdom, for you have a hundred times
-told me how far-seeing, shrewd, and yet kindly he was. In his plan there
-is the certainty of independence; together we can cheer each other when
-the day’s work is done. As for living in England, trusting to the
-assistance of friends, and the lingering uncertainty of a provision from
-the Government, I have seen too many families pitiably drifting towards
-a lower level. There is no middle course. No! Our path has been chosen
-for us. Let us go where a merciful Providence would seem to lead us.’
-
-The fateful conference was ended. A council, not much bruited about, but
-fraught with momentous results to those yet unborn, in the Effingham
-family, and it may be to other races and sections of humanity. Who may
-limit the effects produced in the coming time, by the transplantation of
-but _one_ rarely endowed family of our upward-striving race?
-
-Nothing remained but to communicate the decision of the high contracting
-parties of the little state to the remaining members. The heir was
-absent. To him would have been accorded, as a right, a place in the
-parliament. But he was in Ireland visiting a college chum, for whom he
-had formed one of the ardent friendships characteristic of early
-manhood. Wilfred Effingham was an enthusiast—sanguine and
-impulsive—whose impulses, chiefly, took a good direction. His heart was
-warm, his principles fixed. Still, so sensitive was he to the
-impressions of the hour, that only by the sternest consciousness of
-responsibility could he remain faithful to the call of duty.
-
-Devoted primarily to art and literature; sport, travel, and social
-intercourse likewise put in claims to his attention and mingled in his
-nature the impulses of a refined Greek with the energy and self-denial
-of his northern race.
-
-It must be confessed that these latter qualities were chiefly in the
-embryonic stage. So latent and undeveloped were they, indeed, that no
-one but his fond mother had fully credited his possession of them.
-
-But as the rounded limbs of the Antinous conceal the muscles which
-after-years develop and harden, so in the graceful physique and
-sensitive mind of Wilfred Effingham lay hidden powers, which, could he
-have foreseen their future exercise, would have astonished no one more
-than himself. Such was the youth recalled from his joyous revel in the
-Green Isle, where he had been shooting and fishing to his heart’s
-content.
-
-A letter from his mother first told that his destiny had been changed.
-In a moment he was transformed. No longer was he to be an enjoyer of the
-hoarded wealth of art, letters, science, sitting on high and choosing
-what he would, as one of the gods of Olympus. His lot, henceforth, would
-be that of a toiler for the necessaries of life! It was a shrewd blow.
-Small wonder had he reeled before it! It met him without warning,
-unsoftened, save by the tender pity and loving counsel so long
-associated with his mother’s handwriting. The well-remembered
-characters, so fair in delicate regularity, which since earliest
-schooldays had cheered and comforted him. Never had they failed him;
-steadfast ever as a mother’s faith, unfailing as a mother’s love!
-
-Grown to manhood, still, as of old, he looked, almost at weekly
-intervals, for the missive, ever the harbinger of home love, the herald
-of joy, the bearer of wise counsel—never once of sharp rebuke or
-untempered anger.
-
-And now—to the spoiled child of affection, of endowment—had come this
-message fraught with woe.
-
-A meaner mind, so softly nurtured, might have shrunk from the ordeal. To
-the chivalrous soul of Wilfred Effingham the vision was but the summons
-to the fray, which bids the knight quit the tourney and the banquet for
-the stern joys of battle.
-
-His nature, one of those complex organisms having the dreamy poetic side
-much developed, yet held room for physical demonstration. Preferring for
-the most part contemplation to action, he had ever passed, apparently
-without effort, from unchecked reverie and study to tireless bodily toil
-in the quest of sport, travel, or adventure. Possessed of a constitution
-originally vigorous, and unworn by dissipation, from which a sensitive
-nature joined with deference to a lofty ideal had hitherto preserved
-him, Wilfred Effingham approached that rare combination which has ere
-now resulted, under pressure of circumstance, in the hero, the poet, the
-warrior, or the statesman.
-
-He braced himself to withstand the shock. It was a shrewd buffet. Yet,
-after realising its force, he was conscious, much to his surprise, of a
-distinct feeling of exaltation.
-
-‘I shall suffer for it afterwards,’ he told his friend Gerald O’More,
-half unconsciously, as they sat together over a turf fire which glowed
-in the enormous chimney of a rude but comfortable shooting lodge; ‘but,
-for the soul of me, I can’t help feeling agreeably acted upon.’
-
-‘Acted upon by what?’ said his companion and college chum, with whom he
-had sworn eternal friendship. ‘Is it the whisky hot? It’s equal to John
-Jameson, and yet it never bothered an exciseman! Sure that same is
-amaylioratin’ my lot to a degree I should have never believed possible.
-Take another glass. Defy Fate and tell me all about it. Has your father,
-honest man, discovered another Roman tile or Julius Cæsar’s
-tobacco-pouch? [the elder Effingham was an antiquarian of great
-perseverance], or have ministers gone out, to the ruin of the country,
-and the triumph of those villains the radicals? ’Tis little that ever
-happens in that stagnant existence that you Saxons call country life,
-barring a trifle of make-believe hunting and shooting. Sure, didn’t me
-uncle Phelim blaze away into a farmer’s poultry-yard in Kent for
-half-an-hour, and swear (it was after lunch) that he never saw pheasants
-so hard to rise before.’
-
-Thus the light-hearted Irishman rattled on, well divining, for all his
-apparent mirth, that something more than common had come in the letter,
-that had the power to drive the blood from Wilfred’s cheek and set
-Care’s seal upon his brow. That impress remained indelible, even when he
-smiled, and affected to resume his ordinary cheerfulness.
-
-At length he spoke: ‘Gerald, old fellow! there is news from home which
-most people would call bad. It is distinct of its kind. We have lost
-everything; are ruined utterly. Not a chance of recovery, it seems. My
-dear mother bids me understand _that_ most clearly; warns me to have no
-hope of anything otherwise. The governor has been hard hit, it seems, in
-foreign bonds; Central African Railways, or Kamschatka telegraph
-lines,—some of the infernal traps for English capital at any rate. The
-Chase is mortgaged and will have to go. The family must emigrate.
-Australia is to be the future home of the Effinghams. This appears to be
-settled. That’s a good deal to be hid in two sheets of note-paper, isn’t
-it?’ And he tossed up the carefully directed letter, caught it as it
-fell, and placed it in his pocket.
-
-‘My breath is taken away; reach me the whisky, if you wish to save my
-life, or else it will be——’ (prompt measures were taken to relieve the
-unfortunate gentleman, but without success). ‘Wilfred, me dear fellow,
-do you tell me that you’re serious? What will ye do at all, at all?’
-
-‘Do? What better men have had to do before now. Face the old foe of
-mortals, Anagkaia, and see what she can do when a man stands up to her.
-I don’t like the idea any the worse for having to cross the sea to a new
-world, to find a lost fortune. After all, one was getting tired of this
-sing-song, nineteenth century life of fashionable learning, fashionable
-play, fashionable work—everything, in fact, regulated by dame Fashion. I
-shall be glad to stretch my limbs in a hunter’s hammock, and bid adieu
-to the whole unreal pageant.’
-
-‘Bedad! I don’t know. I’d say the reality was nearer where we are, with
-all the disadvantages of good dinners, good sport, good books, and good
-company. But you’re right, me dear fellow, to put a bold face on it; and
-if you have to take the shilling in the divil’s regiment, sure ye’ll die
-a hero, or rise to Commander-in-Chief, if I know ye. But your mother,
-and poor Miss Effingham, and the Captain—without his turnips and his
-justice-room and his pointers and his poachers, his fibulæ and
-amphoræ—whatever will he do among blackfellows and kangaroos? My heart
-aches for ye all, Wilfred. Sure ye know it does. If ye won’t take any
-more potheen, let us sleep on it; and we’ll have a great day among the
-cocks, if we live, and talk it over afterwards. There never was that
-sorrow yet that ye didn’t lighten it if ye tired your legs well between
-sun and sun!’
-
-With the morrow’s sun came an unwonted calm and settled resolve to the
-soul of Wilfred Effingham. Together, gay, staunch Gerald O’More and he
-took the last day’s sport they were likely to have for many a day. The
-shooting was rather above than under the average, as if the ruined heir
-was willing to show that his nerves had not been affected by his
-prospects.
-
-‘I must take out the old gun,’ he said, ‘and keep up my shooting. Who
-knows but that we may depend upon it for a meal now and then in this New
-Atlantis that we are bound for. But one thing is fixed, old fellow, as
-far as a changeable nature will permit. I shall have to be the mainstay
-of my father’s house. I must play the man, if it’s in me. No more
-dilettantism, no more mediæval treasures, no more tall copies. The
-present, not the past, is what we must stand or fall by. The governor is
-shaken by all this trouble; not the best man of business at any time. My
-dear mother is a saint _en habit de Cour_; she will have to suffer a
-sea-change that might break the hearts of ordinary worldlings. Upon
-Rosamond and myself will fall the brunt of the battle. She has prepared
-herself for it, happily, by years of unselfish care and thought. I have
-been an idler and a loiterer. Now the time has come to show of what
-stuff I am made. It will mean good-bye to you, Gerald O’More, fast
-friend and _bon camarade_. We shall have no more shooting and fishing
-together, no more talk about art and poetry, no more vacation tours, no
-more rambles, for long years—let us not say for ever. Good-bye to my old
-life, my old Self! God speed us all; we must arm and away.’
-
-‘I’d say you might have a worse life, Wilfred, though it will come hard
-on you at first to be shooting kangaroos and bushrangers, instead of
-grouse and partridges, like a Christian. But we get used to everything,
-I am told, even to being a land-agent, with every boy in the barony
-wondering if he could tumble ye at sixty paces with the ould duck gun.
-When a thing’s to be done—marrying or burying, standing out on the sod
-on a foggy morning with a nate shot opposite ye, or studying for the
-law—there’s nothing like facing it cool and steady. You’ll write me and
-Hallam a line after you’re landed; and we’ll think of ye often enough,
-never fear. God speed ye, my boy! Sure, it’s Miss Annabel that will make
-the illigant colonist entirely.’
-
-The friends parted. Wilfred lost no time in reaching home, where his
-presence comforted the family in the midst of that most discouraging
-state of change for the worse, the packing and preparing for departure.
-
-But he had utilised the interval since he left his friend by stern
-self-examination, ending in a fixed, unalterable resolve. His mother,
-his sisters, and his father were alike surprised at his changed bearing.
-He had grown years older in a week. He listened to the explanation of
-their misfortune from his father with respectful silence or short,
-undoubting comment. He confirmed the decision to which the family
-counsel had arrived. Emigration to Australia was, under the
-circumstances, the only path which promised reparation of the fortunes
-of the house. He carefully read the letter from Mr. Sternworth, upon
-which their fate seemed to hang. He cheered his mother by expressing
-regret for his previous desultory life, asking her to believe that his
-future existence should be devoted to the welfare of all whom both held
-so dear.
-
-‘_You_ have never doubted, my dearest mother,’ he said, ‘but that your
-heedless son would one day do credit to his early teaching? I stand
-pledged to make your words good.’
-
-The arrival of the heir, who had taken his place at his father’s right
-hand in so worthy a spirit, seemed to infuse confidence into the other
-members of the family. Each and all appeared to recognise the fact that
-their expatriation was decided upon, and while lamenting their loved
-home, they commenced to gather information about their new abode, and to
-dwell upon the more cheering probabilities.
-
-The family was not a small one. Guy Effingham was a high-spirited
-schoolboy of fourteen, whose cricket and football engagements had
-hitherto, with that amount of the humanities which an English public
-schoolboy is compelled to master, under penalties too dire for
-endurance, been sufficient to fill up his irresponsible life. It was
-arranged that he was to remain at school until the week previous to
-their departure. His presence at home was not necessary, while his
-mother wished him to utilise the last effective teaching which he was
-likely to have. To her was committed the task of preparing him for his
-altered position. Two younger daughters, with a boy and girl of tender
-years, the darlings of the family, completed the number of the
-Effinghams. The third daughter, Annabel, was the beauty of the family. A
-natural pride in her unquestioned loveliness had always mingled with the
-maternal repression of all save the higher aims and qualities which it
-had been the fond mother’s life-long duty to inculcate. Annabel
-Effingham had received from nature the revival of the loveliness of some
-ancestress, heightened and intensified by admixture of family type. She
-was fair, with the bright colouring, the silken hair, the delicate
-roseate glow which had long been the boast of the women of her mother’s
-family—of ancient Saxon blood—for many generations. But she had
-superadded to these elements of beauty a classical delicacy of outline,
-a darker shade of blue in the somewhat prouder eye, a figure almost
-regal in the nobility of carriage and unconscious dignity of motion,
-which told of a diverse lineage. Beatrice, the second daughter of the
-house, had up to the present time exhibited neither the strong
-altruistic bias which, along with the faculty of organisation,
-characterised Rosamond, nor the universally confessed fascination which
-rendered Annabel’s path a species of royal progress. Refined,
-distinguished in appearance, as indeed were all the members of the
-family, she had not as yet developed any special vocation. In her
-appearance one saw but the ordinary traits which stamp a highly cultured
-girl of the upper classes. She was, perhaps, more distinctly literary in
-her tastes than either of her sisters, but her reserved habits concealed
-her attainments. For the rest, she appeared to have made up her mind to
-the inevitable with less apparent effort than the other members of the
-family.
-
-‘What can it avail—all this grieving and lamenting?’ she would say. ‘I
-feel parting with The Chase, with our relations and friends—with all our
-old life, in fact—deeply and bitterly. But that once admitted, what good
-end is served by repeating the thought and renewing the tears? Other
-people are ruined in England, and have to go to Boulogne and horrid
-continental towns, where they lead sham lives, and potter about, unreal
-in everything but dulness and poverty, till they die. We shall go to
-Australia to _do_ something—or not to do it. Both are good in their way.
-Next to honest effort I like a frank failure.’
-
-‘But suppose we _do_ fail, and lose all our money, and have nothing to
-eat in a horrid new country,’ said Annabel, ‘what _will_ become of us?’
-
-‘Just what would become of us here, I suppose; we should have to
-work—become teachers at a school, or governesses, or hospital nurses;
-only, as young women are not so plentiful in Australia as in England,
-why, we should be better paid.’
-
-‘Oh, but here we know so many people, and they would help us to find
-pleasant places to live in,’ pleaded Annabel piteously. ‘It does seem so
-dreadful to be ten thousand miles away from your own country. I am sure
-we shall starve!’
-
-‘Don’t be a goose, Annabel. How can we starve? First, we have the chance
-of making money and living in plenty, if not in refinement, on this
-estate that papa is going to buy. And if that does not turn out a
-success, we must find you a place as companion to the Governor-General’s
-wife, or as nursery governess for _very_ young children. I’ll become a
-“school marm” at Yass—that’s the name—and Rosamond will turn dressmaker,
-she has such a talent for a good fit.’
-
-‘Oh dear, oh dear! don’t talk of such dreadful things. Are we to go all
-over the world only to become drudges and work-women? We may as well
-drown ourselves at once.’
-
-‘My child! my child!’ said a gentle voice. ‘What folly is this? What are
-we, that we should be absolved from the trials that others have to bear?
-God has chosen, for His own good purpose, to bring this misfortune upon
-us. He will give us strength to bear it in a chastened spirit. If we do
-not bear it in a resigned and chastened spirit, we are untrue to the
-teaching which we have all our lives affected to believe in. We have all
-our part to perform. Let us have no repining, my dearest Annabel. Our
-way is clear, and we have others to think of who require support.’
-
-‘But you _like_ to be miserable, you know, mother; you think it is God’s
-hand that afflicts you,’ sobbed the desponding spoiled child. ‘I can’t
-feel that way. I haven’t your faith. And it breaks my heart; I shall
-die, I shall die, I know.’
-
-‘Pray, my darling, pray for help and grace from on high,’ continued the
-sweet, sad tones of the mother, as she drew her child’s fair head upon
-her lap, and passed her hand amid ‘the clustering ringlets rich and
-rare,’ while Beatrice sat rather unsympathetically by. ‘You will have me
-and your sisters to cheer you.’ Here the fair disconsolate looked
-distrustfully at Beatrice.
-
-By degrees the half-mesmeric, instinctive influence of the loved
-mother’s pitying tones overcame the unwonted fit of unreason.
-
-‘I will try and be good,’ she murmured, looking up with a soft light in
-her lovely eyes, ‘but you know I am a poor creature at best. You must
-bear with me, and I will help as much as I can, and try to keep from
-repining. But, oh, my home, my home, the dear old place where I was
-born. How dark and dreary do this long voyage and journey seem!’
-
-‘Have we not a yet longer voyage, a more distant journey to make, my own
-one?’ whispered the mother, in accents soft as those with which in times
-gone by she had lulled the complaining babe. ‘We know not the time, nor
-the hour. Think! If we do not prepare ourselves by prayer and faith, how
-dark _that_ departure will appear!’
-
-‘You are always good and kind, always right, mother,’ said the girl,
-recovering her composure and assuming a more steadfast air. ‘Pray for
-me, that I may find strength; but do I not know that you pray for all of
-us incessantly? We ought—that is—I ought to be better than I am.’
-
-Among the lesser trials which, at the time of his great sorrow,
-oppressed Howard Effingham, not the least was the necessity for parting
-with old servants and retainers. He was a man prone to become attached
-to attendants long used to his ways. Partly from kindly feeling, partly
-from indolence, he much disliked changing domestics or farm labourers.
-Accustomed to lean against a more readily available if not a stronger
-support than his own, he was, in most relations of life, more dependent
-than most men upon his confidential servants.
-
-In this instance, therefore, he had taken it much to heart that his
-Scotch land-steward, a man of exceptional capacity and absolute personal
-fidelity, having a wife also, of rare excellence in her own department,
-should be torn from him by fate.
-
-Backed up by his trusty Andrew, with his admirable wife, he felt as if
-he could have faced all ordinary colonial perils. While under Jeanie
-Cargill’s care, his wife and daughters might have defied the ills of any
-climate, and risked the absence of the whole College of Physicians.
-
-Andrew Cargill was one of those individuals of strongly marked
-idiosyncrasy, a majority of whom appear to have been placed, by some
-mysterious arrangement of nature, on the north side of the Tweed.
-Originally the under-gardener at The Chase, he had risen slowly but
-irresistibly through the gradations of upper-gardener and under-bailiff
-to the limited order of land-steward required by a moderate property. He
-had been a newly-married man when he formed the resolution of testing
-the high wages of the Southron lairds. His family, as also his rate of
-wages, had increased. His expenses he had uniformly restricted, with the
-thoroughness of his economical forefathers. He despised all wasteful
-ways. He managed his master’s affairs, as committed to his charge, with
-more than the rigorous exactitude he was wont to apply to his own.
-Gaining authority, by the steady pressure of unrelaxing forecast habit
-of life, he was permitted a certain license as to advice and implied
-rebuke. Had Andrew Cargill been permitted to exercise the same control
-over the extra-rural affairs that he was wont to use over the
-farm-servants and the plough-teams, the tenants and the trespassers, the
-crops and the orchards, the under-gardeners and the pineries, no
-failure, financial or otherwise, would have occurred at The Chase.
-
-When the dread disaster could no longer be concealed, it is questionable
-whether Mr. Effingham felt anything more acutely than the necessity
-which existed of explaining to this faithful follower the extent, or
-worse, the cause of his misfortune. He anticipated the unbroken silence,
-the incredulous expression, with which all attempts at favourable
-explanation would be received. Open condemnation, of course, was out of
-the question. But the mute reproach or guarded reference to his master’s
-inconceivable imbecility, which on this occasion might be more strongly
-accented than usual, would be hard to endure.
-
-Mr. Effingham could not depute his wife, or one of the girls, to convey
-the information to the formidable Andrew. So he was fain to pull himself
-together one morning, and go forth to this uncompromising logician.
-Having briefly related the eventful tale, he concluded by dispensing
-with his faithful servant, as they were going to a new country, and very
-probably would never be able to employ servants again.
-
-Having thrown down the bombshell, the ‘lost leader’ looked fixedly at
-Andrew’s unmoved countenance, and awaited the particular kind of
-concentrated contempt which he doubted not would issue forth.
-
-His astonishment was great when, after the hurried conclusion, ‘I shall
-miss you, Andrew, you may be sure, more than I say; and as for Jeanie, I
-don’t know how the young ladies and the mistress will get on without
-her,’ the following words issued slowly and oracularly from Andrew’s
-lips:—
-
-‘Ye’ll no miss me ava, Maister Effingham. Dinna ye think that it’s a’
-news ye’re tellin’ me. I behoved just to speer a bit what garred the
-puir mistress look sae dowie and wae. And the upshot o’ matters is that
-I’m gaun wi’ ye.’
-
-‘And your wife and children?’
-
-‘Ye didna threep I was to leave them ahint? Andra’ Cargill isna ane o’
-thae kind o’ folk, sae just tak’ heart, and for a’ that’s come and gane
-ye may lift up your heid ance mair; it’s nae great things o’ a heid, as
-the auld wife said o’ the Deuk’s, but if Botany Bay is the gra-and
-country they ca’ it, and the book-writers and the agents haena been
-tellin’ the maist unco-omon set o’ lees, a’ may gang weel yet.’
-
-‘But what’s put this in _your_ head, of all people in the world,
-Andrew?’ queried his master, becoming bold, like individuals, or
-corporate bodies, of purely defensive ideas, after observing tokens of
-weakness in the besieging force.
-
-‘Weel, aweel, first and foremost, Laird, ye’ll no say that we haena
-eaten your bread and saut this mony a year; there’s been neither stint
-nor stay till’t. I hae naething to say against the wage; aiblins a man
-weel instructed in his profession should aye be worthy o’ his hire.
-Jeanie has been just spoiled by the mistress—my heart’s sairvice to her
-and the young leddies—till ilka land they were no in, wad be strange
-eneugh to her, puir body. And the lang and short o’ the hail matter is,
-that we loe ye and your bonnie lads and lassies, Laird, sae weel that we
-winna be pairted frae ye.’
-
-As Mr. Effingham grasped the hand of the staunch, true servitor, who
-thus stood by him in his need, under whose gnarled bark of natural
-roughness lay hid so tender and true a core, the tears stood in his
-eyes.
-
-‘I shall never forget this, Andrew,’ said he; ‘you and Jeanie, old
-friend, will be the comfort of our lives in the land over-sea, and I
-cannot say what fresh courage your determination has given me. But are
-you sure it will be for your own advantage? You must have saved money,
-and might take a farm and live snugly here.’
-
-‘I was aboot to acquent ye, Laird,’ said the conscientious Scot, too
-faithful to his religious principles to take credit for a
-disinterestedness to which he felt but partially entitled. ‘Ye’ll see,
-Laird, for ye’re weel acquent wi’ the Word, that the battle’s no always
-to the strong, nor the race to the swift. Ye’ll ken that, frae your ain
-experience—aweel, I winna just say that neither’—proceeded Andrew,
-getting slightly involved between his quotations and his determination
-to be ‘faithful’ to his erring master, and by no means cloaking his sins
-of omission. ‘I’ll no say but what ye’ve been lettin’ ither folks lead
-ye, and throw dust in ye’re een in no the maist wiselike fashion, as nae
-doot ye wad hae dune wi’ the tenants, puir bodies, gin I had letten ye.
-But touchin’ my ain affairs, I haena sae muckle cause to brag; for maybe
-I was unco stiff-necked, and it behoved to chasten me, as weel’s
-yersell; I hae tint—just flung awa’—my sma’ scrapin’s and savin’s, these
-saxteen years and mair, in siccan a senseless daft-like way too!’
-
-Here Andrew could not forbear a groan, which was echoed by an
-exclamation from his master.
-
-‘I am sincerely grieved—astonished beyond expression! Why, Andrew,
-surely _you_ have not been dabbling in stocks and foreign loans?’
-
-‘Na—nae ga-amblin’ for _me_, Laird!’ replied Andrew sourly, and with an
-accentuation which implied speedy return to his ordinary critical state
-of mind; ‘but if I had minded the Scripture, I wadna hae lost money and
-faith at one blow. “Strike not hands for a surety,”’ it saith, ‘but I
-trusted Geordie Ballantyne like a brither; my ain cousin, twice removed.
-He was aboot to be roupit oot, stock and lock, and him wi’ a hoosefu’ o’
-weans. I just gaed surety to him for three hunder pound!’
-
-‘You were never so mad—a prudent man like you?’
-
-‘And he just flitted to America, fled frae his ain land, his plighted
-word, and left me to bear the wyte o’t. It’s nae use greetin’ ower spilt
-brose. The money’s a’ paid, and Andra’ Cargill’s as puir a man’s when he
-cam’ to The Chase, saxteen years last Michaelmas. Sae, between the
-heart-break it wad be to pairt wi’ the family, and the sair heart I hae
-gotten at pairtin’ wi’ my siller, the loss o’ a friend—“mine own
-familiar freend,” as the Psawmist says—as weel’s the earnings o’ the
-maist feck o’ my days, at ae blast, I hae settled to gang oot, Laird, to
-Austra-alia, and maybe lay oot a wheen straight furrows for ye, as I did
-lang syne on the bonnie holms o’ Ettrick.’
-
-Here Andrew’s voice faltered, and the momentous unprecedented
-conversation ended abruptly.
-
-The unfeigned delight with which his wife and daughters received the
-news did much to reconcile Mr. Effingham to his expatriation, and even
-went far to persuade him that he had, in some way, originated the whole
-idea. Nor was their satisfaction unfounded. Andrew, with all his
-apparent sternness and occasional incivility, was shrewd, capable, and
-even versatile, in the application of his industry and unerring common
-sense to a wide range of occupations. He was the ideal colonist of his
-order, as certain to succeed in his own person as to be the most helpful
-and trustworthy of retainers.
-
-As for Jeanie, she differed from her husband in almost every respect,
-except in the cardinal virtues. She had been a rustic celebrity in her
-youth, and Andrew occasionally referred still, in moments of unbending,
-to the difficulties of his courtship, and the victory gained over a host
-of rival suitors. She still retained the softness of manner and
-tenderness of nature which no doubt had originally led to the
-fascination of her masterful, rugged-natured husband.
-
-For the rest, Jean Cargill had always been one of those servants, rare
-even in England, the land of peerless domestics, whose loving, unselfish
-service knew no abatement in sickness and in health, good fortune or
-evil hap. Her perceptive tastes and strong sense of propriety rendered
-her, as years rolled on, a trusted friend; an infinitely more suitable
-companion for the mistress and her children, as she always called them,
-than many a woman of higher culture. A tireless nurse in time of
-sickness; a brave, clear-headed, but withal modest and cautious, aid to
-the physician in the hour of peril. She had stood by the bedstead of
-more than one member of the family, in the dark hour, when the angel of
-death waited on the threshold of the chamber. Never had she slackened or
-faltered, by night or day, careless of food or repose till the crisis
-had passed, and the ‘whisper of wings in the air’ faded away.
-
-
-Mrs. Effingham, with all her maternal fondness and devotion, had been
-physically unable at times to bear up against the fatigue of protracted
-watching and anxiety. She had more than once, from sheer bodily
-weakness, been compelled to abandon her post. But to Jeanie Cargill,
-sustained by matchless love and devotion, such a thing had never
-occurred. At noon or midnight, her hand was ever ready to offer the
-needful food, the vital draught; her ear ever watchful to catch the
-faint murmur of request; her eye, sleepless as a star, was ever
-undimmed, vigilant to detect the slightest change of symptom. Many
-nurses had been heard of, seen, and even read of, in the domestic
-circles of Reigate, but in the estimation of every matron capable of
-giving an opinion, Jeanie Cargill, by countless degrees of comparison,
-outshone them all.
-
-That night, when Mrs. Effingham, as was her wont, sought relief from the
-burden of her daily cares, and the crowding anxieties of the morrow,
-‘meekly kneeling upon her knees,’ it appeared to her as if in literal
-truth the wind had been tempered to the shorn lamb. That terrible travel
-into the unknown, the discomforts and dangers of the melancholy main,
-with the dreary waste of colonial life, would be quite different
-adventures, softened by the aid and companionship of everybody’s ‘dear
-old Jeanie.’ Her patient industry, her helpful sympathy, her matchless
-loyalty and self-denial, would be well-springs of heaven-sent water in
-that desert. Andrew’s company, though not socially exhilarating, was
-also an invigorating fact. Altogether, Mrs. Effingham’s spirits
-improved, and her hopes arose freshly strengthened.
-
-No sooner was it settled that Andrew and his fortunes were to be wafted
-o’er the main, in the vessel which bore the Effingham family, than, with
-characteristic energy, he had constituted himself Grand Vizier and
-responsible adviser. He definitely approved of much that had been done,
-and counselled still further additions to the outfit. Prime and
-invincible was his objection to leave behind a certain pet ‘Jersey coo,’
-‘a maist extraordinar’ milker, and for butter, juist unco-omon. If she
-could be ta’en oot to thae parts, she wad be a sma’ fortune—that is, in
-ony Christian land where butter and cheese were used. Maybe the
-sea-captain wad let her gang for the value o’ her milk; she was juist in
-the height o’t the noo. It wad be a sin and a shame to let her be roupit
-for half price, like the ither kye, puir things.’
-
-Persistent advocacy secured his point. Daisy had been morally abandoned
-to her fate; but Wilfred, goaded by Andrew’s appeals, had an interview
-with the shipping clerk, and arranged that Daisy, if approved of, should
-fill the place of the proverbial milch cow, so invariably bracketed with
-the ‘experienced surgeon’ in the advertisements of the Commercial
-Marine. Her calf also, being old enough to eat hay, was permitted to
-accompany her.
-
-Andrew also combated the idea that the greyhounds, or at least a pair,
-should be left behind, still less the guns or fishing-rods.
-
-‘Wasna the Laird the best judge of a dog in the haill country-side, and
-no that far frae the best shot? What for suld he walk aboot the woods in
-Australia waesome and disjaskit like, when there might be kangaroos, or
-whatna kind o’ ootlandish game, to be had for the killing? Hoot, hoot,
-puir Page and Damsel couldna be left ahint, nor the wee terrier Vennie.’
-
-There was more trouble with the greyhounds’ passage than the cows, but
-in consideration of the large amount of freight and passage-money paid
-by the family, the aristocratic long-tails were franked. Andrew, with
-his own hands, packed up the fowling-pieces and fishing-rods, which,
-with the exaggerated prudence of youth, Wilfred had been minded to leave
-behind, considering nothing worthy of removal that would not be likely
-to add to their material gains in the ‘new settlement.’ He had yet to
-learn that recreation can never be advantageously disregarded, whether
-the community be a young or an old one.
-
-Little by little, a chain of slow yet subtle advances, by which, equally
-with geologic alterations of the earth’s surface, its ephemeral living
-tenants proceed or retrograde, effected the translation of Howard
-Effingham, with wife and children, retainers and household goods. Averse
-by nature to all exertion which savoured of detail, reserving his energy
-for what he was pleased to dignify with the title of great occasions, as
-he looked back over the series of multitudinous necessary arrangements,
-Howard Effingham wondered, in his secret soul, at the transference of
-his household. Left to himself, he was candid enough to admit, such a
-result could never have been achieved. But the ceaseless ministration of
-Jeanie and Andrew, the calm forethought of Mrs. Effingham, the unsparing
-personal labour of Wilfred, had, in due time, worked the miracle.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
- THE FIRST CAMP
-
-
-Whatever may be the loss or injury inseparable from misfortune, no one
-of experience denies that the pain is lightened when the blow has
-fallen. The shuddering terror, the harrowing doubts, which precede an
-operation, far outrun the torture of the knife. Worse a thousandfold to
-endure than actual misery, poverty and disgrace, is the dull sense of
-impending doom, the daily anxiety, the secret dread, the formless,
-unhasting, unsparing terror, which each day brings nearer to the victim.
-
-Howard Effingham had, for weeks past, suffered the torments of the lost.
-An unwise concealment of the coming ruin which his reserved temperament
-forbade him to announce, had stretched him upon the rack. The acute
-agony was now past, and he felt unspeakably relieved as, with increasing
-completeness, the preparations for departure were accomplished.
-
-After the shock of the disaster he commenced the necessary duties with
-an unwontedly tranquil mind. He had despatched a bank draft for the
-amount mentioned by his friend and counsellor the Rev. Harley
-Sternworth. Prior to this needful act, he held various conferences with
-the trustees of Mrs. Effingham’s settlement. In many instances such
-authorities are difficult, even impracticable, to deal with, preferring
-the minimum interest which can be safely procured in the matter of trust
-money, to the slightest risk. In this instance, the arbiter of destiny
-was an old gentleman, at once prudent yet liberal-minded, who did not
-disdain to examine the arguments in favour of the Australian plan. After
-reading Mr. Sternworth’s letter, and comparing the facts therein stated
-with colonial securities, to which he had access, he gave in his
-adhesion to the investment, and converted his coadjutor, a mild,
-obstinate personage, who could with difficulty be induced to see any
-other investment legally open to them but the ‘sweet simplicity of the
-three per cents.’
-
-Long was the last day in coming, but it came at last. Their stay in the
-old home was protracted until only time was given for the journey to
-Southampton, where the staunch, old-fashioned wool-ship lay, which was
-to receive their condensed personal effects and, as it seemed to them,
-shrivelled-up personalities.
-
-Adieus were said, some with sore weeping and many tears; some with
-moderate but sincere regret; some with the half-veiled indifference with
-which any action not affecting their own comfort, interest, or
-reputation is regarded by a large class of acquaintances. The minor
-possessions—the carriages, the horses, the library, the furniture—were
-sold. A selection of the plainest articles of this last requisite,
-which, the freight being wonderfully low, their chief adviser had
-counselled them to carry with them, was alone retained.
-
-‘It will sell for next to nothing,’ his last letter had said, ‘judging
-from my experience after the regiment had “got the route,” and you will
-have it landed here for less than the price of very ordinary
-substitutes. Bring all the small matters you can, that may be useful;
-and don’t leave the piano behind. I must have a tune when I come to see
-you at Warbrok, and hear Mrs. Effingham sing “Auld Robin Gray” again.
-You recollect how our old Colonel broke down, with tears rolling over
-his wrinkled cheeks, when she sang it?’
-
-All was now over. The terrible wrench had been endured, tearing apart
-those living fibres which in early life are entwined around hearth and
-home. They had gazed in mournful farewell upon each familiar thing which
-from childhood’s hour had seemed a portion of their sheltered life. Like
-plants and flowerets, no denizens of hothouse or simulated tropic clime,
-but not the less carefully tended from harmful extremes, climatic or
-social, had the Effingham family grown and flourished. Now they were
-about to be abandoned to the elemental forces. Who should say whether
-they would wither under rude blasts and a fiercer sun, or, from natural
-vigour and inherent vitality, burgeon and bloom beneath the Southern
-heavens?
-
-Of the whole party, she who showed less outward token of sorrow, felt in
-her heart the most unresting anguish. To a woman like Mrs. Effingham,
-reared from infancy in the exclusive tenets of English county life, the
-idea of so comprehensive a change, of a semi-barbarous migration, had
-been well-nigh more bitter than death—but for one source of aid and
-spiritual support, unendurable.
-
-Her reliance had a twofold foundation. The undoubting faith in a Supreme
-Being, who ordered aright all the ways of His creatures, even when
-apparently remote from happiness, remained unshaken. Firmly had she ever
-trusted in that God by whom her former life had been guided. Events
-might take a mysteriously doubtful course. But, in the wilderness, under
-leafy forest-arches, beneath the shadow of the gathering tempest, on
-land or ocean, she would trust in God and her Redeemer. Steadfast and
-brave of mien, though with trembling lip and sickened heart, she
-marshalled her little troop and led them on board the stout ship, which
-only awaited the morrow’s dawn to spread her wings and sweep
-southward—ever southward—amid unknown seas, until the great island
-continent should arise from out the sky-line, telling of a land which
-was to provide them with a home, with friends, even perhaps a fortune.
-What a mockery in that hour of utter wretchedness did such hope
-promptings appear!
-
-After protracted mental conflict, no more perfect system of rest can be
-devised than that afforded by a sea-voyage. Anxiety, however mordant,
-must be lulled to rest under the fixed conditions of a journey, before
-the termination of which no battle of life can be commenced, no campaign
-resumed.
-
-Toil and strife, privation and poverty, labour and luck, all the
-contending forces of life are hushed as in a trance. As in hibernation,
-the physical and mental attributes appear to rally, to recruit fresh
-stores of energy. ‘The dead past buries its dead’—sorrowfully perchance,
-and with silent weeping. But the clouds which have gathered around the
-spirit disperse and flee heavenwards, as from a snow-robed Alp at
-morning light. Then the roseate hues of dawn steal slowly o’er the
-silver-pure peaks and glaciers. The sun gilds anew the dark pine forest,
-the purple hills. Once more hope springs forth ardent and unfettered.
-Endeavour presses onward to victory or to death.
-
-To the Effingham family came a natural surprise, that, under their
-circumstances of exile and misfortune, any cheerfulness could occur. The
-parents possessed an air of decent resignation. But the younger members
-of the family, after the first days of unalloyed wretchedness, commenced
-to exhibit the elastic temperament of youth.
-
-The seamanship displayed on the staunch sailing ship commenced to
-interest them. The changing aspects of sea and sky, the still noon, the
-gathering storm-cloud, the starry midnight, the phosphorescent
-fire-trail following the night-path of their bark—all these had power to
-move the sad hearts of the exiles. And, in youth, to move the heart is
-to lighten the spirit.
-
-Wilfred Effingham, true to his determination to deliver himself over to
-every practical duty which might grow out of their life, had procured
-books professing to give information with regard to all the Australian
-colonies.
-
-With difficulty he managed, after an extended literary tour involving
-Tasmania, Swan River, and New Zealand, to distinguish the colony to
-which they were bound, though he failed to gather precise information
-regarding the district in which their land was situated. He made out
-that the climate was mild, and favourable to the Anglo-Saxon
-constitution; that in mid-winter, flowering shrubs and delicate plants
-bloomed in spite of the pretended rigour of the season; that the heat in
-summer was considerable, as far as shown by the reading of the
-thermometer, but that from the extreme dryness of atmosphere no greater
-oppressiveness followed than in apparently cooler days in other
-climates.
-
-‘Here, mother,’ he said, having mastered the latter fact, ‘we have been
-unconsciously coming to the exact country suited to your health and
-pursuits. You know how fond of flowers you are. Well, you can have a
-winter garden now, without the expense of glass or the trouble of
-hothouse flues; while you can cheat the season by abstaining from colds,
-which you could never do in England, you know.’
-
-‘I shall be happy to have a little garden of my own, my son,’ she
-replied, ‘but who is to work in it? We have done for ever, I suppose,
-with head and under gardeners. You and Guy and everybody will always, I
-suppose, be at farm-work, or herding cattle and sheep, busy from morning
-to dark. How glad we shall be to see your faces at night!’
-
-‘It does not follow,’ replied Wilfred, ‘that we shall never have a
-moment to spare. Listen to what this author says: “The colonist who has
-previously been accustomed to lead a life, where intervals of leisure
-and intellectual recreation hold an acknowledged place, must not
-consider that, in choosing Australia for his home, he has forfeited all
-right to such indulgences. Let him not think that he has pledged himself
-to a life of unbroken toil and unremitting manual labour. On the
-contrary, he will discover that the avocations of an Australian country
-gentleman chiefly demand the exercise of ordinary prudence and of those
-rudimentary business habits which are easily acquired. Intelligent
-supervision, rather than manual labour, is the special qualification for
-colonial success; and we do not err in saying that by its exercise more
-fortunes have been made than by the rude toils which are supposed to be
-indispensable in the life of an Australian settler.”
-
-‘There, mother!’ said the ardent adventurer. ‘That writer is a very
-sensible fellow. He knows what he is talking about, for he has been ever
-so many years in Australia, and has been over every part of it.’
-
-‘Well, there certainly seems permission given to us to have a
-flower-garden for mamma without ruining ourselves or neglecting our
-business,’ said Rosamond. ‘And if the climate is so beautiful as they
-say, these dreadful February neuralgia-martyrdoms will be things of the
-past with you, dearest old lady.’
-
-‘There, mother, what do you say to that? Why, you will grow so young and
-beautiful that you will be taken for our elder sister, and papa would be
-ashamed to say you are his wife, only that old gentlemen generally marry
-young girls nowadays. Then, fancy what a garden we shall have at The
-Chase—we _must_ call it The Chase, no matter what its present name is.
-It wouldn’t feel natural for us to live anywhere but at a Chase. It
-would be like changing our name.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-On board ship there is always abundant leisure for talk and recreation,
-especially in low latitudes and half calms. The Effinghams, after they
-had been a month out, began to feel sensibly the cheering effects of
-total change of scene—the life-breathing atmosphere of the unbounded
-sea. The demons of Regret and Fear, for the most part, shun the blue
-wave and lie in wait on land for unwary mortals. The ship was seaworthy
-and spacious, the officers capable, the few passengers passably
-agreeable. Gradually the tone was restored of Captain Effingham’s
-nervous system. He ceased to repine and regret. He even beheld some
-grains of hope in the future, black as the outlook had until now
-appeared. While the expression of sweet serenity and calm resignation
-which ever dwelt upon the features of Mrs. Effingham became heightened
-and assured under the concomitants of the voyage, until she appeared to
-radiate peace and goodwill sufficient to affect beneficially the whole
-ship’s company. As for the two little ones, Selden and Blanche, they
-appeared to have been accustomed since infancy to a seafaring life. They
-ran about unchecked, and were in everybody’s way and every one’s
-affections. They were the youngest children on board, and many a rough
-sailor turned to look, with something like a glistening in his eye, on
-the saucy brown-eyed boy, and the delicate little five-year-old fairy,
-whose masses of fair hair floated in the breeze, or were temporarily
-confined with an unwilling ribbon.
-
-It seemed but the lengthening limit of a dream when the seaman at the
-good ship’s bow was commanded to keep a lookout for land; when, yet
-another bright blue day, fading into eve, and a low coast-line is seen,
-rising like an evening cloud from out a summer sea.
-
-‘Hurrah!’ said Wilfred Effingham, as the second mate pointed out the
-land of promise, ‘now our life begins. We shall belong to ourselves
-again, instead of being the indulgently treated slaves—very well
-treated, I confess—but still the unquestionable bond-slaves of that
-enlightened taskmaster, Captain Henry Fleetby of the _Marlshire_.’
-
-‘We have been very happy, my dear,’ said Mrs. Effingham, ‘happier than I
-should have thought possible in a ship, under any circumstances. Let us
-hope our good fortune will continue on land. I shall always look back to
-this voyage as the most wonderful rest that our poor wounded hearts
-could have enjoyed. Your papa looks quite himself again, and I feel
-better than I have done for years. I shall remember our captain, his
-officers, and his ship, with gratitude, as long as I live.’
-
-‘I feel quite attached to the dear old vessel,’ said Annabel, ‘but we
-can’t go sailing about the world all our lives, like respectable Flying
-Dutchmen. I suppose the captain must turn us out to-morrow. Who would
-have thought we should regret coming to the end of the voyage?’
-
-How calm was that last day of the long, but not too long, voyage, when
-they glided for hours on a waveless sea, by a great wall of sandstone
-cliffs, which finally opened, as if by magic, and discovered the portal
-of an Enchanted Haven! Surely the prospect could not all be real, of
-this wondrous nook, stolen from the vast, the limitless Pacific, in
-which they discerned, through the empurpling eve, villas, cottages,
-mansions, churches, white-walled and fantastic to their eyes, girt with
-strange shrubs and stately forest trees of unknown aspect. As the
-_Marlshire_ floated to her anchorage, threading a fleet of skiffs, which
-made the waters gay with many a sail, the full heart of the mother and
-the wife overflowed.
-
-Involuntarily a fervent prayer of thanksgiving went up to that Being who
-had safely guarded them o’er the waste of ocean; had permitted their
-entrance into this good land, which lay ready to receive them in their
-need.
-
-Passengers concluding a short voyage are nervously anxious to land, and
-commence the frantic enjoyment of existence on _terra firma_. Not so
-with the denizens of the good ship _Marlshire_, which had been their
-home and dwelling-place for more than a quarter of a year. Having grown,
-with the strange adaptiveness of our nature, to love the gallant bark,
-you revere the captain, respect the first officer, and believe in the
-second. Even the crew is above the average of the mercantile Jack-tar
-novel. You will always swear by the old tub; and you will not go on
-shore till to-morrow morning, if then.
-
-All things considered, the family decided to stay quietly on board the
-_Marlshire_ that night, so as to disembark in a leisurely way in the
-morning, when they would have the day before them in which to make
-arrangements.
-
-They talked of staying quietly on board, but the excitement of being so
-near the land was too much for them. The unnatural quietude of the ship,
-the calm water of the bay, the glancing lights, which denoted the
-thousand homes of the city, the cries and sounds of the massed
-population of a seaport, the warm midnight air, the woods and white
-beaches which denoted the shore-line, the gliding harbour-boats, all
-seemed to sound in one strangely distinct chorus: ‘Land, land, land at
-last.’ All magically exciting, these sounds and scenes forbade sleep.
-Long after the other members of the family had gone below for the night,
-Wilfred and Rosamond paced the deck, eagerly discussing plans for the
-future, and, with the sanguine temper of youth, rapidly following each
-freshly-formed track to fortune.
-
-No one was likely to indulge in slumber after sunrise. A babel of sounds
-announced that the unlading of cargo had commenced. Their last ship
-breakfast prefaced the actual stepping upon the friendly gangway, which
-now alone divided them from the other side of the world. Before that
-feat was performed, a squarely-built, grey-headed personage, in clerical
-garb, but withal of a somewhat secular manner, walked rapidly from the
-wharf to the deck and confronted the party.
-
-‘Here you are at last, all safe and sound, Howard, my dear fellow!’ said
-he, shaking hands warmly with Mr. Effingham. ‘Not so much changed
-either; too easy-going for that. Pray present me to Mrs. Effingham and
-the young ladies. Your eldest son looking after the luggage?—proper
-place for him. Allow me to take your arm, my dear madam, and to conduct
-you to the hotel, where I have engaged rooms for you. May as well set
-off—talk as we go along. Only heard of the _Marlshire_ being signalled
-the day before yesterday. Came a long journey—slightly knocked up this
-morning, but soon recovered—splendid climate—make a young man of you,
-Earl Percy, in a year or two. We always called him Earl Percy in the
-regiment, Mrs. Effingham. Perhaps he told you. And all this fine family
-too—two, four, six, seven. I can hardly credit my senses. Plenty of room
-for them in this country—plenty of room—that’s one thing.’
-
-‘We have every reason to be thankful for the comfortable way in which we
-have voyaged here,’ said Mrs. Effingham; ‘and now that you have so
-kindly come to meet us, I feel as if half our troubles were over.’
-
-‘Your troubles are just commencing, my dear madam, but with Harley
-Sternworth’s help something may be done to lighten them. Still I feel
-sure that these young ladies will look upon difficulties in a sensible
-way, not expecting too much, or being discouraged—just at first, you
-know.’
-
-‘Your country, my old friend, will have to look bad indeed if my wife
-cannot find a good word to say for it,’ said Mr. Effingham, roused to
-unwonted cheerfulness. ‘At any rate, it suits you well; you look as hard
-as a west country drover.’
-
-‘Never was better. Haven’t had a dose of medicine for years. Ride fifty
-miles a day if necessary. Finest climate—finest country—under the sun.
-Lots of parish work and travelling, with a dash of botanising, and a
-pinch of geology to fill up spare time. Wouldn’t go back and live in a
-country town for the world. Mope to death.’
-
-All this time the reverend gentleman was pressing forward up a gentle
-incline, towards the lower end of George Street, and after walking up
-that noble thoroughfare, and discreetly refraining from mention of the
-buildings which ornament that part of it, he turned again towards the
-water and piloted his party successfully to Batty’s Hotel.
-
-‘Here, my dear madam, you will find that I have secured you pleasant
-apartments for a week or ten days, during which time you will be able to
-recruit after the voyage, and do justice to the beauties of the city.
-You are not going up country at once. A few days’ leisure will be
-economy in the end.’
-
-‘So we are not to start off hundreds of miles at once, in a bullock
-dray, as the captain told us?’ said Rosamond.
-
-‘No, my dear young lady, neither now nor, I hope, at any time will such
-a mode of travelling be necessary. I cannot say too much for your
-conveyance, but it will be fairly comfortable and take you to your
-destination safely. After that will commence what you will doubtless
-consider to be a tolerably rough life. Yes—a rough life.’
-
-‘These young people have made up their minds to anything short of living
-like Esquimaux,’ said Mr. Effingham. ‘I don’t think you will frighten
-them. You and I saw curious backwoods places when we were quartered in
-Canada, didn’t we? You will hardly match them in Australia.’
-
-‘Nothing to be compared to it,’ said Mr. Sternworth earnestly. ‘We have
-no winter here, to begin with; that is, none worth speaking about for
-cold. Moreover, the people are intensely British in their manners and
-customs, in an old-fashioned way. But I am not going to explain
-everything. You will have to _live_ the explanation, which is far better
-than hearing it, and is sure to be retained by the memory.’
-
-It was decided that no move was to be made for the interior until the
-baggage was landed, and arrangements made for its safe carriage by dray.
-
-‘If you leave before all is ready,’ said their mentor, ‘you run risk of
-the loss of a portion, by mistake or negligence; and this loss may never
-be repaired. You will find your furniture of immense value in the new
-abode, and will congratulate yourself upon having brought it. It is
-astonishing with what different eyes you look upon a table or sideboard
-here and in England.’
-
-‘I was anxious to bring out some of our old possessions,’ said Mrs.
-Effingham. ‘But I had hard work to persuade my husband that we might not
-be able to procure such here. Your advice was most opportune. I feel
-more pleased than I can say that we were able to act upon it.’
-
-At lunch they were joined by Wilfred, who had discovered that there was
-no chance of all the furniture coming ashore that day. He had arranged
-with the captain that Andrew and his family should remain on board, as
-also Daisy the cow, until everything was ready to load the drays with
-the heavy baggage.
-
-Andrew had expressed himself much pleased with the arrangement,
-regarding the ship as ‘mair hamelike’ than the busy foreign-looking
-city, to the inhabitants of which he did not take kindly, particularly
-after an exploring stroll, which happened to be on the Sunday after
-arrival.
-
-‘A maist freevolous folk, given up to mammon-worship and
-pleesure-huntin’,—walkin’ in thae gairdens—no that they’re no just
-by-ordinar’ for shrubs and floorin’ plants frae a’ lands—walkin’ and
-haverin’ in the gairdens on the Sawbath day, a’ smilin’ and heedless,
-just on the vairge o’ happiness. Saw ye ever the like? It’s juist
-fearsome.’
-
-Upon the lady portion of the family, the city with its shops, parks, and
-inhabitants made a more favourable impression.
-
-Mr. Sternworth was untiring in showing them, in the excursions which
-Mrs. Effingham and the girls made under his guidance, the beauties of
-the city. They wandered much in the lovely public gardens, to Mrs.
-Effingham’s intense delight, whose love of flowers was, perhaps, her
-strongest taste. They drove out on the South Head road, and duly noted
-the white-walled mansions, plunged deeply in such luxuriant
-flower-growth as the Northern strangers had rarely yet beheld.
-Wonderfully gracious seemed the weather. It was the Australian spring
-with air as soft and balmy as that of Italy in her fairest hours.
-
-How enjoyable was that halt between two stages of existence! Daily, as
-they rose from the morning meal, they devoted themselves to fresh
-rambles around the city, under the chaperonage of the worthy person.
-They commenced to feel an involuntary exhilaration. The pure air, the
-bright days, the glowing sun, the pleasant sea-breeze, combined to cause
-an indefinable conviction that they had found a region formed for aid
-and consolation.
-
-The streets, the equipages, the people, presented, it is true, few of
-the contrasts, to their English experience, which a foreign town would
-have afforded. Yet was there the excitement, strong and vivid, which
-arises from the first sight of a strange land and an unfamiliar people.
-
-‘This town has a great look of Marseilles,’ said Wilfred, as they
-loitered, pleasantly fatigued, towards their temporary home in the
-deepening twilight. ‘The same white, balconied, terraced houses of pale
-freestone; the southern climate, the same polyglot water-side
-population, only the Marseilles quay might be stowed away in a hundred
-corners of this wonderful harbour; and the people—only look at them—have
-a Parisian tendency to spend their evenings in the streets. I suppose
-the mildness of the climate tends to it.’
-
-‘This kind of thing, I suppose, strikes you sharply at first,’ said Mr.
-Sternworth; ‘but my eyes have become so accustomed to all the aspects of
-my little world, that I cannot see much difference between it and many
-English places I have known in my day. The variations noted at first
-have long since disappeared; and I feel as much at home as I used to do
-at Bideford, when I was quartered there with the old regiment.’
-
-‘But surely the people must be different from what they are in England,’
-said Beatrice. ‘The country is different, the trees, the plants—how
-beautiful many of them are!—and the climate; surely all this must tend
-to alter the character or the appearance of the people.’
-
-‘It may in a few centuries have that effect, my dear young lady,’ said
-the old gentleman, ‘but such changes are after the fashion of nature’s
-workings, imperceptibly slow. You will agree with me in another year,
-that many old acquaintances in men and manners are to be met with out
-here, and the rest present only outward points of divergence.’
-
-The days of restful peace had passed. The valuable freight—to them
-invaluable—having been safely loaded, Mr. Sternworth unfolded the plan
-which he had arranged for their journey.
-
-‘You are aware,’ he said, ‘that Warbrok Chase, as the young ladies have
-decided to call your estate, is more than 200 miles from Sydney. It lies
-40 miles beyond Yass, which town is distant 180 miles from the
-Metropolis. Now, although we shall have railways in good time, there is
-nothing of the sort yet, and the roads are chiefly in their natural
-state. I would therefore suggest that you should travel in a roomy
-horse-waggon, comfortably fitted up, taking a tent with you in which to
-sleep at night. I have procured a driver well acquainted with the
-country, who knows all the camps and stopping-places, and may be
-depended upon to take you safely to your journey’s end.’
-
-‘No railways, no coaches,’ said Mr. Effingham; ‘yours is rather a
-primitive country, Harley, it must be confessed; but you know what is
-best for us all, and the weather is so mild that none of us can suffer
-from the bivouac.’
-
-‘I should not have hazarded it if there had been any risk to health,’
-said the old gentleman, bowing courteously. ‘There are coaches, however,
-and you might reach your destination in four days, after hurried
-travelling. But the tariff is expensive for so large a party; you would
-be crowded, or meet unsuitable fellow-travellers, while you could take
-but little of your luggage with you.’
-
-‘I vote for the overland journey,’ said Rosamond. ‘I am sure it will be
-quite refreshingly eastern. I suppose Andrew and Jeanie and poor dear
-Daisy and the dogs and everything can go.’
-
-‘Everything and everybody you please but the heavy luggage. Your
-servants will be able to sleep under a part of the waggon-tilt, which
-will be comfortable enough at night. The cow will give you milk for your
-tea. Even the greyhounds may catch you a wallaby or two, which will come
-in for soup.’
-
-‘There could not be a better scheme,’ said Wilfred exultingly. ‘My dear
-sir, you are a second father to us. How long do you think it will take
-us to get to Warbrok altogether?’
-
-‘You will have to make up your minds to ten or twelve days’ travelling,
-I am afraid—say, twenty miles a day. I really believe you will not find
-it tedious, but, as with your water journey, get quite to like it.
-Besides, there is one grand advantage, as far as the young ladies are
-concerned.’
-
-‘What is that?’ said Annabel, with added interest, but somewhat doleful
-countenance. ‘Is there _any_ advantage in travelling like gipsies?’
-
-‘It is this, then, my dear girls,’ said the old man, bending upon them
-his clear, kindly beaming eyes, ‘that you will make acquaintance with
-the rougher habitudes (and yet not unduly so) of country life in
-Australia by this primitive forest journeying. When you arrive at your
-destination you will therefore be proportionately satisfied with your
-new residence, because it will represent _a settled home_. Your daily
-journey will by that time have become a task, so that you will hail the
-prospect of repose with thankfulness.’
-
-‘Is that all?’ asked Annabel with a disappointed air. ‘Then we are to
-undergo something dreadful, in order that something only disagreeable
-may not look so bad after it. Is all Australian life like that? But I
-daresay I shall die young, and so it won’t matter much. Is the lunch
-nearly ready? I declare I am famishing.’
-
-Every one laughed at this characteristic sequence to Annabel’s prophecy,
-and the matter of the march having been settled, their friend promised
-to send up the waggon-driver next morning, in order that the proper
-fittings and the lamps—indispensable articles—and luggage might be
-arranged and packed. A tent also was purchased, and bedding, cooking
-utensils, provisions, etc., secured.
-
-‘You will find Dick Evans an original character,’ said the parson, ‘but
-I do not know any man in the district so well suited for this particular
-service. He has been twenty years in Australia, and knows everything,
-both good and evil, that can be known of the country and people. He is
-an old soldier, and in the 50th Regiment saw plenty of service. He has
-his faults, but they don’t appear on the surface, and I know him well
-enough to guarantee that you will be wholly ignorant of them. His
-manners—with a dash of soldier servant—are not to be surpassed.’
-
-At an hour next morning so soon after dawn that Andrew Cargill, the most
-incorruptible of early birds, was nearly caught napping, Mr. Dick Evans
-arrived with two horses and his waggon. The rest of the team, not being
-wanted, he had left in their paddock at Homebush. He immediately placed
-the waggon in the most convenient position for general reference, took
-out his horses, which he accommodated with nose-bags, and with an air of
-almost suspicious deference inquired of Andrew what he could commence to
-do in the way of packing.
-
-The two men, as if foreseeing that possible encounters might henceforth
-take place between them, looked keenly at each other. Richard Evans had
-the erect bearing of which the recipient of early drill can rarely
-divest himself. His wiry figure but slightly above the middle height,
-his clean-shaved, ruddy cheek, his keen grey eye, hardly denoted the
-fifty years and more which he carried so lightly.
-
-A faultless constitution, an open-air occupation with habits of great
-bodily activity, had borne him scatheless through a life of hardship and
-risk.
-
-This personage commenced with a request to be shown the whole of the
-articles intended to be taken, gently but firmly withstanding any
-opinion of Andrew’s to the contrary, and replying to his protests with
-the mild superiority of the attendant in a lunatic asylum. After the
-whole of the light luggage had been displayed, he addressed himself to
-the task of loading and securing it with so much economy of space and
-advantage of position, that Andrew readily yielded to him the right to
-such leadership in future.
-
-‘Nae doot,’ he said, ‘the auld graceless sworder that he is, has had
-muckle experience in guiding his team through thae pathless
-wildernesses, and it behoves a wise man to “jouk and let the jaw gae
-by.” But wae’s me, it’s dwelling i’ the tents o’ Kedar!’
-
-Dick Evans, who was a man of few words and strong in the heat of
-argument, was by no means given to mixing up discussion with work. He
-therefore kept on steadily with his packing until evening, only
-requiring from Andrew such help and information as were indispensable.
-
-‘There,’ said he, as he removed the low-crowned straw hat from his
-heated brow, and prepared to fill his pipe, ‘I think that will about do.
-The ladies can sit there in the middle, where I’ve put the tent loose,
-and use it as a sofy, if they’ve a mind to. I can pitch it in five
-minutes at night, and they can sleep in it as snug as if they had a
-cottage with them. You and your wife can have the body of the waggon to
-yourselves at night, and I’ll sleep under the shafts. The captain and
-the young gentlemen can have all the room between the wheels, and nobody
-can want more than that. I suppose your missis can do what cooking’s
-wanted?’
-
-‘Nae doot,’ Andrew replied with dignity, ‘Mistress Cargill wad provide a
-few bits o’ plain victual. A wheen parritch, a thocht brose, wad serve
-a’ hands better than flesh meat, and tea or coffee, or siccan trash.’
-
-‘Porridge won’t do for me,’ said the veteran firmly, ‘not if I know it.
-Oatmeal’s right enough for you Scotchmen, and not bad stuff either, _in
-your own country_, but beef and mutton’s our tack in Australia.’
-
-‘And will ye find a flesher in this “bush,” as they ca’ it, that we’ve
-to push through?’ demanded Andrew. ‘Wad it no be mair wiselike to keep
-to victual that we can carry in our sacks?’
-
-‘Get plenty of beef and mutton and everything else on the road,’ said
-Mr. Evans, lighting his pipe and declining further argument. ‘Don’t you
-forget to bring a frying-pan. I’ll take the horses back to the paddock
-now and be here by daylight, so as we can make a good start.’
-
-It had been arranged by Mr. Sternworth that the boys, as he called them,
-should set forth in the morning with Evans and the waggon, as also
-Andrew and Jeanie, taking with them the cow, the dogs, and the smaller
-matters which the family had brought. No necessity for Captain Effingham
-and the ladies to leave Sydney until the second day. He would drive them
-in a hired carriage as far as the first camp, which Evans had described
-to him.
-
-They would thus avoid the two days’ travel, and commence their journey
-after the expedition had performed its trial trip, so to speak.
-
-‘What _should_ we have done without your kind care of us?’ said Mrs.
-Effingham. ‘Everything up to this time has been a pleasure trip. When is
-the hard life that we heard so much of to begin?’
-
-‘Perhaps,’ said Rosamond, ‘Mr. Sternworth is going to be like the
-brigand in the romances, who used to lure persons from their homes. I
-have no doubt but that there are “hard times” awaiting us somewhere or
-somehow.’
-
-‘My dear young lady, let me compliment you on your good sense in taking
-that view of the future. It will save you from disappointment, and fill
-your mind with a wholesome strength to resist adversity. You may need
-all your philosophy, and I counsel you to keep it, like armour, well
-burnished. I do not know of any evil likely to befall you, but that you
-will have trouble and toil may be taken as certain. Only, after a time,
-I predict that you will overcome your difficulties, and find yourselves
-permanently benefited.’
-
-The old gentleman, whose arrangements were as successfully carried out
-as if he had been the commissary instead of the chaplain of his former
-regiment, made his appearance on the following day in a neat barouche
-drawn by a pair of good-looking bay horses, and driven by a highly
-presentable coachman.
-
-‘Why, it might pass muster for a private carriage,’ said Annabel. ‘And I
-can see a crest on the panels. I suppose we shall never own a carriage
-again as long as we live.’
-
-‘This _is_ a private carriage, or rather was, once upon a time,’ said
-Mr. Sternworth; ‘the horses and the coachman belonged to it. Many
-carriages were put down last year, owing to a scarcity of money, and my
-old friend Watkins here, having saved his wages, like a prudent man,
-bought his master’s carriage and horses, and commenced as cab
-proprietor. He has a large connection among his former master’s friends,
-and is much in demand at balls and other festivities.’
-
-The ex-coachman drove them at a lively pace, but steadily, along a
-macadamised turnpike road, not so very different from a country lane in
-Surrey, though wider, and not confined by hedges. The day was fine. On
-either side, after the town was left behind, were large enclosures,
-wherein grazed sheep, cattle, and horses. Sometimes they passed an
-orangery, and the girls were charmed with the rows of dark green trees,
-upon which the golden fruit was ripe. Then an old-fashioned house, in an
-orchard, surrounded by a wall—wall and house coloured red, and rusty
-with the stains of age—much like a farmhouse in Hertfordshire. One town
-they passed was so manifestly old-fashioned, having even _ruins_, to
-their delight and astonishment, that they could hardly believe they were
-in a new country.
-
-‘Some one has been playing Rip Van Winkle tricks upon us,’ said
-Rosamond. ‘We have been asleep a hundred years, and are come back
-finding all things grown old and in decay.’
-
-‘You must not forget that the colony has been established nearly fifty
-years,’ said Mr. Sternworth, ‘and that these are some of the earliest
-settlements. They were not always placed in the most judicious sites;
-wherefore, as newer towns have passed them in the race for trade, these
-have submitted to become, as you see them, “grey with the rime of
-years,” and simulating decay as well as circumstances will permit.’
-
-‘Well, I think much more highly of Australia, now that I have seen a
-_real_ ruin or two,’ said Annabel decisively. ‘I always pictured the
-country full of hideous houses of boards, painted white, with spinach
-green doors and windows.’
-
-The afternoon was well advanced as the inmates of the carriage descried
-the encampment which Mr. Evans had ordered, with some assistance from
-his military experience. So complete in all arrangements for comfort was
-it—not wholly disregarding the element of romantic scenery—that the
-girls cried aloud in admiration.
-
-The streamlet (or creek) which afforded the needful water meandered
-round the base of a crag, jutting out from a forest-clothed hill. The
-water-hole (or basin) in the channel of the creek was larger than such
-generally are, and reflected brightly the rays of the declining sun. The
-meadow, which afforded space for the encampment, was green, and fertile
-of appearance. The waggon stood near the water; the four horses were
-peacefully grazing. At a short distance, under a spreading tree, the
-tent had been pitched, while before it was a wood fire, upon which
-Jeanie was cooking something appetising. Wilfred and his brother were
-strolling, gun in hand, up the creek; the cow was feeding among the
-rushes with great contentment; Andrew was seated, meditating, upon a box
-which he had brought forth from the recesses of the waggon; while Dick
-Evans, not far from a small fire, upon which stood a camp-kettle at
-boiling-point, was smoking with an air of conscious pride, as if not
-only the picturesque beauty, but the personages pertaining to the
-landscape, belonged to him individually.
-
-‘I could not leave you more comfortably provided for,’ said their
-‘guide, philosopher, and friend.’ ‘Old Dick may be trusted in all such
-matters as implicitly as the Duke of Wellington. I never knew him at
-fault yet in this kind of life.’
-
-‘You must positively stay and have afternoon tea with us,’ exclaimed
-Annabel. ‘It is exactly five, and there is Dick putting a tin cupful of
-tea into the teapot. What extravagant people you colonists are! I never
-drank tea in the open air before, but it seems quite the right thing to
-do. I see Jeanie has made griddle-cakes, like a dear old thing. And I
-know there is butter. I am so hungry. You _will_ stay, won’t you?’
-
-‘I think, sir,’ said the ex-family coachman, looking indulgently at the
-special pleader, ‘that we shall have time to get back to the Red Cow Inn
-to-night, after a cup of tea, as the young lady wishes it. I’ll run you
-into town bright and early to-morrow.’
-
-‘Very well then, Miss Annabel, I shall have the honour to accept your
-invitation,’ bowed the old man. ‘I go away more cheerfully than I
-expected, now that I leave you all so comparatively snug. It will not be
-for long. Be sure that I shall meet you on the threshold of Warbrok.’
-
-The _al fresco_ meal was partaken of with much relish, even gaiety,
-after which civilisation—as personified by the reverend gentleman and
-the carriage—departed. Annabel looked after it ruefully, while Jeanie
-and Mrs. Effingham took counsel together for the night. It was for the
-first time in the family history. Never before had the Effinghams slept,
-so to speak, in the open air. It was a novel adventure in their
-uneventful lives—a marked commencement of their colonial career. It
-affected them differently, according to their idiosyncrasies. Rosamond
-was calmly resolute, Annabel apprehensive, and Beatrice indifferent; the
-boys in high spirits; Mr. Effingham half in disapproval, despondently
-self-accusing; while Mrs. Effingham and Jeanie were so fully absorbed in
-the great bedding question that they had no emotions to spare for any
-abstract consideration whatever.
-
-The moon, in her second quarter, had arisen lustrous in the pure, dark
-blue firmament, fire-besprinkled with ‘patines of bright gold,’ before
-this important matter (and supper) was concluded. Then it was formally
-announced that the tent was fully furnished, and had turned out
-wonderfully commodious. The mattresses were placed upon a layer of
-‘bush-feathers,’ as Dick Evans called them, and which (the small twigs
-and leaf-shoots of the eucalyptus) he had impressed Wilfred and his
-brother to gather. There was a lantern secured to the tent-pole, which
-lighted up the apartment; and sheets, blankets, coverlets being brought
-forth, Annabel declared that she was sure they would all sleep like
-tops, that for her part she must insist on going to bed at once as the
-keen air had made her quite drowsy. A dressing-table had been
-improvised, chiefly with the aid of Mr. Evans’ mechanical skill. When
-the matron and her daughters made their farewell for the night, and
-closed their canvas portal, every one was of the opinion that a high
-degree of comfort and effective lodging had been reached.
-
-Mr. and Mrs. Cargill and family retired to the inmost recesses of the
-upper waggon, where the ends of the tilt, fastened together, protected
-them. Mr. Effingham and his sons joined Dick Evans at his briskly
-burning fire, where the old man was smoking and occasionally indulging
-in a refresher of tea as if he had no intention of going to bed till he
-reached Warbrok.
-
-‘We are having glorious weather to travel in, Evans,’ said Mr.
-Effingham. ‘You have been in the service, Mr. Sternworth tells me; what
-regiment?’
-
-‘I was in the old 50th for many a year, Captain,’ he said, unconsciously
-standing erect and giving the salute. ‘I served under Sir Hugh Gough in
-India, where I got this slash from a Mahratta sabre. Didn’t seem a hard
-cut neither; the fellow just seemed to swing his wrist, careless-like,
-as he rode by, but it was nigh deep enough to take the “wick” out of me.
-Their swords was a deal sharper than ours, and their wooden scabbards
-kept ’em from getting blunt again. I had a great argument with my
-sergeant about it once,’ continued the old man. ‘I couldn’t a-bear to
-see our poor chaps sliced up by them razor-edged tulwars, while our
-regulation swords was a’most too dull to cut through a quilted cotton
-helment. Ah! them was fine times,’ said the old soldier, with so genuine
-a regret in his tones that Howard Effingham almost believed he had, for
-the first time in his life, fallen across a noble private, pleased with
-his profession, and anxious to return to it.
-
-‘I have rarely heard a soldier regret the army,’ said he. ‘But you still
-retain zeal for the service, I am pleased to find.’
-
-‘Well, sir, that’s all very well,’ said the philosophical man-at-arms;
-‘but what I was a-thinking of was the “loot.” It’s enough to bring tears
-into a man’s eyes that served his Queen and country, to think of the
-things as we passed over. Didn’t Jimmy O’Hara and two or three more men
-of my company get together once and made bold to stick up the priest of
-one of them temples. No great things either—gold earrings and bangles,
-and a trifle of gold mohurs, the priest’s own. There was a
-copper-coloured, bronze-looking idol—regular heathen god, or some such
-cretur—which the priest kept calling out “Sammy” to, or “Swammi.” The
-ugly thing had bright glittering eyes, and Jim wanted to get ’em out
-badly, but the priest said, “Feringhee wantee like this?” and he picked
-up a bit of glass, and smiled contempshus like. At last we left him and
-“Swammi,” eyes and all. I don’t ever deserve to have a day’s luck, sir,
-agin, as long as I live.’
-
-‘Why so?’ said Mr. Effingham, astonished at the high moral tone, which
-he had not been used to associate with the light infantry man of the
-period. ‘Not for taking the image away, surely?’
-
-‘No!’ shouted the old man, roused from his ordinary respectful tone.
-‘But for leavin’ him behind! That Sammy, sir, was pure gold, and his
-eyes was di’monds, di’monds! Think o’ that. We left a thousand pound a
-man behind, because we didn’t know gold when we seen it. It will haunt
-me, sir, to my dying day.’
-
-The boys laughed at the unsentimental conclusion of the veteran’s tale.
-Their father looked grave.
-
-‘I cannot approve of the plunder of religious edifices, Evans; though
-the temptation was too great for soldiers, and indeed for others in
-those days.’
-
-The chief personages having retired, Mr. Effingham and his sons essayed
-to make their couch under the waggon.
-
-‘It is many a year since I had any experience in this kind of thing,’
-said he; ‘but, if I remember rightly, it was in Spain that I bivouacked
-last. This locality is not unlike Estramadura. That rocky ravine, with
-the track running down it, is just where you would have expected to see
-the muleteer stepping gaily along beside his mules singing or swearing,
-as the case might be; and they do both with great vigour.’
-
-‘I remember Don Pedro, Captain,’ said Dick. ‘I mind the wine-skins putty
-well too. It wasn’t bad stuff; but I don’t know as dark brandy doesn’t
-come handier if ye wants a stir up. But there’s one thing you can’t have
-forgot, Captain, that beats this country holler.’
-
-‘You must mean the fleas,’ said Effingham; ‘_they_ certainly could not
-be surpassed. I hope you don’t mean to rival them here.’
-
-‘Well, I don’t deny, Captain, that in some huts, where the people aren’t
-particular, in a sandy country, in summer you will find a few, and
-likewise them other reptiles, ’specially where there’s pine slabs, but
-in a general way we’re pretty clean in this country, and you’ve no call
-to be afeard to tackle your blankets.’
-
-‘I’m glad to hear it, Evans,’ said Effingham, yawning. ‘I have no doubt
-that your camp is always fit for inspection. I think we may say
-good-night.’
-
-Between the keen air of the forest, and the unwonted exercise, a
-tendency to drowsiness now set in, which Mr. Effingham and his sons
-discovered by the time that the blankets were drawn over them. The sides
-of their apartment, represented by the wheels of the waggon, were
-covered by the canvas tilt, the ceiling was low but sufficient. It was
-the ideal chamber in one respect. Ventilation was unimpeded, while
-shelter was secured.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
- THE NEW HOME
-
-
-When Wilfred awoke from deep untroubled slumber, the sun seemed gazing
-at the encampment with haughty, fixed regard, as of a monarch, enthroned
-upon the summit of the purple mountain range.
-
-Unwitting of the lengths (fortunately) to which the unsparing archer
-could go in Southern lands, he essayed to commence dressing.
-
-Rising hurriedly, he was reminded by a tap on the head from the
-axle-tree that he was in a bedroom of restricted accommodation. More
-guarded in his after-movements he crawled outside, first placing on the
-dewy grass a rug upon which to stand. He commenced his toilette, and
-cast a comprehensive glance around.
-
-The first thing he saw was the upright form of Richard Evans, who,
-returning from a search after his hobbled horses, drove them before him
-towards the camp, at the same time smoking his pipe with a serene and
-satisfied air. The morning was chilly, but he had not thought a coat
-necessary, and in a check shirt and moleskin trousers calmly braved an
-atmosphere not much above forty degrees Fahrenheit.
-
-‘This must be a fine climate,’ said Wilfred to his father. ‘We shall be
-well wrapped up till breakfast time, at any rate, and yet that old
-buffer is wandering about in his shirt-sleeves as if he were in Naples.’
-
-‘He is pretty hard-bitten, you may depend,’ said Mr. Effingham. ‘I think
-some of our old “die-hards” are as tough samples of humanity as could
-anywhere be met. I do not uphold the British soldier as a model, but
-they were men in my time, beyond any manner of doubt.’
-
-Dick marched up his team to the waggon, whence the lodgers had by this
-time issued—Andrew to make a fire near the tent, and Jeanie to penetrate
-that sacred enclosure, and presumably to act as tire-woman in the
-interior.
-
-The shafts, which had served Dick as a sleeping apartment during the
-night, aided by a shroud of tarpaulin, were uplifted, and bagging being
-thereon stretched, were converted into a manger for the chaff and maize,
-which the horses quickly commenced to consume.
-
-Presently Jeanie issued from the tent, and finding the camp-kettle
-boiling, proceeded to make tea. Andrew, in the meantime, milked the cow.
-The gridiron was brought into requisition, and certain mutton chops
-broiled. Eventually Mrs. Effingham and her daughters issued from the
-tent, fresh and dainty of aspect as if they had just left their bedrooms
-at The Chase. Then the day commenced, and also breakfast.
-
-‘Good-morning, O mother! Hail, O tender maidens! What do you think of
-camping out?’ was Wilfred’s greeting, ‘Have you been sitting up weeping,
-or did you forget everything till daylight, as we did?’
-
-‘We all slept like tops,’ said Annabel. ‘I never was so sleepy in my
-life. I was almost off before I could undress. I think it’s splendid.
-And oh! what is there for breakfast?’
-
-Grilled chops, smoking cups of tea, with bread and butter, constituted
-the repast. Worse meals have been eaten. The appetites were, like the
-travellers, highly respectable. By the time the meal was finished, Mr.
-Richard Evans had harnessed his team, and bringing himself up to the
-attitude of ‘attention,’ requested to know when the ladies would like to
-make a start.
-
-After consultation, it was notified to their guide and courier that as
-soon as the tent was struck and the baggage packed, every one would be
-ready.
-
-The troops being in high health and spirits, in a comparatively short
-space of time the march was resumed. Wilfred and Guy walked ahead,
-fowling-piece in hand. Andrew drove the cow, which followed quietly in
-the rear. The coupled greyhounds looked eagerly around, as if sensible
-that they were now in hunting country. They were with difficulty
-restrained when a wallaby, in two bounds, crossed the road and
-disappeared in an adjoining scrub.
-
-The dry air was pure and fresh, the unclouded sky blue as a sapphire
-dome, the winding forest road free from all impediment but an occasional
-ledge of sandstone. If there is any portion of the day ‘when the poor
-are rich in spirits and health,’ when the heart of youth stirs, when age
-is soothed with dreams of happiness, it is in that sweetest hour which
-follows the early morning meal in rural Australia. Dawn is austere,
-mid-day often sultry, but nowhere will he, whose heart and intelligence
-respond alike gratefully to that charmed time, find its inspirations
-more invigorating than in the early summer of Australia. Then the
-fortunate traveller experiences coolness without cold, and warmth
-without the heat which produces lassitude.
-
-As the waggon rolled easily along, the horses stepping cheerily on the
-track, the wayfarers paced over the unwonted herbage with an alertness
-of mien which would have suggested a very different history.
-
-‘How lovely the shrubs are that we see in all directions!’ said Mrs.
-Effingham. ‘What should we have given for that golden flowering mimosa
-at The Chase, or this blue-leaved, pink pointed tree, which I suppose
-must be a young eucalyptus. Here they are so common that no one heeds
-them, and yet there are rare plants enough to set up a dozen
-greenhouses.’
-
-‘Everything is so utterly different,’ said Rosamond. ‘I am most
-agreeably surprised at the landscape. What erroneous ideas one has of
-far countries! I suppose it is because we seldom feel sufficient
-interest to learn about them thoroughly. I pictured Australia a sandy
-waste, with burned-up reedy grass, and a general air of the desert. Now,
-here we have woods, a pretty little brook rippling by, rocks and hills,
-and in the distance a mountain. I could make quite an effective sketch.’
-
-‘The country isn’t all like this, Miss,’ said Dick Evans, with a
-deferential air. ‘If you was to go two or three hundred miles into the
-bush, there’s no timber at all; you’ld find it all sand and
-salt-bushes—the curiousest place ever you see.’
-
-‘How can it be the “bush,”’ inquired Wilfred, ‘if there are no trees?
-But we are not going so far, at any rate.’
-
-‘Finest grazing land out,’ said Richard the experienced. ‘All the stock
-rolling fat—no trouble in looking after ’em. If I was a young gentleman,
-that’s the place I’d make for. Not but what Warbrok’s a pleasant spot,
-and maybe the young ladies will like it better than the plains.’
-
-‘I fancy we all shall, Richard,’ said Rosamond. ‘The plains may be very
-well for sheep and cattle, but I prefer a woodland country like this. I
-suppose we can have a garden there?’
-
-‘Used to be the best garden in all the country-side, Miss, but the
-Warleighs were a wild lot; they let everything go to wrack. The trees
-and bushes is mostly wore out, but the sile’s that good, as a handy man
-would soon make it ship-shape again.’
-
-‘What are we to do for lunch?’ said Annabel, with some appearance of
-anxiety. ‘If we are to go on roaming over the land from sunrise to
-sunset without stopping, I shall die of hunger—I’m sure I shall. I keep
-thinking about those cakes of Jeanie’s.’
-
-‘My dear child,’ said her mother, ‘I daresay we shall manage to feed you
-and the rest of the flock. I am pleased to find that you have such a
-famous appetite. To be sure, you have not stopped growing yet, and this
-fresh air acts as a tonic. So far, we must not complain of the climate.’
-
-‘It’s only a few miles furder on, ma’am, to the King Parrot Waterhole,
-where we can stop in the middle of the day, and have a bit to eat if the
-young ladies is sharp-set. I always stop on the road and feed my horses
-about twelve o’clock. And if the young gentlemen was to walk on, they
-might shoot a pair of ducks at the waterhole, as would come in handy for
-the pot.’
-
-When about mid-day they reached the King Parrot Waterhole, a
-reed-fringed pool, about as large as their English horse-pond, they
-found Wilfred in possession of a pair of the beautiful grey-breasted
-wood-ducks (_Anas Boscha_), a teal, with chestnut and black feathers and
-a brilliant green neck, also a dark-furred kangaroo, which Dick
-pronounced to be a rock wallaby.
-
-‘Australia isn’t such a bad place for game,’ said Guy. ‘We found the
-ducks swimming in the pool, three brace altogether, and “Damsel” caught
-this two-legged hare, as she thought it, as it was making up that stony
-hill. _I_ like it better than Surrey.’
-
-‘We shall find out ever so many interesting things,’ said Rosamond. ‘I
-shall never feel thankful enough to that good old Professor Muste for
-teaching me the small bit of botany that I know. Now, look at this
-lovely Clianthus, is it not enough to warm the heart of a Trappist? And
-here is that exquisite purple Kennedya, which ought, in an Australian
-novel, to be wreathed round the heroine’s hat. Do my eyes deceive me, or
-is not that a white heath? I must dig it up.’
-
-‘I believe, Rosamond, that you could comfort yourself on Mount Ararat,’
-said Annabel. ‘Why, it will be _ages_ before those ducks can be picked
-and roasted. Oh, Jeanie, Jeanie, can’t we have them before tea-time? I
-wish I had never seen them.’
-
-‘If you like, you can help me take off the feathers, and spare Jeanie’s
-everlastingly busy fingers,’ said Beatrice.
-
-Here Annabel looked ruefully at her tiny, delicate hands, with a child’s
-pout.
-
-‘Oh, it’s no use looking at your pretty hands,’ said the more practical
-Beatrice. ‘This is the land of work, and all who can’t make themselves
-useful will be treated like the foolish virgins in the parable. It
-always makes me smile when that chapter is read. I can fancy Annabel
-holding out her lamp, with an injured expression, saying, “Well, nobody
-told me it was time to get ready.”’
-
-‘Beatrice, my daughter,’ said Mrs. Effingham gravely, ‘sacred subjects
-are not befitting matter for idle talking; dispositions vary, and you
-may remember that Martha was not praised for her anxiety to serve.’
-
-At mid-day the kettle bubbled on the fire, kindled by the ever-ready
-Richard, cakes and sandwiches were handed round, the tea—thanks to
-Daisy—was gratefully sipped.
-
-The sun shone brightly on the green flat, where the horses grazed in
-peace and plenty. The birds chirped and called at intervals; all Nature
-seemed glad and responsive to the joyous season of the southern spring.
-
-Thus their days wore on, in peaceful progression, alike free from toil,
-anxiety, or adventure. The daily stage was accomplished, under Dick’s
-experienced direction, without mistake or misadventure. The evening meal
-was a time of rest and cheerful enjoyment, the night’s slumbers
-refreshing and unbroken.
-
-‘What a delightful country this is! I feel quite a new creature,
-especially after breakfast,’ exclaimed Annabel one morning. ‘I could go
-on like this for months, till we reached the other side of the
-continent, if there is any other side. Will it be as nice as this, I
-wonder, at Malbrook, or Warbrok, or whatever they call it? Warbrok Chase
-won’t look so bad on our letters, when we write home. I must send a
-sketch of it to cousin Elizabeth, with a bark cabin, of course. She will
-never believe that we have a real house to live in among the backwoods.
-What sort of a house is it, Dick? Is it thatched and gabled and damp and
-delightful, with dear little diamond casements like the keeper’s lodge,
-or is it a horrid wooden barn? Tell me now, there’s a dear old man!’
-
-‘We shall be there, Miss, the day after to-morrer, please God,’
-responded Dick with respectful solemnity. ‘Parson Sternworth said I was
-to say nought about the place, but let it come on you suddent-like. And
-I’m a man as is used to obey orders.’
-
-‘Very well, you disagreeable old soldier,’ said the playful maiden.
-‘I’ll be even with you and the parson, as you call him. See if I don’t.’
-
-‘Sorry to disobleege you, Miss Anniebell,’ said the veteran, ‘but if my
-old General, Sir Hugh Gough, was to come and say, “Corporal Richard
-Evans, hand me over the chart of the country,” I should have to tell him
-that he hadn’t got the counter-sign.’
-
-‘And quite right too, Evans,’ interposed Mr. Effingham, ‘to keep up your
-good old habits in a new country. Discipline is the soul of the army.’
-
-‘I was allers taught _that_, sir,’ replied Dick, with an air of military
-reminiscence which would have befitted a veteran of the Great Frederick.
-‘But when we reaches Warbrok my agreement’s out with the Parson, and
-Miss can order me about all day.’
-
-In spite of Annabel’s asseverations that the party would never reach the
-spot indicated, and that she believed there never was any such place,
-but that Dick would lead them into a trackless forest and abandon them,
-the journey ended about the time specified. A rugged track, indeed, one
-afternoon tried their patience. The horses laboured, the docile cow
-limped and lagged, the girls complained, while Andrew’s countenance
-became visibly elongated.
-
-At length Dick Evans’s wooden facial muscles relaxed, as halting on the
-hardly-gained hill-top he pointed with his whip-handle, saying simply,
-‘There’s Warbrok! So the young ladies and gentlemen can see for
-theirselves.’
-
-How eagerly did the whole party gaze upon the landscape, which now, in
-the clear light of the Southern eve, lay softly in repose before them!
-
-The character of the scenery had changed with the wondrous suddenness
-peculiar to the land in which they had come to dwell. A picture set in a
-frame of forest and unfriendly thickets! Now before their eyes came with
-magical abruptness a vision of green slopes, tall groves, and verdurous
-meadows. It was one of nature’s forest parks. Traces of the imperfect
-operations of a new country were visible, in felled timber, in naked,
-girdled trees, in unsightly fences. But nature was in bounteous mood,
-and had heightened the contrast with the barren region they had
-over-passed, by a flushed abundance of summer vegetation. This lavish
-profusion of herb and leaf imparted a richness of colouring, a clearness
-of tone, which in a less favourable season of the year Warbrok must
-perceptibly have lacked.
-
-‘Oh, what a lovely, lovely place!’ cried Annabel, transported beyond
-herself as she stood on tip-toe and gazed rapturously at the scene.
-‘Those must be the Delectable Mountains. Dick, you are a Christian hero
-[the old man smiled deprecatingly], I forgive you on the spot. And there
-is the house, a _real_ house with two storeys—actually two—I thought
-there were only cottages up the country—and an orchard; and is that a
-blue cloud or the sea? We must have turned round again. Surely it can’t
-be _our lake_? That would be too heavenly, and those glorious mountains
-beyond!’
-
-‘That’s Lake William, miss, called after His Gracious Majesty King
-William the Fourth,’ explained Dick, accurate and reverential. ‘Fourteen
-miles long and seven broad. You’ll find the house big enough, but it’s a
-long way from being in good order; and it’s a mercy there’s a tree alive
-in the orchard.’
-
-‘Oh, never mind, we’ll soon put things to rights, won’t we, mamma? And
-what splendid creatures those old trees will be when they come out in
-leaf. I suppose it’s too early in the spring yet?’ continued she.
-
-‘Dead—every one of ’em, miss,’ explained their conductor. ‘They’ve been
-ring-barked, more’s the pity. They was beauties when I knowed ’em fust,
-before the blessed tenants was let ruinate everything about the place. I
-wonder there’s a stone of the house standing, that I do. And now, sir,
-we’ll get on, and the young ladies can have tea in their own parlour, if
-my old woman’s made a fire, accordin’ to orders.’
-
-The hearts of the more reflective portion of the party were too full for
-comment, so Annabel’s chatter was allowed to run on unchecked. A feeling
-of despondency had been gradually stealing over Howard Effingham and his
-wife, as for the two last stages they had pictured to themselves the
-toil of building up a home amid the barren solitudes, such as, in their
-innocence, they thought their new property might resemble. Now, here was
-a spot in which they might live out their lives with cheerful and
-contented minds, thankful that ‘their lines had fallen in pleasant
-places’; having reason to hope that their children might dwell in peace
-and prosperity after them.
-
-‘We can never be sufficiently grateful to your dear old friend,’ said
-Mrs. Effingham. ‘If he had not in the first place written you that
-letter, Howard, and afterwards acted upon his opinion so boldly, what
-might have been our fate?’
-
-‘He always used to look after me when we were in the regiment,’ said her
-husband acquiescingly; ‘I daresay he’ll find a similar pleasure in
-taking charge of us now. Fortunately for you and the girls, he never
-married.’
-
-A few miles only needed to be traversed before Mr. Evans triumphantly
-drove his team through the gate of the dilapidated garden fence
-surrounding the front of a large old-fashioned stone mansion, with wide
-verandah and lofty balcony, supported upon freestone pillars. A stout,
-elderly woman of decided aspect opened the creaking hall door, and
-casting a searching glance at Mr. R. Evans, made the strangers welcome.
-
-‘I’m sure I’m very glad to see you, my lady,’ said she, bobbing an
-antiquated curtsey, ‘and you, sir, and the young ladies and gentlemen.
-I’ve done all I could to clean up the old barrack of a house; it was
-that lonesome, and made me frighted with ghosts, as I thought I’d never
-live to see you all; and Dick here, I knew there was no certainty of, as
-might have gone to Timor, or the Indies, and never let on a word about
-it. Please you to come in, my lady.’
-
-‘My old woman’s temper is none of the best, Captain,’ said Dick, stating
-the fact with philosophical calmness, ‘but I’ll warrant she’s cleaned up
-as much as any two, and very bad it wanted it when Parson Sternworth
-brought us over.’
-
-Now that a nearer view was afforded of the demesne and dwelling, it was
-evident that the place had been long abandoned to natural decay and
-sordid neglect. The fences were rotten, gapped, or fallen; the orchard,
-though the aged trees were high out of the reach of browsing cattle, had
-been used as a convenient species of stock paddock; the climbers,
-including a magnificent bignonia and a wistaria, the great laterals of
-which had erstwhile clothed the verandah pillars with beauty and bloom,
-were broken and twisted. In the rear of the building all the broken
-bottles and bones of the land appeared to be collected; while, with
-windows broken, shutters hanging on a single hinge, doors closing with
-difficulty, or impossible to open, all things told of the recklessness
-of ruined owners.
-
-Still, in despite of all deficiencies, the essentials of value could not
-be overlooked. The house, though naked and desolate of aspect, was large
-and commodious, promising in its shingled roof and massive stone walls
-protection against the heat of summer, the cold of winter. The deep
-black mould needed but ordinary culture to respond generously. The
-offices might be mouldering and valueless, but the _land_ was there,
-thinly timbered, richly grassed, well adapted for stock of all kinds.
-And though the gaunt limbs of the girdled trees looked sadly
-unpicturesque between the front of the house and the lake shore, some
-had been left untouched, and the grass was all the more richly swarded.
-The lake itself was a grand indisputable fact. It was deep and fresh,
-abounding in water-fowl, a priceless boon to dwellers in a climate
-wherein a lack of rivers and permanent reservoirs is unhappily a
-distinguishing characteristic.
-
-Let it not be supposed that Wilfred and his mother, the girls and Jeanie
-were outside the house all this time. Very promptly had Dick unloaded
-the household stores, pressing all able-bodied persons, including his
-wife, into the service, until the commissariat was safely bestowed under
-shelter. His waggon was taken to the rear, his horses unharnessed, and
-he himself in a marvellously short space of time enjoying a well-earned
-pipe, and advising Andrew to bestow Daisy’s calf in a dilapidated but
-still convertible calf-pen, so that his mother might graze at ease, and
-yet be available for the family breakfast table in the morning.
-
-‘The grass here is fust-rate,’ he said, in a tone of explanation to
-Andrew. ‘There’s been a lot of rain in spring. It’s a pity but we had a
-few good cows to milk. It would be just play for you and me and the
-young master in the mornings. Teach him to catch hold like and learn him
-the use of his hands.’
-
-‘_Him_ milk!’ exclaimed Andrew, in a tone of horrified contempt. ‘And
-yet—I dinna say but if it’s the Lord’s will the family should ha’ been
-brocht to this strange land, it may be no that wrang that he should
-labour, like the apostles, “working with his hauns.” There’s guid
-warrant for’t.’
-
-Meanwhile, inside the house important arrangements were proceeding. The
-sitting-room, a great, bare apartment, had an ample fireplace, which
-threw out a genial warmth from glowing logs. There was a large, solid
-cedar table, which Mrs. Evans had rubbed and polished till the dark red
-grain of the noble wood was clearly visible. Also a dozen _real_ chairs,
-as Annabel delightedly observed, stood around, upon which it was
-possible to enjoy the long-disused comfort of sitting down. Of this
-privilege she promptly availed herself.
-
-The night-draperies were disposed in the chief bedchamber, though until
-the arrival of the furniture it was apparent that the primitive sleeping
-accommodation of the road would need to be continued. Mr. Effingham and
-his sons were luxuriously billeted in another apartment, where, after
-their axle-tree experiences, they did not pity themselves.
-
-Andrew and his family were disposed of in the divisions of the kitchen,
-which, in colonial fashion, was a detached building in the rear. Mr. and
-Mrs. Evans had, on their previous entry on the premises, located
-themselves in an outlying cottage (or hut, as they called it), formerly
-the abode of the dairyman, where their possessions had no need of
-rearrangement. Even the dogs had quarters allotted to them, in the long
-range of stabling formerly tenanted by many a gallant steed in the old
-extravagant days of the colony, when unstinted hospitality and claret
-had been the proverbial rule at Warbrok.
-
-‘Oh dear!’ exclaimed Annabel from her chair, ‘what a luxurious feeling
-it is to be once more in a _home_ of one’s own! Though it’s a funny old
-place and must have been a tempting refuge for ghosts wandering in
-search of quarters. And then to think that to-morrow morning we shall
-not have to move on, for ever and ever. I was beginning to get the least
-bit tired of it; were not you, mamma? Though I would have died sooner
-than confess it.’
-
-‘Words cannot describe how thankful I am, my dear child,’ said her
-mother, ‘that we have had the good fortune to end this land journey so
-well. It is the first one of the kind I ever undertook, and I trust it
-will be the last. But let us remember in our prayers to-night _whose_
-hand has shielded us from the perils of the deep, and whatever dangers
-we may have escaped upon the land.’
-
-‘I feel as if we had all been acting a charade or an extended _tableau
-vivant_,’ said Rosamond. ‘Like you, Annabel, dear, I am not sorry that
-the theatricals are over, though the play has been a success so far. It
-has no more nights to run, fortunately for the performers. Our everyday
-life will commence to-morrow. We must enter upon it in a cheerful,
-determined spirit.’
-
-‘I cannot help fancying,’ said Beatrice, ‘that colonial travellers enjoy
-an unnecessary amount of prestige, or some experiences must differ from
-ours. We might have had a Dick who would have lost his horses or
-overturned the waggon, and bushrangers (there _are_ bushrangers, for I
-saw in a paper that Donohoe and his gang had “stuck-up,” whatever that
-means, Mr. Icely’s drays and robbed them) might have taken us captive.
-We have missed the romance of Australian life evidently.’
-
-Howard Effingham felt strangely moved as he walked slowly forth at dawn.
-He watched the majestic orb irradiate the mist-shrouded turrets of the
-great mountain range which lay to the eastward. Endless wealth of colour
-was evoked by the day-god’s kiss, softly, stealingly, suffusing the
-neutral-tinted dome, then with magical completeness flashing into
-supernal splendour. The dew glistened upon the vernal greensward. The
-pied warbler rolled his richest notes in flute-like carol. The
-wild-fowl, on the glistening mirror of the lake, swam, dived, or flew in
-playful pursuit. The bracing air was unspeakably grateful to Howard
-Effingham’s rurally attuned senses. Amid this bounty of nature in her
-less sophisticated aspects, his heart swelled with the thought that much
-of the wide champaign, the woodland, and the water, over which his eye
-roamed wonderingly, called him master. He saw, with the quick projection
-of a sanguine spirit, his family domiciled once more with comfort and
-security. And not without befitting dignity, so long despaired of. He
-prized the ability to indulge again the disused pursuits of a country
-life. Though in a far land, among strange people, separated by a whole
-ocean from the scenes of his youth and manhood, he now felt for the
-first time since the great disaster that contentment, even happiness,
-was possible. Once more he felt himself a country gentleman, or at the
-least an Australian squire. With the thought he recalled the village
-chimes in their lost home, and his wife’s reference of every
-circumstance of life to the special dispensation of a benign, overruling
-Providence occurred to him. With unconscious soliloquy he exclaimed, ‘I
-have not deserved this; God be merciful to me a sinner!’
-
-Dick Evans, with his horses, now appeared upon the scene, bells,
-hobbles, and all. He bore every appearance of having been up at least
-two hours.
-
-‘What a wonderful old fellow that is!’ said Wilfred, who had joined his
-father; ‘day or night seems alike to him. He is always hard at work at
-something or other—always helpful and civil, apparently good at a score
-of trades, yet military as a pipe-clayed belt. Mr. Sternworth admitted
-that he had faults, but up to this time we have never discovered them.’
-
-‘If he has none, he is such an old soldier as I have never met,’ said
-his father mildly. ‘Longer acquaintance will, I suppose, abate his
-unnatural perfection. But, in any case, we must keep him on until we are
-sufficiently acclimatised to set up for ourselves.’
-
-‘Quite so, sir! We cannot have our reverend mentor always at beck and
-call. We want some one here who knows the country and its ways. Guy and
-I will soon pick up the lie of the land, as he calls it, but at present
-we are all raw and ignorant together.’
-
-‘Then we had better engage him at once. I suppose he can tell us the
-proper wages.’
-
-‘Very possibly; but now I think of it, sir, hadn’t you better delegate
-the executive department to me? Of course to carry out your
-instructions, but you might do worse than appoint me your responsible
-minister.’
-
-‘My boy!’ said Effingham, grasping his son’s hand, ‘I should have made
-the suggestion if you had not anticipated me. I cheerfully yield the
-management to you, as you will have the laborious part of the work. Many
-things will need to be done, for which I am unfit, but which you will
-gradually master. I fully trust you, both as an example to Guy and
-Selden, and the guardian of your mother and sisters.’
-
-‘As God will help me in my need, they will need no other,’ replied the
-eldest son. ‘So far I have led a self-indulgent life. But the spur of
-necessity (you must admit) has been wanting. Now the hour has come. You
-never refused me a pleasure; trust me to fulfil every duty.’
-
-‘I never have doubted it, my boy! I always knew that higher qualities
-were latent in your nature. As you say, the hour has come. We were never
-laggards when the trumpet-call sounded. And now, let us join the family
-party.’
-
-As they reached the house, from which they had rambled some distance,
-the sun was two hours high, and the smoke issuing from the kitchen
-chimney denoted that culinary operations were in progress. At that
-moment a serviceable-looking dogcart, drawn by a wiry, roan horse,
-trotted briskly along the track from the main road, and in drawing up,
-displayed in the driver the welcome presentment of the Rev. Harley
-Sternworth.
-
-‘How do, Howard? How are you, Wilfred, my boy? Welcome to Warbrok—to
-Warbrok Chase, that is. I shall learn it in time. Very proper addendum;
-suits the country, and gratifies the young ladies’ taste. Thought I’d
-catch you at your first breakfast. Here, Dick, you old rascal—that is,
-you deserving veteran—take Roanoke.’
-
-The somewhat decided features of the old army chaplain softened visibly
-as, entering the bare uncarpeted apartment, he descried Mrs. Effingham
-and her daughters sitting near the breakfast table, evidently awaiting
-the master of the house. His quick eye noticed at once the progress of
-feminine adaptation, as well as the marked air of comfort produced with
-such scanty material.
-
-He must surely have been gratified by the sensation he produced. The
-girls embraced him, hanging upon his words with eagerness, as on the
-accents of the recovered relative of the melodrama. Mrs. Effingham
-greeted him with an amount of warmth foreign to her usual demeanour. The
-little ones held up their faces to be kissed by ‘Uncle Harley.’
-
-‘We are just going to have our first breakfast,’ said Annabel. ‘Sit down
-this very minute. Haven’t we done wonders?’
-
-Indeed, by the fresh, morning light, the parlour already looked homelike
-and attractive. The breakfast table, ‘decored with napery,’ as Caleb
-Balderstone phrased it, had a delicately clean and appetising
-appearance. A brimming milk jug showed that the herbage of Warbrok had
-not been without its effect upon their fellow-passenger from the Channel
-Islands. A goodly round of beef, their last roadside purchase,
-constituted the _pièce de résistance_. A dish of eggs and bacon,
-supplied by Mrs. Evans, whose poultry travelled with her everywhere, and
-looked upon the waggon as their home, added to the glory of the repast.
-A large loaf of fresh bread, baked by the same useful matron, stood
-proudly upon a plate, near the roadside tea equipage, and a kettle like
-a Russian _samovar_. Nor was artistic ornamentation wholly absent.
-Annabel had fished up a broken vase from a lumber room, which, filled
-with the poor remnants of the borders, ‘where once a garden smiled,’ and
-supplemented with ‘wild buttercups and very nearly daisies,’ as she
-described the native flora, made an harmonious contribution.
-
-Before commencing the meal, as Mr. Effingham took his seat at the head
-of his own table once more, humble as were the surroundings, his wife
-glanced at the youngest darling, Blanche. She ran across to a smaller
-table covered with a rug, and thence lifting off a volume of some
-weight, brought it to their guest. His eyes met those of his old comrade
-and of her his life’s faithful companion. The chaplain’s eyes were
-moistened, in despite of his efforts at composure. What recollections
-were not summoned up by the recurrence of that simple household
-observance? His voice faltering, at first, with genuine emotion, Harley
-Sternworth took the sacred volume, and read a portion, before praying in
-simple phrase, that the Great Being who had been pleased to lead the
-steps of His servants to this far land, would guide them in all their
-ways, and prosper the work of their hands in their new home. ‘May His
-blessing be upon you all, and upon your children’s children after you,
-in this the land of our adoption,’ said the good priest, as he arose in
-the midst of the universal amen.
-
-‘Do you know that it was by no means too warm when I left Yass at
-daylight this morning? This is called a hot climate. But in our early
-summer we have frosts sometimes worthy of Yorkshire. Yesterday there was
-rather a sharp one. We shall have rain again soon.’
-
-‘Oh, I hope not,’ said Annabel. ‘This is such lovely, charming weather.
-So clear and bright, and not at all too warm. I should like it to last
-for months.’
-
-‘Then, my dear young lady, we should all be ruined. Rain rarely does
-harm in this country. Sometimes there are floods, and people who live on
-meadowlands suffer. But the more rain the merrier, in this country at
-least. It is a land of contradictions, you know. Your Lake William,
-here, will never overflow, so you may be easy in your minds, if it rains
-ever so hard.’
-
-‘And what does my thoughtful young friend, Rosamond, think of the new
-home?’ inquired the old gentleman, looking at her with affectionate
-eyes.
-
-‘She thinks, Uncle Sternworth, that nothing better for us all could have
-been devised in the wide world, unless the Queen had ordered her
-Ministers to turn out Sir Percy de Warrenne and put us in possession of
-Old Court. Even that, though Sir Percy is a graceless kinsman, might not
-have been so good for us, as making a home for ourselves here, out of
-our own heads, as the children say.’
-
-‘And you are quite satisfied, my dear?’
-
-‘More than satisfied. I am exulting and eager to begin work. In England
-I suffered sometimes from want of occupation. Here, every moment of the
-day will be well and usefully employed.’
-
-‘And Miss Beatrice also approves?’
-
-‘_Miss_ Beatrice says,’ replied that more difficult damsel, who was
-generally held to be reserved, if not proud, ‘she would not have come to
-Australia if it could have been helped. But having come, supposes she
-will not make more useless lament than other people.’
-
-‘Beatrice secretly hates the country, I know she does,’ exclaimed
-Annabel, ‘and it is ungrateful of her, particularly when we have such a
-lovely place, with a garden, and a lake, and mountains and sunsets, and
-everything we can possibly want.’
-
-‘I am not so imaginative as to expect to live on mountains and sunsets,
-and I must confess it will take me a long time to become accustomed to
-the want of _nearly_ all the pleasures of life, but I suppose I shall
-manage to bear up my share of the family burdens.’
-
-‘You have always done so hitherto, my dear,’ said Mrs. Effingham; ‘but
-you are not fond of putting forward your good deeds—hardly sufficiently
-so, as I tell you.’
-
-‘Some one has run away with Beatrice’s share of vanity,’ said Rosamond.
-‘But we must not stay talking all the morning. I am chief butler, and
-shall have to be chief baker too, perhaps, some day. I must break up the
-meeting, as every one has apparently breakfasted.’
-
-‘And I must have a serious business conversation with your father and
-Wilfred,’ said Mr. Sternworth. ‘Where is the study—the library, I mean?
-Not furnished yet! Well, suppose we adjourn to the ex-drawing-room. It’s
-a spacious apartment, where the late tenant, a practical man, used to
-store his maize. There is a deal table, for I put it there myself. Guy,
-you may as well ask Dick Evans to show you the most likely place for
-wild-fowl. Better bring chairs, Wilfred. We are going to have a
-“sederunt,” as they say in Scotland.’
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
- MR HENRY O’DESMOND OF BADAJOS
-
-
-‘Now, Howard, my young friend!’ said the worthy man, as they settled
-themselves at a small table, near a noble mantelpiece of Australian gray
-marble, curiously marked with the imprints of the fossil encrinite, ‘I
-address you as I used to do in our army days, for, with regard to money
-matters, I feel sure you are as young as ever. In the first place, I
-must render an account of my stewardship. Observe, here is the
-conveyance to you and your heirs for ever of the estate of Warbrok, a
-Crown grant to Colonel Rupert Falkland Warleigh, late of Her Majesty’s
-80th Regiment, dated as far back as 1805, comprising 5174 acres, 1 rood,
-3 perches, by him devised in equal shares to his sons—Randal, Clement,
-and Hubert. It was not entailed, as were most of the early grants. They
-fell away from the traditions of the family, and lived reckless,
-dissipated lives. Their education was neglected—perhaps not the best
-example exhibited to them by the old Colonel—he was always a gentleman
-though—what wonder the poor boys went wrong? They came to be called the
-“Wild Warleighs of Warbrok.” At last the end came. Hopelessly in debt,
-they were forced to sell. Here are their signatures, duly attested. Your
-purchase money, at the rate of 10s. per acre—a low price, but ready
-money was very scarce in the colony at the time—amounted to £2587:5s.,
-mentioned as the consideration. Out of your draft for £3000 remained,
-therefore, £412:15s.; expenses and necessary farm work done, with wages
-to Dick Evans and his wife, have amounted to £62:7s. This includes the
-ploughing and sowing of a paddock—a field you would call it—of 20 acres
-of wheat, as the season had to be availed of. I hand you a deposit
-receipt for £350:8s., lodged to your credit in the Bank of New Holland,
-at Yass, where I advise you to place the rest of your capital, and I
-thereby wash my hands of you, pecuniarily, for the present.’
-
-‘My dear old friend,’ said Effingham, ‘it is not for the first time that
-you have pulled me through a difficulty, though never before did we face
-one like this. But how comes it that I have money to receive? I thought
-the draft of £3000 would barely suffice to pay for the estate.’
-
-‘You must know that I transacted this piece of business through a
-solicitor, a shrewd man of business, who kept my counsel, making no sign
-until the property was put up to auction. The terms being cash, he had a
-decided advantage, and it was not known until after the sale, for whom
-he had purchased. So the Warleighs having retired, we must see what the
-Effinghams will make of it.’
-
-‘There will be no riotous living, at any rate,’ said Wilfred; ‘and now,
-as you have done with the Governor, please advise me as to our future
-course. I am the duly-appointed overseer—I believe that is the proper
-title—and intend to begin work this very day.’
-
-‘Couldn’t do better. We may as well call Dick Evans into council. He was
-hired by me at 18s. per week, with board and lodging. For this wage he
-engaged to give his own and wife’s services, also those of his team and
-waggon. The wages are under the ordinary rate, but he explained that his
-horses would get fat here, and that he liked being employed on a place
-like Warbrok, and under an ex-officer in Her Majesty’s service. I should
-continue the engagement for a few months, at all events; you will find
-him most useful.’
-
-‘Up to this time he has been simply perfect,’ said Wilfred. ‘It’s a
-pleasure to look at such an active worker—so respectful, too, in his
-manner.’
-
-‘Our experience of the Light Infantry man, Howard,’ said Mr. Sternworth,
-‘must prevent us from fully endorsing Wilfred’s opinion, but Dick Evans
-is a good man; at all country work better, indeed, than most of his
-class. Let us hear what he says.’
-
-Probably anticipating some such summons he was not far off, having
-returned from showing Guy a flock of wild-fowl. He walked into the room
-and, saluting, stood at ease, as if such a thing as a chair had never
-been by him encountered in the whole course of existence.
-
-‘Corporal Evans!—pshaw! that is, Dick,’ said the worthy ex-military
-priest, ‘I have sent for you to speak to Captain Effingham, and Mr.
-Wilfred, who is to be farm manager and stock overseer. I have told them
-that you are the very man for the place, when you behave yourself.’ Here
-the keen grey eyes looked somewhat sternly at Mr. Evans, who put on a
-look of mild surprise. ‘Are you willing to hire for six months at the
-same rate of wages, with two rations, at which I engaged you? You will
-work your team, I know, reasonably; and Mrs. Evans will wash and help
-the ladies in any way she can?’
-
-‘Well, Mr. Chaplain, the wages is not too high,’ replied Evans, ‘but I
-like the place, and my horses knows the run, and does well here. _You_
-know I like to serve a gentleman, ’specially one that’s been in the
-service. I’ll stay on at the same rate for six months.’
-
-‘Well, that’s settled. Now, let us have a talk about requirements. How
-to use the grass to the best advantage?’
-
-‘There’s no better place in the country-side for dairying,’ said Dick,
-addressing himself to his clerical employer, as alone capable of
-understanding the bearings of the case; ‘it’s a wonderful fine season,
-and there’s a deal of grass going to waste. There’s stray cattle between
-here and the other end of the lake as will want nothing better than to
-clear it all off, as they’re used to do, if we’re soft enough to let
-’em. Many a good pick they’ve had over these Warbrok flats, and they
-naturally looks for it again, ’specially as there’s a new gentleman come
-as don’t know the ways of the country. Now, what I should do, if I was
-the master, would be to buy two or three hundred mixed cattle—there’s a
-plenty for sale just now about Yass—and start a dairy. We might make as
-much butter between now and Christmas as would pay middlin’ well, and
-keep other people’s cattle from coming on the place and eating us out of
-house and home, in a manner of speakin’.’
-
-‘Good idea, Richard,’ said Mr. Sternworth; ‘but how about the yard and
-cowshed? It’s nearly all down, and half-rotten. Mr. Effingham doesn’t
-want to engage fencers and splitters, and have all the country coming
-here for employment.’
-
-‘There’s no call for that, sir,’ said the many-sided veteran. ‘I had a
-look at the yard this morning. If I had a man to help me for a fortnight
-I’ll be bound to make it cattle-proof with a load of posts and rails,
-that I could run out myself, only we want a maul and wedges.’
-
-‘I’ll be your man,’ said Wilfred, ‘if that’s all that’s necessary. I may
-as well learn a trade without delay. Andrew can help, too, I daresay.’
-
-‘_He’s_ not much account,’ quoth Dick disdainfully. ‘He thinks he knows
-too much already. These new hands—no offence to you, sir—is more in the
-way than anything else. But if you’ll buckle to, sir, we’ll soon make a
-show.’
-
-‘I know a stock agent who can get the exact cattle you want,’ said Mr.
-Sternworth. ‘He told me that Mr. O’Desmond had a hundred young cows and
-heifers for sale. They are known to be a fine breed of cattle.’
-
-‘The best in the country,’ said Dick. ‘Old Harry O’Desmond never had any
-but right down good horses, cattle, and sheep at Badajos, and if we give
-a little more for them at the start it will be money saved in the end.
-He’s the man to give us an extra good pick, when he knows they’re for an
-officer and a gentleman.’
-
-‘Our friend Richard has aristocratic notions, you observe,’ said the
-parson, smiling. ‘But Harry O’Desmond is just the man to act as he says.
-You will do well to treat with him.’
-
-‘Only too happy,’ said Effingham. ‘Everything arranges itself with
-surprising ease, with your aid. Is this kind of settling made easy to go
-on for ever? It was almost a pity we took the voyage at all. You might
-have made our fortunes, it seems to me, as a form of recreation, and
-left us to receive the profits in England.’
-
-‘And how am I to be paid, you heedless voluptuary, may I ask, if not by
-the presence of your charming family? Since I’ve seen them I wouldn’t
-have had the colony lose them for twice the value of the investment.
-Besides, seriously, if the seasons change or a decline takes place in
-the stock market you’ll need all _your_ brains and Wilfred’s to keep the
-ship afloat. Never lose sight of the fact that this is an uncertain
-land, with a more uncertain climate.’
-
-‘It’s all right if you don’t overstock, sir,’ spoke the practical
-Richard. ‘But Mr. Sternworth’s right. I mind the ’27 drought well. We
-was forced to live upon kangaroo soup, rice, and maize meal, with
-marshmallers and “fat hen” for a little salad. But they say the
-climate’s changed like, and myster than it used to be.’
-
-‘Climates _never_ change in their normal conditions,’ said Sternworth
-positively. ‘Any assertion to the contrary is absurd. What has been will
-be again. Let us make such provision as we can against droughts and
-other disasters, and leave the rest to Providence, which has favoured
-this land and its inhabitants so far.’
-
-‘The fences seem dilapidated. Ought they not to be repaired at once?’
-said Wilfred.
-
-‘By degrees, all in good time,’ said the old gentleman testily. ‘We must
-not go deeply into “improvements,” as they are called here, lest they
-run away with our money at the commencement of affairs. Dick will
-explain to you that the cattle can be kept in bounds without fencing for
-a time. And now I feel half a farmer and half an exhausted parson. So I
-think I must refresh myself with another look at the lady part of the
-establishment, have a mouthful of lunch, and start for home.’
-
-‘It’s a murder you didn’t take to farming, sir, like Parson Rocker,’
-said Dick, with sincere regret in his tones. ‘You’d ha’ showed ’em
-whether sojer officers can’t make money, though the folks here don’t
-think so.’
-
-‘I have my own work, Richard,’ said the old gentlemen. ‘It may be that
-there is occasionally rather more of the church militant about me than
-is prudent. But the town and neighbourhood of Yass will be the better
-for old Harley Sternworth’s labours before we say farewell to one
-another.’
-
-‘I can now leave you all with perfect confidence,’ he said after lunch,
-as Dick Evans brought Roanoke and the dogcart to the door. ‘The next
-time I come I must bring an old friend to pay his respects, but that
-will not be till the furniture has arrived. I foresee you will make
-astonishing changes, and turn The Chase into the show mansion of the
-district. I must bring you some of my “Souvenirs de Malmaison” and
-“Madame Charles.” “The Cloth of Gold” and others I see you have. I am
-prouder of my roses than of my sermons, I think. I don’t know which
-require most care in pruning. Good-bye, my dear friends!’
-
-The roan tossed his head, and set off at such a pace along the
-grass-grown track which led to the main ‘down the country’ road, as the
-highway from Yass to Sydney was provincially termed, that it was easy to
-see he had been making a calculation as to the homeward route. The girls
-looked after the fast-receding vehicle for a while before recommencing
-their household tasks. Howard Effingham and his wife walked to and fro
-along the pleasant sun-protected colonnade of the south verandah. When
-they separated, little had been said which was free from praise of their
-tried friend, or from thankfulness to the Almighty Disposer of events,
-who had shown them His mercy in the day of need.
-
-This eventful colloquy concluded, settled daily employment commenced for
-all the denizens of The Chase. They rose early, and each one attended to
-the duties allotted by special arrangement. Breakfast over, Wilfred
-shouldered an axe and marched off with Dick Evans to some forest tree,
-to be converted into posts and rails for the fast-recovering dairy-yard.
-
-Andrew had betaken himself to the renovation of the orchard and garden
-with grateful persistence, as he recalled his earlier feats at the
-English home of the family, duly thankful for the opportunity of
-exercising his energies in a direction wherein he could show himself
-capable.
-
-‘It’s gra-and soil,’ he was pleased to observe, ‘and I hae nae doot
-whatever that I shall be able to grow maist unco-omon vegetables, gin I
-had some food—that is, manure—to gie the puir things. The trees are sair
-negleckit and disjaskit, but they’ll come round wi’ care and the knife.
-The spring is a thocht advanced, as that auld carle Evans has gi’en me
-to understand. I winna say he’s no auld farrand wi’ a’ the “bush” ways,
-as they ca’ them, but he’s an awfu’ slave o’ Satan wi’ his tongue—just
-fearsome. But gin ye’ll put me a fence round this bit park, Maister
-Wilfred, I’ll show yon folks here that auld Andrew Cargill can grow
-prize kail in baith hemispheres.’
-
-‘We are going to split some palings before we are done,’ said Wilfred,
-smiling at the old man’s rounding off of his sentence. ‘Then we’ll pull
-this old fence down and take in more ground, so that you may exercise
-your landscape gardening talent.’
-
-‘This bit garden will keep my body employed and my thochts frae
-unprofitable wanderings, brawly, during this season o’ inexperience. Ye
-see, Maister Wilfred, it wadna become me, as a pairson o’ reflection, to
-da-ash presumptuously into a’ matters o’ practice, but they canna haud
-me to obsairve and gather up the ootcome of thae bush maitters, and bide
-my time a wee, till the day comes when I can take my place at the
-laird’s right hand ance mair.’
-
-‘No one will be better pleased than I shall be, Andrew,’ said Wilfred,
-heartily grasping the hand of his faithful servitor. ‘I’ll no deny that
-he kens maist things befitting a dweller in the wilderness. The de’il’s
-aye guid at gifts to his ain folk. But, wae’s me, he’s lightsome and
-profane abune a’ belief.’
-
-The great event of the year, after all, was the arrival of the drays
-with the heavy luggage and the furniture reserved from sale.
-
-Joy and thankfulness all too deep for words greeted the welcome wains,
-promptly unladen, and their inestimable contents brought into the
-shelter of the wide verandah before unpacking.
-
-‘I never could have believed,’ said Mrs. Effingham, ‘that anything in
-Australia could have had the power to afford me so much pleasure. The
-refurnishing of our house at The Chase never produced half such pleasure
-as I now feel at the prospect of seeing the old tables and chairs, the
-sideboard, and my dear old davenport again.’
-
-‘And the piano!’ cried Annabel. ‘What a luxury to us, who have been
-tuneless and songless all these months! Even the morning “scales” would
-have been better than nothing. I shall really go in for steady
-practising—I know I never did before. There is nothing like being
-starved a little.’
-
-‘Starving seems to agree with you in a bodily sense,’ said Rosamond, ‘if
-I may judge from certain alterations of dresses. But you are right in
-believing that it gives a wonderful relish for mental food. Look at
-these two lovely boxes of books. The library was sold, but here are many
-of our old favourites. How I shall enjoy seeing their faces again!’
-
-‘I am certain Jeanie must have _stolen_ a quantity of things after the
-sale,’ asserted Beatrice, who had been examining the externals of the
-packages; ‘bedding and curtains, and every kind of thing likely to be
-useful. I expect my room will be so like the one at the old Chase that I
-shall never find out the difference of a morning, till I go downstairs
-and see the verandahs.’
-
-‘There are no verandahs in England,’ said Guy, who was one of the
-‘fatigue party,’ as Dick expressed it. ‘They ought to take a hint from
-the colonies—stunning places they make on a wet day, or a hot one, I can
-tell you.’
-
-‘Where shall we tek this sideboard, mem?’ said Dick Evans, with his
-ultra-respectful, family-servant intonation.
-
-‘Into the dining-room, of course,’ screamed the delighted Annabel. ‘Why,
-_every_ room in the house will be furnished more or less; it will be
-quite a palace.’
-
-Willing hands abounded, Mr. Evans in person superintending the opening
-of the cases, taking care to draw nails in order to fit the boards for
-future usefulness, so that, very shortly, the whole English shipment was
-transferred to its final Australian resting-place.
-
-Robinson Crusoe, when he had made the last successful raft-passage and
-transhipment from the Guinea trader before she went down, could not have
-been more grateful than our deported friends when the litter and the
-cases and Dick and Andrew were cleared off, and they were free to gloat
-over their precious property.
-
-How different the rooms looked! There was an air of comfort and
-refinement about the well-preserved furniture which was inexpressibly
-comforting to the ex-dwellers in tents. The large rooms looked perhaps a
-shade too bare, but in warm climates an Indian non-obtrusion of
-upholstering is thought becoming. The well-remembered tones of the
-piano, which glorified an unoccupied corner of the drawing-room, echoed
-through that spacious apartment, now provided with a carpet almost as
-good as new, which Jeanie’s provident care had abstracted from the
-schoolroom at The Chase. The dear old round table was there, ‘out of
-mother’s morning-room; the engravings from father’s study, particularly
-those favourite ones of “The fighting Temeraire” and “Talavera”—all were
-here. When the climbers grew up over the verandah pillars, shading the
-front windows with the purple masses of the wistaria, there might be a
-prettier room in Sydney, but in the bush they were sure it was
-unsurpassed.’
-
-Nor were Andrew and Jeanie devoid of personal interest in the arrival of
-the treasure-waggons. Certain garden tools and agricultural implements,
-dear to Andrew’s practical soul, now gladdened his eyes, also a
-collection of carefully packed seeds. Besides all these, a rigorously
-select list of necessaries in good order and preservation, once the
-pride of his snug cottage, came to hand. For days after this arrival of
-the Lares and Penates, the work of rearrangement proceeded unceasingly.
-Mrs. Effingham and Rosamond placed and replaced each article in every
-conceivable position. Annabel played and sang unremittingly. Jeanie
-rubbed and polished, with such anxious solicitude, that table and chair,
-wardrobe and sideboard, shone like new mahogany. Beatrice had possessed
-herself of the bookcase, and after her morning share of housekeeping
-work was performed, read, save at dinner, without stopping until it was
-time to go for that evening walk which the sisters never omitted.
-
-Once it fell upon a day that a gentleman rode up in leisurely fashion
-towards the entrance gate. He was descried before he came within a
-hundred yards, and some trepidation ensued while the question was
-considered as to who should take his horse, and how that valuable animal
-should be provided for.
-
-Mr. Effingham, Guy, and Wilfred were away at the stock-yard, which by
-this time was reported to be nearly in a state of efficiency. Andrew had
-disappeared temporarily. The gentleman, for such plainly was his rank,
-was a stalwart, distinguished-looking personage, sitting squarely, and
-with something of military pose in his saddle. He was mounted upon a
-handsome, carefully-groomed hackney. He reined up at the dilapidated
-garden fence, and after looking about and seeing no appearance of an
-entrance gate, as indeed that portal had been long blocked up by rails,
-gathered up his reins, and clearing the two-railed fence with practised
-ease, rode along the grass-grown path to the front door of the house. At
-the same moment Dick Evans, who had just arrived with a load of palings,
-appeared from the rear, and took his horse.
-
-The stranger briskly dismounted, and knocked at the hall door with the
-air of a man who was thoroughly acquainted with the locale. He bowed low
-to Mrs. Effingham who opened it.
-
-‘Permit me to make myself known as Henry O’Desmond, one of your
-neighbours, my dear madam,’ said he, with the high-bred air of a man of
-the world of fashion, who possesses also the advantage of being an
-Irishman. ‘I presume I am addressing Mrs. Effingham. I have anticipated
-the proper time for paying my respects; but there has been a matter of
-business named by my agent, in which I hope to be able to serve Captain
-Effingham. He is quite well, I trust?’
-
-Mrs. Effingham explained that her husband had been perfectly well that
-morning; furthermore, if Mr. O’Desmond would give them the pleasure of
-his company to lunch, he would be enabled to make his acquaintance.
-
-That gentleman bowed with an air of heartfelt gratitude, and asserted
-that it would give him the sincerest gratification to have such an
-opportunity of meeting Captain Effingham, to which he had looked
-forward, since hearing of the good fortune that was about to befall the
-district, from his respected friend the Rev. Mr. Sternworth.
-
-Being introduced to the young ladies, Mr. O’Desmond, a handsome,
-well-preserved man, promptly demonstrated that he was capable of
-entertaining himself and them until his host should think fit to arrive.
-Indeed, when Mrs. Effingham, who had left the room for reasons connected
-with the repast, returned, having captured her husband, and
-superintended his toilet, she found her daughters and their guest
-considerably advanced in acquaintance.
-
-‘Oh, papa,’ said Annabel, ‘Mr. O’Desmond says there’s such a lovely view
-about ten miles from here—a ravine full of ferns, actually _full_ of
-them; and a waterfall—a real one! It is called Fern-tree Gorge; and he
-has invited us all to a picnic there some day.’
-
-‘Very happy to make Mr. O’Desmond’s acquaintance,’ said Effingham,
-advancing with a recollection of old days strong upon him. ‘We are
-hardly aware yet in what consists the proper proportion of work and play
-in Australia; and in how much of the latter struggling colonists can
-indulge. We shall be very grateful for information on the subject.’
-
-‘And right welcome you are, my dear sir, to both, especially to the
-latter. They’ll tell you that Harry O’Desmond is not unacquainted with
-work during the twenty years he has spent in this wild country. But for
-fun and recreation he’ll turn his back on no man living.’
-
-‘Here is my lieutenant, and eldest son; permit me to introduce him. He
-is burning to distinguish himself in the practical line.’
-
-‘Then he couldn’t have a better drill instructor than my old
-acquaintance, Dick Evans—wonderfully clever in all bush work, and
-scrupulous after his own fashion. But, see here now, I came partly to
-talk about cows, till the young ladies put business clean out of my
-head. I’m told you want to buy cattle, Mr. Wilfred; if you’ll mount your
-horse and take old Dick with you to-morrow morning, he’ll show you the
-way to Badajos, and I’ll pick you the best hundred cows this day in the
-country.’
-
-This was held to be an excellent arrangement, and lunch being now
-proclaimed, a temporary cessation of all but society talk took place.
-Every one being in the highest spirits, it was quite a brilliant
-symposium. It was a novel luxury to be again in the society of a
-pleasant stranger, well read, travelled, and constitutionally agreeable.
-O’Desmond sketched with humour and spirit the characteristic points of
-their nearest neighbours; slightly satirised the local celebrities in
-their chief town of Yass; and finally departed, having earned for
-himself the reputation of an agreeable, well-bred personage; a perfect
-miracle of a neighbour, when ill-hap might have made him equally near
-and unchangeably disagreeable.
-
-‘What a delightful creature!’ said Annabel. ‘Didn’t some one say before
-we left home that there were no gentlemen in Australia—only “rough
-colonists”? I suppose that English girls will call us “rough colonists”
-when we’ve been here a few years. Why, he’s like—oh, I know now—he’s the
-very image of the Knight of Gwynne. Fancy lighting on a facsimile of
-that charming old dear—of course Mr. Desmond is not nearly so old. He’s
-not young though, and takes great care of himself, you can see.’
-
-‘He’s not so _very_ old, Annabel,’ said Beatrice mischievously. ‘That is
-the kind of man I should advise you to marry. Not a foolish boy of
-five-and-twenty.’
-
-‘Thank you, Beatrice,’ said Annabel, with dignity. ‘I’ll think over it
-and let you know. I don’t think it’s probable I should ever marry any
-one only a little older than myself. What could he know? I should laugh
-at him if he was angry. But Wilfred is going over to Badajos, or
-whatever is the name of the O’Desmond’s place, to-morrow, so he can
-bring us back a full, true, and particular account of everything, and
-whether Rosamond, or you, dear, would be the fitter helpmate for him.
-I’m too young and foolish at present, and might be more so—that is,
-foolish, not young, of course.’
-
-‘I notice that the air of this climate seems to have a peculiar effect
-upon young people’s tongues,’ said the soft voice of Mrs. Effingham.
-‘They seem to run faster here than in England.’
-
-Mr. Desmond’s property, Badajos, was nearly twenty miles from Warbrok
-Chase. As it had been clearly settled that Wilfred should go there on
-the following day, arrangements had to be made. Dick must accompany him
-for the double purpose of confirming any selection of cattle. That
-veteran cheerfully endorsed the idea, averring that now the yard was all
-but finished, and the fencing stuff drawn in, leave of absence could be
-well afforded. He therefore put on a clean check shirt, and buckled a
-pea-jacket in front of his saddle, which he placed upon his old mare,
-and was ready for the road.
-
-Provided with a stock-whip, taken from his miscellaneous possessions,
-with lighted pipe and trusty steed, his features wore the expression of
-anticipated happiness, which distinguishes the schoolboy out for a
-holiday. He passed Andrew Cargill with an air of easy superiority, as
-that conscientious labourer, raising his moistened brow as he delved at
-the long-untilled beds, could not refrain from a look of astonishment at
-this new evidence of universal capacity, as he marked Dick’s easy seat
-and portentous whip.
-
-He muttered, ‘I wadna doot but that the auld graceless sorrow can ride
-through braes and thickets, and crack yon muckle clothes-line they ca’ a
-stock-wheep like ony lad. The de’il aye makes his peets o’ masterfu’
-men, wae’s me.’
-
-A difficulty arose as to Wilfred’s steed. Mr. Sternworth had declined
-the delicate task of remount agent. Thus The Chase was temporarily
-unprovided with horseflesh. However, Dick Evans was not a man to be
-prevented from carrying out a pleasant expedition for want of a horse to
-ride. Sallying out early, he had run in a lot of the ownerless animals,
-always to be found in the neighbourhood of unstocked pastures. Choosing
-from among them a sensible-looking cob, and putting Wilfred’s English
-saddle and bridle on him, he led him up to the garden gate, where he
-stood with his ordinary air of deep respectability.
-
-‘I was just wondering how in the world I was to get a horse,’ said
-Wilfred. ‘I see you have one. Did you borrow, or buy, or steal one for
-my use?’
-
-‘I’ve been many a year in this country, Mr. Wilfred, without tekkin’
-other people’s property, and I’m too old to begin now. But there’s 2C on
-this chestnut pony’s near shoulder. I’m nigh sure it’s Bill Chalker’s
-colt, as he lost two years ago, and told me to keep him in hand, if ever
-I came acrost him.’
-
-‘Then I may ride him without risk of being tried for horse-stealing, or
-lynched, if they affect that here,’ said Wilfred gaily. ‘I shouldn’t
-care to do it in England, I know.’
-
-‘Things is quite different on the Sydney Side,’ said Mr. Evans with mild
-dogmatism.
-
-Wilfred did not consider this assertion to be conclusive, but time
-pressing, and the ready-saddled horse inviting his approval, he
-compounded with his conscience by taking it for granted that people were
-not particular as to strayed horses. The fresh and spirited animal,
-which had not been ridden for months, but was (luckily for his rider)
-free from vice, snorted and sidled, but proceeded steadily in the main.
-He soon settled down to the hand of a fair average horseman.
-
-Noticing fresh objects of interest in each flowering shrub, in the birds
-that flew overhead, or the strange animals that ever and again crossed
-their path, about each and all of which his retainer had information to
-offer, the time did not hang heavily on hand. They halted towards
-evening before a spacious enclosure, having passed through which, they
-came upon a roomy cottage, surrounded by a trim orchard, and backed up
-by farm buildings.
-
-‘Here’s Badajos, Mr. Wilfred,’ said his guide. ‘And a better kept place
-there ain’t in the whole country side.’
-
-‘Welcome to Badajos, Mr. Effingham,’ said the proprietor. ‘William, take
-this gentleman’s horse; you know your way, Dick. We’ll defer business
-till the morning. I have had the cattle yarded, ready for drafting;
-to-morrow you can choose the nucleus of a good herd. I shall be proud to
-put you in the way of cattle-farming in the only true way to succeed—by
-commencing with females of the right kind.’
-
-As Wilfred followed his entertainer into the house, he felt unaffectedly
-surprised at the appearance of elegance mingled with comfort which
-characterised the establishment. The rooms were not large, but arranged
-with an attention of detail which he had not expected to find in a bush
-dwelling. The furniture was artistically disposed. Books and periodicals
-lay around. High-class engravings, with a few oil-paintings, which
-recalled Wilfred Effingham’s past life, hung on the walls. Couches and
-lounges, of modern fashion, looked inviting, while a Broadwood piano
-stood in the corner of the drawing-room, into which he followed his
-host.
-
-‘I am a bachelor, more’s the pity,’ said Mr. O’Desmond; ‘but there’s no
-law against a little comfort in the wilderness. Will you take some
-refreshment now? Or would you like to be shown to your room?’
-
-Wilfred accepted the latter proposal. In a very comfortable chamber he
-proceeded to divest himself of the traces of the road, after a leisurely
-and satisfactory fashion. He had barely regained the drawing-room, when
-a gong sounded with a melodiously reminiscent clang.
-
-The dinner was after the fashion of civilised man. Soup and fish, fresh
-from a neighbouring stream, with meritorious entrées and entremets,
-showed skill beyond that of an ordinary domestic. While the host, who
-had sufficiently altered his attire for comfort, without committing the
-_bêtise_ of out-dressing a guest, as he recommended a dry sherry, or
-passed the undeniable claret, seemed an embodied souvenir of London,
-Paris, Vienna, of that world of fortune and fashion which Wilfred was
-vowed to forsake for ever. Next morning the sun and Mr. W. Effingham
-arose simultaneously. Dick Evans had anticipated both, and was standing
-at ease near the stable.
-
-‘This place is worth looking at, sir. You don’t see nothing to speak of
-out of order—tidy as a barrack-yard.’
-
-Wonderfully trim and orderly was the appearance of all things. The
-enclosure referred to was neatly gravelled, and showed not a vagrant
-straw. The garden was dug, raked, and pruned into orderly perfection.
-The servants’ quarters, masked by a climber-covered trellis, were
-ornamental and unostentatious. The dog-kennels, tenanted by pointers,
-greyhounds, collies, and terriers, were snug and spacious. The stables
-were as neat as those of a London dealer. It was a show establishment.
-
-‘Mr. O’Desmond’s servants must be attached to him, to work so well,’
-said Wilfred.
-
-‘Humph!’ replied the veteran, ‘he makes ’em toe the line pretty smart,
-and quite right too,’ he added, with a grim setting of his under jaw.
-‘He was in the colony afore there was many free men in it. Shall we walk
-down to the milking-yard, sir?’
-
-The full-uddered shorthorn cows, with their fragrant breath and mild
-countenances, having been admired in their clean, paved milking-yard, a
-return was made towards the cottage. As they neared the garden,
-O’Desmond rode briskly up to the stable door, and dismounting, threw the
-reins to a groom, who stood ready as a sentinel.
-
-‘The top of the morning to you, Mr. Effingham; I trust you slept well? I
-have had a canter of a few miles, which will give me an appetite for
-breakfast. I rode over to the drafting-yards, to make sure that the
-cattle were there, according to orders. Everything will be in readiness,
-so that you can drive easily to Warbrok to-night. You can manage that,
-Dick, can you not?’
-
-‘Easy enough, if you’ll send a boy with us half-way, Mr. O’Desmond,’
-replied Dick. ‘You see, sir, Mr. Effingham’s rather new to
-cattle-driving, and if the young heifers was to break back, we might
-lose some of them.’
-
-‘Quite right, Dick; you are always right where stock are concerned—that
-is, the driving of them,’ he added. ‘I look to you to stay with Mr.
-Effingham till his dairy herd is established. I shall then have the
-pleasure of adding his name to that of the many gentlemen in this
-district whose fortunes I have helped to make.’
-
-‘Quite true, sir,’ assented Dick heartily. ‘The Camden sheep and the
-Badajos cattle and horses are known all over the country by them as are
-judges. But you don’t want me to be praising on ’em up—they speak for
-themselves.’
-
-Breakfast over, as faultless a repast as had been the dinner, it became
-apparent that Mr. O’Desmond held punctuality nearly in as high esteem as
-comfort. His groom stood ready in the yard with his own and Wilfred’s
-horses saddled, the shining thorough-bred, which he called his hackney,
-offering a strong contrast to the unkempt though well-conditioned animal
-which his guest bestrode.
-
-As they rode briskly along the winding forest track, Wilfred, observing
-the quality of his host’s hackney, the silver brightness of his bit and
-stirrup-irons, the correctness of his general turn-out, remembering also
-the completeness of the establishment and the character of the
-hospitality he had enjoyed, doubted within himself whether, in course of
-time, the owner of Warbrok Chase might ever attain to such a pinnacle of
-colonial prosperity.
-
-‘How incredible this would all appear to some of my English friends!’ he
-thought. ‘I can hardly describe it without the fear of being supposed to
-exaggerate.’
-
-‘Here we are,’ said O’Desmond, reining up, and dismounting at a
-substantial stock-yard, while a lad instantly approached and took his
-horse. ‘I have ordered the heifers and young cows to be placed in this
-yard. We can run them through before you. You can make your choice, and
-reject any animals below the average.’
-
-‘They look rather confused at present,’ answered Wilfred; ‘but I suppose
-Dick here understands how to separate them.’
-
-‘I’ll manage that, never you fear, sir—that is, if you and Mr. O’Desmond
-have settled about the price.’
-
-‘I may state now,’ remarked that gentleman, ‘that the price, four pounds
-per head, mentioned to me on your account by your agent is a liberal
-one, as markets go. I shall endeavour to give you value in kind.’
-
-‘It’s a good price,’ asserted Dick; ‘but Mr. O’Desmond’s cattle are
-cheaper at four pounds all round than many another man’s about here at
-fifty shillings. If he lets me turn back any beast I don’t fancy, we’ll
-take away the primest lot of cattle to begin a dairy with as has
-travelled the line for years.’
-
-‘I will give you my general idea of the sort of cattle I prefer,’ said
-Wilfred, not minded to commence by leaving the _whole_ management in any
-servant’s hands, ‘then you can select such as appear to answer the
-description.’
-
-‘All right, sir,’ quoth Mr. Evans, mounting the fence. ‘I suppose you
-want ’em large-framed cattle, good colours, looking as if they’d run to
-milk and not to beef, not under three, and not more than five year old,
-and putty quiet in their looks and ways.’
-
-‘That is exactly the substance of what I was going to say to you,’ said
-Wilfred, with some surprise. ‘It will save me the trouble of
-explaining.’
-
-‘We may as well begin, sir,’ said Dick, addressing himself to the
-proprietor. Then, in quite another tone, ‘Open the rails, boys; look
-sharp, and let ’em into the drafting-yards.’
-
-The cattle were driven through a succession of yards after such a
-fashion that Wilfred was enabled to perceive how the right of choice
-could be exercised. By the time the operation was concluded he felt
-himself to be inducted into the art and mystery of ‘drafting.’ Also, he
-respected himself as having appreciably helped to select and separate
-the one hundred prepossessing-looking kine which now stood in a separate
-yard, recognised as his property.
-
-‘You will have no reason to be dissatisfied with your choice,’ said
-O’Desmond. ‘They look a nice lot. I always brand any cattle before they
-leave my yard. You will not object to a numeral being put on them before
-they go? It will assist in their identification in case of any coming
-back.’
-
-‘Coming back!—come back twenty miles?’ queried Wilfred, with amazement.
-‘How could they get back such a distance?’
-
-‘Just as you would—by walking it, and a hundred to the back of that. So
-I think, say, No. 1. brand—they are A1 certainly—will be a prudent
-precaution.’
-
-‘Couldn’t do a better thing,’ assented Dick. ‘We’ll brand ’em again when
-we go home, sir; but if we lost ’em anyway near the place, they’d be all
-here before you could say Jack Robinson.’
-
-A fire was quickly lighted, the iron brands were heated, the cows driven
-by a score at a time into a narrow yard, and for the first time in his
-life Wilfred saw the red-hot iron applied to the hide of the live
-animal. The pain, like much evil in this world, if intense, was brief;
-the cows cringed and showed disapproval, but soon appeared to forget.
-The morning was not far advanced when Wilfred Effingham found himself
-riding behind a drove, or ‘mob’ (as Dick phrased it), _of his own
-cattle_.
-
-‘There goes the best lot of heifers this day in the country,’ said the
-old man, ‘let the others be where they may. Mr. O’Desmond’s a rare man
-for givin’ you a good beast if you give him a fair price; you may trust
-him like yourself, but he’s a hard man and bitter enough if anybody
-tries to take advantage of him.’
-
-‘And quite right too, Dick. I take Mr. O’Desmond to be a most honourable
-man, with whom I shouldn’t care to come to cross purposes.’
-
-‘No man ever did much good that tried that game, sir. He’s a bad man to
-get on the wrong side of.’
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
- ‘CALLED ON BY THE COUNTY’
-
-
-When the important drove reached Warbrok, great was the excitement.
-Wilfred’s absence was the loss of Hamlet from the play; his return the
-signal for joy and congratulation. The little commonwealth was visibly
-agitated as the tired cattle trailed along the track to the stock-yard,
-with Dick sitting bolt upright in his saddle behind them, and Wilfred
-essaying to crack the inconveniently long whip provided for him.
-
-The girls made their appearance upon the verandah; Andrew looked forth
-as interested, yet under protest. Guy walked behind, and much admired
-the vast number and imposing appearance of the herd; while Captain and
-Mrs. Effingham stood arm in arm at a safe distance appreciating the
-prowess of their first-born.
-
-‘Now, sir,’ quoth the ready Dick, ‘we’ll put ’em in the yard and make
-’em safe to-night; to-morrow, some one will have to tail ’em.’
-
-‘Tail them?’ said Wilfred. ‘Some of their ears have been scolloped, I
-see; but surely it is not necessary to cut their tails in a hot climate
-like this?’
-
-‘S’cuse me, sir,’ said Dick respectfully, ‘I wouldn’t put the knife to
-them for pounds; “tailing” means shepherdin’.’
-
-‘And what does “shepherding” mean? I thought shepherds were only for
-sheep?’
-
-‘Well, sir, I never heerd talk of shepherdin’ at home, but it’s a
-currency word for follerin’ anything that close, right agin’ their
-tails, that a shepherd couldn’t be more careful with his sheep; so we
-talk of shepherdin’ a s’picious c’rakter, or a lot of stock, or a man
-that’s tossicated with notes stickin’ out of his pocket, or a young
-woman, or anything that wants lookin’ after very partickler.’
-
-‘Now I understand,’ said Wilfred. ‘It’s not a bad word, and might be
-used in serious matters.’
-
-‘No mistake about that, sir. Now the yard’s finished off and topped up,
-we’ll soon be able to make a start with the dairy. There’ll be
-half-a-dozen calves within the week, and more afore the month’s out.
-There’s nothin’ breaks in cows to stop like their young calves; you’ll
-soon see ’em hanging about the yard as if they’d been bred here,
-’specially as the feed is so forrard. There’s no mistake, a myst season
-do make everything go pleasant.’
-
-When the cattle were in the yard, and the slip rails made safe by having
-spare posts put across them, Wilfred unsaddled his provisional mount and
-walked into the house in a satisfactory mental condition.
-
-‘So, behold you of return!’ quoted Rosamond, running to meet him, and
-marching him triumphantly into the dining-room, where all was ready for
-tea. ‘The time has been rather long. Papa has been walking about, not
-knowing exactly what to do, or leave undone; Guy shooting, not
-over-successfully. The most steadily employed member of the household,
-and the happiest, I suppose, has been Andrew, digging without
-intermission the whole time.’
-
-‘I wish we could dig too, or have some employment found for us,’ said
-Annabel; ‘girls are shamefully unprovided with real work, except
-stocking-mending. Jeanie won’t let us do anything in the kitchen, and
-really, that is the only place where there is any fun. The house is so
-large, and echoing at night when the wind blows. And only think, we
-found the mark of a pistol bullet in the dining-room wall at one end,
-and there is another in the ceiling!’
-
-‘How do you know it was a pistol shot?’ inquired Wilfred. ‘Some one
-threw a salt-cellar at the butler in the good old times.’
-
-‘Perhaps it was fired in the good old times; perhaps it killed some
-one—how horrible! Perhaps he was carried out through the passage. But we
-know it was a shot, because Guy poked about and found the bullet
-flattened out.’
-
-‘Well, we must ask Evans; very likely old Colonel Warleigh fired pistols
-in his mad fits. He used to sit, they say, night after night, drinking
-and cursing by himself after his wife died and his sons left him. No one
-dared go near him when his pistols were loaded. But we need not think of
-these things now, Annabel. He is dead and gone, and his sons are not in
-this part of the country. So I see you have had flower-beds made while I
-was away. I declare the wistaria and bignonia are breaking into flower.
-How gorgeous they will look!’
-
-‘Yes, mamma said she could not exist without flowers any longer, so we
-persuaded Andrew, much against his will,—for he said “he was just fair
-harassed wi’ thae early potatoes,”—to dig these borders. Guy helped us
-to transplant and sow seeds, so we shall have flowers of our own once
-more.’
-
-‘We shall have everything of our own in a few years if we are patient,’
-said Wilfred; ‘and you damsels don’t want trips to watering-places, and
-so on. This life is better than Boulogne, or the Channel Islands, though
-it may be a trifle lonely.’
-
-‘Boulogne! A thousandfold,’ said Rosamond. ‘Here we have life and hope.
-Those poor families we used to see there looked liked ghosts and
-apparitions of their old selves. You remember watching them walking down
-drearily to see the packet come in—the girls dowdy or shabby, the old
-people hopeless and apathetic, the sons so idle and lounging? I shudder
-when I think how near we were to such horrors ourselves. The very air of
-Australia seems to give one fresh life. Can anything be finer than this
-sunset?’
-
-In truth, the scene upon which her eyes rested might have cheered a
-sadder heart than that of the high-hearted maiden who now, with her arm
-upon her brother’s shoulder, directed his gaze to the far empurpled
-hills, merging their violet cloud masses and orange-gold tints in the
-darkening eve. The green pastures, relieved by clumps of heavy-foliaged
-trees, glowed emerald bright against the dark-browed mountain spur. The
-dying sun-rays fell in fire-flakes of burning gold on the mirrored
-silver of the lake. Wrapped in soft tremulous mist lay the hills upon
-the farther shore, vast with the subtle effect of limitless distance. At
-such times one could dream with the faith of older days—that Earth, the
-universal mother, loved her children, and breathed forth in growth of
-herb and flower her smiling welcome.
-
-That night, as the Effinghams sat around their table, an unconscious
-feeling of thankfulness swelled each heart. The parents saw assurance of
-a well-provided suitable home for the little troop, the probable
-disbanding of which had cost such sad forebodings. The sons, strong in
-the faith of youth, saw a future of adventure, well-rewarded labour,
-perhaps brilliant success. The girls felt that their lives would not be
-henceforth deprived of the social intercourse which had once been an
-ordinary condition of existence.
-
-‘How did you fare at Mr. O’Desmond’s, my son? What kind of an
-establishment does he keep?’ inquired Mrs. Effingham.
-
-‘You will all be rather astonished,’ answered Wilfred mysteriously.
-‘What should you think, Annabel? You are a good hand at guessing.’
-
-‘Let me think. He is very aristocratic and dignified, yet he might live
-in a hut. Men are so independent of rooms or houses, almost of
-looking-glasses. Now a woman in a poky little place always shows it in
-her dress. I should say he lives in a comfortable cottage, and has
-everything very complete.’
-
-‘And you would be right. We shall have to mind our manners and dinners
-when he comes again. He lives like a club bachelor, and is as well
-lodged as—let us say—a land steward on an absentee nobleman’s estate.’
-
-‘You must be romancing, Wilfred,’ said Beatrice. ‘Where could he get the
-luxuries that such a great man as you have described could procure? What
-a wonderful difference a few thousand miles makes! We think ourselves
-not so much worse, essentially, than we were in England; but we must be
-deteriorating.’
-
-‘Don’t talk nonsense, my dear Beatrice,’ said Rosamond. ‘Is it not a
-little vulgar to attach so much weight to externals? As long as we are
-doing our duty, why should there be any deterioration? It will be our
-own fault if we adopt a lower level of manners.’
-
-‘Oh, but how can any one expect to be the same in colonial society?’
-exclaimed Annabel. ‘See how insignificant even the “best people” are out
-here. Why, I was reading yesterday about a “country baronet,” and even a
-“well-meaning, unfashionable countess,” being looked down
-upon—positively laughed at—in England. Now think what tremendous
-potentates they would be out here! I’m sure that proves what I say.’
-
-‘Your propositions and proofs are worthy of one another, my dear,’ said
-Wilfred. ‘But as to society, I shan’t be sorry when more of our
-neighbours call.’
-
-‘Now that the house is fit to receive them I shall be pleased, my dear
-son, to see the people of the land. I am sure I hope there are some nice
-ones.’
-
-Wilfred rose early next morning to indulge himself with another look at
-the new cattle. He was only just in time, as Dick had breakfasted,
-caught his horse, and was about to let out the imprisoned drove.
-
-‘I’ll tail ’em for the first few days, sir,’ he said, ‘till I give ’em
-the way of camping under them big trees near the little swamp. It will
-make a first-rate camp for ’em, and learn ’em to run handy to the place.
-After that we must get some sort of a lad to foller ’em. It won’t pay
-you to keep me at blackfellow’s work.’
-
-‘What’s that?’ inquired Wilfred.
-
-‘Why, simple work like this, that any black boy could do, if he didn’t
-give his mind to ’possums. Besides, we wants a horse-yard, and a bit of
-a paddock, and another field cleared, to plough for next year.’
-
-‘That seems a good deal of work to carry on, Richard. Won’t it take more
-hands? Remember, we must go economically to work. My father is by no
-means a rich man.’
-
-‘That’s quite right, sir; no one should run themselves out of pocket,
-high or low. But if we had some one to go with these cows till the
-calves come, and that won’t be long, you and I could do what work I’ve
-chalked out.’
-
-‘Why should not Guy “tail” the cows, as you call it?’ suggested Wilfred,
-pleased with the idea that they would be able to provide labour from
-their own community. ‘It would do him no harm.’
-
-‘Perhaps the young gentleman mightn’t like it,’ said Dick, with deep
-respect. ‘It’s dull work, every day, like.’
-
-‘Oh, he _must_ like it!’ decided Wilfred, with the despotic elder
-brother tone. ‘We have come out here to work, and he must take his
-share. He may find it dull for a time; but he can shoot a little and
-amuse himself, as long as he doesn’t come home without them, like Little
-Bo-peep. What would a boy cost?’
-
-‘About six or eight shillings a week, and his rations, sir, which would
-come to as much again. But the young master needn’t stay out after four
-o’clock.’
-
-‘Then we make a saving at once of say sixteen shillings a week. Guy
-never earned so much in his life before. He will be quite proud of his
-value in the labour market. You and I can begin splitting and fencing at
-once.’
-
-‘But we shall want some more cattle, sir,’ suggested Dick.
-
-‘More cattle!’ said Wilfred in amazement, to whom a hundred head was an
-awe-striking number. ‘What for?’
-
-‘Why, to eat! It don’t do to buy meat every time you want a roast or a
-steak. Cheapest to kill your own. If we was to buy a mob of common
-cattle, they’d cost nothing to speak of; the bullocks soon fatten, and
-the cows would breed you up a fair mixed herd in no time.’
-
-‘Well, but we have these cattle you have just let out,’ pleaded Wilfred,
-looking admiringly at the red, white, and roan shorthorn crosses, which,
-spreading over the rich meadow, were feeding quietly, as if reared
-there.
-
-‘Them’s all very well, sir; but it’ll be years before you kill a bullock
-out of that lot; they’ve got to come, all in good time. But the quiet
-steers, and the worst of the cows, in a mixed herd, will be fat before
-you can look round, in a season like this, and your beef won’t cost you
-above a penny a pound.’
-
-It was decided that Guy was to ‘tail’ or herd the new cows at present.
-Upon this duty being named to him, he made no objection—rather seemed to
-like it.
-
-‘I suppose as long as I don’t lose them I can do anything I like,’ he
-said; ‘hunt ’possums, shoot, ferret out ferns for Rosamond, or even
-read.’
-
-‘The more you lets the cattle alone the better, Mr. Guy,’ said Dick. ‘As
-long as they don’t sneak away from you, you can’t take it too easy.
-There’s fine feed all roads now, and after the first hour or two they’ll
-fill theirselves and lie down like working bullocks. But you’ll want a
-horse.’
-
-‘That I shall,’ said the boy, beginning to take up the fashions of the
-bush, and to rebel at the idea of going on foot, as if mankind was a
-species of centaur.
-
-‘Must have more horses too, sir,’ announced Dick, with a calm air of ask
-and have.
-
-‘How many?’ returned Wilfred uncomplyingly; ‘it seems we shall want more
-horses—we haven’t any, certainly—more cattle, more tillage, more yards,
-more paddocks; it will soon come to wanting more money, and where to get
-_that_ I don’t know.’
-
-‘Horses are dirt cheap, sir, just now, and can’t be done without, nohow.
-You’ll want a cob for the Captain to potter about on, a couple of hacks
-for yourself, one apiece for Mr. Guy and the young ladies—they’d like a
-canter now and then afore Christmas. I hear Mick Donnelly’s selling off,
-to clear out for Monaro. You couldn’t do better than ride over and see
-his lot; they’ll be pretty sure to live on our grass, if any of the
-neighbours gets ’em, and you may as well have that profit out of ’em
-yourself.’
-
-The conversation having come to an end, Mr. Evans was about to move
-after his cattle, now indulging in a pretty wide spread, when a horseman
-joining them, greeted Wilfred.
-
-‘Good-morning, sir,’ said the stranger, with loud, peculiar, but not
-unpleasant voice, having a note of culture too. ‘Glad to make your
-acquaintance; Mr. Effingham, I believe? We’re neighbours, on the south,
-about ten miles from Benmohr. You haven’t seen a chestnut pony about,
-branded 2C? He used to run here in Hunt’s time. Why, hang me! if he
-isn’t coming up to show himself!’
-
-The chestnut pony which had borne Wilfred so successfully in the journey
-for the new cattle now trotted up, having followed Evans’s mare, to
-which animal he had attached himself, after the manner of horses, prone
-to contract sudden friendships.
-
-Wilfred, about to disclaim any knowledge of the strange gentleman’s
-chestnut, not dreaming that the estray which had come in so handily
-could be his property, and as yet not given to reading at a glance 2C or
-other hieroglyph, felt rather nonplussed, more especially when he
-noticed the stranger’s eye attracted to the saddle-mark on the pony’s
-fat back.
-
-‘I must confess to having ridden your horse, if he be so, a short
-journey. We were not aware of his ownership, and I had no horse of my
-own. I trust you will forgive the liberty.’
-
-‘He _has_ rather nice paces. How did you like him?’ inquired the
-stranger urbanely, much as if he had a favour conferred upon him. ‘I’ll
-run him into the yard now with your permission, and lead him home.’
-
-‘Pray come in, and allow me to introduce you to my people,’ said
-Wilfred, satisfied, from the stranger’s bearing, that he was a desirable
-acquaintance. ‘With the exception of Mr. O’Desmond, from whom I bought
-these cattle, we have not seen a neighbour yet.’
-
-‘Know them all in time,’ said the stranger; ‘no great shakes, some of
-them, when you _do_ know them. My name’s Churbett, by the bye—Fred
-Churbett, of The Oaks; cattle station on Banksia Creek, used to be
-called She-oak Flat—had to change it. Nice cattle O’Desmond let you
-have; got good stock, but makes you pay for them.’
-
-‘How you have improved the old place!’ continued Mr. Churbett, as they
-approached the house. ‘Who would believe that so much could have been
-made of it? Never saw it in the palmy days of Colonel Warleigh, though.
-Seems to have run in the military line of ownership. The old boy kept up
-great state. Four-in-hand always to Yass, they say. Coachman, butler,
-lots of servants—convicts, of course. Awful temper; cursed freely, drank
-ditto. Sons not behindhand, improved upon the paternal sins—gambling,
-horse-racing, Old Harry generally. Had to clear out and sell. Great pull
-for the district having a family straight from “home” settled in it.’
-
-‘I trust the advantage will be mutual,’ said Wilfred. ‘We hope to be
-neighbourly when we are quite settled. But you will understand that it
-has taken us a little time to shake down.’
-
-‘Thought of that,’ said Mr. Churbett, ‘or should have had the pleasure
-of calling before. Trotted over to look up master “Traveller” for the
-muster, or should have waited another week.’
-
-Mr. Churbett’s horses having been disposed of, he was duly introduced.
-He proved if anything a greater success than Mr. O’Desmond. He was
-musical, and the sight of the piano immediately brought up talk about
-the last opera he had heard in London. He was also a great reader, and
-after touching upon half a score of authors, promised to bring over a
-new book which he had just got up from town.
-
-‘Really,’ said Annabel innocently, ‘this is a surprise. I never dreamed
-of getting a new book in the bush. Why, it only came out just before we
-left. I was longing to read it; but, of course, we were too miserable
-and worried. How can it have got here so quickly?’
-
-‘Just the same way that we did, I suppose,’ said Beatrice—‘in a ship.
-You forget the time that has passed since we landed.’
-
-‘Still, it is a pleasant surprise. I shouldn’t wonder, perhaps we may
-get some new music soon. But I should as soon have thought of a
-book-club in the moon.’
-
-‘Talking of book-clubs,’ said Churbett, ‘we are trying to get up one; I
-hope you will join. With twelve members, and a moderate subscription, we
-can import a very fair lot of books every year. A brother of mine in
-London can choose them for us; I am to be librarian. The books are
-divided into sets, which each subscriber sends on in turn.’
-
-Annabel clapped her hands. ‘How delightful! Wilfred, of course, will
-join. Fancy, dear, _clean_ new books every month. Really, life is
-becoming quite intoxicating, and I thought we should die of dulness and
-ennui.’
-
-‘No; did you, though?’ echoed Mr. Churbett compassionately. ‘I confess
-to feeling inclined to cry when I came up to Murson Creek and saw the
-hut I was to live in for the first year. But one’s feelings get
-wonderfully altered after a while.’
-
-‘And are you _quite_ resigned, that is contented, to give up operas and
-picture galleries, clubs and travel, all the pleasant parts of English
-life?’ asked Rosamond.
-
-‘It _was_ hard at first, Miss Effingham; but here I have independence,
-with the prospect of a fortune. In England such was not the case,
-particularly the independence. Operas and other memories recall a fairy
-realm which I may yet re-enter. Meantime, I ride about all day, work now
-and then, smoke and read at night, and if not exactly happy, am decently
-cheerful.’
-
-‘What the world calls pleasure you never see, I suppose?’ said Beatrice
-philosophically.
-
-‘Do we not? I forgot one compensation in our virtuous, self-denying
-lives. Once a year, at least, we have races in Yass, which is our
-metropolis. Then we all meet together, as a solemn, social obligation.
-Pilgrimage to Mecca, and so on. Very few true believers absent. Balls,
-picnics, any amount of dancing, flirtation, what not. Enough to last for
-the rest of the year. After a week or two we go home sorrowfully,
-staying at each other’s houses on the way, to let down the excitement by
-degrees.’
-
-‘Where do the ladies come from?’ asked Annabel. ‘I suppose there are
-very few?’
-
-‘Very few!’ said Mr. Churbett in tones of horror. ‘_Ever_ so many. Is it
-possible you have never heard, even in Europe, of the beautiful Miss
-Christabel Rockley, the fascinating Mrs. Snowden, the talented Mrs.
-Porchester? Ladies! They abound, or how should we remain civilised? Yass
-is well known to be the home of all the graces. Could O’Desmond retain
-his _grand seigneur_ air but for the advantage of refined association? I
-wish I could take you round, Miss Effingham, on an introductory tour.
-What a book we could write of our experiences!—“Travels and Sketches in
-the Upper Strata of the Social System of the Yass District, by Miss
-Annabel Effingham, illustrated by F. Churbett, F.R.Y.A.S.S., Fellow of
-the Royal Yass Analytical Squatting Society,” reads well.’
-
-‘Quite delicious,’ said Annabel. ‘But everything that is nice is
-improper, so, of course, I shouldn’t be let go. Not even Rosamond, who
-is prudence personified. I’m afraid there is no more liberty for poor
-women in a new country than an old one. That _is_ the bell—I was sure of
-it. Mr. Churbett, allow me to invite you to dinner—an early one, which
-is about the extent of my privileges.’
-
-Mr. Churbett accepted the invitation, as he no doubt would have acceded
-to any proposition emanating from the speaker even less manifestly
-beneficial. He kept the whole party amused, and lingered until he
-declared he should have to gallop Grey Surrey all the way home to get
-there before dark.
-
-‘He’s like me,’ he explained, upon being charged with cruelty; ‘he only
-does a day’s work now and then, and he doesn’t mind it when it does
-come.’
-
-Resisting all invitation to stop for the night, on the plea that the
-effort necessary in his case must be made some time and might as well be
-undergone now, he departed in the odour of high consideration, if not of
-sanctity.
-
-In order that no opportunities might be lost, Wilfred commenced the
-habit of rising at dawn and joining Dick at the stock-yard, where the
-old man had initiated a dairy, with the aid of the few cows of the
-O’Desmond brand which had produced calves. Here he was attended by
-Andrew, who sturdily proceeded to take his share of the work, in spite
-of Dick’s sarcastic attitude. He evidently considered the dairy to be
-his province, and regarded Andrew as an interloper.
-
-‘Na, na, Maister Wilfred,’ said Andrew, ‘I hae been acquent in my time
-wi’ a’ manner o’ kye, and had a collie following me these thretty years.
-It’s no because we’re in a new land that I’m to turn my back on ilka
-occupa-ation that will bring in profit to the laird and his bairns.
-Jeanie can mak’ as sweet butter as ever a gudewife in Lothian, and we
-hae to depend maistly on the butter-keggies, for what I see.’
-
-‘You’ll find that garden of yours, when the weeds come up, quite enough
-for one, I’m thinking. There’s enough of us here, if Mr. Wilfred takes
-to it kind, as he seems to do. But if you’re such a dab hand at milking,
-you can tek that red cow that’s come in this morning.’
-
-‘And a gra-and show o’ milk she has,’ quoth Andrew, ‘maist unco-omon!’
-
-Dick commenced, with a stolid expression, to arrange the slip-rails,
-which apparently took time to adjust. Andrew, meanwhile, proud of the
-opportunity of exhibiting his familiarity with the art and science of
-milking, moved the red cow into one of the bails, or stalls, in which
-cows are ordinarily milked in Australia.
-
-Sitting upon a three-legged stool, he commenced his ancient and
-classical task. He had succeeded in, perhaps, drawing a pint from the
-over-full udder of the red cow aforesaid, when she suddenly raised her
-hind leg and caught him with such emphasis that man and milk, pail and
-stool, went clattering down into the corner of the yard.
-
-‘Gude save us!’ exclaimed Andrew, picking himself up, and rubbing his
-person, while he collected all that was recoverable of the scattered
-properties. ‘What garred the fell beastie act sae daft-like. I hae
-milket a hunner coos, and ne’er was whummled like yon.’
-
-‘Perhaps they was Scotch cows, and understood your talk, Mr. Cargill,’
-said Dick, with great politeness, covering a grim enjoyment; ‘but in
-this country we mostly _leg-ropes_ cows when we bail ’em up, for fear of
-accidents.’
-
-‘Weel, I winna say that these queys, being brocht up in a mair savage
-fashion than in bonnie Scotland, wadna need head and heel fastenings.
-But, ma certie, they would glower in my part of the country, gin ye tied
-a coo’s leg like a thrawn ox at the smithy.’
-
-‘I suppose “we must do at Rome, etc.,” and all the rest of it, Andrew,’
-said Wilfred. ‘Here, Dick, make a beginning with your cow, and Andrew
-and I will put a leg-rope on this one. Never too late to mend. I’ll back
-Andrew to hold his own yet in the milking-yard, or anywhere else.’
-
-Old Dick, having satisfied his grudge by compassing the downfall of
-Andrew, whom he had shrewdly guessed never to have been accustomed to a
-leg-rope, condescended to instruct Wilfred in the proper way to knot it.
-The cows were eventually milked _secundum artem_, and when the full
-buckets, foaming over with creamy fluid, stood on a bench outside the
-yard, Wilfred saw with distinct gratification the first dividend from
-the cattle investment.
-
-‘We must calculate now, Andrew,’ he said, as they walked over to the
-house, ‘how much butter can be made from the milk of these cows. It is a
-small matter, of course; but multiplied by ten—as we shall have at least
-fifty cows in milk, Dick says, before Christmas—it will not be so bad.’
-
-‘After conseederin’ the matter maist carefully,’ said Andrew, ‘I am free
-to give it as ma deleeberate opeenion that gin the pasture keeps aye
-green and plenteous we may mak’ baith butter and cheese o’ the best
-quality. As to price, I canna yet say, havin’ nae knowledge o’ the
-mairkets.’
-
-‘Well, we have made a beginning, Andrew, and that is a great matter. If
-we can only pay current expenses, without employing more hands, we shall
-be doing well, I consider.’
-
-‘We must work gey and close at the first gang aff, Maister Wilfred, and
-then dinna ye fear. Wi’ the Lord’s blessing, we’ll be spared to set up
-our horn on high, as weel as thae prood Amalekites, that have had the
-first grip o’ this gra-and Canaan. I was doon yestreen and lookit at the
-field o’ victual—the paddock, as yon auld carle ca’s it. It’s maist
-promising—forbye ordinar’—maist unco-omon.’
-
-Among the list of indispensable investments which Dick Evans had urged
-upon Wilfred, but which he had not at present thought it necessary to
-undertake, were another lot of cattle, a dozen horses (more or less),
-and some kind of taxed cart, or light vehicle. Apparently these would be
-advantageous and profitable, but Wilfred had determined to be most
-sparing in all outlay, lest the reserve fund of the family should come
-to a premature end.
-
-On this day it seemed that the advanced guard of the neighbouring gentry
-had commenced to lay formal siege to Warbrok Chase. On his return to the
-house in the afternoon, Wilfred descried two good-looking horses hanging
-up to the garden fence, and upon entering the sitting-room beheld their
-owners in amicable converse with his mother and sisters. He was promptly
-introduced to Mr. Argyll and Mr. Charles Hamilton. Both men were well,
-even fashionably dressed, and bore about them the nameless air which
-stamps the holder of a degree in the university of society.
-
-‘We should have called before,’ said Mr. Argyll, a tall fair-haired man,
-whose quick glancing blue eye and mobile features betrayed natural
-impetuosity, kept under by training; ‘but my partner here is such an
-awfully hard-working fellow, that he would not quit the engineering with
-which he was busied, to visit the Queen of Sheba, if she had just
-settled in the neighbourhood.’
-
-‘I was not aware,’ said Mr. Hamilton coolly, and with an air of settled
-conviction upon his regular and handsome features, ‘of the extent of my
-sacrifice to duty. I may venture to assure Mrs. Effingham that my
-neighbourly duties for the future will not be neglected.’
-
-‘I hope not,’ said Mrs. Effingham; ‘for, now that the excitement of
-settling in such a very different world has passed away, we begin to
-feel rather lonely—may I say dull?’
-
-‘No, mamma,’ said Rosamond, ‘you must not say that. We are all so fully
-occupied, from morning to dusk, that we have no time to be dull.’
-
-‘Oh, but we cannot get on without society,’ remarked Annabel. ‘I feel in
-the highest spirits as long as there is so much to do, that there is no
-time for thinking; indeed, I hate to have a moment to myself. But in the
-afternoons, when papa and the boys are out, I begin to realise our
-solitary position, and the feeling becomes oppressive.’
-
-‘Very naturally too,’ said Mr. Argyll. ‘But as yet you have no idea of
-the social resources which you will be able to draw upon when you are
-acquainted with everybody.’
-
-‘And who is everybody?’ asked Beatrice. ‘How can we be sociable if
-people don’t come to see us? Suppose you tell us who are the nice people
-of the district, and we shall be able to enjoy them in anticipation.’
-
-‘You will see most of them within the month; but I shrink from
-describing them. Charles, you are afraid of nobody, suppose you give us
-a _catalogue raisonné_.’
-
-‘Certainly, if Miss Effingham wishes it,’ assented Mr. Hamilton, who had
-the imperturbable look which goes with a temperament difficult to
-surprise or intimidate. ‘I shall have great pleasure in trotting out our
-friends for her information. We have been here only three years, so in
-case of mistakes you must be considerate.’
-
-‘Oh, we shall be most discreet,’ said Annabel; ‘besides, we have no
-acquaintance yet to chatter to—that’s the best guarantee for prudence.’
-
-‘I think I may take your solemn affirmation not to betray me,’ said Mr.
-Hamilton, looking admiringly into Annabel’s lovely eyes, ‘and even then
-I would face the risk. First, there is Captain Snowden with his wife. He
-was in the navy, I think; he has rather more of the sailor about him
-than—what shall I say?—the courtier, though he can be very agreeable
-when he likes. Madame is extremely lady-like, clever, travelled, what
-not. You must see her and judge for yourself.’
-
-‘Are there any more ladies?’ asked Rosamond. ‘They possess an absorbing
-interest for us.’
-
-‘Ever so many more,’ laughed Hamilton. ‘Mrs. Porchester, who is rather a
-“blue”; Mrs. Egremont, who is a beauty; the Misses Carter, who are
-good-nature itself. The others, I think, you must find out by degrees.
-In Yass there are some very nice families, particularly that of Mr.
-Rockley. He is the leading merchant in these parts, and rules like a
-benevolent despot. His wife is hospitable and amiable beyond compare;
-his daughter, Miss Christabel, dangerously beautiful. I _must_ leave
-something to the imagination.’
-
-‘I assure you we are most grateful to you as it is,’ said Mrs.
-Effingham. ‘It is really encouraging to find that there are so many
-charming people in the neighbourhood. We should hardly consider them in
-the same county at home; but here they don’t seem to mind riding any
-distance.’
-
-‘I am mistaken,’ said Hamilton, ‘if you do not find people riding
-wonderful distances to visit Warbrok. We are less than twenty miles
-away, I am thankful to say, so you will see us as often as you care for.
-By the way,’ turning to Wilfred, ‘did I hear you say you were going to
-Donnelly’s sale? If you buy stock there, you had better stay a night at
-Benmohr on your return. It is just a fair stage.’
-
-‘Thanks. I shall be most happy. Do you think it a good idea to invest at
-Donnelly’s?’
-
-‘If I were in your place I should buy all his cattle and a few horses.
-They can’t fail to be a profitable purchase, as you seem to have any
-amount of grass. But we must be going. We shall expect you at Benmohr
-the day after the sale. Mrs. Effingham, I shall do myself the honour of
-another visit, after you have been able to verify my portraitures.’
-
-‘What gentlemanlike young men!’ said Mrs. Effingham, when the guests
-were fairly away. ‘I am so sorry that your papa was out. He would have
-been so pleased. Mr. Argyll seems so clever, and Mr. Hamilton is very
-handsome—both wonderfully well dressed for the bush.’
-
-‘I should say Mr. Argyll was disposed to be sarcastic,’ said Rosamond;
-‘and I am mistaken if he has not a fierce temper. He told us he was a
-Highlander, which accounts for it.’
-
-‘Mr. Hamilton is one of the nicest-looking men I have seen for a long
-time,’ said Annabel; ‘what splendid eyes he has! He is very particular
-about his gloves too; gives time and reflection to his toilet, I should
-say.’
-
-‘I have heard Dick say that he is the hardest-working squatter in the
-district,’ said Wilfred. ‘He is devoted to ploughing, digging,
-navvy-work, horse-breaking—“all manner of slavery,” as Dick says.’
-
-‘Who would have thought it!’ exclaimed Mrs. Effingham in tones of
-astonishment. ‘From his appearance I should have thought that he was
-afraid to soil those white hands of his.’
-
-‘The best-dressed people are not the most backward at work or fighting,’
-said Wilfred.
-
-‘But how _can_ he keep his hands white,’ inquired Annabel with a great
-appearance of interest, ‘if he really works like a labourer?’
-
-‘Perhaps he works in gloves; a man can get through a great deal of work
-in a pair of old riding-gloves, and his hands be never the worse. There
-is something about those two men that I like extremely. Mr. Argyll puts
-me in mind of Fergus MʻIvor with that fiery glance; he looks as if he
-had a savage temper, well held in.’
-
-‘They are both very nice, and I hope you will make real friends of them,
-Wilfred,’ said Mrs. Effingham. ‘Might I also suggest that, as it is
-evidently practicable to dress like a gentleman and work hard, a certain
-young man should be more careful of his appearance?’
-
-‘I deserve that, I know, old lady,’ said her son laughingly; ‘but really
-there is a temptation in the wilderness to costume a little. I promise
-you to amend.’
-
-‘Our circle of acquaintance is expanding,’ said Beatrice; ‘certainly it
-has the charm of variety. Mr. O’Desmond is Irish, Mr. Churbett from
-London, our last visitors Scots—one Highland, one Lowland. All differing
-among themselves too. I am sure we shall be fully occupied; it will be a
-task of some delicacy _tenir de salon_, if we ever have them here at a
-party.’
-
-‘A party!’ said Mrs. Effingham; ‘don’t think of it for _years_ to come,
-child. It would be impossible, inappropriate in every way.’
-
-‘But there’s no harm, mamma, surely, in _thinking_ of it,’ pleaded
-Annabel. ‘It encourages one to keep alive, if nothing else.’
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
- AN AUSTRALIAN YEOMAN
-
-
-A week of laborious work preceded the day when circumstances permitted
-Wilfred and his serving-man to ride forth for the purpose of attending
-the sale of Mr. Michael Donnelly’s stock and effects. Formerly known as
-‘Willoughby’s Mick,’ he had, during an unpretending career as
-stock-rider for that gentleman, accumulated a small herd of cattle and
-horses, with which to commence life on a grazing farm near Yass. Here,
-by exercise of the strictest economy as to personal expenses, as well as
-from the natural increase of stock, he had, during a residence of a
-dozen years, amassed a considerable property. Yet on his holding there
-was but scant evidence of toil or contrivance. A few straggling peach
-trees represented the garden. The bark-roofed slab hut which he found
-when he came had sufficed for the lodging of himself and wife, with
-nearly a dozen children. The fences, not originally good, were now
-ruinous. The fields, suffered to go out of cultivation, lay fallow and
-unsightly, only half-cleared of tree-stumps. The dress of this honest
-yeoman had altered for the worse since the hard-riding days of
-‘Willoughby’s Mick.’ The healthy boys and girls were more or less
-ragged; the younger ones barefooted. The saddles and cart harness were
-patched with raw hide, or clumsily repaired. The cow-shed was rickety;
-the calves unsheltered. Yet with all this apparent decay and disorder,
-any one, judging from appearances, who had put down Michael Donnelly as
-an impoverished farmer, would have been egregiously deceived. His
-neighbours knew that his battered old cabbage-tree hat covered a head
-with an unusual amount of brains. Uneducated and bush-bred, he possessed
-intuitive powers of calculation and forecast frequently denied to
-cultured individuals. Early in life he had appropriated the fact, that
-in this land of boundless pasturage, profitable up to a certain point,
-without the necessity of one _farthing_ of expenditure, the
-multiplication of stock was possible to any conceivable extent. Once
-make a commencement with a few cows, and it was a man’s own fault if he
-died without more cattle than he could count. Hadn’t Johnny Shore begun
-that way? _Walked_ over to Monaro with half-a-crown in his pocket. He
-saved his wages for a few years and got the needful start.
-
-Become a capitalist, his instincts revolted against spending money
-needlessly, when every pound, often less, would buy a cow, which cow
-would turn into fifty head of cattle in a few years. ‘What could a man
-do that would pay him half as well? Why employ labour that could be done
-without? It was all very well for Mr. Willoughby, who had raised his
-wages gradually from twenty pounds per annum and one ration. Mr.
-Willoughby was a gentleman with a big station, and threw his money about
-a bit; but why should he, Mick Donnelly, go keeping and feeding men to
-put in crops when farming didn’t pay? Therefore his fields might lie
-fallow and go out of cultivation.’
-
-His boys were getting big lumps of fellows, old enough to help brand and
-muster. The girls could milk, and break in the heifers, as well as all
-the men in the country. His wife could cook—there wasn’t much of that;
-and wash—it didn’t fatigue her; and sweep—that process was economised—as
-well as ever. Any kind of duds did for working people, as long as they
-went decent to chapel on Sundays. That they had always done and would
-do, please God. But all other occasions of spending money were wasteful
-and unnecessary.
-
-The sole expenses, then, of this large family were in the purchase of
-flour, tea, sugar, and clothes, none of which articles came to an
-extravagant sum for the year. While the sales were steady and
-considerable, Mick and his sons drove many a lot of cattle, fat or
-store, to the neighbouring markets. The profits of the dairy in butter
-and bacon, the representatives of which latter product roamed in small
-herds around the place, paid all the household expenses twice over;
-while the amount of his credit balance at the Bank of New Holland in
-Yass would have astonished many a tourist who watched Mick smoking on
-his stock-yard rails, or riding an unshod mare down the range after a
-mob of active cattle.
-
-But now a more ambitious idea was evolved from the yeoman’s slowly
-maturing, but accurate mental processes. He had been noting the relative
-scale of outlay and income of a neighbouring sheep-farmer. After certain
-cautious comparisons, he fixed the conclusion that, other things being
-equal, sheep would pay him better than cattle. He heard from an old
-comrade of the forced sale of a sheep station in the then half-explored,
-unstocked district of Monaro, lying between the Great Range and the
-Snowy River. His offer of cash, at a rate far from remunerative to the
-late owner, had been accepted.
-
-That part of his plan settled, he sold his freehold to a neighbouring
-proprietor who was commencing to found an estate, receiving rather more
-than double his original purchase money. Stock being at a reasonable
-price, Donnelly determined to sell off the whole of his possessions,
-merely reserving his dray, team, and a sufficiency of saddle-horses for
-the family. His herd had become too numerous for the run. His boys and
-girls would make shepherds and shepherdesses for a while—by no means a
-picturesque occupation in Australia, but still profitable as of old. He
-would be enabled to continue independent of hired labour. He trusted to
-the duplication of stock to do the rest. Hence the clearing-off sale,
-which a number of farmers in the neighbourhood were likely to attend,
-and to which Wilfred and his chief servitor were at present wending
-their way.
-
-On this occasion Wilfred had resisted the idea of mounting any of the
-strayed horses, still numerous upon the enticing pastures of Warbrok.
-Having unwittingly placed himself in a false position, he was resolved
-not to repeat the impropriety.
-
-‘Mr. Churbett had behaved most courteously,’ he said; ‘but it might have
-been otherwise. I was not aware that it was other than a colonial
-custom. There must be no more mistakes of this kind, Dick, or you and I
-shall quarrel. Go to one of the nearest farmers and see if you can hire
-me a decent hack.’
-
-So Dick, though chafing at the over-delicacy which led his master to pay
-for a mount while available steeds were eating his grass, proceeded to
-obey orders, and shortly returned with a substantial half-bred, upon
-which Wilfred bestowed himself.
-
-Dick Evans was always in good spirits at the prospect of a cruise in
-foreign parts. Mrs. Evans, on the other hand, was prone to dwell upon
-the unpleasant side of domestic matters. Her habit of mind had doubtless
-resulted in the philosophic calm with which her husband bore his
-frequent, and occasionally protracted, absences from the conjugal
-headquarters. As before, he mounted his old mare with a distinct air of
-cheerfulness.
-
-‘The dairy work will get along all right for a day or two, sir,’ he
-said. ‘Old Andy begins to be a fairish milker—he was dead slow at
-first—and Mr. Guy’s a great help bailin’ up. There’s nothing brisks me
-up like a jaunt somewheres—I don’t care where it is, if it was to the
-Cannibal Islands. God Almighty never intended me to stop long in one
-place, I expect.’
-
-‘A rolling stone gathers no moss, Dick,’ said Wilfred. ‘You’ll never
-save up anything if you carry out those ideas always.’
-
-‘I don’t want to save nothing, sir. I’ve no call to keep money in a box;
-I can find work pretty well wherever I go that will keep me and my old
-woman in full and plenty. I’m safe of my wages as long as I can work,
-and when I can’t work no more I shall die—suddent like. I’ve always felt
-that.’
-
-‘But why don’t you get a bit of land, Dick, and have a place of your
-own? You could easily save enough money to buy a farm.’
-
-‘Bless your heart, sir, I wouldn’t live on a farm allers, day in, day
-out, if you’d give me one. I should get that sick of the place as I
-should come to hate the sight of it. But hadn’t you better settle with
-yourself like, sir, what kind of stock you’re agoin’ to bid for when we
-get to Mick’s? There’ll be a lot of people there, and noise, and perhaps
-a little fighting if there’s any grog goin’, so it’s best to be ready
-for action, as old Sir Hugh Gough used to tell us.’
-
-‘Mr. Churbett and Mr. Hamilton thought I should buy all the mixed
-cattle, as many of them would be ready for the butcher before winter.’
-
-‘So they will, sir, or my name’s not Richard Evans, twice corporal in
-the old 50th, and would have been sergeant, if I’d been cleverer at my
-book, and not quite so clever at the canteen. But that’s neither here
-nor there. What I look at is, they’re all dairy-bred cattle, and broke
-in close to your own run, which saves a power of trouble. If you can get
-a hundred or two of ’em for thirty shillings or two pound a head,
-they’ll pay it all back by next season—easy and flippant.’
-
-Finishing up with his favourite adjective, which he used when desirous
-of showing with what ridiculous ease any given result might be obtained,
-Mr. Richard Evans lighted his pipe with an air of assurance of success
-which commenced to infect his employer.
-
-About mid-day they reached the abode of Michael Donnelly, Esq., as such
-designated by the local papers, who ‘was about to submit to public
-competition his quiet and well-bred herd of dairy cattle, his choice
-stud, his equipages, farming implements, teams, carts, harness, etc.,
-with other articles too numerous to mention.’ Other articles there were
-none, except he had decided to sell the olive branches. Wilfred was
-shocked at the appearance of the homestead of this thriving farmer. The
-falling fences, the neglected orchard, the dilapidated hut, the
-curiously patched and mended stock-yard, partly brush, partly of logs,
-with here and there a gap, secured by a couple of rude tree-forks, with
-a clumsy sapling laid across—all these did not look like the
-surroundings of a man who could give his cheque for several thousand
-pounds. However, the personal appearance of Mick himself, an athletic,
-manly, full-bearded fellow, as also that of his family, was decidedly
-prepossessing. They were busily attending to the various classes of
-stock, with much difficulty kept apart for purposes of sale. Whatever
-else these Australian Celts lacked, they had been well nourished in
-youth and infancy. A finer sample of youthful humanity, physically
-considered, Wilfred had never seen. The lack of order everywhere visible
-had in no way reacted upon their faculties. All their lives they had
-known abundant nutriment, unrestricted range. Healthful exercise had
-been theirs, congenial labour, and diet unstinted in the great
-essentials. Few other considerations had entered into the family
-councils.
-
-And now they were about to migrate, like the world’s elder children, to
-a land promising more room. Then, as now, a higher life was possible,
-where the sheep and the oxen, the camels and the asses, would enjoy a
-wider range. The sale over, they would once more resume that journey
-which, commencing soon after the marriage day of Michael Donnelly and
-Bridget Joyce, was not ended yet.
-
-Wilfred Effingham was soon confirmed in his opinion that he had done
-well to attend. Many of the neighbouring settlers were there, as well as
-farmers and townspeople from Yass, brought together by the mysterious
-attraction of an auction sale. One of the townspeople, asking first if
-he was Mr. Effingham of Warbrok, put into his hand a note which ran as
-follows:—
-
-
-‘MY DEAR WILFRED—I thought you were likely to be at Donnelly’s sale, so
-I send you a line by a parishioner of mine. I have made inquiries about
-the stock, and consider that you could not do better than buy as many of
-the cattle as you have grass for. They are known to be quiet, having
-been used to dairy tending, and are certain to increase in value and
-number, as you have so much grass at Warbrok. Price about two pounds. A
-few horses would not be superfluous, and there are some good ones in
-Donnelly’s lot, or they would hardly have stood his work. Mention my
-name to Mick, and say he is to let you down easy. I have had a touch of
-rheumatism lately—_et ego in Arcadia_—there’s no escape from old age and
-its infirmities in any climate, however good, or I’d have looked you up
-before now. Tell your father I’m coming over soon.—Always yours
-sincerely,
-
- HARLEY STERNWORTH.’
-
-
-The hour of sale having arrived, and indeed passed, the auctioneer, who
-had driven out from Yass for the purpose, commenced his task, which he
-did by climbing on to the ‘cap’ of the stock-yard and rapping violently
-with a hammer-handled hunting-crop. A broad-chested, stout-lunged,
-florid personage was Mr. Crackemup, and if selling by auction deserved
-to be ranked as one of the fine arts, he was no mean professor.
-
-‘Ladies and gentlemen!’ he shouted. ‘I say ladies, for I notice quite a
-number of the fair sex have honoured me with their presence. Let me
-mention, in the first place, that the owner of this valuable stock we
-see before us has resolved to leave this part of the country. Yes, my
-friends, to leave Gumbaragongara for good and all! Why do I mention this
-fact—why do I dwell upon it? Because, ladies and gentlemen, it makes all
-the difference as to the _bona fide_ nature of the sale which we are met
-together to-day to celebrate—that is—a—to carry out—according to these
-written conditions. My principal, Mr. Donnelly, with the shrewdness
-which has characterised him through life, seized upon this view of the
-case. “If I leave the country bodily,” he said to me, “and sell the
-stock for what they’ll fetch, no one can say that I went away and took
-the best with me.” No, ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Donnelly departs
-to-morrow for Monaro, taking only a dray and team, with a few
-riding-horses, so that all his well-bred, quiet, beautiful herd of dairy
-cattle, selected with great care from some of the best herds in the
-colony [here divers of the audience grinned irreverently], I shall have
-the honour of submitting to public competition this day.
-
-‘The first lot, ladies and gentlemen, is No. 1. Generally so, isn’t it?
-Ha! ha! One hundred and fifty-four cows and heifers, all broken to bail;
-most of them with calves at foot, or about to—to—become mothers.’
-
-Mr. Crackemup was a man of delicate ideas, so he euphemised the maternal
-probabilities.
-
-‘Any one buying this choice lot, with butter at a shilling, and cheese
-not to be bought, buys a fortune. I will sell a “run out” of twenty
-head, with the option of taking the lot. “Fifteen shillings a
-head”—nonsense; one pound, twenty-two and six, twenty-five-thank you,
-miss; thirty shillings, thirty-five, thirty-seven and six-thank you,
-sir. One pound seventeen and sixpence, once; one pound seventeen and
-sixpence, twice; for the third and last time, one pound seventeen
-shillings and sixpence. Gone! What name shall I say, sir? “Howard
-Effingham, Warbrok Chase.” Twenty head. Thank you, sir.’
-
-At this critical moment the voice of Dick Evans was heard by Wilfred, in
-close proximity to his ear: ‘Collar the lot, sir; they’re dirt cheap;
-soon be in full milk. Don’t let ’em go.’
-
-‘I believe,’ said Wilfred, raising his voice, ‘that I have the option of
-taking the whole.’
-
-‘Quite correct, sir; but if I might advise——’
-
-‘I take the lot,’ said Wilfred decisively.
-
-And though there was a murmur from the crowd, and one stalwart dame
-said, ‘That’s not fair, thin; I med sure I’d get a pen of springers
-myself,’ the auctioneer confirmed his right, and the dairy lot became
-his property.
-
-It turned out, as is often the case, that the first offered stock were
-the most moderate in price. Many of the buyers had been holding back,
-thinking they would go in lots of twenty, and that better bargains might
-be obtained. When they found that the stranger had carried off all the
-best dairy cows, their disappointment was great.
-
-‘Serves you right, boys,’ was heard in the big voice of the proprietor;
-‘if you had bid up like men, instead of keeping dark, you’d have choked
-the cove off taking the lot. Serves you all dashed well right.’
-
-The remaining lots of cattle consisted of weaners, two and
-three-year-old steers and heifers. Of fat cattle the herd had been
-pretty well ‘scraped,’ as Donnelly called it, before the sale. For most
-of these the bidding was so brisk and spirited that Wilfred thought
-himself lucky in securing forty steers at twenty-five shillings, which
-completed his drove, and were placed in the yard with the cows.
-
-Then came the horses; nearly a hundred all told—mares, colts, fillies,
-yearlings, with aged or other riding-horses. These last Donnelly excused
-himself for selling by the statement that if he took them to Monaro half
-of them would be lost trying to get back to where they had been bred,
-and that between stock-riders and cattle-stealers his chance of
-regaining them would be small.
-
-‘There they are,’ he said; ‘there’s some as good blood among them as
-ever was inside a horse-skin. They’re there to be sold.’
-
-The spirit of speculation was now aroused in Wilfred, or he would not
-have bought, as he did, half-a-dozen of the best mares, picking them by
-make and shape, and a general look of breeding. They were middle-sized
-animals, more like Arabs than the offspring of English thoroughbreds,
-but with a look of caste and quality, their legs and feet being
-faultless, their heads good, and shoulders fair. They fell to a bid of
-less than ten pounds each, and with foals at foot, Wilfred thought they
-could not be dear.
-
-‘Them’s the old Gratis lot,’ said Mr. Donnelly. ‘I bought ’em from Mr.
-Busfield when they was fillies. You haven’t made a bad pick for a new
-hand, sir. I wish you luck with ’em.’
-
-‘I hope so,’ said Wilfred. ‘If you breed horses at all, they may as well
-be good ones.’ As he turned away he caught the query from a bystander—
-
-‘Why, you ain’t going to sell old Barragon?’
-
-‘Yes, I am,’ said Mick, who was evidently not a man of sentiment; ‘all
-fences in the country wouldn’t keep him away from these parts. He’s in
-mostly runs near the lake, and eats more of that gentleman’s grass than
-mine. He don’t owe me nothin’.’
-
-‘You buy that horse, sir,’ said Dick, who was acting the part of a moral
-Mephistopheles. ‘He’s as old as Mick, very near, and as great a dodger
-after cattle. But you can’t throw him down, and the beast don’t live
-that can get away from him on a camp.’
-
-Wilfred turned and beheld a very old, grey horse cornered off, and
-standing with his ears laid back, listening apparently to Mr.
-Crackemup’s commendations.
-
-‘Here you have, ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Donnelly’s favourite
-riding-horse Barragon, an animal, he informs me, that has done some of
-the most wonderful feats ever credited to a horse in any country—some
-exploits, indeed, which he scarcely likes to tell of. [‘I’ll be bound he
-don’t,’ drawled out a long, brown-faced bystander.] You have heard the
-reasons assigned for disposing of him here, rather than, as of course he
-would prefer to do, still keeping him attached to the fortunes of the
-family. His instinct is so strong, his intelligence so great, ladies and
-gentlemen, that he would unerringly find his way back from the farthest
-point of the Monaro district. What shall I say for him?’
-
-‘May as well have him, sir,’ said his counsellor. ‘He’ll go cheap. He’ll
-always stick to the lake; and if any one else gets him, they’ll be
-wanting us to run him in, half the time.’
-
-Wilfred looked at the horse. The type was one to which he had not been
-accustomed—neither a roadster, a hunter, a hackney, nor a harness
-horse—he was _sui generis_, the true Australian stock-horse, now rarely
-seen, and seldom up to the feats and performances of which grizzled
-veterans of the stock-whip love to tell.
-
-No one with an eye for a horse could look at the war-worn screw without
-interest. A long, low horse, partaking more of the Arab type than the
-English, he possessed the shapes which make for endurance, and more than
-ordinary speed. The head was lean and well shaped, with a well-opened,
-still bright eye. The neck was arched, though not long; but the
-shoulder, to a lover of horses, was truly magnificent. Muscular, fairly
-high in the wither, and remarkably oblique, it permitted the freest
-action possible, while the rider who sat behind such a formation might
-enjoy a feeling of security far beyond the average. Battered and worn,
-no doubt, were the necessary supports, by cruelly protracted
-performances of headlong speed and wayfaring. Yet the flat cannon-bones,
-the iron hoofs, the tough tendons, had withstood the woeful hardships to
-which they had been subjected, with less damage than might have been
-expected. The knees slightly bent forward, the strained ligaments,
-showed partial unsoundness, yet was there no tangible ‘break down.’ What
-must such a horse have been in his colthood—in his prime?
-
-A sudden feeling of pity arose in Wilfred’s heart as he ran his eye
-critically over the scarred veteran. At a small price he would, no
-doubt, be a good investment, old as he was. He would be reasonably
-useful; and as a matter of charity one might do worse alms before Heaven
-than save one of the most gallant of God’s creatures from closing his
-existence in toil and suffering. Mick’s neighbours not being more
-sentimental than himself, Wilfred found himself the purchaser of the
-historical courser at a price considerably under five pounds.
-
-‘By George! I’m glad you’ve got him, mister,’ said Mr. Donnelly, with
-vicarious generosity. ‘I’m not rich enough to pension him, and the money
-he’s fetched, put into a cow, will be something handsome in ten years.
-But he’s a long ways from broke down yet; and you’ll have your money’s
-worth out of him, with luck, before he kicks the bucket. You’d better
-ride him home, and I’ll send my boy Jack with you as far as Benmohr.
-He’ll lead Bob Jones’s moke, that you rode here, and leave him in Argyll
-and Hamilton’s paddock till he’s sent for. You’d as well get off with
-your mob, if you want to get to Benmohr before dark.’
-
-Wilfred recognised the soundness of this advice, and in a few minutes
-afterwards found himself upon Barragon. While Dick Evans promptly let
-out the cattle, Jack Donnelly, a brown-faced young centaur, riding a
-half-broken colt, and leading his late mount, commanded two eager cattle
-dogs to ‘fetch ’em up.’ The drove went off at a smart pace, and in five
-minutes they were out of sight of the yard, the farm, and the crowd,
-jogging freely along a well-marked track, which Dick stated to be the
-road to Benmohr.
-
-This cheerful pace was, however, not kept up. The steers at the ‘head’
-of the drove were inclined to go even too fast. It was necessary to
-restrain their ardour. The cows and calves became slow, obstinate, and
-disposed to spread, needing all the shouting of Dick and young Donnelly,
-as well as the personal violence of the latter’s dogs, to keep them
-going. Wilfred rejoiced that he had obeyed the impulse to possess
-himself of old Barragon, when he found with what ease and comfort he was
-carried by the trained stock-horse in these embarrassing circumstances.
-Finally the weather changed, and it commenced to rain in the face of the
-cortège. Dick once or twice alluded to the uncertainty which would exist
-as to their getting all the cattle again if anything occurred to cause
-their loss this night. Lastly, just as matters began to look dark,
-Wilfred descried Benmohr.
-
-The ‘semi-detached’ cottage which did duty as a spare bedroom had an
-earthen floor, and was not an ornate apartment; still, a blazing fire
-gave it an air of comfort after the chill evening air. Needful toilet
-requisites were provided, and the manifest cleanliness of the bed and
-belongings guaranteed a sound night’s rest.
-
-Upon entering the cottage, along a raised stone causeway, pointed out by
-Mr. Hamilton, Wilfred found his former acquaintance Mr. Argyll, and Mr.
-Churbett, with a neighbour, who was introduced as Mr. Forbes. The table
-was already laid, and furnished with exceeding neatness for the evening
-meal. A glowing fire burned in the ample stone chimney, and as the three
-gentlemen rose to greet him, Wilfred thought he had never seen a more
-successful union of plainness of living, with the fullest measure of
-comfort.
-
-‘You have made the port just in time,’ remarked Argyll; ‘the rain is
-coming down heavily, and the night is as black as a wolf’s throat. You
-seem to have bought largely at Donnelly’s sale.’
-
-‘All the dairy cows and heifers, and a few steers for fattening,’
-answered Wilfred. ‘I suppose we might have had some trouble in
-collecting them if they had got away from us to-night.’
-
-‘So much that you might have never seen half of them again,’ said Mr.
-Churbett promptly. ‘You would have been hunting for them for weeks, and
-picked them up “in twos and threes and mobs of one,” as I did my Tumut
-store cattle, that broke away the first night I got them home.’
-
-Wilfred felt in a condition to do ample justice to the roast chicken and
-home-cured ham, and even essayed a shaving of the goodly round of beef,
-which graced one end of the table. After concluding with coffee,
-glorified with delicious cream, Wilfred, as they formed a circle round
-the fire, came to the conclusion, either that it was the best dinner he
-had eaten in the whole course of his life, or else that he had never
-been quite so hungry before.
-
-In despite of Mrs. Teviot’s admonitions, none of the party sought their
-couches much before midnight. There was a rubber of whist—perhaps two.
-There was much general conversation afterwards, including literary
-discussion. One of the features of the apartment was a well-filled
-bookcase. Finally, when Mr. Hamilton escorted Wilfred to his chamber, he
-said, ‘You needn’t bother about getting up early to-morrow. Trust old
-Dick to have the cattle away at sunrise; he and the boy can drive them
-easily now, till you overtake them. We breakfast about nine o’clock, and
-Fred Churbett will keep you company in lying up.’
-
-The night was murky and drizzling; the morning would probably resemble
-it. Wilfred was tired. He knew that Dick would be up and away with the
-dawn. He himself wished to consult his new friends about points of
-practice germane to his present position. On the whole he thought he
-could safely take Mr. Hamilton’s advice.
-
-His slumbers that night, in bed-linen fragrant as Ailie Dinmont’s, were
-deep and dreamless. Surely it could not have been morning, it was so
-dark, and still raining, when he heard knocking at a window, and a voice
-thrice repeat the words, ‘Maister Hamilton, are ye awauk?’ but the words
-melted away—a luxurious drowsiness overpowered his senses. The rain’s
-measured fall and tinkling plash changed into the mill-wheel dash of his
-childhood’s wonder in Surrey. When he awoke, the sky was dark, but there
-was the indefinable sensation that it was not very early. So he dressed,
-and beholding a large old pair of ‘clodhoppers’ standing temptingly
-near, he bestowed himself in them and cautiously made towards the
-milking-yard. He looked across to the enclosure where his cattle had
-been during the previous night. It was a smooth and apparently deep sea
-of liquid mud, so sincerely churned had it been during the wet night. He
-felt grieved for the discomfort of the poor cattle, but relieved to know
-that they had been hours before on the grass, and were well on their way
-to Warbrok Chase.
-
-At the milking-yard he saw a sight which had never before met his eyes.
-The morning’s work had apparently been just completed. Argyll was
-walking towards the dairy, a pisé building with thick, earthen walls. He
-carried two immense cans full to the brim with milk. Hamilton was wading
-through the yard behind about sixty cows and calves, which were stolidly
-ploughing through a lake of liquid mud. As they quitted the rough stone
-causeway, they appeared to drop with reluctance into a species of
-slough. An elderly Scot, approaching the type of Andrew Cargill, was
-labouring, nearly knee-deep, solemnly after. He and Mr. Hamilton were
-splashed from head to foot; it would have been a delicate task to
-recognise either. The latter, coming to a pool of water, deliberately
-walked in, thus purifying both boot and lower leg.
-
-‘Muddy work, this milking in wet weather,’ said he calmly, scraping a
-piece of caked mud about the size of a cheese-plate from the breast of
-his serge shirt. ‘It would need to pay well, for it _is_ exceedingly
-disagreeable.’
-
-‘Very much so, indeed, I should think,’ assented Wilfred, rather
-shocked. ‘I had no idea that dairy work on a large scale could be so
-unpleasant.’
-
-‘Ours is perhaps more mud-larking than most people’s,’ said Mr. Hamilton
-reflectively, ‘chiefly from the richness of the soil, so we endure it.
-But you must look into the cheese-room—the bright side of the affair
-financially.’
-
-Wilfred was much impressed with the dairy, a substantial, thatched
-edifice, having a verandah on four sides. The pisé walls—nearly two feet
-thick—were of earth, rammed in a wooden frame after a certain formula.
-
-‘Here is the best building on the station,’ said his guide. ‘We reared
-this noble pile ourselves, in the days of our colonial inexperience,
-entirely by the directions contained in a book, with the aid of old
-Wullie and our emigrant labourers. After we became more “Australian” and
-“less nice” we took to slabs. It was quicker work, but our architecture
-suffered.’
-
-In one portion of this building were rows of milk-vessels, while ranged
-on shelves one above another, and occupying three sides of the building,
-were hundreds of fair, round, orthodox-looking cheeses, varying in
-colour from pale yellow to orange. They presented an appearance more
-akin to a midland county farm than an Australian cattle-station.
-
-‘There, you see the compensation for early rising, wet feet, and
-mud-plastering. We have a ready sale for twice as many cheeses as Mrs.
-Teviot can turn out, at a very paying price. Her double Stiltons are
-famed for their richness and maturity. We pay a large part of the
-station expenses in this way; besides, what is of more importance,
-improving the cattle, by keeping the herd quiet and promoting their
-aptitude to fatten.’
-
-‘You have no sheep, I think?’ inquired Wilfred.
-
-‘No; but we breed horses on rather a large scale. I must show you my
-pet, Camerton, by and by. Now I must dress for breakfast, for which I
-daresay you are quite ready.’
-
-After a reasonable interval the partners appeared neatly attired, though
-still in garments adapted for station work. It was an exceedingly
-cheerful meal, the proverbial Scottish breakfast, admitted to be
-unsurpassable—devilled chicken and grilled bones, alternated with the
-incomparable round of beef, which had excited Wilfred’s admiration on
-the preceding day. Piles of boiled eggs, and _such_ a jug of cream!
-fresh butter, short-cake, and the unfailing oatmeal porridge completed
-the fare, to which Wilfred, after his observations and inquiries, felt
-himself fully qualified to do justice.
-
-‘Well, Charles,’ said Mr. Churbett, desisting from a sustained attack
-upon the toast and eggs, ‘how do you feel after your day’s work? What an
-awful number of hours you have been up and doing! That’s what makes you
-so frightfully arrogant. It’s the comparison of yourself with ordinary
-mortals like me, for instance, who lie in bed.’
-
-‘You certainly do take it easy, Master Fred,’ returned Hamilton, ‘to an
-extent I cannot hope to imitate. Every man to his taste, you know. You
-have a well-grassed, well-watered, open country at The She-oaks; once
-get your cattle there and they are no trouble to look after. Nature has
-done so much that I am afraid—as in South America—man does very little.’
-
-‘Shows his sense,’ asserted Mr. Churbett calmly. ‘Don’t you be imposed
-upon, Effingham, by these people here; they have a mania for bodily
-labour, and all sorts of unsuitable employment. I didn’t come out to
-Australia to be a navvy or a ploughman; I could have found similar
-situations at home. I go in for the true pastoral life—an Arab steed, a
-tent, cool claret, and a calm supervision of other men’s labours.’
-
-‘Did the Sheik Ibrahim drink claret, or go to the theatre, leaving his
-flocks and herds to the Bedaween?’ said Mr. Forbes. ‘Some people appear
-to be able to combine the pleasures of all religions with the duties of
-none.’
-
-‘Smart antithesis, James,’ said Churbett approvingly. ‘I’ll take another
-cup of tea, please, to keep. I’m going to read Sydney Smith in the
-verandah after breakfast. Yes, I _am_ proud of that theatre exploit. Few
-people would have nerve for it.’
-
-‘You would have needed all your nerve if you had found a hundred and
-fifty fat cattle scattered and gone next morning,’ said Mr. Forbes, a
-quietly sarcastic personage.
-
-‘But they were _not_ gone, my dear fellow; what’s the use of absurd
-suppositions? We got back before daylight. Not a beast had left the
-camp. Now there are a great many people who would never have thought of
-doing that.’
-
-‘I should say not,’ said Hamilton. ‘Fred, your natural advantages will
-be the death of you yet. Come with me, Effingham, if you want to see the
-dam and the old horse. They are our show exhibits, and we are rather
-proud of them.’
-
-Walking through the garden to the lower end of the slope upon which the
-homestead of Benmohr was built, Wilfred saw that the course of the
-creek, dignified with the name of a river, had been arrested by a wide
-and solid embankment, half-way up the broad breast of which a sheet of
-deep, clear water came, while for a greater distance than the eye could
-reach along its winding course was a far-stretching reservoir,
-lake-like, reed-bordered, and half-covered with wild-fowl.
-
-‘Here you see our greatest difficulty, Effingham, and our greatest
-triumph. When we took up this run a shallow stream ran in winter and
-spring, but in summer it was invariably dry. This exposed us to expense,
-even loss. So we resolved to construct a dam. We did so, at some cost in
-hired labour; a spring flood washed it away. Next year we tried again,
-and the same result followed. Then the neighbours pitied and “I told you
-so’d” us to such an extent that we felt that dam _must_ be made and
-rendered permanent. We had six months’ work at it last summer; during
-most of the time I did navvy work, wheeling my barrow up and down a
-plank like the others. It was a stiff job. I invented additions, and
-faced it with stone. That fine sheet of water is the result of it; I
-believe it will stand now till the millennium, or the alteration of the
-land laws.’
-
-‘I quite envy you,’ said Wilfred. ‘A conflict with natural forces is
-always exciting. I am quite of your opinion; the great advantage of this
-Australian life is that a man enjoys the permission of society to work
-with his hands as well as his head.’
-
-Leaving the water for an isolated wooden building in the neighbourhood
-of the offices, Mr. Hamilton opened the upper half of a stable-door and
-discovered to view a noble, dark chestnut thoroughbred in magnificent
-condition.
-
-‘Here is one of my daily tasks,’ said he, removing the gallant animal’s
-sheet and patting his neck. ‘In this case it is a labour of love, as I
-am passionately fond of horses, and have a theory of my own about
-breeding which I am trying to carry out. Isn’t he a beauty?’
-
-Wilfred, looking at the satin skin of the grand animal before him,
-thought he had rarely seen his equal.
-
-‘You observe,’ said Hamilton, ‘in this sire, if I mistake not,
-characteristics not often seen in English studs. Camerton combines the
-perfect symmetry, the beauty and matchless constitution of the desert
-Arab with the size and bone of the English thoroughbred.’
-
-‘He does give me that idea, precisely,’ said Wilfred. ‘Wonderful make
-and shape. His back rib has the cask-like roundness of the true Arab;
-and what legs and feet! Looking at him you see an enlarged Arab.’
-
-‘His grand-dam was a daughter of The Sheik, an Arab of the purest
-Seglawee strain of the Nejed, imported from India many years ago by a
-cavalry officer, whose charger he was. He has besides the Whisker,
-Gratis, and Emigrant blood. In him we have at once the horse of the new
-and of the old world—the size and strength of the Camerton type, the
-symmetry of the Arab, and such legs and feet as might have served
-Abdjar, the steed of Antar.’
-
-When they re-entered the cottage they saw Mr. Churbett, who had intended
-to go home that morning, but finding the witty Canon such pleasant
-reading, thought he would start in the afternoon, finally making up his
-mind to stay another day and leave punctually after breakfast. There was
-nothing to do—he observed—and no one to talk to, when he did get home,
-so there was the less reason for haste.
-
-‘You had better stay, Fred, and go with me to Yass,’ suggested Argyll.
-‘I am going there next week, and I daresay you have some business
-there.’
-
-‘I believe I have; indeed, I know that I have been putting off something
-old Billy Rockley blew me up about last month, and I’ll go in with you
-and get it over. But I won’t stay now. I’ll go to-morrow, or my
-stock-rider will think I’m lost and take to embezzling my bullocks,
-instead of stealing my neighbour’s calves, which is his duty to do. One
-must keep up discipline.’
-
-After lunch Wilfred mounted his ancient charger and departed along the
-track to Warbrok, Mr. Churbett volunteering to show him the way past
-divers snares for the unwary, yclept ‘turn-off’ roads.
-
-‘These two fellows,’ said he, ‘have no end of what they call duties to
-perform before nightfall, and can’t be spared of course; but I can spare
-myself easily, and give Duellist exercise besides.’
-
-Presently Mr. Churbett, who was a very neat figure, having assumed
-breeches and boots, appeared mounted upon a magnificent bay horse, the
-finest hackney, in appearance, which Wilfred had yet seen. A bright bay
-with black points, showing no white but a star in the centre of his
-broad forehead; he stood at least fifteen hands three inches in height,
-with all the appearance of high caste and courage. As they started he
-showed signs of impatience, and then, arching his neck, set off at a
-remarkably fast walk, which caused Barragon’s stock-horse jog to appear
-slow and ungraceful.
-
-‘What a glorious hackney!’ said Wilfred, half enviously. ‘Did you breed
-him?’
-
-‘No, don’t breed horses; too much expense and bother. Fools breed—that
-is, enthusiasts—and wise men buy. He’s a Wanderer, bred by Rowan of
-Pechelbah. Got him rather cheap about six months ago; gave
-five-and-twenty pounds for him. The man that _did_ breed him, of course,
-couldn’t afford to ride him; thought he had others as good at home,
-which I take leave to doubt.’
-
-‘I should think so! What a price for a horse of his figure—five years
-old, you say, and clean thoroughbred. A gift! Is he fast?’
-
-‘Pretty well. I shall run him for the Maiden Plate at Yass Races. And
-now, do you see that turn-off road? Well, don’t turn off; by and by you
-will come to another; follow it, and you will have no further chance of
-losing your way. I’ll say good-afternoon.’
-
-His amusing friend turned, and as Duellist’s hoofs died away in the
-distance, Wilfred took the old horse by the head and sent him along at a
-hand-gallop, only halting occasionally until, just as the dusk was
-impending, the far-gleaming waters of the lake came into view. Dick had
-arrived hours before, and had all his charge secured in the now
-creditable stock-yard. The absentee was welcomed with enthusiasm by the
-whole family, who appeared to think he had been away for months, to
-judge by the warmth of their greetings.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
- TOM GLENDINNING, STOCK-RIDER
-
-
-‘Come in at once, this moment, and tell us all about everybody,’ said
-Annabel; ‘tea is nearly ready, and we are hungry for news, and even just
-a little gossip. Have you enjoyed yourself and seen many new people?
-What a fine thing it is to be a man!’
-
-‘I have seen all the world, like the little bird that flew over the
-garden wall. I have enjoyed myself very much, have bought a few horses
-and many cattle, also spent a very pleasant evening at Benmohr. Where
-shall I begin?’
-
-‘Oh, about the people of course; you can come to the other things later
-on. People are the only topics of interest to us. And oh, what do you
-think? We have seen strangers too. More wonderful still, a lady. What
-will you give me if I describe her to you?’
-
-‘Don’t feel interested in a sketch of a lady visitor,’ said Wilfred. ‘A
-description of a good cheese-press, if you could find one, would be
-nearer the mark.’
-
-‘You would not speak in that way if you had seen Mrs. Snowden,’ said
-Rosamond, ‘unless you are very much changed.’
-
-‘She is a wonder, and a paragon, of course; did she grow indigenously?’
-
-‘She’s so sweet-looking,’ said Annabel impetuously; ‘she rode such a
-nice horse too, very well turned out, as you would say. She talks French
-and German; she has travelled, and been everywhere. And yet they have
-only a small station, and she sometimes has to do housework—there now!’
-
-‘What a wonderful personage! And monsieur—is he worthy of so much
-perfection?’
-
-‘He’s a gentlemanlike man, rather good-looking, who made himself
-agreeable. Rosamond has been asked to go and stay with them. Really, the
-place seems _full_ of nice people. Did you see or hear of any more?’
-
-‘Yes; now I come to think of it, I heard of two more, great friends of
-Argyll and Hamilton and of Mr. Churbett, whom I saw there. Their names
-are D’Oyley; Bryson, the younger brother, is a poet; at any rate these
-are some of his verses which Mr. Churbett handed to me _apropos_ of our
-lives here, shutting out all thoughts but the austerely practical. Yes;
-I haven’t lost them.’
-
-‘So you talk of cheese-presses and bring home poetry! Is that your idea
-of the practical? I vote that Rosamond reads them out while we are
-having tea. Gracious! Ever so many verses.’
-
-‘They seem original; and not so many of one’s neighbours could write
-them in any part of the world,’ said Rosamond. ‘I will read them out, if
-Annabel will promise not to interrupt in the midst of the most pathetic
-part.’
-
-‘I am all attention,’ said Annabel, throwing herself into an easy-chair.
-‘I wonder what sort of a man Mr. D’Oyley is, and what coloured eyes he
-has. I like to know all about authors.’
-
-‘Never saw him; go on, Rosamond,’ said Wilfred, and the elder sister,
-thus adjured, commenced—
-
- A FRAGMENT
-
- Deem we our waking dreams
- But shadows from the deep;
- And do the offspring of the mind
- In barrenness descend
- To an eternal sleep?
-
- Each print of Beauty’s feet
- Leads upward to her throne;
- For every thought by conscience bless’d,
- Benignant virtue yields
- A jewel from her zone.
- * * * * *
- The rainbow hath its cloud,
- The seasons gird the sphere,
- We know their time and place, but thou,
- Whence art thou, Child of Light,
- And what thy mission here?
-
- Like meteor stars that stream
- Adown the dark obscure,
- Didst thou descend from angel homes,
- To bless with angel joys
- Abodes less bright and pure?
-
- Thy beauty and thy love
- May mortal transports share,
- Aspire with quivering wings to reach
- The spirits of thy thought
- That breathe celestial air.
-
- Thou art no child of Earth.
- Earth’s fairest children weep
- That o’er affection’s sweetest lyre,
- By phantom minstrels stirred,
- Unhallowed strains will sweep.
-
- While zephyr-wings may guard,
- The rose its bloom retains;
- The autumn blast o’er sere leaves wails;
- Upon the naked stem
- The thorn alone remains.
- * * * * *
- The sun-rays scattered far
- Seek now the parent breast,
- In gentler glory gathering o’er
- The floating isles that speck
- The landscape of the West.
-
- Mute visitants! their smiles
- A fleeting welcome bear,
- Light on thy form the glad beams play,
- And mingling with its folds
- Curl down thy golden hair.
-
- Methinks, as standing thus
- Against the glowing sky,
- That shadowy form, faint-tinged with gold,
- And raptured face, recall
- A dream of days gone by.
-
- Glimpses of shadows past,
- That boyhood’s mind pursued,
- In curious wonder shaping forth
- Its visions of the pure,
- The beautiful, the good.
-
- Till, like the moon’s full orb
- Above the silent sea,
- One Form expanding bright arose,
- And fancy’s mirror showed
- An image like to thee.
-
- Of headlong hopes that spurned
- The curb of destiny,
- When my soul asked what most it craved,
- Still, still, the mirror showed
- An image like to thee.
-
-‘I think they are beautiful and uncommon,’ said Annabel decidedly; ‘only
-I don’t understand what he means.’
-
-‘Obscurity is a quality he has in common with distinguished latter-day
-poets,’ said Wilfred. ‘Commencing with the ideal, he has finished with
-the real and personal, as happens much in life. I think “A Fragment” is
-refined, thoughtful, and truly poetic in feeling.’
-
-‘So do I,’ agreed Rosamond. ‘Mr. Bryson D’Oyley is no every-day
-squatter, I was going to say, but as all our neighbours seem to be
-distinguished people, we must agree that he is fully up to the average
-of cattlemen, as they call themselves.’
-
-‘I _must_ tell Mrs. Snowden about the cheese-press simile. You will be
-ready to commit suicide after you have seen her.’
-
-‘Then I must keep out of her way. Rosamond, suppose you sing something.
-I have not heard a piano since I left.’
-
-‘Mrs. Snowden tried it, and sang “Je n’aimerai, jamais.” Her voice was
-not wonderful, but it is easy to see what thorough training she has
-had.’
-
-‘There is a forfeit for any one who mentions Mrs. Snowden again this
-evening,’ said Mrs. Effingham. ‘We must not have her spread out over our
-daily life, fascinating as I grant her to be. Beatrice and Annabel have
-been learning a new duet, which they will sing after Rosamond. I think
-you will like it, and this is such a charming room to sing in.’
-
-‘That’s one advantage belonging to this old house,’ said Rosamond, ‘our
-music-room is perfect. It is quite a pleasure to hear one’s voice in it;
-and when we _do_ furnish the dining-room, if we are ever inclined to
-give a party—a most unlikely thing at present—it is large enough to hold
-all the people in the district.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-During the following week the men of the family occupied themselves in
-branding and regulating the new cattle. A portion of these, having young
-calves at foot, were at once amalgamated with the dairy herd. This being
-accomplished, it was apparent that some division must be made between
-the old and the new cattle. There were too many of them to be mixed up
-in one herd, and the steers, in close quarters, were not good for the
-health of the cows and smaller cattle. From all this it resulted that
-the oracle (otherwise Dick), being consulted, made response that a
-stock-rider must be procured who would look after all the cattle, other
-than the milch kine, and ‘break them into the Run.’
-
-Wilfred was inclined to be opposed to this project, but reflected that
-if any were lost, it would soon amount to more than a man’s wages; also,
-that the labour of the dairy, with the rapid increase of the O’Desmond
-cattle, was becoming heavier, and required all Guy’s and Andrew’s
-attention to keep it in order.
-
-‘For what time would a stock-rider be required?’ he asked.
-
-‘Why, you see, sir,’ said Dick, ‘these here cattle, if they’re not
-watched for the next three months, may give us the slip, and be back
-among the ranges, at Mick’s place, where they was bred, afore you could
-say Jack Robinson. You and I couldn’t leave the dairy, and the calves
-coming so fast, if we was never to see ’em again.’
-
-‘I understand,’ said Wilfred; ‘but how are we to pick up a stock-rider
-such as you describe? I suppose we shall have to pay him forty or fifty
-pounds a year.’
-
-‘I don’t know as we should, sir. There’s a man, if we could get hold on
-him, as would jest do for the work and the place. I heard of him being
-in Yass last week, finishing his cheque, and if you’ll let me away
-to-morrow, I’ll fetch him back with me next day, most likely. He’ll come
-reasonable for wages; he used to live here, in the old Colonel’s time,
-and knows every inch of the country.’
-
-‘Very well, Dick, you can go. I daresay we can manage the dairy for a
-day.’
-
-On the next morning, after milking-time, Mr. Richard Evans presented
-himself in review order, when, holding his mare by the bridle, he asked
-for the advance of two pounds sterling, for expenses, and so on.
-
-‘You see, I want a pair of boots, Mr. Wilfred, and I may as well get ’em
-in Yass while I’m about it.’
-
-‘Oh, certainly,’ assented Wilfred, thinking that he never saw the
-veteran look more respectable. ‘The air of Warbrok agrees with you,
-Dick; I never saw you look better.’
-
-‘Work allers did agree with me, sir,’ he answered modestly, unhitching
-his bridle with a slight appearance of haste, as Mrs. Evans came
-labouring up and glanced suspiciously at the notes which he placed in
-his pocket.
-
-‘I hope he’ll look as well when he comes back,’ said she, with a meaning
-glance; ‘but if he and that old rascal Tom gets together, they’ll ——’
-
-‘Never you mind, old woman,’ interrupted Dick, riding off, ‘you look
-after them young pigs and give ’em the skim milk reg’lar. Tom
-Glendinning and I’ll be here to-morrow night, if I can find him.’
-
-Mrs. Evans raised her hand in what might be accepted as a warning or a
-threatening gesture, and Wilfred, wondering at the old woman’s manner,
-betook himself to his daily duties.
-
-‘A grumbling old creature,’ he soliloquised. ‘I don’t wonder that Dick
-is glad to get away from her tongue. She ought to be pleased that he
-should have a holiday occasionally.’
-
-On the morning following Richard Evans’s departure, extra exertion was
-entailed upon Wilfred and Guy, as also upon Andrew Cargill, by reason of
-their having to divide the milking of his proportion of the cows among
-them. As Dick was a rapid and exhaustive operator, his absence was felt,
-if not regretted. As they returned from the troublesome task, a full
-hour later than usual, Wilfred consoled himself by the thought that the
-next day would find this indispensable personage at his post.
-
-‘I wadna hae thocht,’ confessed Andrew, ‘that the auld, rough-tongued
-carle’s absence could hae made siccan a camstairy. But he’s awfu’ skeely
-wi’ thae wild mountain queys, and kens brawly hoo tae daiker them. It’s
-no said for naught that the children o’ the warld are wiser in their
-generation than the children o’ licht. He’ll be surely back the morn’s
-morn.’
-
-Explaining Dick’s eminence in the milking-yard by this classification,
-and undoubtedly including himself in the latter category, Andrew betook
-himself to an outer apartment, where the scrupulous Jeanie had provided
-full means of ablution.
-
-The next day passed without the appearance of the confidential retainer.
-Another, and yet another. In default of his aid, Wilfred exerted himself
-to the utmost and succeeded in getting through the ordinary work; yet a
-sense of incompleteness pervaded the establishment. Ready-witted,
-tireless, and perfect in all the minor attainments of Australian country
-life, Dick was a man to be missed in a hundred ways in an establishment
-like Warbrok Chase.
-
-New cows had calved and required milking for the first time. One of them
-had shown unexpected ferocity; indeed, knocking over Andrew, and
-disabling his right arm.
-
-‘The old fellow may have had an accident,’ suggested Mr. Effingham; ‘I
-suppose such things occur on these wild roads; or he _may_ have indulged
-in an extra glass or two.’
-
-‘I said as much to that old wife of his,’ said Wilfred, ‘but she
-grumbled something about the devil taking care of his own; he would be
-back when he had had his “burst”—whatever that means—and that he and
-that old villain Tom Glendinning would turn up at the end of this week
-or next, whenever their money was done.’
-
-‘Why, if there isn’t old Dick coming along the road now,’ said Guy;
-‘that’s his mare, anyhow, I know the switch of her tail. There’s a man
-on a grey horse with him.’
-
-In truth, as the two horsemen came nearer along the undulating forest
-road, it became apparent that their regretted Richard, and no other, was
-returning to his family and friends. His upright seat in the saddle
-could be plainly distinguished as he approached on the old bay mare. The
-London dealer’s phrase of a ‘good ride and drive horse’ held good in her
-case, as she came along at her usual pace of a quick-stepping walk, with
-her head down and her hind legs brought well under her at every stride.
-The other horseman rode behind, not caring apparently to quicken the
-unmistakable ‘stockman’s jog’ of his wiry, high-boned grey horse. His
-lounging seat was in strong contrast to his companion’s erect bearing,
-but it told of the stock-rider’s long days and nights passed in the
-saddle. Not unlike the courser of Mazeppa was his hardy steed in more
-than one respect.
-
- Shaggy and swift and strong of limb,
- All Tartar-like he carried him.
-
-The Arab blood, which old Tom’s charger displayed, prevented any
-particular shagginess; but in the bright eye, the lean head, the sure
-unfaltering step, as well as in the power of withstanding every kind of
-climate, upon occasion, upon severely restricted sustenance, ‘Boney’
-might have vied with the Hetman’s, or any other courser that
-
- ... grazed at ease
- Beside the swift Borysthenes.
-
-Such in appearance, and so mounted, were the horsemen who now
-approached. Their mode of accost was characteristic. Dick rode up
-straight till within a few paces of his employer, when he briskly
-dismounted, and stood erect, making the ordinary salute.
-
-The effects of the week’s dissipation were plainly visible in the
-veteran’s countenance, gallant as were his efforts to combine
-intrepidity with the respectful demeanour of discipline. A bruise under
-one eye, with other discolorations, somewhat marred the effect of his
-steady gaze, while a tremulous muscular motion could not be concealed.
-
-‘How is this, Evans?’ said his commander; ‘you have broken your leave,
-and put us to much inconvenience; what have you been doing with yourself
-all this time?’
-
-‘Got drunk, Captain!’ replied the veteran, with military brevity, and
-another salute of regulation correctness.
-
-‘I am sorry to hear it, Richard,’ said Mr. Effingham. ‘You appear to
-have had a skirmish also, and to have suffered in engagement. I daresay
-it will act as a caution to you for the future.’
-
-‘Did me a deal of good—begging your honour’s pardon—though I didn’t
-ought to have promised to come back next day. I was that narvous at
-breakfast afore I went that I couldn’t scarce abear to hear the old
-woman’s voice. I’ll be as right as a Cheshire recruit till Christmas
-now. But I’ve done the outpost duty I was told off for, and brought Tom
-Glendinning. He’s willin’ to engage for ten shillin’ a week and his
-keep, and his milkin’s worth that any day.’
-
-The individual addressed moved up his elderly steed, and touching his
-hat with a faint flavour of the gentleman’s servant habitude long past,
-fixed upon the group the gleaming eyes which surmounted his hollow
-cheek. The face itself was bronzed, well-nigh blackened out of all
-resemblance to that of a white man. Trousers of a kind of fustian,
-buttressed with leather under the knees and other places (apparently for
-resisting the friction involved by a life in the saddle), protected his
-attenuated limbs. The frame of the man was lean and shrunken. He had a
-worn and haggard look, as if labour, privation, and the indulgence of
-evil passions had wrecked the frail tenement of a soul. Yet was there a
-wiry look about the figure—a dauntless glitter in the keen eyes which
-told that their possessor could yet play a man’s part on earth before he
-went to his allotted place. A footsore dog with a rough coat and no
-particular tail had by this time limped up to the party and lay down
-under the horses’ feet.
-
-‘Are you willing to engage with me on the terms mentioned by Richard
-Evans?’ asked Mr. Effingham. ‘You are acquainted with this place, I
-believe?’
-
-‘I was here,’ answered the ancient stock-rider, ‘when the Colonel first
-got a grant of Warbrok from the Crown. A lot of us Government men was
-sent up with the overseer, Ben Grindham, to clear a paddock for corn,
-where all that horehound grows now. We had a row over the rations—he
-drove us like niggers, and starved us to boot (more by token, it’s
-little we had to ate)—and big Jim Baker knocked his head in with an axe,
-blast him! He was always a fool. I seen him carried to the old hut where
-you see them big stones—part of the chimney, they wor.’
-
-‘Good heavens!’ said Wilfred. ‘And what was done?’
-
-‘Jim was hanged, all reg’lar, as soon as they could get him back to
-Sydney. We was all “turned in to Government,”’ said the chronicler.
-‘After a bit, the Colonel got me back for groom, so I stayed here till
-my time was out. I know the old place (I had ought to), every rod of it,
-back to the big Bindarra.’
-
-‘You can milk well, I believe?’
-
-‘He can do most things, sir,’ said Dick, comprehensively guaranteeing
-his friend, and mounting his mare, he motioned to the old fellow, who
-had just commenced to emit a derisive chuckle from his toothless gums,
-to follow him. ‘If you’ll s’cuse us now, sir, we’ll go home and get
-freshened up a bit. Tom won’t be right till he’s had a sleep. He’s
-hardly had his boots off for a week. You’ll see us at the yard in the
-morning all right, sir, never fear.’
-
-‘Well, I’m glad you’ve come back, Dick,’ said Guy; ‘we’ve missed you
-awfully. The heifers are too much for Andrew. However, it’s all right
-now, so the sooner you get home and make yourself comfortable the
-better.’
-
-This suggestion, as the ancient prodigals ambled away together, caused
-old Dick to grin doubtfully. ‘I’ve got to have it out with my old woman
-yet, sir.’
-
-Whatever might have occurred in the progress of a difficult explanation
-with Mrs. Evans, the result was so far satisfactory that on the
-following morning, when Wilfred went down to the milking-yard, he found
-the pair in full possession of the situation, while the number of calves
-in companionship with their mothers, as well as the state of the
-brimming milk-cans, testified to the early hour at which work had
-commenced.
-
-Dick had regained his easy supremacy, as with a mixture of fearlessness
-and diplomacy he exercised a Rarey-like influence over the wilder cows,
-lately introduced to the milking-yard.
-
-His companion, evidently free of the guild, was causing the milk to come
-streaming out of the udder of a newly calved heifer, as if by the mere
-touch of his fingers, the bottom of his bucket rattling the while like a
-small-sized hailstorm.
-
-Greeting the old man cheerfully, and making him a compliment on his
-milking, Wilfred was surprised at the alteration in his appearance and
-manner.
-
-The half-reckless, defiant tone was replaced by a quiet bearing and
-respectful manner. The expression of the face was changed. The eyes,
-keen and restless, had lost their savage gleam. An alert step, a ready
-discharge of every duty, with the smallest details of which he seemed
-instinctively acquainted, had succeeded the lounging bearing of the
-preceding day. Wilfred thought he had never seen a man so markedly
-changed in so short a time.
-
-‘You both seem improved, Dick. I suppose the morning air has had
-something to do with it.’
-
-‘Yes, sir—thank God,’ said he, ‘I’m always that fresh after a good
-night’s sleep, when I’ve had a bit of a spree, that I could begin again
-quite flippant. Old Tom had a goodish cheque this time, and was at it a
-week afore I came in. _He looked_ rather shickerry. But he’s as right as
-a toucher now, and you won’t lose no calves while _he’s_ here, I’ll go
-bail. He can stay in my hut. My old woman and he knowed one another
-years back, and she’ll cook and wash for him, though they do growl a bit
-at times.’
-
-It soon became apparent, making due deductions for periodical
-aberrations, that Mr. Effingham possessed in Dick Evans and Tom
-Glendinning two rarely efficient servitors. They knew everything, they
-did everything; they never required to be reminded of any duty
-whatsoever, being apparently eager to discover matters for the advantage
-of the establishment, in which they appeared to take an interest not
-inferior to that of the proprietor. Indeed, they not infrequently
-volunteered additional services for their employer’s benefit.
-
-The season had now advanced, until the fervid height of midsummer was
-near, and still no hint of aught but continuous prosperity was given to
-the emigrant family.
-
-Though the sun flamed high in the unspecked firmament, yet from time to
-time showers of tropical suddenness kept the earth cool and moist,
-refreshing the herbage, and causing the late-growing maize to flourish
-greenly, in the dark unexhausted soil. Their wheat crop had been reaped
-with but little assistance from any but the members and retainers of the
-family. And now a respectable stack occupied jointly, with one of oaten
-hay, the modest stack-yard, or haggard, as old Tom called it.
-
-The cheese operations developed, until row upon row of rich
-orange-coloured cheeses filled the shelves of the dairy.
-
-The garden bore token of Andrew’s industry in the pruned and renovated
-fruit trees, which threw out fresh leaves and branches; while the moist
-open season had been favourable to the ‘setting’ of a much more than
-ordinary yield of fruit. The crops of vegetables, of potatoes, of other
-more southern esculents looked, to use Andrew’s phrase, ‘just
-unco-omon.’ Such vegetables, Dick confessed, had not been seen in it
-since the days of the Colonel, who kept two gardeners and a spare boy or
-two constantly at work. Gooseberries, currants, and the English fruits
-generally, were coming on, leading to the belief that an extensive jam
-manufacture would once more employ Jeanie and the well-remembered copper
-stew-pan—brought all the way from Surrey.
-
-The verandah was once more a ‘thing of beauty’ in its shade of ‘green
-gloom.’ The now protected climbers had glorified the wreathed pillars;
-again gay with the purple racemes of the Wistaria and the deep orange
-flowers of the _Bignonia venusta_. The lawn was thickly carpeted with
-grass; the gravelled paths were raked and levelled by Andrew, whenever
-he could gain an hour’s respite from dairy and cheese-room.
-
-The increase of the cattle had been of itself considerable, while the
-steers of the Donnelly contingents fattened on the newly matured
-grasses, which now commenced to send forth that sweetest of all summer
-perfumes, the odour of the new-mown meadows.
-
-The small but gay parterres, which the girls and Mrs. Effingham kept,
-with some difficulty, free from weeds, were lovely to the eye as
-contrasted with the bright green sward of the lawn.
-
-The wildfowl dived and flew upon the lake, furnishing forth for a
-while—as in obedience to Mr. Effingham’s wishes a close season was
-kept—unwonted supplies to the larder.
-
-All the minor living possessions of the family appeared to bask and
-revel in the sunshine of the general prosperity. The greyhounds,
-comfortably housed and well fed, had reared a family, and were
-commencing to master the science of killing kangaroos without exposing
-themselves to danger.
-
-The Jersey cow, Daisy, had produced a miniature copy of herself, in a
-fawn-coloured heifer calf, while her son, ‘The Yerl of Jersey,’ as
-Andrew had christened him, had become a thick-set, pugnacious, important
-personage, pawing the earth, and bellowing unnecessarily, as if sensible
-of the exalted position he was destined to take, as a pure bred Jersey
-bull, under two years of age, at the forthcoming Yass Agricultural Show.
-
-As the days grew longer, and the daily tasks of labour became less
-exciting in the neighbourhood, as well as at Warbrok Chase, much
-occasional visiting sprang up. The stable was once more capable of
-modest entertainment, though far from emulating the hospitalities of the
-past, when, in the four-in-hand drag of the reigning regiment, the
-fashionables of the day thought worth while to rattle over the unmade
-roads for the pleasure of a week’s shooting on the lake by day, with the
-alternative of the Colonel’s peerless claret by night. Andrew’s boy,
-Duncan, a solemn lad of fourteen, whom his occasionally impatient sire
-used to scold roundly, was encouraged to be in attendance to receive the
-stranger cavalry.
-
-For one afternoon, Fred Churbett’s Grey Surrey, illustrious as having
-won the Ladies’ Bag two years running at the Yass Races, and, as such,
-equal in provincial turf society to a Leger winner, would canter
-daintily up to the garden gate, followed perhaps at no great interval by
-Charlie Hamilton’s chestnut, Red Deer, in training for the Yass Maiden
-Plate, and O’Desmond’s Wellesley, to ensure whose absolute safety he
-brought his groom. On the top of all this Captain and Mrs. Snowden would
-arrive, until the dining-room, half filled with the fashion of the
-district, did not look too large after all.
-
-By degrees, rising to the exigencies of his position, Wilfred managed to
-get hold of a couple of ladies’ horses, by which sensible arrangement at
-least three of the family were able to enjoy a ride together, also to
-return Mrs. Snowden’s call, and edify themselves with the conversation
-of that amusing woman of the world.
-
-And the more Mr. Effingham and his sons saw of the men composing the
-little society which shared with them the very considerable district in
-which they resided, the more they had reason to like and respect them.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The blessed Christmastide was approaching. How different was it in
-appearance from the well-remembered season in their own beloved home! A
-thousand reminiscences came rushing across the fields of memory, as the
-Effinghams thought of the snow-clad hedges, the loaded roofs, the
-magical stillness of the frost-arrested air. Nor were all the features
-of the season attractive. Heavy wraps, closed doors, through which, in
-spite of heaped-up fires, keen draught and invisible chills would
-intrude; the long evenings, the dark afternoons, the protracted nights,
-which needed all the frolic spirits of youth, the affection of home
-life, and the traditional revelry of the season to render endurable.
-
-How different were all things in this strange, far land!
-
-Such soft airs, such fresh, unclouded morns, such far-reaching views
-across the purple mountains, such breeze-tossed masses of forest
-greenery, such long, unclouded days were theirs, in this the first
-midsummer of what Annabel chose to call ‘Australia Felix.’
-
-‘I should have just the same feeling,’ she said, ‘if I lived in the
-desert under favourable circumstances. Not the horrid sandy, simoomy
-part of it, of course. But some of those lovely green spots, where there
-is a grey walled-in town, an old, old well, thousands of years old, and
-such lovely horses standing at the doors of the tents. Why can’t we have
-our horses broken in to stand like that, instead of having to send
-Duncan for them, who takes hours? And then we could ride out by
-moonlight and _feel_ the grand silence of the desert; and at sunset the
-grey old chiefs and the maidens and the camels and the dear little
-children would come to the village well, like Rebekah or Rachel—which
-was it? I shall go to Palestine some day, and be a Princess, like Lady
-Hester Stanhope. This is only the first stage.’
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
- MR. WILLIAM ROCKLEY OF YASS
-
-
-Upon his next visit to The Chase, which took place shortly after this
-conversation, the Reverend Harley Sternworth was accompanied by a
-pleasant-looking, alert, middle-aged personage, who, descending from the
-dog-cart with alacrity, was introduced as Mr. William Rockley of Yass.
-
-‘Bless my soul!’ said this gentleman, looking eagerly around, ‘what a
-fine property! Never saw it look so well before. I’m delighted to find
-it has got into such good hands; neglected in Colonel Warleigh’s time,
-even worse since by rascally tenants. Nearly bought it myself, but
-couldn’t spare the money. Splendid investment; finest land in the whole
-district, finest water, finest grass. I ought to know.’
-
-‘It is most gratifying to hear a gentleman of your experience speak so
-highly of Warbrok,’ said Mr. Effingham. ‘Our good friend here has been
-the making of our fortunes.’
-
-‘Just like him! just like him!’ said the new-comer, lighting a cigar and
-puffing out smoke and sentences with equal impetuosity. ‘Always
-attending to other people’s business; might have made his own fortune,
-two or three times over, if he’d taken my advice.’
-
-‘I know some one else who is tarred with the same brush,’ returned the
-parson. ‘Who bought in young Harding’s place the other day, when his
-mortgagee sold him up, and re-sold it to him on the most Utopian terms?
-But shouldn’t you like to walk round while you smoke your cigar this
-morning? We can pay our respects to the ladies afterwards.’
-
-‘Just the very thing. Many a time I’ve been here in the old days. What a
-change! What a change! Bless my soul, how well the garden looks; never
-expected to see it bloom again! And the old house!—one would almost
-think Mrs. Warleigh was alive.’
-
-‘The best of wives and mothers,’ said Mr. Sternworth with feeling. ‘What
-a true lady and good Christian she was! If she had lived, there would
-have been a different household.’
-
-‘Daresay, daresay,’ said Mr. Rockley meditatively. ‘Precious rascals,
-the sons; hadn’t much of a chance, perhaps. Wild lot here in those days,
-eh? So I see you have had that mound moved from the back of the cellar.’
-
-‘We couldn’t think what it was,’ said Mr. Effingham. ‘The excavation
-must have been made long ago.’
-
-‘Not heard the story, then? Wonderful how some secrets are kept. Never
-mind, Sternworth, I won’t tell Captain Effingham the _other_ one. Randal
-Warleigh, the eldest son, was one of the wildest devils that even _this_
-country ever saw. Clever, handsome, but dissipated; reckless,
-unprincipled, in fact. Old man and he constantly quarrelling. Not that
-the Colonel was all that a father should have been, but he drank like a
-gentleman. Never touched anything before dinner. He finished his bottle
-of port then, and sometimes another, but no morning spirit-drinking.
-Would as soon have smoked a black pipe or worn a beard. It came to this
-at last, that when he went away he locked up sideboard and cellar,
-forbidding the housekeeper to give his sons any liquor.’
-
-‘The Colonel left home for a week in Yass, when Randal arrived with some
-cattle and two fellow-roysterers. No grog available. Naturally savage.
-Swore he would burn the old rookery down before he would submit to be
-treated so. Behaved like a madman. Ordered up his men, got picks and
-shovels, dug a tunnel under the cellar wall, and helped himself, _ad
-libitum_, to wine and spirits.’
-
-‘The governor’s a soldier,’ he said; ‘I’ve given him a lesson in civil
-engineering. Here’s his health, boys!’
-
-‘What an outrage!’ said Mr. Effingham.
-
-‘You would have said so if you had seen Warbrok when the old gentleman
-returned. Every soul on the place—all convict servants in those days—had
-been drunk for a week. Cellar half-emptied, house in confusion. Randal
-and his friends had betaken themselves, luckily, the day before, to the
-Snowy River, or there might have been murder done. As it was——’
-
-‘I think we may spare our friend any more chronicles of the good old
-times, Rockley; let us go down and see the dairy cows, those that Harry
-O’Desmond sold him.’
-
-‘All right!’ said his friend good-humouredly, accepting the change of
-subject. ‘I daresay Harry O’ had his price, but they _are_ the best
-cattle in the country.’
-
-Mr. Rockley was equally hearty and complimentary as to the live stock.
-Didn’t think he had ever seen finer cows, finer grass; he believed Mr.
-Effingham, if he went on as he was doing, would make a fortune by
-dairying. If old Colonel Warleigh had not been ignorant of rural
-matters, and his elder sons infernal low-lived scoundrels, a fortune
-would have been made before at Warbrok. Nothing could have prevented
-that family from becoming rich, with this estate for a home farm, and
-two splendid stations on Monaro, but the grossest mismanagement,
-incompetence, and vicious tendencies—he might say depravity—of course,
-he meant on the part of the young men. The Colonel was indiscreet—in
-fact, a d——d old fool—but everybody respected him.
-
-The three gentlemen completed the round of the establishment, during
-which progress their mutual friend had praised the stock-yard, the wheat
-stack, the lake, the garden, and had pretty well exhausted his
-cigar-case. It was high noon in Warbrok, and the shelter of the broad
-verandah, which he eulogised by declaring it to be the finest verandah
-he had ever been under in his life, was distinctly grateful.
-
-Upon his introduction to Mrs. Effingham and the young ladies, he was
-afflicted with an inability to express adequately his respectful
-admiration of the whole party. Everything elicited a cordial panegyric.
-It was apparent, even without the aid of a few guarded observations from
-Harley Sternworth, that Mr. Rockley’s compliments arose from no weak
-intention of flattery, no foolish fondness or indiscriminate praise. It
-was simply the outpouring of a spring of benevolence which brimmed over
-in an important organ, which, for greater convenience in localising the
-emotions, is known as the heart. Longing to do good to all mankind, with
-perceptions of rare insight and keenness, much of Mr. Rockley’s
-philanthropy was necessarily confined to words. But when the opportunity
-arrived of translating good wishes into good deeds, few—very few—of the
-sons of men embarked in that difficult negotiation with half the
-pleasure, patience, and thoroughness of William Rockley.
-
-The friends had not intended to stay the night, the time of a business
-man being limited, but upon invitation being pressingly made, first by
-Mrs. Effingham and then by the young ladies, one after another, Mr.
-Rockley declared that he couldn’t resist such allurements, but that they
-must make a cruelly early start and get back to Yass to breakfast next
-day. He believed they would see him there often. Mrs. Rockley had not
-had the pleasure of calling upon Mrs. Effingham, because she had been
-away in Sydney visiting her children at school, as well as an aunt who
-was very ill—was always ill, he added impatiently. But she would drive
-over and see them, most likely next week; and whenever Mrs. Effingham
-and the young ladies came to Yass, or the Captain and his sons, they
-must make his house their home—indeed, he would be deeply offended if he
-heard of their going to an hotel.
-
-‘Well, really I’m afraid——’
-
-‘My dear sir,’ interrupted Mr. Rockley, ‘of course you meant what you
-said about the need of recreation for young people. Your sons have not
-had any since you came here, except an odd slap at a flock of ducks—and
-these Lake William birds are pretty shy. Then the ladies have hardly
-seen any one in the district, except the half-dozen men that have been
-to call. Don’t you suppose it’s natural that they should like to know
-the world they’ve come to live in?’
-
-‘We are such a large party, Mr. Rockley,’ said Mrs. Effingham, who felt
-the necessity of being represented at this important council. ‘It is
-extremely kind of you, but——’
-
-‘But look here, Mrs. Effingham,’ interrupted Mr. Rockley with fiery
-impatience, so evidently habitual that she could not for a moment
-consider it to be disrespectful, ‘don’t you think it probable, in the
-nature of things, that you may visit Yass—which is your county town,
-remember—at the time of the races? All the world will be going. It’s a
-time of year when there is nothing to do—as the parson here will tell
-you. There will be balls, picnics, and parties for the young
-ladies—everything, in fact. _You must go_, you see that, surely? You’ll
-be the only family of position in the country-side that won’t be there.
-And if you go and don’t make my house your home, instead of a noisy,
-rackety hotel, why—I’ll never speak to one of you again.’
-
-Here Mr. Rockley closed his rapidly delivered address, with a look of
-stern determination, which almost frightened Mrs. Effingham.
-
-‘You will really offend my good friend and his most amiable and
-hospitable lady if you do not accept his invitation,’ said Mr.
-Sternworth. ‘It is hardly an ordinary race-meeting so much as a
-periodical social gathering, of which a little racing (as in most
-English communities, and there never was one more thoroughly British
-than this) is the ostensible _raison d’être_.’
-
-‘Well, Howard, for the young people’s sake, we really must think of it,’
-said Mrs. Effingham, answering, lest her husband, in distrust of a
-colonial gathering, might definitely decline. ‘There will be time enough
-to apprise Mrs. Rockley before the event.’
-
-‘My wife will write to you when I get home,’ said Mr. Rockley, ‘and
-explain matters more fully than I can do.—Everything goes off pleasantly
-at our annual holiday, doesn’t it, Harley?’
-
-‘So much so, that in my office of priest I have never had occasion to
-enter my protest. The people need a respite from the toils and
-privations of their narrow home world, almost more than we do.’
-
-The evening passed most pleasantly. The parson and the soldier talked
-over old army days. While Mr. Rockley, who had been a squatter before
-finally settling down at Yass as principal merchant and banker, gave
-Wilfred and Guy practical advice. Then he assured Mrs. Effingham that at
-any time when she or the young ladies required change, they had only to
-write to Mrs. Rockley—or come, indeed, without writing—and make their
-house a home for as long as ever it suited them. Subsequently he
-declared that he had never heard any music in the least degree to be
-compared to the duet which Rosamond and Annabel executed for his
-especial benefit. He charmed Mrs. Effingham by telling her that her son
-Wilfred was the most promising and sensible young man he had ever
-noticed as a beginner in the bush, and must infallibly do great things.
-Lastly, he begged that he might be provided with a cup of coffee at
-daylight, as, if he and Mr. Sternworth were not at Yass by
-breakfast-time, dreadful things might happen to the whole district.
-Annabel declared that she would get up and make it for him herself.
-Their visitors then retired for the night, all hands being in a high
-state of mutual appreciation.
-
-‘Your friend seems a most genial and sterling person, Harley,’ said Mr.
-Effingham, as they indulged in a final stroll up the verandah, after the
-general departure. ‘Is he always so complimentary?’
-
-‘He can be extremely the reverse, upon occasion; but he is, perhaps, the
-man of all others in whose good feeling I have the most undoubting
-faith. Under that impetuous, explosive manner, the outcome of a fervid,
-uncompromising nature, he carries an extraordinary talent for affairs,
-and one of the most generous hearts ever granted to mortal man. He has
-the soul of the Caliph Haroun Alraschid, and has secretly done more good
-deeds, to my knowledge, in this district than all the rest of us put
-together. His correct taste has enabled him to appreciate all my dear
-children here. From this time forth you may reckon upon a powerful,
-untiring friend in William Rockley.’
-
-‘I know _one_ friend, Harley,’ said Effingham as their hands met in a
-parting grasp, ‘who has been more than a brother to me in my hour of
-need. We can never divide the gratitude which is your due from me and
-mine.’
-
-‘Pooh! pooh! a man wants more friends than one, especially in Australia,
-where a season of adversity—which means a dry one—may be hanging over
-him; and a better one than William Rockley will be to you, henceforth,
-no man ever saw or heard of. Good-night!’
-
-So passed the happy days of the first early summer-time at Warbrok—days
-which knew no change until the great festival of Christmas approached,
-which closes the year in all England’s dependencies with hallowed
-revelry and honoured mirth. Christmas was imminent. The 20th of December
-had arrived; a day of mingled joy and sorrow, as more freshly, vividly
-came back the buried memories of old days, the echo of the lost chimes
-of English Christmas bells. But in spite of such natural feelings, the
-advent of Christmas was not suffered to pass without tokens of gladness
-and services of thanksgiving.
-
-It had been decided to invite Messrs. Hamilton and Argyll, with Mr.
-Churbett and Mr. Forbes, to join the modest family festivities on this
-occasion. Old Tom had been duly despatched with the important missives,
-and the invitations were frankly accepted.
-
-On the 24th of December, therefore, late in the afternoon, which is the
-regulation hour for calling in Australian country society, the visitor
-being aware that he is expected to stay all night, and not desiring,
-unless he is _very_ young, to have more than an hour to dispose of
-before dinner, the gentlemen aforesaid rode up. They had met by
-appointment and made the expedition together.
-
- * * * * *
-
-‘Fancy this being Christmas Day!’ exclaimed Annabel, as—the
-time-honoured greetings being uttered—the whole party disposed
-themselves comfortably around the breakfast-table. ‘And what a lovely
-fresh morning! Not a hot-wind day, as old Dick said it would be. It
-makes me shiver when I think of how we were wrapped up this time last
-year.’
-
-‘Are you certain it _is_ Christmas, Miss Annabel?’ said Fred Churbett;
-‘I doubt it, because of the absence of holly and snow, and old women and
-school children, and waits and the parish beadle—all the belongings of
-our forefathers. There _must_ be some mistake. The sun is too fast,
-depend upon it. I must write to the _Times_.’
-
-‘Old Dick brought a load of scarlet-flowering bushes from the hills
-yesterday,’ said Rosamond, ‘with which he solemnly decorated his hut and
-our verandah pillars. He wished to make Andrew a present of a few
-branches as a peace-offering, but he declined, making some indignant
-remark about Prelatism or Erastianism, which Dick did not understand.’
-
-At eleven o’clock A.M. a parade of the ‘full strength of the regiment,’
-as Effingham phrased it, was ordered. Chairs, with all things proper,
-and a reading-desk, had been arranged on the south side of the wide
-verandah.
-
-To this gathering-point the different members of the establishment had
-been gradually converging, arrayed in garments, which, if varying from
-the fashion-plates of the day, were neat, suitable, and of perfect
-cleanliness. Mrs. Evans’s skill as a laundress, which was in the inverse
-ratio to her mildness of disposition, enabled Dick to appear in white
-duck trousers and a shirt-front which distanced all rivalry. They
-contrasted strongly with the unbroken tint of brick-dust red presented
-by his face and throat, the latter encircled by an ancient military
-stock. Mrs. Evans was attired with such splendour that it was manifest
-she had sacrificed comfort to fashion.
-
-‘Old Tom’ had donned, as suitable for the grandeur and solemnity of the
-occasion, a well-worn pair of cord breeches, the gift of some employer
-of sporting tendencies, which, ‘a world too wide for his shrunk shanks,’
-were met at the knee by carefully polished boots, the long-vanished tops
-being replaced by moleskin caps. A drill overshirt, fastened at the
-waist with a broad leather belt, from which depended a tobacco-pouch,
-completed this effective costume. The iron-grey hair was carefully
-combed back from his withered countenance; his keen eyes gleamed from
-their hollow orbits, imparting an appearance of mysterious vitality to
-the ancient stock-rider.
-
-Andrew and Jeanie, of course, attended, the latter dressed with the good
-taste which always characterised her, and the former having in charge
-the sturdy silent Duncan, with their younger offspring. Of these, Jessie
-bade fair to furnish a favourable type of the ‘fair-haired lassie’ so
-frequently met with in the ballads of her native land, while Colin, the
-second boy, was a clever, confident youngster, in whose intelligence
-Andrew secretly felt pride, though he repressed with outward sternness
-all manifestations of the same.
-
-Andrew himself, it must be stated, appeared under protest, holding that
-‘thae Yerastian, prelatic festivals,’ in his opinion, ‘were no warranted
-by the General Assembly o’ the Kirk o’ Scotland, natheless, being little
-mair than dwellers in the wilderness, it behoved a’ Christians, though
-they should be but a scattered remnant in the clefts o’ the rocks, to
-agree in bearing testimony to the Word.’
-
-Across the broad verandah the members of the family, with their
-visitors, were seated, behind them the retainers. A table covered with a
-cloth was placed before Mr. Effingham, with the family Bible and a
-prayer-book of the Church of England.
-
-As he made commencement, and with the words, ‘When the wicked man
-turneth away,’ the congregation stood up, it was a matter of difficulty
-with Mrs. Effingham to restrain her tears. How the well-remembered
-sentences seemed to smite the rock of her well-guarded emotions as with
-the rod of the Prophet! She trembled lest the spring should break forth
-from her o’erburdened heart, whelming alike prudence and the sense of
-fitness. The eyes of the girls were dewy, as they recalled the
-white-robed, long-remembered pastor, the ivy-covered church, storied
-with legend and memorial of their race, the villagers, the friends of
-their youth, the unquestioned security of position, long guaranteed by
-habit and usage, apparently unalterable. And now, where stood they,
-while the sacred words proceeded from the lips of the head of the
-household, whom they had followed to this far land?
-
-In a ‘lodge in the wilderness,’ a speck in a ‘boundless contiguity of
-shade,’ with its unfamiliar adjuncts and a company of strangers—pilgrims
-and wayfarers—even as they. For a brief interval the suddenly realised
-picture of distance and isolation was so real, the momentary pang of
-bitterness so keenly agonising, that more than one sob was heard, while
-Annabel, whose feelings were less habitually under control, threw her
-arms round Jeanie’s neck (who had nursed her as a babe) and wept
-unrestrainedly.
-
-No notice was taken of this natural outburst of emotion. Jeanie, with
-unobtrusive tenderness and unfailing tact, comforted the weeping girl.
-Solemnly the words of the service sounded from her father’s lips, while
-the ordinary responses concealed the occasional sobs of the mourner for
-home and native land. She had unconsciously translated the unspoken
-words of more disciplined hearts.
-
-Gradually, as the service continued, the influences of the scene
-exercised a healing power upon the group—the fair, golden day, the
-tender azure of the sky, the wandering breeze, the waters of the lake
-lapping the shore, the whispering of the waving trees, even the hush of
-
- Beautiful silence all around,
- Save wood-bird to wood-bird calling,
-
-commenced insensibly to soothe the hearts of the exiles. Gradually their
-faces recovered serenity, and as the repetitions of belief and trust, of
-submission to a Supreme Benevolence, were repeated, that ‘peace which
-passeth all understanding,’ an indwelling guest with some, a memory, a
-long-forgotten visitant with others, appeared for a space to have
-enveloped the little company on that day assembled at Warbrok.
-
-The simply-conducted service was verging on conclusion when a stranger
-appeared upon the track from the high road. In bushman’s dress, and
-carrying upon his back the ordinary knapsack (or ‘swag’) of the
-travelling labourer, he strode along the path at a pace considerably
-higher in point of speed than is usual with men who, as a class, being
-confident of free quarters at every homestead, see no necessity for
-haste. A tall, powerfully-built man, his sun-bronzed countenance
-afforded no clue to his social qualification.
-
-Halting at the garden gate, he stood suddenly arrested as he
-comprehended the occupation of the assembled group. He looked keenly
-around, then easing the heavy roll by a motion of his shoulders, awaited
-the final benediction.
-
-‘What is your business with me?’ said Mr. Effingham, closing his book,
-and regarding with interest the stranger, whose bold dark eyes roved
-around, now over the assembled company, now over the buildings and
-offices, and lastly settled with half-admiration, half-diffidence, on
-the bright faces of the girls. ‘I have no employment here at present.
-Perhaps you would like to stay to-night. You are heartily welcome.’
-
-‘Come along o’ me, young man,’ interposed Dick Evans, as promptly
-divining the wayfarer’s habitudes. ‘Come along o’ me; you’ll have a
-share of our Christmas dinner, and you might come by a worse.’
-
-‘All right,’ replied the stranger cheerfully, and with a nod of
-acknowledgment to Mr. Effingham he jerked back his personal effects into
-their position and strode after his interlocutor, who, with old Tom
-Glendinning, quitted the party, leaving Mrs. Evans to follow at her
-convenience.
-
-‘Fine soldier that man would have made,’ said Mr. Effingham, as he
-marked the well-knit frame, the elastic step of the stranger. ‘I wonder
-what his occupation is?’
-
-‘Horse-breaker, bullock-driver, station hand of some sort,’ said Argyll
-indifferently. ‘Just finished a job of splitting, probably, or is
-bringing his shearing cheque to get rid of in Yass.’
-
-‘He appeared to have seen better days, poor fellow,’ said Mrs.
-Effingham, ever compassionate. ‘I noticed a wistful expression in his
-eyes when he first came up.’
-
-‘I thought he looked proud and disdainful,’ said Annabel, ‘and when old
-Dick said “come along,” I half expected him to reply indignantly. But he
-went off readily enough. I wonder if he’s a gentleman in disguise?’
-
-‘Or a bushranger,’ suggested Churbett. ‘Donohoe is “out” just now, and
-is said to have a new hand with him. These gentry have been occasionally
-entertained, like angels, unawares.’
-
-‘What a shocking idea!’ exclaimed Annabel. ‘You have no sentiment, Mr.
-Churbett. How would _you_ like to be suspected by everybody if you were
-reduced to poverty? He is very handsome, at any rate.’
-
-‘Fred would be too lazy to walk, that is one thing certain, Miss
-Annabel,’ said Hamilton. ‘He would prefer to take the situation of cook
-or hut-keeper at a quiet station, where there were no children. Fancy
-his coming up, touching his hat respectfully, and saying, “I suppose you
-haven’t a berth about the kitchen as would suit a pore man, Miss?”’
-
-Here the speaker gave so capital an imitation of Mr. Churbett’s accented
-tone in conversation that everybody laughed, including the subject of
-the joke, who said it was just like Hamilton’s impudence, but that
-_other_ people occasionally had mistakes made as to their station in
-life. What about old MʻCallum sending him and Argyll to pass the night
-in the men’s hut?
-
-‘The old ruffian!’ said Argyll, surprised out of his usual serenity, ‘I
-had two minds to knock him down; another, to tell him he was an ignorant
-savage; and a fourth, to camp under a gum-tree.’
-
-‘What did you do finally?’ asked Rosamond, much interested. ‘What an
-awkward position to be placed in.’
-
-‘The night happened to be wet,’ explained Hamilton; ‘we had ridden far,
-and were _so_ hungry—no other place of abode within twenty miles; so—it
-was very unheroic—but we had to put our pride in our pockets, and sleep,
-or rather _stay_, in an uncomfortable hut, with half-a dozen
-farm-servants.’
-
-‘What a bore!’ said Wilfred. ‘Did he know your names? It seems
-inconceivable.’
-
-‘The real truth was,’ said Mr. Churbett, volunteering an explanation,
-‘that the old man, taking umbrage somewhere at what he considered our
-friend Hamilton’s superfine manners and polite habit of banter, had
-vowed to serve him and Argyll out if ever they came his way. This was
-how he carried out his dark and dreadful oath.’
-
-‘What a terrible person!’ exclaimed Annabel, opening her eyes. ‘Were you
-very miserable, Mr. Hamilton?’
-
-‘Sufficiently so, I am afraid, to have made our friend chuckle if he had
-known. We had to ride twenty miles before we saw a hair-brush again, and
-Argyll, I must say, looked dishevelled.’
-
-A simultaneous inclination to laughter seized the party, as they gazed
-with one accord at Argyll’s curling locks.
-
-‘I should think that embarrassments might arise,’ said Mr. Effingham,
-‘from the habit of claiming hospitality when travelling here. There are
-inns, I suppose, but they are infrequent.’
-
-‘Not so many mistakes are made as one might think,’ explained Churbett.
-‘Squatters’ names are widely known, even out of their districts, and
-every one accepts a night’s lodging frankly, as he expects to give one
-in return.’
-
-‘But how can we know whether the stranger be a gentleman, or even a
-respectable person?’ said Mrs. Effingham. ‘One would be so sorry to be
-unkind, and yet might be led into entertaining undesirable guests.’
-
-‘Every gentleman should send in his card,’ said Argyll, ‘if he wishes to
-be received, or give his name and address to the servant. People who
-will not so comply with the usages of society have no right to
-consideration.’
-
-‘But suppose people are not well dressed,’ said Wilfred, ‘or are
-outwardly unlike gentlemen, what are you to do? It would be annoying to
-make mistakes in either way.’
-
-‘When people are not dressed like gentlemen,’ said Hamilton, ‘you may
-take it for granted that they have forfeited their position, or are
-contented to be treated as steerage passengers, so to speak. In such
-cases the safer plan, as far as my experience goes, is to permit them to
-please themselves. I had a good look at our friend yonder, as he came
-up, and I have a shrewd suspicion that he belongs to the latter
-category.’
-
-‘Poor young man!’ said Mrs. Effingham. ‘Couldn’t anything be done for
-him? Think of a son of ours being placed in that position!’
-
-‘He is making himself comfortable with old Dick Evans, most likely,
-however unromantic it may appear,’ said Churbett. ‘He will enjoy his
-dinner—I daresay he hasn’t had many good ones lately—have a great talk
-with Dick and the old stock-rider, and smoke his pipe afterwards with
-much contentment.’
-
-‘But a _gentleman_, if he be a gentleman, never could lower himself to
-such surroundings, surely?’ queried Rosamond. ‘It is not possible.’
-
-‘Oh yes, it _is_,’ said Beatrice. ‘Because, you remember, Sergeant
-Bothwell was more comfortable in the butler’s room with old John Gudyill
-than he would have been with Lady Bellenden and her guests, though she
-longed to entertain him suitably, on account of his royal blood.’
-
-‘Miss Beatrice, I congratulate you on your familiarity with dear Sir
-Walter,’ said Argyll. ‘It is a case perfectly in point, because Francis
-Stewart, otherwise Bothwell, had at one time mixed in the society of the
-day, and must have had the manners befitting his birth. Nevertheless in
-his lapsed condition he preferred the _sans gêne_ of his inferiors.
-There are many such in Australia, who “have sat at good men’s feasts,”
-but are now, unfortunately, more at ease in the men’s hut.’
-
-‘Of course you’ve heard of Carl Hotson, the man they used to call “the
-Count”?’ said Hamilton. ‘No? He lived at Carlsruhe, on the other side of
-the range, near the Great South Gap, where every one was obliged to
-pass, and (there being no inn) stay all night. Now “the Count” was a
-fastidious person of literary tastes. He chafed against entertaining a
-fresh batch of guests every night. “Respectable persons—aw—I am
-informed, but—aw—I don’t keep an hotel!” Unwilling to be bored, and yet
-anxious not to be churlish, he took a middle course. He invented “the
-stranger’s hut,” which has since obtained in other parts of the
-country.’
-
-‘Whatever was that?’ asked Guy.
-
-‘He had a snug cottage built at a short distance from the road. Into
-this dwelling every traveller, without introduction, was ushered. A good
-dinner, with bed and breakfast, was supplied. His horse was paddocked,
-and in the morning the guest, suitably entertained, but ignorant of the
-personnel of the proprietor, as in a castle of romance, was free to
-depart.’
-
-‘And a very good idea it was,’ said Mr. Effingham. ‘I can imagine one
-becoming tired of casual guests.’
-
-‘Some people were not of that opinion,’ said Mr. Forbes, ‘declaring it
-to be in contravention of the custom of the country. One evening Dr.
-Portman, an elderly gentleman, of majestic demeanour, came to Carlsruhe.
-He relied on a colonial reputation to procure him unusual privileges,
-but not receiving them, wrote a stiff note to Mr. Hotson, regretting his
-inability to thank him personally for his peculiar hospitality, and
-enclosing a cheque for a guinea in payment of the expense incurred.’
-
-‘What did “the Count” say to that?’
-
-‘He was equal to the occasion. The answer was as follows:—
-
-
-‘SIR—I have received a most extraordinary letter signed J.D. Portman,
-enclosing a cheque for one guinea. The latter document I have
-transmitted to the Treasurer of the Lunatic Asylum.—Obediently yours,
-
- CARL HOTSON.’
-
-
-The Christmas dinner, which included a noble wild turkey, a fillet of
-veal, a baron of beef, with two brace of black duck, as well as green
-peas, cauliflowers, and early potatoes from the now productive garden,
-was a great success. Cheerful and contented were those who sat around
-the board. Merry and well-sustained was the flow of badinage, which kept
-the young people amused and amusing. In the late afternoon the guests
-excused themselves, and left for home, alleging that work commenced
-early on the morrow, and that they were anxious as to the results of
-universal holiday-making.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
- HUBERT WARLEIGH, YR., OF WARBROK
-
-
-Next morning early, Mr. Effingham was enjoying the fresh, cool air when
-Dick marched up to him.
-
-‘Well, Evans,’ said Effingham, ‘Christmas Day is over. Tell me, were you
-able to abstain?’
-
-‘Believe me, I got drunk, sir,’ answered the veteran, ‘but I’m all right
-now till New Year’s Day.’
-
-‘I am afraid that your constitution will suffer, Evans, if you continue
-these regular—or rather irregular—excesses.’
-
-‘Can’t say for that, sir. Been drunk every Christmas since the year as I
-’listed in the old rigiment; but I wanted to tell you about that young
-man as was in our hut last night. Do you know who he is, sir?’
-
-‘No, indeed, Evans! I suspected he was no ordinary station-hand.’
-
-‘Well, no, sir; that’s the youngest of the old Colonel’s sons. Him as
-they used to call “Gyp” Warleigh. He was allers fond of ramblin’ and
-campin’ out, from a boy, gipsy fashion. When the Colonel died, he went
-right away to some of the far-out stations beyond Monaro, and never
-turned up for years. Old Tom knowed him at once, but didn’t let on.’
-
-‘Poor fellow! How hard that he should have come back to his father’s
-house penniless and poorly clad. I wonder if we could find him
-employment here?’
-
-‘H—m! I don’t know, sir; we haven’t much to keep hands goin’ at this
-season, but you can see him yourself. I daresay he’ll come up to thank
-you afore he goes.’
-
-Dick’s conjecture proved true, inasmuch as before the breakfast bell
-rang the prodigal walked up to the garden gate.
-
-This time he underwent a more careful examination, the result of which
-was to impress the master of the house in a favourable manner. Though
-dressed much as before, there was some improvement in his appearance. He
-came forward now, with the advantage conferred by rest and good
-entertainment. His regular features, as Mr. Effingham now thought,
-showed plainly the marks of aristocratic lineage. The eyes, especially,
-were bold and steadfast, while his figure, hardened by the toils of a
-backwoods life, in its grand outline and muscular development, aroused
-the admiration of a professional connoisseur. The bronzed face had lost
-its haggard expression, and it was with a frank smile that he raised his
-hat slightly and said, ‘Good-morning, sir. I have come to thank you for
-your kindness and hospitality.’
-
-‘I am pleased to have been enabled to afford it,’ said the master of the
-establishment; ‘but is there nothing more that I can do for your
-father’s son?’
-
-The man started; a frown set the lower part of his face in rigid
-sternness. After a moment’s pause the cloud-like expression cleared, and
-with softened voice he said:
-
-‘I see they have told you. I thought the old stock-rider knew me; he was
-here before we lived at Warbrok. Yes, it is all true. I am Hubert
-Warleigh.’
-
-Mr. Effingham’s impulsive heart was stirred within him, at these words,
-to a degree which he himself would hardly have admitted. The actual
-presentment of this cadet of an old family—once the object of a mother’s
-care, a mother’s prayers—fallen from his position and compelled to
-wander over the country, meanly dressed and carrying a burden in this
-hot weather, touched him to the heart. He walked up to the speaker, and
-laying his hand upon his arm, said in tones of deep feeling:
-
-‘My dear fellow, will you let me advise you, as I should thank any
-Christian man to do for my son in like need? Stay with us for a time. I
-may be able to assist you indirectly, if not otherwise. At the worst,
-the hospitality of this house—of your old home—is open to you as long as
-you please to accept it.’
-
-‘You are kind—too kind, sir,’ said the wanderer, while his bold eyes
-softened, and for a moment he turned his face towards the lake. ‘The old
-place makes me feel like a boy again. But it will never do—_it’s too
-late_. You don’t know the ways of this country yet, and you might come
-to repent being so soft—I mean so good-natured.’
-
-‘I will take the risk,’ persisted Effingham. ‘Let me see you restored to
-your proper standing in society, and following any occupation befitting
-a gentleman, and I shall hold myself fully repaid.’
-
-The stranger smiled, half-sadly, half-humorously, as he seated himself
-on a fence-rail.
-
-‘That is not so easy as you think, sir,’ he said. ‘Though there’s very
-few people in this country would bother about trying. When a fellow’s
-been rambling about the bush, working and living with the men, for years
-and years, it is not so easy to turn him into a gentleman again. Worst
-of all when he’s come short of education, and has half-forgotten how to
-behave himself before ladies. Ladies! I swear, when I saw your
-daughters, looking like rosebuds in the old verandah, I felt like a
-blackfellow.’
-
-‘That a feeling of—of rusticity—would be one of the consequences of a
-roving life, I can understand; but you are young—a mere boy yet. Believe
-one who has seen something of the world, that the awkwardness you refer
-to would soon disappear were you once more among your equals.’
-
-‘Too late—too late!’ said the man gloomily. ‘Gyp Warleigh must remain in
-the state he has brought himself to. I know him better than you do,
-worse luck! There’s another reason why I’m afraid to trust myself in a
-decent house.’
-
-‘Good heavens!’ said Effingham. ‘Then what is that? You surely have
-not——’
-
-‘Taken to the bush? Not yet; but it’s best to be straight. I learned the
-trick of turning up my little finger too early and too well; and though
-I’m right enough for months when I’m far in the bush, or have had a
-spell of work, I’m helpless when the drinking fit comes on me. I _must_
-have it, if I was to die twenty times over. And the worst of it is, I
-can feel it coming creeping on me for weeks beforehand; I can no more
-fight it off than a man who’s half-way down a range can stop himself.
-But it’s no use talking—I must be off. How well the old place looks!
-It’s a grand season, certainly.’
-
-‘You have had adventures here in the old days,’ said Effingham, willing
-to lead him into conversation. ‘Had you a fight with bush-rangers in the
-dining-room ever?’
-
-‘Then the bullet-marks _are_ there yet?’ said the stranger carelessly.
-‘Well, there was wild work at Warbrok when that was done, but
-bushrangers had no say in it. It was the old governor who blazed away
-there. He was always a two-bottle man, was the governor, and after poor
-mother died he scarcely ever went to bed sober. Randal and Clem were
-terrible wild chaps, or they might have kept matters together. I was the
-youngest, and let do pretty much as I liked. I never learned anything
-except to read and write badly. Always in the men’s huts, I picked up
-all the villainy going before I was fourteen. But about those
-bullet-marks in the wall.’
-
-‘I feel deeply interested, believe me; and if you would permit me to
-repair the neglect you have experienced, something may yet be done.’
-
-‘You don’t know men of my sort, Captain, or you wouldn’t talk in that
-way. Not that I haven’t a feeling towards you that I’ve never had since
-poor mother died, and told me to be a good boy, as she stroked my hair
-for the last time. But how could I? What chance is there for a lad in
-the bush, living as we did in those days? I remember Randal’s coming
-home from Bathurst races—he’d go any distance to a race meeting. He was
-like a madman. It was then that the row came about with the governor,
-when they nearly shot one another.’
-
-‘Nearly shot one another! Good heavens! How _could_ that happen?’
-
-‘After the cellar racket Randal had the sense to stay away at Monaro and
-work at our station there for months. He could work when he liked, and a
-smarter man among stock never handled a slip-rail. But he had to come
-home at last. The governor talked to him most polite. Hoped he’d stay to
-dinner. He drank fair; they were well into the fourth bottle when the
-row began. He told us afterwards that the old man, instead of flying
-into a rage, as usual, was bitter and cool, played with him a bit, but
-finished up by saying that “though it was the worst day’s work he ever
-did to come to this accursed country, he hardly expected his eldest son
-would turn out a burglar and a thief.”
-
-‘Randal was off his head by this time—been ‘a bit on’ before he
-came—swore he wouldn’t stand that from any man, not even his own father.
-The old man glared at him like a tiger, and fetching out the loaded
-duelling pistols, which people always had handy in those days, gave him
-one, and they stood up at different ends of the long room.
-
-‘We heard the shots and rushed in. There was Randal holding on by the
-wall, swaying about, and, pointing to the ceiling, saying, as well as he
-could, “Fired in the air! by ——! fired in—the—air!” Sure enough, there
-was the mark of his bullet in the ceiling, but the _other one_ had hit
-the wall, barely an inch from Randal’s head.’
-
-‘What an awful affair! How your father must have rejoiced that he was
-spared the guilt of such a crime.’
-
-‘I don’t know about that; all he _said_ next day was, that his hand must
-have been shaky, or he would have rid the world of an infernal
-scoundrel, who had disgraced his family and was no son of his. He never
-spoke to him again.’
-
-‘Miserable father—lost son! What became of your brothers, may I ask,
-since you have told me so much?’
-
-‘Randal was in a vessel coming back from Adelaide with an exploring
-party. He’d been lushing pretty heavy, and they thought he must have
-gone overboard one night in a fit of the horrors. Anyhow, he was never
-seen alive afterwards. Poor Clem—he wasn’t half as bad as Randal, only
-easy led—died at the Big River: was shepherding when we last heard of
-him. I’m all that’s left of the Warleighs. Some fine day you’ll hear of
-me being drowned crossing a river, or killed by the blacks, or broke my
-neck off a horse; and a good job too. I must be off now. It’s years
-since I’ve said as much to any one.’
-
-‘But why—why not stay and commence a happier career? Scores of men have
-done so, years after your age. You will have encouragement from every
-member of my family.’
-
-‘Family!’ answered the outcast, with a bitter smile. ‘Am I fit to
-associate with _ladies_? Why, even while I’m speaking to you I can
-hardly open my mouth without an oath or a rough word. No! It might have
-been once; it’s years too late now. But I thank you all the same; and if
-ever a chance comes in my way of doing your people a good turn, you may
-depend your life on Gyp Warleigh. Good-bye, sir!’
-
-As he rose to his feet, squaring his shoulders and towering to the full
-height of his stature, Mr. Effingham instinctively held out his hand.
-Closing his own upon it for one moment in an iron grasp, the wanderer
-strode forth upon his path, and was lost behind a turn in the timber.
-
-Howard Effingham returned to his household filled with sad thought. He
-had seen ruined men of all sorts and kinds before; had known many who,
-with every social aid and endowment, had chosen to tread the path of
-degradation. But there was, to his mind, an element of unusual pathos in
-this acquiescent yet resentful debasement of a noble nature. In the hall
-he met Wilfred and Guy. Contrasting their frank, untroubled countenances
-with that of the ill-fated son of his predecessor his heart swelled with
-thankfulness.
-
-‘What a long talk you have been having with our dark friend,’ said
-Wilfred. ‘Does he want a situation as stock-rider? or has he a project
-requiring the aid of a little capital? He doesn’t look like an
-enthusiast.’
-
-‘Nor is he one,’ answered the father briefly. ‘He is an unhappy man,
-whom you will compassionate when I tell you that he is Hubert
-Warleigh—the Colonel’s youngest son.’
-
-‘Good heavens!’ cried Wilfred. ‘Who said there was no romance in a new
-country? I thought he was a fine-looking fellow, with something uncommon
-about him. What a history!’
-
-‘What a dreadful, what an astonishing thing!’ exclaimed Annabel, who,
-having an appetite for novelty, and seldom being so absorbed in her
-household duties as to escape early notice of such, had joined the
-group. ‘To think that that sunburned, roughly-dressed man, carrying a
-bundle with his blanket and all kinds of things, should be a gentleman,
-the son of an old officer; just like Wilfred and Guy here! To be sure,
-he _was_ handsome, in spite of his disguise; and did you notice what
-splendid black eyes he had? Poor fellow, poor fellow! Why didn’t you
-make him stay, papa?’
-
-‘My child! I did try to persuade him; I promised to see what we could do
-for him. My heart yearned to the youngster, thinking that if, in the
-bounds of possibility, any child of mine was in such evil case, so might
-some father’s heart turn to him in his need. But he only said it was too
-late, with a kind of proud regret. Yet I think he was grateful, for he
-wrung my hand at parting, said it had done him good to speak with me,
-and if he could ever do us a service I might count upon him.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the dreamy days of the late summer one and all derived great solace
-and enjoyment from the Lake William Book Club, now become, thanks to Mr.
-Churbett’s brother in London, a working institution. That gentleman had
-forwarded a well-selected assortment, comprising the newest publications
-of the day, in various departments of literature, not forgetting a
-judicious sprinkling of fiction. The books brought out by the family,
-neither few nor of humble rank, had been read and re-read until they
-were known by heart. This fresh storehouse of knowledge was, for the
-first time in their lives, truly appreciated.
-
-Mr. Churbett had employed himself in his solitary hours in covering with
-strong white paper and carefully entitling each volume. These he divided
-into ‘sets,’ comprising, say, a modicum of history, travel, biography,
-or science, with a three-volume novel. The sets being duly numbered, a
-sketch circuit was calculated, and proper arrangements made. He, for
-instance, forwarded a set to Benmohr, whence they were enjoined to
-forward them at the expiration of a month to The Chase; at the same time
-receiving a fresh supply from headquarters. O’Desmond sent them on to
-the Snowdens, to be despatched by them to Mr. Hampden at Wangarua. So it
-came to pass that when the twelfth subscriber forwarded the
-first-mentioned set to its original dwelling-place at Mr. Churbett’s,
-the year had completed its cycle, and each household had had ample, but
-not over-abundant, time to thoroughly master the contents of their dole
-of literature.
-
-The autumn month of March was chiefly characterised by the rural
-population of the district, as being the season in which was held the
-Annual Yass Race Meeting. This tournament was deservedly popular in an
-English-speaking community. There was no wife, widow, or maid,
-irrespectively of the male representatives, who did not feel a mild
-interest in the Town Plate, the delightfully dangerous Steeplechase, and
-finally in the ‘Ladies’ Bag.’ This thrilling event comprised a
-collection of fancy-work—slippers, embroidered smoking-caps, and
-gorgeous cigar-cases, suitable for masculine use or ornament.
-
-The coveted prize was fabricated by the fair hands of the dames and
-damsels of the district. The race was confined to amateurs, and those
-only were permitted to compete who had received invitations from the
-Secretary of the Ladies’ Committee.
-
-Great interest was taken, it may be supposed, in the carrying-off of
-this trophy, and many a youthful aspirant might be seen ‘brushing with
-hasty step the dew away,’ as he reviewed at dawn his training
-arrangements with a face of anxiety, such as might become the owner of a
-Derby favourite.
-
-By direct or devious ways the echoes of battle-cries, proper to the
-approaching fray, commenced to reach The Chase. Faintly interested as
-had been the family in the probable pleasures of such an assemblage,
-they could not remain wholly insensible. With each succeeding week
-tidings and murmurs of the Carnival swelled into sonorous tone. One day
-a couple of grooms, leading horses sheeted and hooded, of which the
-satin skins and delicate limbs bore testimony to their title to blue
-blood, would pass by on their way to Yass; or Mr. Churbett would ride
-over with the latest news, declaring that Grey Surrey was in such
-condition that no horse in the district had a chance with him, though
-Hamilton’s No Mamma had notoriously been in training for a month longer.
-Also, that the truly illustrious steeplechaser, The Cid, had been
-stabled at Badajos for the night; but that, in his opinion, he could not
-be held at his fences, and if so, St. Andrew would make such an
-exhibition of him as would astonish his backers and the Tasmanian
-division generally. Then Mrs. Snowden would arrive to lunch, and among
-other items of intelligence volunteer the information that the ball,
-which the Racing Club Committee was pledged to give this year, would
-exceed in magnificence all previous entertainments. Borne on the wings
-of the weekly post there came a missive from Mrs. Rockley, reminding
-Mrs. Effingham of her promise to come and bring her daughters for the
-race week, assuring her that rooms at Rockley Lodge awaited them, and
-that wilful child Christabel was prepared to die of grief in the event
-of anything preventing their having the pleasure of their company.
-
-Then Bob Clarke was, after all, to ride The Cid. He was the only man
-that could hold him at his fences. So there would be such a set-to
-between him and St. Andrew, with Charlie Hamilton up, as had never been
-seen in the district. The western division were going to back The Cid to
-the clothes on their back. Hamilton was a cool hand across country, and
-a good amateur jock wherever you put him up, but Bob Clarke, who had had
-his early training among the stiff four-railers and enclosed
-pasture-lands of Tasmania, was an extraordinary horseman, and had a way
-of getting a beaten horse over his last fences which stamped him as the
-man to put your money on.
-
-It was not in human nature altogether to disregard current opinions,
-which, in default of more important public events, swayed the pastoral
-community as well as the dwellers in the rural townships. The Effinghams
-gradually abandoned themselves to the stream, and decided to accept Mrs.
-Rockley’s invitation for the lady part of the family. To this end
-Wilfred made a flying visit to the town, where he had been promptly
-taken in custody by Mr. Rockley and lodged in safe keeping at his
-hospitable mansion.
-
-He returned with what Beatrice called a rose-coloured description of the
-whole establishment; notably of the marvellous beauty of Christabel
-Rockley, the only daughter.
-
-‘Why, you haven’t seen girls for I don’t know how long,’ said Annabel,
-‘except us, of course—and you don’t see any beauty in fair people—so how
-can you tell? The first young woman with a pale face and dark eyes is a
-vision of loveliness, of course. Wait till _we_ go to Yass, and you will
-hear a proper description.’
-
-‘Women are always unsympathetic about one another,’ he retorted. ‘That’s
-the reason one can hardly trust the best woman’s portrait of her
-friend.’
-
-‘And men are so credulous,’ said Beatrice. ‘I wonder any sensible woman
-has the patience to appropriate one. See how they admire the merest
-chits with the beauty of a china doll, and so very, _very_ little more
-brains. There is a nice woman, I admit, here and there, but a man
-doesn’t know her when he sees her.’
-
-‘All this is premature,’ said the assaulted brother, trying to assume an
-air of philosophical serenity. ‘I know nothing about Miss Christabel
-save and except that she is “beautiful exceedingly,” like the dame in
-Coleridge. But you will find Mr. Rockley’s the nicest house to stay in,
-or I much mistake, that you have been in of late years, and, in a
-general way, you will enjoy yourselves more than you expect.’
-
-‘I expect _great things_,’ said Annabel, ‘and I intend to enjoy myself
-immensely. Fancy, what a pleasure it will be to me to see quantities of
-new people! Even Rosamond confessed to me that she felt interested in
-our coming glimpse of Australian society. We _have_ been a good deal
-shut up, and it will do us good; even Beatrice will fall across a new
-book or a fresh character to read, which comes to much the same thing. I
-prefer live characters myself.’
-
-‘And I prefer the books,’ said Beatrice; ‘there’s such a dreadful amount
-of time lost in talking to people, very often, about such wretched
-commonplaces. You can’t skip their twaddle or gossip, and you can in a
-book.’
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
- A PROVINCIAL CARNIVAL
-
-
-The last week of March at length arrived, by which time the nights had
-grown perceptibly colder, and the morning air was by no means so mild as
-to render wraps unnecessary.
-
-No rain had fallen for some weeks, though before that time there had
-been a succession of showers; so that, there being no dust, while the
-weather was simply perfect, the grass green, and the sky cloudless, a
-more untoward time might have been selected for recreation.
-
-It was indeed the carnival of a community of uncompromising toilers, as
-were, in good sooth, the majority of the inhabitants of the town and
-district of Yass.
-
-Not without misgiving did Wilfred consent to leave the homestead
-entirely to itself. Yet he told himself that, while the farm and dairy
-were in the hands of such capable persons as Dick Evans, old Tom, and
-Andrew, without some kind of social or physical earthquake, no damage
-could occur.
-
-Dick, in spite of his love of excitement, did not care to attend this
-race meeting. Aware of his weakness, he was unwilling to enter on a
-fresh bout of dissipation before the effects of the last one had faded
-from recollection. ‘I looks to have a week about Michaelmas,’ said he,
-as gravely as if he had been planning a hunting or fishing excursion,
-‘then I reckon to hold on till after harvest, or just afore Christmas
-comes in. Two sprees a year is about the right thing for a man that
-knows himself. I don’t hold with knockin’ about bars and shanties.’
-
-Crede old Tom, the last Yass races had chiefly impressed themselves on
-his mind as a festivity wherein he spent ‘thirty-seven pounds ten in six
-days, and broke his collar-bone riding a hurdle race. Whether he was
-getting older he could not say, but he felt as if he did not care to go
-in just now. He was going to keep right till next Christmas, when, of
-course, any man worth calling a man would naturally go in for a big
-drink.’
-
-For far other reasons, and in widely differing language, did Andrew
-Cargill protest his disinclination to join revelries which, based on the
-senseless sport of horse-racing, he felt to be indefensible, immoral,
-and worthy only of the heathen, who were so unsparingly extirpated by
-the children of Israel. ‘I haena words to express my scorn for thae
-fearless follies, and I thocht that the laird and the mistress wad ha’
-had mair sense than to gang stravaigin’ ower the land like a wheen
-player-bodies to gie their coontenance to siccan snares o’ Beelzebub.
-It’s juist fearsome.’
-
-Conflict of opinion in this case resulted in similarity of action,
-inasmuch as the two unregenerates, conscious that their hour was not yet
-come, conducted themselves with the immaculate propriety nowhere so
-apparent as in those Australian labourers who are confessedly saving
-themselves up for a ‘burst.’
-
-Nothing could have been descried upon this lower earth more deeply
-impressive than the daily walk of these two ancient reprobates, as
-Andrew, in his heart, always designated them.
-
-The sun never saw them in bed. Old Tom had his morning smoke while
-tracking the nightly wandering dairy cows long before that luminary
-concerned himself with the inhabitants of the district. As day was
-fairly established, the cows were in the yard, and the never-ending work
-of milking commenced. Andrew’s northern perseverance was closely taxed
-to keep pace in the daily duties of the farm with these two swearing,
-tearing old sinners.
-
-All preliminaries having been concluded, which Mrs. Effingham declared
-fell but little short of those which preceded their emigration, the
-grand departure was made for their country town in what might justly be
-considered to be high state and magnificence.
-
-First of all rode Rosamond and Beatrice on their favourite palfreys.
-Touching the stud question, Wilfred and Guy had gradually developed the
-love of horses, which is inseparable from Australian country life. The
-indifferent nags upon which the girls had taken their early riding
-lessons had, by purchase or exchange, been replaced by superior animals.
-Rosamond, whose nerve was singularly good, and whose ‘hands’ had reached
-a finish rarely accorded to the gentler sex, was the show horsewoman of
-the family, being entrusted with the education of anything doubtful
-before the younger girls were suffered to risk the mount. She rode a
-slight, aristocratic-looking dark bay, of a noble equine family, which,
-like themselves, had not long quitted the shores of Britain. Discharged
-from a training-stable upon the charge of unfitness to ‘stay,’ he had
-fallen into unprofessional hands, from which Wilfred had rescued him,
-giving in exchange a fat stock-horse and a trifle more ‘boot’ than he
-was ready to acknowledge. He had been right in thinking that in the
-delicate head, the light arched neck, the rarely oblique shoulder, the
-undeniable look of blood, he saw sufficient guarantee for a peerless
-light-weight hackney. This in despite of a general air of height rather
-than stability, which caused the severe critics of Benmohr and The
-She-oaks to speak of him as being unduly ‘on the leg.’
-
-There are some metals which compensate in quality for lack of weight and
-substance; so among horses we find those which, indomitable of spirit
-and tireless of muscle, are capable of wearing out their more
-solidly-built compeers. To such a class belonged ‘dear Fergus,’ as
-Rosamond always called the matchless hackney with which Wilfred had
-presented her. Gay and high-couraged, temperate, easy, safe, fast, with
-a walk and canter utterly unapproachable, the former, indeed,
-assimilating to the unfair speed of a ‘pacer,’ while the latter was
-free, floating, graceful, and elastic as that of the wild deer, he was a
-steed to dream of, to love and cherish in life, to mourn over in death.
-Many an hour, in the gathering twilight, by the shores of the lake, had
-Rosamond revelled in, mounted upon this pink of perfection, when Wilfred
-jumped upon a fresh horse after his day’s work and called upon his
-sister to come for her evening ride. How anxiously, after the lingering,
-glaring afternoon, did Rosamond watch for the time which brought the
-chief luxury of the day, when she lightly reined the deer-like Fergus as
-he sped through the twilight shadows, over the greensward by the lake
-shore.
-
-Beatrice had also her favourite, which, though of different style and
-fashion, was yet an undeniable celebrity. A small iron-grey mare, scarce
-above pony height, was Allspice, with a great flavour of the
-desert-born, from which she traced her descent, in the wide nostril,
-high croup, and lavish action. Guy picked her up at a cattle muster,
-where he was amazed at seeing the ease with which she carried a
-thirteen-stone stock-rider through the ceaseless galloping of a day’s
-‘cutting-out.’ Asking permission to get on her back, he at once
-discovered her paces, and never rested till he had got her in exchange
-for a two-year-old colt of his own, which had attracted the attention of
-Frank Smasher, the stock-rider in question. Frank, returning with him to
-Warbrok, roped the colt, the same day putting the breaking tackle on
-him, and within a week was cutting out cattle, on the Sandy Camp, with
-no apparent inferiority to the oldest stock-horse there.
-
-Whether Allspice had been broken in after this Mexican fashion is not
-known, but as she could walk nearly as fast as Fergus, trot fourteen
-miles an hour, and canter ‘round a cheese-plate,’ if you elected to
-perform that feat, we must consider that she was otherwise trained in
-youth, or inherited the talent which dispenses with education. The light
-hand and light weight to which she was now subjected apparently suited
-her taste. After a few trials she was voted by the family and all
-friendly critics to be only inferior to the inimitable Fergus.
-
-Mr. Churbett had volunteered to come over the evening before and
-accompany the young ladies, as otherwise Guy would have been their only
-cavalier, Wilfred being absorbed in the grave responsibility of the
-dogcart and its valuable freight.
-
-This sporting vehicle contained Mrs. Effingham and Annabel, together
-with an amount of luggage, easily calculable when the possibility of a
-few picnics, a couple of balls, and any number of impromptu dances are
-mentioned. Mr. Effingham also, and his sons, found it necessary upon
-this occasion to look up portions of their English outfit, which they
-had long ceased to regard as suited for familiar wear.
-
-The light harness work of the family had been hitherto performed by
-a single horse, a sensible half-bred animal, and a fair trotter
-withal. On this occasion Wilfred had persuaded himself that a second
-horse was indispensable. After divers secret councils among the
-young men, it ended in Mr. Churbett’s Black Prince, the noted tandem
-leader of the district, being sent over. He was docile, as well as
-distinguished-looking, so all went well, in spite of Mrs.
-Effingham’s doubts, fears, and occasional entreaties, and Annabel’s
-plaintive cries when a nervous ‘sideling’ was passed, or a deeper
-creek than usual forded.
-
- * * * * *
-
-‘Oh, what a pretty place Rockley Lodge is—a nice, roomy bungalow; and
-how trim the garden looks!’
-
-‘Apparently inhabited,’ said Annabel, ‘and rather affected by visitors,
-I should say. I can see horses fastened to the garden fence, a carriage
-at the door, and a dogcart coming round from the back, as well as two
-side-saddle horses. So this is Mr. Rockley’s place! He said it was just
-a little way from the town; and there—Mr. Churbett and Rosamond are
-turning in at the entrance gate.’
-
-Duellist, having gone off in his training, thereafter not unwillingly
-retained for hackney purposes, evidently knew his way to the place, for
-he marched off at once, along the track which turned to the white gate.
-Followed by the tandem, with Beatrice and Guy bringing up the rear, the
-whole party drew up before the hall door.
-
-Mr. Churbett, giving his horse to a hurried groom, who made his
-appearance from the offices, assisted Rosamond to dismount, by which
-time a youthful-looking personage, whom the Effinghams took to be Miss
-Christabel, but who turned out to be her mother, advanced with an air of
-unfeigned welcome, and greeted the visitors.
-
-‘Mr. Churbett, introduce me at once. I am afraid you are all very tired.
-Come in this moment, my dear girls, and rest yourselves; we must have no
-talking or excitement until dinner-time. Mr. Effingham, I count upon
-you; Mr. Rockley charged me to tell you that he had asked Mr. Sternworth
-to meet you. Mr. Churbett, of course you are to come, and bring the two
-young gentlemen. Perhaps we might have a little dance, who knows? You
-can go now. Mr. Rockley had rooms and loose boxes kept for you at the
-Budgeree, or you wouldn’t have had a hole to put your head in; what do
-you think of that?’
-
-Mr. Churbett, much affected by his narrow escape of arriving in Yass and
-finding every room and stall appropriated, with no more chance of a
-lodging than there is in Doncaster on the Leger day, moved on, leading
-Fergus, and murmuring something about Rockley being a minor Providence,
-and Mrs. Rockley all their mothers and aunts rolled into one. He
-recovered his spirits, however, as was his wont, and caracolled ahead on
-Duellist, leading the way into a large stable-yard, around which were
-open stalls and loose boxes, apparently calculated for the accommodation
-of a cavalry regiment.
-
-‘This is the Budgeree Hotel, and a very fair caravanserai it is. Jim,
-look alive and take off the tandem leader. Joe, I want a box for
-Duellist. Bowcher, this is Captain Effingham of Warbrok, and these young
-gentlemen his sons; did Mr. Rockley order rooms for them and me?’
-
-‘Mr. Rockley, sir. Yes, sir. He come down last week on purpose to see if
-I’d kep’ rooms for Mr. Argyll and Mr. Hamilton, as the place was that
-full, and like to be fuller; and then he asked if your rooms was took,
-and the Captin’s and two young gents’, and when I said they wasn’t, he
-went on terrible, as it was just like you, and ordered ’em all right
-off, besides four stalls and a box.’
-
-‘Ah, well, it’s all right, Bowcher. Mr. Rockley knows my ways. I wonder
-you hadn’t sense enough to keep rooms for me and my friends, as I told
-you I was coming. Town very full?’
-
-‘Never see anythink like it, sir. Horses coming from all directions, and
-gents from Hadelaide, I should say. Least-ways, from all the outside
-places. They’re that full at the Star, as they have had to put half the
-horses in the yard, and rig up stalls timpry like.’
-
-‘Ha! that’s all very well; but don’t try that with Black Prince or these
-ladies’ horses, or they’ll kick one another sky high.’
-
-While this conversation was proceeding, Mr. Effingham and his sons had
-been ushered upstairs, where, at the extreme end of a long corridor, the
-Captain was provided with a reasonable bedroom, enjoying a view of the
-town and surrounding country. Wilfred and Guy had to content themselves
-with a smaller double-bedded apartment, the waiter apologising, as
-everything, to the attics, was crammed full, and visitors hourly, like
-crowds at the theatre, turned away from the doors. Slight inconveniences
-are not dwelt upon in the ‘brave days when we were twenty-one.’ So they
-cast their modest wardrobes on the beds, and tried to realise the
-situation.
-
-This was a marked divergence from the circumstances of their mode of
-life for the past year. It appeared that every room on both sides of the
-corridor was tenanted by at least one person of an emotional and
-vociferous nature.
-
-Boots were carried to the staircase and hurled violently down,
-accompanied by objurgations. Friendly, even confidential, conversations
-were carried on by inmates of contiguous apartments. Inquiries were made
-and answered as to who were going to dine at Rockley’s or Bower’s; and
-one gentleman, who had come in late, publicly tossed up as to which
-place he should go uninvited, deciding by that ancient test in favour of
-a certain Mr. Bower, apparently of expansive hospitality.
-
-In addition to the dinner-chart, much information was afforded to such
-of the general public as had ears, as to the state and prospects of the
-horses interested in the coming events. Senator had a cough; and there
-were rumours about the favourite for the Leger. St. Maur and the
-Gambiers had come in, and brought a steeplechaser, which Alec was to
-ride, which would make Bob Clarke’s Cid go down points in the betting.
-Mrs. Mortimer had arrived and those pretty girls from Bunnerong. The
-fair one would be the belle of the ball. ‘No!’ (in three places) was
-shouted out, ‘Christabel Rockley was worth a dozen of her,’ and so on.
-Mr. Effingham began to consider what his position would be if he should
-have to listen to a discussion upon the merits of his daughters. This
-complication happily did not arise, the tide of mirthful talk flowing
-into other congenial channels.
-
-It must be confessed that if the company had been charged for the noise
-they made, the bill would have been considerable. But after all, the
-speakers were gentlemen, and their unfettered speech and joyous abandon
-only reminded Effingham of certain old barrack days, when the
-untrammelled spirit of youth soared exultingly free, unheeding of the
-shadow of debt or the prison bars of poverty.
-
-In due time the splashing, the dressing, and the jesting were nearly
-brought to an end. Leaving Fred Churbett to follow with Guy, Mr.
-Effingham and his heir departed to Rockley House.
-
-‘There _is_ something exhilarating, after all, in dressing for dinner,’
-said he. ‘After the day is done it is befitting to mingle with pleasant
-people and drink your wine in good society. It reminds one of old times.
-My blood is stirred, and my pulses move as they have not done since I
-left England. Change is _the_ great physician, beyond all doubt.’
-
-‘I did not think that I should have cared half as much about these
-races,’ said Wilfred. ‘I had doubts about coming at all, and really I
-don’t think I should have done so but for the girls and my mother. It is
-sure to do them good. But after all, Dick and Tom, not to speak of
-Andrew, are equal to more than the work they have to do at present, and
-I suppose one need not be always in sight of one’s men.’
-
-Rockley Lodge was profusely lighted. From the murmur of voices and
-rustle of dresses there appeared to be a large number of persons
-collected in the drawing-room, redolent of welcome as it ever was.
-
-As they entered the house a voice was heard, saying, in tones not
-particularly modulated, ‘Order in dinner; I won’t wait another moment
-for any man in Australia.’
-
-Effingham recognised his late visitor in the speaker, who, arrayed in
-correct evening costume, immediately greeted him with much deference,
-mingled with that degree of welcome usually accorded to a distinguished,
-long-absent relative.
-
-‘My dear Captain Effingham, I am proud to see you. So you’ve found your
-way to Yass at last. Hope to see you here often. St. Maur, let me make
-you known to Captain Effingham. I heard him mention having met your
-brother in India. Bob Clarke; where’s Bob Clarke? Oh, here he is. You’ll
-know one another better before the races are over. Christabel, come
-here; what are you going away for? Mr. Wilfred Effingham you know, Mr.
-Guy you never saw; capital partners you’ll find them, I daresay. Is the
-dinner coming in, or is it not? [this with a sudden change of voice].
-Mr. Churbett not come? Wait for Fred Churbett, the most unpunctual man
-in New South Wales! I’ll see him——’
-
-Fortunately for Mr. Rockley’s ante-dinner eloquence the necessity for
-finishing this sentence was obviated by the appearance of the butler,
-who announced dinner, after which Mr. Rockley, saying, ‘Captain
-Effingham, will you take in Mrs. Rockley? I see your friend Sternworth
-has just made his way in with Fred Churbett; it’s well for them they
-weren’t ten minutes later,’ offered his arm to Mrs. Effingham, and led
-the way with much dignity.
-
-The room was large, and the table, handsomely laid and decorated, looked
-as if it was in the habit of being furnished for a liberal guest list.
-There could not have been less than thirty people present, exclusive of
-the six members of Mr. Rockley’s own family. Their friends Hamilton and
-Argyll were there, as also Mr. St. Maur, a tall, aristocratic-looking
-personage from the far north; Mr. Clarke, a pleasant-faced, frank
-youngster, whom everybody called Bob; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Malahyde, and
-other prepossessing-looking strangers, male and female; and lastly,
-their old friend Harley Sternworth.
-
-What warmth, friendliness, cordiality, pervaded the entertainment! All
-apparently felt and talked like near relations, between whom had never
-arisen a question of property or precedence.
-
-Mrs. Rockley, her daughter, and nieces were lively and unaffected, and
-beyond all comparison considerately hospitable. Rosamond and her
-sisters, dressed, for the first time since their arrival, in accordance
-with the laws of fashion as then promulgated, looked, to the eyes of
-their fond parents and brothers, as though endowed with fresh beauty and
-a distinction of air hitherto unmarked.
-
-The dinner was in all respects a success—well served, well cooked; and
-as Mr. Rockley was severe as to his taste in wines, that department
-fully satisfied a fastidious critic, as was Howard Effingham. Messrs.
-Churbett, Argyll, and Hamilton, as habitués, had numberless jokes and
-pleasantries in common with the young ladies, which served to elicit
-laughter and general merriment; while Hampden, St. Maur, the parson, and
-Mr. Rockley in turn diverged into political argument, in which their
-host was exceptionally strong.
-
-When they entered the drawing-room, to which Fred Churbett, Bob Clarke,
-and others of the _jeunesse dorée_, who cared little for port or
-politics, had retreated in pursuance of a hint from Mrs. Rockley, they
-were surprised to find that spacious apartment wholly denuded of its
-carpet and partially of its furniture. There was but little time to
-express the feeling, as a young lady seated at the piano struck up a
-waltz of the most intoxicating character, and before Mr. Rockley had
-time to get fairly into another argument with the parson, the room was
-glorified with the rush of fluttering garments, and the joyous
-inspiration of youthful sentiment.
-
-Everybody seemed to like dancing, and no more congenial home for the
-graces Terpsichorean than Rockley Lodge could possibly be found. The
-host, who was not a dancing man, smoked tranquilly in the verandah, much
-as if the entertainment were in a manner got up for his benefit, and had
-to be gone through with, while he from time to time debated the question
-of State endowments with Sternworth, or that of non-resident grants from
-the Crown with John Hampden, who was characteristically inflexible but
-nonaggressive.
-
-What with their neighbours Argyll and Hamilton, Ardmillan, Forbes, and
-Neil Barrington, the ever-faithful Fred Churbett, and divers
-newly-formed acquaintances who had arrived during the evening, the Miss
-Effinghams found so many partners that they scarcely sat down at all.
-Mr. St. Maur, too, perhaps the handsomest man of the party, singled out
-Beatrice and devoted himself to her for the greater part of the evening.
-During the lulls, music was suggested by Mrs. Rockley, who was ever at
-hand to prevent the slightest _contretemps_ during the evening. Rosamond
-and Beatrice were invited to play, and finally Annabel and Beatrice to
-sing.
-
-Beatrice was one of the most finished performers upon the pianoforte
-that one could fall across, outside professional circles; many of them
-even might have envied her light, free, instinctively true touch, her
-perfect time, her astonishing execution. Her voice was a well-trained
-contralto. When she sang a world-famed duet with Annabel, and the liquid
-notes—clear, fresh, delicately pure as those of the mounting
-skylark—rose in Annabel’s wondrous soprano, every one was taken by
-storm, and a perfect chorus of admiration assured the singers that no
-such performance had been heard in the neighbourhood since a time
-whereof the memory of man runneth not to the contrary.
-
-It must not be supposed that Wilfred Effingham permitted much time to
-elapse before he took measures which resulted in an improvement of his
-recent acquaintance with Miss Christabel Rockley. He had seen many girls
-of high claim to beauty in many differing regions of the old world. He
-had walked down Sackville Street, and sauntered through the great Plaza
-of Madrid, bought gloves in Limerick, and lace in the Strada Reale; but
-it instantly occurred to him that in all his varied experiences he had
-never set eyes upon so wondrously lovely a creature as Christabel
-Rockley. Her complexion, not merely delicate, was wild-rose tinted upon
-ivory; her large, deep-fringed eyes, dark, melting, wondering as they
-opened slowly, with the half-conscious surprise of a startled child,
-reminded him of nothing so much as of the captured gazelle of the
-desert; her delicate, oval face, perfect as a cameo; her wondrous
-sylph-like figure, which swayed and glided in the dance like a forest
-nymph in classic Arcady; her rosebud mouth, pearly teeth, her childish
-pout smiling o’er gems—pearls, if not diamonds; how should these
-angel-growth perfections have ripened in this obscure outpost of
-Britain’s possessions? He was startled as by a vision, amazed. He would
-have been hopelessly subjugated there and then had he not been at that
-time such a philosophical young person.
-
-Lovely as was the girl, calculated as were her unstudied graces and
-matchless charms to enthral the senses and drag the very heart from out
-of any description of man less congenial than a snow-drift, Wilfred
-Effingham escaped for the present whole and unharmed.
-
-At the same time he enjoyed thoroughly the gay tone and joyous feelings
-which characterised the whole society, and insensibly caught, in spite
-of his ever-present feeling of responsibility, the contagion of free and
-careless mirth.
-
-Dance succeeded dance, the quick yet pleasantly graduated growth of
-friendly intimacy arose under the congenial conditions of gaiety
-unrestrained and mingled merriment, till, soon after midnight, the
-joyous groups broke up.
-
-Mr. Rockley suddenly intimated that, as they would have a long day at
-the races next day, and the ladies would need all their rest after the
-journey some of them had made, to withstand the necessary fatigues, he
-thought it would be reasonable, yes, he _would_ say he thought it would
-occur to any one who was not utterly demented and childishly incapable
-of forethought, that it was time to go to bed.
-
-This deliverance decided the lingering revellers; adieus were made with
-much reference to ‘au revoir,’ one of those comprehensive phrases into
-which our Gallic friends contrive to collect several meanings and
-diverse sentiments.
-
-At the Budgeree Hotel a desultory conversation was kept up for another
-hour between such choice spirits who stood in need of the ultimate
-refreshment of a glass of grog and a quiet pipe; but the wonders and
-experiences of the day had so taxed the energies of Mr. Effingham and
-his sons that the latter fell asleep before Fred Churbett had time to
-offer six to four on St. Andrew for the steeplechase, or Hamilton to
-qualify young Beanstalk’s rapturous declaration that Christabel Rockley
-looked like a real thorough-bred angel, and that there wasn’t a girl
-from here to Sydney fit to hold a candle to her.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
- MR. BOB CLARKE SCHOOLS KING OF THE VALLEY
-
-
-The eventful day at length arrived. How many hundreds would have been
-disappointed if it had rained! From the sporting squatters, who looked
-out of window to see if the weather was favourable for Harlequin or
-Vivandière, to the farmer’s son, busy at sunrise grooming his
-unaccustomed steed, and pulling the superfluous hair from that grass-fed
-charger’s mane and tail, while his sister or cousin danced with joy,
-even before she donned the wide straw hat and alpaca skirt, with the
-favourably disposed bow of pink or blue ribbon, in which to be beautiful
-for the day.
-
-And what more innocent pleasure? So very seldom comes it in the long
-months of inland farming life, that no moralist need grudge it to his
-fellow-creatures for whom fate has not provided the proverbial silver
-spoon. That brown-cheeked youngster believes that his bay Camerton colt,
-broken in by himself, will make a sensation on the course; perhaps pull
-off a ten-pound sweep in the Hurry-scurry Hack-race (post entry), and he
-looks forward with eager anticipation to the running for the Town Plate
-and the steeplechase. Besides, he has not been in town since he took in
-the last load of wheat. It is slow at home sometimes, though there is
-plenty of work to do; and he has not seen a new face or heard a new
-voice since he doesn’t know when.
-
-In sister Jane’s heart, whose cheek owns a deeper glow this morning,
-what unaccustomed thoughts are contending for the mastery.
-
-‘Will it not be a grand meeting, with ever so many more people there
-than last year? And the gentlefolks and the young ladies, she does like
-so to see how they dress and how they look. It is worth a dozen fashion
-books. Such fun, too, is a sweeping gallop round the course, and to feel
-the breeze blow back her hair. Everything looks splendid, and the lunch
-in the pavilion is grand, and every one so polite. Besides, there is Ben
-Anderson that she knows “just to speak to”; she saw him at a school
-feast last year, and he is certainly _very_ nice looking; he said he
-would be sure to be at the Yass races. She wonders whether he _will_ be
-there; nobody wants him, of course, if he likes to stay away—but still
-he _might_ come; his father has a farm away to the westward.’
-
-So the rhythm of human life, hope or fear, love or doubt, curiosity or
-sympathy, chimes on, the same and invariable in every land, in every
-age.
-
-Thanks to the occasionally too fine climate of Australia, ‘the morning
-rose, a lovely sight,’ and if the sun flashed not ‘down on armour
-bright,’ he lit up a truly animated scene. Grooms, who long before day
-had fed and watered their precious charges, were now putting on the
-final polish, as if the fate of Europe depended upon the delicate limbs
-and satin-covered muscles. Owners, backers, jockeys, gentlemen riders,
-all these were collecting or volunteering information; while the
-ordinary business of the town—commercial, civil, or administrative—was
-suffered to drift, as being comparatively unimportant.
-
-At an hour not far from nine o’clock the guests under the hospitable
-roof of the Budgeree Hotel were assembled at the breakfast-table. What a
-meal! What a feast for the gods was that noble refection! What joyous
-anticipation of pleasure was on all sides indulged in! What mirthful
-conversation, unchecked, unceasing! There had been, it would seem, a
-dinner and a small party at Horace Bower’s, and, strange to say, every
-one had there enjoyed themselves much after the same fashion as at
-Rockley’s. Bower had been in great form—was really the cleverest, the
-most amusing fellow in the world. Mrs. Bower was awfully handsome, and
-her sister, just arrived from Sydney, was a regular stunner, would cut
-down all before her. Mrs. Snowden had been there too—smartest woman in
-the district; seen society everywhere—and so on.
-
-A race day owns no tremendous possibilities, yet is there a savour of
-strife and doom mingled with the mimic warfare. Many a backer knows that
-serious issues hang upon the favourite’s speed and stamina; on even
-less, on chance or accident. The steeplechase rider risks life and limb;
-it _may_ be that ‘darkness shall cover his eyes,’ that from a crushing
-fall he may rise no more.
-
-These entanglements weighed not in any wise upon the soul of Wilfred
-Effingham, as he arose with a keener sense of interest and pleasure in
-expectation than had for long greeted his morning visions. His
-responsibilities for the day were bounded by his vehicle and horses, so
-that his family should be safely conveyed to and from the course. Mrs.
-Effingham had at first thought of remaining quietly in the house, but
-was reassured by being told that the course was a roomy park, that the
-view of the performances was complete, that the carriages and the
-aristocracy generally would be provided with a place apart, where no
-annoyance was possible; that the country people were invariably
-well-behaved; and that if she did not go, her daughters would not enjoy
-themselves, and indeed thought of remaining away likewise. This last
-argument decided the unselfish matron, and in due time the horses were
-harnessed, the side-saddles put in requisition, and after a decent
-interval Black Prince was caracolling away in the lead of the dogcart,
-and Fergus exhibiting his paces among a gay troop of equestrians, which
-took the unused, but all the pleasanter, road to the racecourse.
-
-At this arena it was seen that the stewards had been worthy of the
-confidence reposed in them. A portion of the centre of the course had
-been set apart for the exclusive use of the carriages and their
-occupants. Not that there was any prohibition of humbler persons; but,
-with instinctive propriety, they had apparently agreed to mass
-themselves upon a slight eminence, which, behind the Grand Stand, a
-roomy weather-board edifice, afforded a full view of the proceedings.
-
-In the centre enclosure were shady trees and a sward of untrampled
-grass, which answered admirably for an encampment of the various
-vehicles, with a view to ulterior lunching and general refreshment
-combinations at a later period of the day.
-
-Here all could be seen that was necessary of the actual racing, while
-space was afforded for pleasant canters and drives between the events,
-round the inner circle of the course; and indeed in any direction which
-might suit the mirth-inspired members of the party. The view, too, Mrs.
-Effingham thought, as she sat in Mrs. Rockley’s phaeton, in which a seat
-of honour had been provided for her, was well worth a little exertion.
-The park-like woodlands surrounded three sides of the little
-amphitheatre, with a distant dark blue range amid the dusk green forest
-tints; while on the south lay a great rolling prairie, where the eye
-roved unfettered as if across the main to the far unknown of the
-sky-line. Across this glorious waste the breeze, at times, blew freshly
-and keen; it required but little imagination on the part of the gazers
-to shadow forth the vast unbroken grandeur, the rippling foam, the
-distant fairy isles of the eternal sea.
-
-Without more than the invariable delay, after twelve o’clock, at which
-hour it had of course been advertised in the _Yass Courier_ of the
-period that the first race would punctually commence, and after sharp
-remonstrance from Mr. Rockley, who declared that if he had a horse in
-the race he would start him, claim the stakes, and enter an action
-against the stewards for the amount, a start _was_ effected for the St.
-Leger. This important event brought six to the post, all well bred and
-well ridden. Wilfred thought them a curiously exact reproduction of the
-same class of horses in England.
-
-His reflections on the subject were cut short by a roar from the
-assemblage as the leading horses came up the straight in a close and
-desperate finish. ‘Red Deer—Bungarree—_no_! Red Deer!’ were shouted, as
-Hamilton’s chestnut and a handsome bay colt alternately seemed to have
-secured an undoubted lead. The final clamour resolved itself into the
-sound of ‘Red Deer! _Red Deer!!_’ as that gallant animal, answering to
-the last desperate effort of his rider, landed the race by ‘a short
-head.’ Hamilton’s early rising and months of sedulous training had told.
-It was a triumph of condition.
-
-Much congratulation and hand-shaking ensued upon this, and Wilfred
-commenced to feel the uprising of the partisan spirit, which is never
-far absent from trials of strength or skill. He had more than once
-flushed at disparaging observations touching the studs in his immediate
-neighbourhood, at gratuitous assertions that the Benmohr horses were not
-to be spoken of in the same day as So-and-so’s whatsyname of the west,
-or another proprietor’s breed in the north, and so on. Now here was a
-complete answer to all such, as well as a justification of his own
-opinion. He had determined not to risk a pound in the way of betting,
-holding the practice inexpedient at the present time. But the thought
-did cross his brain that if he had taken the odds more than once pressed
-upon him, he might have paid his week’s expenses as well as confuted the
-detractors of the Benmohr stud. This deduction, _ex post facto_, he
-regarded as one of the wiles of the enemy, and scorned accordingly.
-
-He found the party more disposed to take a canter, after the enforced
-quietude of the last hour, than to remain stationary, so possessing
-himself of Guy’s hack, whom he placed temporarily in charge of the
-dogcart, taking off the leader as a precautionary measure, he rode forth
-among the gay company for a stretching canter round the course, which
-occasionally freshened into a hand-gallop, as the roll of hoofs excited
-the well-conditioned horses.
-
-The Town Plate—a locally important and much-discussed event—having been
-run, and won, after an exciting struggle, by Mr. O’Desmond’s Bennilong,
-a fine old thoroughbred, who still retained the pace, staying power, and
-ability to carry weight, which had long made him the glory of the
-Badajos stud and the pride of the Yass district, preparations for lunch
-on an extensive scale took place.
-
-The horses of the different vehicles, as well as the hackneys, were now
-in various ways secured, the more provident owners having brought
-halters for the purpose. Mrs. Rockley and Mrs. Bower, with other ladies,
-had arranged to join forces in the commissariat department, the result
-of which was a spread of such comprehensive dimensions that it required
-the efforts of the younger men for nearly half an hour to unpack and set
-forth the store of edibles and the array of liquors of every kind and
-sort.
-
- Rich and rare the viands were,
- Diversified the plate,
-
-inasmuch as each family had sent forth such articles as, while available
-for immediate use, would cause less household mourning if reported
-wounded or missing. But the great requisities of an _al fresco_
-entertainment were fully secured. An ample cold collation, with such
-relays of the beloved Bass and such wines of every degree as might have
-served the need of a troop of dragoons. The last adjuncts had been
-forwarded by the male contingent, under a joint and several
-responsibility.
-
-Eventually the grand attack was commenced by the impetuous Rockley, who,
-arming himself with a gleaming carver, plunged the weapon into the
-breast of a gigantic turkey, in the interests of Mrs. Effingham, who sat
-on his right hand.
-
-After this _assaut d’armes_ the fray commenced in good earnest. The
-ladies had been provided with seats from the vehicles, overcoats, rugs,
-and all manner of envelopes, which could be procured, down to a spare
-suit of horse-clothing. Shawls and cloaks were brought into requisition,
-but the genial season had left the sward in a highly available
-condition, and with a cool day, a pleasant breeze, the shade of a few
-noble eucalypti, fortunately spared, nothing was wanting to the
-arrangements. As the devoted efforts of the younger knights and squires
-provided each dame and damsel with the necessary aliment, as the
-champagne corks commenced to fusilade with the now sustained, now
-dropping fire of a brisk affair of outposts, the merry interchange of
-compliments, mirthful badinage, and it may be eloquent glances become no
-less rapid and continuous.
-
- Our Youth! our Youth! that spring of springs.
- It surely is one of the blessedest things
- By Nature ever invented!
-
-sang Tom Hood, and who does not echo the joyous, half-regretful
-sentiment. How one revelled in the$1‘$2’$3at the casual concourse of
-youthful spirits, where the poetic sentiment was inevitably heightened
-by the mere proximity of beauty. Surely it is well, ere the bright sky
-of youth is clouded by Care or gloomed by the storm-signal of Fate, to
-revel in the sunshine, to slumber in the haunted shade. So may we gaze
-fondly on our chaplet of roses, withered, alas! but fragrant yet, long
-ere the dread summons is heard which tells that life’s summer is ended,
-and the verdant alleys despoiled.
-
-Another race or two, of inferior interest, was looked for, and then the
-party would take the road for town, concluding the day’s entertainment
-with a full-sized dance at the expansive abode of Mr. Rockley, which
-would combine all contingents.
-
-The next day’s more exciting programme included the steeplechase, to be
-run after lunch. In this truly memorable event some of the best
-cross-country horses in Australia were to meet, including those
-sensational cracks, The Cid and St. Andrew, each representing rival
-stables, rival colonies. The former with Bob Clarke up, the latter with
-Charles Hamilton; each the show horseman of his district, and backed by
-his party to the verge of indiscretion.
-
-The less heroic melodramas having been acted out with more or less
-contentment to performers, there was a general return to boot and
-saddle, previous to the leisurely progress homeward from the day’s
-festivities. This, as the hours were passing on towards the shadowy
-twilight, was not one of the least pleasant incidents of the day’s
-adventures.
-
-The road skirted the great plain which bounded the racecourse, and as
-the westering sun flamed gorgeous to his pyre, fancy insensibly glided
-from the realism of the present to the desert mysteries of the past.
-
-‘Oh, what a sunset!’ said Christabel Rockley, whom fate and the
-impatience of her horse had placed under the control of Mr. Argyll. ‘How
-grand it is! I never see sunset over the plains from our verandah
-without thinking of the desert and the Israelites, camels, and pillared
-palaces. Is it like that? How I _should_ love to travel!’
-
-‘The desert is not so unlike that plain, or any plain in Australia,’
-explained Argyll (who had seen the Arab’s camel kneel, and watched the
-endless line of the Great Caravan wind slowly over the wind-blown
-hollows), ‘inasmuch as it is large and level; but the vast, awe-striking
-ruins, such as Luxor or Palmyra—records of a vanished race—these we can
-only dream of.’
-
-‘Oh, how wonderful, how entrancing it must be,’ said Miss Christabel,
-‘to see such enchanted palaces! Fancy us standing on a fallen column, in
-a city of the dead, with those dear picturesque Arabs. Oh, wouldn’t it
-be heavenly! And you must be there to explain it all to me, you know!’
-
-As the girl spoke, with heightened colour, and the eager, half-girlish
-tones, so full of melody in the days of early womanhood, as the great
-dark eyes emitted a wondrous gleam, raised pleadingly to her companion’s
-face, even the fastidious Argyll held brief question whether life would
-not be endurable in the grand solitudes of the world, ‘with one (such)
-fair spirit to be his minister.’
-
-‘My dear Miss Christabel,’ he made answer, ‘I should be charmed to be
-your guide on such an expedition. But if you will permit me to recommend
-you a delightful book, called——’
-
-Here he was interrupted by the deeply-interested fair one, who, pointing
-with her whip to the advanced guard of the party, now halted and drawn
-to the side of the road, said hurriedly, ‘Whatever _are_ they going to
-do, Mr. Argyll? Oh, I see—Bob Clarke’s going to jump King of the Valley
-over Dean’s fence. It’s ever so high, and the King is such a wretch to
-pull. I hope he won’t get a fall.’
-
-This seemingly abrupt transition from the land of romance to that of
-reality was not perhaps so wide a departure in the spirit as in the
-letter. The age of chivalry is _not_ past; but the knights who wear
-khaki suits in place of armour, and bear the breech-loader in preference
-to the battle-axe, have to resort to means of proving their prowess
-before their ladies’ eyes other than by splintering of lances and
-hacking at each other in the sword-play of the tournament.
-
-The King of the Valley was a violent, speedy half-bred. His owner was
-anxious to know whether he was clever enough over rails, to have a
-chance for the coming steeplechase. An unusual turn of speed he
-undoubtedly possessed, and, if steadied, the superstition was that the
-King could jump anything. But the question was—so hot-blooded and
-reckless was he when he saw his fence—could he be controlled so as to
-come safely through a course of three miles and a half of post and rail
-fencing, new, stiff and uncompromising?
-
-To the cool request, then, that he would give him a schooling jump over
-Dean’s fence, which some men might have thought unreasonable, Bob
-Clarke, with a smile of amusement, instantly acceded, and making over
-his hackney to a friend, mounted the impatient King, shortened his
-stirrups, and then and there proceeded to indulge him with the big
-fence.
-
-Then had occurred the sudden halt and general attitude of expectation
-which Miss Rockley had noted, and with which she had so promptly
-sympathised. Bob Clarke was a slight, graceful youngster, with regular
-features, dark hair and eyes, and a mild expression, much at variance
-with the dare-devilry which was his leading characteristic. Passionately
-fond of field sports, he had ridden more steeplechases, perhaps, than
-any man in Australia of his age. He had been carried away ‘for dead’
-more than once; had broken an arm, several ribs, and a collar-bone—this
-last more than once. These injuries had taken place after the horse had
-fallen, for of an involuntary departure from the saddle no one had ever
-accused him.
-
-As he gathered up his reins and quietly took the resolute animal a short
-distance back from the fence, unbroken silence succeeded to the flow of
-mirthful talk. The fence looked higher than usual; the close-grained
-timber of the obstinate eucalyptus was uninviting. The heavy posts and
-solid rails, ragged-edged and sharply defined, promised no chance of
-yielding. As the pair had reached the moderate distance considered to be
-sufficient for the purpose, Bob turned and set the eager brute going at
-the big dangerous leap. With a wild plunge the headstrong animal made as
-though to race at the obstacle with his usual impetuosity. Now was seen
-the science of a finished rider; with lowered hand and closely fitting
-seat, making him for a time a part of the fierce animal he rode, Bob
-Clarke threw the weight of his body and the strength of his sinewy frame
-into such a pull as forced the powerful brute to moderate his pace.
-Such, however, was his temper when roused, that the King still came at
-his fence much too fast, ‘reefing’ with lowered head and struggling
-stride—an unfavourable state of matters for measuring his distance. As
-he came within the last few yards of the fence more than one lady
-spectator turned pale, while a masculine one, _sotto voce_, growled out,
-‘D——n the brute! he’ll smash himself and Bob too.’
-
-As the last half-dozen strides were reached, however, the _rusé_ hero of
-many a hard fought fray ‘over the sticks,’ suddenly slackening his grasp
-of the reins, struck the King sharply over the head with his whip, thus
-causing him to throw up his muzzle and take a view of his task. In the
-next moment the horse rose from _rather_ a close approach, and with a
-magnificent effort just cleared the fence. A cheer from every man
-present showed the general relief.
-
-‘Oh, how beautifully he rides!’ said the fair Christabel, whose cheek
-had perhaps lost a shade of its wild-rose tint. ‘No one looks so well on
-horseback as Mr. Clarke. Don’t you think he’s very handsome?’
-
-‘Not a bad-looking young fellow at all, and certainly rides well,’ said
-Argyll, without enthusiasm. ‘I daresay he has done little else all his
-lifetime, like your friends the Arabs. Watch him as he comes back
-again.’
-
-The margin by which he had escaped a fall had been estimated by the
-experienced Bob, who, taking advantage of a field heavy from early
-ploughing, gave King of the Valley a deserved breather before he brought
-him back.
-
-By the time they were within a reasonable distance of the fence, the
-excited animal had discovered that he had a rider on his back. As he
-came on at a stretching gallop, he was seen to be perfectly in hand.
-Nearing the jump, it surprised no experienced spectator to see him
-shorten stride and, ‘taking off’ at the proper distance, sail over the
-stiff top rail, ‘with (as his gratified owner said) a foot to spare, and
-Bob Clarke sitting on him, with his whip up, as easy as if he was in a
-blooming arm-chair.’
-
-‘There, Champion,’ said the victor as he resumed his hackney. ‘He can
-jump anything you like. But if you don’t have a man up who can hold him,
-he’ll come to grief some day.’
-
-A few trials and experiments of a like nature were indulged in by the
-younger cavaliers before they reached town, most of which were
-satisfactory, with one exception, in which the horse by a sudden and
-wily baulk sent his rider over the fence, and calmly surveyed the
-obstacle himself.
-
-Another dance, at which everybody who had been at the races, and who was
-_du monde_, finished worthily the day so auspiciously commenced. Wilfred
-Effingham, who had declared himself rather fatigued at the first
-entertainment, and had at that festival asserted that it would do for a
-week, now commenced to enjoy himself _con amore_—to sun himself in the
-light of Christabel Rockley’s eyes, and to _badiner_ with Mrs. Snowden,
-as if life was henceforth to be compounded of equal quantities of race
-meetings by day and dances by night.
-
-‘I suppose you are a little tired, Miss Rockley,’ he said, ‘after the
-riding and the picnic and the races; it _is_ rather fatiguing.’
-
-‘Tired!’ echoed the Australian damsel in astonishment. ‘Why should I be
-tired? What is the use of giving in before the week is half over? I
-shall have lots of time to rest and enjoy the pleasure of one’s own
-society after you have all gone. It will be dull enough then for a month
-or two.’
-
-‘But are there any more festivities in progress?’ he asked with some
-surprise.
-
-‘Any more? Why, of course, lots and quantities. You English people must
-be made of sugar or salt. Why, there’s the race ball to-morrow night, at
-which _everybody_ will be present—the band all the way from Sydney. The
-race dinner the next night—only for you gentlemen, of course, _we_ shall
-go to bed early. Then Mrs. Bower’s picnic on Saturday, with a dance here
-till twelve o’clock—I must get the clock put back, I think. And
-Sunday——’
-
-‘Sunday! haven’t you any entertainment provided for Sunday?’
-
-‘Well, no; not exactly. But everybody will go to church in the morning,
-and Mr. Sternworth will preach us one of his nice sensible sermons—they
-do me so much good—about not allowing innocent pleasures to take too
-great hold upon our hearts. In the afternoon we are all going for a
-long, long walk to the Fern-tree Dell. You’ll come, won’t you? It’s such
-a lovely place. And on Monday——’
-
-‘Of course we shall begin all over again on Monday; keep on dancing,
-racing, and innocently flirting, like inland Flying Dutchmen, for ever
-and ever, as long as we hold together. Isn’t that the intention?’
-
-‘Now you’re beginning to laugh at me. It will be serious for some of us
-when you all go away. Don’t you think so, now?’ (Here the accompaniment
-was a look of such distracting pathos that Wilfred was ready to deliver
-an address on ‘Racing considered as the chief end of man,’ without
-further notice.) ‘No; on Monday morning you are all to pay your bills at
-the Budgeree—those that have money enough, I mean; not that it
-matters—Bowker will wait for ever, they say. Then you go back to your
-stations, and work like good boys till the next excuse for coming into
-Yass, and that finishes up the week nicely, doesn’t it?’
-
-‘So nicely that I believe there is a month of ordinary life compressed
-into it—certainly as far as enjoyment goes. I shall never forget it as
-long as I live—never forget some of the friends I have made here during
-the brightest, happiest time of my life, especially——’
-
-‘Look at that ridiculous Mr. Tarlton dancing the _pas seul_!’ exclaimed
-Miss Christabel, not quite disposed to enter upon Wilfred’s explanation
-of his sensations. ‘Do you know, I think quadrilles are rather a mistake
-after all. I should like dances to be made up of nothing but valses and
-galops.’
-
-‘Life would be rather too rapid, I am afraid, if we carried that
-principle out. Don’t you think Mrs. Snowden is looking uncommonly well
-to-night?’
-
-‘She always dresses so well that no one looks better.’
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
- STEEPLECHASE DAY
-
-
-In despite of the mirthful converse continued around him, during the
-small hours, and the complicated condition of his emotions, Wilfred
-Effingham slept so soundly that the breakfast bell was needed to arouse
-him. He felt scarcely eager for the fray; but after a shower-bath and
-that creditable morning meal ever possible to youth, his feelings
-concerning the problems of life and the duties of the hour underwent a
-change for the better.
-
-Charles Hamilton, Bob Clarke, and the turf contingent generally had been
-out at daylight, personally inspecting the steeds that were to bear them
-to victory and a modest raking in of the odds or otherwise. How much
-‘otherwise’ is there upon the race-courses of the world! How often is
-the favourite amiss or ‘nobbled,’ the rider ‘off his head,’ the
-certainty a ‘boil over’! Alas, that it should be so! That man should
-barter the sure rewards of industry for the feverish joys, the
-heart-shaking uncertainties, the death-like despair which the gambling
-element, whether in the sport or business of life, inevitably brings in
-its train!
-
-‘Why, this _is_ life,’ sneers the cynic; ‘you are describing what ever
-has been, is, and shall be, the worship of the great god “Chance.” The
-warrior and the statesman, the poet and the priest, the people
-especially, have from all time placed their lives and fortunes on a
-cast, differently named, it is true. And they will do so to the end.’
-
-Such causticities scarcely apply to the modest provincial meeting which
-we chronicle, inasmuch as little money changed hands. What cash was
-wagered would have been treated with scorn by the layers of the odds and
-inventors of ‘doubles,’ those turf triumphs or tragedies. Nevertheless,
-the legitimate excitement of the steeplechase, three and a half miles
-over a succession of three-railed fences, with the two ‘hardest’ men in
-the Southern District up, would be a sight to see.
-
-Independently of the exciting nature of the race, an intercolonial
-element was added. Bob Clarke and his steed were natives of Tasmania;
-the cool climate and insular position of which have been thought to be
-favourable to human and equine development. Much colour for the
-supposition was recognised by the eager gazers of Mr. Bob Clarke and his
-gallant bay, The Cid.
-
-The former was evidently born for a career of social success. Chivalrous
-and energetic, with a bright smile, a pleasant manner, his popularity
-was easy of explanation.
-
-In a ball room, where his modesty was in the inverse ratio to his
-iron-nerved performances across country, he was a rival not to be
-despised. Among men he was voted ‘an out-and-out good fellow,’ or a
-gentlemanlike, manly lad, from whatever side emanated the criticism.
-
-The Cid was a grand horse, if not quite worthy of the exaggerated
-commendation which his admirers bestowed. A handsome, upstanding animal,
-bright bay, with black points, he had a commanding-looking forehand,
-‘that you could hardly see over,’ as a Tasmanian turfite observed,
-besides a powerful quarter, with hips, the same critic was pleased to
-observe, ‘as wide as a fire-place.’ In his trials he was known to have
-taken leaps equal in height to anything ever crossed by a horse. But a
-stain in his blood occasionally showed out, in a habit of baulking. Of
-this peculiarity he gave no notice whatever, sometimes indulging it at
-the commencement, sometimes at the end of a race, to the anguish of
-well-wishers and the dismay of backers. A determined rider was therefore
-indispensable. As on this occasion the only man in the country-side ‘who
-could ride him as he ought to be ridden,’ according to popular belief,
-was up, who had also trained him for this particular race, little
-apprehension was felt as to the result.
-
-Not less confident were the friends of St. Andrew, a different animal in
-appearance, but of great merit in the eyes of judges. Not so large as
-his celebrated antagonist, he had the condensed symmetry of the
-racehorse. Boasting the blue blood of Peter Fin (imported) on his
-mother’s side, his Camerton pedigree on the other, entitled him to be
-ticketed ‘thorough-bred as Eclipse.’ A compact and level horse, with the
-iron legs of the tribe, every muscle stood out, beautifully developed by
-a careful preparation. His dark chestnut satin coat, his quiet,
-determined air, the unvarying cleverness with which he performed in
-private, together with the acknowledged excellence of his rider,
-rendered the Benmohr division confident of victory.
-
-The others which made up the race were fine animals, but were not
-entrusted to any great extent with the cash or the confidence of the
-public. Of these the most formidable was a scarred veteran named Bargo,
-who had gone through or over many a fence in many a steeplechase. His
-rider being, like himself, chiefly professional, they were both
-undoubted performers. But though the old chaser would refuse nothing,
-his pace had declined through age. It was understood that he was entered
-on the chance of the two cracks destroying each other, in which case
-Bargo would be a ‘moral.’
-
-The remaining ones, with the exception of King of the Valley, were
-chiefly indebted for their entry to the commendable gallantry of
-aspiring youth. It was something to turn out in ‘the colours’ and other
-requisites of costume before an admiring crowd; something, doubtless, to
-see a cherry cheek deepen or pale at the thought of the chances of the
-day; something to try a local favourite in good company. All honour to
-the manly and honest-hearted feeling!
-
-Of these, briefly, it may be stated that Currency Lass was a handsome
-chestnut mare with three white legs, and much of the same colour
-distributed over her countenance. She was fast, and jumped brilliantly,
-if she could be prevailed upon not to take off too near to her fences,
-or ridiculously far off, or to pump all the breath out of her body by
-unnecessary pulling. The regulation of these tendencies provided a task
-of difficulty for the rider.
-
-Wallaby and Cornstalk were two useful, hunter-looking bays, which would
-have brought a considerably higher price in the old land than they were
-ever likely to do here.
-
-The course had been arranged so that the horses should start near the
-stand, and going across country take a circuitous course, but eventually
-finishing at the stand after negotiating a sensational last fence. This
-was not thought to be good management, but the enclosures admitted of no
-other arrangement.
-
-The morning’s racing having been got through, everybody adjourned to
-lunch, it being decided that _the_ important event should take place at
-three o’clock, after which the excitement of the day might be considered
-to be over. In spite of the approaching contest, which doubtless
-contained an element of danger, as it was known that the riders of the
-two cracks would ‘go at each other for their lives,’ not less than the
-usual amount of mirth and merriment was observable. The two chief actors
-were altogether impervious to considerations involving life and limb,
-although they had seen and suffered what might have made some men
-cautious.
-
-Bob Clarke had been more than once ‘carried away for dead’ from under a
-fallen horse, while Charles Hamilton had won a steeplechase after having
-employed the morning in tracking a friend who had gone out to ‘school’ a
-young horse, and whom the search-party discovered lying dead under a log
-fence.
-
-The ladies exhibited a partisanship which they were at no pains to
-conceal. Bets (in gloves) ran high; while the danger of the imminent
-race rendered a fair cheek, here and there, less brilliant of hue, and
-dimmed the sparkle of bright eyes.
-
-‘Oh, I _hope_ no one will get hurt,’ said Christabel Rockley; ‘these
-horrid fences are so high and stiff. Why can’t they have all flat races?
-They’re not so exciting, certainly, but then no one can get killed.’
-
-‘Accidents occur in these, you know,’ said Mrs. Snowden,
-philosophically; ‘and, after all, if the men like to run a little risk
-while _we_ are looking on, I don’t see why we should grudge them the
-pleasure.’
-
-‘It seems very unfeeling,’ says the tender-hearted damsel. ‘I shall feel
-quite guilty if any one is hurt to-day. Poor Mrs. Malahyde, Bob Clarke’s
-sister, is dreadfully anxious; the tears keep coming into her eyes. She
-knows how reckless he can be when he’s determined to win.’
-
-‘I fancy Mr. Hamilton’s St. Andrew will win,’ said Mrs. Snowden; ‘he is
-better bred, they say, and he looks to me so well-trained. What do you
-think, Mr. Effingham?’
-
-‘I am a thick and thin supporter of the Benmohr stable,’ said Wilfred.
-‘The Cid is a grand horse, but my sympathies are with St. Andrew.’
-
-‘I’ll bet a dozen pairs of gloves The Cid wins,’ said Miss Christabel
-impetuously, looking straight at Mrs. Snowden. ‘He can beat anything in
-the district when he likes; Mr. Hamilton rides beautifully, but Bob can
-make _any_ horse win.’
-
-‘My dear child, you are quite a “plunger,”’ said Mrs. Snowden.
-‘Doubtless, they will cover themselves with glory. I’m afraid they can’t
-both win.’
-
-At this moment one of the heroes joined the speakers, sauntering up with
-a respectful expression of countenance, proper to him who makes a
-request of a fair lady.
-
-‘Miss Christabel, I have come to ask you to give me one of your ribbons
-for luck. I see Miss Effingham has decorated Hamilton. It’s only fair
-that I should have a charm too.’
-
-‘Here it is, if you care for it, Bob!’ said the girl, hastily detaching
-a ‘cerise’ knot from her dress, while her varying colour told how the
-slight incident touched an unseen chord beneath the surface; ‘only I
-wish you were not going to ride at all. Somebody will be killed at these
-horrid steeplechases yet, I know.’
-
-‘Why, you’re nearly as bad as my sister,’ said the youthful knight
-reassuringly, and giving his fair monitress an unnecessary look of
-gratitude, as Wilfred thought. ‘I shan’t let her come on the course next
-time I ride. There’s the saddling bell. We’ll see whether the pink
-ribbon or the blue goes farthest.’
-
-The arrangements had been made with foresight, so that beyond the
-customary galloping across the course for a surcingle at the last moment
-by a friend in the interests of Currency Lass, a proceeding which
-aroused Mr. Rockley’s wrath, who publicly threatened her rider that he
-would bring the matter before the Turf Club, little delay was caused. At
-length all preliminaries were complete, and high-born St. Andrew passed
-the stand, shining like a star, with Charles Hamilton, in blue and gold,
-utterly _point devise_, on his back. Horse and rider seemed so
-harmonious, indeed, that a ringing cheer burst from the crowd, and all
-the throats whose owners inhabited the hills and vales south of the
-Great Lake shouted themselves hoarse for St. Andrew and Mr. Hamilton.
-
-‘He’s as fit as hands can make him,’ said one of this division—a groom
-of O’Desmond’s. ‘There’s few of us can put on the real French polish
-like Mr. Hamilton; he’s a tiger to work, surely; and the little ’oss is
-fast. I know his time. If that Syd, or whatever they call him, licks ’im
-to-day, he’ll have his work to do. My guinea’s on St. Andrew.’
-
-‘He’s a good ’un, and a stayer,’ said the man who stood next to him in
-the closely-packed temporary stand; ‘but there’s a bit of chance work in
-a steeplechase. The Cid’s a trimmer on the flat, or cross the sticks,
-but you can’t depend on him. I wouldn’t back him for a shillin’ if young
-Clarke wasn’t on him. But he’s that game and strong in the saddle, and
-lucky, as my note would be on a mule if he was up. Here he comes!’
-
-As he spoke, The Cid came by the post at speed, ‘a pipe-opener’ having
-been thought necessary by his master, and as the grand horse extended
-himself, showing the elastic freedom of his magnificent proportions,
-with the perfection of his rider’s seat and figure, standing jockey-like
-in his saddle, moveless, and with hands down, it was a marvel of
-equestrian harmony.
-
-The roar of applause with which the crowd greeted the exhibition showed
-a balance of popularity in favour of horse and rider as the
-long-repeated cheers swelled and recommenced, not ending indeed until
-the pair came walking back, The Cid raising his lofty crest, and
-swinging his head from side to side, as he paced forward with the air of
-a conqueror.
-
-‘Oh, what lovely, lovely creatures!’ said Annabel Effingham, who had
-never been to a race meeting before. ‘I had no idea a horse could be so
-beautiful as St. Andrew or The Cid. Why can’t they both win? I hope Mr.
-Hamilton will, I’m sure, because he’s our neighbour; but I shall be
-grieved if The Cid loses. How becoming jockey costume is! And what a
-lovely jacket that is of Mr. Clarke’s! If I were a man I should be
-passionately fond of racing.’
-
-‘Bob’s a great deal too fond of it,’ said Mrs. Malahyde, a bright-eyed
-matron of seven- or eight-and-twenty. ‘I wish you girls would combine
-and make him promise to give it up. I can’t keep away when he’s going to
-ride, but it’s all agony with me till I see him come in safe.’
-
-‘When you look at it in that way,’ assented Annabel, ‘it certainly
-doesn’t seem right, and it’s unfair of us to encourage it. What a pity
-so many nice things are wrong!’
-
-‘They’re off!’ said Miss Christabel, who had been eagerly watching the
-proceedings, during which the other performers had severally displayed
-themselves, receiving more or less qualified ovations, and then finally
-been taken in charge severely by Mr. Rockley as far as the distance
-post. ‘They’re off! Oh, don’t say a word till they’re over the first
-fence!’
-
-All the horses of the little troop had sufficient self-control to go
-‘well within themselves’ from the start except King of the Valley and
-Currency Lass. The mare’s nervous system was so shaken by the thunder of
-the horse-hoofs and the shouting of the crowd at her introduction to
-society, that she pulled and tore, and ‘took it out of herself,’ as her
-rider, Billy Day, afterwards expressed himself, to that extent, that he
-felt compelled to let her have her head, with a lead over the first
-fence.
-
-This barrier she at first charged at the rate of a liberal forty miles
-an hour, with her head up, her mouth open, and such an apparently
-reckless disregard of the known properties of iron-bark timber, that
-Billy’s friends began to cast about for a handy vehicle, as likely to be
-in immediate demand for ambulance work. But whether from the
-contrarieties said to govern the female sex, or from some occult reason,
-Currency Lass no sooner had her own way than she displayed unexpected
-prudence. She slackened pace, and cocking her delicately-pointed ears,
-rewarded her rider’s nerve and patience by making a magnificent though
-theatrical jump, and being awfully quick on her legs, was half-way to
-the next fence before another had crossed the first.
-
-‘Oh, what a lovely jump Currency Lass took!’ said one of the young
-ladies, ‘and what a distance she is in front of all the rest. Do you
-think she will win, Mr. Smith? How slowly all the others are going.’
-
-‘There’s plenty of time,’ said the critic of the sterner sex. ‘She’s a
-clever thing, but she can’t stay the distance. Ha! very neatly done
-indeed. That’s what I call workmanlike. Cornstalk baulks—well done—good
-jump! All over the first fence, and no one down.’
-
-These latter remarks were called forth by seeing St. Andrew, The Cid,
-and Bargo charge the fence nearly in line, the latter rather in the
-rear, and go over with as little haste or effort as if it had been a row
-of hurdles. Wallaby hit the top rail hard, but recovered himself, and
-Cornstalk, after baulking once, was wheeled short, and popped over
-cleverly, without losing ground.
-
-The same style of performance was repeated with so little variation for
-the next half-dozen leaps, that the eager public began to look with
-favour upon the enthusiastic Currency Lass, still sailing ahead with
-undiminished ardour, and flying her leaps like a deer. The sarcastic
-inquiry, ‘Will they ever catch her?’ commenced to be employed, and the
-provincial prejudice in favour of a true bushman and a country-trained
-horse, ‘without any nonsense about her,’ began to gather strength.
-
-But at this stage of the proceedings it became apparent that the
-struggle between the two cracks could not longer be postponed. With one
-bound, as it appeared to the spectators, St. Andrew and The Cid were
-away at speed, their riders bearing themselves as if they had only that
-moment started for the race.
-
-‘They’re at one another now,’ said Argyll to O’Desmond. ‘We shall see
-how the Camerton blood tells in a finish.’
-
-‘Don’t you think Charlie’s making the pace too good?’ said Mr. Churbett.
-‘I wanted him to wait till he got near the hill, but he said he thought
-the pace would try The Cid’s temper, and half a mistake would make him
-lose the race.’
-
-‘They’re both going too fast now, in my opinion,’ said Forbes. ‘One of
-them will have a fall soon, and then the race is old Bargo’s, as sure as
-my name’s James.’
-
-‘Oh, what a pretty sight!’ said Mrs. Snowden, as a large fence in full
-view of the whole assemblage was reached.
-
-The native damsel was still leading, but the distance had visibly
-decreased which separated her from the popular heroes. All three horses
-were going best pace, and as the mare cleared the fence cleverly, but
-with little to spare, pressed by The Cid and St. Andrew, as they took
-the jump apparently in the same stride, a great cheer burst from the
-crowd.
-
-‘Well done, Bargo!’ shouted the complimentary crowd, in high
-good-humour, as the old horse came up, quietly working out his
-programme, and topping the fence with but little visible effort,
-followed his more brilliant leaders. The others were by this time
-considerably in the rear, but took their jumps creditably still. The
-next fence was known to be the most dangerous in the whole course. The
-ground was broken and stony, the incline unpleasantly steep, and a small
-but annoying grip caused by the winter rains interfered with the
-approach. In the hunting field it would have been simply a matter for
-careful riding. But here, at the speed to which the pace had been
-forced, it was dangerous.
-
-‘Why don’t they pull off there?’ muttered Mr. Rockley, virtuously
-indignant. ‘No one but a madman would go over ground like that as if
-they were finishing a flat race. That fellow Hamilton is as obstinate as
-a mule. I know him; he wouldn’t pull off an inch for all the judges of
-the Supreme Court.’
-
-‘I’m afraid Bob Clarke won’t,’ said John Hampden; ‘that’s the worst of
-steeplechasing, the fellows _will_ ride so jealous. Well done, The Cid!
-By Jove! the mare’s down! and—yes—no!—St. Andrew too. Don’t be
-frightened, anybody,’ as more than one plaintive cry arose from among
-the carriages on which the ladies stood thickly clustering. ‘Both men
-up, and no harm done. Hamilton’s away again, but it’s The Cid’s race.’
-
-These hurried observations, made for the benefit of the visibly
-distressed _clientèle_ of Hamilton, were called forth by the most
-sensational proceedings which had obtained yet.
-
-As the two rivals came down the slope at the highly improper pace
-alluded to, they overtook Currency Lass at her fence, which confused
-that excitable animal. Getting her head from her rider, who had been
-prudently steadying her across this unpleasant section, with the idea
-that he would be unaccompanied till he was clear of it, she went at the
-fence with her usual impetuosity. A gutter threw her out a little; it
-may be that her wind had failed. It is certain that, taking off too
-closely to the stiff fence, she struck the top rail with tremendous
-force, the impetus casting her rolling over on her back into the
-adjoining paddock, while her rider, fortunately for him, was ‘sent rods
-and rods ahead of her’ (as a comrade described it), and so saved from
-being crushed under the fallen horse. The mare rose to her legs
-trembling and half stunned, glared for one moment at surrounding
-objects, and then went off at full speed, with flapping stirrups and
-trailing reins. The Cid had sailed over the fence a yard to the left of
-her, and was going at his ease, with nothing near him.
-
-Where, then, was St. Andrew? He had also come to grief.
-
-Putting his foot on a rolling stone, he had been unable to clear his
-leap, though he made a gallant effort. Striking heavily, he went down on
-the farther side.
-
-His rider, sitting well back, and never for one instant losing his
-proverbial coolness, was able to save him as much as, under the
-circumstances, a horse can be saved. Down on nose and knee only went the
-good horse, his rider falling close to his shoulder, and never
-relinquishing the reins. Both were on their feet in an instant, and
-before the crowd had well realised the fact, or the ‘I told you so’
-division had breath to explain why St. Andrew _must_ fall if the pace
-was kept really good, Charlie Hamilton was in the saddle and away, with
-his teeth set and a determination not to lose the race yet, if there was
-a chance left. Bargo came up with calculated pace and line, and
-performed his exercise with the same ease and precision as if he had
-been practising at a leaping bar. Cornstalk baulked again, and this time
-with sufficient determination to lose him half a mile. Wallaby gave his
-rider a nasty fall, breaking his collar-bone and preventing further
-efforts. While King of the Valley, going reasonably up to this stage,
-overpowered his rider at last, and hardly rising at his fence, rolled
-over, and did not rise. He had broken his neck, and his rider was
-unconscious for twelve hours afterwards. The race therefore lay between
-The Cid, St. Andrew, and the safe and collected Bargo, coming up _pedo
-claudo_, and with a not unreasonable chance, like Nemesis, of appearing
-with effect at the close of the proceedings.
-
-The next marked division of the course was known as ‘the hill,’ an
-eminence of no great altitude between two farms, but possessing just
-sufficient abruptness to make the fence a more than average effort. This
-‘rise,’ as the country people called it, lay about three-quarters of a
-mile from home, and the horse that first came down the long slope which
-led towards the winning-post, divided from it but by several easy
-fences, had a strong chance of winning the race.
-
-Before The Cid reached the base of this landmark, still keeping the pace
-good, but going comparatively at his ease, it was apparent that
-Hamilton, who had been riding St. Andrew for his life, and had indeed
-resolved to tax the courage and condition of the good horse to the last
-gasp, was closing in upon his leader. ‘Sitting down’ upon his horse,
-Charles Hamilton extorted praise from the assemblage by the
-determination with which he fought a losing race. He was well seconded
-by the son of Camerton, as, extending himself to the utmost, he flew
-fence after fence as if they were so many hurdles.
-
-‘What a pity poor St. Andrew came down at that abominable place!’ said
-Annabel. ‘I really believe he might have won the race. He was not so far
-behind Mr. Clarke when he disappeared behind the hill.’
-
-‘He’s only playing with him, I’m afraid,’ said Mr. Hampden kindly.
-‘Hamilton and his horse deserve to win, but that fall made too great a
-difference between horses so evenly matched.’
-
-‘The Cid’s heart’s not in the right place,’ here broke in an admirer of
-Miss Christabel’s, who had been cut down by the fascinating Bob. ‘You
-know that, Hampden. I saw him refuse and lose his race, which he had
-easy in hand, at Casterton. He might baulk at that sidling jump behind
-the hill yet. It’s a nasty place.’
-
-‘I believe he will too,’ said Fred Churbett, staunch to the Benmohr
-colours. ‘We ought to see them soon now; they’re a long time coming.
-Take all the odds you can get, Miss Annabel.’
-
-‘Will _you_ take seven to four, Churbett?’ said Mr. Hampden. ‘I know The
-Cid’s peculiarities, but I’ll back him out, and my countryman, Bob
-Clarke, as long as there is a Hereford at Wangarua.’
-
-‘Done!’ said the friendly Fred; ‘and “done” again, Mr. Hampden,’ said
-Bob’s rival.
-
-Just as the words were finished a great shout of ‘St. Andrew wins,
-Benmohr for ever!’ arose from the country people as _one horse_ was seen
-coming down the long, green slope. On the rider could plainly be
-discovered the blue and golden colours of Charles Hamilton.
-
-‘Baulked, by Jove! the sidling fence was too much for him; thought Bob
-was sending him along too fast. Deuced uncertain brute; not the real
-thing; never could stay; nothing like the old Whisker and Camerton
-strain. Here comes Bargo! By Jove! Hurrah!’
-
-Such comments and condemnations were freely expressed as St. Andrew came
-sailing along. The concluding cheer, however, was evoked by the
-apparition of a second horse which followed St. Andrew with a flogging
-rider, who was evidently making his effort. It immediately became
-apparent that this was Bargo, whom his rider was ‘setting to with,’
-believing that the tremendous pace which St. Andrew had sustained for
-the last part of the race must now tell upon him. Where, then, was The
-Cid? Where, indeed? His admirers were dumb; his opponents jubilant. It
-is the way of the world.
-
-‘Where’s your seven to four now, Mr. Hampden?’ said the youthful
-partisan.
-
-‘Possibly quite safe; never be quite certain till the numbers are up.
-Here comes The Cid at last; Bob’s not beaten yet.’
-
-Another sustained shout from the excited crowd showed what a new element
-of interest this apparition of the lost horseman had added to the race.
-Bargo, carefully saved, and comparatively fresh, sorely pressed the
-gallant St. Andrew, whose bolt was nearly shot. Still, struggling gamely
-to keep his lead, and well held together, he had crossed the third fence
-from home before he was challenged by Bargo.
-
-But down the hill, at an awful pace, ridden with the desperation of a
-madman, came The Cid. Bob Clarke, with cap off and reckless use of whip
-and spur, could not have increased the pace by one single stride had he
-been going for a man’s life. Had a doomed criminal been standing on the
-scaffold, ready for the headsman’s axe, did the reprieve of the old
-romances not be displayed in time, not another second could The Cid have
-achieved.
-
-‘He’ll do it yet if they’re not too close at the last fence,’ said
-Hampden, with his usual calmness. ‘I never knew The Cid baulk _twice_ in
-one race, and he has a terrible turn of speed for a short finish. Bob’s
-in earnest, I should say.’
-
-That fact was doubted by none who saw him that day. His face was pale;
-his eyes blazed with a flame which few had ever seen who looked upon the
-handsome features and pleasant smile of Robert Clarke. The excitement
-became tremendous. The ladies made emotional remarks—some of pity for
-his disappointment, some of sympathy with his probable hurts, if he had
-had a fall. All joined in reprobating the unlucky Cid.
-
-Christabel Rockley alone said no word, but her fixed eyes and pale cheek
-showed the absorbing interest which the dangerous contest, now deepening
-to a possible tragedy, had for her.
-
-The furious pace appeared not to interfere with The Cid’s wondrous
-jumping powers. At the speed he was driven at his fences he must have
-gone over or through them. He seemed to prefer the former, and cheer
-after cheer broke the unusual silence as high in air was seen the form
-of horse and rider, as every fence was crossed but the last, and perhaps
-the stiffest, a hundred yards from home.
-
-St. Andrew and Bargo were now neck and neck, stride and stride. The
-indomitable chestnut had begun to roll; the stout but not brilliant
-Bargo was at his best. As they near the last fence it is evident that
-The Cid, still coming up with a ‘wet sail,’ is overhauling the pair. The
-question is, whether St. Andrew is not too near home.
-
-The anxiety of the crowd is intense, the breathless suspense of the
-friends of the rival stables painful, the fielders are at the acme of
-excited hope and fear, when St. Andrew and Bargo, closely followed by
-The Cid, rise at this deciding leap. The chestnut just clears it, with
-nothing to spare; Bargo, overpaced, strikes heavily, and rolls in the
-field beyond; Bob Clarke charges the panel on the right like a demon,
-and, after a deadly neck-and-neck struggle with St. Andrew, who still
-has fight left, outrides him on the post.
-
-The conclusion of this ‘truly exciting race, covering with glory all
-concerned therein,’ as the local journal phrased it, was felt to be
-almost too solemn a matter for the usual hackneyed congratulations. The
-overwrought emotions of the young ladies rendered a prompt adjournment
-necessary to side-saddles and vehicles, which, after refreshment
-supplied to the protagonists, were made ready for the homeward route.
-Bob Clarke received a congratulatory glance from Christabel Rockley,
-which no doubt helped to console him, as did such guerdon many a good
-knight of old, for the dust and dangers of the tourney.
-
-His sister, Mrs. Malahyde, who could hardly have been said either to
-have seen or enjoyed the thrilling performance, for ‘mamma was lying
-down crying in the bottom of the dogcart all the time,’ as her little
-daughter testified, now arranged her bonnet and countenance, and
-expressed her heartfelt thanks for Bob’s safety.
-
-Charles Hamilton received assurances from the ladies generally, and
-particularly from his neighbours of The Chase, that his courage and
-perseverance had been to them astonishing, and beyond all praise; while
-St. Andrew, beaten only by a head, after all his gallant endeavours to
-repair ill-luck, was lauded to the skies.
-
-‘Poor dear fellow!’ said Annabel. ‘I wonder if horses ever feel
-disappointed. He does droop a little, and it was wicked of you to spur
-him so, Mr. Hamilton. Now that naughty Cid goes swinging his head about
-as if he was quite proud of himself. How _he_ has been spurred! Dear
-me!’
-
-‘Yes, and well flogged,’ said one of the Hobart division. ‘Bob said when
-he baulked behind the hill he could have killed him. However, it will do
-him good. He took his last fences as if he would never refuse again as
-long as he lived.’
-
-‘I will just say this, as my calm and deliberate opinion, and I should
-like to hear any man contradict me,’ said Mr. Rockley, ‘that there never
-was a race better ridden in the colony than Hamilton’s on St. Andrew. If
-he hadn’t made that mistake at the stony creek he _must_ have had the
-race easily. His recovering his place was one of the best bits of riding
-I ever saw.’
-
-‘Oh, of course; but if The Cid hadn’t baulked, _he_ would have come in
-as he liked. Suppose we get them to run it over again to-morrow as a
-match for a hundred. I’ll put a tenner on The Cid.’
-
-‘The race is run, Mr. Newman, and that’s enough,’ said Rockley
-decisively; ‘quite enough danger for one year. The next thing is to get
-back to Yass in time to dine comfortably, and see that everything is
-ready for the race ball to-night.’
-
-This sensible advice, which, like the suggestions of royal personages,
-savoured somewhat of a command, was duly acted upon, and in a short time
-the greater part of the company, who intended to recompense themselves
-for the fatiguing emotions of the day by the fascinations of the night,
-took the homeward road, leaving ‘The Hack Stakes’ and the ‘Scurry’ (post
-entry) to be run without them. There was ample time. The afternoon was
-mild and fair of aspect; a friendly breeze, sighing over the plain, had
-come wandering up from the south. The equestrian portion of the company
-formed themselves unconsciously into knots and pairs.
-
-Bob Clarke, having shifted into mufti, was lounging homeward on a
-well-bred hackney on the offside of Christabel Rockley’s Red King, whose
-arching neck he felt impelled to pat, while he replied to the eager
-questioning of the fair rider. Her cheeks were brilliant again with
-youth’s bright tints, and her eyes glittered like imprisoned diamonds
-beneath her tiny lace veil.
-
-‘I hope you sympathise with me, Miss Effingham,’ said Hamilton, as they
-rode in advance of the rest of the party, a position to which Fergus’s
-extraordinary walking powers generally promoted him. ‘Bob is receiving
-the victor’s meed from Miss Christabel—how happy they both look!’
-
-‘I really do, sincerely,’ said Rosamond, ignoring the episodical matter.
-‘It must be most provoking to have one’s prize wrested away in the
-moment of victory. But every one saw what a gallant struggle you and St.
-Andrew made. Were you hurt at all when you fell?’
-
-‘I shall be pretty stiff to-morrow,’ he answered carelessly; ‘but I have
-had no time to think about it. I thought my arm was broken, as it was
-under St. Andrew’s shoulder. It is all right, though numbed for a while.
-I am inwardly very sore and disgusted, I don’t mind telling you. That
-tall fellow, Champion, and Malahyde, with all the Tasmanians, will crow
-so.’
-
-‘It can’t be helped, I suppose,’ said Rosamond soothingly. ‘Mr. Hampden,
-at least, did not show any disposition to do so, for he praised your
-riding and St. Andrew’s good finish warmly. He said all steeplechases
-were won either by luck, pluck, a good horse, or good riding, and that
-you had all but the first requisite.’
-
-‘Hampden is a good fellow and a gentleman,’ said the worsted knight,
-rather consoled, ‘and so is Bob Clarke. If one has done one’s best,
-there is no more to be said. But I had set my heart on winning this
-particular race. Heigh-ho! our pleasure week is coming to an end.’
-
-‘Yes; to-night, the ball; to-morrow, the Ladies’ Bag and a picnic. We
-are all off home on Monday. I shall not be sorry, though I have enjoyed
-myself thoroughly; every one has been so pleasant and friendly, and Mrs.
-Rockley kind beyond description. I never had so much gaiety in so short
-a time. But I shall be pleased to return to our quiet life once more.’
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
- MISS VERA FANE OF BLACK MOUNTAIN
-
-
-After a due amount of dining and dressing, the former performed by the
-male and the latter by the feminine portion of the gathered social
-elements, ‘The great Terpsichorean event, which marked this most
-harmonious Turf reunion, was inaugurated with _éclat_,’ as the editor of
-the _Yass Standard_ (in happy ignorance of the illegal arrangement which
-divers magnates, chiefly being Justices of the Peace, were at that very
-hour transacting) described it in the following Monday’s issue.
-
-All the bachelors, and not a few of the married men, had quarters at the
-Budgeree Hotel, so that they had no unnecessary fatigue to undergo, but
-were enabled to present themselves in the grand ballroom of that
-imposing building nearly as soon as it was ascertained that the Rockley
-contingent, which apparently combined everybody’s favourite partner, had
-arrived.
-
-The brass band included a wandering minstrel from the metropolis, whose
-aid, both instrumentally and in the selection of dance music, proved
-truly valuable. The invitations, owing to the liberal views of Mr.
-Rockley, had been comprehensive, taking in all the townspeople who could
-by any chance have felt aggrieved at being left out.
-
-The ball was opened by a quadrille, in which Mrs. Rockley and Hampden
-took part, while Rockley, with deferential demeanour, led out Mrs.
-Effingham, who consented on that occasion only to revive the
-recollections of her youth. Mrs. Snowden and Argyll, Hamilton and
-Rosamond Effingham, with other not less distinguished personages,
-‘assisted’ at this opening celebration.
-
-After this ceremonious commencement the first waltz took place, in which
-Wilfred found himself anticipated as to a dance with Christabel Rockley,
-who, with an utterly bewildering look, regretted that she was engaged to
-Bob Clarke. That heroic personage swiftly whirled away with the goddess
-in his arms, leaving Wilfred more annoyed than he liked to confess, and
-divided in his resolutions whether to stay at home and work austerely,
-avoiding the lighter amusements, or to buy the best horse in the Benmohr
-stud, train him at The Chase, and ride against Bob Clarke for his life
-at the next meeting. He had called up sufficient presence of mind to
-place his name again on Miss Christabel’s very popular card, rather low
-down, it is true, but still available for a favourite waltz, in which
-Fred Churbett had promised to assist with his cornet, and Hamilton with
-his Sax-horn, a new instrument, believed to be the combination of all
-sweet and sonorous sounds possible to the trumpet tribe.
-
-But all inappropriate thoughts were driven out by the next partner, a
-striking-looking girl, to whom he was introduced by Mr. Rockley, very
-properly doing duty as chief steward.
-
-This young lady’s name was stated to be Vera Fane, with great clearness
-of intonation. He further volunteered the information that she was the
-daughter of his old friend, Dr. Fane, and (in what was meant to be a
-whisper) ‘as nice a girl as ever you met in your life.’
-
-The young lady smiled and blushed, but without discomposure, at this
-evidence of the high value at which she was rated.
-
-‘Rather too good to be true, don’t you think?’ she said, with a frank
-yet modest air. ‘I ought to declare myself much honoured, and all the
-rest of it. But you know Mr. Rockley’s warm-hearted way of talking, and
-I really think he believes every word of it. He has known me from a
-child. But I apologise, and we’ll say no more about it, please. Very
-good racing there seems to have been. I was _so_ sorry, in despair I may
-say, to miss the steeplechase.’
-
-‘Then you only came in to-day?’ asked Wilfred. ‘How was that? I didn’t
-think any lady in the district could have forgone the excitement. It
-seems to rank with the miracle plays of the Middle Ages.’
-
-‘Or rather the masques and tournaments of those of chivalry. But I was
-away from home, and had to ride a long way for the ball and the Ladies’
-Bag to-morrow.’
-
-‘I am afraid you must be tired. How far have you come to-day?’
-
-‘Really,’ said the young lady, with some hesitation, ‘I must plead
-guilty to having ridden fifty miles to-day. I am afraid it shows
-over-eagerness for pleasure, and dear old Mr. Sternworth might scold me,
-if he was not so indulgent to what he calls “the necessities of youth.”
-But our home is a lonely spot, and I have so _very_ little change.’
-
-‘Fifty miles!’ said Wilfred, in astonishment. ‘And do you really mean to
-say that you have ridden that immense distance, and are going to dance
-afterwards? It will kill you.’
-
-‘You must be thinking of young ladies in England, Mr. Effingham,’ said
-the girl, with an amused look; ‘not but what some of them rode fair
-distances for the same reasons a hundred years ago, papa says. I daresay
-I shall feel tired on Sunday; but, as I’ve ridden ever since I could
-walk, it is nothing so very wonderful. You mustn’t think me quite an
-Amazon.’
-
-‘On the contrary,’ said Wilfred, looking at the girl’s graceful figure,
-and recognising that air of refinement which tells of gentle blood, ‘I
-am lost in astonishment only. You look as if you had made a start from
-“The Big House” with the rest of Mrs. Rockley’s flock. But we must join
-this waltz, if you don’t mind, or your journey will have been in vain.’
-
-Miss Fane smiled assent, and as they threaded the lively maze,
-practically demonstrated that she had by no means so overtired herself
-as to interfere with her dancing. Wilfred immediately established her
-among the half-dozen perfections he had discovered in that line. There
-was, moreover, a frank, unconcealed enjoyment of the whole affair, which
-pleased her partner. Her fresh, unpremeditated remarks, showing original
-thought, interested him; so much so, that when he led her to a seat
-beside her chaperon, having previously secured a second dance at a later
-period of the evening—and the _very last_—even Sir Roger de Coverley—the
-bitterness of soul with which he had seen Christabel Rockley borne off
-by the all-conquering Bob Clarke, was considerably abated. He would have
-been incensed if any one had quoted ‘_surgit amari aliquid_,’
-nevertheless; if one may so render the cheerful bard, ‘some charming
-person generally turns up, with power to interest.’ It would not have
-been so far inapplicable to his, or indeed to the (comparatively) broken
-hearts of most of us.
-
-By the time the dance of dances had arrived, when he was privileged to
-clasp the slight waist and gaze into the haunting eyes of the divine
-Christabel, he was conscious of a more philosophical state of mind than
-in the beginning of the evening. Nevertheless, the mystic glamour of
-beauty came over him, fresh and resistless, as the condescending charmer
-let her witching orbs fall kindly on his countenance, smiled merrily
-till her pearly teeth just parted the rosy lips, and blushed
-enchantingly when he accused her of permitting Bob Clarke to monopolise
-her. She defended herself, however, in such a pleading, melodious voice;
-said it was cruel in people to make remarks, altogether looking so like
-a lovely child, half penitent, half pouting, that he felt much minded to
-take her in his arms and assure her of his forgiveness, promising
-unbounded confidence in her prudence, and obedience to her commands for
-the time to come.
-
-‘There will be some more excitement, do you know, for the Ladies’ Bag
-to-morrow,’ said the enchantress. ‘Mr. Churbett’s Grey Surrey may not
-win it, after all. Bob told me that a horse of Mr. Greyford’s, that
-nobody knows about, has a chance. He’s suspected of having been in good
-company before. Won’t it be fun if he wins, though I shall be sorry for
-Mr. Churbett. Only Mr. Greyford can’t get a gentleman rider the proper
-weight. What is yours?’
-
-‘Really,’ said Wilfred, ‘I’m not sure to a few pounds. But why do you
-ask?’
-
-‘Don’t you see? If you’re not under eleven stone, you can ride him. We
-can’t let any one in without an invitation received before the race. You
-had one, I know.’
-
-‘Oh yes, I believe so; but I never thought of riding.’
-
-‘Well, but you _can_ ride, of course. Now, if you’re the proper weight,
-you might ride Mendicant for Mr. Greyford; it would do him a service,
-and make the race better fun. Besides, all the girls would like to see
-you ride, I know.’
-
-‘Would _you_ take any interest in my winning, Miss Rockley? Say the
-word, and I will do that or anything else in the wide world.’
-
-‘Oh, I daresay; just as if you cared what _I_ thought. Now there’s Vera
-Fane, that papa introduced you to, she would be charmed to see you win
-it. Oh, I know——’
-
-‘But yourself? Only say the word.’
-
-‘Then _do_ ride—there, don’t look at me like that, or you’ll have mamma
-thinking I’m ill and knocked up with excitement; and if she begins to
-say I look pale, papa’s capable of carrying me off before the ball’s
-over.’
-
-Wilfred, thus adjured, veiled the ardent fire of his glances, and then
-and there pledged himself to ride Mr. Greyford’s Mendicant for the
-Ladies’ Bag, and to win, if Miss Rockley would only back him, which she
-promised to do.
-
-It was surprising how much more interest Wilfred took in the coming
-contest, now that he was about to guide one of the chariot racers, to
-disperse _pulverem Olympicum_ in his own person. He danced perseveringly
-with all the partners suggested to him, covering himself with glory in
-the eyes of Mr. Rockley. He had another and yet another dance with Miss
-Fane, being much gratified at the interest she expressed concerning the
-coming race. He made the acquaintance, too, of Mr. Greyford.
-
-‘_Re_ Mendicant, he’s a lazy beggar,’ said that gentleman frankly, ‘but
-well-bred, and can come at the finish if he likes. I had given up the
-idea of starting him for want of a jock, but I shall be happy if you
-will ride him for me. We’ll go halves in this wonderful bag if Mendicant
-pulls it off.’
-
-And so the great race ball was relegated to the limbo of dead joys and
-pleasures, to that shadow-land where the goblets we have quaffed, the
-chaplets which wreathed our brows, the laughter that kindled our hearts,
-the hands that pressed, the hearts—ah me!—that throbbed, have mostly
-departed. There do they lie, fair, imperishable, awaiting but the blast
-of the enchanted horn to arise, to sparkle and glow, to thrill once
-more. Or has the cold earth closed remorselessly, _eternally_, over our
-joys and those who shared them, never again to know awakening till Time
-shall be no more?
-
-Much must be conceded to the influence of the Australian climate or to
-the embalming influences of active pleasure-seeking, which seems to
-possess an Egyptian potency for keeping its votaries _in statu quo_
-while engaged in the worship of the goddess. Whatever may have been the
-secret of unfailing youth, most of the race meeting constituents seemed
-to possess it, as they turned out after breakfast on Friday morning,
-apparently ready to commence another week’s racing by day, and dancing
-by night, if the gods permitted.
-
-About a dozen horses were qualified to start for the Ladies’ Bag.
-Hamilton had one, Forbes had one, Bob Clarke (of course) another, so
-that the two stables would again be well represented. O’Desmond, who did
-not ride himself, had a likely young horse in, and there were several
-others with some sort of provincial reputation. There was the great Grey
-Surrey, and lastly that ‘dark,’ unassuming, dangerous Mendicant of
-Greyford’s with Mr. Wilfred Effingham up.
-
-That gentleman had never ridden a race before, but was a fair
-cross-country rider before he saw Australia, and since then the riding
-of different sorts of horses had, of course, tended to improve both seat
-and hands. He was aware of the principles of race-riding, and though Bob
-Clarke, Hamilton, Forbes, and Churbett had semi-professional skill, he
-yet trusted, with the befitting courage of youth, to hold his own in
-that tilt-yard.
-
-He had borrowed a set of colours, and looking at himself in the glass
-arrayed as in the traditional races of England, was not dissatisfied
-with his appearance. He found himself wondering whether he should be
-regarded with indulgence by the critical eyes of Miss Christabel, or
-indeed the penetrating orbs of Miss Fane. Was there a chance of his
-winning? Would it not be a triumph if, in spite of the consummate
-horsemanship of Hamilton and Bob Clarke, the reputation of Grey Surrey,
-he should win the prize? The thought was intoxicating. He dared not
-indulge it. He partially enveloped himself in an overcoat, which
-concealed the glories of his black and scarlet racing-jacket, the only
-silken garment which the modern cavalier is permitted to wear (how
-differently they ruffled it in the days of the second Charles!), and
-hied him to the course.
-
-Here he was met by congratulations on all sides.
-
-‘Glad to see you’ve taken to the amateur jock line, Effingham,’ said
-Churbett. ‘There’s a world of fun in it, though it involves early
-rising. It’s awfully against the grain with me, but I assure you I look
-forward to it every year now. It _compels_ me to take exercise.’
-
-‘That view of racing never struck me before,’ said Wilfred. ‘But when
-we’re at Yass, you know, one must follow the fashion.’
-
-‘Especially when certain people look interested. Aha! Effingham, you’re
-an awfully prudent card; but we’re all alike, I expect.’
-
-‘Pooh, pooh! why shouldn’t I take a turn at the pigskin as well as you
-and the others?’ said Wilfred, evading the impeachment; ‘and this sort
-of thing is awfully catching, you know.’
-
-‘Very catching, indeed,’ assented Mr. Churbett. ‘Is that Miss Fane on
-the brown horse next to Mrs. Snowden? Ladylike-looking girl, isn’t she?
-Suppose we go and get a bet out of her?’
-
-Following up this novel idea they rode over to the little group, where
-Mr. Churbett was assailed with all sorts of compliments and inquiries
-about the state and prospects of Grey Surrey.
-
-‘I think the articles should have been selected with reference to your
-complexion, Mr. Churbett,’ said Mrs. Snowden; ‘you seem so certain of
-carrying it off. I know blue is your favourite colour, and I made my
-smoking-cap and slippers of the last fashionable shade on purpose.’
-
-‘Always considerate, Mrs. Snowden,’ said the object of this compliment,
-as a smile became general at this allusion to Fred’s auburn-tinted hair.
-‘You must have been thinking of Snowden, who resembles me in that way,
-and the _very_ early days when you used to work slippers for him.’
-
-‘Really I forget whether I ever did much in that line for Snowden. It
-must have been centuries ago.’
-
-‘Oh, but I don’t agree with that at all,’ said the fair Christabel.
-‘Suppose some one with dark hair wins it, then he would have to go about
-with all sorts of unbecoming trash. Let every one be guided by their own
-taste.’
-
-‘I daresay a few trifles that will look well on Bob Clarke will be found
-in the bag,’ said Hamilton. ‘I heard something about a gorgeous crimson
-and gold smoking-cap. I wonder if anybody has been studying _my_
-complexion? If Effingham wins, you will all be thrown out.’
-
-‘Then you _are_ going to ride, Mr. Effingham?’ said the fair Christabel,
-with a smile so irresistible that it fully repaid him for his troubles
-and misgivings. ‘I am sure I hope you will win, though I’m afraid,
-between Grey Surrey, No Mamma, and Bolivar, you haven’t a good chance.’
-
-‘I wouldn’t be too certain about that,’ said Miss Fane, who had
-recognised Wilfred with a pleasant, cordial greeting, and whom he
-thought looking uncommonly well in her habit, and indisputably well
-mounted. ‘Don’t be alarmed by these great reputations. A little bird
-told me about Mendicant, and I’ll take the odds (in gloves), which are
-eight to one, I believe, that he’s first or second.’
-
-This daring proposal brought rejoinders and wagers upon the head of the
-fair turfite, who quietly accepting a few of the latter, declared that
-her book was full, but was not to be dislodged from her position.
-
-Wilfred felt much encouraged, and proportionately grateful to the fair
-friend who had stood by him and his unknown steed. So he registered a
-vow to remember her in the future—to like and respect and approve of
-her—in short, to pay her all those guarded tributes which men in early
-life keep for the benefit of women they admire, trust, and look up to,
-but alas! do not love.
-
-Among his few well-wishers must be classed Wilfred’s sisters and mother,
-who, honestly pleased to see him ‘respeckit like the lave,’ as Andrew
-would have said, secretly thought that he looked handsomer and better
-turned out when mounted than almost anybody else in the race—in fact,
-nearly as well as Bob Clarke. But even these partial critics could not
-assert to themselves, when they saw Master Bob come sailing past the
-stand upon Bolivar, a dark bay thoroughbred, looking like a brown satin
-angel (Bolivar, not Bob), as one enthusiastic damsel observed, that he
-equalled in appearance and get-up that inimitable workman. Still, he
-looked very nice, they lovingly thought, and of Wilfred’s clear
-complexion, brown hair, well-knit frame, and animated countenance other
-fair spectators held a like opinion.
-
-Grey Surrey came next, ‘terrible’ for a mile, and owing to his Arab
-ancestry, a better stayer than might have been thought from his violent
-manners. His rider’s admirably fitting nether garments, the wrinkles of
-his boots, the shading of his tops, were accurate to a degree. His
-bright blue colours had many a time been in the van. Kindly and affable
-in the widest sense, with a vein of irresistible comic humour, he was
-the most popular squatter in his district—a man of whom none thought
-evil—to whom none would dream of doing harm more than to the unweaned
-child. To a rare though not too sedulously cultivated intellect Fred
-Churbett joined the joyous disposition of a moderate viveur, the soul of
-a poet, and the heart of a woman. But the gold held not the due
-proportion of alloy—too often, alas! the case with the finer natures.
-
-The comprehensive cheer which the whole assemblage instinctively gave
-showed their appreciation. From the crowd (not so many as on the
-previous day, but still were the people not wholly unrepresented) rose
-cries of ‘Well done, Mr. Churbett! Hope you’ll win again. Grey Surrey
-and The She-oaks for ever!’
-
-And as the silky flowing mane glistened in the sun, while the proud
-favourite arched his neck and with wide nostril and flashing eye trod
-the turf with impatient footstep, as might his Arab ancestors have
-spurned the sands of Balk or Tadmor, every friend he had on the course,
-which comprehended all the ladies, all the gentlemen, all the
-respectable and most of the disrespectable persons, thought that if Fred
-Churbett and Grey Surrey did not win yet another victory, there must be
-something reprehensible about turf matters generally.
-
-Probably, in order that the ladies might have a liberal allowance of
-sport in recompense for their contributions, and partly in compliance
-with the undeveloped turf science of the day, the fashion of ‘heats’ had
-always been the rule of this race. Thus, when Grey Surrey came in
-leading by a length, with Bolivar and No Mamma racing desperately for
-second place, every one of experience stated that the third, or even the
-fourth, would be the deciding heat if Bolivar or No Mamma was good
-enough to ‘pull it off’ from the brilliant Surrey. Wilfred had adopted
-the advice he had received from Mr. Greyford, and while keeping a fair
-place, had taken care to save his sluggish steed. He nevertheless
-managed to come through the ruck without apparent effort during the last
-part of the running, and finished an unpretending fifth.
-
-On delivering over his horse to Mr. Greyford’s trainer, he was gratified
-to find that he had won that official’s unqualified approval by his
-style of riding. ‘There isn’t a mark on him, sir,’ he said; ‘and that’s
-the way to take him for the first couple of heats. Mendicant’s a lazy
-’oss, and an uncommon queer customer to wind up. But if Surrey don’t win
-the next heat—and I think Mr. Forbes’s No Mamma will give him all he can
-do to get his nose in front—it’s this old duffer’s race, as safe as if
-the rest was boiled.’
-
-‘But how about Bolivar?’
-
-‘Well, sir, Bolivar and No Mamma are a-cuttin’ their own throats the way
-they’re a-bustin’ theirselves for second place, and if you go at
-whatever wins the third heat from _the_ jump, and take it easy the next
-’un, you’ll have this ’ere bag to a moral.’
-
-Returning from this diplomatic colloquy to the vortex of society,
-Wilfred found himself to be already an object of interest in sporting
-circles. Much advice was tendered to him, and counsels offered as to his
-future plan of action, but as these were mostly contradictory, he
-thought himself justified in holding his tongue and abiding by the
-professional opinion of the stable.
-
-Before the final heat he found Fireball Bill walking the veteran up and
-down, with a serious and thoughtful countenance. ‘Look ’ere, sir, don’t
-you make too sure of this ’ere ’eat afore you’ve won it. The old ’oss
-seems right enough; he’s bound to win if he stands up, but I don’t like
-the way he puts down that near foreleg. It’s allers been a big anxiety
-to me. He might go away as sound as a roach and crack up half-way round.
-But you make the pace from the jump, and keep ’em goin’, or else one on
-’em ’ll do yer at the bloomin’ post.’
-
-‘What chance is there of that?’
-
-‘Every chance, sir. You mind me. I’m a man as has follered racing since
-I was the height of a corn-bin, and I knows the ways on ’em. Mr. Clarke
-ain’t easy beat, nor Mr. Hamilton neither. They’ll go off steady, yer
-see, as if there was no use tryin’ to pass yer, along o’ their havin’
-busted their ’orses in them ’eats as went afore.’
-
-‘And a very natural idea. It seems a pity to knock them about, after all
-they’ve done.’
-
-‘We’ve got _to win this race_, sir, and a race ain’t won till the
-numbers is up. Now, Mr. Bob Clarke’s dart is jest this. If he sees you
-don’t keep the old ’orse on his top, he and Mr. Hamilton will wait on
-yer, savin’ their own ’orses till they come to the straight. Then
-they’ll go at you with a rush, and there’s no hamatoor in Australia can
-take as much out of a horse in the last ten strides as Bob Clarke.
-_You’re_ caught afore the old ’orse can get on to his legs, and the race
-is snatched out of the fire by nothin’ but ridin’ and head-work, and
-we’re—smothered!’
-
-‘Beaten and laughed at! I understand clearly, Bill. I shall always think
-you have had more to do with the winning of the race than I have.’
-
-‘That’s all right, sir, but keep it dark. All this is confidential-like
-between the trainer and the gen’leman as rides. There goes the bell
-again. I can hear Mr. Rockley cussin’ all the way from where he stands.
-Here’s your ’orse, sir; you’ve got to win, or kill him!’
-
-Delivering over the unsuspecting Mendicant with this sound professional
-but scarcely humane injunction, Fireball Bill gazed after his charge,
-and scrutinised the leg he suspected him of ‘favouring.’ ‘He’s right!’
-he finally exclaimed, after anxious deliberation; ‘but if I hadn’t
-primed the cove, ’e’d a’ lost that race, sure’s my name’s William
-Scraper.’
-
-Wilfred rode on his way in dignified fashion, as befitting the position
-of probable winner, but in his heart a feeling of thankfulness to the
-old trainer by whose advice he had escaped a catastrophe. What a
-mortification it would have been; how the vane of public opinion would
-have veered round! He trembled to think of it; and as he drew up after
-the others, he hardened his heart, resolved that no artifice of the turf
-should mar his triumph that day.
-
-His rivals went off with an assumption of indifference, as if merely
-going round for form’s sake; but he took the old horse by the head and
-sent him away as if he was riding against Time from end to end. His two
-chief antagonists—for O’Desmond had very properly withdrawn his
-colt—waited at a reasonable rate of speed until it became apparent that
-Mendicant’s rider had no intention of altering his pace. Then they set
-to, and by the way they came up, showed how accurate was Fireball Bill’s
-calculation.
-
-Suddenly, and without a sign of premeditation, Bob Clarke took his horse
-by the head, and with one of his many desperate efforts, sent him up so
-suddenly to the flank of Mendicant, that Wilfred thought the race was
-lost in good earnest.
-
-But as he heard the approaching hoofs, he too commenced to ‘do the
-impossible,’ and found that, though nearly level, Bolivar was unable to
-improve his position, while Mendicant, answering whip and spur,
-gradually drew in advance, as the winning post and the judge’s stand
-(and, as it seemed to Wilfred, half Yass at gaze) came to meet him. A
-few strides, a deafening shout, a rally of whips, and the race is over.
-But the long, lean head had never been overlapped; and as he pulls up,
-head down and distinctly ‘proppy,’ half-a-dozen men struggle for the
-honour of leading Mendicant into the weighing-yard, and his rider knows
-that he has won. Bolivar, with distended nostril and heaving flank,
-follows next, with Bob Clarke sitting languidly on his back, and looking
-nearly as exhausted as his horse; while No Mamma, eased at the distance,
-drags in, as if she had had enough of it for some time to come. Wilfred
-takes his saddle and mechanically goes to scale. ‘Weight!’ says Mr.
-Rockley decisively, and all is over.
-
-In all turf contests, bitter disappointments, deep and lasting
-mortifications, sharpened by loss and inconvenience, occur. But when
-there comes a real triumph, the sweets of success are rich of flavour.
-
-Wilfred was the hero of the occasion, Fortune’s latest favourite,
-impossible to be deposed until next year. No newer victor could
-therefore take away the savour and memorial of his triumph, as, to a
-certain extent, he had now done from Bob Clarke.
-
-Such is the inconsistency of human nature that, although the
-steeplechase required about ten times the amount of horsemanship,
-besides nerve, experience, and a host of qualities unneeded in a flat
-race, Wilfred found himself the observed of all observers, and could not
-but discern that his rivals were temporarily in the shade.
-
-He lost no time in bestowing himself into his ordinary raiment and
-joining the homeward-bound crowd, secure of the smiles which ladye fair
-never refuses to bestow upon the knight who has worthily done his
-devoir.
-
-Christabel Rockley congratulated him warmly upon his good fortune, and
-then turned to console Bob Clarke, a process which apparently involved
-more time and explanation, so much so that Wilfred changed his locale,
-under pretence of looking after his mother and sisters, and soon found
-himself in more sympathetic company.
-
-He saw that Miss Fane had become a great friend and associate of his
-sister Rosamond, so quickly are lifelong alliances cemented among young
-ladies. Mrs. Snowden was also in the neighbourhood, and among them he
-was flattered to his heart’s content.
-
-‘I was sure you were going to win it from the first,’ said Mrs. Snowden,
-as if stating an incontestable fact. ‘I said to Mrs. Rockley, “How cool
-Mr. Effingham looks! Depend upon it, he has ridden in good company
-before.”’
-
-‘I never bet anything more substantial than gloves,’ said Miss Fane,
-with a gleam of mischief in her eyes; ‘but I can quite understand the
-gambling spirit now. I longed to put a five-pound note papa gave me at
-parting on Mendicant. Dreadfully wicked, wasn’t it? But I should have
-won fifty or sixty pounds, perhaps a hundred. I have made a small
-fortune, however, in gloves.’
-
-‘I shall always think that you were the cause of my winning, Miss Fane,’
-said Wilfred, looking most grateful. ‘No one else believed in me, except
-these girls here,’ looking at his sisters.
-
-‘We are prejudiced,’ said Rosamond, ‘and will remain so to the end of
-the chapter. But I thought you were fighting against odds, with such
-champions as Mr. Hamilton and Mr. Clarke. Now you have won the tilt and
-are the favoured knight. Is the queen of beauty to give you the victor’s
-wreath?—and who is she?’
-
-‘Oh, Christabel the peerless, of course,’ said Miss Fane. ‘And I think
-her the prettiest creature in the world—that is, for a dark beauty, of
-course,’ looking at Annabel, who now came up. ‘It’s a case of honours
-divided, all the men say.’
-
-‘I wonder how we shall settle down in our peaceful homes again,’ said
-Beatrice, ‘after all these wild excitements and thrilling incidents. I
-feel as if we were leaving the first or second volume of a novel.’
-
-‘Why the first or second,’ said Miss Fane, ‘and not the third?’
-
-‘Because there’s no possibility of our story being complete in one
-volume. There are materials for romances here, but the _dénouement_ is
-wanting. Every one will go home again on Monday; the actors and
-actresses will throw on their wrappers, the lights will be put out, the
-theatre shut up, and no piece announced until next year. There is
-something theatrical about all pleasure. This indeed is real melodrama,
-with plenty of scene-shifting, comedy in proper proportion, leading
-actors, and a hint of tragedy in the last act.’
-
-For the Effinghams this had been a completely new experience. Without
-complications of the affections, except in Wilfred’s case, a wider
-estimate of Australian country life had been afforded to them. Besides
-the squirearchy of the land, they had met specimens of the best of the
-younger sons whom England’s ancient houses still send, year by year, to
-carry her laws, her arts, her ambition, and her energy to the most
-distant of her possessions. These include, literally, the ends of the
-earth, where they may aid in the heroic work of colonisation, planting
-the germs of nations, and raising the foundations of empires. Such men
-they had among their immediate neighbours. Still it was pleasant to know
-that others of the same high nature and standard of culture, the
-Conquistadors of the South, were distributed over the entire continent.
-
-Moreover, they had fallen across several perfect feminine treasures, as
-Annabel declared them to be—friends and acquaintances, most rare and
-valuable. Nothing could have exceeded the hospitality and thoughtful
-kindness of the ladies of the Rockley family. Mrs. Rockley had been
-unwearied in providing for the comfort of her guests, and in that
-congenial employment partaking as well in her own person of a reasonable
-share of the pleasures of the continuous _festa_, underwent such
-fatigue, that nothing but an unruffled temper, with great natural
-advantages of constitution, prevented her from breaking down hopelessly
-before the week was over. As it was, though there was a slight look of
-weariness, an air of responsibility, in the morning, the least occasion
-sufficed to bring the ever-cordial smile to the kind face, when all
-gravity of mien instantly disappeared.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
- THE DUEL
-
-
-In Ireland’s good old days, before the decline of unlimited hospitality
-and claret, debt, duelling, and devilment generally, when the Court of
-Encumbered Estates was not, the whole duty of man apparently being
-transacted with an enviable scorn of ready-money payments, no doubt
-exists, that after such a race week as we have essayed to recall, more
-than one gentleman’s hackney would have gone home without him, unless
-the pistol practice was worse than usual.
-
-As it was, a contretemps _did_ occur, which could not be settled without
-the intervention of seconds. These gentlemen decided that a meeting must
-take place. It chanced after this wise. As will happen in all lands,
-there had arisen a veiled but distinct antagonism between two men who
-aspired to social leadership. These were William Argyll and John
-Hampden.
-
-The former, haughtily impatient of opposition, was prone to follow out
-likes and dislikes, with the enthusiasm of his Highland blood. Culture,
-travel, and the drill of society had but modified his natural
-temperament. Under provocation it was as untamed as that of any son of
-MacCallum Mohr who had never quitted the paternal glen. He undervalued
-the opinions of his Australian-born neighbours who had not, like
-himself, enjoyed the advantages of travel. Hasty in word or deed,
-habituated to high consideration from the dwellers near his paternal
-estate, he was careless to a fault about giving offence.
-
-Hampden, though a proud and self-respecting man, was singularly
-imperturbable of demeanour. Open-minded, generous, interested in every
-idea calculated to advance the welfare of his native land, his position
-was high and unquestioned. In his own part of the country he was
-respected by his equals and reverenced by his inferiors to a degree
-uncommon, but by no means unknown in Australia. The people were much in
-the habit of resorting to him for aid or counsel in their difficulties.
-And whatever Mr. Hampden said in such cases carried with it the weight
-and authority of law. His decisions, indeed, were more often quoted,
-more rarely disputed, than those of any bench of magistrates in the
-land.
-
-Although cautious in forming his opinions and chary of expressing them,
-John Hampden was noted as one who never gave back an inch from any
-position which he assumed. This trait chafed the choleric Argyll, who
-had also a considerable ‘following’—admirers of his attainments, and
-dominated by his unrelaxing though generous despotism. It therefore
-happened that, in public matters, Argyll and Hampden were mostly
-observed to take different sides.
-
-Before the race meeting there arose a dispute, common enough in those
-days, between the stock-riders of the two establishments as to the
-ownership of certain calves at the annual muster of Mount Wangarua. Some
-ill-considered remarks of Argyll’s, reflecting on Hampden’s management,
-were repeated with additions. Allusion had been made to ‘indiscriminate
-branding,’ than which nothing could have been more uncalled for. A
-scrupulously exact man in such matters, many a poor man had reason to
-bless the day when his few head of strayed cattle found their way into
-the herds which bore the J.H. brand. Rarely was it placed on an animal
-without satisfactory proof of ownership. However, ‘accidents will occur
-in the best regulated (cattle) families,’ and so had come to pass the
-mistake, fully explained afterwards, upon which Argyll had commented
-unfavourably.
-
-The opportunity afforded for withdrawing his hasty expressions was not
-availed of. So after a formal interview, the alternative was reached
-which, by the laws of society in that early day, compelled a resort to
-the pistol.
-
-Of course, this ultimatum, though known to a few intimate friends, was
-carefully concealed from the general public. The rivals met without
-suspicious coldness, were seen at the ordinary gatherings, and bore
-themselves as became the average pleasure-seekers of the hour. But the
-meeting had been fixed for the Monday following the race week, and it
-was agreed that the principals, with their seconds, should visit a
-certain secluded spot on the homeward route of Hampden’s party, and
-there arrange their difficulty.
-
-Both men were known to be good shots; with rifle and pistol (not yet had
-Colonel Colt impressed his revolving signet on the age) Hampden was
-known to have few equals. But no surprise was manifested when it was
-announced on the eventful Monday that Hampden and his friend Neville,
-together with Forbes, Argyll, and Churbett, had departed at daylight and
-taken the same road. Every one was in the confused state of mind which
-is prone to succeed a season of indulgence. There were bills to pay,
-clothes to pack, resolutions as to improvement to be made by those who
-had exceeded their usual limit in love, loo, or liquor. So that, except
-an expression of astonishment that any reason whatever should have had
-power to take Fred Churbett out of his bed at such an abnormal hour,
-little was said.
-
-As they rode through the silent streets of the sleepy town, a moaning
-breeze betokened that the exceptionally fine weather they had enjoyed
-was about to change for the worse.
-
-To Fred Churbett, as he rode along with a young surgeon impressed in
-case of accident, the day seemed chilly, the fitful wind boding, the
-darkening sky gloomy and drear. ‘What if one of these men, in all the
-pride of manhood, so lately rejoicing in the sport in which they had
-been jointly engaged, should never leave the Granite Glen alive? What a
-mockery was this life of ours! And for what? for a careless word—a hasty
-jest—for this might a man go down to the dark unknown, with all his sins
-upon his head. A melancholy ending to their pleasant days and joyous
-nights!’
-
-These cheerless meditations were probably compounded in equal
-proportions of bilious indigestion and natural regret. Fred’s inner man
-had come off indifferently under a regimen of late hours and mixed
-refreshments; so much so, that he had professed his intention, when he
-returned to the peaceful shades of The She-oaks, ‘to lie on his back for
-a month and live on blue-pill.’ Such thoughts would not have occurred to
-him had he been engaged as principal. But as a mere spectator of a
-mortal combat they were impressively urgent.
-
-Besides all this, Hampden was a married man—had a wife and half-a-dozen
-boys and girls at Mount Wangarua. When he thought that a messenger might
-ride up through the far-famed meadows, where the white-faced Herefords
-lay thick on the clover sward the summer through, to tell the expectant
-wife that the husband—the father, the pattern country gentleman—would
-return no more! Fred felt as if he must strike up everybody’s sword, as
-in old melodramas, and call upon them in the name of God and man to
-desist from a deed at once puerile and immoral.
-
-But like a dream when morning breaks, and princess and noble, castle and
-dragon flee into the shadow-land, whence they came, so his purpose
-vanished into thin air, as they suddenly debouched upon the Granite
-Glen, and he saw by the set faces of the men, as they dismounted, how
-unavailing would be all interference.
-
-With sudden revulsion of feeling, he prepared to act his part. Motioning
-the young surgeon to follow him to the little creek which rippled
-plaintively over the grey blocks, shaded by the funereal, sighing
-casuarina, they took charge of the horses of the combatants. Forbes and
-Neville each produced one of the oblong cases ‘which no gentleman could
-be without’ in those days. Twelve paces were stepped by Forbes, in
-deference to his similar experiences. The principals took their ground.
-
-Fred Churbett scanned narrowly, at the moment, the faces he knew so
-well. On Argyll’s he saw the look of vehement resolve which he had seen
-a hundred times before, while his eyes glowed with angry light. Fred
-knew that whenever any one alluded to Hampden’s alleged expression,
-‘that he was a hot-blooded Highlander, accustomed to rule semi-savages,
-and who did not know how to conduct himself among gentlemen,’ or words
-to that effect, Argyll could not be held accountable for his actions.
-When the passion fit was over, a more accomplished, courteous gentleman
-did not live—generous to a fault, winning, nay, fascinating, of manner
-to all with whom he came into contact.
-
-Hampden’s face, on the other hand, bore its usual serious expression,
-with no shadow of change o’er the mild, contemplative gaze. He looked,
-as he always appeared to those who knew him, as if he were thinking out
-the subject on hand with painstaking earnestness in the interests of
-truth.
-
-Duels were always rare in Australia. Now they are unknown. Society
-appears to manage without them in disputes affecting the honour of
-individuals. Whether manners have suffered in consequence, is a point
-upon which opinions have differed. It had so chanced that Hampden had
-never stood ‘on the ground’ before, although in skirmishes with the wild
-tribes of his native land it was well known that his cool intrepidity
-and unerring aim had more than once saved life.
-
-On this occasion an observer of character might have believed that he
-was more closely occupied in analysing his own and his adversary’s
-sensations than in attending to his personal interest.
-
-That opinion would have been modified, when the critic observed him
-raise his hand with quiet precision at the signal. He fired with
-instinctive rapidity, and at the falling handkerchief two reports rang
-out.
-
-As each man preserved his position unaltered, a sigh of relief broke
-from Fred Churbett. The features of Hampden had not in the slightest
-degree altered their expression. The eager observer even thought he
-detected a tendency to the slow, humorous smile which was wont to be his
-substitute for laughter, as Argyll threw down his weapon with a hasty
-exclamation, while a red line on his pistol arm showed that the accuracy
-of Hampden’s aim had not been altered by the nature of his target.
-
-‘You are hit, Argyll?’ said Churbett, starting forward. ‘For God’s sake,
-stop this mummery! I know Hampden regrets anything inconsiderate he may
-have said.’
-
-The brow of Argyll was black with suppressed fury.
-
-‘A d——d graze, can’t you see, sir?’ he said, as he reluctantly pulled up
-his coat-sleeve for the inspection of the surgeon. ‘The matter cannot
-stop here. An apology at this stage would be absurd. I am in Mr.
-Forbes’s hands, I believe.’
-
-That gentleman had already walked gravely forward to meet Mr. Neville,
-who, with equal seriousness of demeanour, conferred with his
-antagonistic diplomate. Words were exchanged, ending with an ominous
-shaking of the head on Forbes’s part. The seconds, having courteously
-bowed, departed to their former positions. There they placed pistols in
-the hands of the opponents, and took their stations. Even at this stage
-the manner of the two men remained as essentially apart as their
-constitutions. Argyll stood chafing with impatience, while Hampden’s
-eyes wandered calmly over the whole scene—the valley, the little stream,
-the threatening sky—as if considering the chances of the season.
-
-As the pistols were handed to them, Argyll took his weapon with a quick
-gleam of the eye, which spoke of inward strife, while Hampden accepted
-his mechanically and proceeded to gaze fixedly at Argyll, as if prepared
-to give the matter his serious attention.
-
-At the signal he raised his hand as before, but one report only startled
-the birds on the adjacent tree-tops. Hampden held his pistol in the
-steady hand which so few had ever known to swerve from a deadly aim, and
-then, elevating the muzzle, fired carelessly into space.
-
-‘We should have improved in our shooting,’ he said, ‘as we went on;
-Argyll’s second shot was not so wide as the first. He has spoiled my
-coat collar.’
-
-‘By Jove!’ ejaculated Neville, ‘rather a near thing. This must end the
-matter; I’ll be no party to another shot.’
-
-‘I have no objection to state _now_,’ said Hampden, ‘that I regret the
-expressions used by me. I beg unreservedly to withdraw them.’
-
-After a short colloquy between Argyll and Forbes, the latter came
-forward, and with great precision of intonation thus delivered himself.
-
-‘I have much pleasure in stating, on the part of my principal, that
-while accepting Mr. Hampden’s handsome apology and retractation, he
-desires to recognise cordially his generous behaviour.’
-
-Only the Spartan laws of the duello, inexorably binding upon all men
-soever of a certain rank in society, prevented Fred Churbett from
-throwing his hat into the air at this termination of the affair.
-
-As each party moved off in opposite directions, after Argyll had, rather
-against his will, submitted to having his arm bandaged, _secundum
-artem_, Hampden said to Neville:
-
-‘What mockeries these affairs are! I could have shot Argyll “as dead as
-a herring.” It’s better as it is, though.’
-
-‘It’s a good thing his last shot wasn’t an inch or two _inside_ your
-collar instead of out,’ said Neville gravely. ‘After all, as you say,
-these things are mockeries, and worse. Suppose he _had_ drilled you, and
-I was on my way to tell Mrs. Hampden that her husband would never return
-to her?’
-
-‘But _you_ wouldn’t be able to have given the sad intelligence, old
-fellow,’ said Hampden; ‘you would have been fleeing from justice, or
-surrendering yourself. Deuced troublesome affair to all concerned,
-except the departed. But a man must live or die, in accordance with the
-rules of society. After all, there’s nearly as much chance of breaking
-one’s neck mustering over that lava country of ours as being snuffed out
-in this way. Life’s a queer lottery at best.’
-
-‘H—m, ha!’ said Neville, ‘great deal to be got out of the subject; don’t
-feel in the humour for enlarging on it just now. What a good fellow that
-Churbett is! He had a mind to read the Riot Act himself.’
-
- An angry man ye may opine,
- Was he, the proud Count Palatine!
-
-And dire would have been the wrath of our provincial potentate, William
-Rockley, had he but known on Sunday morning what deeds were about to be
-enacted within his social and magisterial jurisdiction.
-
-No sympathy had he, a man of strictly modern ideas, with what he called
-the mediæval humbug of duelling. He looked upon the policeman as the
-proper exponent of such proceedings. Could he have but guessed where
-this discreditable anachronism, according to his principles, was being
-perpetrated, all concerned would have found themselves in the body of
-Yass gaol, in default of sufficient sureties to keep the peace. The
-news, however, did not leak out until afterwards, owing to the
-discretion of the persons concerned, and the fortunate absence of
-serious results. When it did become matter of public comment, his
-imperial majesty was furious. He abused every one concerned in
-unmeasured terms; swore he would never speak to Argyll or Forbes again,
-and would have Hampden struck off the Commission of the Peace. As for
-Fred Churbett, he considered him the worst of the lot, because of his
-deceitful, diabolical amiability, which permitted him to assist in such
-infamous bloodthirsty designs unsuspectedly. Not one of them should ever
-darken his doors again. He would never subscribe another shilling to the
-Yass Races; indeed, he believed he would sell out, wind up his business,
-and leave that part of the colony altogether.
-
-However, not receiving intimation of this infraction of the law until
-matters were somewhat stale, the _status in quo_ was undisturbed. The
-whole of the company, with the exception of the few who were in the
-secret, were similarly innocent; so the air remained unclouded. An
-afternoon walk to Fern-tree Hollow, a shady defile which lay a couple of
-miles from the town, was the accepted Sunday stroll.
-
-Every one turned up to say farewell, thinking it a more suitable time
-than on the hurried, packing, saddling, harnessing-up, bill-paying
-morrow. Then once more the work of the hard world would recommence. The
-idyll had been sung to the last stanza. The nymphs would seek their
-forest retreats, the listening fauns would disappear amid the leaves.
-The rites of that old world deity ‘Leisure,’ now sadly circumscribed,
-had been honoured and ended. This was the last day, almost the last
-hour, when Phyllis could be expected to listen to soft sighings, or
-Neæra to be seen in proximity to the favouring shade.
-
-As they strolled homewards, in the evening, with a troubled sunset and a
-cooler breeze, as if in sympathy with the imminent farewell, the scraps
-of conversation which might have been gathered were characteristic.
-Something more than half-confidences were occasionally interchanged, and
-semi-sentimental speculations not wholly wanting.
-
-At the close of the evening, and the end of the stroll, every one, of
-course, went to the Maison Rockley, and comforted their souls with
-supper, Sunday being an early dinner day, as in all well-regulated
-British families. Conversations which had not been satisfactorily
-concluded had here a chance of definite ending, as the guests somehow
-seemed unwilling to separate when the probability of meeting again was
-uncertain or remote.
-
-With the exception of a little music, there was no attempt at other than
-conversational occupation, which indeed appeared to suffice fully for
-the majority of the guests. And though ordinary topics gradually
-introduced themselves, and Rockley, in the freedom of the verandah,
-reiterated his opinions to Mr. Effingham upon the iniquities of the land
-law, a subdued tone pervaded, half unconsciously, the various groups, as
-of members of one family about to separate for a hazardous expedition.
-
-‘I feel terribly demoralised,’ said Mrs. Snowden, ‘after all this
-dissipation; it is like a visit to Paris must have been to Madame
-Sevigné, after a summer in the provinces. Like her, we shall have to
-take to letter-writing when we go home to keep ourselves alive. The
-poultry are my great stand-by for virtuous occupation. They suffer, I
-admit, from these fascinating trips to Yass; for the last time I
-returned I found two hens sitting upon forty-five eggs. Now what
-philosophy could support that?’
-
-‘Whose philosophy, that of the hens?’ inquired Hamilton, who, with his
-observant companion, had been mildly reviewing the confidentially
-occupied couples. ‘It looks to me like a case of overweening feminine
-ambition on their part.’
-
-‘It was all the fault of that careless Charlotte Lodore who was staying
-with me—a cousin of mine, and a dreadful girl to read. She was so deeply
-interested in some new book that she left the poor fowls to their own
-devices, and never thought about adjusting their “clutches”—that’s the
-expression—until I returned. If you could have seen our two faces as we
-gazed at the pile of addled eggs you would have been awed. I _was_ so
-angry.’
-
-As for Wilfred, he concluded an æsthetic conversation with Miss Fane by
-trusting that she would be enabled to accept his mother’s invitation,
-and pay them a visit at Warbrok Chase before the winter set in.
-
-‘Nothing would give me greater pleasure, really,’ said she, ‘but I
-seldom manage to leave home, except to see a relation in Sydney, or when
-our good friends Mr. and Mrs. Rockley insist on my coming here. But for
-them, papa would hardly consent to my visiting in the country at all.’
-
-There was evidently some constraint in the manner of the girl’s
-explanation, and Wilfred did not press for the solution, trusting to
-time and the frank candour with which every one discussed every other
-person’s affairs in the neighbourhood.
-
-Miss Fane took an opportunity of quitting her seat and joining Mrs.
-Effingham and Beatrice, with whom, much to Wilfred’s satisfaction, she
-maintained a friendly and confidential talk until the little party
-commenced to disperse. He discovered at the same time that Christabel
-Rockley and Bob Clarke had exhausted their powers of mutual fascination
-for the present, so he could not forgo the temptation of hastening,
-after the manner of moths of all ages, to singe his wings in a farewell
-flutter round the fatal Christabel. That enchantress smiled upon him,
-and rekindled his regrets with a spare gleam or two from out her
-wondrous eyes, large as must have been the consumption of soul-felt
-glances during the evening; yet such is the insatiable desire for
-conquest that she listened responsively to his warm acknowledgments of
-the pleasure they had enjoyed during the week, nearly all of which was
-attributable to the great kindness of Mrs. Rockley and the hospitality
-of her father. ‘He should _never_ forget it. The remembrance would last
-him all his life,’ and so on, and so on.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On Monday morning business in its severest sense set in for the world of
-Yass, its belongings, and dependencies. Before dawn all professionals
-connected with race-horses were hard at work with the silent energy
-which characterises the breed. Jockeys and trainers, helpers and boys,
-were steadily employed, each in his own department, strapping, packing,
-or saddling up with a taciturn solemnity of mien, as if racing had been
-abolished by Act of Parliament, and no further rational enjoyment was to
-be hoped for in a ruined world. Correspondingly, the tide of labour and
-rural commerce swelled and deepened. Long teams of bullocks slowly
-traversed the main street, with the heavy, indestructible dray of the
-period, filled with loads of hay, wheat, maize, oats, or flour. Farmers
-jogged along in spring-carts, or on rough nags; the shops were open and
-busy, while the miscellaneous establishment of Rockley and Company,
-which accommodated with equal ease an order for a ton of sugar or a
-pound of nails, a hundred palings, or sawn timber for a bridge, was, as
-usual, crowded with every sort of client and customer, in need of every
-kind of merchandise, advice, or accommodation.
-
-Shortly after breakfast, therefore, Black Prince pranced proudly up
-before his wheeler to the door of Rockley House, looking—but by no means
-likely to carry out that impropriety—as if he was bent upon running away
-every mile of the homeward journey. Portmanteaus and, it must be
-admitted, parcels of unknown size and number (for when did women ever
-travel forth, much less return, without supplementary packages?) were at
-length conveniently bestowed.
-
-Adieus and last words—the very last—were exchanged with their kind
-hostess and her angelic daughter, who had vowed and promised to visit
-The Chase at an early period. Rockley had betaken himself to his
-counting-house hours before. Fergus and Allspice were once more honoured
-with the weight of their respective mistresses, and the little cortège
-departed. Our cavalier had, we know, been prevented by a pressing
-engagement from accompanying them on the homeward route; but it was not
-to be supposed that two young ladies like Rosamond and Beatrice were to
-be permitted to ride through the forest glades escorted merely by
-relations. Most fortunately Mr. St. Maur happened to be visiting his
-friend O’Desmond, combining business and pleasure, for a few days. As
-his road lay past The Chase, he was, of course, only too happy to join
-their party.
-
-Annabel Effingham thought that Bertram St. Maur was perhaps the prince
-and seigneur of their by no means undistinguished circle of
-acquaintances. A tall, handsome man, with a natural air of command, he
-was by Blanche and Selden, immediately after they had set eyes on him,
-declared to be the image of a Norman King in their History of England,
-and invested accordingly with grand and mysterious attributes. A
-well-known explorer, in the first days of his residence in Australia he
-had preferred the hazards of discovery to the slower gains of ordinary
-station life. He was therefore looked upon as the natural chief and
-leader in his own border district, a position which, with head and hand,
-he was well qualified to support.
-
-The homeward journey was quickly performed, a natural impatience causing
-the whole party to linger as little as possible on the road. Once more
-they reached the ascent above their home, from which they could look
-down upon the green slopes, the tranquil lake, the purple hills, of the
-well-known landscape. The afternoon had kept fine; the change from the
-busy town, the late scene of their dissipation, was not unpleasing.
-
-‘I am pleased to think that you young people have enjoyed yourselves,’
-said Mrs. Effingham, ‘and so, I am sure, has papa. It has been a change
-for him; but, oh, if you knew how delighted I am to see home again!’
-
-‘So am I; so are we all,’ said Annabel. ‘I for one will never say a word
-against pleasure, for I have enjoyed myself tremendously. But “enough is
-as good as a feast.” We have had a grand holiday, and like good children
-we shall go back cheerfully to our lessons—that is, to our housekeeping,
-and dear old Jeanie.’
-
-‘Your mother is right in thinking that I enjoyed myself,’ said Mr.
-Effingham. ‘I found most pleasant acquaintances, and had much
-interesting talk about affairs generally. It does a man good, when he is
-no longer young, to meet men of the same age and to exchange ideas. But
-I must say that the pleasure was of an intense and compressed
-description; it ought to last you young people for a year.’
-
-‘_Half a year_,’ said Annabel, ‘I really think it might. _We_ met
-improving acquaintances too,—though I am popularly supposed not to care
-about sensible conversation,—Miss Fane, for instance. We shared a room,
-and I thought her a delightful, original, clever creature, and so good
-too. Can’t we have her over here, mamma? She lives at a place called
-Black Mountain, ever so far away, and can hardly ever leave home,
-because she has little brothers to teach, and all the housekeeping to
-do. I am sorry she is so far off.’
-
-‘So am I, Annabel. We should all like to see more of her.’
-
-‘I think that there were an unusual number of pretty girls,’ continued
-Annabel. ‘As for Christabel Rockley, I could rave about her as much as
-if I were a man. She is a lovely creature, and as good-natured and
-unselfish as a child.’
-
-‘I must say,’ said Mr. Effingham, ‘that for hospitality in the largest
-sense of the word, I never saw anything to surpass that of our friends.
-I knew Ireland well when I was young, but even that proverbially
-generous land seems to me to be outdone by our Australian friends.’
-
-‘I hope Jeanie will have a nice dinner for us,’ said Annabel. ‘But we
-need never be afraid of the dear old thing not doing everything she
-ought to have done. She knew we were coming home to-day, and she will be
-ready and prepared for a prince, if we had picked up a stray one at
-Yass. Home, sweet home! How glad I am! There is nothing like dissipation
-for making one feel truly virtuous.’
-
-Of a truth, there is always something sacred and precious connected in
-the minds of the widely scattered families of the Anglo-Saxon race about
-the very name of ‘home!’ There was no one of the Effinghams whose heart
-was not stirred as they rode and drove up to the hall door, and saw the
-kindly, loving face of Jeanie, the seriously satisfied countenance of
-Andrew, and even the silent Duncan, quite excited for him, as he stood
-ready to assist with the horses. The garden in the neighbourhood of the
-entrance gate was trim and neat, while showers had preserved the
-far-stretching verdure which glorifies the country in whatever
-hemisphere. No great time was consumed in unsaddling. Guy personally
-superintended the stabling of St. Maur’s horse, while Wilfred conducted
-him to one of the spare rooms. Dick Evans, always handy in emergencies,
-turned up in time to dispose of the tandem. And in less than half an
-hour Effingham and his new acquaintance were walking up and down the
-verandah awaiting the dinner-bell, much refreshed and comforted, and in
-a state of mind fitted for admiring the landscape.
-
-‘How fortunate you seem to have been in falling across such a family
-residence,’ said St. Maur. ‘You might have been for years in the country
-and never heard of anything half so good. What a lovely view of the
-lake; and first-class land, too, it seems to be.’
-
-‘We owe our good fortune in great part, or I may say altogether, to my
-old friend Sternworth. But for him we should never have seen Australia,
-or have been stumbling about in the dark after we did come here. And if
-it were possible to need any other aid or advice, I feel certain Mr.
-Rockley would insist on giving it. I must say that the soil of Australia
-produces more friends in need to the square mile than any other I know.’
-
-‘It may be overrated in that respect,’ said St. Maur, smiling; ‘but you
-are in no danger of overrating Rockley’s benevolence or his miraculous
-ways and means of carrying out his intentions. As for Mr. Sternworth, he
-is the “Man of Ross”—or rather of Yass—
-
- To all the country dear,
-
-and passing rich on not exactly ‘forty pounds a year,’ but the
-Australian equivalent. If he introduces any more such desirable
-colonists we must have him made rural Dean. You are satisfied with your
-investment, I take it?’
-
-‘So much so, that I look forward with the keenest relish to the many
-changes and improvements [here his visitor gave a slight involuntary
-motion of dissent] which I trust to carry out during the next few years.
-Everything is reassuring in a money-making aspect, so I trust not to be
-indiscreet in developing the property.’
-
-‘My dear sir, nothing can be more proper than that we should carry out
-plans for the improvement of our estates, after they have shown annual
-profit balances for years. But to spend money on improvements in
-Australia _before_ you have a reserve fund is—pardon my frankness—held
-to be imprudent.’
-
-‘But surely a property well improved must pay eventually better than one
-where, as at present, all the stock are permitted to roam almost in a
-state of nature?’
-
-‘When you come to talk of stock paying, my dear sir, you must bear in
-mind that it is not the finest animal that yields the most profit, but
-the one on which, at a saleable age, you have _expended the least
-money_.’
-
-The evening passed most pleasantly, with just sufficient reference to
-the experiences of the week to render the conversation entertaining. In
-the morning their guest departed, and with him the last associations of
-the memorable race meeting, leaving the family free to pursue the calm
-pursuits of their ordinary life.
-
-Wilfred found himself freshly invigorated and eager to take up again
-occupations connected with the policy of the establishment. He praised
-Dick Evans and old Tom warmly for the exact order in which he found all
-departments, not forgetting a word of approval for Andrew, of whose good
-conduct, however, he was assured under all possible circumstances.
-
-As the season passed on, it seemed as though the family of the
-Effinghams had migrated to one of the poets’ isles—
-
- Happy with orchard lawns,
- Where never wind doth blow or tempest rave—
-
-so flawless were all the climatic conditions, upon which their
-well-being depended.
-
-Pleasant it was, after the day’s work was done, when the family gathered
-round the substantial fire which, red-glowing with piled-up logs,
-thoroughly warmed but did not oppressively heat the lofty room. Then
-came truly the season of
-
- Rest, and affection, and stillness.
-
-Although a certain reaction was apparent after the stupendous adventures
-and experiences of the race meeting, yet moderate social intercourse
-survived. Mr. Churbett was the first of the personages from the outer
-world who presented himself, and the historiette of the duel having
-leaked out, he had to undergo a grave lecture and remonstrance from Mrs.
-Effingham, which, as he said afterwards, reminded him so of his own
-mother that it brought the tears into his eyes.
-
-Mr. Argyll, luckily for his peace of mind, had occasion to go to Sydney,
-otherwise, not to mention chance reviewers and critics, it is hard to
-imagine how he could have protected himself against the uncompromising
-testimony which Mrs. Teviot felt herself compelled to take up against
-him.
-
-‘Spillin’ the bluid o’ the Lord’s anointed; no that Maister Hampden was
-mair than a magistrate, but still it is written, ‘they bear not the
-sword in vain.’ And oh, it’s wae to think if Hampden’s bullet had juist
-gane thro’ the heart o’ Maister Argyll, and his mither, that gracious
-lady, wearyin’ for him by the bonny hills o’ Tarbert! And that Maister
-Churbett, I wadna hae thocht it. I could fell him.’
-
-Howard Effingham, in a general way, disapproved of duelling, but as a
-soldier and a man of the world was free to confess that, as society was
-constituted, such an ultimatum could not be dispensed with. He was happy
-to hear no casualty had occurred. His own opinion, judging from what he
-had seen of colonial society, was that the men composing it were an
-exceptionally reasonable set of people, whose lives, from circumstances,
-were of exceptional value to the community at large as well as to their
-families. In the older countries of Europe, where duelling had formerly
-flourished, the direct converse of this proposition often obtained. He
-believed that in course of time the practice of duelling would become so
-unnecessary, even unfashionable, as to be practically obsolete.
-
-Mr. Hampden did not belong to their ‘side of the country’ (or
-neighbourhood); thus he was necessarily left to receive his share of
-admonition from his wife, and such of his personal friends who cared to
-volunteer reproof or remonstrance. There were those who smiled
-sardonically at this view of the case.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
- THE LIFE STORY OF TOM GLENDINNING
-
-
-During one of the long rides which Wilfred was obliged to take from time
-to time with Tom Glendinning, it occurred to him to ask about his
-previous history. The old man was unusually well; that is, free from
-rheumatism and neuralgia. The demons which tortured his irritable temper
-were at rest. For a wonder, Tom was communicative.
-
-‘Sure there’s little use in knowin’ the finds and the kills and blank
-days of a toothless old hound like meself. I’m broken-mouthed enough to
-know better; but the oulder some gets, the wickeder they are. Maybe it’s
-because there’s little hope for them. I was born in the north of
-Ireland, where my people was dacent enough. Linen factories they had—no
-less. My great grandfather came from Scotland, my father was dead, and
-my uncle that I lived with was the sourest old miser that ever the Black
-North turned out. I was a wild slip of a youngster always, like a hawk
-among barn-door fowl. My mother came from the West. It was her blood I
-had, and it ran too free and merry in thim days. She was dead too, but I
-loved her people. I liked the sporting notions of ’em, and took to their
-ways, their fights, their fairs and the very brogue, just to spite my
-uncle and his canting breed.
-
-‘I hated everything they liked, and liked everything they hated. I was
-flogged and locked up for runnin’ away from school. Why should I stay in
-and larn out of a dog’s-eared book when the hounds met within five Irish
-miles of me? I was always with them when I could slip off—sleepin’ in
-the stables, helpin’ the grooms, doin’ anything so they’d let me stay
-about the stables and kennel. I could ride any hunter they had at
-exercise and knew every fox-covert in the neighbourhood, every hare’s
-form, besides being able to tie a fly and snare rabbits. When I was
-twelve years old I ran away and made my way down to Mayo, to my mother’s
-people—God be with them all their days! I was happy then.’
-
-‘I suppose you were, indeed,’ said Wilfred.
-
-‘Why wouldn’t I be? My mother’s brother was but a small farmer, but he
-was a king’s ayqual for kind-heartedness, divilment and manliness. He
-could follow the hounds on foot for a ten-mile run. He was the best
-laper, wrestler, hurler, and stick-fighter in the barony. The sort of
-man I could have died for. More by token, he took to me at once when I
-stumbled in sore-footed and stiff like a stray puppy. I was the
-“white-headed boy” for my dead mother’s sake.’
-
-‘You had all you could wish for, then.’
-
-‘I had. I was a fool, too, but sure I didn’t know it. ’Tis that same
-makes all the differ. The Squire took a fancy to me, after I rode a
-five-year-old for him over the ox-fences one day. I was made dog-boy,
-afterwards third whip; and sure, when I had on the cord breeches and the
-coat with the hunt button, I was prouder than the king. There was no
-divilment in all the land I wasn’t in; but I didn’t drink in thim days,
-and I knew my work well. Whin I was twenty-two a fit took me to go to
-Belfast and see the ould place again.’
-
-‘Did you wish to ask for your uncle’s blessing?’
-
-‘Not if I was stritched for it! But my cousin Mary! sure I could never
-get her out of my head, and thim black eyes of hers. She kissed me the
-night I ran away, and the taste of her lips and the sweet look of her
-eyes could never lave me. I can see her face now. I wonder where is she?
-And will I see her again when I go to my place!’
-
-The old man turned away his head; his voice was still for some moments.
-Were there tears in those evil-glowing eyes, that never lowered before
-mortal man or quailed under the shadow of death? Who shall say? Wilfred
-played with his bridle-rein. When the henchman spoke next he gazed
-resolutely before him, towards the far purple mountain peak; his voice
-once more was strong and clear.
-
-‘Whin I seen her again she was a woman grown, but her eyes were the
-same, and her heart was true to the wild boy that was born to ruin all
-that was nigh or kind to him. The old man scowled at me. There was
-little love between us.
-
-‘“So you’ve grown into a useless man instead of a disobedient lad,” he
-said. “Why didn’t ye stay among the rebels and white-boys of the West?
-It’s the company that fits ye well; you’ll have the better chance of
-being hanged before you’re older. Change your name before it’s a by-word
-and a disgrace to honest folks.”
-
-‘I swore then I’d make him repent his words, and that if I was hanged my
-name should be known far and wide. I went back to the wild West. But if
-I did I gave him good raison to curse me to his dyin’ day. I soothered
-over Mary to marry me, and the day after we were well on the way to
-Athlone.’
-
-‘Surely then you had a happy life before you, Tom?’
-
-‘True for you. If I wasn’t happy, no man ever was. But the divil was too
-strong in me. I was right for the first year. I loved my work with the
-hounds, and the master—rest his sowl—used to say there wasn’t a whip
-west of Athlone could hold a candle to me. He gave me a snug cottage.
-Mary was a great favourite entirely with the ladies of the house. For
-that year—that one blessed year of my life—I was free from bad ways.
-Within the year Mary had a fine boy in her arms—the moral of his father,
-every one said—and as she smiled on me, I felt as if what the priest
-said about being good and all the rest of it, might be true, after all.’
-
-‘And what made the change, Tom?’
-
-‘The ould story—restlessness, bad company, and saycret societies. I got
-mixed up in one, that I joined before I was married, more for the fun of
-the night walks and drillin’s and rides than anything else. The oath
-once taken—a terrible oath it was, more by token—I thought shame of
-breakin’ it. It’s little I’d care _now_ for a dozen like it. The end of
-it was, one night I must go off with a mob of young fools, like myself,
-to frighten a strong farmer who had taken the land over a poor man’s
-head. I didn’t know then that the best kindness for a strugglin’ holder
-there, was to hunt him out of the overstocked land to this place, or
-America, or the West Indies. Anyhow, we burned a stack. After I left,
-the boys were foolish and bate him. He took to his bed and died—divil
-mend him! Two days afterwards I was arrested on a warrant, and lodged in
-the county gaol. ’Twas the first time I heard a prison lock turn behind
-me. Not the last, by many a score times.
-
-‘I had no chance at the Assizes. A girl swore to me as Huntsman Tom.
-Five of thim was hanged. I got off with transportation. I was four miles
-away whin they were heard batin’ Doran. I asked the Judge to hang me
-with the rest. He said it couldn’t be done. Mary came every day to see
-me, poor girleen; she liked to show me the boy; but I could see her
-heart was broke, though she tried to smile—such a smile—for my sake. I
-desarved what I got, maybe. But if I’d been let off then, as there’s a
-God in heaven I’d have starved rather than have done a wrong turn agin
-as long as I lived. If them judges knew a man’s heart, would they let
-one off, wonst in a way? Mary was with me every day, wet or dry, on
-board the prison ship till she sailed. Is there angels come to hell, I
-wonder, to see the wretches in torment? If they do, they’ll look like
-_her_, as she stood on the deck and trembled whin the chained divils
-that some calls men filed by. She looked at me with her soft eyes, till
-I grew mad, and told her roughly to go home and take the child with her.
-Then she dropped on her knees and cried, and kissed my hands with the
-irons on them and the face of me, like a madwoman. She lifted the baby
-to me for a minute, and it held out its hands. I kissed its wheeshy soft
-face, and she was gone out of my sight—out of my life—for ever.’
-
-‘How did you like the colony?’
-
-‘Well enough at the first. I worked well, and did what I was tould. It
-was all the relafe there was. I made sure I should get my freedom in a
-few years. The first letther I got was from my old uncle. Mary was dead!
-He said nothin’ about the child, but he would bring it up, and never
-wished to hear my name again. This changed me into a rale divil, no
-less. All that was bad in me kem out. I was that desperate that I defied
-the overseers, made friends with the biggest villians among the
-prisoners, and did everything foolish that came into my head. I was
-punished, and the worse I was trated the worse I grew. I was chained and
-flogged and starved and put into dark cells. ’Tis little satisfaction
-they got of me, for I grew that savage and stubborn that I was all as
-one as a wild baste, only wickeder. If ye seen my back now, after the
-triangles, scarred and callused from shoulder to flank! I was marked out
-for Norfolk Island; ye’ve heard tell of that place?’
-
-Wilfred nodded assent.
-
-‘That _hell_!’ screamed the old man, ‘where men once sent never came
-back. Flogged and chained; herded like bastes, when the lime that they
-carried off to the boats burned holes in their naked flesh, wading
-through the surf with it! But I forgot, there was _one_ way to get back
-to Sydney.’
-
-‘And what way was that?’
-
-‘You could always _kill_ a man—one of your mates—only a prisoner—sure,
-it couldn’t matter much!’ said the old man with a dreadful laugh; ‘but
-ye were sent up to Sydney in the Government brig, and tried and hanged
-as reg’lar as if ye wor a free man and owned a free life. There was thim
-there thin that thought the pleasure trip to Sydney and the comfort of a
-new gaol and a nate condimned cell all to yourself, well worth a man’s
-blood, and a sure rope when the visit was over. Ha! ha!’
-
-He laughed long and loud. The sound was so unnatural that Wilfred
-fancied if their talk had occurred by a lonely camp in a darksome forest
-at midnight, instead of under the garish light of day, he might have
-imagined faint unearthly cries and moans strangely mingled with that
-awful laughter.
-
-‘Thim was quare times; but I didn’t go to ‘the island hell’ after all.
-An up-country settler came to the barracks to pick a groom, as an
-assigned servant—so they called us. He was a big, bold-lookin’ man, and
-as I set my eyes on him, I never looked before me or on the floor as
-most of thim did.
-
-‘“What’s that man?” he said. “I like the look of him; he’s got plenty of
-devil in him; that’s my sort. He can ride, by the look of his legs. I’m
-just starting up-country.”
-
-‘They wouldn’t give me to him at first; said I was too bad to go loose.
-But he had friends in high places, and they got me assigned to him. Next
-day we started for a station. When I felt a horse between my legs I
-began to have the feelings of a man again. He gave me a pistol to carry,
-too. Bushrangers wor on the road then, and he carried money.’
-
-‘“You can fight or not, as you like, Tom,” he said, “if we meet any of
-the boys; but if you show cur, back you go to the barracks.”
-
-‘“Sooner to hell,” says I. I felt that I would go through fire and water
-for him. He trated me liked a _man_!’
-
-‘And did you meet any bushrangers?’ said Wilfred.
-
-‘We did then—the Tinker’s gang—three of them, and a boy. They bailed us
-up in a narrow place. I took steady aim and shot the Tinker dead. As
-well him as me—not that I cared a traneen for my life. My master dropped
-a second man; the other one and the boy bolted for their lives.
-
-‘“Well done, Tom!” says my master, when it was all over. “You were a
-good cavalry man lost”—he was in the Hussars, no less, at home. “We
-don’t part asy, I can tell you. You deserve your freedom, and you’ll get
-it.”
-
-‘He was betther than his word. I got a conditional pardon, not to go
-beyond the colonies. Sure I had little taste for lavin’ them. I stayed
-with him till he died; the next place I went to was Warbrok, as I tould
-ye the first day I seen you.’
-
-‘Did you ever hear what became of your child?’
-
-‘Ne’er a one of me knows, nor cares. If he’s turned out well, the less
-he knows of me the better. If he’s gone to the dogs, there’s scoundrels
-enough in the country already. But I nigh forget tellin’ ye, I made
-money once by dalin’ in cattle, and every year I sent home £50, thinkin’
-it might do good to the child.’
-
-‘And do you know if it went safe?’
-
-‘Sure I got a resate for every pound of it, just as if a lawyer had
-written it, thankin’ me, but never sayin’ a word about the boy, but that
-it would be used for his larning.’
-
-‘And what made you leave it off?’
-
-‘I didn’t lave it off. They sent back the last of it without a word or
-message. That made me wild, and I started drinkin’, and never cried
-crack till it was gone. I began to wander about and take billets as a
-stock-rider. ’Tis the way I’ve lived iver since. If it wasn’t for the
-change and wild life now and thin—fightin’ them divils of blacks,
-gallopin’ after wild cattle, and campin’ out where no white man had been
-before—I’d been dead with the drink long ago. But something keeps me;
-something tells me I can’t die till I’ve seen one from the ould country.
-Who it is, I can’t tell. Sometimes I see Mary in my drames, holdin’ up
-the child like the last day I seen her. I’d have put a bullet through
-me, when I was in “the horrors,” only for thim drames. I shall go when
-my time comes. It’s little I’d care if it was in the night that’s
-drawin’ on.’
-
-Here he rode on for some minutes without speaking, then continued in an
-altered voice:
-
-‘See here now, Mr. Wilfred, it’s little I thought to say to mortial man
-the things I’ve let out of my heart this blessed day. But my feeling to
-you and your father is the same as I had to my first master—the heavens
-be his bed! If he’d always been among such people here—rale gintry—that
-cared for him and thought to help him, Tom Glendinning would maybe have
-been a different man. But the time’s past. I’m like a beaten fox, nigh
-run down; and I’ll never die in my bed, that much I know. You won’t
-spake to me agen about this. My heart’s burstin’ as it is; and—I’ll
-maybe drop—if it comes on me again—like it—does—now——’
-
-He pressed his hand closely, fiercely, upon the region of the heart. He
-grew deadly pale, and shook as if in mortal agony; his face was
-convulsed as he bowed himself upon the saddle-bow, and Wilfred feared he
-was about to fall from his horse. But he slowly regained his position,
-and quivering like one who had been stretched upon the rack, guided his
-horse along the homeward path.
-
-‘’Tis spasms of the heart, the doctor tould me it was,’ he gasped at
-length. ‘They’d take me off some day, before you could light a match,
-“if I didn’t keep aisy and free from trouble,”’ he said. ‘Maybe they
-will, some day; maybe something else will be too quick for them. It’s
-little I care. Close up, Mr. Wilfred, we’re late for home, and I’d like
-to regulate thim calves before it’s dark.’
-
-Much Wilfred mused over the history of the strange old man who had now
-become associated with their fortunes.
-
-‘What a life!’ thought he. ‘What a tragedy!’ How changed from the days
-when he followed the Mayo hounds; reckless then, perhaps, and impatient
-of control, but an unweaned child in innocence compared to his present
-condition. And yet he possessed qualities which, under different
-treatment might have led to honour and distinction.
-
- * * * * *
-
-As far as personal claims to distinction were concerned, few districts
-in which the Effinghams could have been located, would have borne
-comparison with the vicinity of Lake William. It abounded, as we have
-told, in younger sons of good family, whom providence would appear to
-have thus guided but a few years before their own migration. This
-fortunate concurrence they had themselves often noted, and fully did
-they appreciate the congenial companionship.
-
-Besides the local celebrities, few tourists of note passed along the
-southern road without being intercepted by the hospitality of one or
-other household. These captives of their bow and spear were shared
-honourably. When the Honourable Cedric Rotherwood, who had letters to
-Mr. Effingham, was quartered for a month at The Chase, fishing,
-shooting, and kangaroo-hunting, the Benmohr men and their allies were
-entreated to imagine there was a muster at The Chase every Saturday, and
-to rendezvous in force accordingly. A strong friendship accordingly was
-struck up between the young men. The Honourable Cedric was only
-five-and-twenty, and years afterwards, when Charlie Hamilton went home
-with one station in his pocket, and two more paying twenty per cent per
-annum upon the original outlay, his Lordship, having then come into his
-kingdom, had him down at Rotherwood Hall, and gave him such mounts in
-the hunting field, and such corners in the battues, not to mention a run
-over to his Lordship’s deer forest in the Highlands, that Charlie, on
-befitting occasions, refers to that memorable visit with enthusiasm (and
-at considerable length, say his friends) even unto this day.
-
-Against this court card, socially marked for the Effinghams’ fortune,
-one day turned up a couple of trumps, which might be thought to have
-made a certainty of the odd trick in favour of Benmohr. Charles
-Hamilton, coming home after a day’s ploughing, found two strangers in
-the sitting-room, one of whom, a quiet plainly dressed personage, shut
-up a book at his entrance, and begged to introduce his friend and
-travelling companion, Major Glendinning, ‘who (his own name Kinghart)
-had brought a letter from a mutual friend, he believed, Mr. Machell of
-Langamilli. The Major had been good enough to accompany him, being
-anxious to see the country.’
-
-‘Delighted to see you, I’m sure,’ said Hamilton, pocketing the letter
-unread. ‘I hope Mrs. Teviot gave you some refreshment. I seldom come
-home before dark, now the days are getting short.’
-
-‘The old lady did the honours, I assure you,’ said the Major, ‘but we
-preferred awaiting dinner, as we had tiffin on the road. As for
-Kinghart, he found an old edition in your book-case which was meat and
-drink to him.’
-
-‘In that case, if you will allow me, I will ask you to excuse me till
-the bell rings, as dressing is a serious business after my clay
-furrows.’
-
-Hamilton had time to look at Willie Machell’s letter, in which he found
-Mr. Kinghart described as an out-and-out brick, though reserved at
-first, and unreasonably fond of books. Played a goodish game of whist,
-too. Henry Kinghart was brother to the famous clergyman and writer of
-that name, and was so deuced clever that, if there had been any material
-for fiction in this confounded country, which there was not, he
-shouldn’t be surprised if he wrote a book himself some day. As for the
-Major, he was invaluable. He (Machell) had met him at the Australian
-Club, and brought him up forcibly from Sydney. He was the best shot and
-horseman he ever saw, and fought no end with his regiment of Irregular
-Horse in India. Siffter, N.I., who denied everybody’s deeds but his own,
-admitted as much. Relative in Australia—cattle-station manager or
-something—that he wanted to look up. He (Hamilton) was not to keep them
-all the winter at Benmohr, as he (Machell) was deucedly dull without
-them.
-
-Mr. Kinghart fully answered his warranty, inasmuch as he volunteered
-little in the way of remark, and fastening upon one or two rare books in
-the Benmohr collection, hardly looked up till Mrs. Teviot came in with
-the bedroom candles. The Major seemed indisposed to literature, but had
-seen so much, and indeed had transacted personally so large a share of
-modern history in Indian military service, that Hamilton, who, like most
-Scottish gentlemen, had a brother in the line there and several cousins
-in the Civil Service, was deeply interested. He had been in every battle
-of note since the commencement of the Mahratta war, and
-
- A scar on his brown cheek revealed
- A token true of ‘Moodkee’ field.
-
-Without a shade of self-consciousness he replied to Hamilton’s eager
-questionings, whom he found to be (from his brother’s letters)
-accurately informed about the affairs of Northern India.
-
-Unfortunately for Mr. Kinghart’s studies, Neil Barrington and Bob
-Ardmillan turned up next morning—two men who would neither be quiet
-themselves, nor suffer other mortals to enjoy repose. Part of the day
-was spent in shooting round the borders of the dam, when the Major
-topped Ardmillan’s bag, who was considered the crack shot of the
-neighbourhood. In the afternoon, there being many horses, colts and
-others, in the stables, Neil proposed an adjournment to the leaping-bar,
-an institution peculiar to Benmohr, for educating the inexperienced
-steeds to jump cleverly with the aid of a shifting bar enwrapped in
-brambles.
-
-At this entertainment the Major showed himself to be no novice, riding
-with an ease of seat and perfection of hand, to which, doubtless, years
-of pig-sticking and tent-pegging had contributed.
-
-In the evening whist was suggested, when Mr. Kinghart showed that his
-studies had by no means prevented his paying due attention to an
-exacting and jealous mistress. The exigencies of the game thawed his
-reserve, and in his new character he was pronounced by the volatile Neil
-and the shrewd satirist Bob Ardmillan to be a first-rate fellow. He
-displayed with some dry humour the results of a habit of close
-observation; in addition, a chance allusion served to reveal such stores
-of classical lore, that Argyll’s absence was deplored by Neil
-Barrington, who believed that his friend, who was always scolding him
-for not keeping up his classics, would have been for once out-quoted.
-
-Of course such treasures of visitors could not be allowed to lie hid,
-and after a few allusions to the family at The Chase had paved the way,
-Mr. Kinghart and the Major were invited to accompany Hamilton on a visit
-(which he unblushingly asserted to be chiefly on business) to that
-popular homestead on the next ensuing Saturday.
-
-The Effingham family were devoted admirers of the elder and Kinghart,
-had but recently read and discussed _Eastward Ho_, _Dalton_, _Rocke_ and
-other products of the large, loving mind which was then stirring the
-hearts of the most generous portion of English society. It may be
-conjectured with what secret triumph, veiled under an assumption of
-formal politeness, Hamilton introduced Major Glendinning and Mr. Henry
-Kinghart.
-
-‘Will you think me curious if I ask whether you are related to the
-Rector of Beverly?’ inquired Rosamond soon after preliminaries had come
-to an end. ‘You must pardon our enthusiasm, but life in the provinces
-seems as closely concerned with authors as with acquaintances or
-friends, almost more so.’
-
-‘My brother Charles would feel honoured, I assure you, Miss Effingham,
-if he knew the interest he has aroused in this far-off garrison of the
-Norseman he so loves to celebrate,’ said the stranger, with a pleasant
-smile. ‘I wish, for a hundred reasons, that he could be here to tell you
-so. How he would enjoy roaming over this land of wonders!’
-
-Rosamond’s eyes sparkled with an infrequent lustre. Here was truly a
-miraculous occurrence. A brother—actually a brother—of the great, the
-noble, the world-renowned Charles Kinghart, with whose works they had
-been familiar ever since they could read; most of whose characters were
-to them household words!
-
-Certainly there was nothing heroic about the personnel of their literary
-visitor—an unobtrusive-looking personage. But now that he was decorated
-with the name of Kinghart, glorified with the reflected halo of genius,
-there was visible to the book-loving maiden a world of distinction in
-his every gesture and fragment of speech.
-
-Then Major Glendinning, too, a man whom few would pass without a second
-glance. Slightly over middle height, his symmetrical figure and complete
-harmony of motion stamped him as one perfected by the widest experiences
-of training and action. ‘Soldier’ was written emphatically by years of
-imprint upon the fearless gaze, the imperturbable manner, the bronzed
-cheek, and accurate but unostentatious dress. A man who had shouldered
-death and had mocked danger; who had actually shed blood in action—‘in
-single fight and mixed array’ (like Marmion, as Annabel said). Not in
-old, half-forgotten days, like their father, but in _last year’s_,
-well-nigh last month’s, deadly picturesque strife, of which the echoes
-were as yet scarcely silent. Annabel and Beatrice gazed at him as at a
-denizen of another planet, and left to Rosamond the more rare adoration
-which exalts the image of the scholar to a higher pedestal than that of
-the warrior.
-
-There was, however, a sufficing audience and ample appreciation for both
-the recent lions, who were by no means suffered by their original
-captors to roar softly or feed undisturbed. Before sitting down to the
-unceremonious evening meal, Charles Hamilton begged Mrs. Effingham to
-defer leaving the drawing-room for a few moments while he made a needful
-explanation.
-
-‘You will not be surprised to hear, Mrs. Effingham,’ he commenced, with
-an air of great deference, ‘that Mr. Kinghart shares his distinguished
-brother’s views as to our duties to the (temporarily) lower orders, and
-the compulsion under which the nobler minds of the century lie, to
-advance by personal sacrifice the social culture of their dependents,
-more particularly in the colonies, where (necessarily) the feelings are
-less sensitive. Mr. Kinghart, therefore, declines to partake of a meal
-in any house, unless the servants are invited to share the repast.’
-
-‘What nonsense!’ said the gentleman referred to, rather hastily; ‘but I
-daresay you recognise our friend’s vein of humour, Mrs. Effingham.’
-
-‘It’s all very well, Kinghart,’ replied Hamilton gravely; ‘but I feel
-pained to find a man of your intellect deserting his convictions when
-they clash with conventionalities. You know the Rector’s opinions as to
-our dependents, and here you stand, ashamed to act up to the family
-principles.’
-
-‘My dear fellow, of course I support Charles’s gallant testimony to the
-creed of his Master, but he had no “colonial experience,” whereas I have
-had a great deal, which may have led me to believe that I am the deeper
-student of human nature. I don’t know whether I need assure Mrs.
-Effingham that she will find me outwardly much like other people.’
-
-‘How few beliefs shall I retain henceforth,’ said Hamilton sorrowfully.
-
-‘Putting socialism out of the question,’ said Mr. Kinghart, ‘I shall
-always regret that Charles did not avail himself of an opportunity he
-once had to visit Australia. He would have been charmed beyond
-description.’
-
-‘I’m sure _we_ should have been, only to see him,’ said Beatrice; ‘but I
-don’t know what we should have had to offer in exchange for what he
-would have to forgo.’
-
-‘You are leaving out of the question the fact of my brother’s passionate
-love of geology, botany, and adventure. The facts in natural history to
-which even my small researches have led are so wonderful that I hesitate
-to assert them.’
-
-‘How fascinating it must be,’ said Rosamond, ‘to be able to walk about
-the earth and read the book of Nature like a scroll. You and our dear
-old Harley seem alike in that respect. I look upon you as magicians. You
-have the “open sesame,” and may find the way to Ali Baba caverns full of
-jewels.’
-
-‘This last is not so wildly improbable, though you over-rate my
-attainments,’ said their visitor, with a quiet smile. ‘I have certainly
-found in this neighbourhood indications of valuable minerals, not even
-excluding that Chief Deputy of the Prince of the Air—Gold.’
-
-‘Why, Kinghart, you are as mad as Mr. Sternworth,’ said Hamilton. ‘All
-_savants_ have a craze for impossible discoveries. How _can_ there be
-gold here?’
-
-‘I took Mr. Hamilton to be a gentleman of logical mind,’ said the
-Englishman quietly. ‘Why should not the sequences from geological
-premisses be as invariable in Australia as in any other part of the
-globe. The South Pole does not invert the principle of cause and effect,
-I presume.’
-
-‘I did not mean that,’ explained Hamilton, with something less than his
-ordinary decisiveness, ‘but there seems something so preposterous in a
-gold-field in a new country like this.’
-
-‘It is not a new country, it is a very old one; there was probably gold
-here long before it was extracted from Ophir. But your men, in digging
-holes yesterday for the posts of that new hut, dislodged fragments of
-hornblendic granite slightly decomposed and showing minute particles of
-gold. I had not time to examine them, but I noted the formation
-accurately.’
-
-‘What then?’ said his male hearers in a kind of chorus.
-
-‘What then? Why, it follows inexorably that we are standing above one of
-the richest goldfields in the known world!’
-
-‘But assuming for a moment, which God forbid,’ said Hamilton, ‘that
-gold—_real_ gold—in minute quantities could be extracted from the stone
-you picked up, does it follow that rich and extensive deposits should be
-contiguous?’
-
-‘My dear Hamilton, you surely missed the geological course in your
-college studies! Gold once found amid decomposed hornblendic granite, in
-alluvial drifts in company with water-worn quartz, has _never_ failed to
-demonstrate itself in wondrous wealth. In the Ural Mountains, in Mexico,
-and most likely in King Solomon’s time, there were no _little_ mines
-where once this precise formation was verified.’
-
-‘I devoutly trust that it may not be in our time,’ said Argyll. ‘What a
-complete overturn of society would take place; in Australia, of all
-places! I should lose interest in the country at once.’
-
-‘There might be inconvenience,’ said Mr. Kinghart reflectively, ‘but the
-Anglo-Saxon would be found capable of organising order. We need not look
-so far ahead. But of the day to come, when the furnace-chimney shall
-smoke on these hillsides, and miles of alluvial be torn up and riddled
-with excavations, I am as certain as that Glossopteris, of which I have
-seen at least three perfect specimens in shale, denotes coal deposits.’
-
-‘We must buy you out, Kinghart, that is the whole of it,’ said
-Ardmillan, ‘and direct your energies into some other channel. If you go
-on proving the existence of gold and black diamonds under these heedless
-feet of ours the social edifice will totter. Hamilton will abandon his
-agriculture, Argyll his stock-keeping, Churbett his reading and early
-rising, Mrs. Teviot will leave off cheese-making, Forbes will cease to
-contradict—in short, the whole Warbrok and Benmohr world will come to an
-end.’
-
-‘It is a very pleasant world, and I am sorry to have hinted at the flood
-which will some day sweep over it,’ said Mr. Kinghart; ‘but what is
-written is written, and indelibly, when the pages are tables of stones,
-set up from the foundation of the world.’
-
-Most enjoyable and still well remembered were the days which followed
-this memorable discussion. A succession of rides, drives, and excursions
-followed, in which Mr. Kinghart pointed out wonders in the world of
-botany, which caused Rosamond to look upon him as a sage of stupendous
-experiences.
-
-To Howard Effingham the presence of Major Glendinning was an unalloyed
-pleasure. Familiar chiefly with service in other parts of the world, he
-was never tired of listening or questioning. Varied necessarily were
-incidents of warfare conducted against the wild border tribes of
-Hindostan with her hordes of savage horsemen. Such campaigns necessarily
-partook of the irregular modes of combat of the foe. Without attaching
-importance to his own share of distinction, their guest permitted his
-hearers to learn much of the picturesque and splendid successes of the
-British arms in the historic land of Ind.
-
-For himself, his manner had a strange tinge of softness and melancholy.
-At one time his mien was that of the stern soldier, proud of the
-thoroughness with which a band of marauders had been extirpated, or the
-spirit of a dissolute native ruler broken. Scarcely had the tale been
-told when a settled sadness would overspread his face, as if in pity for
-the heathens’ spoil and sorrow. To his hearers, far from war’s alarms,
-there was a strong, half-painful fascination in these tales of daring,
-heightened by the frequent presence of death in every shape of
-hot-blooded carnage or military execution.
-
-‘How difficult it is to imagine,’ said Beatrice one day, suddenly
-arousing herself, after staring with dilated eyeballs at the Major, who
-had been recounting a realistic incident for Guy’s special edification
-(how the Ranee of Jeypore had hanged a dozen of his best troopers, and
-of the stern reprisal which he was called upon to make), ‘that you,
-actually sitting here quietly with us, are one and the same person who
-was chief actor in these fearful doings. What a wonderful change it must
-be for you.’
-
-‘Let me assure you,’ said the Major, ‘that it is a most pleasant change.
-I am tired of soldiering, and my health is indifferent. I almost think
-that if I could fish out this old uncle of mine, I should be content to
-settle in the bush, and take to rural life for the rest of my days.’
-
-‘Don’t you think you would find it awfully dull?’ said Annabel; ‘you
-would despise all our life so much. Unless there happened to be an
-outbreak of bushrangers, you might never have a chance of killing any
-one again, as long as you lived.’
-
-‘I could manage without that excitement. I have had enough, in all
-conscience, to last a lifetime. The climate of your country suits us old
-Indians so well. If I were once fairly established, I think I could rear
-horses and cattle, especially the former, with great contentment.’
-
-‘There is no one of your name in this part of the country,’ said Guy,
-‘except our old stock-rider, Tom. He’s such a queer old fellow. I
-remember asking him what his surname was one day, and he told me it was
-Glendinning. He’s away now, mustering at Wangarua.’
-
-‘It is not an uncommon name where my family lived,’ said the Major. ‘I
-should like to see him if he is a namesake. He may have heard of the
-person I am in search of.’
-
-The whole party was extremely sorry to permit their guests to depart;
-but after a few days spent in luxurious intercourse, during which
-sight-seeing and sport were organised day by day, and every imaginable
-book and author reviewed with Mr. Kinghart in the evening, while Guy had
-fully made up his mind to go to India, and had got up Indian history
-from the Mogul dynasty to the execution of Omichund, a parting had to be
-made. It was only temporary, however, as Mr. Kinghart had promised to
-visit an old schoolfellow long settled at Monaro, and after a
-fortnight’s stay had promised to return this way with the Major before
-they said farewell finally. At Warbrok Chase there was great dismay at
-the inevitable separation.
-
-‘I declare,’ said Annabel, ‘that I begin to doubt whether it is prudent
-to make such delightful acquaintances. One is so dreadfully grieved when
-they depart. It is much better to have everyday friends, who can’t run
-away, isn’t it?’
-
-‘And who mightn’t be much missed if they did; quite so, Miss Annabel,’
-said Forbes, to whom this lament was made.
-
-‘Oh, of course _you_ are different at Benmohr and just about here. We
-are all one family, and should be a very united one if Mr. Churbett
-would leave off teasing me about what silly people say, and Mr. Forbes
-would give up his sarcasms, Mr. Hamilton his logic, Mr. Argyll his
-tempers, and so on. How I could improve you all, to be sure! But I mean
-friends—that is, strangers—like Mr. Kinghart and Major Glendinning, that
-are birds of passage. I can’t explain myself; but I’m sure there’s
-something true and new about the idea.’
-
-‘It may be quite true that young ladies prefer recently acquired friends
-to those of long standing, but I am afraid it is not altogether new in
-the history of the sex,’ said Mr. Forbes. ‘Still I think I understand
-you, Miss Annabel. Which of the illustrious strangers do _you_ chiefly
-honour with your regrets, Miss Beatrice?’
-
-‘I mourn over Mr. Kinghart,’ said Beatrice, with instinctive defensive
-art. ‘He is a library that can talk, and yet, like a library, prefers
-silence. I wonder if one would ever get tired of listening to him, and
-having everything so delightfully explained. He is sarcastic about
-women, too. Perhaps he has been ill-treated by some thoughtless girl. I
-should like to wither her.’
-
-‘Why don’t you comfort him, Beatrice? Your love for reading would just
-suit, or perhaps not suit,’ said Annabel. ‘You would have to toss up
-which was to order dinner or make tea. I can see you both sitting in
-easy-chairs, with your foreheads wrinkled up, reading away the whole
-evening. I wonder if two poets or two authors ever agreed in married
-life? Of course, he might scratch out her adjectives, or she might sneer
-at his comic element. But, do you know, a thought strikes me. Don’t you
-see a likeness to some one in the Major that you’ve seen before? I do,
-and it haunts me.’
-
-‘No, I never saw any one the _least_ like him; his expression, his
-figure, his way of walking, riding, and talking are quite different from
-other people. How a man’s life moulds him! I am sure I could tell what
-half the men I see have been or _not_ been, quite easily, by their
-appearance and ways.’
-
-‘But did you notice his eyes?’
-
-‘Well, they are soft, and yet piercing, which is unusual; but that is
-all.’
-
-‘On second thoughts I won’t say, lest I might be thought less sensible
-even than I am. I have no capital to fall back upon in that respect.’
-
-‘You do say such odd things, my dear Annabel. I think you ought to get
-on with our last duet. You only half know your part.’
-
-That a certain reaction follows hard upon the most unalloyed pleasure is
-conceded. The dwellers at The Chase recognised a shade of monotony, even
-of dulness, falling upon their uneventful lives as the friends and
-visitors departed.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
- ‘SO WE’LL ALL GO A-HUNTING TO-DAY’
-
-
-The cheering results of this season of prosperity were not without
-effect upon the sanguine temperament of Howard Effingham. Prone to
-dismiss from his mind all darkly-shaded outlines, he was ever eager to
-develop projects which belong to the enjoyments rather than to the
-acquisitions of life. Few human beings had commenced with a smaller
-share of foresight. _He_ required no exhortation to refrain from taking
-heed for the morrow and its cares. For him they could hardly be said to
-exist, so little did he realise in advance the more probable evils.
-
-The time had arrived, in his opinion, to dwell less fixedly upon the
-problem of income. The greater question of cultured living could no
-longer be neglected. All danger of poverty and privation overtaking the
-family being removed, Mr. Effingham for some time past had devoted his
-mind to the assimilation of the lives of himself and his neighbours to
-those of the country gentlemen of his own land. Something he had already
-effected in this way. He had received a shipment of pheasants and
-partridges, which, in a suitable locality, were making headway against
-their natural enemies. Much of his time was spent, gun in hand, clearing
-the haunts of the precious Gallinæ from the unsparing dasyurus (the wild
-cat of the colonists), while Guy’s collection of stuffed hawks had
-increased notably. Orders had been given to shoot every one that could
-be seen, from the tiny merlin, chiefly devoted to moths and
-grasshoppers, to the wedge-tailed eagle eight feet between the wings,
-discovered on a mighty iron-bark tree, thence surveying the
-bright-plumaged strangers. Hares, too, and rabbits had been liberated,
-of which the latter had increased with suspicious rapidity.
-
-Coursing, fishing, shooting, all of a superior description, Howard
-Effingham now saw with prophetic vision established for the benefit of
-his descendants at The Chase. They would be enabled to enjoy themselves
-befittingly in their seasons of leisure, and cadets of the House, when
-they visited England, would not have to blush for their ignorance of the
-out-door accomplishments of their kinsfolk. In imagination he saw
-
- The merry brown hares come leaping
- Over the crest of the hill,
-
-or starting from their ‘forms’ in the meadows which bordered the lake.
-He saw the partridge coveys rise from the stubbles, and heard once more
-the whirr of the cock pheasant as he ‘rocketted’ from the copse of
-mimosa saplings. He saw carp, tench, and brown trout in the clear
-mountain streams, and watched far down the Otsego ‘laker’ in the still
-depths of their inland bay. At the idea of these triumphs, which long
-years after his bones rested in an exile’s grave, would be associated
-with the name of Howard Effingham, his heart swelled with proud
-anticipation. But there was one deficiency as yet unfilled; one
-difficulty hitherto not confronted. Much had been attempted, even
-something done. Why should he not be more nobly daring still? Why not
-organise that sport of kings, that eminently British pastime, nowhere
-enjoyed in perfection, hitherto, outside of the ‘happy isles’? _Why not
-go in for fox-hunting?_ Could its transplantation be possible?
-
-True, the gladdening variety of pasture and plough, meadow and woodland,
-over which hound and horse sweep rejoicingly in Britain, was not
-possible in the neighbourhood. Hedges and ditches, brooks and banks, as
-yet gave not change and interest to the programme while educating horse
-and rider. Still, he would not despair.
-
-In the pensive, breezeless autumn, or the winter mornings, when the dew
-lay long on the tall grass, and the soft, hazy atmosphere gradually
-struggled into the brilliant Australian day, could there be better
-scenting weather? Would not the first cry of the hounds, as a dozen
-couples, to begin with, hit off the scent of a dingo or a blue forester,
-sound like a forgotten melody in his ears? There would be an occasional
-fence to give the boys emulative interest; for the rest, a gallop in the
-fresh morn through the park-like woodlands, or even across the spurs of
-the ranges, would be worth riding a few miles to enjoy. All the
-neighbours—now making money fast and not indisposed for amusement—would
-be glad to join. A better lot of fellows no Hunt ever numbered amongst
-its subscribers. Subscription? Well, he supposed it must be so. It would
-be a proprietary interest, and he was afraid Wilfred would object to the
-whole burden of maintenance falling upon the resources of The Chase.
-
-This brilliant idea was not suffered to lapse for want of expansion.
-Energetic and persistent in the domain of the abstract or the
-unprofitable, Howard Effingham at once communicated with a few friends.
-He was surprised at the enthusiasm which the project evoked. A committee
-was formed, comprising the names of the Benmohr firm, Churbett,
-Ardmillan, Forbes, and the D’Oyleys, besides Robert Malahyde, a
-neighbour of Hampden’s and an enthusiastic sportsman. Never was a more
-happy suggestion. It pleased everybody. O’Desmond declared that the very
-idea recalled ‘The Blazers’; he felt himself to be ten years younger as
-he put down his name for a handsome subscription on the spot. Fred
-Churbett had always known that Duellist was thrown away as a hackney;
-and now that there was something more to be jumped than the Benmohr
-leaping-bar, did not care how early he got up. This announcement was
-received with shouts of incredulous laughter.
-
-Wilfred alone was not enamoured of this new project. He foresaw direct
-and, still more serious, indirect expenses. It was no doubt a great
-matter to have even the semblance of the Great English Sport revived
-among them. Still, business was business. If this sort of thing was to
-be encouraged, there was no knowing where it would stop. He himself
-would be only too glad to have a run now and then, but his instinctive
-feeling was that he would be better employed attending to his cattle and
-consolidating the prosperity, which now seemed to be flowing in with a
-steady tide.
-
-In truth, of late, affairs had commenced to take a most encouraging,
-even intoxicating turn for the better. The whole trade of the
-land—pastoral, commercial, and agricultural—was in a satisfactory
-condition, owing chiefly to unprecedentedly good seasons. All the
-Australian colonies, more particularly New South Wales, have within them
-elements of vast, well-nigh illimitable development. Nothing is needed
-but ordinary climatic conditions to produce an amount of material
-well-being, which nothing can wholly displace. The merchants of the
-cities, the farmers of the settled districts, the squatters of the far
-interior, were alike prospering and to prosper, it seemed, indefinitely.
-The export trade, Mr. Rockley assured him, had increased astonishingly,
-while the imports had so swelled that England would soon have to look
-upon Australia as one of her best customers.
-
-‘So you are going to have a pack of foxhounds in your neighbourhood, Mr.
-Effingham?’ said Mrs. Rockley. ‘I think it a splendid idea. Chrissie and
-I will ride over and see one of your meets, if you ask us.’
-
-Then did Wilfred begin solemnly to vow and declare that the chief reason
-he had for giving the idea his support was, that perhaps the ladies at
-Rockley Lodge might be induced to attend a meet sometimes; otherwise, he
-confessed he thought it a waste of money.
-
-‘Oh, you mustn’t be over-prudent, Mr. Effingham. Mr. Rockley says you
-Lake William people are getting alarmingly rich. You must consider the
-unamused poor a little, you know. It is a case of real distress, I
-assure you, sometimes in Yass when all you men take fits of hard work
-and staying at home. Now hunting is such a delightful resource in winter
-time.’
-
-‘Every one in our neighbourhood has joined,’ said Wilfred, ‘but we shall
-want more subscriptions if we are to become a strong Hunt club.’
-
-‘Put me down,’ said Mr. Rockley. ‘I haven’t much time, but I might take
-a turn some day. Hampden, the Champions, Malahyde, Compton, and Edward
-Bellfield are most eager. Bob Clarke wrote forwarding their
-subscriptions, though they live rather far off. They hope to have a run
-now and then for their money.’
-
-‘I think I shall ask your father to let me work him a pair of slippers,’
-said Miss Christabel, ‘or an embroidered waistcoat, if he would like it
-better. He deserves the thanks of every girl in the district for his
-delightful idea and his spirited way of carrying it out. I hope some of
-us won’t take to riding jealous, but I wouldn’t answer for it if ever
-Mrs. Snowden and I get together. I’ll tell you who could cut us both
-down.’
-
-‘And who may that be?’ asked Wilfred.
-
-‘Why, Vera Fane, of course. Didn’t you know that she rode splendidly?
-When she was quite a little child she used to gallop after the cattle at
-Black Mountain, where they live, and they say, though she is very quiet
-about it, that she can ride _anything_.’
-
-‘What sort of a place is this Black Mountain? It hasn’t altogether a
-sound of luxury.’
-
-‘Oh, it’s a terrible place, I believe, for poor Vera to have to live in
-always,’ said the good-natured Christabel. ‘They say it is as much as
-you can do to ride there, it’s so rough, and they had to pack all their
-stores, I believe, till the new road was made. And they’re very poor.
-Mr. Fane is one of those men who never make money or do anything much
-except read all day. If it wasn’t for Vera, who teaches her brothers
-(she’s the only girl), and keeps the accounts, and looks after the
-stores, and manages the servants, and does a good deal of the housework
-herself, the whole place would go to ruin.’
-
-‘Apparently, if such a good genius was to be withdrawn; but why doesn’t
-her father sell out and go away? There are plenty of other stations to
-be got in more habitable places.’
-
-‘Oh, his wife is buried there—no wonder she died, poor thing. He won’t
-hear of leaving the place; and I really believe, lonely as it is, that
-Vera likes it too. She is a wonderful girl, always teaching herself
-something, when she isn’t darning stockings, or cooking, or having a
-turn at the wash-tub, for Nelly Jones, who stayed with her one summer,
-told me that they lost their servant once, and Vera _did everything_ for
-a month. Sometimes she gets out, as she did to the races last year, and
-she enjoys that, as you may believe.’
-
-‘I hope she does,’ said Wilfred reflectively. ‘I thought her a very nice
-girl, but I had no idea she was such a paragon.’
-
-‘She’s a grand girl, and an ornament to her sex,’ said Mr. Rockley
-suddenly. ‘I couldn’t have believed such a woman was possible, but I
-stopped there a week once, weatherbound. All the creeks were up, and as
-you had to cross the river about fifty times to get out of the
-confounded hole, I was bound to let the water go down. I should have
-hanged myself looking at old Fane’s melancholy phiz and listening to the
-rain, if it hadn’t been for Miss Fane. But I’ll tell you all about her
-another time. I must be off now. You’ll stay to dinner? I’ll find you
-here, I suppose, when I come back.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-If Howard Effingham could only have bent his mind with the same
-unflagging perseverance to matters of material advantage that he devoted
-to the establishment of the Lake William Hunt, he would have been a
-successful man in any country. Never would he have needed to quit his
-ancestral home.
-
-In some enterprises everything appears to go contrary from the
-commencement. Hindrances, breakdowns, and mortifications of all kinds
-arise, as it were, out of the earth. On the other hand, occasionally, it
-appears as though ‘the stars in their courses fought _for_ Sisera.’ The
-Hunt scheme had its detractors, who looked upon it as unnecessary and
-injurious, if, indeed, it were not also impossible. These amiable
-reviewers were discomfited. The sportsmen communicated with proved
-sympathetic. All sent a couple or two of hounds, above the average of
-gift animals; and one gentleman, relinquishing his position of M.F.H. in
-Tasmania, shipped the larger portion of his pack, firmly refusing to
-accept remuneration. He further stated that he should feel amply
-compensated by hearing of their successful incorporation in the Hunt of
-so well known a sporting centre as that of Lake William.
-
-A kennel had been put up, of course, by Dick Evans. He had the dash and
-celerity of a ship carpenter, ensuring stability, but avoiding
-precision, the curse of your average mechanic. His colleague, old Tom,
-who grumbled at most innovations, was, wonderful to relate, in a state
-of enthusiasm.
-
-Everybody in the district had a couple of hunters, it seemed, which he
-desired to get into condition, a task for which there had never before
-been sufficient inducement. Stalls and boxes were repaired, and the
-tourist through the famed district which lay around Lake William was
-enabled to report that nowhere in Australia had he seen such an array of
-well-bred, well-conditioned horses.
-
-Eventually, all necessary preparations were completed. Ten or twelve
-couple of hounds had been got together, had been regularly exercised,
-and, thanks to old Tom’s efficient services as whip, persuaded to
-confine themselves to one kangaroo at a time, also to follow the scent
-in early morn with a constancy truly remarkable, considering the
-characters which they mostly enjoyed. So forward were all things, so
-smoothly had the machinery worked, that after several councils of war a
-day was at length fixed for the formal establishment of the ‘Lake
-William Hunt Club.’
-
-Notices and invitations were sent out in all directions. Even here
-fortune favoured them. It so happened that Hampden and St. Maur, with
-the Gambiers and a few more _esprits forts_, had business (real, not
-manufactured) which compelled their presence within such distance as
-permitted attendance. John Hampden was supposed to ride to hounds in
-such fashion that he had few equals. Formerly, in Tasmania, a Master of
-Hounds himself, his favourite hunter, The Caliph, was even now a
-household word.
-
-Such a glorious season, too! Why does not Nature more frequently
-accommodate us with such easy luxuries—weather wherein every one is
-prosperous, easy of mind, and, as a natural consequence, charitably
-disposed? Everybody’s stock was looking well. Prices were high and
-rising. There was a report gaining ground of rich lands having been
-discovered and settlements formed in the far south. That fact meant
-increased demand for stock, and so tended to make all things more
-serene, if possible. Nobody was afraid to leave home, no bush fires were
-possible at this time of year, the stock were almost capable of minding
-themselves, and if a man had a decent overseer, why, he might go to
-England without imprudence. Such was the wondrous concurrence of
-fortune’s favours.
-
-The great and glorious day arrived. Following the run of luck which had
-marked the whole enterprise, its beauty would have rejoiced the heart of
-any M.F.H. in the three kingdoms.
-
-As the party commenced to assemble on the green knoll which lay in front
-of the garden fence in view of the lake, all connoisseurs united in the
-verdict that there could not have been invented a better scenting day.
-There had been rain lately, and during the night anxiety had been felt
-lest a downpour might mar the enjoyment of the unprecedented pastime.
-
-Too kind, however, were the elements. The hazy dawn had gradually
-yielded to a sunrise toned by masses of slowly moving soft grey clouds.
-The air, saturated with moisture, became mild and spring-like as the
-morning advanced. The wind changed to a few points nearer west and
-gradually lulled to an uncomplaining monotone. The thick, green,
-glistening sward, though reasonably damp, was firm and kindly in the
-interests of the contending coursers. It was a day of days, a day of
-promise, of fullest justification of existence. In such a day hope
-returns to each heart, strong and triumphant; care is a lulled and
-languid demon, and sorrow an untranslated symbol.
-
-Nearly all the ladies who were to assist at the grand ceremonial had
-ridden or driven over the night before. Warbrok was nearly as fully
-occupied as Rockley Lodge had been at the races. It was many a day since
-the old walls had included so large and mirthful a party, had listened
-to such joyous babble, had echoed to like peals of innocent laughter.
-
-Of course, the fair Christabel and her mother were early invited guests.
-They had brought a girl cousin. Mrs. Snowden had also asked leave to
-bring a friend staying with her at the time. Miss Fane had, of course,
-been entreated by Mrs. Effingham to be sure to come, but that young lady
-had written, sorrowfully, to decline as Dr. Fane was absent on business.
-A postscript, partially reassuring, stated that he was expected home the
-next day, and if the writer could possibly manage it she might ride part
-of the way to Warbrok and join some friends who were to come to the
-breakfast. But this was a hazardous supposition, too good to come off.
-Deep regret was expressed at The Chase on the receipt of this note, but
-the world went on nevertheless, as it does in default of all of us.
-
-Can I essay to describe the array of dames and demoiselles, knights and
-squires and retainers, yeomen, men-at-arms, and others of low degree,
-who, on that ever-memorable autumn morn, trampled the green meadow in
-front of old Warbrok House? Many a day has passed since the shadows of
-the waving forest trees flecked the greensward, since the hillside
-resounded to horse-hoof and jingling bridle, while mirthful words and
-silvery laughter blended ever and anon with the unaccustomed bay of the
-foxhound.
-
-Ah me! Of the manly forms and bold, eager brows of those who kept tryst
-that day, how many have gone down before the onset of battle, the arrow
-of pestilence, the thousand haps of a colonist’s life? The stark limbs
-are bowed, the bold eyes dimmed, the strong hearts tamed by the slow
-sorcery of Time—even of those o’er whom the forest tree sighs not, or
-the wild wave moans no requiem.
-
-How many of that fair company have ridden away for ever into the Silent
-Land! What bright eyes have forgotten to shine! How many a joyous tone
-is heard no more!
-
- The halls her bright smile lighted up of yore,
- Are lonely now!
-
-Gone to the Valhalla, doubtless, are many brave souls of heroes; but in
-the good year of grace eighteen hundred and thirty-six the chances of
-life’s battle sat but lightly on the gallant troop that reined up at the
-first meet at Warbrok Chase. Many a goodly muster of the magnates of the
-land had been held in that home of many memories ere this; but never
-within the ken of the oldest chronicler had anything occurred so
-successful, so numerously attended, of such great and general interest
-to the district or neighbourhood.
-
-Resolved that all the concomitants and accessories should be as
-thoroughly English as could in any way be managed, Howard Effingham had
-personally superintended the details of a Hunt breakfast, such as
-erstwhile he had often enjoyed or dispensed within the bounds of Merrie
-England.
-
- North and south, and east and west,
- The ‘visitors’ came forth,
-
-as though minded to give the Squire of Warbrok—a name by which Howard
-Effingham was commencing to be known in the neighbourhood—a substantial
-acknowledgment of the interest taken by the country-side in his highly
-commendable enterprise. The younger squatters, then, as now, the
-aristocracy of the land, mustered gallantly in support of the hereditary
-pastime of their order. A list might be attempted, were it only like the
-names of the ships in Homer’s _Iliad_, some day to be read to curious
-listening ears by one unknowing of aught save that such, in the dear
-past, were the names of heroes.
-
-But no thought of the irony of fate fell darkly on the merry party
-issuing from The Chase to greet the Badajos and Benmohr contingents, as
-they came up from opposite directions. With Harry O’Desmond rode a tall
-man in a green hunting frock, whose length of limb and perfect seat
-showed off the points of an inestimable grey of grand size and power,
-whom all men saw at once to be The Caliph, well known on both sides of
-the Straits. It was in truth John Hampden’s famous hunter, a very Bayard
-among horses, at whom no horse-loving junior could look without tears in
-his eyes.
-
-Of that party also were the Gambiers—Alick, Jimmy, and Jack—with their
-friend Willie Machell. A trio of cheerful hard-riding young squatters,
-having made names for themselves as leading dare-devils where anything
-dangerous was to be done with the aid of horse-flesh. Their ‘Romeo’
-five-year-olds, with matchless shoulders, but imperfect tempers, carried
-them admirably. Will Machell was a tall, mild, gentlemanlike, musical
-personage, by no means so ‘hard’ as his more robust friends. He would be
-available as a chaperon for the feminine division, as he did not intend
-to do more than canter a mile or two after the throw-off.
-
-Came from the broad river-flats and forest parks of the Murray, Claude
-Waring and his partner Rodder, the former tall, dark, jovial; the latter
-neat, prudent, and fresh-coloured.
-
-Came from the volcanic cones and scoria-covered plateaus of Willaree the
-broad frame and leonine visage of Herman Bottrell. He was well carried
-by his square-built ambling cob, while beside him on a dark bay
-five-year-old, with the blood of Tramp in his veins, sat the well-known
-figure of ‘Dolly’ Goldkind, a man who in his day had shared the
-costliest pleasures of the _haute volée_ of European capitals.
-Commercial vicissitudes in his family had forced him to importune
-fortune afresh in the unwonted guise of an Australian squatter. She had,
-in this instance, not disdained to ‘favour the brave,’ and Dolly was now
-in a fair way to see the pavement of the Faubourg St. Germain once yet
-again, and to bask amid the transient splendour of the Tuileries. He had
-faced gallantly his share of uncongenial solitude, unadorned Nature, and
-rude surroundings, always awaiting, with the philosophy born of English
-steadfastness, and Parisian _insouciance_, the good time coming.
-
-Came Bernard Wharton, bronzed by the fierce unshadowed sun of that dread
-waste where clouds rarely linger or the blessed rains of heaven are
-known to fall. His last whoo-hoop had been heard in his own county, in
-the ancestral land. His blue eye was bright, and his smile ready, as
-though he had known naught but lightsome toil and the sport of his
-Northamptonshire forefathers.
-
-Ardmillan, Forbes, and Neil Barrington, with all the ‘Benmohr mob,’ as
-they were familiarly called, were in the vanguard. Neil Barrington
-possessed one valuable attribute of the horseman, inasmuch as he was
-ready, like Bob Clarke, to ride anything and at anything. No man had
-ever seen Neil decline a mount or a fence, however unpromising. But his
-skill was inferior to his zeal, usually provoking comment from the
-bystanders.
-
-On one of these occasions, when he had hit a top rail very hard in an
-amateur steeplechase, an expostulatory friend said, ‘Why don’t you lift
-your horse, Neil?’
-
-‘Lift, be d——d!’ replied the indignant Neil; ‘I’ve enough to do to stick
-on.’
-
-However, being muscular, active, and fearless, Neil’s star had hitherto
-favoured him, so that he was generally well up at the finish.
-
-One needs a staunch horse for ‘cutting out’ work, but the great raking
-Desborough which Bob Clarke brought with him was surely too good to be
-knocked about in the Benmohr bogs and volcanic trap ‘rises’ at a muster,
-while his condition savoured more of the loose-box than the grass
-paddock. Bob was one of those fortunate individuals that every one
-everywhere, male and female, gentle and simple, is glad to welcome. So
-there was no dissentient to the view of duty he had adopted but Mr.
-Rockley. And though that gentleman stated it as his opinion that Master
-Bob would have been better at home minding his work if he ever intended
-to make money, he extended the right hand of fellowship to him, and was
-as gracious as all the world and distinctly the world’s wife (and
-probably daughter) was wont to be.
-
-There were those who thought that Christabel Rockley’s eyes glowed with
-a deeper light after Bob’s coming was announced. But such an occasion
-would have brightened the girl’s flower-like face even if Bob had been
-doomed to eat his heart the while in solitude and disappointment on the
-far Mondarlo Plain.
-
-‘None of the ladies who belonged to “our set,” and could ride at all,
-were absent,’ Neil Barrington remarked, ‘except Miss Fane; and it was a
-beastly shame she was prevented from coming—most likely by that old Turk
-of a father of hers. It was a real pleasure to see her ride, and now
-they were all done out of it.’
-
-Just as Neil had concluded his lamentation for Vera Fane, who had won
-his heart by comforting him after one of his tumbles, saying that she
-never saw any one who rode so straight without turning out a horseman in
-the end, the Granville party, who had a long distance to come, made
-their appearance through the trees of the north gully, and there, on the
-well-known bonnie brown Emigrant, between Jack Granville and his sister
-Katie, was Vera Fane, or the evil one in her sweet guise.
-
-So the grateful Neil was appeased, and straightway modified his language
-with respect to Dr. Fane’s parental shortcomings; while Wilfred
-Effingham, who never denied his interest in the young lady—chiefly, he
-avowed, as a study of character—felt more exhilarated than he could
-account for. The Granvilles were congratulated, first of all upon their
-own appearance, and assured they were not at all late (Rockley had been
-devoting them to the infernal deities for the last half-hour), then upon
-their thoughtful conduct in bringing Miss Fane.
-
-‘Deal of trouble, of course,’ quoth Jack Granville. ‘Miss Fane is one of
-that sort, ain’t she? She rode over with a small black boy for an
-escort, and roused us up about midnight. Nearly shot her, didn’t I,
-Katie?’
-
-‘I’m afraid I frightened you,’ said Miss Fane, with an apologetic
-expression, ‘but papa had only just come home from Sydney. I knew if I
-missed this eventful day I should never have such another chance, so I
-lifted up Wonga by his hair, poor child, to wake him, and then started
-off for a night ride.’
-
-There was no time for further amenities, as the Master, triumphant and
-distinguished in the eyes of the Australian-born portion of the Hunt,
-gorgeous in buckskins, accurate top-boots, and a well-worn pink, moved
-off with fourteen couple of creditable foxhounds. A very fair,
-even-looking lot they were admitted to be. Old Tom had proved an
-admirable whip, displaying a keenness in the vocation which verified the
-tales with which he had regaled his acquaintances as to feats and
-frolics with the Blazers in the historic County Galway, in the kingdom
-of Long Ago.
-
-A roan cob, with a reputation for unequalled feats in the jumping line,
-had, after many trials, been secured by Wilfred as a ‘safe conveyance’
-for his father. He was, indeed, an extraordinary animal; the sort that
-some elderly gentlemen are always talking about and never seem able to
-get.
-
-Wallaby was a red roan, low set, of great power and amazing activity.
-‘He could jump anything,’ his former owner declared, ‘and was that fond
-of it, as you could lead him up to this ’ere three-railed fence with a
-halter and he’d clear it and jump back without pulling it out of your
-hand.’ This he proceeded to do before Wilfred and his father, after
-which there was no question as to his cross-country capability.
-
-Not above 14 hands 2 inches in height, with short legs, his neat head
-and neck, with sloping shoulders and short back, ranked him as fit to
-carry a bishop or a banker in Rotten Row. His thighs and gaskins showed
-where the jumping came from. Besides these excellences, he was quiet,
-fast, and easy in his paces; so that Mrs. Effingham and the girls had no
-anxiety about the head of the house when so mounted.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
- THE FIRST MEET OF THE LAKE WILLIAM HUNT CLUB
-
-
-‘What a delightful sight!’ said Miss Fane to Rosamond; ‘and how glad I
-am that I was so determined to come. I have rather a craze for horses, I
-know, but doesn’t it look magnificent. What an array! Everybody within a
-hundred miles must be here. I feel as if I could go out of my senses
-with excitement. This is strictly between ourselves. But of course you
-have seen far larger fields.’
-
-‘I was too young before I left home for much in the hunting way,’ said
-Rosamond, ‘but I was taken to see a throw-off now and then on the first
-day of the season.’
-
-‘What was it like? A much finer sight than this?’
-
-‘We cannot, of course, compete in appointments—the Hunt servants so
-neatly got up; the huntsman such a picture, with his weather-beaten
-face, and the whips so smart and trim. Then the grey-haired squires on
-their favourite hunters give such a tone to the affair. But we have good
-horses out to-day, including yours and mine, which would not be
-unnoticed, even that dear Fergus. He wonders what it is all about.’
-
-‘And the scenery and the belongings?’
-
-‘Well, a lawn in front of a grand historic mansion that has been
-besieged more than once since the Wars of the Roses must have the _pas_
-over anything in Australia. Still, as for scenery, it was often tame,
-and scarcely came up to that.’
-
-Here she pointed with her whip as the hounds spread eagerly over a
-grassy flat immediately beneath them. They had been for some time
-imperceptibly ascending a slope.
-
-The mists which had shrouded the mountain-tops had rolled back, and a
-panorama of grand and striking beauty stood revealed. Westward lay the
-lake, a silver sheet, amid the green slopes which marked its shores. On
-the south rose sheer and grim the enormous darkened cone which
-terminated the mountain range which they had approached. The released
-effulgence of the morning sun magically transfigured to purple masses
-the outline of the curving ridge, before crowning it with a tremulous
-aureole. Trending westerly, the level ground increased in width, until,
-but for its groves of eucalyptus, it might have been dignified by the
-name of plain. This gradually merged into a region of park-like forest.
-
-‘What a charming place for a gallop!’ said Christabel Rockley. ‘I do so
-hope the fox, or whatever he is, will be found here. I should not be
-afraid to ride fast over this nice, clear country.’
-
-‘It is almost too easy,’ said Miss Fane, drawing her bridle-rein, as she
-watched old Tom closely. ‘I like forest and range work, I must confess.
-But we must look out, or the hounds will be away, and we shall be left
-lamenting like so many Lord Ullins.’
-
-The girl’s instinct had not deceived her. She had ridden many a day at
-her father’s side, when the shy cattle of a neglected herd, ready for
-headlong speed at the snapping of a twig, needed quick following to live
-with. Keeping her eye on old Tom, she had noted the signs of an
-approaching start.
-
-A leading hound ran along a cattle track, and giving tongue, went off at
-score. Three or four comrades of position followed suit, and in the
-shortest possible time the whole pack was away, running with a breast
-high scent.
-
-‘The black dingo for a thousand,’ said old Tom to the Master, as he
-hustled Boney alongside of the roan cob. ‘I seen Hobart Gay Lass put up
-her bristles the minit she settled to the scent. It’s a true tongue the
-slut has, and I’ll back her against ’ere a dog of the English lot,
-though there’s good hounds among them. We’ll have the naygur to-day, if
-there’s vartue in a good scent and a killing pack.’
-
-‘Then you know him, Tom?’
-
-‘By coorse, I do; he killed Strawberry’s calf, and didn’t I go down on
-my two knees and swear I’d have the heart’s blood of him.’
-
-‘Then how did you manage to lay the hounds on him here—I thought he was
-a lake dog?’
-
-‘Divil a doubt of it; but I seen him here one day, just under the range,
-pinning a “joey,” and I kept lavin’ a bit of mate for him, just to make
-him trot over regular—maybe a bullock’s heart or a hock of a heifer’s
-calf, maybe a bird I’d shot. Dingoes is mortial fond of birds. I seen
-his tracks here yesterday, and med sure he’d be here wonst more, for the
-last time, and here he is forenint us now—glory be to God!’
-
-‘Then he’s safe to be a straight goer?’
-
-‘It’s twelve mile to the lake, and he’ll make for the little rise, where
-there’s rocks, just before you come to Long Point. If he’s pushed there,
-he’ll maybe turn to the Limestone Hill, at the back of the big house,
-where there’s caves—my curse on thim—and then good-bye.’
-
-‘This is pretty country, if there was more fencing,’ said the Master.
-‘Perhaps it is as well, though, as there are so many ladies out. The
-hounds are running like smoke.’
-
-The nature of the ground at this point of the hunt was such as to admit
-of all being reasonably well up. True, the pack went at considerable
-speed. The scent was burning, and there were no small enclosures, as in
-‘Merrie England,’ to check the more delicate damsels or inexperienced
-horsemen. The sward was sound and firm, the tall-stemmed eucalypti stood
-far apart in the southern forest-park. Bob Clarke and the Benmohr
-division, Hampden and the Gambiers, rode easily in front. Rosamond, Miss
-Rockley, Miss Fane, and a few other ladies, who were exceptionally well
-mounted, had no difficulty in keeping their places.
-
-‘So this is fox-hunting!’ said Miss Fane. ‘That is, so far as we can
-have the noble sport without the fox. It is nice to see the hounds
-running so compactly. And I like the musical composite cry with its
-harmonies and variations.’
-
-‘This dingo,’ said Wilfred, who had established himself at her
-bridle-rein, ‘is running very straight and fast. If he makes for the
-range behind the house, we shall see him and have a little fencing too.’
-
-‘I don’t object to a jump or two,’ said the young lady, ‘if they are not
-too stiff. This is the sort of pace that enables one to look about. But
-I should like to see the hounds work a little more.’
-
-While this conversation was proceeding, every one was at their ease, and
-voted the sport most delightful. The front rankers were sailing along,
-while the hounds were carrying a good head and forcing Master Dingo
-along at a pace which prevented him from availing himself of one or two
-hiding-places.
-
-However, just as Rosamond had compared herself to the Landgrave, in the
-German ballad, sweeping on in endless chase, with a horseman on either
-hand—St. Maur on the right on a coal-black steed, and Fred Churbett on
-the left on the rejoicing Duellist—wondering how long they were going to
-have such a pleasant line of country, through which Fergus was
-luxuriously striding as if he had commenced the first part of a
-fifty-mile stage, the scene changed. The confident pack checked, and
-commenced a circular performance which betrayed indecision, if not
-failure of scent.
-
-‘What’s the matter?’ said Miss Fane. ‘Is the whole thing over? Was the
-dingo a myth?’
-
-‘We have overrun the scent, Miss Fane,’ said Wilfred with dignity. ‘The
-hounds have checked, but we shall hit it off again in a few minutes.’
-
-He had hardly finished speaking when Miss Fane, who, if it was her first
-day after hounds, had ‘kept her side’ well up for many a day in early
-girlhood, ‘when they wheeled the wild scrub cattle at the yard,’ took
-her horse by the head, with a rapid turn towards two couple of hounds
-that she had descried racing down the side of a creek. A neat jump,
-following old Tom over the narrow but deep water-course at a bend,
-placed her on easy terms with the pack. A new line of country lay spread
-out before them at right angles to their late course.
-
-The hounds had now settled again to the scent. Another ‘blind’ creek,
-waterless, but respectable in the jumping way, lay in front. At this
-Miss Fane’s horse went so fast and took so extensive a fly, that Wilfred
-felt himself compelled to be hard on his Camerton chestnut and ride, if
-he intended to keep his place in the front alongside of this ‘leading
-lady,’ as Miss Fane’s nerve and experience entitled her to become.
-
-But the rest of the field were not doomed to defeat and extinction,
-although Miss Fane’s knowledge of emergencies had enabled her to fix the
-moment when the scent was recovered.
-
-Scarcely did the hounds swing to their line, for the dingo had turned,
-at right angles, in the creek, and so occasioned the outrunning of the
-scent, when Forbes, Ardmillan, Neil Barrington, and Fred Churbett were
-seen coming up hand over hand. Miss Effingham’s ‘dear Fergus’ was
-slipping along with his wonted graceful ease, and permitting the
-interchange of a few sentences with Mr. Churbett, who rode at her
-bridle-rein. Hampden, with whom was Beatrice, on Allspice, was riding
-wide of the hounds, but only waiting for serious business to show what
-manner of work he and The Caliph were wont to cut out for themselves.
-Bob Clarke, wonderful to relate, was _not_ among the first flight. It
-could not have been the fault of Desborough—faster than any horse in the
-hunt—and as to jumping, why, he had a man on his back who was a
-sufficient answer to any reflections on that score.
-
-‘May I niver be d——d!’ exclaimed old Tom, ‘if the varmint isn’t going
-straight for the paddock! One would think he was a rale fox, to see the
-divilment of him. Sure it must be the hounds puts them up to all the
-villainy. Well, the bigger the lape, the more divarshion.’
-
-Satisfying himself with this view of the matter, old Tom watched with
-interest the field gradually approaching a large outer paddock, which
-lay at some distance from the house. It was the ordinary two-railed
-fence of the colonists, and though fairly stiff, not formidable to any
-one who intended going.
-
-The hounds slipped quietly under the lower rail, and in another moment
-were racing, unchecked, along the flat which it enclosed. But with the
-field, this obstacle commenced to alter the state of matters.
-
-The first flight, it is true, came rattling round a point of timber at
-any number of miles an hour, when they encountered this obstacle, to the
-sardonic entertainment of Tom Glendinning, who had eased his horse to
-see the effect. Wilfred and Miss Fane were still leading when the line
-of fence suddenly appeared. Wilfred, from his knowledge of the country,
-was aware that it was coming, and had prepared his companion for it.
-
-‘It is not very high,’ she said. ‘We are going so charmingly that I
-could not bear to be stopped. Emigrant here’—and she fondly patted the
-dark brown neck of the adamantine animal she rode—‘is good for anything
-in a moderate way.’
-
-‘It is scarcely four feet,’ said Wilfred, ‘but don’t go at it if you are
-not quite sure. We can go round.’
-
-‘I’m not going round, I can promise you,’ said the girl, with a clear
-light glowing in her steadfast eyes. ‘Oh, here it is. Two-railed fences
-are not much. Besides, we are leading, and must show a good example.’
-
-Whereupon Emigrant’s head was turned towards the nearest panel. The
-well-bred horses quickened their speed slightly; Emigrant shook his
-arched neck as both cleared the rail with little more trouble than a
-sheep-hurdle. As they alighted on the sound greensward, Miss Fane was
-sitting perfectly square with her hands down, just a little backward in
-her seat, but without the slightest sign of haste or discomposure.
-
-‘Well done,’ said Wilfred. ‘Prettily jumped. Emigrant has been at it
-before.’
-
-‘He has been at most things,’ said Miss Fane, looking fondly at her
-experienced palfrey. ‘He had all kinds of work before I managed to make
-private property of him; but nobody rides him but me now, and I think I
-shall manage to keep his old legs right for years to come.’
-
-The next advancing pairs were not quite so secure of their horses’
-abilities, and a slight uncertainty took place. It was all very well for
-Miss Fane to say the fence was not much; but rails are rails. When they
-happen to be new and unyielding, though scarcely four feet in height, a
-mistake causes a severe fall. There is no _scrambling_ through an
-Australian fence, as a rule. It must be jumped clean or let alone.
-
-Fergus, the unapproachable, was in good sooth no great performer over
-anything stiff. Peerless as a hackney in all other respects, he was not
-up to much across country; nor had he been required hitherto, in the
-houndless state of the land, to do aught in that line. Nevertheless,
-Rosamond, fired by the example of Miss Fane, and inspirited by the
-apparent ease with which Emigrant negotiated the obstacle, would have
-doubtless run the risk, trusting to Fergus’s gentlemanlike feeling to
-see her safe. But all risk of danger was obviated by Bob Clarke’s
-promptitude.
-
-That chivalrous youth, knowing all about Red King, as indeed he did
-about every horse in the land, was aware that he was a difficult horse
-to ride at timber. ‘Handsome as paint,’ was the general verdict, but he
-needed two pairs of hands in company.
-
-On this occasion the fact of there being other ambitious animals in
-front, and the ‘great club of the unsuccessful’ in his rear, had roused
-his temper.
-
-The fair Christabel was by no means deficient in courage, but to-day Red
-King had been too much for her. He had fretted himself into foam, and
-her pretty hands were sore with holding the ‘reefing’ horse, whose mouth
-became more and more callous.
-
-‘Don’t you ride him at that fence, Miss Christabel,’ said Bob, in a tone
-of entreaty. ‘He’ll go through it as sure as you’re alive. I know him.’
-
-The girl’s face grew a shade paler, but she set her teeth, and, pointing
-with her whip to Miss Fane, who was sailing away in ease and luxury on
-the farther side, said, ‘I _must_; they’re all going at it.’
-
-‘Very well,’ said he—mentally reprobating Red King’s mouth and temper,
-and it may be the obstinacy of young women—‘keep behind me, and we’ll be
-next.’
-
-Upon this the wily Bob shot out from the leading ranks, closely followed
-by the wilful Christabel, whose horse, indeed, left her no option.
-Sending Desborough at a hog-backed rail at the rate of forty miles an
-hour, with a reprehensibly loose rein, that indignant animal declined to
-rise, and, chesting the rail, snapped it like a reed. As Master Bob lay
-back in the saddle with his head nearly on his horse’s tail, he had the
-pleasure of seeing Christabel pop pleasantly over the second rail,
-followed by the other ladies, excepting Mrs. Snowden, who faced the
-unbroken fence with considerable resolution. As for the attendant
-cavaliers, they negotiated it pleasantly enough, with the exception of a
-baulk or two and one fall. Indeed, another rail gave way soon after,
-making a gap through which the rear-guard, variously mounted and
-attired, streamed gallantly.
-
-As for Bob Clarke, Red King had managed to run up to Desborough—(great
-turn of speed that old King)—and he fancied he saw in the marvellous
-eyes a recognition of his unusual mode of easing a stiff leap.
-
-The next happened to be one rare in Australia, having its origin in Mr.
-Effingham’s British reminiscences. A fence was needed in the track of a
-marshy inlet from the lake. A ditch with a sod wall thrown up on the
-farther side made a boundary sufficing for all the needs of an
-enclosure, yet requiring no carriage of material.
-
-‘We need not make it quite so broad or deep,’ he said, ‘as the ox fences
-in Westmeath; but if I can get a couple of hedgers and ditchers, I shall
-leave my memorial here, to outlast Dick’s timber skeletons.’
-
-Two wandering navvies, on the look-out for dam-making, were fortunately
-discovered. The result of their labours was ‘The Squire’s Ditch,’ as the
-unusual substitute was henceforth named. It certainly was a relief after
-the austerity of posts and rails proper. In a few places the ditch had
-been filled in and a partial gap made in the sod wall. At any rate horse
-and rider would all go at it with light hearts. So, with the exception
-of Wilfred and Miss Fane—the latter having picked out the worst place
-she could see—everybody treated themselves indulgently; hit the wall, or
-scrambled over the ditch, just as their horses chose to comport
-themselves, and rode forward rejoicing.
-
-The hounds have now lengthened out, while their leaders are racing, with
-lowered sterns, at a pace that leaves the heavy brigade an increasing
-distance behind. The flat is broken only by an occasional sedgy interval
-where the fall to the lake has not been sufficient. For the same reason
-the creek, or natural outlet of the watershed, is, though not very wide,
-less unequal as to depth than are most Australian watercourses, while
-the perpendicular banks show how the winter rains of ages have
-channelled the rich black soil.
-
-‘We have something like a water-jump here,’ said Wilfred to his
-companion, as they watched the hounds disappear and climb up, giving
-tongue as they scour forward with renewed energy. ‘It is not so very
-wide, but the sides are steep. If your horse does not know that sort of
-jump, we had better follow it down to the ford, near the lake.’
-
-‘Black Mountain is full of small rivers and treacheries of all sorts,’
-said the girl. ‘A horse that can go there can go anywhere, I _think_.’
-Sending Emigrant at it pretty fast, he lowered his head slightly and
-‘flew it like a bird.’
-
-By the time they approached the Deep Creek, as old Tom averred it had
-been christened ever since he knew Warbrok, the greater part of the
-field seemed aware that no common obstacle was before them.
-
-‘See here now, Mr. Churbett,’ said old Tom. ‘It’s an ugly lape unless
-you know where to take it, and some of the ladies might get hurted. You
-make for the point half a mile down, where ye see thim green reeds.
-There’s a little swamp fills it up there, and ye can wade through easy.
-More by token, I’m thinkin’, the hounds will turn to ye before ye cross
-the three-railed fence into the horse paddock.’
-
-Mr. Churbett at once made sail for the point indicated, successfully
-piloting, with Forbes and a few men who were more chivalrous than keen,
-the feminine division. He was followed by the greater portion of the
-rear-guard, who, seeing that there was an obstacle to free discussion in
-front, wisely turned when they did. Hamilton, Argyll, and Hampden rode
-at the yawner with varied success.
-
-As for Bob Clarke, seeing that it was impossible to adopt his last
-method of simplifying matters, he persuaded Miss Rockley to gallop up
-the creek with him, on the off-chance of finding a crossing, which they
-did eventually, but so far up that they were nearly thrown out
-altogether.
-
-We cannot claim for the sheep-killing denizen of the Australian waste,
-mysteriously placed on our continent a century in advance of the merino,
-the wondrous powers of Reynard the Great. But in the pace which enables
-him to bring to shame an inferior greyhound, and in the endurance which
-keeps him ahead of a fair pack of foxhounds, as well as in his ardent
-love of poultry, he undoubtedly does resemble ‘the little tyrant of the
-fields.’
-
-The distance the black dingo had already come was considerable, the pace
-decidedly good. The long slopes, all with an upward tendency, began to
-tell. When the fence of the home-paddock was reached, the farther corner
-of which impinged upon a steep spur of the main range, the bolt of the
-gallant quarry was nearly shot.
-
-He was viewed by Tom crawling under the lower rail; an enthusiastic
-view-holloa rang out from the old man. One more fence and a kill was
-certain, unless his last effort sufficed to land him within reach of one
-of the ‘gibbah-gunyahs’ (or rock caves) which the aboriginals and their
-canine friends had inhabited apparently from remote ages.
-
-As the field ranged up to the horse-paddock fence, it was seen to be by
-no means so moderate a task as the other post and rails. Old Dick, who
-had superintended its erection, had been careful that it should be one
-of the best pieces of work in the district,—substantial, of full height,
-and with solid posts nearly two feet in the ground. Hence it loomed
-before the hunt fully four feet six inches in height, with top-rails
-which forbade all chance of cracking or carrying out.
-
-Fortunately for the ladies and a large proportion of the sterner sex,
-who would have to ‘jump or go home,’ Wilfred knew of ‘slip-rails’ a
-little more than a hundred yards from where the quick eyes of old Tom
-had marked the dingo steal through.
-
-‘I have no doubt you would try it, Miss Fane,’ said Wilfred, who marked
-with admiration the game sparkle in his companion’s eye, as her gaze
-ranged calmly over the barrier; ‘but it is a high, stiff fence, and
-dangerous for a lady. At any rate, as your temporary guardian, I must
-forbid your taking it, if you would defer to my control.’
-
-‘Certainly, oh, certainly, and many thanks,’ said the girl, blushing
-slightly; ‘it is very good of you to take care of me. But what are we to
-do? We _can’t_ miss the finish after this delightful run.’
-
-‘Certainly not. Do you see the road to the right of us? There is a
-slip-rail on the track, which I fancy will be patronised. Follow me.’
-
-Slip-rails are contemned by advanced pastoralists, but they stood the
-Lake William Hunt in good stead on this occasion. As they rode to the
-opening, Miss Fane said:
-
-‘Pray leave the middle rail up. It will be the last jump, and I daresay
-the other ladies will agree with me.’
-
-‘Very well,’ said Wilfred. ‘I need not get off.’
-
-Riding up to the fence, he lifted out the shifting end of the stout
-round rail, and, allowing it to fall to the ground, cantered back to his
-fair companion.
-
-‘Now then,’ she said, ‘see how prettily you will take this, Master
-Emigrant! It is quite stiff, though not very high.’
-
-In truth the rail, as high as a sheep-hurdle, was slightly hog-backed,
-and strong enough to have capsized a buffalo.
-
-‘You will go first, of course,’ said Wilfred, turning his horse’s head
-in the same direction.
-
-The nice old hackney, albeit his best years had been spent as a
-stock-horse amid the unfair country of the Black Mountain run, was
-within a shade of thoroughbred. He went at the jump with his hind legs
-well under him, and, rising at exactly the proper moment, popped over
-with so little effort or disturbance of seat that Miss Fane might have
-held a glass of water in her whip-hand.
-
-If she had turned her head she might not have been so self-possessed;
-for, the moment her back was turned, Wilfred Effingham, foreseeing that
-the talent would be sure to ride this, the only sensational fence of the
-run, turned his horse’s head to the big three-railer.
-
-He rode an upstanding chestnut five-year-old, which he had selected as a
-colt from the Benmohr stud. For some time past he had employed himself
-in ‘making’ him, a pleasant task to a lover of horses. He had given the
-resolute youngster much schooling over logs, rails, and any kind of
-fence which came handy, avoiding those which were not unyielding. He was
-aware that no more dangerous idea can be contracted by a timber-jumper,
-than that he can break through anything, the first new fence that he
-meets being likely fatally to undeceive him. He flattered himself that
-Troubadour, from repeated raps, would take care to rise high enough over
-any fence.
-
-At the moment he set him going he saw Argyll and Churbett, with Hampden,
-St. Maur, and all the ‘no denial’ division converging on the slip-rails,
-having witnessed Miss Fane’s disappearance through them.
-
-Whether Troubadour was over-anxious to regain Emigrant, cannot be known.
-But he went at the fence too fast, hit the top-rail a tremendous bang,
-and rolled over into the paddock, narrowly escaping a somersault across
-his master.
-
-He, however, was lucky enough to be thrown, by the mere impetus of the
-fall, clear of his horse. Jumping to his feet with the alacrity of
-youth, he caught the bridle-rein of the astonished Troubadour, who stood
-staring and shaking, just in time to see The Caliph sail over the high
-fence with a great air of ease and authority, followed by the others,
-among whom Churbett’s horse hit the fence hard, ‘but no fall.’ The
-ladies followed Miss Fane’s example and negotiated the middle rail
-successfully, as Wilfred jumped into his saddle, and sending his spurs
-into the unlucky Troubadour, rejoined his charge without further delay.
-
-That young lady had pulled up, and was looking at the scene of the
-disaster with an anxious expression. Her face had assumed a paler hue,
-and her hands fidgeted with the bridle-rein.
-
-‘I am _so_ glad you are not hurt,’ she said. ‘I thought all sorts of
-things till I saw you get up and mount.’
-
-‘Thank you very much,’ said Wilfred, with a grateful inflection in his
-voice. ‘It was very awkward of Troubadour; but accidents will happen,
-and it will teach him to lift his legs another time. But we must ride
-for it now; we have been in the front so far. Ha! the hounds are turning
-to us; they will have Master Dingo before he reaches the cliffs.’
-
-Another mile and the dark quadruped, still at a stretching wolf-gallop,
-was decidedly nearer the leading hounds, whose bristles began to rise,
-ominous of blood. Old Tom, waving his cap, cheered them on as he rode
-rejoicingly forward on the wiry, unflinching grey. Slower and more
-laboured became the pace of the aboriginal canine. Before him was the
-cliff, upon the lower tier of which, could he have crawled, lay
-sanctuary. But in vain he scans eagerly the frowning masses of
-sandstone, denuded by the storms of ages. In vain he glances fiercely
-back at the remorseless pack, showing his glittering teeth. His doom is
-sealed. With a half-turn and a vicious snap, in which his teeth meet
-like a steel-trap through Cruiser’s neck, he confronts destiny. The next
-moment there is a confused heap of struggling, tearing hounds, a few
-seconds of dumb, despairing resistance, and the mothers of the herd are
-avenged.
-
-Miss Fane turns away her head and joins the group of ‘first families,’
-by this time enabled to be in respectably at the death.
-
-Old Tom in due time appeared with the brush of the dingo, which he held
-on high for inspection. It was not unlike that of the true Reynard,
-though larger and fuller. It had also a white tag. The old man,
-advancing to Miss Fane’s side, thus spoke:
-
-‘The Masther said I was to give ye the brush, Miss; it’s well ye desarve
-it. Sure I’d like to have seen ye with the Blazers. My kind sarvice to
-ye, and wishin’ ye the hoith of good fortune.’
-
-‘Well done, Tom!’ said Argyll, ‘you have made a very neat speech; and we
-all congratulate Miss Fane upon her very spirited riding to-day. As you
-say, she well deserves the brush, and I hope she will grace many more of
-our meets.’
-
-‘We must send the “cap” round for the huntsman, Tom,’ said Hampden, ‘who
-found such a straight-goer for the first run of the Lake William Hounds,
-and hit off the scent so neatly after the check.’
-
-As he spoke he lifted it from the old man’s grey head, and placing a
-sovereign in it, rode along the ranks. He returned it with such a
-collection of coin as the old man, long accustomed to cheques and
-‘orders,’ had not seen for years.
-
-‘It’s fortunate the fox—the dingo, I mean,’ said Wilfred, ‘chose to make
-for the cliffs, instead of the other end of the lake. We should have had
-a terrible distance to ride home, though not in the dark, as one often
-was in the old country. Now, you must all come in, as we are so near The
-Chase. We can put up everybody who hasn’t pressing work to do at home.’
-
-The day was done. The hunt was over, with the first pack of hounds that
-had ever been followed amid the green pastures which bordered the Great
-Lake. It was by no means the last. And indeed a hunter, bred and broken
-by one of the very men who then aided to establish that traditional
-sport, was fated, when shipped to England, to be one of the few well up
-in the quickest thing that the Pytchley saw that season, to be
-chronicled in Bell, and to win enduring renown for Australian horses and
-Australian riders. But that day, with much of Fate’s glad or sorrowful
-doings, was far in the unborn future. So the band of friends and
-neighbours returned to The Chase, pleased with themselves, with the day,
-and the feats performed, and above all, congratulating Squire Effingham
-upon the triumphant opening meet of the season.
-
-Not all the meets were so well attended. But the grand fact remained
-that, at regular intervals, dawn saw the dappled beauties trooping forth
-at the heels of old Tom and the Master across the dewy meadows, beneath
-the century-old trees of the primeval forest. Still rang out the music,
-dear to Howard Effingham’s soul, when the scent lay well in the soft,
-cloudy, autumnal mornings. Still were there, occasionally, incidents of
-hunting spirit and feats of horsemanship worthy of the traditional
-glories of the ne’er-forgotten Fatherland.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
- THE MAJOR DISCOVERS HIS RELATIVE
-
-
-After the inauguration, hunting became an organised and well-supported
-recreation among the dwellers within the influence of the social
-wavelets of the lake. The Benmohr firm found, on the whole—though the
-stabling of hunters was not unaccompanied by expense—that it brought
-their stud prominently before the public. Hence they found ready sale,
-at an ascending scale of prices, for all the colts they could turn out.
-Strangers came for the hunting, and made purchases. The hounds, too,
-meeting regularly once a week during the winter months, exercised a
-repressive influence upon the dingos, so much so, that M.F.H. (not being
-a sheep-owner) began seriously to think of preserving these
-much-maligned yet indispensable animals.
-
-So widely spread and honourably mentioned was the fame of the Lake
-William Hunt Club, that His Vice-regal Highness the Governor himself
-more than once deigned to partake of the hospitality of The Chase,
-bringing with him aides-de-camp and private secretaries, pleasant of
-manner, and refreshing as such to the souls of the daughters of the
-house.
-
-Meanwhile Wilfred worked away at the serious business of the estate,
-only taking occasional interest in these extraneous pleasures;
-grumbling, moreover, at the expense, indirect or otherwise, that the
-kennel necessitated.
-
-However, it must be said in justice to him, that it was rarely he was
-betrayed into impatience with regard to an occupation which, with other
-branches of acclimatised field sports, had become the mainstay of his
-father’s interest in life.
-
-‘Really,’ Mr. Effingham would say, ‘in a few years—say about eighteen
-hundred and forty-five or thereabouts—I believe we shall be nearly as
-secure of decent sport as we were in old England. The Murray cod are
-increasing in the lake. I have brown trout, dace, and tench in the
-little river. There are almost too many rabbits; and as to hares,
-pheasants, and partridges, we can invite half-a-dozen guns next season,
-without fear of consequences. I have been offered deer from Tasmania.
-With the inducement of a stag-hunt and a haunch of venison, I don’t see
-why we shouldn’t finish our season right royally. Depend upon it, New
-South Wales only wants enterprise, in the department of field sports, to
-become one of the finest countries under the sun.’
-
-There was no doubt that in the eyes of an observer not endowed with the
-apprehensive temperament which numbers so many successful men amongst
-its possessors, the appearance of matters generally at The Chase
-justified reasonable outlay.
-
-Wilfred had made a few guarded investments—all successful so far. What,
-for instance, could pay better than the purchase of the quiet, dairy
-steers from the small farmers in the autumn, when grass and cash were
-scarce, to fatten them in the lake paddocks? Adjacent freeholds, from
-time to time in the market, were added to the snug estate of The Chase.
-True, he could not always find the cash at call for these tempting
-bargains—(is there anything so enticing as the desire to add farm to
-farm and house to house, as in the old, old days of Judah?)—but Mr.
-Rockley was ready to endorse his bill, which, with his credit at the
-Bank of New Holland, was as good as cash.
-
-Thus passed the time until the close of the hunting season, before which
-Major Glendinning had returned and apparently taken up his abode in the
-neighbourhood, in great request at all the stations, and earning for
-himself daily the character of a thorough sportsman. He purchased a
-couple of horses from the Benmohr stud, on which, from time to time, he
-performed such feats across country as caused it to be surmised that, in
-the event of his settling in the neighbourhood, Bob Clarke would find a
-rival.
-
-He spoke highly of the standard as to blood and bone of the horses bred
-in the district, openly stating that, in the event of the proprietors
-being minded to establish a system of shipment to India, they might
-expect extraordinary prices for their best horses, while the medium ones
-would be worth double or treble their colonial value.
-
-Mr. Rockley, after reckoning up expenses, together with the rather
-serious item of risk of loss on ship-board, decided that there was a
-handsome margin. He finished by declaring that in the following spring,
-which would be in time for the cool season at Calcutta, he would send a
-dozen horses of his own breeding, and join them in a cargo from the
-district.
-
-The idea was adopted. Preparations were made by handling and
-stable-feeding as many of the saleable horses as could be spared.
-O’Desmond was a warm supporter of the movement. He offered to find from
-his long-established stud fully half the number necessary for the
-undertaking. The Major, who was compelled to revisit India once more, if
-but for the last time, had agreed to accompany the emigrants, and to see
-them safely into the stables of old Sheik Mahommed, the great Arab
-horse-dealer.
-
-‘Fancy getting a hundred or two for our colts!’ said Hamilton. ‘Not more
-than they are worth when you come to think of their breeding. I look
-upon the Camerton stock as the very best horses in New South Wales,
-probably in Australia. But of course we never expect more than a third
-of such prices in these markets.’
-
-‘The Major deserves a statue,’ said Argyll, ‘inscribed—“Ad centurionem
-fortissimum, qui, equis canibusque gaudens, primus in Indis et in Nova
-Cambria erat.”’
-
-‘Very neat and classical,’ affirmed Fred Churbett. ‘I intend to send
-Duellist. I should be sure to get three hundred for him, shouldn’t I?
-He’s a sweet hack, but the price _is_ tempting. I daresay I could pick
-up another one up to my weight.’
-
-‘A horse of Duellist’s blood, size, and fashion would sell for that sum
-any day in Calcutta,’ assented the Major. ‘He would be a remarkable
-horse anywhere, and I need not tell you, would fetch more as a park hack
-in London.’
-
-‘Would we were both there!’ murmured Fred softly. ‘I fancy I see myself
-on him doing Rotten Row. I have half a mind to go with you to Calcutta,
-Major. If the trade develops we might make money a little faster than at
-present, and have our fling in the old country before these locks are
-tinged with grey,’ melodramatically patting his auburn _chevelure_.
-
-‘It might be a desirable change,’ said Forbes. ‘Many people are said to
-improve in appearance as they grow older.’
-
-‘But not in mildness of disposition, James,’ retorted Churbett. ‘A
-tendency to flat contradiction and aggressive argument has rarely been
-known to abate with advancing years. But this is wide of the Indian
-Remount Association. I don’t see why we shouldn’t offer to ship and sell
-on commission. Many people in the district breed a good nag and don’t
-know what to do with him afterwards. Suppose we consult the Squire about
-it. He’s not a business man, but he knows India well.’
-
-It was agreed that they should make up a party, consisting of Forbes,
-Churbett, the Major, and Argyll, to ride over to The Chase that
-afternoon. This was always a popular proceeding if any colour of
-business, news, or sport could be discovered for the visit.
-
-As they were nearing the gate of the home-paddock, they encountered
-Wilfred Effingham, accompanied by his old stock-rider, bringing in a
-draft of cattle. They amused themselves watching the efficient aid
-rendered by the dog, and remarked incidentally the fiery impatience and
-clever horsemanship of old Tom, who, roused by the difficulty of driving
-some of the outlying younger cattle, was flying round the drove upon old
-Boney at a terrific pace.
-
-‘How well that old vagabond rides!’ said Fred Churbett, as Tom came
-racing down the range after a perverse heifer, forcing her along at the
-very top of her speed, with Boney’s opened mouth just at her quarter, at
-which, with ears laid back and menacing teeth, he reached over from time
-to time, the old man’s whip meanwhile rattling over her in a succession
-of pistol-cracks, while he audibly devoted her to the infernal deities.
-
-‘There, thin, may the divil take ye for a cross-grained, contrairy,
-brindle-hided baste of a scrubber; may I niver if I don’t have ye in the
-cask the first time yer bones is dacently covered!’ he wrathfully
-ejaculated, as Boney stopped dead at the rear of the drove, into which
-the alarmed heifer shot with the velocity of a shell.
-
-As they rode up to Wilfred and his man, Major Glendinning addressed the
-old stock-rider:
-
-‘By the way, Tom, do you happen to know any one of your own name in this
-part of the country—or elsewhere in the colony, as you have been such a
-traveller?’
-
-‘The divil a know I know,’ replied Tom (who was in one of his worst
-humours, and at such times had little control over himself), ‘of any man
-but Parson Glendinning that lives on the Hunter River, and he’s a
-Scotchman and never seen “the black North” at all. But what raison have
-ye to ask _me_? I’m Tom Stewart Glendinning, the stock-rider, and
-barrin’ that I was “lagged” and was a fool to myself all my life long,
-I’ve no call to be ashamed of my name, more than another man.’
-
-As he spoke the old man raised himself in his saddle and looked
-steadily, even fiercely, into the eyes of his interlocutor, who in turn,
-half astonished, half irritated at the old man’s manner, frowned as he
-returned the gaze with military sternness of rebuke.
-
-Wilfred came up with the intention of rating his follower for his
-acerbity, but as he marked the fixed expression of the two men,
-something prevented him interposing. A similar feeling took possession
-of the others, as they stopped speaking and unconsciously constituted
-themselves an audience during this peculiar colloquy. Did a shadow of
-doubt, a half-acknowledged idea cross the minds of the spectators, as
-they watched the two men whose paths in life lay so wide apart? Was it
-the fire which burned with sudden glow, at that moment, in the eyes of
-both speakers, as they confronted each other, the chance similarity of
-their aquiline features, closely compressd lips, and knitted brows?
-Whatever the unseen influence, it was simultaneous, as it awed to
-silence men, at no time easy to control, and placed them in a position
-of mesmeric domination.
-
-The Major rapidly, but with strangely husky intonation, then said:
-
-‘Under that name did you send to Simon Glendinning, in the county of
-Derry, certain sums of money?’
-
-‘I did thin; and why wouldn’t I, if it was my own? It was asy made in
-thim days; the country was worth living in,—not like now, overstocked
-with “jimmies” and foreign trash.’
-
-‘You sent that money, as I was informed,’ continued the Major,
-persistently unheeding the old man’s petulance, ‘for the benefit of a
-child, a nephew of your own, whom you desired to provide for?’
-
-‘Nephew be hanged! The boy was _my son_, Owen Walter Glendinning by
-name. Maybe he’s dead and gone this many a day, for I niver heard tale
-or tidings of him since. It’s as well for him and betther. ’Tis little
-use I see in draggin’ on life in this world at all, unless you’ve great
-luck intirely. But what call have ye to be cross-examinin’ me—like a
-lawyer—about my family affairs, and what makes the colour lave yer face
-like a dead man’s? Who are ye at all?’
-
-‘I am Owen Walter Glendinning! It was for me that your money was used. I
-am—your—son!’
-
-As he spoke an ashen hue overspread the bronzed cheek, and the strong
-man swayed in his saddle as if he would have fallen to the ground. His
-lips were clenched, and every feature bore the impress of the agony that
-strains nature’s every capacity. As for the spectators, they looked upon
-the actors in this life drama, of which the catastrophe had been so
-unexpectedly sprung upon them, with silent respect accorded to those
-beyond human aid. Words would have been worse than useless. They could
-but look, but sit motionless on their horses, but school every feature
-to passive recipiency, until the end should come.
-
-‘God in Heaven!’ cried the old man; ‘do you tell me so? May the tongue
-be blistered that spoke the word! It was a lie I tould you—lies—lies—I
-tell ye; sure ye don’t belave a word of it?’
-
-Then he looked at the despairing face of the soldier with wistful
-entreaty and bitter regret, piteous to behold.
-
-‘It is too late; it is useless to declare that you misled me. You have
-betrayed the truth, which in pity for my unworthy pride you attempt to
-conceal.’
-
-‘It’s all a lie—a lie—a hellish lie!’ screamed the old man, transported
-with rage and regret. ‘What you, my son! You! Major Glendinning, a fine
-gintleman, and a soldier every inch of ye, the ayquals of the best
-gintry in the land and they proud of ye, the son of a drunken old
-convict stock-rider! I tell ye it _can’t_ be. I swear it’s a lie. I knew
-the man ye spake of. He’s dead now, but he was book-larned and come of
-an old family. I heard tell of his sending home money to his nephew in
-the North, and our names being the same I just said it out of divilment.
-Sure I’d cut my throat if I thought I’d be the manes of harmin’ ye. Why
-don’t ye curse me? Why don’t ye tell thim gintlemen I’m a lyin’ old
-villain? They know me well. Here, I’ll swear on my bended knees, by the
-blessed Virgin and all the saints, there’s no word of truth in what I
-said.’
-
-As old Tom raved, implored, and blasphemed, cursing at once his own
-folly and evil hap, his face writhed with the working of inward feeling.
-His features were deadly pale, well-nigh livid; the tears ran down his
-furrowed cheeks, while his eyes blazed with an unearthly light. As he
-fell on his knees and commenced his oath of renunciation the calm tones
-of the Major were again heard.
-
-‘All this is vain and useless. Get up, and listen to reason. That you
-are my—my father, I have now not the slightest reason to doubt. Your
-knowledge of the name, of the annual sum sent, is sufficient evidence;
-if these facts were not ample, the resemblance of feature is to me at
-this moment, as doubtless to our good friends here, unmistakable. Fate
-has brought about this meeting, why, I dare not question. You are too
-excited to listen now’—here the old man made as though he would burst in
-with a torrent of imprecations on the childish absurdity of the
-speaker—‘but we shall meet again before I leave for India.’
-
-‘May we niver meet again on God’s earth! ’Tis yerself that’s to blame if
-this divil’s blast gets out. Sure the Benmohr gintlemen and Mr. Churbett
-won’t let on. Mr. Wilfred’s close enough. Kape your saycret, and divil a
-soul need hear of the sell ould Tom gave ye. My sarvice to ye, Major!’
-
-Here the old man mounted and devoted his energies to the cattle. Wilfred
-moved forward, by no means sorry that the strange scene had concluded.
-
-‘Look here, Effingham, I will ride on to The Chase and make my adieus;
-as well now as another time. I return at once to India. You understand
-my position, I feel sure.’
-
-He rode forward with a more upright seat, a firmer hand upon his
-bridle-rein, and that stern lighting of the eyes that may be seen when,
-and when only—
-
- Bridle-reins are gathered up,
- And sabres blaze on high,
-
-ere each man spurs to the death feast, wherein his own name has,
-perchance, been sounded on a shadowy roll-call by a phantom herald.
-
-Hamilton urged his horse alongside of the Major and held out his hand.
-Their eyes met as each wrung the proffered palm. But no word was spoken.
-Argyll and Churbett rode slightly ahead. Before long they reached the
-gate of The Chase, which, with its peculiar fastening, their horses
-began to know pretty well, either sidling steadily up or commencing to
-gambade at the very sight of it, in token of detestation, as did Grey
-Surrey.
-
-‘It seems odd that I shall perhaps never see this house again,’ said
-Major Glendinning, slowly and reflectively. ‘I was beginning to be very
-fond of it, and had made up my mind to buy a place for a stud farm and
-settle near it. But why think of it now, or of anything else? “What is
-decreed by Allah is decreed,” as saith the Moslem. Who am I to complain
-of the universal fate?’
-
-But as the strong man spoke there was an involuntary tremor in his
-voice, a contraction of the muscles, as when the dumb, tortured frame
-quivers under the surgeon’s knife.
-
-‘Oh, how glad I am that you all came to-day,’ said Annabel, as they
-walked in; ‘that is, if a girl is permitted to express her pleasure at
-the arrival of gentlemen. Perhaps I should have said “how fortunate a
-coincidence.” But, as a fact, all our horses are in to-day, and we were
-just wondering if we could make up a riding-party after lunch. Mr.
-Churbett, I can order you to come, because you never have any work to
-do; not like some tiresome people who _will_ go home late at night or
-early in the morning.’
-
-‘I never get credit for my labours, Miss Annabel. I’m too good-natured
-and easily intimidated—by ladies. But did you never hear of my memorable
-journey with cattle from Gundagai to the coast, all in the depth of
-winter; and—and—in fact—several other exploring enterprises?’
-
-‘What, really, Mr. Churbett? Then I recant. But I thought you managed
-the station from your verandah, sitting in a large cane chair, with a
-pile of books on the floor.’
-
-‘An enemy hath done this,’ said Mr. Churbett impressively. ‘Miss
-Annabel, I never shall be exonerated till you immortalise The She-oaks
-with your presence at a muster. Then, and then only, can you dimly
-shadow forth the deeds that the knight Frederico Churbetto, with his
-good steed Grey Surrey, is capable of achieving.’
-
-‘“I wadna doot,” as Andrew says; and indeed, Mr. Churbett, I should like
-very much to see all the galloping and watch you and your stock-riders
-at work. You must ask mamma. Only, the present question is, can we have
-a canter down to the lake side?’
-
-‘We shall be truly thankful,’ said Hamilton. ‘I can answer for it. We
-did not know the good fortune in store for us when we started.’
-
-‘Oh, thanks, thanks! Consider everything nice said on both sides. But
-what have you done to Major Glendinning? He looks so serious.’
-
-‘Oh, he’s all right,’ said Hamilton, thinking it best to suffer their
-friend to make his explanations personally. ‘Indian warriors, you know,
-are apt to suffer from old wounds. Change of weather, I think.’
-
-‘Poor fellow!’ said Annabel. ‘It seems hard that if one is not killed in
-battle, he should have to suffer afterwards. However, we must cheer him
-up. I will go and put my habit on.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-The afternoon was fine, so after a preliminary saddling-up, the whole
-party filed off, apparently in high spirits. The roads in one direction
-were always sound, while by ascending slightly one of the spurs of the
-range a grand view was always obtainable.
-
-Rosamond rode foremost, as she generally did, by right of the
-exceptional walking of Fergus. She was accompanied by Forbes, whose
-hackney had been selected after great research, his friends averred, in
-order that he might rank as the next fastest pacer in those parts.
-Argyll and Wilfred brought up the rear, occasionally joining company
-with Annabel and Fred Churbett. The Major and Beatrice went next behind
-the leaders. The couples preserved the order in which they set out, with
-the exception of the inroad upon Fred and Annabel’s eager colloquies,
-which were not deeply sentimental. That amiable personage complained
-that no one scrupled to break in upon his _tête-à-têtes_. He ‘thought he
-should have to grow a moustache and call some one out, in order to
-inspire respect.’
-
-Major Glendinning had made frequent visits to Warbrok, and familiar
-intercourse having naturally resulted from his intimacy with their
-friends at Benmohr, the family had come to look upon him as one of their
-particular set. Of a nature constitutionally reserved, and more
-specially self-contained from long residence as a military autocrat in
-one of the provinces of Northern India, he had read and thought more
-deeply than men of his class are apt to do. In proportion, therefore, to
-his general reticence was his satisfaction in unlocking his stores of
-experience when he met with congenial minds.
-
-A few chance questions on the part of Beatrice Effingham, after his
-first introduction to the family, had discovered to him that she was
-better informed as to the administration of Northern India than most
-people. Hence grew up between them a common ground of interest in which
-he could expatiate and explain. And his listener was never tired of
-hearing from an eye-witness and an actor the true story of the
-splendours and tragedies of that historic land.
-
-The real reason of this research, apart from the hunger for literary
-pabulum, which at all times possessed Beatrice, was an affectionate
-interest in the life of an uncle, who, after entering upon a brilliant
-career, had perished through the treachery of a native Rajah. His
-adventures had fascinated the romantic girl from early childhood; hence
-she had loved to verify every detail of the circumstances under which
-the star of the ill-fated Raymond Effingham had faded into darkness.
-
-By those indescribable degrees of advance, of which the heart can note
-the progress, but rarely the first approach, a friendship between the
-Major and the thoughtful girl became so apparent as to be the subject of
-jesting remark. When, therefore, he had announced his intention of
-settling in the neighbourhood, a thrill of unusual force invaded the
-calm pulses of Beatrice Effingham. Had his retirement from the service,
-from the profession he loved so well, some reason in which her future
-was concerned? If so, if he settled down on one of the adjoining
-properties, could any union be more consonant with her every feeling,
-taste, and aspirations than with one whom, in every way, she could so
-fully respect and admire, whose deeds in that wonderland of her fancies
-were written on the records of his country’s fame? It was a dream too
-bright for reality. And though it would occasionally disturb the even
-tenor of Beatrice’s hours in the library, her well-regulated mind
-refused to dwell upon possibilities as yet unsanctioned.
-
-When, therefore, Major Glendinning promptly availed himself of the
-opportunity afforded by the ride to the lake to constitute himself her
-escort; when, after a few commonplace observations, she observed that
-his countenance, though more grave than was usual in her presence, had
-yet an expression of fixed resolve, an indefinable feeling of
-expectation, almost amounting to dread, took possession of her, and it
-was with a beating heart and changing cheek that she listened.
-
-‘I take advantage of this opportunity, Miss Beatrice, to say the words
-which must be said before we part.’
-
-‘Part!’ said the girl, shaking in every limb, though she bravely
-struggled against her emotions and tried to impart firmness to her
-voice. ‘Then you are going to leave us for India? Have you been ordered
-back suddenly?’
-
-‘That is as it may be,’ said the soldier; and as he spoke their eyes
-met. His face wore a look of unalterable decision, yet so fraught was it
-with misery, even despair, that she instinctively felt that Fate had
-dealt her a remorseless stroke. ‘I have heard this day,’ he continued,
-‘what has altered the chief purpose of my life—has killed my every hope.
-I return to India by the next ship.’
-
-‘You have heard terribly bad news,’ she answered very softly. ‘I see it
-in your face. I need not tell you how we shall all sympathise with you;
-how grieved we shall be at your departure.’
-
-Here the womanly instinct of the consoler proved stronger than that of
-the much-vaunted ruler of courts and camps, inasmuch as Beatrice lost
-sight of her personal feelings in bethinking herself how she could aid
-the strong man, whose features bore evidence of the agony which racked
-every nerve and fibre.
-
-‘I feel deeply grateful for your sympathy. I knew you would bestow it.
-No living man needs it more. This morning I rode out fuller of pleasant
-anticipation than I can recall, prepared to take a step which I hoped
-would result in my life’s happiness. I had arranged for an extension of
-leave, after which I intended to sell out and live in this
-neighbourhood, which for many reasons—for every reason—I have found so
-delightful.’
-
-‘And your plans are altered?’
-
-This query was made in tones studiously free from all trace of interest
-or disapproval, although the beating heart and throbbing brain of the
-girl almost prevented utterance.
-
-‘I have this day—this day only—you will do me the justice hereafter to
-believe—heard a statement, unhappily too true, which clears up the
-mystery which has rested upon me from my birth. That cloud has been
-removed. But behind it lies a foul blot, a dark shadow of dishonour,
-which I deemed could never have rested on the name of Walter
-Glendinning.’
-
-‘Dishonour!’ echoed Beatrice. ‘Impossible! How can that be?’
-
-‘It is as I say—deep and ineradicable,’ groaned out the unhappy man.
-‘You will hear more from your brother. All is known to him and your
-friends of Benmohr. Enough that I have no personal responsibility. But
-it is a burden that I must carry till the day of a soldier’s death. You
-will believe me when I say that my honour demands that I quit
-Australia—to me so dear, yet so fatal. The years that may remain to me
-belong to my country.’
-
-‘I feel,’ said the girl, with kindling eye and a pride of bearing which
-equalled his own, ‘that you are doing what your high sense of honour, of
-duty, demands. I can but counsel you to take them, for guide and
-inspiration. I know not the doom which has fallen on you, but I can bid
-you God-speed, and pray for you evermore.’
-
-‘You have spoken my inmost thoughts. God help us that it should be so.
-But I were disloyal to every thought and aspiration of my nature if I
-stooped to link the life of another, as God is my witness and judge, to
-my tarnished name. We must part—never, perhaps, to meet on earth—but,
-Beatrice, dearest and only loved—may I not call you so?—I who now look
-upon your face, and hear your voice for the last time—you will think in
-your happy home of one who tore the heart from his bosom, which a dark
-fate forbade him to offer you. When you hear that Walter Glendinning
-died a soldier’s death, give a tear to his memory—to his fate who
-scorned death, but could not endure dishonour.’
-
-Neither spoke for some moments. The girl’s tears flowed fast as she
-gazed before her, while both rode steadily onward. The man’s form was
-bowed, and his set features wore the livid aspect of him who has
-received a death-wound but strives to hide the inward agony. Slowly,
-mechanically, they rode side by side along the homeward track, in the
-rear of the others until the entrance gate was reached. Then, as if by
-mutual impulse, they turned towards each other, and their eyes met in
-one long sorrowful glance. Such light has shone in the eyes of those who
-parted ere now, sanctified by a martyr’s hope—a martyr’s death.
-
-‘We shall meet,’ she said, ‘no more on earth; but oh, if you value my
-love, cherish the thought of a higher life—of a better world, where no
-false human pride, no barrier of man’s cruelty or injustice may sever
-us. I hold the trust which my heart, if not my lips, confessed. Till
-then, farewell, and may a merciful God keep our lives unstained until
-the day of His coming.’
-
-She drew the glove from her hand hurriedly. It fell at his horse’s feet.
-He dismounted hastily, and placed it in his bosom, and raising her
-ice-cold hand to his lips, pressed it with fervour. Then accompanying
-her to the hall door, he committed her to the charge of Wilfred, who,
-with his mother and sister, stood on the verandah, took a hurried leave
-of the family, regretting that he was compelled, by sudden summons, to
-rejoin his regiment, and with his friends, who with ready tact made
-excuse for returning, took the familiar track to Benmohr.
-
-Few words were spoken on the homeward road, which was traversed at a
-pace that tried the mettle of the descendants of Camerton. That night
-the friends sat late, talking earnestly. It was long after midnight
-before they separated. On the following day Major Glendinning and his
-father met at a spot half-way between The Chase and Benmohr, the
-interview being arranged by Hamilton, who rode over and persuaded the
-old man to accompany him. What passed between them was never known, but
-ere that night was ended the Major was far on his way to Sydney, which
-he reached in time to secure a passage in the good ship _Governor
-Bourke_, outward bound for China. In the course of the week Mr.
-Effingham received a letter in explanation of the circumstances, signed
-Owen Walter Glendinning, declaring his unworthiness to aspire to his
-daughter’s hand, as well as his inability to remain in the country after
-the mystery of his birth had been so unexpectedly revealed to him. He
-held himself pledged to act in the matter after the expiration of a year
-in accordance with what Mr. Effingham, acting as the guardian of his
-daughter’s happiness, might consider in the light of an honourable
-obligation. A bank draft drawn in favour of Thomas Stewart Glendinning
-was enclosed, with an intimation that an annual payment would be
-forwarded for his use henceforth during the writer’s life.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The first cloud which the Effinghams had descried since their arrival in
-Australia had appeared in the undimmed horizon. The breath of evil,
-which knows no bound nor space beneath the sun, had rested on them.
-Habitually taking deeper interest in the subjective issues of life than
-in its material transaction, they were proportionately depressed. All
-that maternal love and the most tender sisterly affection could give was
-lavished upon the sufferer. Her well-disciplined mind, strengthened by
-culture and purified by religion, gradually acquired equilibrium. But it
-was long ere the tranquil features of Beatrice Effingham recovered their
-wonted expression; and a close observer could have detected the trace of
-an inward woe in the depths of her erstwhile clear, untroubled eyes.
-
-In his answer to the letter which he had received, Mr. Effingham ‘fully
-agreed with the course which his friend had taken, and the determination
-which he had expressed. Looking at the situation, which he deplored with
-his whole heart, he was unable to see any other mode of action open to
-him as a man of honour. Deeply prejudicial as had been the issue to the
-happiness of his beloved daughter, he could not ask him (Major
-Glendinning) to swerve by one hair’s-breadth from the path which he had
-laid down for himself. His wishes would be attended to with respect to
-the bank draft forwarded for the use of the person named, but he would
-suggest that Mr. Sternworth should be chosen as the recipient of future
-remittances. He would, in conclusion, wish him the fullest measure of
-success and distinction which his profession offered, with, if not
-happiness, the inward satisfaction known to those who marched ever in
-the vanguard of honourable duty. In this wish he was warmly seconded by
-every member of the family.’
-
-Old Tom, after notice of his intention to leave the employment,
-presented himself before his master, dressed and accoutred as for a
-journey, leading Boney and followed by the uncompromising Crab. His
-effects were fastened in a roll in front of his saddle, his coiled
-stockwhip was pendent from the side-buckle. All things, even to the
-fixed look upon the weather-beaten features, betokened a settled
-resolution.
-
-‘I’m going to lave the ould place, Captain,’ he said; ‘and it’s sorry I
-am this day to quit the family and the lake and the hounds, where I laid
-it out to lave the ould bones of me. I’m wishin’ the divil betther
-divarshion than to bother with the family saycrets of the likes o’ me.
-Sure he has lashins of work in this counthry, without disturbin’ the
-last days of poor ould Tom Glendinning—and he sure of me, anyhow. My
-heart’s bruk, so it is.’
-
-‘Hush, Tom,’ said his employer. ‘We can understand Major Glendinning’s
-feelings. But, after all, it is his duty to acknowledge the ties of
-nature. I have no doubt that after a time he will become—er—used to the
-relationship.’
-
-‘D——n the relationship!’ burst out the old man menacingly. ‘Ah, an’ sure
-I ax yer pardon, yer honour, for the word; but ’tis wild I am that the
-Major, a soldier and a rale gintleman every inch of him, that’s fought
-for the Queen and skivered them infernal blackamoors in the Injies,
-should be given out as the son of a blasted ould rapparee like me. It
-was asy knowing when I seen that look on him when he heard the name, but
-how could I drame that _my son_ could have turned into a king’s
-officer—all as one as the best of the land? If I _had_ known it for
-sartain, before he axed me, I’d have lived beside him as a common
-stock-rider for years, if he’d come here, and he’s niver have known no
-more than the dead. It’s a burning shame and a sin, that’s what it is!’
-
-‘It may have been unfortunate,’ said Mr. Effingham; ‘but I can never
-regard it as wrong that a father and a son should come to know of the
-tie which binds them to each other.’
-
-‘And why not, I ask ye?’ demanded the old man savagely. ‘What good has
-it done aither of us? It’s sent _him_ back, with a sore heart, to live
-among them black divils and snakes and tigers, a murdtherin’ hot
-counthry it is by all accounts, when he might have bought a place handy
-here and bred horses and cattle—sure he’s an iligant rider and shoots
-beautiful, don’t he now? I wonder did he take them gifts after me?’ said
-the old man, with the first softened expression and a half sigh. ‘Sure,
-if I could have plazed myself _with lookin’ at him_ and he not to know,
-I wouldn’t say but that I might have listened to Parson Sternworth
-and—and—repinted,—yes, repinted,—after all that’s come and gone! And now
-I’m on the ould thrack agin, with tin divils tearin’ at me, and who
-knows what will happen.’
-
-‘There’s no need for you to lead a wandering life, or indeed, to work at
-all, even if you leave the district,’ said Mr. Effingham. ‘I have a sum
-in my hands, forwarded by the Major, sufficient for all your wants.’
-
-‘I’ll not touch a pinny of it!’ cried out the old man; ‘sure it’s blood
-money, no less, his _life_, anyway, that will pay for this! Didn’t I see
-his eye, when he shook hands with me, and begged my pardon for his
-pride, and asked me to bless him—_me_!’—and here the old man laughed
-derisively, a sound not pleasant to hear. ‘If there’s fighting where
-he’s going, and he lives out the year, it will be because lead and cowld
-steel has no power to harm a man that wants to die. Mr. Effingham, I’ll
-never touch it; and why would I? Sure the drink’ll kill me, fast enough,
-without help.’
-
-‘But why go away? I am so grieved that, after your faithful service, you
-should leave in such a state of mind.’
-
-‘Maybe I’ll do ye more sarvice before I die, but I must get into the
-far-out runs, or I’ll go mad thinking of _him_. It was my hellish timper
-that let the words out so quick, or he’d never have known till his dying
-day. Maybe the rheumatiz was to blame, that keeps burning in the bones
-of me like red-hot iron, till I couldn’t spake a civil word to the
-blessed Saviour Himself. Anyhow, it’s done now; but of all I ever
-did—and there’s what would hang me on the list—I repint over _that_, the
-worst, and will till I die. Good-bye, sir. God bless the house, and thim
-that’s in it.’
-
-The old man remounted his wayworn steed with more agility than his
-appearance promised, and taking the track which led southward, went
-slowly along the road without turning his head or making further speech.
-The dog rose to his feet and trotted after him. In a few moments the
-characteristic trio passed from sight.
-
-‘Mysterious indeed are the ways of Providence!’ thought Effingham, as he
-turned towards the house. ‘Who would ever have thought that the fortunes
-of this strange old man would ever have been associated with me or mine.
-I feel an unaccountable presentiment, as if this incident, inexplicable
-as it is, were but the forerunner of evil!’
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
- BLACK THURSDAY
-
-
-Autumn and winter passed in the ordinary succession of regular duties
-and peaceful employments, now become easy and habitual. These the
-expatriated family had learned to love. The departure of the old
-stock-rider was felt as a temporary inconvenience, but the brothers with
-Dick Evans’s aid and counsel felt themselves qualified to supply his
-place, and decided not to employ a successor.
-
-Guy, indeed, had grown into a stalwart youngster, taller and broader
-than his elder brother; so much had the pure air, the healthful bush
-life, the regular exercise and occasional labour demanded by the station
-exigencies done for his development. He was apt at all the minor rural
-accomplishments—could ride the unbroken colts, which their own stud now
-produced, and was well acquainted with the ways and wanderings of
-outlying cattle. The lore of the Waste, in which old Dick was so able an
-instructor, was now his. He could plait a hide-rope, make bullock-yokes,
-noose and throw the unbranded cattle, drive a team, split and put up
-‘fencing stuff’; in many ways do a man’s work, when needed, as
-efficiently as his preceptor. Dick prophesied that he would become ‘a
-great bushman’ in years to come. Indeed, by tales of ‘taking up new
-country’ and of the adventurous branches of station life, he had
-fostered a thirst for more extended and responsible action which gave
-his parents some uneasiness.
-
-He had begun to acquire the Australian boy’s contempt for the narrow
-bounds involved by a residence on ‘purchased land.’ He impatiently
-awaited the day when he should be able to sally forth, with a herd of
-his own and the necessary equipment, to seek his fortune amid romantic,
-unexplored wilds. He began to lose interest in the daily round of home
-duties; and though from long habit and an affectionate nature, as yet
-dutifully obedient to his parents’ bidding, he more than once confessed
-that he longed for independent action.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The season was ‘setting in dry.’ There had been no rain for months.
-Around Lake William and near that wide expanse of water an appearance of
-verdure was preserved by the more marshy portion of the great flats.
-Amid these the cattle daily revelled and fed. They might have been seen
-grouped in large droves far out on the promontories, or wading amid the
-shallowing reed-beds which fringed the shore, long after the sun had
-set, and the breathless night, boding of storms which came not, had
-closed in.
-
-Among the neighbours this state of matters by no means passed without
-observation and remark. Nought save desultory discussion ensued. Except
-O’Desmond, no one had been long enough in the colony to have had
-experience of abnormal seasons. Curiously, he was the one who took the
-more despondent view of matters, from which men augured ill.
-
-‘I hope to heaven that we are not going to have a repetition of 1827,’
-he said; ‘one experience of that sort is enough to last a man for his
-lifetime.’
-
-‘Was it so very awful?’ said Hamilton, the conversation taking place at
-Benmohr, at which convenient rendezvous Wilfred and Churbett had
-encountered that gentleman. ‘One fancies that the ancient colonists were
-not fertile in expedients.’
-
-‘No doubt we have much to learn from the accomplished gentlemen who have
-done us the honour to invest in our colony of late years,’ said
-O’Desmond grandly, with a bow of the regency; ‘but if you had seen what
-I have, you would not undervalue the danger. I don’t care to talk about
-it. Only if this year ends badly, I shall leave Badajos to my old couple
-and the overseer, muster my stock, and start into the wilderness without
-waiting for another.’
-
-‘What direction shall you take?’ said Hamilton.
-
-‘Due south, until I strike the head waters of the Sturt and the
-Warburton. These I shall follow down, and make my depôt wherever I
-discover a sufficiently tempting base.’
-
-‘It has quite the heroic ring about it,’ said Wilfred. ‘But for certain
-reasons, I would like to follow you. How about provisions?’
-
-‘I take a year’s supply of rations and clothing. We drive our meat
-before us.’
-
-‘And the blacks?’
-
-‘I know all that can be known about them,’ said O’Desmond. ‘They
-recognise chiefs among the white men. If one does not fear them, they
-are to be dealt with like children.’
-
-‘You will find it hard to quit your pleasant life at Badajos for the
-desert,’ said Wilfred.
-
-‘Not at all; the sharper the contrast, the more easily is the change
-made. Besides, on such occasions mine is a well-organised expedition. I
-take my cook, my groom, my four-in-hand. What do you say? Come with me
-for the first week or two. I can promise you a chop broiled to
-perfection. I must show you my “reversible griller,” of which I am the
-proud inventor.’
-
-Here the door was loudly knocked at, and being opened without further
-ceremony, disclosed the serious countenance of Wullie Teviot, apparently
-out of breath.
-
-‘Maister Hamilton and gentlemen a’,’ he said, ‘I’m no in a poseetion to
-do my errand respectfully the noo, but hae just breath to warn ye that
-there’s a muckle bush-fire comin’ fast frae the direction o’ Maister
-Effingham’s. I trust we’ll no be the waur o’t.’
-
-This ended migratory speculations abruptly. Each man started to his
-feet. Hamilton left the room to secure a horse and order out his
-retainers, Wilfred to try and make out whether the heavy spreading cloud
-on the horizon was across his boundary.
-
-‘I and my man will go with Hamilton,’ quoth O’Desmond. ‘Effingham had
-better make for home, and see how it is likely to affect him.’
-
-Hamilton was dashing down the paddock on a bare-backed horse by this
-time, to run up the hacks, and also one for the spring-cart, to be
-loaded with spare hands for the scene of action, besides that invaluable
-adjunct in a bush fire, a cask of water.
-
-‘I hardly like leaving,’ said Wilfred; ‘it looks selfish.’
-
-‘Don’t mind about the sentiment,’ said O’Desmond. ‘If your run is afire
-you will need to help Dick Evans and his party. I’ll be bound the old
-fellow is half-way there already. He is not often caught napping.’
-
-Then Wilfred mounted too, and sped away, galloping madly towards the
-great masses of ever-increasing smoke-cloud. It proved to be farther off
-than he expected. He had ridden far and fast, when he reached the border
-where he could hear the crackling of the tender leaflets, and watched
-the red line which licked up so cleanly all dry sticks and bush, with
-every stalk and plant and modest tuft of grass. He then found that the
-chief duty, not so much of meeting the enemy, as of guiding and
-persuading him to turn his fiery footsteps in a different direction, was
-being satisfactorily performed by Richard Evans and his assistants. Guy,
-in wild delight at being made lieutenant of the party, was dashing ever
-and anon into the centre of the smoke and flame, and dealing blows with
-his bough like a Berserker.
-
-‘Head it off, lads,’ Dick was saying when Wilfred rode up. ‘It’s no use
-trying to stop it in the long grass; edge it off towards the ranges.
-There it may burn till all’s blue.’
-
-‘Why, Dick,’ said he to his trustworthy veteran, ‘how did you manage to
-get here so quickly? They’ve only just seen it at Benmohr.’
-
-‘They’ll find it out pretty quick, sir, if there’s a shift of wind
-to-night. It don’t need much coaxing our way, but it means Benmohr, with
-a southerly puff or two. If it gets into that grassy bit by the old
-stock-yard, it will burn at the rate of fifty mile an hour.’
-
-Hour after hour did they work by the line of fire, ere Dick’s vigilance
-could permit any kind of halt or relaxation. It was exciting, not
-unpleasant work, Wilfred thought, walking up and down the red-gleaming
-line of tongues of fire which licked up so remorselessly the tangled
-herbage, the lower shrubs, the dead flower-stalks, and all scattered
-branches of the fallen trees.
-
-The night was dark, sultry, and still. As ever and anon the fire caught
-some tall, dead tree, and running up it, seized the hollow trunk,
-holding out red signals from each limb and cavity, high up among the
-branches, the effect against the sombre sky, the dull, massed gloom of
-the mountain, was grandly effective. In the lurid scene the moving
-figures upon whose faces the fierce light occasionally beat, seemed
-weird and phantasmal. Patiently did the wary leader watch the line of
-fire, which had been extinguished on the side next to the lower lands,
-now casting back a half-burned log far within the blackened area, and
-anon beating out insidious tussocks of dried grass, ignited by a
-smouldering ember.
-
-When once the defensive line had been subdued, it was easily kept under
-by sweeping the half-burned grass and sticks back from the still
-inflammable herbage into the bared space now devoid of fuel. But care
-was still needed, as ever and again a half-burned tree would crash down
-across the line, throwing forth sparks and embers, or perhaps lighting
-up a temporary conflagration.
-
-All the night through, the men kept watch and ward beside the boundary.
-The strangeness of the scene compensated Wilfred and Guy for the loss of
-their natural rest as well as for the severity of the exertion. As they
-watched the flame-path hewing its way unchecked up the rugged
-mountain-side, lighting up from time to time with wondrous clearness
-every crag, bush, and tree, to the smallest twig—a nature picture,
-clear, brilliant, unearthly, framed in the unutterable blackness of the
-night, it seemed as if they were assisting at some Walpurgis revel; as
-if in the lone woods, at that mystic hour, the forms of the dead, the
-spectres of the past, might at any moment arise and mingle with them.
-
-As they lay stretched on the dry sward, in the intervals of rest, they
-watched the gradual progress of the flame through the rugged,
-chasm-rifted, forest-clothed mountain. With every ascent gained, the
-flame appeared to hoist a signal of triumph over the dumb, dark,
-illimitable forest which surrounded them. Finally, when like a crafty
-foe it had climbed to the highest peak, the fire, there discovering upon
-a plateau a mass of brushwood and dry herbage, burst out in one
-far-seen, wide-flaming beacon, at once a Pharos and a Wonder-sign to the
-dwellers at a lower elevation.
-
-The bush fire had been fought and conquered. It only remained for Dick
-and a few to go back on the following day and make sure that the
-frontier was safe; that no smouldering logs were ready to light up the
-land again as soon as the breeze should have fanned them sufficiently.
-The main body of the fire had gone up the mountain range, where no harm
-could be done; where, as Dick said, as soon as the first rain came, the
-grass would be all up again, and make nice, sweet picking for the stock
-in winter.
-
-The Benmohr people had not been quite so lucky; the wind setting in that
-direction, the flames had come roaring up to the very homestead, burning
-valuable pasture and nearly consuming the establishment. As it was, the
-garden gate caught fire. The farm and station buildings were only
-preserved by the desperate efforts of the whole force of the place, led
-on by Argyll and Hamilton, who worked like the leaders of a forlorn
-hope. After the fight was over and the place saved, Charlie Hamilton,
-utterly exhausted with the heat and exertion, dropped down in a faint,
-and had to be carried in and laid on a bed, to the consternation of Mrs.
-Teviot, who thought he was dead.
-
-It was now the last week of March, and all things looked as bad as they
-could be. Not a drop of rain worth mentioning had fallen since the
-spring. The small rivers which ran into Lake William had ceased to flow,
-and were reduced each to its own chain of ponds. That great sheet of
-water was daily receding from its shores, shallowing visibly, and
-leaving islands of mud in different parts of its surface, unpleasantly
-suggestive of total evaporation. Strange wild-fowl, hitherto unknown in
-the locality—notably the ibis, the pelican, and the spoonbill—had
-appeared in great flocks, disputing possession with the former
-inhabitants. The flats bordering upon the lake, once so luxuriantly
-covered with herbage, were bare and dusty as a highroad. The constant
-marching in and out of the cattle to water had caused them to be fed
-down to the last stalk. Apparently there was no chance of their renewal.
-The herd, though still healthy and vigorous, was beginning to lose
-condition; if this were the case now, what tale would the winter have to
-tell? The yield of milk had so fallen off that merely sufficient was
-taken for the use of the house. The ground was so hard that it was
-impossible to plough for the wheat crop, even if there had been
-likelihood of the plant growing after the seed was sown.
-
-Andrew was clearly of the opinion that Australia much resembled Judea,
-and that for some good reason the Lord had seen fit to pour down His
-wrath upon the land, which was now stricken with various plagues and
-grievous trials.
-
-‘I’m no sayin’,’ he said, ‘that the sin o’ the people has been
-a’thegither unpardonable and forbye ordinair’. There’s nae doot a wheen
-swearin’ and drinkin’ amang thae puir ignorant stock-riders and splitter
-bodies. Still, they’re for the maist pairt a hard delvin’, ceevil
-people, that canna be said to eat the bread o’ idleness, and that’s no
-wilfu’ in disobeyin’ the Word, siccan sma’ hearin’ as they hae o’t. I’m
-lyin’ in deep thocht on my bed nicht after nicht, wearyin’ to find ae
-comfortin’ gleam o’ licht in this darkness o’ Egypt.’
-
-‘It’s a bad look-out, Andrew,’ said Guy, to whom Andrew was confiding
-his feelings, as he often did to the lad when he was troubled about the
-well-doing of the community. ‘And it will be worse if the cattle die
-after next winter. Whatever shall we do? We shall never get such a lot
-of nice, well-bred ones together again. What used the Jews to do in a
-season like this, I wonder, for they got it pretty bad sometimes, you
-know, when Jacob sent all his sons into Egypt?’
-
-‘I mind weel, Maister Guy,’ said the old man solemnly. ‘And ye see he
-had faith that the Lord would provide for him and his sons and dochters.
-And though they were sair afflicted before the time of deliverance came,
-they were a’ helped and saved in the end. He that brocht ye a’ here nae
-doot will provide. Pray and trust in Him, Maister Guy, and dinna forget
-what ye learned at your mither’s knee, hinny, the God-fearin’ lady that
-she ever was. We must suffer tribulation, doubtless; but dinna fear—oh,
-dinna lose faith, my bairn, and we shall sing joyful songs i’ the
-ootcome!’
-
-As the season wore on, and the rainless winter was succeeded by the
-hopeless spring, with drying winds and cloudless days, it seemed as if
-the tribulation spoken of by Andrew was indeed to be sharp, to the verge
-of extermination.
-
-Not only were great losses threatened by the destruction of the stock,
-but the money question was commencing to become urgent. For the past
-year no sales of stock had been possible. Few had the means of keeping
-the stock they were possessed of. They were not likely to add to their
-responsibility by buying others, at however tempting a price. As there
-was no milk, there was naturally no butter, cheese, or the wherewithal
-to fatten the hogs for bacon. These sources of income were obliterated.
-Having no produce to sell, it became apparent that the articles
-necessary to be bought were suddenly enhanced in value. Flour rose from
-twelve and fifteen to fifty, seventy, finally, _one hundred pounds per
-ton_. Not foreseeing this abnormal rise, Wilfred had sold their
-preceding year’s crop, as usual, as soon as it reached a better price
-than ordinary, merely retaining a year’s supply of flour. That being
-exhausted, he was compelled, sorely against the grain, to purchase at
-these famine rates. Rice, which could be imported cheaply, was largely
-mingled with the flour, as a matter of economy. The bread was scarcely
-so palatable, but by the help of Jeanie’s admirable baking, little
-difference was felt.
-
-Mr. Rockley confided that he felt deeply reluctant to charge him and
-other friends such high prices for the necessaries of life. The
-difficulties of carriage, however, were now amazing. Numbers of the
-draught cattle had perished, and fodder was obliged to be carried by the
-teams on their journeys, enhancing the cost indefinitely.
-
-‘The fact is,’ said that unreserved merchant, ‘I am losing on all sides.
-The smaller farmers in my debt have no more chance of paying me, before
-the rain comes, than if they were in gaol. Everybody purchases the
-smallest quantity of goods that they can do with, and I have great
-difficulty in buying in Sydney at prices which will leave any margin of
-profit. But you come in and dine with us this evening. I’ve got a bottle
-of claret left, in spite of the hard times. And keep up your spirits, my
-boy! We shall come out of this trouble as we’ve done through others.
-This country wasn’t meant for faint-hearted people, was it? If all comes
-right, we shall be proud of having stuck to the ship manfully, eh? If
-not, it’s better to give three cheers when she goes down, than to whine
-and snivel. Come along in. I’ve done with business for the day.’
-
-And so Wilfred, who had ridden to Yass in a state of despondency, went
-in and was comforted, as happened to him many a time and often, under
-that hospitable roof. The dinner was good though the times were bad,
-while Rockley’s claret was unimpeachable, as of old. Mrs. Rockley and
-Christabel were more than usually warm and sympathetic of manner. As he
-sat in the moonlight with Rockley and the ladies (who had joined them),
-and heard from his host tales of previous hard seasons and how they had
-been surmounted, he felt his heart stir with unwonted hope and a resolve
-to fight this fight to the end.
-
-‘I’ve seen these seasons before,’ said the energetic optimist, ‘and I’ve
-always remarked that they were followed by a period of prosperity. Think
-of the last drought we had, and what splendid seasons followed it! This
-looks as bad as anything _can_ look, but if I could get long odds, I
-wouldn’t mind betting that before 1840 we’re crowded with buyers, and
-that stock, land, and city property touch prices never reached before.
-Look forward, Wilfred, my boy, look forward! There’s nothing to be done
-without it, in a new country, take my word.’
-
-‘You must admit that it’s hard to see anything cheering just at
-present.’
-
-‘Not at all, not at all,’ said his host, lighting another cigar.
-‘Christabel, go in and sing something. It’s all a matter of calculation.
-Say that half your cattle die—mind you, you’ve no business to let ’em
-die, if you can help it—hang on by your eyelids, that’s the idea—but say
-half of ’em _do_ die, why, the moment the rain comes the remainder are
-twice as valuable as they were before, perhaps more than that, if a new
-district is discovered. By the way, there _is_ a report of a new
-settlement down south; if it comes to anything, see what a rush there’ll
-be for stock, to take over on speculation. That’s the great advantage of
-a new country; if one venture goes wrong, there are a dozen spring up
-for you to choose from.’
-
-‘Do you think it would be a good idea to take away part of the stock,
-and try and find a new station?’
-
-‘I really believe it would; and if I were a young man to-morrow it’s the
-very thing that I would go in for. We have not explored a tenth part of
-the boundless—I say boundless—pasture lands of this continent. No doubt
-there are millions of acres untouched, as good as we have ever
-occupied.’
-
-‘But are they not so far off as to be valueless?’
-
-‘No land that will carry sheep or cattle, or grow grain, can be
-valueless in Australia for the next century to come. And with the
-increase of population, all outer territories will assume a positive
-value as soon as the present depression is over.’
-
-While in Yass, Wilfred consulted their good friend and adviser, Mr.
-Sternworth, who had indeed, by letter, when not able to visit them
-personally, not ceased to cheer and console during the disheartening
-season.
-
-‘This is a time of trial, my dear Wilfred,’ he said, ‘that calls out the
-best qualities of a man, in the shape of courage, faith, and
-self-denial. It is the day of adversity, when we are warned not to
-faint. I can fully enter into your distress and anxiety, while seeing
-the daily loss and failure of all upon which you depended for support.
-It is doubly hard for you, after a term of success and progress. But we
-must have faith—unwavering faith—in the Supreme Ruler of events, and
-doubt not—doubt not for one moment, my boy—but that we shall issue
-unharmed and rejoicing out of this tribulation.’
-
-Among their neighbours, unusual preparations were made to lighten the
-impending calamity. Unnecessary labourers were discharged. The daily
-work of the stations was, in great measure, done by the proprietors. The
-Teviots were the only domestic retainers at Benmohr; they, of course,
-and Dick Evans were a part of the very composition of the
-establishments, and not to be dispensed with. The D’Oyleys discharged
-their cook and stock-rider, performing these necessary duties by turns,
-week alternate.
-
-Fred Churbett retained his married couple and stock-rider, declaring
-that he would die like a gentleman; that he could pay his way for two
-years more; after which, if times did not mend, he would burn the place
-down, commit suicide decently, and leave the onus on destiny. He could
-not cook, neither would he wash clothes. He would be as obstinate as the
-weather.
-
-O’Desmond made full preparations for a migration in spring, if the
-weather continued dry and no rain fell in September. There would be a
-slight spring of grass then, rain or no rain. He would take advantage of
-it, to depart, like a patriarch of old, not exactly with his camels and
-she-asses, but with his cattle and brood mares, his sheep and his oxen,
-his men-servants and his maid-servants—well perhaps not the latter, but
-everything necessary to give a flavour of true colonisation to the
-movement. And he travelled in good style, with such observances and
-ceremony as surrounded Harry O’Desmond in all that he did, and made him
-the wonder and admiration of less favoured individuals.
-
-He had his waggonette and four-in-hand, the horses of which, corn-fed at
-the commencement, would, after they got on to the grasses of the great
-interior levels, fare well and indeed fatten on the journey. A roomy
-tent, as also a smaller one for his body-servant, cook, and kitchen
-utensils, shielded him and his necessaries from the weather. Portable
-bath and dining-table, couch, and toilette requisites were available at
-shortest notice; while a groom led his favourite hackney, upon which he
-mounted whenever he desired to explore a mountain peak or an unknown
-valley. The cottage was handed over to the charge of the gardener and
-his wife, old servants of the establishment. And finally, the
-long-expected rain not appearing in September, he departed, like a
-Spanish conquistador of old, to return with tales of wondrous regions,
-of dusky slaves, of gold, of feather-crowned Caciques, and palm-fanned
-isles, or to leave his whitening bones upon mountain summit or lonely
-beach.
-
-It was believed among his old friends that Harry O’Desmond would either
-return successful, with hardly-won territory attached to his name, or
-that he would journey on over the great desert, which was supposed then
-to form the interior of the continent, until return was hopeless.
-
-His servants would be faithful unto death. None would ever question his
-order of march. And if he were not successful in founding a kingdom, to
-be worked as a relief province for Badajos, he would never come back at
-all. Some day there would be found the traces of a white man’s
-encampment, amid tribes of natives as yet unknown—the shreds of tents,
-the waggonette wheels, the scattered articles of plate, and the more
-ordinary utensils of the white man. From beneath a spreading tree would
-be exhumed the bones of the leader of the party. Such would be the
-memorials of a pioneer and explorer, who was never known to turn back or
-confess himself unsuccessful.
-
-As to the labour question, Dick Evans and his wife were indispensable
-now, more than ever, as the brothers had resolved not to remain _in
-statu quo_. Wilfred had determined to organise an expedition, and to
-take the greater part of the herd with him. In such a case it would have
-been suicidal to deprive themselves of Dick’s services, as, of course,
-he would be only too eager to make one of the party. He cheerfully
-submitted to a diminution of wages, stating that as long as he and the
-old woman had a crust of bread and a rag to their backs they would stand
-by the captain and the family.
-
-‘If we could only get through the winter,’ he said, ‘I shouldn’t have no
-fear but we’d box about down south with the cattle till we dropped on a
-run for them. There’s a lot of fine country beyond the Snowy, if we’d
-only got a road over the mountains to it. But it’s awful rough, and the
-blacks would eat up a small party like ours. I don’t hardly like the
-thoughts of tacklin’ it. But what I’m afraid on is, that if the winter
-comes on dry we’ll have _no cattle to take_. They’re a-gettin’ desprit
-low now, and the lake’s as good as dried up.’
-
-The outlook was gloomy indeed when even the sanguine Dick Evans could
-make no better forecast. But Wilfred was the sailing-master, and it did
-not become him to show hesitation.
-
-‘We must do our best, and trust in God, Dick,’ he said. ‘This is a
-wonderful country for changes; one may come in the right direction yet.’
-
-As for Andrew and Jeanie, they would not hear of taking any wages until
-times improved. They had cast in their lot with the family, and Jeanie
-would stay with her mistress and the girls, who were dear to her as her
-own children, as long as there was a roof to shelter them.
-
-Andrew fully recognised it as a ‘season of rebuke and blasphemy.’ He who
-ordered the round world had, for inscrutable reasons, brought this
-famine upon them. Like the children of Israel, he doubted but they would
-have to follow the advice given in 1 Kings xviii. 5: ‘And Ahab said to
-Obadiah, Go into the land, unto all fountains of water, and unto all
-brooks; peradventure we may find grass to save the horses and mules
-alive, that we lose not all the beasts.’
-
-‘And did they?’ asked Guy.
-
-‘Nae doot; as maist like we shall do gin we use the same means as
-gracious Elijah. No that I’m free to testify that I conseeder the
-slayin’ o’ the prophets o’ Baal a’thegither a needcessity. It wad have
-been mair wiselike on the pairt o’ Elijah to have disestablished their
-kirk and garred them lippen a’ their days to the voluntary principle.
-But let that flee stick to the wa’; dinna doot, laddie, that ae day the
-heavens will be black wi’ clouds, and there will be a great rain.’
-
-Perhaps the one of the whole party most to be pitied was Howard
-Effingham. With the eagerness of a sanguine nature, he had become fixed
-in the idea that the prosperity with which they had commenced was to be
-continuous. Inspired with that belief he had, as we have seen, commenced
-to indulge himself with the reproduction, on a small scale, of the
-pleasant surroundings of the old country. He had fancied that the
-production of cattle, cheese, butter, bacon, and cereals would go on
-almost automatically henceforth, with a moderate amount of exertion on
-Wilfred’s part and of supervision on his own. It was not in his nature
-to be absorbed in the money-making part of their life; but in the
-acclimatisation of birds, beasts, and fishes, in the organisation of the
-Hunt Club, in the greyhound kennel, and in the stable his interest was
-unfailing, and his energy wonderful.
-
-Now, unfortunately, to his deep regret and mortification, he saw his
-beloved projects rendered nugatory, worthless, and in a manner
-contemptible, owing to this woeful season.
-
-What was likely to become of the fish if the lake dried up, as it showed
-every disposition to do? How was one to go forth fowling and coursing
-when every spare moment was utilised for some purpose of necessity?
-
-As for the hounds, some arrangement would have to be made about feeding
-and exercising these valuable animals. The horseflesh was wanting, the
-time was not to be spared, the meat and meal were not always
-forthcoming. Terrible to imagine, the kennel was commencing to be an
-incubus and an oppression!
-
-In the midst of this doubt and uncertainty a letter came from a
-well-known sportsman, Mr. Robert Malahyde, keenest of the keen, offering
-to take charge of the hounds until the season became more tolerable. His
-district was not so unfavourably situated as the neighbourhood of Yass,
-and from his larger herds and pastures he would be able to arrange the
-‘boiler’ part of the management more easily than Mr. Effingham.
-
-A meeting of the subscribers was quickly called, when it was agreed that
-the hounds be sent to Mummumberil till the seasons changed.
-
-As for the pheasants and partridges, which had flourished so
-encouragingly during the first season, the curse of the time had fallen
-even on them. The native cat (dasyurus) had increased wonderfully of
-late. Berries and grass seeds were scanty in this time of famine. In
-consequence, the survival of the fittest, coupled with acts of highly
-natural selection, ensued. The native cats selected the young of the
-exotic birds, but few of the adult game seemed likely to survive this
-drought.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
- AN UNEXPECTED DEVELOPMENT
-
-
-An expedition was to be organised in spring, and the stock removed, no
-matter where. It would be the only chance for their lives. As it was,
-the winter was fast coming upon them. Every blade of the ordinary
-herbage had disappeared. The nights commenced to lengthen. Frosts of
-unusual severity had set in. Even now it seemed as if their last hope
-might be destroyed and their raft dashed on the rocks ere it was
-floated.
-
-But one morning Dick Evans came up to Wilfred, sadly contemplating the
-attenuated cows which now represented the once crowded milking-yard. He
-was riding his old mare, barebacked, with his folded coat for a saddle,
-and spoke with unusual animation.
-
-‘I believe we’re right for the winter after all, sir. I never thought to
-see this, though old Tom told me he’d know’d it happen once afore.’
-
-‘What do you mean?’
-
-‘Well, I took a big walk this morning to see if I could find tracks of
-this old varmint. I thought she might be dead, but I warn’t satisfied,
-so I took a regular good cruise. I found some tracks by the lake, where
-I hadn’t been for some time, and there sure enough I finds my lady, as
-snug as a wallaby in a wheat patch. Look how she’s filled herself, sir.’
-
-Wilfred replied that the old mare appeared to have found good quarters.
-
-‘When I got to the lake, sir, I was reg’lar stunned. It was as dry as a
-bone, but through the mud there was a crop of “fat hen” comin’ up all
-over, miles and miles of it, as thick as a lucerne field on the Hunter.
-The old mare was planted in a patch where it was pretty forrard. But
-it’s growin’ so’s you can see it, and there’ll be feed enough in a week
-or two for all our cattle and every hoof within twenty miles of the
-lake.’
-
-‘Wonderful news, Dick; and this “fat hen,” as you call it, is good and
-wholesome food for stock?’
-
-‘Can’t beat it, sir; first-chop fattening stuff; besides, there’s rushes
-and weeds growin’ among it. You may pound it, we’ll have no more trouble
-with the cattle for the winter, and they’ll be in good fettle to start
-south in the spring.’
-
-This was glorious news. It was duly related at the breakfast-table, and
-after that meal Wilfred and Guy betook themselves to the lake. There
-they beheld one of Nature’s wondrous transformations.
-
-The great lake lay before them, dry to its farthermost shore. The
-headlands stood out, frowning in gloomy protest against the conversion
-of their shining sea into a tame green meadow. Such, in good sooth, had
-it actually become. Through the moist but rapidly hardening mud of the
-lake-surface millions of plants were pushing themselves with vigour and
-luxuriance, caused by the richness of the ooze from which they sprang.
-Far as the eye could see, a green carpet was spread over the lately
-sombre-coloured expanse. The leaves of the most forward plants were
-rounded and succulent, while nothing could be more grateful to the
-long-famished cattle than the full and satisfying mouthfuls which were
-in parts of the little bays already procurable.
-
-Even now, guided by the mysterious instinct which sways the hosts of the
-brute creation so unerringly, small lots had established themselves in
-secluded spots, showing by their improved appearance how unusual had
-been the supply of provender.
-
-‘What a wonderful thing,’ said Guy; ‘who would ever have thought of the
-old lake turning into a cabbage-garden like this? Dick says this stuff
-makes very good greens if you boil it. Why, we can let Churbett and the
-Benmohr people send their cattle over if it keeps growing—as Dick
-says—till it’s as high as your head. But how in the world did this seed
-get here? That’s what I want to know. The lake hasn’t been dry for ten
-years, that’s certain, I believe. Well, now, did this seed—tons of
-it—lie in the mud all that time; and if not, how was it to be sowed,
-broadcast, after the water dried up?’
-
-‘Who can tell?’ said Wilfred. ‘Nature holds her secrets close. I am
-inclined to think this seed must have been in the earth, and is now
-vivified by the half-dry mud. However it may be, it is a crop we shall
-have good cause to remember.’
-
-‘I hope it will pull us through the winter and that’s all,’ said Guy. ‘I
-mustn’t be done out of my trip down south. I want to find a new country,
-and make all our fortunes in a large gentlemanlike way, like Mr. St.
-Maur told us of. You don’t suppose he goes milking cows and selling
-cheese and bacon.’
-
-‘You mustn’t despise homely profits, Guy,’ said the elder. ‘Some of the
-largest proprietors began that way, and you know that “Laborare est
-orare,” as the old monks said.’
-
-‘Oh yes, I know that,’ said the boy; ‘but there’s all the difference
-between Columbus discovering America, or Cortez when he climbed the tree
-in Panama and saw two oceans, and being the mate of a collier. I must
-have a try at this exploring before I’m much older. There’s such a lot
-of country no one knows about yet.’
-
-‘You will have your chance, old fellow, and your triumph, like others, I
-hope. But remember that obedience goes before command, and that Captain
-Cook was a boy in a collier before he became a finder of continents.’
-
-Wilfred found it necessary to ride over to Benmohr to arrange definitely
-about the time of departure. He had nearly reached the well-known gate
-when a horseman rode forward from the opposite direction. He was well
-mounted, and led a second horse, upon which was a pack-saddle. Both
-animals were in better condition than was usual in this time of
-tribulation.
-
-Effingham was about to pass the stranger, whose bronzed features, half
-concealed by a black beard, he did not recall, when he reined his horses
-suddenly.
-
-‘You don’t remember me, Mr. Effingham. I am on my way to the old place.
-I’ve got something to tell you.’
-
-It took more than another glance to enable him to recognise the speaker,
-and then it was a half-instinctive guess that prompted him to connect
-the bold black eyes and swarthy countenance with Hubert Warleigh.
-
-‘The same,’ said the horseman. ‘I saw you did not know me; most likely
-took me for a station overseer or a gentleman. I was a swagman when you
-saw me last, so I’m getting on, you see.’
-
-‘I beg you a thousand pardons,’ said Wilfred, shaking his hand
-cordially. ‘I did not know you at first sight; the beard alters your
-appearance, you must admit. I hope you are coming to stay with us. My
-father will be delighted to see you. He often speaks of you.’
-
-‘I thank him, and you too. If _my_ father had been like him, I should
-have been a different man. But I had better tell you my business before
-we go farther. They say you are going to shift the cattle; is that
-true?’
-
-‘We start almost at once. But we haven’t settled the route.’
-
-‘That’s just as well. I’ve found a grand country-side away to the south,
-and came to show you the way—that is, if you believe my story.’
-
-‘Look here,’ cried Wilfred excitedly, ‘come with me to Benmohr to-night,
-and we’ll talk it over with Argyll and Hamilton. We must hold a council
-over it. It’s near sundown, and I intended to stay there.’
-
-Hubert Warleigh drew back. ‘I don’t know either of them to speak to. The
-fact is, I have lived so much more in the men’s huts than the masters’
-until the last few months, that I don’t fancy going anywhere unless I’m
-asked.’
-
-‘Come as my friend,’ said Wilfred impetuously. ‘It is time you took your
-proper position. Besides, you are the bearer of good tidings—of news
-which may be the saving of us all.’
-
-He allowed himself to be persuaded. So the two young men rode up to the
-garden gate, at which portal they were met by Argyll. Ardmillan and Neil
-Barrington were playing quoits on the brown lawn. Fred Churbett (of
-course) was reading in the verandah.
-
-‘Let me introduce my friend, Mr. Hubert Warleigh,’ said Wilfred. ‘He has
-just come in from a journey, and I have prevailed on him to accompany
-me.’
-
-‘Most happy to see you, Mr. Warleigh,’ said Argyll, with cordial
-gravity. (He knew all about ‘Gyp’ Warleigh, and had probably said
-contemptuous things, but accepted Wilfred’s lead, and followed suit.)
-‘The man will take your horses. Effingham, you know your way to the
-barracks.’
-
-Hubert Warleigh followed his newly-acquired comrade into the building,
-where the appearance of matters indicated that some of the other
-habitués had been recently adorning themselves. Mrs. Teviot, however,
-promptly appeared on the scene with half-a-dozen towels, and supplies of
-warm water.
-
-‘Weel, Maister Effingham, this is a sair time and a sorrowfu’. To think
-o’ a’ the gentlemen gangin’ clean awa’, and a’ the milch kye, puir
-things, into thae waste places o’ the yearth, and maybe deein’ o’ drouth
-or hunger, and naebody to hae a crack wi’ but thae fearsome saavages
-‘It’s very hard upon all of us, Mrs. Teviot, but if it won’t rain, what
-are we to do? We can’t stay at home and let the cattle die. You know the
-Israelites used to take away their beasts in time of famine, and they
-seem to have had them pretty often.’
-
-‘How do you do, Mrs. Teviot?’ said Warleigh. ‘How’s Wullie this dry
-weather? I suppose you forget me staying a night in the hut with old Tom
-Glendinning, three or four years ago.’
-
-‘Gude sake, laddie!’ said the old woman in a tone of deep surprise, ‘and
-is that you, clothed and in your right mind, like the puir body in the
-Book? And has some one casten oot your deevil? Oh, hinnie! but I’m a
-prood woman the day to see your father’s son tak’ his place amang
-gentlefolk ance mair. The Lord guide ye and strengthen ye in the richt
-path! Man, ye lookit sae douce and wiselike, hoo was I to ken ye, the
-rantin’ dare-deevil that ye were syne?’
-
-‘I have been living among the blacks, Mrs. Teviot,’ said the prodigal,
-with a transient glance of humour in his deep eye; ‘perhaps that may
-have improved me. But I am going to try to be a gentleman again, if I
-don’t find it too dull.’
-
-‘Aweel! The denner is dishen’ up the noo; dinna wait to preen yersels
-ower muckle,’ added the good old dame as she vanished.
-
-In despite of her warning, her old acquaintance produced several
-articles of raiment from the large valise, which had been unstrapped
-from his led horse, and proceeded to change his dress. When they walked
-into the house Wilfred thought he had rarely seen a handsomer man.
-
-His clear, bronzed complexion, his classically cut features, his large
-dark eyes, with, what was then more uncommon than is the case now, a
-bushy, coal-black beard, made the effect of his countenance picturesque
-and striking in no ordinary degree.
-
-His tall and powerful frame, developed by toil and exercise into the
-highest degree of muscular strength, was perfect in its symmetry as that
-of a gladiator. His very walk showed the effect of years of woodcraft,
-with the hunter’s lightness of footstep, and firm, elastic tread. As he
-entered the dining-room there was a look of surprise, even admiration,
-visible on every face.
-
-‘Mr. Warleigh,’ said Argyll, ‘allow me to make my friends known to you.
-Hamilton, my partner—Ardmillan—Forbes—Neil Barrington—Fred Churbett.
-Now, you are all acquainted. Dinner and Mrs. Teviot won’t admit of
-further formalities.’
-
-In despite of his former preferences for humble companionship, and his
-depreciation of his own manners and habitudes, Wilfred was pleased and
-interested by the unaffected bearing of his protégé during the dinner
-ceremony. He well knew all the men present by reputation, though they
-had no previous acquaintance with him, except, perhaps, as a stock-rider
-on a cattle-camp.
-
-Without attempting to assume equality of language or mingle in
-discussion, for which his lack of education unfitted him, he yet bore
-himself in such self-possessed if unpretending fashion as impressed both
-guests and entertainers.
-
-When the dinner was cleared away, and pipes were lit, in accordance with
-the custom of bachelor households (O’Desmond’s always honourably
-excepted), Wilfred Effingham thought the time favourable for opening the
-serious business of the evening.
-
-‘I take it for granted,’ he said, ‘that we are all agreed to start for
-“fresh fields and pastures new” in a few days. Equally certain that we
-have not settled the route. Is that not so? Then let me take this
-occasion of stating that Mr. Warleigh has arrived from the farthest out
-station on the south, and that he is in possession of valuable
-information as to new country.’
-
-‘By Jove!’ said Argyll, ‘that is the very thing we were discussing when
-you rode up, and are as far from a decision as ever. If Mr. Warleigh can
-give us directions, we ought to be able to keep a course moderately
-well—I mean with the aid of an azimuth compass.’
-
-‘Argyll would undertake to find the road to Heaven with that compass of
-his,’ said Ardmillan.
-
-When the laugh had subsided, which arose from this allusion to a
-well-known habit of Argyll’s, who always carried a compass with him—even
-to church, it was asserted—and was wont to state that no one but an
-idiot could possibly lose his way in Australia who had sense enough to
-comprehend the points of that invaluable instrument—Hubert Warleigh said
-quietly, ‘I’m afraid the road to my country is a good deal like the road
-to h—ll, that is, in the way of being the most infernal bad line for
-scrub, mountain, and deep rivers I ever tackled, and that’s saying a
-good deal. But I promised Captain Effingham to do him a good turn when I
-got the chance, and when I heard of this dry season I came prepared to
-show the way, if he liked to send his stock over, and go myself. As you
-all seem to be in the same box, equally hard up, I don’t mind acting as
-guide. We’ll be all the better for going as a strong party, as the
-blacks are treacherous beggars and the tribes strong.’
-
-‘The road, you say, is as bad as bad can be,’ said Hamilton. ‘I suppose
-the good country makes up for it when you get there?’
-
-‘I’ve seen all the best part of New South Wales,’ said the explorer. ‘I
-never saw anything that was a patch on it before. Open forest country,
-rivers running from the Snowy Mountains to the sea, splendid lakes, and
-a regular rainfall.’
-
-‘The last is better than all,’ said Hamilton. ‘One feels tired of
-working up to a decent thing, and then having it knocked down by a
-change of season. I, for one, will take the plunge. I am ready to start
-at once for this interesting country, where the rivers don’t dry up, the
-grass grows at least once a year, and rain is not a triennial
-phenomenon.’
-
-‘The same here!—and—I, and I,’ came from the other proprietors.
-
-‘I suppose there’s room enough for all of us; we needn’t tread on each
-other’s toes when we reach the land of promise?’ said Ardmillan.
-
-‘Enough for the whole district of Yass and something to spare,’ said
-their guest. ‘I was only over a portion of it, but I could see no end of
-open country from the hill-tops. It’s a place that will bear heavy
-stocking—thickly grassed and no waste country to speak of. After you
-leave the mountains, which are barren and rough enough, you drop down
-all of a sudden upon thinly-timbered downs—marshy in places, but grass
-up to your eyes everywhere.’
-
-‘I like that notion of marshes,’ said Fred Churbett pensively. ‘I feel
-as I should enjoy the melody of the cheerful frog again. His voice has
-been so long silent in the land that I should hail him as a species of
-nightingale, always supposing that he was girt by his proper
-surroundings of the “sword-grass and the oat-grass and the bulrush by
-the pool.”’
-
-‘How was it you managed to drop across this delightful province,
-Warleigh?’ said Wilfred. ‘I should like to hear, if you don’t mind
-telling us, how you crossed the mountains towards the south. Old Tom and
-Dick Evans said they were inaccessible; that there was no good country
-between them and the coast.’
-
-‘Old Tom knew better,’ said their guest quietly. ‘We had a long talk the
-last time I was at Warbrok; he said then if any one could find a road
-for cattle the other side of the Snowy River, after you pass
-Wahgulmerang, he was dead certain there was any amount of fine country
-beyond, between it and the coast.’
-
-‘How did he get to know?’
-
-‘It seems he was stock-keeping once on one of the farthest out runs, and
-a mate of his, who was “wanted” for some cross work or other, came along
-and asked him to put him away for a bit, till the police got tired of
-hunting him. The old man gave him some rations, and told him of a track
-through the gullies, which took him to the leading spur, by which, of
-course, he could get on to the table land. Only an odd white man or so
-had ever been there. After a week he got “tired of looking at forty
-thousand blooming mountains” (as he told Tom afterwards), and being a
-resolute chap, with gun and ammunition, he thought he would make in
-towards the coast. Anyhow he was away all the winter. When he came back
-he told Tom that he had dropped in with a small tribe of blacks, who had
-taken to him. They spent the winter by the side of a great lake, fishing
-and hunting. There was plenty of fine grass country in all directions
-when you got over the main range.’
-
-‘And why did he come away from Arcadia?’ asked Argyll.
-
-‘From where?’ asked the unclassical narrator. ‘No; that wasn’t the name.
-It was Omeo. A grand sheet of water on a kind of hill-plain, with ranges
-all round, and one tremendous snow-peak you could see from anywhere.
-Well, he got tired of the whole thing—didn’t know when he was well off,
-like most men of his sort—so he made tracks back again. Old Tom didn’t
-believe all the story. But he thought afterwards that there must be
-something in it, and that it would be worth while some day to have a
-throw in and find the lake at any rate.’
-
-‘Then we are to suppose that you made the attempt and succeeded?’ said
-Ardmillan. ‘I confess that I envy you. But how did you manage by
-yourself?’
-
-‘You remember the day I left your place?’ said Gyp Warleigh, nodding to
-Wilfred. ‘I felt so savage and ashamed of myself that I determined to do
-something, or get rubbed out in the attempt. So I made through Monaro,
-crossed the Snowy River near Buckley’s crossing, and made straight for
-the foot of the big range. I was well armed, and had as much rations as
-I could carry. I knew the blacks were bad, but I had lived with more
-than one tribe, and thought I could manage them. I set myself to track
-the man old Tom spoke of. Of course, I’m a fair bushman,’ he added
-gravely. ‘I’ve never done anything else much all my life, so there’s no
-great credit in it.’
-
-‘Had you no compass with you?’ inquired Argyll. ‘No? Then I differ from
-you in thinking there was nothing extraordinary in the adventure. Not
-one man in ten thousand would have risked it, or come out with his
-life.’
-
-‘What does a man want with a compass who can see the sun now and then?’
-asked the Australian. ‘He can steer by the lie of the country, the
-course of the water, if he has the bushman’s eye. I tracked up the old
-man’s mate, and found his first camp on the table land. It was easy
-after that. He couldn’t help but follow the leading range. It wasn’t
-such rough country after the first day. Game was plenty, so I lived
-well.’
-
-‘How about the niggers?’ asked Churbett. ‘I should have felt too nervous
-to sketch or make any use of my opportunities. Fancy going to sleep at
-night and thinking you mightn’t want any breakfast!’
-
-‘I had a better chance than most men. I’m half a blackfellow myself in
-the way of knowing their language and most of their ways. I did one of
-their old men a service, and he taught me a secret that saved my life
-more than once. Still, I didn’t want to run across them if I could help
-it.’
-
-‘I should have thought you couldn’t avoid them,’ said Hamilton. ‘They
-are great trackers, and have eyes like hawks.’
-
-‘I know that, but I could see their smokes a long way. I lay by during
-the day and travelled late and early. One day I climbed a tree on the
-top of a range, when I saw a cluster of snowy mountains, and on the far
-side of them the waters of a lake. I had found Omeo.’
-
-‘You must have felt like Columbus or Cortez gazing upon the two oceans,’
-said Ardmillan. ‘What a grand sensation.’
-
-‘Columbus discovered America, didn’t he? The other chap I don’t remember
-hearing about. Well, I partly discovered Omeo, I suppose, and a bitter
-cold morning it was. I crawled down to the shore, and before I got there
-could see miles and miles of splendid open country, stretching away to
-the west. There were no more mountains; and as I pulled up next day, on
-the bank of a big river, I found myself surrounded by a tribe of
-blacks.’
-
-‘They slew you, of course,’ said Fred Churbett. ‘Lights half turn, and
-slow music from the orchestra. What a dramatic situation! If they didn’t
-do that, Warleigh, what did they do?’
-
-‘It was a close shave, I tell you,’ said the hero of the adventure. ‘But
-they had just lost a fellow of about my age; so they adopted me, as luck
-would have it. I could patter their lingo a bit, for they talked a sort
-of Kamilaroi, in which I could make myself understood. Anyhow I lived
-three or four months with them, and wandered nearer the coast. The
-country kept getting better, and the grass was something to see after
-this brickfield of a place. Towards spring my friends drew back to the
-Monaro side again, and one fine day I gave them the slip, and here I am
-now, good for the return trip. All I can do for any of you in the way of
-showing new country, you’re welcome to. I’m bound to Mr. Effingham and
-his father first of all. I’m their man till the exploring racket’s
-finished.’
-
-‘Gentlemen,’ said Argyll, rising to his feet oratorically, ‘friends,
-countrymen, and fellow-pastoralists, I feel assured that you are all
-grateful for the unexpected turn our plans have taken, owing to the
-valuable information conveyed to us this night by my gallant and
-honourable friend, Mr. Hubert Warleigh. If he carries out his promise of
-acting as guide to us as far as this fair unknown land, I know you too
-well to think for one moment that he will be suffered to confer this
-benefit upon us gratuitously, the power to do which he has acquired at
-peril of his life. (Hear, hear.) I beg to move that every man present at
-this meeting pledges himself to contribute in kind, say at the rate of
-ten per cent of his number, with the object of forming a herd with which
-Mr. Warleigh may begin squatting life in the fine district he has been
-fortunate enough to discover.’
-
-The proposition was carried by acclamation. Further suggested by Neil
-Barrington, ‘that this meeting do drink Mr. Warleigh’s health,’ and Mrs.
-Teviot appearing with the ‘materials,’ which included a bottle of
-Glenlivet, the suggestion was forthwith carried out.
-
-Mr. Warleigh quietly declined the cheering beverage, and after a mild
-request that he would change his mind, no notice was taken of the
-eccentric proceeding. When at a tolerably late hour Wilfred and Hubert
-retired to the barracks, the greatest unanimity prevailed. They were
-provided with a goal and a guide. Nothing could be more satisfactory.
-From the first they would have a course, and when the difficulties of
-the road arose, they could, as a strong and united band, overcome
-ordinary obstacles, and protect themselves from known dangers.
-
-On the following morning Wilfred returned to The Chase, having persuaded
-his newly-acquired friend to accompany him, not, however, without some
-difficulty.
-
-‘You have no notion,’ he said, ‘how queer and strange I felt at Benmohr
-last night. I am the equal of any man there by birth, yet I could see
-that they were helping me not to feel out of place, knowing what they
-did. I couldn’t help thinking that I was like a stock-rider that comes
-in and stands twisting his cabbage-tree hat before the master and his
-friends, when he’s asked if everything will be ready for the muster next
-day, and if he’ll have a glass of grog.’
-
-‘But, my dear fellow, you could never look like that; your
-appearance—excuse me for alluding to it—gives you a great pull in
-society. After all, how many men are there who have had every advantage
-that education can give them, who chiefly hold their tongues, or say
-nothing worth listening to when they do speak.’
-
-‘Ah, but they understand things if they don’t talk; a poor ignorant
-devil like me, when he hears matters touched on, as happened last night,
-without any of them intending it, for they tried not to talk above me,
-knows no more than the dead what they are at. I feel as if I could cut
-my throat when it comes across me that, by other people’s neglect and my
-own folly, I have lost the best part of my birthright.’
-
-‘There’s time yet,’ said Wilfred, deeply touched by the sadness of the
-tone, in which this grand stalwart cadet of a good house bewailed the
-fate which had reduced him, mentally, to the condition of a
-bullock-driver.
-
-‘You are young enough yet for anything; there is time enough and to
-spare for you to improve yourself. So don’t be downhearted. As I said
-before, your looks and your family name will carry you through
-anything.’
-
-‘If I thought so,’ said the younger son, ‘I might do something, even
-now, to mend matters. And you really think that a man of my age could
-make himself as good at books as some of the men we have just met, for
-instance?’
-
-‘I _have_ known men beginning late in life,’ said Wilfred, ‘who passed
-stiff examinations, and when they commenced they could do little but
-read and write. Now you are steady and have full control over yourself,
-have you not?’
-
-‘God knows!’ said his companion drearily. ‘I won’t go so far as that;
-but I haven’t touched a drop of anything since your father shook hands
-with me at Warbrok, and I don’t intend, for seven years at any rate. I
-knelt down as soon as I was out of sight, and swore a solemn oath
-against anything stronger than tea. And so far I’ve kept it.’
-
-Much surprised were all at The Chase when Wilfred and his companion rode
-up, and after a hurried introduction, passed on together to the former’s
-bedroom.
-
-The young ladies endeavoured as much as possible to prevent themselves
-from gazing too uninterruptedly at the interesting quasi-stranger; but
-found it to be a difficult task.
-
-In despite of the educational defects and social disabilities of Hubert
-Warleigh, there was about him a grandly unconscious, imperturbable
-expression, like that of an Indian chief, which suited well his splendid
-figure and bronzed features. He quietly addressed his host and answered
-a few questions with but little change of countenance, and it was only
-after an unusually playful sally on the part of Annabel that he relaxed
-into a frank smile, which showed an unblemished set of teeth, under his
-drooping moustache.
-
-‘I feel as if he had been taken in battle, and we were holding him in
-captivity,’ said that sportive maiden, after the girls had retired to
-Mrs. Effingham’s room for their final talk.
-
- ‘All stern of look and strong of limb
- The chieftain gazed around;
- And silently they looked on him
- As on a lion bound.
-
-He has just that sort of air—very picturesque, of course—for he is the
-handsomest man I ever saw; don’t you think so, Rosamond? I suppose he
-can read and write? What a cruel shame to have brought him up like that?
-Fancy Selden reared in such a way, mamma?’
-
-‘I can hardly fancy such a thing, my dear imaginative child,’ said the
-mother. ‘But how thankful we ought to be that we have been able to keep
-dear Selden at school, even in this trying time.’
-
-Mr. Effingham, who attributed the change which had taken place in Hubert
-Warleigh’s habits in some measure to his own exhortation, was very
-pleased and proud. He welcomed the young man into his family circle with
-warmth, and in every way endeavoured to neutralise the _gêne_ of the
-position by drawing him out upon topics in which his personal experience
-told to advantage.
-
-He constrained him to repeat the tale of his exploration, and dwelt with
-great interest upon his sojourn with the blacks, which, he said,
-deserved a place in one of Fenimore Cooper’s novels.
-
-Annabel wanted to know whether there were any young men in the tribe who
-at all resembled Uncas. But Hubert had never heard of Chingachgook or of
-his heroic son. Magua and Hawkeye were as unknown to his unfurnished
-mind as the personages of the Nibelungen-Lied. So they were compelled to
-avoid quotations in their conversation, and only to use the cheapest
-form of English which is made. It was a matter of regret to these
-kind-hearted people when they made any allusion which they perceived to
-be as the word of an unknown tongue to the stranger within their gates.
-His half-puzzled, half-pained look was piteous to see. It was like that
-of some dumb creature struggling for speech, or blindly feeling for a
-half-familiar object.
-
-To the artless benevolence of youth it would have been interesting to
-remedy the deficiencies of a nature originally rich and receptive, but
-void and barren from lack of ordinary culture. Mrs. Effingham, however,
-compelled to regard things from a matron’s point of view, was not sorry
-to think that this picturesque, neglected orphan would in a few days
-quit their abode for a long journey.
-
-As the time drew near, and preparations were proceeded with, a great
-sadness commenced to overspread The Chase. Wilfred had never been absent
-for any lengthened period before, nor Guy for more than a week under any
-pretence whatever. He was frantic with delight at the change of plan.
-
-‘I’m so glad that “Gyp” Warleigh is going with us, even if he hadn’t
-found this new district. Dick says he’s the best bushman in the country,
-and can go straight through a scrub and come out right the other side,
-without sun or compass or anything, just like a blackfellow. You see
-what a place I’ll have across the mountains after a year or two.’
-
-‘I wish it was not so far and so dangerous, my child, as I am sure it
-must be,’ said Mrs. Effingham, stroking the boy’s fair brow, as she
-looked sadly at the eager face, bright with the unquestioning hopes of
-youth. ‘You will enjoy the travel and adventure and even the risk, but
-think how anxious your poor mother and sisters will be!’
-
-‘Oh, I’ll write by every chance,’ said Guy, anxious as a page who sees
-the knights buckle on armour for the first skirmish, not to be deprived
-of his share of the fray. ‘There will be lots of opportunities by people
-coming back.’
-
-‘What! from a place just discovered?’ said his mother, with a gentle
-incredulity.
-
-‘Ah, but Dick says if it’s half as fine as Hubert Warleigh calls it—not
-that he’s a man to say a word more than it deserves—that it will be
-rushed like all new settlements with hundreds of people, and there will
-be a town and a post-office and all kinds of humbug in no time. People
-move faster in Australia than in that slow old Surrey.’
-
-‘You mustn’t say a word against our dear old home, my boy,’ said his
-mother, playfully threatening him, ‘or I shall fear your being turned
-into a backwoodsman, or at any rate something different from an English
-gentleman, and that would break my heart. But I hope plenty of
-tradespeople and farmers, and persons of all kinds, will come to your
-Eldorado. It will make it all the safer, and more comfortable for you
-all.’
-
-‘Farmers, mother!’ said the boy indignantly. ‘What are you thinking of?
-We don’t want any poking farmers there, taking up the best of the flats
-and the waterholes after we have found the country and fought the blacks
-for them. We can keep it well enough with our rifles. All I want is a
-good large run, and not to see a soul near it except my own stock-riders
-for years to come.’
-
-‘You are going to be quite a mediæval baron, Guy,’ said Annabel, who had
-stolen up and taken his hand in hers, the three hearts beating closely
-in unison. ‘I suppose you will set up a dungeon for refractory vassals.’
-
-‘I am sure he will be a good boy, and remember his mother’s teachings
-when she is far away,’ said the fond parent, as the tears filled her
-eyes, looking at the fair, bright-eyed face which she might never see
-more after the last wave of her hand—the last fond, lingering farewell,
-which was so soon to be.
-
-Well it is for the young and strong, who go laughing and shouting into
-the battle of life, as if there were no ambuscades, defeats, weary
-retreats, or hopeless resistance. Well for the sailor boy, who leaps on
-to the deck as if there were no wreck or tempest, fatal mermaid or dead
-men’s bones, beneath the smiling, inconstant wave! They have at least
-their hour of hot-blooded fight and stubborn resistance to relentless
-Destiny. But, ah me! how fares it with those who are left behind,
-condemned to dreary watchings, for tidings that come not—to sickening
-fears, that all too soon resolve themselves into the reality of doom?
-These are the earth’s true martyrs—the fond mother—the devoted wife—the
-loving sisters—the saddened father. Theirs the torture and the stake,
-sacrificed to which they are in some form or other, while life lasts.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI
- A GREEN HAND
-
-
-Matters were well advanced for the road. The thousand-and-one trifles
-that are so easily forgotten before the commencement of a long journey,
-and so sorely missed afterwards, were nearly completed under the
-tireless tendance of Dick Evans. The three young men were chatting in
-the verandah, after a long day’s drafting, when a strange horseman came
-‘up from the under world.’
-
-‘I wonder who it is,’ said Guy. ‘Not any of the Benmohr people, for they
-have no time to spare until they come to say good-bye. I should say all
-the other fellows were too hard at work. It’s a chance if Churbett and
-the D’Oyleys will be ready for a fortnight. He looks like a gentleman.
-It must be a stranger.’
-
-‘It is a gentleman, as you say,’ replied Hubert Warleigh, ‘and not long
-from home, by the cut of his jib.’
-
-‘How can you tell?’ asked Wilfred. ‘He is a tall man and has a gun,
-certainly, which last favours your theory.’
-
-‘I see,’ said Hubert, ‘a valise strapped to the back of his saddle;
-holsters for pistols, and top-boots. He is a “new chum,” safe enough;
-besides, when he got to the slip-rails, he took the top one down first.’
-
-‘You must be right,’ said Wilfred, smiling. ‘I used to disgrace myself
-with the slip-rail business. Who in the world can it be? He has come at
-the wrong time for being shown round, unless he wants an exploring
-tour.’
-
-The horseman rode up in a leisurely and deliberate fashion; a tall,
-fresh-complexioned man, whose blue eyes and dark hair reminded Wilfred
-of many things, and a half-forgotten clime. The lower part of the
-stranger’s face was concealed by a thick but not fully-grown beard; and
-as he advanced, with a look of great solemnity, and inquired whether he
-had the honour to see Mr. Wilfred Effingham, that gentleman, for the
-life of him, could not remember where he had set eyes upon him before.
-
-‘That is my name,’ said Wilfred. ‘Will you allow us to take your horse,
-and to say that we are very glad to see you? Guy, take this gentleman’s
-horse to the stable.’
-
-‘I thank you kindly. I believe that I have a letter of introduction
-somewhere to you, sir, from an acquaintance of mine in Ireland—a
-dissipated, good-for-nothing fellow, one Gerald O’More. I thought it
-might be as useful in Australia as the writing of a better man.’
-
-‘Gerald O’More was a friend of mine,’ said Wilfred coldly, with a frown
-unseen by the stranger, busily engaged in unfastening his multifarious
-straps and buckles. ‘There must be some mistake about the reputation.’
-
-‘It’s little matter,’ said the stranger coolly. ‘There’s hundreds in
-Ireland it would suit to the letter, and proud of it they’d be. Maybe it
-was Tom Ffrench I was thinking of—but it’s all as one. It’s thinking he
-was of coming out here himself, the same squireen.’
-
-‘I wish to Heaven he had,’ said Wilfred, with so hearty an accentuation
-that the stranger raised his head, apparently struck by the sudden
-emotion of his tone. ‘There is no man living I would as soon see this
-moment.’
-
-‘So this wild counthry hasn’t knocked all the heart out of ye, Wilfred,
-me boy,’ said the stranger, holding out his hand, while such a smile
-rippled over his face as only a son of mirth-loving Erin can produce.
-‘And so ye didn’t know your old chum because he had a trifle of hair on
-his face, and he coming ten thousand miles to make an afternoon call. I
-trust the ladies are well this fine weather, and haven’t had their
-bonnets spoiled by the rain lately.’
-
-Wilfred gazed for one moment at the now well-known features, the bright
-fun-loving eyes, the humorous curves of the lips, and then grasping both
-hands, shook them till his stalwart visitor rocked again.
-
-‘Gerald, old man!’ he exclaimed in tones of the wildest astonishment,
-‘is it you in the flesh? and how in the name of everything magical did
-you ever manage to leave green Rathdown and come out to this burned-up
-land of ours? But you are as welcome as a week’s rain—I can’t say more
-than _that_. To think that a beard should have altered your face so! But
-I had no more thought of seeing you here than our old host of Castle
-Blake.’
-
-‘True for you! What a brick he was! God be with the days we spent there
-together, Will. Maybe we’ll see them again, who knows? Didn’t I find my
-way here like an Indian of the woods? ’Tis a great bushman I’ll make,
-entirely. And, in truth, there’s no life would suit me better. An
-Irishman’s a born colonist, half made before he leaves old Ireland. Was
-that your young brother that I used to make popguns for? What a fine boy
-he has grown!’
-
-‘Yes, that was Guy; he’s anxious, like you, to be a bold bushman. Let me
-introduce my friend Mr. Warleigh, the leader of an expedition we are all
-bound upon next week.’
-
-‘Very glad to meet Mr. Warleigh, I’m sure, and I hope he’ll be kind
-enough to accept me as a supernumerary—cook’s mate, or anything in the
-rough-and-ready line. I’m ready to ship in any kind of craft.’
-
-‘You don’t mean to say you would like to go with us, Gerald? We are
-bound for “a dissolute region, inhabited by Turks,” as your illustrious
-countryman expressed it. For Turks read blacks,—in their way just as
-bad.’
-
-‘Pardon me, my dear fellow, for the apparent disrespect; but you don’t
-fancy people come out to this unfurnished territory of yours to amuse
-themselves? What else did I come for but to work and make money, do you
-suppose?’
-
-‘Now I won’t have any explanations till I’ve shown you to my mother and
-the girls. How astonished they will be!’
-
-They were certainly astonished. So much so, indeed, that Mr. O’More
-began to ask why it should be so much more surprising that he came than
-themselves.
-
-‘But we were ruined,’ said Annabel, ‘and would not have had anything to
-eat soon, or should have had to go to Boulogne—fancy what horror!’
-
-‘And am I, Gerald O’More, such a degenerate Irish gentleman that I can’t
-be ruined as nately and complately as any ancestor that ever frightened
-a sub-sheriff?’ (Here they all laughed at his serio-comic visage.) ‘In
-sober earnest, I _was_ ruined, not entirely by my own fault, but so
-handily that when the old place was sold there was nothing left over but
-the lodge at Luggie-law, where you and I used to fish and shoot and
-drink potheen, Wilfred, in cold evenings.’
-
-‘Why not live there, then? I’m sure we were snug enough.’
-
-‘Why not?’ said O’More—and as he spoke his features assumed a sterner,
-more elevated expression—‘because I wouldn’t turn myself into a poor
-gentleman, with a few hangers-on, and a career contemptibly limited
-either for good or evil. No! I’d seen many a good fellow, once the
-genial sportsman and boon companion, change into the lounger and sot. So
-I packed my gun and personal possessions, put the lodge in my pocket,
-and here I am, with all the world of Australia before me.’
-
-‘A manly resolve,’ said Mr. Effingham, ‘and I honour you for it, my dear
-boy. You find us in the midst of a disastrous season, but those who know
-the land say that the next change must be for the better. You will like
-all our friends, and enjoy the free life of the bush before you are a
-month at it. Australia is said, also—though we have not found such to be
-the case lately—to be an easy country to make money in.’
-
-‘So I have found already,’ said O’More.
-
-‘How?’ said everybody in a breath. ‘You can’t have had any experience in
-money-making as yet.’
-
-‘Indeed have I,’ said the newly-arrived one. ‘Why, the first day I came
-to Sydney I bought a half-broke, well-bred colt for a trifle, and as I
-came through Yass I exchanged him for the horse I am now riding and a
-ten-pound note.’
-
-‘What a wonderful new chum you must be!’ said Guy impulsively. ‘I’ve
-heard of lots that lost nearly all the cash they had the first month,
-but never of one who made any. You will be as rich as Mr. Rockley soon.’
-
-‘Amateur horse-dealing doesn’t always turn out so well. But I always buy
-a good horse when I see him. I shall get infatuated about this country;
-it suits me down to the ground.’
-
-The evening was passed in universal hilarity. Mr. O’More’s spirits
-appeared to rise in the inverse proportion to the distance which
-separated him from the Green Isle. Every one was delighted with his
-_naïveté_ and resolves to do great things in the way of exploration. The
-expedition he regarded as an entertainment for his special benefit,
-declaring that if it had not been finally settled he would have got one
-up on his own account.
-
-As good luck would have it, the Benmohr cattle escaped from the
-mustering paddock after they had been collected, and having ‘made back’
-to fastnesses, which they had been permitted to occupy in consideration
-of the season, took some days in recapturing. So that yet another week
-of respite, to everybody’s expressed disgust but secret relief, was
-granted. Besides, Fred Churbett was not quite ready—he seldom was—and
-the D’Oyleys were just as well pleased to scrape up a few more of their
-outliers. There remained then ‘a little season of love and laughter’ for
-Mr. Gerald O’More to utilise in improving the acquaintance.
-
-And he was just the man to do this. He won old Dick’s good-will by the
-hearty energy with which he threw himself into the small labours
-which, of course—for who ever knew an overland journey quite provided
-for, or a ship’s cargo stowed away, on the appointed day of its
-departure?—remained to be got through. He had devoted himself _en
-amateur_ to the duties of third mate on the voyage out, and, being a
-yachtsman of experience, entitled himself to the possession of a
-certificate, should he ever require, as he thought seriously was on
-the cards, to work his way home. In matters connected with ropes and
-fastenings he showed an easy superiority. Sailors are proverbially the
-most valued hands in Australia, from their aptitude to make the best
-kind of bushmen. Their adaptiveness to every kind of labour, grounded
-on the need for putting out their strength at the orders of a despotic
-superior, is a fine training for bush life. Having nautical tendencies
-superadded to recent experiences, Gerald O’More fulfilled these
-conditions, and was rated accordingly.
-
-‘He’s the makings of a fust-rate settler, that young gentleman is,’ said
-Dick Evans. ‘He’s a man all over, and can ketch hold anywhere. He’s got
-that pluck and bottom as he don’t know his own strength.’
-
-His exuberant spirits by no means exhausted themselves during the labour
-of the day, when in check shirt and A.B. rig he was in the forefront of
-the drafting, branding, loading, or packing which still went on. In the
-evening, after a careful toilette, he was equally tireless in his
-society duties, and kept all the lady part of the family entertained by
-his varied conversation, his songs, jokes, and tales of many lands. He
-struck up a great alliance with Annabel, who declared that he was a
-delightful creature, specially sent by Providence to raise their spirits
-in this trying hour.
-
-It was well enough to talk lightly of the Great Expedition, but as the
-day approached for the actual setting out of the Crusade, deep gloom
-settled upon the inmates of The Chase.
-
-Wilfred Effingham had never before quitted home upon any more
-danger-seeming journey than a continental trip or a run over to Ireland.
-He was passionately devoted to his mother and sisters, whom at that
-period of his life he regarded as the chief repositories, not only of
-all the virtues, but of all the ‘fine shades’ of the higher feminine
-character. By no means deficient of natural admiration for the unrelated
-daughters of Eve, he regarded his sisters with a love such as only that
-relation can furnish. With them he was ever thoughtful, fond, and
-chivalrous. For their comfort and advantage he was capable of any
-sacrifice. Rosamond, nearest to him in age, had been from childhood his
-close companion, and for her he would have laid down his life. These
-feelings were reciprocated to the fullest extent.
-
-And now he was going away—the dutiful son, the fond brother, the kindly,
-cheerful companion—away on a hazardous journey into an unknown,
-barbarous region, exposed to the dangers of Australian forest wayfaring.
-Guy, too, was on the march—the frank, fearless boy, idolised, as is the
-younger son ofttimes, with the boundless love with which the mother
-strains the babe to her bosom.
-
- He was the last of all, yet none
- O’er his lone grave may weep.
-
-He was not the _very_ last, Selden and Blanche coming after, as was
-pointed out to Mrs. Effingham, when her tears flowed at Selden’s
-accidental quotation from ‘The Graves of a Household,’ for these lines
-referred to one beneath the lone, lone sea, and even in the recesses of
-the bushland mourning over his grave would be possible.
-
-‘Oh, my darling,’ said the tender mother, ‘do not jest on such a
-subject. How could I live were either of you to die in the wilderness?
-Why did this terrible season come to rob me of my sons? But promise me,
-promise me, both of you, as you love your mother, not to run unnecessary
-risks. Danger, ah me! I know there must be, but you will think of your
-poor mother, and of your father and sisters, and not needlessly court
-danger. Guy, you _will_ promise me?’
-
-‘Don’t be so frightened, mother,’ said the younger son. ‘I won’t go
-running after risks and dangers. Why, it’s ten to one nobody gets hurt.
-There are only blacks; and there’s no water to drown us, that’s one
-consolation.’
-
-When did generous youth perceive the possibility of danger until forced
-upon him by sudden stroke of fate? ‘Whom the gods love die young’ is
-true in one sense, inasmuch as they escape the melancholy anticipations
-which cloud the joys of maturer life. For them trains never collide, nor
-coaches upset; sword-strokes are parried, and bullets go wide; ships
-founder not; disease is only for the feeble; they are but the old who
-die!
-
-Wilfred more truly understood the matron’s tender dread, and her
-reasons.
-
-‘Don’t fret, my darling mother,’ he said as he clasped her hand, ‘I’ll
-look after Guy. You know he obeys me cheerfully, so far; and you know I
-am pretty careful. I will see he does nothing rash, and he will be
-always under my eye.’
-
-‘Remember, dear, I trust him to you,’ said Mrs. Effingham, returning her
-son’s fond clasp, but not wholly reassured, being of the opinion that
-what Wilfred considered careful avoidance of danger other people
-characterised as unflinching though not impetuous determination to get
-through or over any given obstacle.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Off at last! The tearful breakfast is over. The long string of cattle
-has poured out of the mustering paddock gates, followed by Hubert
-Warleigh, with Duncan Cargill and Selden, who were permitted to help
-drive during the first stage; Mr. O’More, in cords and top-boots, with a
-hunting-crop in his hand, wisely declining a stock-whip for the present.
-His horse bears a cavalry headstall bridle, with a sliding bridoon
-rein—‘handy for feeding purposes,’ he says. He has yet to learn that,
-after a week’s cattle-driving, most horses may be trusted to graze with
-the reins beneath their feet, which they will by no means tread upon or
-run off with.
-
-A couple of brown-faced youngsters, natives of Yass, have been hired, as
-road hands and to be generally useful, for the term of one year. These
-young persons are grave and silent of demeanour; have been ‘among
-cattle’ all their lives, and no exception can be taken to their
-horsemanship. They afford an endless fund of amusement to O’More, who
-forces them into conversation on various topics, and tries to imitate
-their soft-voiced, drawling monotone.
-
-Dick Evans drives the horse-dray, destined to go no farther than the
-Snowy River, after which the camp equipment will be carried on
-pack-horses, the road being closed to wheels. They are now being driven
-with the cattle, accoutred with their pack-saddles and light loads to
-accustom them to the exercise.
-
-Dick has had a characteristic parting with Mrs. Evans, who saw him
-prepare to depart without outward show of emotion.
-
-‘Now mind you behave yourself, Evans, while you’re away, and don’t be
-running off to New Zealand, or the Islands, or anywheres.’
-
-‘All right, old woman,’ said Dick, cracking his whip. ‘You’ll be so
-precious fond of me when I come back that we shan’t have a row for a
-year afterwards.’
-
-‘No fear; not if you was to stop away five year!’ retorted his spouse,
-with decision. ‘Take care as I don’t marry again afore you come back, if
-you hang it out too long.’
-
-‘Marry away and don’t mind me, old woman,’ returned the philosophical
-Dick; ‘_I_ shan’t interfere with the pore feller. Leave us the old mare,
-that’s all. A good ’oss, that you can’t put wrong in saddle or harness,
-ain’t met with every day.’
-
-Here Mrs. Evans, seeing a smile on the faces of the listeners, began to
-think she was occupying an undignified position. Putting her apron to
-her eyes, with a feeble effort at wiping a few tears away, she solemnly
-told her incorrigible mate that she hoped God would change the wicked
-old heart of him, as wasn’t thankful for a good wife, as had cooked and
-worked for him, and been dragged about the country all these years, and
-now to be told she was worse than a brute beast! Here _real_ tears came.
-
-‘The mare can hold her tongue, at any rate,’ quoth Dick; ‘and where’s
-the woman you can say as much of, barrin’ Mrs. Wilson of Ours, as was
-born deaf and dumb? But come, I didn’t mean to fret ye, and me on the
-march. Give us a buss, old woman! Now we part all reg’lar and military
-like. You know women’s not allowed with the rigiment in war time. Mind
-you take care of the missus and the young ladies, and keep a civil
-tongue in your head.’
-
-With this farewell exhortation and reconciliation Dick shook off his
-spouse, and walked briskly away by the side of the team. The cattle,
-glad to feel themselves unchecked, struck briskly along the track.
-Wilfred and Guy came up at a hand-gallop, and took their places behind
-the drove. The first act of the migratory drama was commenced, with all
-the actors in their places.
-
-The first day’s stage was arranged to reach only to a stock-yard near
-Benmohr. It was a longish day’s drive, but, being the first day from
-home, all the more likely to steady the cattle. Having got so far, and
-secured them inside the rails, with Dick and his team camped by the dam,
-Wilfred left Guy in charge and rode over, with O’More and Hubert
-Warleigh, to spend a last civilised evening at Benmohr. It was necessary
-for the latter, now recognised as the responsible leader of the
-expedition, to give Argyll, Hamilton, and the others instructions as to
-the route.
-
-A fair-sized party was assembled around that hospitable board. All the
-men present had been actuated by the same feelings, apparently, as
-themselves, viz. with a trustworthy person in charge of the camp, they
-might as well enjoy themselves once more at dear, jolly, old Benmohr.
-
-‘Hech! sae ye’re here to look at a body ance mair, Maister Effingham;
-and whatten garred you to list Maister O’More, and him juist frae hame,
-puir laddie, to gang awa’ and be killed by thae wild blacks?’
-
-‘I suppose you wouldn’t mind _my_ being rubbed out, Mrs. Teviot,’ said
-Hubert. ‘It’s only gentlemen from England that are valuable. Imported
-stock, eh?’
-
-‘Noo, Maister Hubert, ye ken weel I wad be wae eneugh if onything
-happened to yer ain sell, though ye hae nae mither to greet for ye,
-mair’s the peety, puir lady! But your hands can aye keep your heed; and
-they say ye can haud ane o’ thae narrow shields and throw a spear as
-weel’s ony o’ the blacks. They’ll no catch _you_ napping; but this young
-gentleman will maybe rin into ambushes and sic-like, like a bird into
-the net o’ the fowler.’
-
-‘Then we must pull him out again,’ said Hubert gravely. ‘I hope you are
-not going to be rash, Mr. O’More. See how you will be missed.’
-
-‘I am aware, as I have not had the good fortune to live much in
-Australia,’ said Gerald, ‘that I must be made of sugar or salt,
-warranted to melt at the first wetting. But my hands have kept my head
-in an Irish fair, before now; and I think half-a-dozen shillelahs at
-once must be nearly as bad as a blackfellow’s club.’
-
-‘They are deuced quick with the boomerang and nullah,’ said Hubert; ‘you
-can hardly see the cursed things before they are on to you.’
-
-‘And a barbed spear is worse than all the blackthorns in Tipperary,’
-said Wilfred; ‘so look out and don’t cast a gloom over the party by your
-early death. Mrs. Teviot, give me a parting kiss and your blessing, for
-that _is_ the dinner-bell.’
-
-‘Maister Effingham!’ said the old dame, in accents of such unfeigned
-surprise and disapproval that all three men burst out laughing. ‘Eh,
-ye’re jist laughin’ at the auld woman, ye bad laddie; but ye ken weel
-that ye hae my blessing; and may the mercy and guidance o’ the Lord God
-of Israel bring ye a’ safe hame to your freends and relations—my
-gentlemen and a’, as I’m prayin’ for’t—and a bonnie day it will be when
-we see ye a’ back again—no forgetten that daft Neil Barrington, that
-gies me as muckle trouble as the hail o’ ye pitten thegither.’
-
-At the conclusion of this farewell ceremony with Mrs. Teviot, who indeed
-took a most maternal interest in the whole company, they hied themselves
-at once to the dining-room.
-
-‘So you are to join our party, Mr. O’More?’ said Hamilton. ‘You could
-not have come at a better time to understand our bush life.’
-
-‘Awfully glad of the chance, I assure you,’ said that gentleman. ‘It was
-the hope of something of the sort that brought me out. If this affair
-had not been on, I should have fancied I had been induced to come to a
-new country under false pretences.’
-
-‘Why so?’ asked Forbes.
-
-‘Because you are all so unpardonably civilised. I expected to sit upon
-wooden stools and eat biscuits and beef, to sleep in the open air, and
-to be returning fire with my pistols as I came up from the wharf.
-Instead of which (I will take turkey, if you please) I find myself here,
-at The Chase, and half-a-dozen other houses in the lap of luxury.’
-
-‘Oh, come!’ said Forbes deprecatingly, ‘are you not flavouring the
-compliment a little too strongly?’
-
-‘I think Mr. O’More comes from the Emerald Isle,’ said Ardmillan. ‘May I
-ask if you have ever kissed the Blarney stone?’
-
-‘Of course; all Irishmen make a point of it. It abates their naturally
-severe tendencies. But joking apart, all you people live as well as most
-of us in the old country. Wilfred here can bear me out. If claret was a
-little more fashionable, I don’t see a pin to choose.’
-
-‘There will be a change of fare when we’re on the road,’ said Fred
-Churbett. ‘Who knows when we shall see pale ale again? The thought is
-anguish; and those confounded pack-horses carry so little.’
-
-‘But think of the way we shall enjoy club breakfasts, clean shirts,
-evening parties, and all that, when we _do_ get back,’ said Neil
-Barrington. ‘We shall be like sailors after a three years’ cruise. I
-must say I always envied _them_.’
-
-‘I think, if the company is unanimous,’ said Hamilton, ‘that we might as
-well have a serious talk about the route. Captain Warleigh, as we must
-now call him, will be off early to-morrow, so the greater reason for
-proceeding to business.’
-
-‘I was going to remind you all,’ said Hubert, ‘that we ought to agree
-about our plans. It’s plain sailing across Monaro, though the feed is
-bad until we come to the Snowy River. Of course, we all go on
-to-morrow.’
-
-‘Which way?’ asked Hamilton.
-
-‘Past Bungendore, Queanbeyan, and Micalago. We cross the Bredbo and the
-Eumeralla higher up, and go by the Jew’s flat, and Coolamatong.’
-
-‘We shall follow in a couple of days,’ said Argyll.
-
-‘And I in three,’ said Forbes.
-
-‘You needn’t follow in a string, unless you like,’ said their guide;
-‘the feed will be cut up if one mob after the other goes over it. All
-the stock-riders hereabouts know the Monaro country, so you can travel
-either right or left of me, as long as you fetch up at Buckley’s
-Crossing, of the Snowy River.’
-
-‘What sort of a ford is it?’ inquired one of the D’Oyleys.
-
-‘It’s always a swim with the Snowy,’ said the captain, ‘summer and
-winter, and a cold one too, as I can witness. But the grass is better,
-though rough, after you cross, and we have an old acquaintance waiting
-there to join the party. He knows the country well.’
-
-‘Who the deuce is he?’ said Argyll. ‘We shall be well off for guides.’
-
-‘Not more than you will want, perhaps,’ said the leader. ‘We’re not over
-Wahgulmerang yet. But the man is old Tom Glendinning—and a better
-bushman never saddled a horse. He has been living for some time at one
-of the farthest out stations, Ingebyra, and wants to join us. He asked
-me not to mention his name till we had actually started.’
-
-‘So,’ said Wilfred reflectively, ‘the old fellow is determined to make
-his latter days adventurous. I see no objection, do you, Argyll? He and
-his history will be probably buried among the forests of this new
-country we are going to explore.’
-
-‘It cannot matter in any way,’ answered Argyll. ‘He will, as you say,
-most likely never return to this locality.’
-
-‘Many of the old hands have histories, if it comes to that,’ said
-Hubert, ‘and very queer ones too. But they have paid the price for their
-sins, and old Tom won’t have time to commit many more—if shooting an odd
-blackfellow or two doesn’t count.’
-
-‘Have we any more general instructions to receive?’ inquired Hamilton,
-who was, perhaps, the most practical-minded of the party.
-
-‘Only these: we must all be well armed. Pistols are handy, and a rifle
-or a double barrel is necessary for every man of the party. We _may_
-have no fighting to do; but blacks are plentiful, big fellows, and
-fierce too. We must be able to defend ourselves and more, or not a man
-will come back alive. After we cross the Snowy River, I shall halt till
-you all come up; then we can join the smaller mobs of cattle, so as to
-be close together in case of trouble. Everything will have to be packed
-from the Snowy; so it will be as well not to take more than is
-required.’
-
-‘You are fully prepared for all the privations of the road, Mr. O’More?’
-asked Argyll. ‘They may strike you as severe after your late life at
-headquarters.’
-
-‘That is the very reason, my dear fellow. You surely haven’t forgotten
-that when you were at home you fancied all Australian life to be
-transacted in the wilderness. I expected the wilderness; I demand the
-desert. With anything short of the wildest waste I shall be
-disappointed.’
-
-‘That’s the way to take it,’ said Fred Churbett. ‘I had all those
-feelings myself when I arrived, but I was betrayed into comfort when I
-bought The She-oaks, and have hardly gone nearer to roughing it than a
-trip to the Tumut for store cattle.’
-
-There was a laugh at this, Fred’s tendency to comfort being proverbial;
-though, to do him justice, he was capable of considerable exertion when
-roused and set going.
-
-‘Is this Eldorado of yours near the coast, Warleigh?’ inquired Forbes.
-‘If so, there will be sure to be good agricultural land, and some kind
-of a township will spring up.’
-
-‘I believe there’s a passage from the lakes to the sea, near which would
-be a grand site for a township. I hadn’t time to look it out. It gave me
-all I knew to get back.’
-
-‘What does any one want a town for?’ growled Argyll. ‘Next thing, people
-will be talking about _farms_. Enough to make one ill. Are we going to
-risk our lives and shed our blood, possibly, for the benefit of
-storekeepers and farmers, to spoil the runs after we have won them?’
-
-‘Don’t be so insanely conservative, Argyll,’ said Forbes. ‘Even a farmer
-is a man and a brother. We shall want some one to buy our raw products
-and import stores. We might as well give Rockley the office if we found
-a settlement. _He_ would do us no harm.’
-
-Here there was a chorus of approbation.
-
-‘Of course I except Rockley—as good a fellow as ever lived. But he holds
-peculiar views upon the land question, and might induce others to come
-over on that confounded farming pretence, which is the ruin of
-Australia.’
-
-‘The country I can show you, if we reach it, is large enough to hold all
-your stock and their increase for the next twenty years, with
-half-a-dozen towns as big as Yass.’
-
-‘If this be the case, the sooner we get there the better,’ said
-Hamilton. ‘You start in earnest to-morrow, and we shall follow the day
-after. I shall keep nearly parallel with you. Ardmillan comes next, then
-Churbett, lastly the D’Oyleys. We shall be the largest party, as to
-stock, men, and horses, that has gone out for many a day.’
-
-‘All the more reason why we should make our mark,’ said O’More. ‘I
-wouldn’t have missed it for five hundred pounds. I might have stayed in
-Ireland for a century without anything of the kind happening. I feel
-like Raymond of Antioch, or Godfrey of Bouillon. I suppose we shan’t
-meet to drink success to the undertaking every night.’
-
-‘This is the last night we shall have _that_ opportunity,’ said Argyll.
-‘Here come the toddy tumblers. The night is chilly, but it will be more
-so next week, when we are on watch or lying under canvas in a teetotal
-camp.’
-
-‘We can always manage a good fire, unless we are in blacks’ country,’
-said Hubert; ‘that is one comfort; there’s any amount of timber; and you
-can keep yourselves jolly in a long night by carrying firewood.’
-
-Long before daylight Hubert Warleigh arose and awakened Wilfred. Their
-horses had been placed so as to be easily procurable, and no delay took
-place. The stars were in the sky. A faint, clear line in the east yet
-told of the coming dawn, as the friends rode forth from Benmohr gate and
-took the track to the scene of the last night’s camp.
-
-When they reached the spot the sun had risen, and no one was on the
-ground but Dick Evans, who was in a leisurely way packing up the camp
-equipage, including the tent and cooking utensils.
-
-‘Here’s the breakfast, Mr. Wilfred,’ he said cheerily; ‘the cattle’s on
-ahead. I kept back the corned beef, and here’s bread and a billy of tea.
-You can go to work, while I finish packing. I’ll catch up easy by
-dinner-time, though the cattle’s sure to rip along the first few days.’
-
-‘This is a grand institution,’ said Gerald. ‘I wouldn’t say a toothful
-of whisky would be out of place, and the air so fresh; but sure “I feel
-as if I could lape over a house this minute,” as I heard a Connemara
-parlour-maid say once.’
-
-‘Nothing is more appetising,’ said Wilfred, ‘than a genuine Australian
-bush meal. A slice or two of meat, a slice of fresh damper, and a pot of
-tea. You may travel on it from one end of the continent to another.’
-
-‘He was a great man that invented that same,’ said O’More. ‘Would there
-be a little more tay in the canteen? Beef and bread his unaided
-intellect might have compassed; but the tay, even to think of that same
-in the middle of the meal, required inspiration. When ye think of the
-portableness of it too. It was a great idea entirely!’
-
-‘Bushmen take it morning, noon, and night,’ said Warleigh. ‘The doctors
-say it’s not good for us—gives us heartburn, and so on. But if any one
-will go bail for a man who drinks brandy and water, I’d stand the risk
-on tea.’
-
-‘So I suspect. Even whisky, they do say, gets into the head sometimes. I
-suppose you never knew a man to kill his wife, or burn his house, or
-lame his child for life, _under the influence of tay_?’
-
-An hour’s riding brought them to the cattle, which had just been
-permitted ‘to spread out on a bit of rough feed,’ as the young man at
-the side next them expressed it. A marshy creek flat had still remaining
-an array of ragged tussocks and rushy growths, uninviting in ordinary
-seasons, but now welcome to the hungry cattle. They found Guy sitting on
-his horse in a leisurely manner, and keeping a sharp look-out on the
-cattle.
-
-‘What sort of a night had you?’ said Wilfred. ‘Were they contented?’
-
-‘Oh, pretty fair. They roared and walked round at first; then they all
-lay down and took it easy. Old Dick roused us out and gave us our
-breakfast before dawn. We had the horses hobbled short, and were on the
-road with the first streak of light. This is the first stop we have
-made.’
-
-‘That’s the way,’ said Hubert. ‘Nothing like an early start; it gives
-the cattle all the better chance. Some of these are very low in
-condition. When we get over the Snowy, they’ll do better.’
-
-‘Shall we have a regular camp to-night,’ asked Guy, ‘and watch the
-cattle?’
-
-‘Of course,’ said Hubert; ‘no more yarding. It is the right thing after
-the first day from home.’
-
-‘And how long will the watches be?’ asked Guy, with some interest. ‘If I
-sleep as soundly as I did last night, I shan’t be much good.’
-
-‘Oh, you’ll soon come to your work. Boys always sleep sound at first,
-but you’ll be able to do your four hours without winking before we’ve
-been a week on the road.’
-
-The ordinary cattle-droving life and times ensued from this stage
-forward. They passed by degrees through the wooded, hilly country which
-lies between Yass and Queanbeyan, all of which was so entirely denuded
-of grass as to be tolerably uninteresting.
-
-By day the work was tedious and monotonous, as the hungry cattle were
-difficult to drive, and the scanty pasture rendered it necessary to take
-advantage of every possible excuse for saving them fatigue.
-
-At night matters were more cheerful. After dark, when the cattle were
-hemmed in—they were tired enough to rest peacefully—Guy had many a
-pleasant talk by the glowing watch-fires. This entertainment came, after
-enjoying the evening meal, with a zest which only youth and open-air
-journeying combined can furnish.
-
-As for Gerald O’More, he examined and praised and enjoyed everything. He
-liked the long, slow, apparently aimless day’s travel, the bivouac of
-the night, the humours of the drovers. He ‘foregathered’ with all kinds
-of queer people who visited the camp, and learned their histories. He
-felt much disappointed that there were no wild beasts except the native
-dog and native bear (koala), neither of which had sufficient confidence
-in themselves to assume the offensive.
-
-The next week was one of sufficient activity to satisfy all the ardent
-spirits of the party. In the first place, the cattle had to be driven
-across the river, the which they resisted with great vehemence, never
-before having seen a stream of the same magnitude. However, by the aid
-of an unlimited quantity of whip-cracking, dogging, yelling, and
-shouting, the stronger division of the herd was forced and hustled into
-the deep, swift current. Here they bravely struck out for the opposite
-side, and in a swaying, serpentine line, followed by the weaker cattle,
-struggled with the current until they reached and safely ascended the
-farther bank.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII
- INJUN SIGN
-
-
-Having crossed their Rubicon, and being fairly committed to the task of
-exploration, a provisional halt was called, and arrangement for further
-progress made. One by one the other drovers arrived, and having
-successively swum the river, guarded or ‘tailed’ their cattle until the
-plan of campaign was fully matured.
-
-Duncan Cargill was sent back with the team. The contents of the waggon,
-which, in view of this stage, had been economised as to weight, were
-distributed among the pack-saddles. Such apportionment also took place
-among the other encampments. Dick Evans as usual distinguished himself
-by the neat and complete manner in which he arranged his packs.
-
-Wheeled carriages being impossible because of the nature of the country,
-it is obvious that nothing but the barest necessaries can be
-conveyed—flour, tea, sugar, camp-kettles large enough to boil beef,
-billy-cans, frying-pans, quart-pots, axes, and the ruder tools, with the
-blankets of the party, are all that can be permitted. Meat—indifferent
-as to quality, but wholesome and edible—they had with them. Each man
-carried his gun, on the chance of a sudden attack by blacks. It would be
-obviously unreasonable to ask the enemy to wait until the pack-horses
-came up, even supposing that guns could be safely carried in that
-fashion. So each man rode with his piece slung carbine-fashion, and if
-he had such weapon, his pistols in the holsters of the period.
-
-Reasonable-sized, but by no means luxurious, tents were carried, in
-which those who were off watch could repose, also as shelter against
-rain, if such a natural phenomenon should ever again occur in Australia.
-
-A few days sufficed to make all necessary arrangements, during which
-Hubert Warleigh’s prompt decisions extorted universal respect.
-
-‘The country is partly open, as you see, for another hundred miles,’
-said he, ‘but after that, turns very thick and mountainous. The Myalls
-will soon be on our tracks, and may go for us any time. What we have to
-do, is to be ready to show fight with all the men we can spare. The
-feed’s mending as we go on.’
-
-‘Certainly it is,’ said Hamilton. ‘Our cattle are fresher than they were
-a week since.’
-
-‘My idea is to box the cattle into larger mobs, which will give us more
-men to handle if we fight. We can draft them by their brands when we get
-to the open country. The driving will be much the same and the men less
-scattered about.’
-
-‘A good proposal,’ said Argyll. ‘It will be more sociable, and, as you
-say, safer in case of a surprise. But are you certain of an attack? Will
-all these precautions be necessary?’
-
-‘I know more of the Myall blacks of this country than most men,’ said
-Warleigh gravely. ‘You see, we are going among strong tribes, with any
-amount of fighting men. Big, well-fed fellows too, and fiercer the
-farther you go south.’
-
-‘How do you account for that?’
-
-‘The cold climate does it and the living. Fish and game no end. It’s a
-rich country and no mistake. When you see it, you won’t wonder at their
-standing a brush to keep it.’
-
-‘What infernal nonsense!’ said Argyll. ‘Just as if the brutes wouldn’t
-be benefited by our occupation.’
-
-‘They won’t look at it in that light, I’m afraid,’ said Fred Churbett.
-‘History tells us that all hill-tribes have exhibited a want of
-amiability to the civilised lowland races. In Scotland, I believe, to
-this day, the descendants of a rude sub-variety of man pride themselves
-upon dissimilarity of dress and manners.’
-
-‘What!’ shouted Argyll, ‘do you compare my noble Highland ancestors with
-these savages, or the lowland plebeians who usurped our rights? As well
-compare the Norman noble with the grocer of Cheapside. Why——’
-
-‘May not we leave the settlement of this question till we are more
-settled ourselves?’ said Wilfred. ‘Our present duty is to be prepared
-for our Australian Highlanders, who, as Warleigh knows, have a pretty
-taste for ambuscades and surprises.’
-
-It was decided that Wilfred and the Benmohr men should mix their cattle
-and take the lead, followed by Churbett and the D’Oyleys, which, with
-Ardmillan’s and Neil’s, would make three large but not unwieldy droves.
-It must be borne in mind that five hundred head of cattle was considered
-a large number in those primitive times, and that, although the road was
-rough and the country mountainous, the added number of stock-riders
-which the co-operative system permitted gave great advantages in
-droving.
-
-Fred Churbett and Gerald O’More struck up a great intimacy, dissimilar
-as they were in temperament and constitutional bias. The unflagging
-spirits and ever-bubbling mirth of the Milesian were a constant source
-of amusement to the observant humorist, while Fred’s tales of Australian
-life were eagerly listened to by the enthusiastic novice.
-
-For days they kept the track which led from one border station to
-another, finding no alteration from their previous experience of
-wayfaring. But one evening they reached a spot where a dense and
-apparently interminable forest met, like a wall, the open down which
-they had been traversing. ‘Here’s Wargungo-berrimul,’ said Hubert
-Warleigh, ‘the last settled place for many a day. We strike due south
-now, towards that mountain peak far in the distance. A hundred miles
-beyond that lies the country that is to make all our fortunes.’
-
-‘Wasn’t it here old Tom Glendinning was to join us?’ said Wilfred.
-
-‘Yes; it was here I picked up the old fellow as I came back, with my
-clothes torn off my back, and very little in my belly either. He swore
-he would be ready, and he is not the man to fail in a thing of this
-sort. By Jove! here the old fellow comes.’
-
-A man on a grey horse came down the track which led from the station
-huts to the deep, sluggish-looking creek. Such a watercourse often
-follows the windings of the outer edge of a forest, defining the
-geological formations with curious fidelity.
-
-A few minutes brought the withered features of the ancient stock-rider
-into full view. He looked years older, and his eyes seemed unnaturally
-bright. His figure was bowed and shrunken since they had seen him last,
-but he still reined the indomitable Boney with a firm bridle-hand; and
-not only did Crab follow him, but two large kangaroo dogs, red and
-brindled as to colour, followed at his horse’s heels.
-
-‘My sarvice to ye, Mr. Wilfred,’ he said, touching his hat with a
-gesture of old days. ‘So ye were bet out of Lake William and the Yass
-country at last. Well, ’tis a grand place ye’re bound for now. To thim
-that gits there, it’s a fortune—divil a less!’
-
-‘Very glad to have you again, Tom. I hope the country will bear out its
-character. What a fine pair of dogs you have there!’
-
-‘’Tis thrue for ye, Master Wilfred; they’re fast and savage divils—never
-choked a dingo. ’Tis little they care what they go at, from a bull to a
-bandicoot, and they’d tear the throat out of a blackfellow, all the same
-as an old-man kangaroo.’
-
-‘Formidable animals, indeed,’ said Wilfred. ‘Gerald, here are a couple
-of dogs warranted to fight like the bloodhounds of Ponce de Leon.’
-
-‘The situation is becoming dramatic,’ said O’More. ‘I shouldn’t mind
-seeing the wild man of the woods coursed by these fellows, if we could
-be up in time to stave off the kill. But what splendid dogs they are!
-taller and more muscular than the home greyhounds, with tremendous
-chests and shoulders—very fine drawn too. They must have a cross that I
-don’t know of.’
-
-‘Thrue for you, sir. I heard tell that their mother—a great slut
-entirely—came from a strain of Indian dogs that was brought to Ingebyra
-by the ould say-captain that took it up. He said it was tigers they
-hunted in India.’
-
-‘Polygar dogs, probably,’ said Wilfred. ‘There is a fierce breed of that
-name used by the Indian princes; the packs, in their wild state, worry a
-tiger now and then. However that may be, they are fine fellows. How did
-you get them, Tom?’
-
-The old man attempted a humorous chuckle as he replied:
-
-‘Sure, didn’t they nearly ate the super himself last week, and him
-comin’ in on foot after dark, by raison that his horse knocked up at the
-four-mile creek. “Tom,” he says, “as you’re goin’ out to this new
-country, you can take them two infernal savages with you. I’d a good
-mind to shoot the pair of them. But the blacks will likely kill the lot
-of you, so it will save me the trouble.” “All right,” says I, “my
-sarvice to ye, sir. Maybe we’ll show the warrigals a taste of sport
-before they have the atin’ of us.” So here we are—ould Tom Glendinning,
-Boney and Crab, Smoker and Spanker—horse, fut, and dthragoons. ’Tis my
-last bit of overlanding, I’m thinkin’. But I’d like to help ye to a good
-run before I go, Mr. Wilfred, and lay me bones where ye’d have a kind
-word and a look now and agen at the grave of ould hunstman Tom.’
-
-The camp was always early astir. The later watchers took good care to
-arouse the rest of the party at the first streak of dawn. Dick Evans and
-Tom were by that time enjoying an early smoke. Hubert Warleigh, tireless
-and indefatigable, needed no arousing. In virtue of his high office, he
-was absolved from a special watch, as more advantageously employed in
-general supervision of the party.
-
-Argyll, wonderful to relate—
-
- Whose soul could scantly brook,
- E’en from his King a haughty look,
-
-was so impressed by the woodcraft of this grand-looking, sad-voiced
-bushman, that to the wild astonishment of his friends he actually
-submitted to hear his opinions confuted.
-
-As they plunged into the sombre trackless forest, where the tall
-iron-bark trees, with fire-blackened stems, stood ranked in endless
-colonnades, they seemed to be entirely at the mercy of their
-lately-gained acquaintance. He it was who rode ever in the forefront, so
-that the horsemen on the right and left ‘lead’ could with ease direct
-their droves in his track. He it was who decided which of two apparently
-similar precipices would prove to be the ‘leading range,’ eventually
-landing the party upon a grassy plateau, and not in a horrible craggy
-defile. He it was who gauged to a quarter of an hour the time for
-grazing, and so reaching a favourable corner in time to camp. He saw the
-pack-saddles properly loaded, apportioned the spare horses, and
-commanded saddle-stuffing. Did a tired youngster feel overcome by the
-desire of sleep, so strong in the lightly-laden brain of youth, allowing
-his side of the drove to ‘draw out,’ he was often surprised on waking to
-see them returning with a dark form pacing silently behind them. Did a
-tricky stock-rider—for they were not all models of Spartan virtue—essay
-to shirk his just share of work, he found a watchful eye upon him, and
-perhaps heard a reminder, couched in the easily comprehended language of
-‘the droving days.’
-
-Before they had been a week on the new division of their journey, every
-one was fain to remark these qualities in their leader.
-
-‘I say, Argyll,’ said Fred Churbett, who, with Ardmillan and Neil
-Barrington, had ridden forward from the rearguard, leaving it to the
-easy task of following the broad trail of the leading herd, ‘how about
-going anywhere with that compass of yours? Could you steer us as
-Warleigh does through this iron-bark wilderness?’
-
-‘I am free to confess, Fred, that it does good occasionally to have the
-conceit taken out of one. You must admit, however, that he has been over
-the ground before. Still, he seems to have a kind of instinct about the
-true course when neither sun nor landmarks are available, which
-travellers assert only savages possess. You remember that dull, foggy
-day? He had been away only an hour when he said we were making a
-half-circle, and so it proved.’
-
-‘And the confounded scrub was so thick,’ said Ardmillan, ‘that I tore
-the clothes off my back hunting up a pack-horse. But for the tracks, I
-knew no more than the dead where I was.’
-
-‘This half-savage life he has lived has developed those instincts,’ said
-Churbett. ‘He could do a little scalping when his blood was up, I
-believe. I saw him look at that cheeky ruffian Jonathan as if he had a
-good mind to break his neck. Pity he missed the education of a
-gentleman.’
-
-‘He is ignorant, of course, poor chap, from no fault of his own,’ said
-Argyll; ‘but he is not to be called vulgar either. Blood is a great, a
-tremendous thing; though he doesn’t know enough for a sergeant of
-dragoons, yet there is a grand unconsciousness in his bearing and a
-natural air of authority now that he is our commanding officer, which he
-derives from his family descent.’
-
-That night they reached the base of a vast range, which, on the morrow,
-they were forced to ascend; afterwards, still more difficult, to
-descend. This meant flogging the reluctant cattle every step of the
-downward, dangerous track. Above them towered the mountain; below them
-the precipice, stark and sheer, three hundred feet to the granite
-boulders over which the foaming Snowy rolled its turbulent course to the
-iron-bound coast of a lonely sea.
-
-Mr. Churbett and others of the party had a grievance against Destiny, as
-having forced them from their pleasant homes to roam this trackless
-wild, but no such accusation was heard from the lips of Gerald O’More.
-His spirits were at the highest possible pitch. Everything was new,
-rare, and delightful. The early rising was splendid, the droving full of
-enjoyment, the scenery enthralling, the watching romantic, the shooting
-splendid, the society characteristic. He made friends with all the men
-of the party, but the chosen of his heart was old Tom, who discovered
-that O’More had known of his old patron in Mayo. He thereupon conceived
-a strong liking and admiration for him, as a ‘rale gintleman from the
-ould counthry.’
-
-Daily the old man recounted legends of the early days of colonial life,
-and instructed him in the lore of the sportsmen of the land. So when the
-cattle were ‘drawing along’ quietly, or feeding under strict
-guardianship, Tom and he would slip off with the dogs, which generally
-resulted in a kangaroo tail baked in the ashes for the evening meal, a
-brush turkey, or a savoury dish of ‘wallaby steamer’ for the morning’s
-breakfast.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Wilfred’s watch was ended. He was anxious enough to find his couch in
-the tent, where he could throw himself down and pass instantly into the
-dreamless sleep which comes so swiftly to the watcher. But he saw their
-leader move off on his round, with his usual stately stride, as if sleep
-and rest were superfluous luxuries.
-
-The morn arose, tranquil, balm-breathing, glorious. As the cattle
-followed the course of a stream through the still, trackless forest, a
-feeling of relief, amounting to exhilaration, pervaded the whole party.
-It was generally known that the outskirts of the wilderness would be
-reached that evening—that ere another day closed they might have a
-glimpse of the long-sought land of promise.
-
-Every one’s wardrobe was in a dilapidated and unsatisfactory condition.
-The horses were jaded, the cattle leg-weary, the men tired out, with the
-dismal monotony of the wilderness.
-
-The stage of this day was unusually short; indeed, not above half of the
-usual distance. The leader, Hubert, wished the rearguard to close up, in
-case of accidents. In the event of a surprise, they must have their
-whole available force within call.
-
-As is customary, there were dissentients. ‘Why lose half a stage?’ ‘Why
-not send a scout forward? The wild men of the woods might, after all, be
-peaceably inclined.’ This last suggestion was Argyll’s, who, always
-impatient, could with difficulty brook the slow, daily advance of the
-leading drove. The impetuous Highlander, who had not hitherto had
-experience of hand-to-hand fighting with the wild tribes of the land,
-was inclined to undervalue the danger of an attack upon a well-armed
-party.
-
-But Hubert Warleigh, in this juncture, showed that he was not disposed
-to surrender his rights as a duly appointed leader. ‘I am sorry we don’t
-agree,’ he said; ‘but I take my own way until we reach the open country.
-As to the blacks, no man can say I was ever afraid of them (or of
-anything else, for that matter), only I know their ways. You don’t, of
-course, and I think it the right thing to be well prepared. Old Tom saw
-a heavy lot of tracks yesterday—all of fighting men too, not a gin or a
-picaninny among them. He didn’t like the look of it. We must camp as
-close as we can to-night, and keep a bright look-out, or Faithfull’s men
-won’t be all they’ll have to brag about.’
-
-Argyll thought these were groundless fears; that they were losing time
-by remaining in this hopeless wilderness longer than was necessary. But
-he was outvoted by the others.
-
-Meanwhile the first drove, after having been fed until sundown, was
-camped in a bend of the sedgy creek, and the usual watch-fires lighted.
-This spot was peculiarly suitable, inasmuch as the long line of an
-outcrop of volcanic trap, which ran transversely to the little
-watercourse, closed one side of the half-circle. This was not, of
-course, an actual fence, but being composed of stone slabs and enormous
-boulders, did not invite clambering on by the footsore cattle.
-
-The other contingent was camped a short distance in the rear, in an
-angle of the lava country, also thickly timbered.
-
-With the lighting of the watch-fires and the routine attention to the
-ordinary duties of the camp, a more tranquil spirit pervaded the party.
-Argyll’s impatience had subsided, and, with his usual generosity, he had
-taken upon himself the task of making the round of the camps, and seeing
-that the order as to each man having his firearms ready, with a supply
-of cartridges, was carried out. Fred Churbett grumbled a good deal at
-having to take all this trouble for invisible or problematical savages.
-
-‘By me sowl, thin, Mr. Churbett,’ said old Tom, ‘if ye had one of their
-reed spears stickin’ into ye for half a day, as I had wanst, you’ld
-never need twice tellin’ to have yer gun ready, like me, night and day.
-’Tis the likes of me knows them, and if it wasn’t for Gyp Warleigh, it’s
-little chance some of yees ’ud have to see yer friends agin.’
-
-‘Don’t you think he’s frightening us all?’ said Gerald O’More, with a
-careless laugh. ‘They must be wonderful fellows, by all accounts. They
-have no bows and arrows, not even wooden swords, like Robinson Crusoe’s
-savages. Surely they don’t hit often with these clumsy spears of theirs.
-Warleigh’s anxiety is telling upon his nerves.’
-
-Old Tom glared wrathfully into the speaker’s eyes for a little space
-before he answered; when he did, there was an air of bitter disdain,
-rarely employed by the old man in his intercourse with gentlemen.
-
-‘Sure ye don’t know the man, nor the craytures yer spakin’ about, half
-as well as ould Crab there. Why would ye, indade, and ye jist out of the
-ship and with the cry of the Castle Blake hounds still in yer ears. It’s
-yerself that will make the fine bushman and tip-top settler in time, but
-yer spoilin’ yerself, sir, talkin’ that way about the best bushman
-between this and Swan River, I don’t care where the other is. Take care
-of _yerself_ then, Mr. O’More, when the spears begin flyin’, and don’t
-get separated from the party, by no manner of manes.’
-
-‘You may depend upon me, Tom,’ said O’More, with a good-humour that
-nothing was apparently able to shake. ‘My hands were taught to keep my
-head. I have been in worse places than this.’
-
-‘Bedad, if ye seen a blackfellow steadyin’ his womrah to let ye have a
-spear at fifty yards, or comin’ like a flash of lightning at ye wid only
-his nullah-nullah, ye’d begin to doubt if ye iver _wor_ in a worse
-place.’
-
-‘There’s something in this country that alters the heart of an
-Irishman,’ said O’More, ‘or I’d never hear one talk of a scrimmage with
-naked niggers as if it was a bayonet charge at a breach.’
-
-‘There’s Irishmen that’s rogues. I’m never the man to deny there’s fools
-among them,’ said the old man sardonically. ‘Maybe we’ll know who’s
-right and who’s wrong by this time to-morrow. My dogs has had their
-bristles up all day, and there’s blacks within scent of us this blessed
-minit, if I know a musk-duck from a teal.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-How fades the turmoil and distraction of daily thought beneath the cool,
-sweet, starry midnight! As each man paced between the watch-fires,
-gazing from time to time towards the recumbent drove, the silent, dark,
-mysterious forest, the blue space-eternities of the firmament, a feeling
-of calm, approaching to awe, fell on the party. High over the dark line
-of the illimitable forest rose towering snow-clad pinnacles, ghostly in
-their pallid grandeur. The rivulet murmured and rippled through the
-night-hush, plainly audible in the oppressive silence.
-
-‘One would think,’ said Argyll to O’More, as they met on one of their
-rounds by a watch-fire, ‘that this night would never come to an end.
-What possesses me I can’t think, but I have an uncanny feeling, as Mrs.
-Teviot would say, that I cannot account for. If there was a ghost
-possible in a land without previous occupation, I should swear that one
-was near us this minute.’
-
-‘Do you believe in ghosts then?’ asked O’More.
-
-‘Most certainly,’ said Argyll, with cheerful affirmation; ‘all
-Highlanders do. We have our family Appearance—a spectre I should
-recommend no man to laugh at. But that something is going to happen I
-will swear.’
-
-‘What on earth _can_ happen?’ said O’More. ‘If it be only these skulking
-niggers, I wish to Heaven they would show out. It would be quite a
-relief after all this humbug of Warleigh’s and that old fool of a
-stock-rider.’
-
-‘The old man’s no fool,’ said Argyll gravely; ‘and though I felt annoyed
-with Warleigh to-day, I never have heard a word against his courage and
-bushmanship. Here he comes. By Jove! he treads as silently as the
-“Bodach Glas” himself. What cheer, General?’
-
-Hubert held up a warning hand. ‘Don’t speak so loud,’ he said; ‘and will
-you mind my asking you to stand apart and to keep a bright look-out till
-daylight? Old Tom and I and the dogs are agreed that the blacks are not
-far off. I only hope the beggars will keep off till then. I intend to
-get out of this tribe’s “tauri” to-morrow. In the meantime have your
-guns handy, for you never can tell when a blackfellow will make his
-dart.’
-
-‘I shouldn’t mind going into half-a-dozen with a good blackthorn,’ said
-O’More. ‘It’s almost cowardly to pull a trigger at naked men armed with
-sharp sticks.’
-
-Hubert Warleigh looked straight at O’More’s careless, wayward
-countenance for a few seconds before he answered; then he said, without
-sign of irritation:
-
-‘You will find them better at single-stick than you have any idea of.
-You are pretty good all round, but you can’t allow for their wild-cat
-quickness. As for the sharpened sticks, as you call them, if you get one
-through you, you won’t have the chance of saying where you would like
-another. Don’t go too near the rocks; and if they make a rush, we must
-stand them off on that she-oak hill.’
-
-‘And what about the cattle?’ asked Argyll.
-
-‘Let them rip. Blacks can’t hurt them much. They may spear a few, but we
-can muster every hoof again inside of ten days. There are no other herds
-for them to mix with, and they won’t leave the water far. I must move
-round now, and see that the men are ready.’
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII
- THE BATTLE OF ROCKY CREEK
-
-
-‘By Jove!’ said Argyll, ‘this looks serious. I must get away to my fire.
-We _must_ stick to his directions. I’m in good rifle practice; they’ll
-remember me in days to come!’
-
-As O’More shrugged his shoulders and moved off, a shower of spears
-whistled through the air, while a chorus of cries and yells, as though
-from a liberated Inferno, rang through the woods along the line of the
-broken, stony country, though no human form could be seen.
-
-The commotion created by this sudden onslaught, in spite of Hubert
-Warleigh’s precautions, was terrific. The startled, frantic cattle
-dashed through the watch-fires, scattering the brands and almost
-trampling their guardians underfoot. Then the heavy-footed droves rolled
-away, madly crashing through the timber, until the echo of their hoofs
-died away in the distance. Several head, however, had been mortally
-wounded, well-nigh transfixed in some cases. They staggered and fell.
-
-At the first surprise of the onset, guns were fired with an instinctive
-desire of reprisal, but no settled plan of defence seemed to be
-organised. Then amid the tumult was heard the trumpet-like voice of
-Hubert Warleigh.
-
-‘Every man to his tree; don’t fire till you are sure; look out for the
-rocks! Keep cool. We have only to stand them off for an hour. It’s near
-daylight.’
-
-His words reassured all. And a shot which came from his double-barrelled
-rifle apparently told, as a smothered yell was heard from the cover.
-
-‘Take that, ye murdtherin’ divils!’ said old Tom, who had crawled behind
-a fallen log, and now raising himself, poured three shots from a gun and
-a brace of horse-pistols into the enemy. ‘I seen one of ye go down thin,
-and it’s not the only one we’ll have this blessed night.’
-
-‘There’s number two,’ said Gerald O’More, as he rolled over a tall man
-with stripes of white and red pigment, who had dashed out for an
-instant.
-
-‘Well done, O’More!’ cried Hubert, with a cheery ring in his voice.
-‘Make as much noise as you like now, but don’t give away a chance. Look
-out!’—as three spears hissed dangerously close—‘you’ll be hit if you
-don’t mind, and——’
-
-‘Hang the brutes!’ shouted O’More. ‘We could charge if we could only see
-them. What do you think of it, Hamilton?’
-
-‘We shall come out straight,’ said that gentleman, with his customary
-coolness, ‘if we behave like disciplined troops and not like recruits.
-Pardon me, O’More, but this impetuosity is out of place. If one of us
-get hurt it may demoralise the men and give the blacks confidence.’
-
-‘Never fear,’ said the excited young man. ‘It’s not the front rankers
-that drop the fastest. By George!’ This half-ejaculation was elicited by
-a spear-point which, passing between the arm and body, grazed his side.
-
-‘I told you so,’ said Hamilton. ‘Why the deuce can’t you behave
-reasonably! These imps of darkness can see us better than we see them.
-How they are yelling in the rear!’
-
-‘That’s to draw us off,’ said Gerald. ‘I won’t go behind a tree now, if
-I was to be here for seven years. But that spear didn’t come far. It’s
-one they throw with the hand—old Tom taught me that much; I’ll have the
-scoundrel if I see the night out.’
-
-A sustained volley along the line from the main body of stock-riders at
-the rear, headed by Ardmillan, Neil Barrington, and Argyll, appeared to
-have told upon the enemy. More than one dying yell was heard. The spears
-were less constant, and though several blows and bruises had been
-inflicted by thrown boomerangs and nullahs, no serious casualty had
-occurred among the white men.
-
-On the right wing of the advanced guard old Tom had ensconced himself
-behind a huge fallen tree, which hid both himself and his dogs. These
-last growled ominously, but took no further part, as yet, in the fray.
-
-From behind his entrenchment the old man fired rapidly, from time to
-time loudly exulting, as a death-cry rang out on the night air or a
-spear buried itself in the fallen tree.
-
-‘Throw away, ye infernal black divils!’ shouted the old man; and after
-the cautious stillness it was strange to hear the reckless tones echoing
-through the forest shades. ‘I’ll back the old single-barrel here against
-a scrubful of yees—always belavin’ in a little cover.’
-
-‘Tek it cool, full-private Glendinning,’ said Dick Evans, who had
-advanced in light-infantry skirmishing order from the rear. ‘Not so much
-talking in the ranks, and mark time when ye’re charging the inimy; it
-looks more detarmined and collected-like—as old Hughie Gough used to
-say. Please God, it’ll soon be daylight; perhaps they’d gather thick
-enough then to let us go at ’em with the bayonet like.’
-
-‘Maybe ye won’t be so full of yer pipeclay if ye gets one of thim reed
-spears into ye—my heavy curse on them! Mr. Hubert says he catched a
-sight of that divil’s-joynt of a Donderah; the thribe says he was niver
-known to lave a fight without a dead man’s hair.’
-
-‘He don’t know white men yet,’ said Dick, ‘’ceptin’ he’s sneaked on to a
-hut-keeper. He’ll be taken down to-night if he don’t look out! Well
-done, Master Guy!’
-
-This exclamation was due to the result of a snapshot from Guy, who had
-drawn trigger upon a savage, who, bounding forward, had thrown two
-spears with wonderful rapidity, and bolted for his cover, his whole
-frame quivering with such intensity of muscular action, that the limbs
-were scarcely visible in the dim light. However, the keen eyes and ready
-aim of youth were upon him; he reached the scrub but to spring upward
-and fall heavily back, a dead man.
-
-Although none of the whites had as yet been wounded, while several of
-their savage enemies had been disabled or killed outright, still the
-contest was unsatisfactory.
-
-They were uncertain as to the number of their enemies, who, concealed in
-the scrub, sent forth volleys of spears. Occasionally an outburst of
-cries and yells arose, so fiendishly replete with hatred, that the
-listeners in that sombre forest involuntarily felt their blood curdle.
-For aught they knew, the tribe might be gradually surrounding them.
-Indeed, an attempt of this kind was made. But it was frustrated by their
-watchful leader, who charged into the darkness with a few picked men,
-and drove the wily savages back to the main body.
-
-On this occasion he had caught a glimpse of the giant Donderah, whose
-cruelty had been a chronicle of the tribe.
-
-‘I can’t make out where the big brute got to,’ he said to old Tom, ‘or I
-should be easier in my mind. He’s a crafty devil, though he’s so big and
-strong, and he has some superstition, they told me, about never going
-out of a fight without a death to his credit. He knows about me, too,
-though we never met. It wasn’t his fault that I got back alive. A black
-girl told me that. They named him after the mountain. There’s not a
-blackfellow from here to the coast that can stand before him, they say.
-If O’More doesn’t take care, he’ll have him as sure as a gun. I have
-half a mind to see if he has dropped flat in that stone gunya.’
-
-It happened just then that one of the lulls, common in savage warfare,
-took place. Hubert Warleigh flitted, noiseless and shadow-like, to
-another part of the camp, lest a diversion should be effected in a
-weaker spot.
-
-Before changing position he gave instructions to old Tom, whose
-practised eye and ear could be depended upon, and whose distrust of the
-savage he knew to be proof against apparent security.
-
-‘I’ll be back soon,’ he said, ‘for if Donderah did not fall back with
-the others, we are none of us too safe. I’ve known him drag a man out,
-with half a tribe close to his heels.’
-
-Old Tom was much of the same opinion, for at the border stations tales
-of the Myall blacks were told by the aboriginals employed about the
-place. The exploits of the Titanic Donderah, ‘cobaun big fellow and
-plenty boomalli white fellow,’ had attained Homeric distinction.
-
-The old man peered keenly through the dim glades, and listened as he
-bent forward, still sheltered by his tree, and resting one hand upon the
-neck of the dog Smoker, whose low growling he strove to repress.
-
-‘Bad scran to ye,’ he said, ‘do ye want every murdtherin’ thief of the
-tribe to know the tree I’m under? Maybe _he’s_ not far off, and ye’re
-winding him. I never knew yer tongue to be false, or I’d dhrive in the
-ribs of ye. Ha, ye big divil!’ he screamed, ‘ye’re there afther all;
-’twas a bould trick of ye to hide in that stone gunya. Ye nearly
-skivered that gay boy from the ould country. Holy saints! sure he’s a
-dead man now! Was there ever such a gommoch!’
-
-This uncomplimentary exclamation was called forth by the apparition of a
-herculean savage, who leaped out of the lava blocks of the rude,
-circular miami—a long-abandoned dwelling-place, probably a century old,
-and but slightly raised above the basaltic rocks of the promontory.
-Starting up, as if out of the night, he flung two spears at the only
-white man unsheltered. Like a diving seal he cast himself downwards, and
-was again invisibly safe.
-
-One of the javelins nearly made an end of Gerald O’More. It was from
-such weapons, hurled with a sinewy arm, that the half-dozen cattle in
-the camp had fallen. They found, next morning, that a spear, piercing
-the flank, had gone _clean through_ an unlucky heifer, and passed out at
-the other side.
-
-However that may have been, Gerald the Dauntless was not the man to
-remain to be made a target of. Rushing forward, with a shout that told
-of West of Ireland associations, he charged the miniature citadel,
-determined to kill or capture his enemy. Before he reached the
-apparently deserted gunya, a dark form might have been observed by eyes
-more keen for signs of woodcraft, to worm itself, serpentlike, along the
-path which O’More trod heedlessly.
-
-As if raised by magic from the earth, suddenly the huge Donderah stood
-erect in his path, and with the bound of a famished tiger, sprang within
-Gerald’s guard. The barrel of his fowling-piece was knocked up, and with
-one tremendous blow the Caucasian lay prone upon the earth. His foe
-commenced to drag him within the circle of the (possibly) sacrificial
-stones.
-
-But before he could effect his purpose, a hoarse cry caused the savage
-to pause and falter. Hubert Warleigh, with his gun clubbed, was bounding
-frantically towards the triumphant champion.
-
-But the distance was against the white man, though his panther-like
-bounds reduced the race to a question of seconds.
-
-‘Hould on, Mr. Hubert!’ yelled old Tom, who had quitted his coign of
-vantage, followed by the excited dogs, no longer to be restrained.
-‘Sure, we’ll have him, the murdtherin’ thafe. The others is fell back,
-since thim two dropped to Mr. Hamilton’s pay-rifle—more power to him.
-Here, boys! hould him! hould him! Smoker! Spanker! soole him!’
-
-The old man yelled like a fiend; and as the startled savage saw the grim
-hounds stretching to the earth in full pursuit of him, he dropped his
-prey in terror of the unaccustomed foe.
-
-‘At him, Spanker! hould him, Smoker!’ screamed the old man, ‘tear the
-throat of him. Marciful Saver! did any one ever see the like of that!
-But I’ll have the heart’s blood of ye, if ye were the Diaoul out of h—l,
-this—night.’
-
-This mixture of religious adjuration and profanity from the lips of the
-excited old stock-rider was elicited by another cast of the fatal dice.
-
-As the brawny savage glanced at the dogs, which were rapidly nearing
-him, and upon the powerful form of Hubert Warleigh, who bade fair to
-challenge him before he could reach his covert, loaded as he was, he
-unwillingly relinquished his victim. With a couple of bounds he reached
-the gunya, where, crouching behind the largest boulder, he awaited the
-attack. But it was not like Hubert Warleigh to leave the wounded man.
-Stooping for a moment, he raised O’More in his arms, with a violent
-effort threw him across his shoulder, and marched towards the
-encampment.
-
-As he half turned in the effort, the savage raised himself to his full
-height, and, poising a spear, stood for a moment as if uncertain whether
-he should expend its force upon the old stock-rider and his dogs or
-against his white antagonist.
-
-At that moment a yell from the main body of blacks showed that they had
-been forced to retreat. He was therefore separated from his companions,
-towards whom the wary stock-rider was advancing with a view of cutting
-him off.
-
-‘Look out!’ shouted the old man to Hubert, as he marked the savage take
-sudden aim. ‘By——! he’ll nail you!’
-
-At the warning cry Hubert swung half round, turning his broad breast to
-the foe and shielding his unconscious burden as best he might. The wild
-warrior drew himself back for an instant, and then—like a cloth-yard
-shaft from a strong yew bow—the thin, dark, wavering missile sped only
-too truly. Deeply, venomously it pierced the mighty chest, beneath which
-throbbed the true and fearless heart of Hubert Warleigh. Freeing one
-hand, he broke the spear-shaft across like a reed-stalk, and without
-stay or stagger strode forward with his burden.
-
-As the last battle scene was enacted, the dawn light struggled through a
-misty cloud-rack, and permitted clearer view of the tragedy to the rank
-and file of the expedition.
-
-When the deadly missile struck their leader, a wild shout broke from the
-whites, and a charge in line was made towards the stone gunya,
-immediately in the rear of which the main body of the natives had
-collected for a desperate stand.
-
-As if in answer, a strange, unnatural cry, half human only, burst upon
-their ears. They turned to behold a singular spectacle. Carried away by
-his exultation at the triumph of his aim and his revenge upon the foeman
-who had baulked him of his prey, the champion of a primeval race
-lingered ere he turned to flight in the direction of his companions.
-
-He was too late. The bandogs of destiny were upon him, grim, merciless,
-with red glaring eyes and gleaming fangs. In his attention to his spear
-he had forgotten to pick up his nullah-nullah (or club), with which he
-would have been a match for any canine foe. A few frantic bounds were
-made by the doomed quarry as the eager dogs looked wolfishly up into his
-terror-stricken countenance. Another step, and the red dog, springing
-suddenly, seized his throat with unrelaxing grip, while Spanker’s sharp
-tusks sank into his flank, tearing at the quivering flesh as he fell
-heavily upon the earth.
-
-‘Whoo-whoop, boys! Whoop!’ screamed old Tom, breathless and excited to
-the blood-madness of the Berserker. ‘That’s the talk. Worry, worry,
-worry! good dogs, good dogs! At him Spanker, boy, ye’re blood up to the
-eyes. Stick to him, Smoker, throttle him like a dingo. How the eyes of
-him rolls. Mercy be hanged!’ he replied in answer to the protest of one
-of the men. ‘What mercy did he show to Mr. Hubert, and him helpless,
-with that gossoon in his arms? Maybe ye didn’t think of the harm ye were
-doing, ye black snake that ye are,’ he continued, apostrophising the
-writhing form, which the ruthless hounds dragged to and fro with the
-ferocity of their kind; the brindle dog revelling in the dreadful
-banquet, wherein his head was ever and anon plunged to the glaring eyes,
-while the red hound held his fell grip upon the lacerated throat.
-
-‘Maybe it’s kind father to ye to dhrive yer spear through any mortial
-craychur that belongs to a strange thribe, white or black. There’s more
-like ye, that’s had betther tachin’, so I’ll give ye a riddance out of
-yer misery. And it’s more than ye’d do for me av ye had me lyin’ there
-under the fut of ye.’
-
-With this closing sentiment, nearer to recognition of a sable brother
-than he had ever been known to exhibit, the old stock-rider raised his
-gun. ‘Come off, ye divils! d’ye hear me, now?’ he said, striking the
-brindle dog heavily with his gun, who then only drew off, licking his
-gory lips and looking greedily at the bleeding form; while the red dog,
-more obedient or less fell of nature, relinquished his hold at the first
-summons.
-
-‘Ye’ve had yer punishment, I’ll go bail, in this world, whatever happens
-in the next,’ said the old man grimly, as he pulled the trigger of his
-piece in a matter-of-fact manner. The charge passed through the skull of
-the mangled wretch, who, leaping from the earth and throwing out his
-arms in the death agony, fell on his face with a crash.
-
-‘There’s an ind of ye,’ said the ruthless elder. ‘The blood of a betther
-man will be cowld enough before the day’s out. Come away, dogs, ye’ve
-had divarshion enough for one huntin’. Sure, they’re far away—the black
-imps of Satan,’ he said, as he listened intently to a distant chorus of
-wailing cries. ‘It’s time to get the camp in order. I wonder when we’ll
-git thim bullocks agin?’
-
-It was indeed time to comply with the old man’s suggestion. Leaving the
-quivering corpse, the men turned away with a sense of relief, to
-commence their less tragic duties. At the camp much was to be arranged;
-all disorder was rife since the attack.
-
-Huddled together were heaps of flour-bags, camp-kettles, and pannikins.
-The tents were overthrown, torn, and bedraggled. The frantic cattle had
-stampeded over the spot chosen with circumspection by the cook, as the
-strewn débris of beef and damper witnessed.
-
-The horses were nearly all absent—some hobbled, some loose. Not a hoof
-of the horned herd was to be seen. Everything in the well-ordered camp,
-so lately presenting a disciplined appearance, seemed to have been the
-sport of evil genii.
-
-Worse a hundredfold than all, beneath a hastily pitched tent, tended
-with anxious faces by his comrades, was stretched a wounded man, whose
-labouring breath came ever thickly and more blood-laden as the sun rose
-upon the battlefield, which secured for the white man one of the richest
-provinces of Australia. Yes! the stark limbs were feeble, the keen eye
-was dim, the stout heart was throbbing wildly, or feebly pulsating with
-life’s waning flame. Hubert Warleigh lay a-dying! His hour was come. The
-hunter of the hills, the fearless wood-ranger, was helpless as a sick
-child. The weapon of his heathen foe had sped home.
-
-Argyll, Hamilton, Ardmillan, and the others stood around his rude pallet
-with saddened hearts. Each voice was hushed as they watched the spirit
-painfully quitting the stalwart form of him whom they had all learned to
-know and to trust.
-
-‘We have bought our country dearly,’ said Wilfred, as a spasm distorted
-the features of the dying man and caused his strong limbs to quiver and
-writhe. Over his chest was thrown a rug, redly splashed, which told of
-the death-wound, from which the life-blood welled in spite of every
-attempt to staunch it. Beside him sat Gerald O’More, buried in deepest
-grief.
-
-‘Better take the lie of the country from me,’ said the wounded man
-feebly. ‘One of you might write it down, with the bearings of the
-rivers, while my head keeps right. How hard it seems! Just made a start
-for a new country and a new life. And now to be finished off like this!
-The Warleigh luck all over. I might have known nothing could come of it,
-but——’ Here his voice grew choked and indistinct, while from the
-saturated wrappings the blood dripped slowly and with a dreadful
-distinctness upon the earthen floor. A long pause. Again he held up his
-hand. ‘It will take every man that can be spared to get the cattle and
-horses together again. A week ought to do it; it’s easy tracking with no
-others about. You can knock up a “break” to count through. Make sure
-you’ve got the lot before you start away. Leave Effingham and Argyll
-with me. I’ll tell them about the course; you’re near the open country.
-I little thought when I saw it next I should be —should be—like this.’
-
-They obeyed the dying leader to the last. All left the tent except
-Wilfred and Argyll. The success of the expedition depended on the cattle
-being recovered without loss of time. Though a monarch dies, the work of
-this world must go on. Few indeed are they for whom the wheels of the
-mighty machine can be stopped. Hubert Warleigh was the last man to
-desire it.
-
-‘It’s no good stopping to “corroboree” over me,’ he said, with a touch
-of humour lighting up the glazing eye. ‘It’s lucky you haven’t O’More to
-wake as well as me. You won’t laugh at blacks’ weapons any more, eh,
-Gerald?’
-
-‘Small laughing will do me for many a day, my dear boy. You have
-forgiven the rash fool that nearly lost his own life and wasted that of
-a better man? I deserve all I’ve got. But for you—cut off in the prime
-of your days, how shall I ever forget it? Forgive me, Hubert Warleigh,
-as you hope to be forgiven.’
-
-Here the warm-hearted passionate Milesian cast himself on his knees
-beside the dying man, and burying his face in his hands, sobbed aloud in
-an agony of grief and humiliation. ‘Don’t fret over it, O’More,’ said
-the measured tones of the dying man. ‘It’s all in the day’s work. People
-always said I’d be hanged, you know; but I’m going off the hooks
-honourably, anyhow. _You_ couldn’t help it; and, indeed, I was away when
-you charged that poor devil Donderah. I’m afraid old Tom’s dogs mauled
-him badly. But look here,’—turning to Wilfred,—‘you get a pencil and
-I’ll show you how the rivers run. There’s the Bogong Range—and the three
-rivers with the best country in Australia between them. When you come to
-the lower lakes, you can follow them to the sea. There’s an outlet, but
-it’s choked up with sand-bars. Somewhere near the mouth there’s a decent
-harbour and a good spot for a township. It will be a big one some day.
-Now you’re all right and can shift for yourselves. Effingham, I want to
-say a word to you before I go.’
-
-Wilfred bent over him and O’More and Argyll left the tent. ‘Come near
-me,’ he whispered, in tones which, losing strength with the decay of
-life’s force, sounded hollow and dull. ‘I feel it so hard and bitter to
-die. I should have had a chance—my only chance—here, and as head
-explorer I might have risen to a decent position. Such a simple way to
-go under too. If that rash beggar hadn’t mulled it with Donderah I
-should have been right. Some men would have left him there. But I
-couldn’t do it—I _couldn’t_ do it.’
-
-‘Old Tom and his dogs avenged you,’ said Wilfred. ‘They ate Donderah
-alive almost, before the old man shot him.’
-
-‘Poor devil!’ said the dying man; ‘so he came off worse than I did. Old
-Tom wouldn’t show him much mercy. I shan’t be long after him. Hang it!
-what a puff of smoke a fellow’s life is when he dies young. It seems the
-other day I was learning to ride at Warbrok, and Clem and Randal coming
-home from the King’s School for the holidays. Well, the three Warleighs
-are done for now. The wild Warleighs! wild enough, and not a paying game
-either. But I’m running on too fast about all these things, and my
-heart’s going, I feel. Are you sure you’ve got the chart all right, with
-the rivers and the lakes all correct—and the harbour——’
-
-‘I think so. We can make our way to the coast now. But why trouble
-yourself about such matters? Surely they are trifles compared with the
-thoughts which should occupy your last moments?’
-
-‘I don’t know much about that,’ said the stricken bushman, raising
-himself for an instant and looking wistfully in his companion’s face.
-‘If a man dies doing his duty he may as well back it right out. What
-gave me the only real help I ever had? Your father’s kind words and your
-family’s kind acts. They made a man of me. It’s on that road that I’m
-dying now, respected as a friend by all of you, instead of like a dog in
-a ditch or a “dead-house.” Now I have two things to say before I go. I
-want you to have the best run. It’s all good, but the best’s the best,
-and you may as well have it. I was to have my pick.’
-
-Wilfred made a gesture of deprecation, but the other continued, with
-slow persistence:
-
-‘You see where the second river runs into the third one? The lake’s
-marked near it on the south. There’s an angle of flat country there, the
-grandest cattle-run you ever set eyes on. Dry, sheltered rises for
-winter; rich flats and marshes for summer. Naturally fenced too. I
-christened it “The Heart” in my own mind. It’s that shape. So you sit
-down there, and leave Guy on it when you go home. He’ll do something
-yet, that boy. He’s a youngster after my own heart. And there’s one more
-thing—the last—the very last.’
-
-‘Rest yourself, my dear fellow,’ said Wilfred, raising his head and
-wiping the death-damp from his forehead, as his eyes closed in a
-death-like faint. But the dying man raised himself unsteadily to a
-sitting position. An unearthly lustre gleamed in the dim eyes, the white
-lips moved mechanically, as the words, like the murmur of the
-breeze-touched shell, issued from them.
-
-‘I told you I loved your sister Annabel. When I looked at her I thought
-I had never seen a woman before. Tell her she was never out of my head
-for one moment since the day I first saw her. Every step I made since
-was towards a life that should have been worthy of her. I would have
-been rich for her, proud for her, even book-taught for her sake. I was
-learning in spare moments what I should have known as a boy. She might
-never have taken to me—most likely not; but she would have known that
-she had helped to save a man’s life—a man’s soul. Tell her that this man
-went to his death, grieving most for one thing, that he should see her
-face no more. And now, give me your hand, Wilfred, for Gyp Warleigh’s
-time is up.’
-
-He grasped the hand held out to him with a firm and nervous clasp; then
-relinquishing it gradually, an expression of peace and repose overspread
-his face, the laboured breathing ceased. His respiration became more
-natural and easy, but the ashen hue of his face showed yet more
-colourless and grey. The tired eyes closed; the massive head fell back
-on the pillow of rugs; the lower portion of the features relaxed; a
-slight shiver passed over the frame. Wilfred bent closely, tenderly,
-over the still face. The faithful spirit of the last male heir of the
-house of Warleigh had passed away.
-
-When the stock-riders returned that evening after the long day’s
-tracking and heard of their leader’s death, many a wild heart was deeply
-stirred. At day-dawn they dug him a deep grave beneath a mighty
-spreading mountain ash, and piled such a cairn above him that no
-careless hand could disturb the dead. As they removed his clothes for
-the last sad robing process, two small volumes fell from an inner
-pocket.
-
-‘Ha!’ said Neil Barrington, ‘one of them is the book I saw him poring
-over that day. I wonder whether it’s a novel? By Jove, though, who’d
-have thought that? Why, it’s an old History of England. The poor old
-chap was getting up his education by degrees. It makes the tears come
-into one’s eyes.’
-
-Here the good-hearted fellow drew his handkerchief across his face.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV
- GYP’S LAND
-
-
-The cattle were tracked down and regathered without difficulty. In the
-virgin forest no slot but their own could possibly exist. When they
-quitted the scene of their encounter, the explorers passed into a region
-of grand savannahs and endless forest parks, waving with luxuriant
-grasses. Each day awakened fresh raptures of admiration. But the rudest
-stock-rider never alluded to the ease with which they now followed the
-well-fed herd, without a curse (in the nature of an epitaph) upon those
-who had robbed them of a comrade and a commander.
-
-‘A magnificent country,’ said Argyll, as on the third day they camped
-the foremost drove on the bank of a broad river in the marshy meadows,
-on which the cattle spread out, luxuriating in the wild abundance of
-pasture; ‘and how picturesque those snow-peaks; the groves of timber,
-sending their promontories into the plains; the fantastic rocks! It is a
-pastoral paradise. And to think that the only man of our party who fell
-a victim should be poor Warleigh, the discoverer of this land of
-promise!’
-
-‘The way of the world, my dear fellow,’ said Ardmillan. ‘The moment a
-man gets his foot on the threshold of success, Nemesis is aroused. Poor
-Gyp had been fighting against his demon for years, and had reached the
-region of respectability. He would soon have been rich enough to
-conciliate Mrs. Grundy. She would have enlarged upon his ancient birth,
-his handsome face and figure, with the mildest admission that he had
-been, years ago, a little wild. Of course he is slain within sight of
-his promised land.’
-
-‘We had all got very fond of him, and that’s the truth,’ said Hamilton.
-‘He was the gentlest creature, considering his tremendous
-strength—self-denying in every way, and so modest about his own
-endowments. It was very touching to listen to his regrets for the
-ignorance in which he had been suffered to grow up. I had planned,
-indeed, to supply some of his deficiencies after we were settled.’
-
-‘I should think so,’ said Fred Churbett. ‘I wouldn’t have minded doing a
-little myself. I don’t go in for “moral pocket-ankercher” business, but
-a man of his calibre was better worth saving than a province of savages.
-Amongst us we should have coached him up, in a year or so, fit to run
-for the society little-go; and now to think that one of these wretched
-anthropoids should have slain our Bayard!’
-
-‘What made it such a beastly shame,’ said Neil Barrington, ‘is that we
-shall all get “disgustingly rich,” as Hotson said, and be known as the
-pioneers of Gyp’s Land (as the men have christened the district), while
-the real hero lies in a half-forgotten grave.’
-
-‘Time may make us as unthankful as the rest of the world,’ said Wilfred.
-‘We can only console ourselves with the thought that we sincerely
-mourned our poor friend, and that Hubert Warleigh’s memory will remain
-green, long after recognition of his services has faded away. It has had
-a lasting effect upon O’More. The poor fellow believes himself to blame
-for the disaster. I have scarcely seen him smile since.’
-
-‘He’s a good, kind-hearted fellow,’ said Fred Churbett, ‘and I honour
-him for it. He told me that he never regretted anything so much in his
-life as disregarding Warleigh’s advice about the blacks. He said the
-poor chap made no answer to some stupid remarks about being afraid of
-naked savages, but smiled gravely, and walked away without another word.
-Yet, to save O’More’s life, he gave his own!’
-
-‘Whom the gods love die young,’ said Hamilton. ‘Some of us may yet have
-cause to envy him. And now, about the choice of runs. How are we to
-arrange that?’
-
-‘We are now in the good country,’ said Argyll. ‘Towards the coast, we
-shall all meet with more first-class grazing land than we know what to
-do with. I think no one should be nearer than seven miles or more than
-ten miles from any other member of the Association. I for one will go
-nearer to the coast.’
-
-‘And I,’ said Fred Churbett, ‘will stay just where I am. This is good
-enough for me, as long as I can defend myself against the lords of the
-soil.’
-
-There was no difficulty in locating the herds of the association upon
-their ‘pastures new.’ In every direction waved the giant herbage of a
-virgin wilderness. There were full-fed, eager-running rivers, for which
-the melting snow at their sources furnished abundant supplies. There
-were deep fresh-water lakes, on the shores of which were meadows and
-headlands rich with matted herbage.
-
-Wild-fowl swarmed in the pools and shallows. Kangaroos were so plentiful
-that old Tom’s dogs ‘were weary at eve when they ceased to slay,’ and
-commenced to look with indifference upon the scarcely-thinned droves.
-Timber for huts and stock-yards was plentiful; so that axes, mauls, and
-wedges were soon in full and cheerful employment. Each squatter selected
-an area large enough for his stock for the next dozen years, keeping
-sufficiently close to his friends for visiting, but not near enough for
-complications. In truth, the rivers and creeks were of such volume that
-they easily supplied natural boundaries.
-
-As for Wilfred and Guy, they carefully followed out the instructions of
-their lost friend, until they verified the exact site of the ‘run’ he
-had recommended to them. This they discovered to be a peninsula. On one
-side stretched the shore of a lake, and on the other a deep and rapid
-river flowed, forming a natural enclosure many miles in extent, into
-which, when they had turned their herd, they had little trouble in
-keeping them safely.
-
-‘My word!’ said Guy, ‘this is something like a country. Why, we have run
-for five or six thousand head, and not a patch of scrub or a range on
-the whole lot of it. Splendid open forest, just enough for shelter;
-great marshes and flats, where the stock are up to their eyes in grass
-and reeds. When the summer comes, it will be like a garden. It rains
-here _every year_ and no mistake.’
-
-‘We are pretty far south,’ said Wilfred; ‘in somewhere about latitude
-37—no great distance from the sea. That accounts for the climate. You
-can see by the blacks’ miamis, which are substantial and covered with
-thatch, that a different kind of dwelling-place is necessary, even for
-the aboriginals. You will have to build good warm huts, I fancy, or the
-winter gales and sleet-storms will perish you.’
-
-‘You let me alone for that!’ said the ardent youngster. ‘We shall have
-lots of time to work, as soon as the cattle are broken in and the
-working bullocks get strong. Our drays must come by sea; but sledges are
-all right for drawing split stuff. I shall build on that bluff above the
-lake. We can keep a good look-out there for the blacks, that they don’t
-come sneaking up by day or night. Oh, how jolly it all is! If I could
-forget about dear old Hubert, I should be perfectly happy.’
-
-‘I suppose we shall have to choose a site for the township.’
-
-‘Township!’ said Guy. ‘What do we want with a beastly township? Two
-public-houses and a blacksmith’s shop to begin with! The next thing will
-be that they will petition the Government to survey some land and cut it
-up in farms.’
-
-‘Well, that’s true,’ assented Wilfred, smiling at his impetuosity; ‘but
-we must not be altogether selfish. Remember, there is a good landlocked
-harbour and a deep anchorage. A township is morally certain to be
-formed, and we may as well take the initiative. Besides, we promised
-Rockley to let him know if there was any opening for a mercantile
-speculation.’
-
-‘That alters the matter,’ said Guy. ‘I would black old Billy’s boots if
-he was short of a valet—not to mention kind Mrs. Rockley, whom all the
-fellows would walk barefoot to serve. I may be mistaken, but you’re
-rather sweet upon Christabel, ain’t you? I’m not in the marrying line
-myself, but I don’t know a prettier girl anywhere.’
-
-‘Pooh! don’t talk nonsense, there’s a good fellow,’ said Wilfred with a
-dignified air. ‘There are miles of matters to be thought about before
-anybody—dark or fair. But you are right in your feelings about Rockley
-and his dear, kind wife, which makes me proud of my junior partner. We
-shall want somebody to buy and sell for us, to order our stores, etc.;
-and as nothing can come from Sydney on wheels, we shall have to get them
-from that new settlement they call Port Phillip, that we heard at the
-“Snowy” they were making such a talk about. We can’t escape a town; and
-as there is bound to be a chief merchant, we had better elect our own
-King William to that high office and dignity.’
-
-‘With all my heart,’ said Guy; ‘only you frightened me at first, talking
-about a town. We haven’t come all this way—through those hungry forests
-and terrible cold rivers, not to mention the blacks—to be crowded out of
-our runs, for farmers.’
-
-‘You needn’t be alarmed, Guy. Remember, this district is a very large
-one. You will have twenty years’ squatting tenure, you may be sure,
-before an acre of your land is sold.’
-
-Guy was correct in his anticipations of the probability of there being
-water-carriage before long. The surplus hands, who were paid off and
-sent back to New South Wales, talked largely, as is their wont, about
-the wonderful new district. Port Phillip, just settled, had a staff of
-adventurers on hand, ready for any kind of enterprise. Within a few
-weeks a brig, with a reasonable supply of passengers, did actually
-arrive at the little roadstead, which had already been dignified with
-the title of The Port. There was the usual assortment of alert
-individuals that invariably turn up at the last new and promising
-settlement in Australia,—land speculators, storekeepers, gentlemen of no
-particular calling, waifs and strays, artisans and contractors. But
-among the babel of strange tongues resounded one familiar voice, the
-resonant cheery tones of which soon made themselves heard, to the great
-astonishment and equal joy of such of the wayfarers as had assembled at
-the disembarkation. Their old and tried friend, Mr. William Rockley,
-once more greeted them in the flesh.
-
-‘Well, here you all are, safe and sound, except poor Gyp Warleigh!’ said
-that gentleman, after the ceremony of greeting and hand-shaking had been
-most cordially performed. ‘Most melancholy occurrence—terrible, in
-fact—heard of it at Port Phillip—all the news there, of course—very
-rising place. Ran down in the _Rebecca_, brig—nearly ran on shore too.
-Thought I’d come on and see you all; find out if anything was to be
-done. Nothing like first chance, at a new settlement, eh? Queer fellow,
-our captain; too much brandy and water. Catch me sailing with him after
-we get back.’
-
-Mr. Rockley added new life and vigour to the infant settlement. His
-practical eye fixed upon a spot more suitable for a township than The
-Port, which he disparaged as a ‘one-horse’ place, which would never come
-to much. Indifferent anchorage, with no protection against south-east
-gales. Might be made decent with a breakwater; but take time—time. A few
-miles up the river—fine stream, deep water, and good wharfage. He should
-run up a store, and send down a cargo of odds and ends at once. Fine
-district—good soil, splendid climate, and so on. Must progress—_must_
-progress. Never seen finer grass, splendidly watered too. You’ve fallen
-on your feet, I can tell you. All through Gyp Warleigh too. Poor
-fellow!—awful pity!
-
-Mr. Rockley borrowed a horse, rode inland and visited the stations,
-being equally encouraging and sanguine about their prospects. ‘_Can’t_
-go wrong; lots of fat cattle in a year or two; make all your fortunes;
-can’t help it; only look out for the rascally blacks; don’t allow
-yourselves to be lulled into security; have a slap at you again some
-day, take my word for it. Know them well; never trust a blackfellow;
-always make him walk in front of you—can’t help using a tomahawk if he
-sees a chance; keep ’em at arm’s length—no cruelty—but make ’em keep
-their distance. Glorious rains at Yass and all over New South Wales.
-Season changed with a vengeance! Stock rising like mad; ewes two guineas
-a head and not to be got. Cattle, horses, snapped up the moment they’re
-offered. Everybody wild to bring stock overland to Port Phillip. By
-Jove! that _is_ a wonderful place if you like; fine harbour—make
-half-a-dozen of Sydney—thirty miles from the Heads to the town. Not so
-picturesque of course; but splendid open country, plains, forests, and
-fertile land right up to the town. Great place by and by. Nothing but
-speculation, champagne, and kite-flying at present. Bought town
-allotments; buy some more as we go back. You’d better pick up two or
-three corner lots, Wilfred, my boy. Money? Never mind _that_! I’ll find
-the cash. Your security’s first-rate now, I can tell you.’
-
-And so their guest rattled on, brimful of great ideas, large
-investments, and goodwill to all men, as of yore.
-
-Wilfred, who had indeed now no particular reason for remaining, but on
-the contrary many motives to draw him towards The Chase, was only too
-glad to avail himself of a passage in the _Rebecca_, the truculent
-captain notwithstanding. That worthy, who appeared to be a compound of
-sailor and smuggler, with a dash of pirate, swaggered about the beach
-for a few days, and after a comprehensive carouse with such of his late
-passengers as he could induce to join him, announced his intention of
-sailing next day—and did so.
-
-Arrived at Melbourne, as the infant city had just been christened,
-Wilfred was astonished at the life and excitement everywhere
-discernible. On the flats bordering the river Yarra Yarra had been
-hastily erected a medley of huts, cottages, and tents, in which resided
-a miscellaneous rout of settlers, storekeepers, speculators,
-auctioneers, publicans, Government officials, artisans, and labourers.
-
-He witnessed for the first time the initial stage of urban colonisation.
-What he chiefly wondered at was the restless energy, the sanguine
-spirits, the dauntless courage of the miscellaneous host employed in
-founding the southern metropolis.
-
-The situation had been well chosen. The river which bisected the baby
-city, though not broad, was yet clear, deep, and, as its aboriginal name
-implied, ‘ever flowing.’ Large vessels were compelled to remain in the
-bay, but coasters came up the river and discharged on the banks of the
-natural basin, which had decided the site of the town.
-
-Around—afar—stretching even to the distant horizon, were broad plains,
-park-like forests, hill and dale. The soil was rich for the most part;
-while a far blue range to the north-east pointed to an untried region,
-beyond which might lie (ay, and _did_ lie) treasures yet undreamed of.
-
-‘All truly wonderful,’ said Wilfred. ‘The world is a large place, as the
-little bird said. We have got outside of our garden wall with a
-vengeance. How slow it seems of us to have been sitting still at Lake
-William, ignorant of this grand country, only five hundred miles off—not
-to mention “Gyp’s Land.” I wonder if this will ever be much of a town.
-It is a long way from Sydney, which must always be the seat of
-Government.’
-
-‘Will it be much of a place?’ echoed Rockley in a half-amused,
-meditative way. ‘I am inclined to think it will. Let us ask this
-gentleman. How do you do, Mr. Fawkner?’ he said, shaking hands with a
-brisk, energetic personage, who came bustling along the river-bank.
-‘Fine weather. Thriving settlement this of yours. My friend is doubting
-whether it will ever come to much. Thinks it too far from Sydney.’
-
-‘What!’ said the little man, who, dressed in corduroy trousers, with a
-buff waistcoat and long-skirted coat, looked like an Australian edition
-of Cobbett. ‘Will it prosper? Why, sir, it will be the metropolis of the
-South—the London of this New Britain, sir! Nothing can stay its
-progress. Tasmania, where I came from, possesses a glorious climate and
-fine soil, but no extent, sir, no scope. New South Wales has fine soil,
-boundless territory, but eccentric climate. In Port Phillip, sir, below
-35 south latitude, you have climate, soil, and extent of territory
-combined.’
-
-Here the little man struck his stick into the damp, black soil with such
-energy that he could hardly pull it out again.
-
-‘I agree with you,’ said Rockley good-humouredly, smiling at Fawkner’s
-vehemence as if he, personally, were the most imperturbable of men. ‘But
-you won’t get the Sydney officials to do much for you for years to come.
-Five hundred miles is a long way from the seat of Government.’
-
-‘Cut the painter, sir, if they neglect us,’ said the pioneer democrat.
-‘We shall soon be big enough to govern ourselves. Seen the first number
-of the _Port Phillip Patriot_? Here it is—printed with my own hands
-yesterday.’
-
-Mr. Fawkner put his hand into a pocket of the long-skirted coat, and
-produced a very small, neatly printed broadsheet, in which the
-editorials and local news struggled amid a crowd of advertisements of
-auctions, notices of land sales, and other financial assignations.
-
-‘And now, gentlemen, I must bid you good-bye,’ said the little man.
-‘Canvassing for subscriptions to build a wooden bridge across the Yarra.
-Cost a lot of money, but must be done—must be done. Large trade with
-South Yarra—lime, timber, firewood—shortest way to the bay too.’
-
-‘Put us down for five pounds,’ said Rockley. ‘It will improve the value
-of the corner allotments we intend to buy—won’t it, Wilfred? Good-bye.’
-
-‘Wonderful man that,’ said Rockley; ‘shrewd, energetic, rather too fond
-of politics. Came over in the first vessel from Van Diemen’s Land. He
-and Batman thought they were going to divide all this country between
-them. You see that clear hill over there? They say that’s where Batman
-stood when he said, “All that I see is mine, and all that I don’t see.”’
-
-‘Very good,’ said Wilfred. ‘Grand conception of the true adventurer. And
-were his aspirations fulfilled?’
-
-‘Well, he bought all the land hereabouts—a few millions of acres—from
-blackfellows who called themselves chiefs. The other colonists disputed
-his royalty. The Government backed them up, and sent a superintendent to
-reign over them. However, he will do very well. Who’s this tall man
-coming along? St. Maur, as I’m a living sinner!’
-
-And that gentleman it turned out to be, extremely well-dressed, and
-sauntering about as if in Bond Street. His greeting, however, was most
-cordial, and smacked more of the wilderness than of the _pavé_.
-
-‘By Jove!’ he said, ‘you here, Rockley? I was just thinking of you and
-Effingham. Can’t say how glad I am. Come into my miami. What a pity you
-couldn’t have a throw in! Lots of money to be made. Made some myself
-already.’
-
-‘Daresay,’ said Rockley. ‘You’re pretty quick when there’s a spec. on
-hand. What have you been about?’
-
-‘Mixed herd of cattle. Turned overlander, as they call it here; brought
-over one on my own account, and another that I picked up on the road.
-Just going over to see Howie’s horses sold. I want a hack. You come and
-lunch with me and Dutton and Tom Carne. We’re over at “The Lamb”—some
-fellows from Adelaide there.’
-
-‘Certainly,’ said Rockley, always ready for anything in the way of
-speculation or enterprise. ‘Nothing better to do; and, by the way,
-Effingham, _we_ shall want horses for riding home; for, as for going
-back with that atrocious, reckless, buccaneering ruffian, I’ll see him
-d——d first!’
-
-Here the sentence, ending with more force than elegance, merged in the
-loud ringing of an auctioneer’s bell in close proximity to a large
-stock-yard at the corner of Bourke and Swanston Streets, near where a
-seductive soft-goods establishment now stands.
-
-The yard contained over a hundred head of horses, which were permitted
-to run out one at a time, when, being completely encircled by the crowd,
-they remained confused, if not quieted, until their fate was decided.
-
-An upstanding, unbroken grey filly happened to be separated just as they
-arrived—
-
- And struggling fiercely, but in vain,
- And snorting with erected mane.
-
-The desert-born was on the point of being knocked down for fifty pounds,
-when Wilfred, infected by the extravagance of the day, bid another
-pound. She finally became his at the low price of sixty guineas.
-
-‘She’s very green,’ said St. Maur; ‘just haltered, I should say.
-However, she has plenty of condition, and if you are going a journey,
-will be quiet enough in a week.’
-
-‘I like her looks,’ said Wilfred. ‘It’s an awful price; but stock have
-risen so, that we shall reap the advantage in another shape. But for
-Rockley I should have gone back by sea.’
-
-‘I never consider a few pounds,’ said that gentleman, ‘where my life’s
-concerned. I can just tell you, sir, that, in my opinion, the _Rebecca_
-is more than likely never to see Sydney at all if bad weather comes on.
-I shall buy that brown cob.’
-
-After the cob had been bought, and a handsome chestnut by St. Maur, the
-friends strolled up to the famous Lamb Inn, long disestablished, like
-the cafés of the Quartier Latin, and there met with certain choice
-spirits, also rejoicing in the designation of ‘overlanders.’ They seemed
-on terms of intimacy with St. Maur, and cordially greeted his two
-friends. One and all had been lately concerned in large stock
-transactions—had been equally fortunate in their sales. Apparently they
-were minded to indemnify themselves for the perils of the waste by a
-full measure of such luxuries as the infant city afforded.
-
-‘Great place this Melbourne, St. Maur,’ said a tall man with bushy
-whiskers. ‘Decomposed basaltic formation, with an outcrop of empty
-champagne bottles. I saw a heap opposite Northcott’s office yesterday
-like a glass-blower’s débris. As fast as they emptied them they threw
-them out of the window. Accumulation in time—you know.’
-
-‘Northcott does a great business in allotments and house property,’ said
-St. Maur; ‘but it can’t last for ever. Too much of that champagne
-element. But what’s become of Warden—he was to have been here?’
-
-‘Forgot about the hour, I daresay,’ said the man with the whiskers.
-‘Most absent fellow I know. Remember what he said to the Governor’s wife
-at Adelaide? She asked him at dinner what he would take. Joe looked up
-from a dream (not of fair women, but of drovers and dealers), and
-thinking of the cattle he had just brought over, replied, “Six pounds a
-head all round, and the calves given in!”’
-
-Mr. Joe Warden, blue-eyed and fair-haired as Cedric the Saxon, long
-afterwards famed as the most daring and successful of the explorers of
-that historic period, shortly joined them, apologising for his
-unpunctuality by declaring that he had bought two corner allotments and
-a flock of ewes within the last ten minutes.
-
-‘This is the kingdom of unlimited loo as applied to real estate—the
-region of golden opportunity, you see, Rockley,’ said St. Maur. ‘We are
-all hard at it buying and selling from morning to night. Must go the
-pace or be left behind. Half-acre allotments in Collins Street have
-brought as much as seventy pounds this very morning. Try that claret.’
-
-‘Quite right too. A very fair wine,’ quoth Mr. Rockley, slowly savouring
-the ruby fluid. ‘My dear St. Maur, you are right to buy everything that
-you can, as long as your credit lasts. I can see—and I stake my business
-reputation on the fact—a tremendous future in store for this town. It is
-not much in itself. The river’s a mere ditch; the harbour a great ugly
-bay; the site of the town too flat; but the country!—the country around
-is grand and extensive. Nothing can take that away. It is not so rich as
-the spot my friend and I have just left; but it’s fine—very fine. I’m
-not so young as I was, but I shall pitch my tent here and never go back
-to Sydney.’
-
-‘I hope to see Sydney again,’ said St. Maur; ‘but in the meantime I
-shall stay and watch the markets. I quite agree with you that there is
-money to be made.’
-
-‘Of course there is,’ said Rockley; ‘but how long will it last? People
-can’t live upon buying and selling to each other for ever. Some fine day
-there will be an awful smash, in which some of you brisk young people
-will be caught. But the settlement is so first-class in soil and
-situation that it _must_ pull through. I shall buy a few allotments,
-just to give me an interest, as the racing men say.’
-
-‘We can accommodate you,’ said Mr. Raymond. ‘But why don’t you stay and
-set up in business here? You’d make a fortune a month, with your name
-and connections. Never mind Mrs. R. for the present; we’re all bachelors
-here.’
-
-‘I see that—and a very jolly set you are. I wouldn’t mind a month or two
-here at all. But my friend Effingham and I are tied to time to get home,
-and as we’re going overland we haven’t much time to spare.’
-
-‘Well, look us up whenever you come back. The door of the Lamb Inn is
-always open—night or day, for that matter. St. Maur and I are thinking
-of buying it, aren’t we, Bertram, and turning it into a Club? We offered
-Jones a thousand for it, but he wouldn’t take less than twelve hundred.’
-
-‘That would have been only a hundred apiece for a dozen of us,’ said the
-man with the large whiskers, whose name was Macleod. ‘Almost concluded
-it, but Morton died of D.T., Southey got married, and Ingoldsby went
-home. Nice idea, you know, being our own landlords.’
-
-‘Not bad at all,’ said Rockley, who approved of everything when he was
-in a good-humour. ‘A _very_ original, business-like idea. Well, I must
-say good-bye to you all, gentlemen. I really wish I could stay longer.’
-
-‘Stay till next week,’ pleaded Raymond. ‘We are going to give a ball. No
-end of an entertainment. Two real carriages just landed, and the
-families pledged to bring them.’
-
-‘I notice a good many stumps in Collins Street,’ said Wilfred. ‘Won’t
-that be a little dangerous for returning?’
-
-‘Not with decent horses,’ said a young fellow with a dark moustache and
-one arm. ‘I drove tandem through it about two o’clock this morning.’
-
-‘But you do everything so well, Blakesley,’ said St. Maur. ‘Speaking as
-an ordinary person, I must say I should funk the “Rue Bourke” or Collins
-after dark. But that is not our affair. Providence _couldn’t_ injure a
-lady when there are only ten in the community.’
-
-‘What about that brig, the _Rebecca_, that’s sailing to-morrow for
-Sydney?’ said a fresh-coloured, middle-aged personage who had spoken
-little, and, indeed, seemed oppressed with thought. ‘You came down in
-her, Rockley, didn’t you?’
-
-‘Like nothing about her,’ said that gentleman with decision. ‘Badly
-found, badly manned, and the worst thing about her is the skipper. You
-don’t catch me in her again, I can tell you. Effingham and I are going
-overland.’
-
-‘Indeed!’ said the speaker, much surprised. ‘I thought we should have
-been fellow-passengers. I never dreamed of any one riding all the way to
-Sydney, five or six hundred miles, when they could go by sea! If I’d
-known, I’d have changed my mind and started with you. It’s too late now;
-I’ve paid my passage.’
-
-‘Look here, Bowerdale,’ said Mr. Rockley with earnestness, ‘I’ve paid my
-passage, and I forfeit it cheerfully rather than run the risk. If you
-knew Captain Jackson, you’d do it too. He’ll lose the ship and all hands
-some day, as sure as my name’s Rockley.’
-
-‘There’s a good deal of luck in these things, I believe,’ said the
-other. ‘I must risk it anyhow. I can’t afford to lose the money, and I
-want to get back to my wife and chicks as soon as I can. We officials
-haven’t unlimited leave either, you know.’
-
-‘D——n the leave!’ said Mr. Rockley volcanically, ‘and the money too. I’ll
-settle the last for you, and you can pay when you sell that suburban
-land you bought in Collingwood. There’s a fortune in _that_. Your
-chief’s a good fellow; he’ll arrange the leave. Half the Civil Servants
-in Sydney have had a shot at Melbourne land, you know. Say the word, and
-come with us. There’s a spare horse, isn’t there, Effingham?’
-
-‘Lots of horse-flesh,’ said Wilfred, following his friend’s cue. ‘Mr.
-Bowerdale will just complete our party—make it pleasanter for all.’
-
-‘You _are_ a good fellow, Rockley,’ said Mr. Bowerdale, smiling; ‘and I
-thank you, Mr. Effingham; but I can’t alter my arrangements, though I
-feel strangely tempted to do so. I have had a fit of the blues all the
-morning. Liver, I suppose—too much excitement. But I make a point of
-always carrying a thing through.’
-
-‘Take your own way,’ grumbled Rockley. ‘Well, I must be off, St. Maur.
-Effingham, did you forget about the pack-saddle? It’s a strange thing
-nobody can remember anything but myself. St. Maur, I beg to thank you
-and these gentlemen for their most pleasant entertainment. Come and see
-me at Yass, all of you, when you stop land-buying, or it stops you.
-Good-bye, Bowerdale; I can’t help thinking you’re a d——d fool.’
-
-So the worthy and choleric gentleman departed, with his surplus steam
-not wholly blown off. All the way back he kept exploding at intervals,
-with remarks uncomplimentary to his unconvinced friend, who left by the
-_Rebecca_, which, with crew, captain, and passengers, was _never more
-heard of_.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On the following morning Mr. Rockley and Wilfred rode forth along the
-Sydney road, then far from macadamised, and chiefly marked out by
-dray-ruts and a mile-wide trail made by the overlanders. Mr. Rockley
-rode one stout cob and led another. Wilfred bestrode an ambling black
-horse of uncertain pedigree, and led the grey filly, upon whose
-reluctant back he had managed to place a pack-saddle with their joint
-necessaries.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXV
- BOB CLARKE ONCE MORE WINS ON THE POST
-
-
-The homeward-bound horsemen had no difficulty about the road, well
-marked as it was by the travelling stock. There was also, as now, a mail
-service from Sydney. They met the mailman about half-way. He was riding
-one horse and leading another; he had often to camp out without fire,
-for fear of blacks. In due time they reached the site of the border town
-of Albury, on the broad waters of the Murray, all unknowing of the great
-wine-cellars its grapes were yet to fill, with reisling, muscat, and
-hermitage in mammoth butts, rivalling that of Heidelberg. Much less did
-they forecast the iron horse one day to rush forward, breathing woe and
-disquiet to the shy dryad of the river oaks, by the gleaming stream and
-the still depths of the reed-fringed lagoons.
-
-Rude were the ways by which they travelled from the Murray to the
-Murrumbidgee River, by way of Gundagai, the great meadows of which were
-then undevastated by flood. Thence to Bowning, and so on to Yass, in
-which city the travellers were greeted with enthusiasm. The next morning
-saw the younger far on his way to The Chase.
-
-What a change had taken place since the exodus—that memorable departure!
-But one little year had passed away, and what a transformation!
-
-With the season everything had changed; all Australia was altered. Life
-itself was so different from that day when, half-despairingly, they rode
-behind their famished cattle, and turned their faces to the wilderness.
-
-Now it had been crossed; the promised land won—a land of milk and honey
-as far as they were concerned—of olives and vineyards—all the biblical
-treasures—no doubt looming in the future.
-
-For this prosperity the discovery of Port Phillip was accountable,
-conjointly with the lavish, exuberant season. The glorious land of
-mountain and stream, valley and meadow, laden with pastoral wealth and
-bursting with vegetation, had been in a manner gifted to them by the
-gallant, ill-fated Hubert Warleigh. They were all revelling in the
-intensity of life, forming stations, buying and selling, speculating and
-calculating, and where was he? Lying at rest beneath the sombre shade of
-the forest giant, far from even the tread of the men of his race. Left
-to moulder away, with the fallen denizens of the primeval forest; to
-fade from men’s minds even as the echo of the surges, as the spring
-songs of the joyous birds!
-
-It seemed increasingly hard to realise. As he approached the well-known
-track that led from the main road to Warbrok he could see the very tree
-near which he had waved a farewell at their first meeting. There was the
-gate through which they had ridden on the occasion of his second visit,
-when he had been received on terms of equality by the whole family.
-
-‘How glad I am now that we did that!’ Wilfred told himself. ‘We tried
-our best to raise him from the slough into which he had fallen, and from
-no selfish motive; how little we thought to be so richly repaid! One
-often intends a kindness to some one who dies before it is fulfilled.
-Then there is unavailing, perhaps lifelong regret. Here it was not so,
-thank God! And now, home at last——’
-
- * * * * *
-
-Of that happy first evening what description can be given that faintly
-shall suggest the atmosphere of love and gratitude that enveloped the
-family, as once more Wilfred sat among them in the well-remembered room?
-Speech even died away, in that all might revel in an uninterrupted view
-of the returned wanderer. How improved, though bronzed and
-weather-beaten, he was after his wayfaring!
-
-‘And to think that Wilfred has returned safe from those dreadful blacks!
-And oh, poor dear Hubert Warleigh! That fine young man, so lately in
-this room with us, full of health and strength, and now to know that he
-is dead—killed by savages—it is too dreadful!’
-
-‘Mamma! mamma!’ said Annabel, sobbing aloud, ‘don’t speak of it. I can’t
-bear it.’
-
-Here she arose and left the room.
-
-‘She is very sensitive, dear child,’ said Mrs. Effingham. ‘I do not
-wonder at her feeling the poor fellow’s death. I can’t help thinking
-about him, as if he were in some way more than an acquaintance.’
-
-‘You have come back to a land of plenty, my son,’ said Mr. Effingham,
-‘as you have doubtless observed. If you had known that such rain was to
-fall, it might have saved you all the journey.’
-
-‘My dear sir,’ answered Wilfred, ‘don’t flatter yourself that, myself
-excepted, one of our old society will be contented to live here again.
-The land we have reached opens out such an extensive field that no sane
-man would think of staying away from it. Rockley will follow, and half
-Yass, I believe. No one will be left but you and I and the Parson.’
-
-‘What an exodus! It amounts to a misfortune,’ said Rosamond. ‘It seems
-as if the foundations of society were loosened. We shall never be so
-happy and contented again.’
-
-‘We never may,’ said Wilfred; ‘but we shall be ever so much richer, if
-that is any compensation. Stock of all kinds are fetching fabulous
-prices in Port Phillip. By the bye, how is Dr. Fane? His store cattle
-are now worth more than the Benmohr fat cattle used to be.’
-
-‘We had Vera here for a whole month,’ said Rosamond. ‘She is the dearest
-and best girl in the whole world, I believe, and so handsome we all
-think her. She said her father had sold a lot of cattle at a fine price,
-and if he didn’t spend all the money in books, they would be placed in
-easy circumstances.’
-
-As Wilfred paced the verandah, smoking the ante-slumber pipe—a habit he
-had rather confirmed during his journeyings and campings—he could not
-but contrast the delicious sense of peaceful stillness with much of the
-life he had lately led. All was calm repose—amid the peaceful landscape.
-No possibility here of the wild shout—the midnight onset—as little,
-perhaps, of lawless deeds as in their half-forgotten English home. A
-truly luxurious relief, after the rude habitudes and painful anxieties
-of their pioneer life.
-
-The night’s sound sleep seemed to have concentrated the repose of a
-week, when Wilfred awoke to discover that all outer life was painted in
-rose tints. That portion of the herd which had been left behind had
-profited by the unshared pasturage to such an extent that they resembled
-a fresh variety. Daisy and her progeny looked nearly as large as
-shorthorns, and extreme prices had been offered for them, old Andrew
-averred, by the cattle-dealers that now overspread the land.
-
-A field of wheat, by miraculous means ploughed and harrowed, since the
-Hegira, promised an abundant crop.
-
-‘Weel, aweel!’ said Andrew, who now appeared bearing two overflowing
-buckets of milk, ‘ye have been graciously spared to return from yon
-fearsome wilderness, like Ca-aleb and Joshua. And to think o’ that puir
-laddie, juist fa’en a prey to thae Amalekites, stricken through wi’ a
-spear, like A-absolom! Maist unco-omon—ane shall be taen and the t’ither
-left. It’s a gra-and country, I’m hearin’.’
-
-‘The finest country you ever set eyes on, Andrew. The Chase seems a mere
-farm after it. If it was not for the family, I should soon pack up and
-go back there.’
-
-‘I wadna doot. Rovin’ and rampa-agin’ aboot the waste places o’ the
-yearth is aye easy to learn. But ye’ll ken yer duty to yer forebears and
-the young leddies, Maister Wilfred, no’ to tak’ them frae this
-douce-like hame.’
-
-‘Oh yes, I know,’ said Wilfred. ‘Of course I shall stay here, and shall
-be very happy and make lots of money again. All the same, it’s a
-wonderful new country. Half the people here will be wanting to get away
-when they hear about it. But how did you get this fine crop of wheat put
-in without working bullocks? I’m afraid, Andrew, you must have been
-taking a leaf out of Dick Evans’s book, and using other people’s
-cattle.’
-
-‘Weel, aweel!’ said Andrew, looking doubtful, ‘I winna deny that there
-micht be some makin’ free wi’ ither folks’ beasties. But they were juist
-fair savin’ their lives wi’ oor grass parks, and when the rain fell, it
-was a case o’ needcessity to till the land, noo that the famine was
-past.’
-
-With regard to the ‘fatal maid,’ Wilfred Effingham had much difficulty
-in reaching a determination worthy of a man who prided himself upon
-acting on logically defensible grounds. He was by no means too certain,
-either, that he could lay claim to Miss Christabel’s undivided
-affections. So much of her heart as she had to give, he suspected was
-bestowed upon Bob Clarke. If that were so, she would cling to him with
-the headlong hero-worship with which a woman invests the lover of her
-girlhood, more particularly if he happens to be ill-provided with this
-world’s goods.
-
-The result of all this introspection was that Wilfred, like many other
-men, sought refuge in delay. There was no need of forcing on the
-decision. He had work to do at home for months to come. And the marriage
-question might be advantageously postponed.
-
-Unpacking his valise after breakfast, he produced a number of
-newspapers, the which, as being better employed, he had not opened. Now,
-in the leisure of the home circle, the important journals were
-disclosed. Each one, provincially hungry for news, seized upon one of
-the messengers from the outer world. ‘Ha!’ said Wilfred suddenly, ‘what
-is this? Colonel Glendinning, of the Irregular Horse, desperately
-wounded. Wonderful gallantry displayed by him. Chivalrous sortie from
-cantonments. Why, this must be our Major, poor fellow!’
-
-He was interrupted by a faint cry from Beatrice, and looking round he
-saw that she had grown deadly pale. He had just time to catch her
-fainting form in his arms. But she was not a girl who easily surrendered
-herself to her emotions. Rousing herself, she looked around with a
-piteous yet resolved expression, and with an effort collected her mental
-forces.
-
-‘Mother,’ she said, ‘I must go where _he_ is. Tell my father that I have
-always deferred to his wishes, but that now I _must_ join him—I feel
-responsible for his life. Had I but conquered my pride, a word from me
-would have kept him here. And now he is dying—after deeds of reckless
-daring. But I must go; I will die with him, if I cannot save him.’
-
-‘Dearest Beatrice, there is no need to excite yourself,’ said the fond
-yet prudent mother. ‘You have only to go to your father. He will consent
-to all that is reasonable. I myself think it is your duty to go. Major
-Glendinning is severely wounded, but good nursing may bring him round. I
-wish you had a companion.’
-
-‘Where could you have a better one than Mrs. Snowden?’ cried Annabel
-hastily. ‘She said she half thought of going home by India, and I know
-she does not care which route she takes. She has been there before, and
-knows all about the route. If papa would only make up his mind to go,
-half the trouble would be off his mind, and he would enjoy the voyage.’
-
-‘There could not be a more favourable time, my dear sir,’ said Wilfred
-in the family council at a later hour. ‘I shall be here now. It is a
-matter of life and death to poor Beatrice as well as to the Colonel. You
-had better arrange to start by the first vessel, and to bring back some
-Arab horses on your return.’
-
-‘It is the only thing to be done,’ said Rosamond, who had just returned
-from her sister’s room. ‘I wouldn’t answer for Beatrice’s reason if she
-is compelled to wait here. She has repressed her feelings until now, and
-the reaction is terrible. It is most fortunate that Mrs. Snowden is
-ready to leave Australia.’
-
-Subjected to the family pressure, aided by the promptings of his own
-heart, Mr. Effingham was powerless to resist. The acclimatisation
-question was artfully brought up. He at once yielded, and before the
-evening was over, a letter was in the mail-bag, requesting their Sydney
-agent to take passages by the first outward-bound boat for India, and to
-advise by post, or special messenger, if necessary.
-
-Beatrice, informed of this determination, gradually recovered that
-calmness allied to despair which simulates resignation. She busied
-herself unweariedly in preparation for the voyage, cherishing the hope
-of soothing the last hours of her lover, if indeed it was denied her, to
-watch over his return to the world of love and hope.
-
-Mrs. Snowden arrived on the following day, and cordially acceded to the
-proposition made to her, to share the adventures of the voyage and of
-Indian travel.
-
-‘If you knew,’ she said, ‘how grateful I feel for the opportunity of
-changing the scene of my sorrows and being of use to my friends after
-this lonely life of mine, you would not thank me. I would go many a mile
-by sea or land to nurse the Major myself. Between me and Beatrice he
-will be well looked after.’
-
-All circumstances seemed favourably shaped for the errand of mercy. A
-ship was about to sail for China, whence the opium clippers might be
-trusted for a swift run to the historic land. Almost before the news of
-the intended journey had reached Yass, so that the parson could drive
-over and express his entire concurrence with the arrangement, the little
-party had set out for Sydney.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the fulness of time the very last evening, before the Rockley family
-left Yass, arrived. All the party from The Chase had been in to say
-good-bye, and had returned. Some mysterious business kept Wilfred in
-town, and that special evening he of course spent at Rockley Lodge.
-
-For it was not to be supposed that, on that momentous evening, the
-family declined to see their friends. In the ‘Maison Rockley’ the head
-of the house was so absorbed in his business pursuits that, except at
-dinner-time, and for an hour after, he could hardly be said to possess
-any family life whatever. He was grateful, therefore, for the presence
-of such friends who would take the burden of domesticity, in part, off
-his hands, and made no scruple of expressing, in the family circle, his
-thanks for such services.
-
-It so turned out that, on this particular morning, he had found time,
-for once in a way, to give his daughter an earnest lecture about her
-ridiculous fancy, as he termed it, for Bob Clarke; a young fellow who,
-without any harm in him, would never come to much, or make any money
-worth speaking of, seeing that he was far too fond of those confounded
-horses, out of which no man had ever extracted anything but ruin, in
-Australia. That they had never heard a word from him for ever so long;
-most probably he was flirting away in Tasmania, and did not cast a
-thought upon her. And here was Wilfred Effingham, than whom he did not
-know a finer fellow anywhere—steady, clever, a man of family, and in
-every way desirable. If he liked her, Christabel—he couldn’t say whether
-he did or not, he had no time to trouble about such rubbish—why didn’t
-she take him, and have done with it, and settle down creditably for the
-rest of her life, instead of wasting her time and vexing her
-friends?—and so on—and so on.
-
-Christabel wept piteously during this paternal admonition, delivered, as
-usual, with a loud voice and a fierce expression of countenance, but had
-gone away reflecting that although she was, so to speak, badly treated
-in this instance, yet, as she had succeeded in getting her own way all
-her life, she probably might enjoy a reasonable portion of it in the
-future.
-
-Meanwhile, being fairly malleable and of the texture which is bent by
-circumstances, she began to consider, when alone in her room, whether
-there was not something of reason in her father’s arguments. Here she
-was placed in the position of only having to accept. Of the true nature
-of Wilfred’s feelings she herself had little doubt. There is something,
-too, not wholly without temptation to the female heart in the
-unconditional surrender of the lover, then and there urging his suit.
-There may be also a wild impulse to accept the inevitable, and thus for
-ever extinguish the uneasiness of anxiety and suspended judgment.
-
-Then, Wilfred Effingham was very good-looking—fair perhaps in
-complexion, and she did not admire fair men, but brown-bearded,
-well-featured, manly. All the girls voted him ‘so nice-looking,’ and the
-men invariably spoke of him as a good fellow. He was well off; he would
-have The Chase some day, and she would be the great lady of the Yass
-district, with her carriage and her servants; could entertain _really_
-well. She would also, beyond doubt, be envied by all her schoolfellows
-and girl friends.
-
-The prospect was tempting. She thought of Bob’s dark eyes, and their
-passionate look when he last said good-bye. She thought of the happy
-days when he rode at her bridle-rein, and would lean over to whisper the
-cheery nonsense that amused her. She thought of the thrill at her heart,
-the strange deadness in every pulse, when The Outlaw went down, and they
-lifted Bob up, pale and motionless; of her joy when he appeared next day
-on the course, with his arm in a sling, but with eyes as bright and
-smile as pleasant as ever. These were dangerous memories. But they were
-boy and girl then. Now she was a woman, who must think of prudence and
-the wishes of her parents.
-
-Then Bob would be poor for many a day, if, indeed, he ever rose to
-fortune. Through her heart passed the uneasy dread, which
-gently-nurtured women have, of the unlovely side of poverty, of shifts
-and struggles, of work and privation—of a small house and bad servants,
-of indifferent dresses, and few thereof. Such thoughts came circling up,
-like birds of evil aspect and omen, ready to cluster round the corse of
-the slain Eros.
-
-_Les absens sont toujours torts_, says the worldly adage. In his
-absence, the advocacy for Bob Clarke was perhaps less brave and
-persistent than it would otherwise have been. The girl strove to harden
-her heart, by clinging to the prudent side of the case, and recalling
-her father’s angry denunciations of any other course than an affirmative
-reply to Wilfred Effingham, should he this night tell her the real
-purport of his constant visits.
-
-He himself had resolved to risk his fate on this last throw of the dice,
-and so far everything assisted his plans. Mr. Rockley was in an
-unusually genial frame of mind at dinner—cordial, of course, as ever,
-but unnaturally patient under contradiction and the delays consequent
-upon the cook’s unsettled condition. Mrs. Rockley excused herself after
-that meal as having household matters to arrange. But Christabel, whose
-domestic responsibilities had always been of the faintest, was at
-liberty to remain and entertain Mr. Effingham and her father, indeed she
-was better out of the way at the present crisis. Wilfred had no thought
-of leaving early in order to accommodate his friends in their presumed
-state of bustle and derangement, for it was one of those rare households
-where visitors never seem to be in the way. None of the feminine heads
-of departments were fussy, anxious, ‘put out,’ or had such pressing
-cares that visitors came short of consideration.
-
-Mrs. Rockley’s talent for organisation was such that no one seemed in a
-hurry, yet nothing was left undone. The house was nearly always full of
-inmates and visitors, male and female, with or without children. Still,
-wonder of wonders, there was never any awkwardness or failure of
-successful entertainment. Rockley, personally, scoffed at the idea of
-being responsible for the slightest share of household management. He
-merely exacted the most complete punctuality, cookery, house-room and
-attendance for the ceaseless flow of guests, the cost of which he
-furnished, to do him justice, ungrudgingly. Whatever might need to be
-done next day (if the whole family, indeed, had been ordered for
-execution, as Horace Bower said), William Rockley would have dined and
-conversed cheerfully over his wine, suggested a little music (for the
-benefit of others), smoked his cigar in the verandah, and mocked at the
-idea of any guest being incommoded by the probably abrupt translation of
-the family, or going away a moment before the regulation midnight hour.
-
-Therefore, when Rockley told him that he hoped he was not going to run
-away a moment before the usual time for any nonsensical idea of being in
-the way because they were starting for Port Phillip on the next day
-(what the deuce had that got to do with it, he should like to know?),
-Wilfred fully comprehended the _bona fides_ of the request, and prepared
-himself to make the most of a _tête-à-tête_ with Miss C. Rockley, if
-such should be on the cards.
-
-So it came to pass that while Mr. Rockley and Wilfred were lounging in
-the Cingalese arm-chairs, which still adorned the verandah, Christabel
-betook herself to the piano, whence she evoked a succession of dreamy
-nocturnes and melancholy reveries which sighed through the hushed night
-air as though they were the wailings of the Lares and Penates mourning
-for their dispossession.
-
-‘Bowerdale hasn’t turned up,’ said Rockley abruptly. ‘The _Rebecca_ has
-never been heard of. She sailed the day we left Melbourne. Queer things
-presentiments. You remember his saying he felt hypped, don’t you?’
-
-‘Yes, quite well. What an awful pity that he should have persisted in
-going by her—after your warning, too!’
-
-‘Didn’t like to lose his passage-money, poor fellow!’ continued the
-sympathising Rockley. ‘I’d have settled that for him quick enough, but
-he wasn’t the sort of man to let any one pay for him. Leaves a wife and
-children too. Well, we must see what can be done. Fortune of war might
-have been our case if I hadn’t taken Jackson’s measure so closely.’
-
-‘Happy to think you did,’ said Wilfred, with natural gratitude. ‘If you
-had not been so determined about the matter, I should have risked the
-sea-voyage. I was tired of land-travelling.’
-
-‘We should all have been with “Davy Jones” now. No cigars, eh? This
-claret’s better than salt water? I suppose we all have our work to do in
-this world; mine is not half done yet; yours scarcely begun. By Jove! I
-forgot to leave word at the office about my Sydney address—where to send
-all the confounded packages, about a thousand of them. I’ll run down and
-see that put straight. Don’t you go till I come back. Tell Mrs. Rockley
-she must have a little supper ready for us.’
-
-Rockley lighted a fresh cigar and plunged into the night, while Wilfred
-lost no time in repairing to the piano, which he managed to persuade the
-fair performer to quit for the verandah, under the assumption that the
-room was warm, and the night air balmy in comparison.
-
-For a while they walked to and fro on the cool freestone pavement,
-talking on indifferent subjects, while Wilfred gazed steadfastly into
-the girl’s marvellous eyes, ever and anon flashing under the soft
-moon-rays, as if he could read her very soul. She was dressed that
-evening in a pale-hued Indian muslin, which but partly veiled the
-exquisite graces of her form. How well he remembered it in after-days!
-There was a languor in her movements, a soft cadence in the tone of her
-voice, a quicker sympathy in her replies to his low-toned speech, which
-in some indefinable manner encouraged him to hope. He drew the lounges
-together, and telling her she needed rest, sat by her side.
-
-‘You are really going away,’ he said; ‘no more last farewells, and
-Heaven knows when we shall meet again. I feel unutterably mournful at
-the idea of parting from your mother, Mr. Rockley—and—yourself. My
-sisters were in the depths of despair yesterday. I don’t think it
-affects _you_ in the least.’
-
-‘Why should you think I am hard hearted?’ asked the girl as she raised
-herself slightly, and leaning her face on her hand, curving the while
-her lovely rounded arm, looked up in his face with the pleading look of
-a spoiled child. ‘Do you suppose it is so pleasant to me to leave our
-home, where I have lived all my life, and travel to a new place where we
-know nobody—that is, hardly any one?’
-
-‘How we all—how I,’ said Wilfred, ‘shall miss these pleasant evenings!
-How many a one have I spent in your father’s house since we first met! I
-can safely say that I have never been so kindly treated under any roof
-in the whole world. As to your father, my dear old governor has always
-been too good, but I scarcely think he could do more for me than Mr.
-Rockley has done.’
-
-‘Papa is always kind, that is, to people whom he likes,’ said Christabel
-with an absent indifference, as if Mr. Rockley’s philanthropy and
-irritability, his energy and his hospitality, were qualities of much the
-same social value.
-
-At that moment the moonbeam was darkened by a passing cloud, and Wilfred
-drew nearer to the girl until he could almost feel her breath upon his
-hair, and hear her heart palpitate beneath the delicate fabric of her
-dress.
-
-‘Christabel,’ he said, ‘ask your heart this night whether I am right in
-hoping that you will not accompany your parents to this rude settlement.
-Here you are known, honoured—yes, loved! Why leave one who would cherish
-you while life lasted?’
-
-Christabel Rockley spoke not nor moved, but she cast her eyes down, till
-in the clear light the long dark lashes could be seen fringing her
-cheek. Her bosom heaved—she made no sign.
-
-‘Christabel,’ he murmured, ‘darling Christabel, I have long loved you,
-fondly, passionately. One word will make me the happiest of living men.
-Bow but your head in token that you grant my prayer, and I will take it
-as a sign from Heaven. Stay with my mother till she embraces you as a
-loved daughter. Only say the word. Will you try to return, in your own
-good time, my deep, my unalterable love?’
-
-She raised her head and looked fixedly at him as he stood there, the
-embodiment of love’s last appeal, in the direct path of the moon’s rays.
-His face and form, instinct with strong emotion, seemed glorified by the
-flood of light in which it was encircled.
-
-‘I can hardly tell,’ she said. ‘I have been trying to think—asking
-myself if I can give you my heart, and this pale face of mine, that you
-set so much value on—foolish boy! I think I may, in a little while, if
-you will bear with me, but I would rather not say, for good and all,
-just at this moment. You _will_ give me more time, won’t you? Ah! what
-is that?’ she suddenly broke off, with almost a shriek, as the roll of
-horse-hoofs smote clearly through the still night air upon the senses,
-almost upon the overwrought hearts of the listeners. ‘Who can it be?
-Surely it isn’t papa riding back on the warehouse-keeper’s cob?’
-
-Not so. The hoofs of no mortal cob ever rang upon turf or roadway with
-the long, regular strokes of the steed of the coming horseman.
-
-‘A thoroughbred horse!’ said Wilfred. ‘Tired, too, by his rolling
-stride. Whoever can it be at this time of night?’
-
-Then he saw Christabel’s pale cheek faintly flush. How lovely was the
-warmer tint as it stole from cheek to brow, while her eye sparkled
-afresh like a lamp relumed. ‘Only one person is likely to come here
-to-night to say good-bye to us,’ she almost whispered. ‘I did not think
-he would take the trouble. Oh, it can’t be——’
-
-As she spoke, the clattering hoofs ceased abruptly at the garden gate. A
-hasty step was heard on the gravel, and Bob Clarke, pale as death and
-haggard with fatigue, stood before them.
-
-‘I swore I would say good-bye,’ he said. ‘So I am here, you see. I have
-ridden a hundred miles to do it. Ha! Effingham! Back from Port Phillip?
-Christabel Rockley, answer me—am I too late?’
-
-‘Oh, Bob!’ she cried, and as she spoke she rose and stood by his side,
-taking one hand in both of hers. ‘You are not too late. But you will
-have to forgive me, and you, too, Wilfred Effingham, for being a silly
-girl that did not know her own mind. It would have served you right,
-Master Bob, and it will be a lesson to you not to put off important
-business. If Desborough had gone lame—I suppose it is he, poor fellow,
-that you have nearly ridden to death—you would have lost Christabel
-Rockley for good and all, whatever she may be worth. I was not sure, and
-papa was angry. But I am now—_I am now_. Oh, Bob, my dear old Bob, I
-will wait for you till I am a hundred if you don’t make a fortune
-before!’
-
-Bob Clarke looked doubtfully from one face to the other, scrutinising
-Wilfred’s with a fierce, questioning glance. But as their eyes met he
-saw that which quenched all jealous fears.
-
-‘My dear fellow,’ said Wilfred, coming forward and holding out his hand,
-‘you have had your usual luck and “won on the post.” I congratulate you
-heartily, on my honour, as a man and a gentleman. Christabel has freely
-told you that but for your opportune arrival her hand might have been
-disposed of differently. You won’t wonder that any man should do his
-best to win her. But from my soul I can now rejoice that it was not so;
-that I have been spared the discovery, when too late, that her heart was
-yours—yours alone. Look upon me now as your lifelong friend. Let us keep
-our own counsel, and all will go well.’
-
-‘Wilfred Effingham has spoken like himself,’ said Christabel, whose
-features were now illuminated with the pure light of love that knows
-neither doubt nor diffidence in the presence of the beloved one. ‘You
-see, I should have had some excuse, Bob, if I had thrown you over, you
-procrastinating old stupid. Why did you leave me doubting and wondering
-all this time? However, I shall have plenty of time to scold you. Here
-comes papa at last.’
-
-At this simple announcement the three faces changed as the well-known
-step of Mr. Rockley was heard—firm, rapid, aggressive. But the girl’s
-features, at first troubled, gradually assumed a steadfast look. Bob
-Clarke raised his head, and drew himself up as if scanning the line of
-country. Wilfred Effingham’s countenance wore the abstracted look of one
-raised by unselfish aims above ordinary considerations.
-
-‘I thought I should never get away from that confounded old idiot,’ Mr.
-Rockley commenced. ‘Why, Bob Clarke! where have you sprung from? We
-heard you had gone to Port Phillip, or Adelaide, or somewhere; very glad
-to see you, wherever you came from. Better stay to-night; we can give
-you a bed. Why the deuce didn’t you take your horse round to the stable
-instead of letting the poor devil stand tied up at the gate after the
-ride he seems to have had? Christabel, perhaps you’ll tell them to bring
-in supper. I feel both hungry and thirsty—giving directions, directions,
-till I’m hoarse.’
-
-Christabel glided away, whereupon Bob Clarke faced round squarely and
-confronted his host.
-
-‘Mr. Rockley, I came here to-night to tell you two things. I apologise
-for being so late, but I only heard you were leaving yesterday. I have
-ridden a hundred miles to-day.’
-
-‘Just like you,’ said Rockley; ‘and why the deuce didn’t you make them
-send you in supper all this time? You look as if you hadn’t saved
-yourself any more than your horse.’
-
-Truth to tell, Master Bob _was_ rather pale, and his eyes looked
-unnaturally bright as he bent them upon the speaker.
-
-‘Plenty of time afterwards, sir,’ he said; ‘the business was important.
-First of all, Mr. Hampden has given me a partnership, and I am going to
-take up country in Port Phillip under the firm of Hampden and Clarke.
-The cattle are drafted and started—five hundred head of picked
-Herefords—Joe Curle is with them, and young Warner. I’m going by sea to
-be ready for them when they come over.’
-
-‘I’m sincerely glad to hear it, my dear Bob,’ said Rockley in his most
-cordial manner—one peculiar to him when he had become aware of something
-to another man’s advantage. ‘Why, you had better come down with us this
-week in the _Mary Anne_. I’ve chartered her, and she is crammed full,
-but, of course, I can give any one a passage. I can’t tell you how glad
-I am. Mrs. Rockley!’ he cried out as that well-beloved matron appeared
-and held out her hand with a smile of good omen to the not fully
-reassured Bob, ‘are we never to have anything to eat to-night? Here’s
-Bob Clarke has ridden a hundred and fifty miles, and dying of hunger
-before your eyes; but, of course, of course’—here he changed into a
-tragic tone of injury—‘if I’m not to be master in my own house——’
-
-Mrs. Rockley, with her placid countenance, only relieved by a glance at
-Wilfred, swiftly withdrew, and Rockley, to whom it had suddenly occurred
-as he looked at Wilfred that complications might arise from his
-subjecting his daughter to the perilous companionship of a sea-voyage
-with so noted a detrimental as Bob Clarke, looked like a hound that had
-outrun the scent, desirous of trying back, but not quite certain of his
-line.
-
-‘Well, Bob, I am sure you will do well in Port Phillip; you have had
-lots of experience, and no man can work harder when he likes, I will say
-that for you; but it’s a fast place, a very fast place, I tell you, sir;
-and if you give yourself up to that confounded racing and
-steeplechasing, I know what will come of it.’
-
-‘Mr. Rockley,’ said Bob again, with the air of a man who steadies his
-horse at a rasper, ‘I came to ask you for your daughter. I know I’ve not
-done much so far, but she likes me, and I feel I shall be successful in
-life or go to the devil—according to your answer this night.’
-
-Mr. Rockley looked first at one and then at the other of his young
-friends in much astonishment. This surprise was so great that for once
-he was unable to give vent to his ideas.
-
-Before he could gather self-possession, Wilfred Effingham spoke. ‘My
-dear Rockley, from circumstances which have come to my knowledge, but
-which I am in honour bound not to reveal, I can assure you that your
-daughter’s happiness is deeply concerned in my friend Clarke’s proposal.
-As a friend of the family—who takes the deepest interest in her future
-welfare—let me beg of you to give the matter your most favourable
-consideration.’
-
-Mr. Rockley’s face passed through the phases of wild astonishment and
-strong disapproval before he replied. It had then relaxed into one of
-humorous enlightenment.
-
-‘I see how it is. That monkey, Christabel, has enlisted you on her side.
-Well, I tell you both that I should have preferred Wilfred Effingham as
-my son-in-law. I am not going to hide my opinion on that or any other
-subject. But as she has made her choice, I will not—I say I will
-not—make her life miserable. Not that I have any objection to you, Bob,
-my boy, except on the score of that confounded horse-racing. It’s very
-well in its way. No man enjoys a race more than I do; but it’s not the
-thing for a young fellow who has his way to make in the world.’
-
-‘I’ll never own another race-horse,’ quoth Bob, with desperate
-self-renunciation, ‘as long as I live, if——’
-
-‘Oh yes, you will,’ said Mr. Rockley, with superior forecast; ‘but what
-I want you to do is to promise not to go head and shoulders into it for
-the next few years, when you’ll have all your work cut out for you, if
-you want to be a man and make a home for your wife and family. Well,
-it’s done now, and here’s my hand, my boy; you’ve got a good little
-girl, if she is a pretty one. But take my advice, don’t give her too
-much of her own way at the beginning. Show that you intend to be master
-from the start, _put her down_ if she shows temper; when she gives in,
-you can be as kind to her as you like afterwards. Better that than for
-her to have the whip-hand. Women don’t understand moderation. That was
-always my way, wasn’t it, Bessie?’ he inquired, appealing to Mrs.
-Rockley, who having entered the room had come in for this piece of
-practical advice, delivered in a loud tone of voice. ‘I’ve been giving
-your future son-in-law—there he is; I know he is a favourite of yours;
-you needn’t say he isn’t—a useful piece of advice, which I hope he’ll
-have the sense to act up to. Supper ready in the next room? I fancy
-we’re all in want of a little refreshment; what do you think, Bob?’
-
-That gentleman had private ideas upon the subject, but did not disclose
-them further than by looking over at Mrs. Rockley, and giving practical
-effect to the suggestion.
-
-The _partie carré_ enjoyed a cheerful but not very conversational
-repast. Wilfred and Bob Clarke felt more disposed to drink than to eat.
-Neither had much to say, so Rockley had it all his own way with Port
-Phillip speculations, advice to Bob Clarke of where to go for
-first-class cattle country, and how to manage economically for the first
-few years. Mrs. Rockley was tired, but found a few reassuring words for
-the anxious Bob, explaining that Christabel had a headache, but would be
-sure to be quite well in the morning. She also indicated her sympathy
-with Wilfred, and her approval of his generosity in backing up his
-rival’s claim. This, she assured him, she nor Christabel would ever
-forget.
-
-Finally, Mr. Rockley looked at his watch in the midst of a suggestion to
-buy more cattle on Hampden’s account and take up two or three runs,
-inasmuch as it was all one trouble and not much more expense; when,
-discovering that it was past midnight, he broke up the parliament.
-Wilfred made his final adieus, and at daylight was fast leaving the town
-behind him, on his way to The Chase, accompanied by divers ‘companions
-of Sintram,’ in the guise of vain regret and dull despair, with also
-(though not unalloyed) a curious sense of relief.
-
-Taking the most philosophical view of the subject, the after-taste of
-refusal by a woman is rarely exceeded in this life for corroding
-bitterness. The non-preference of oneself, to the average suitor, fills
-the individual, unless he be free from every tinge of vanity, with wrath
-and disgust. In vain the proverbial salve is applied by superficial
-comforters. The foiled fisherman will not be consoled. He will throw
-away his flies and burn his rod. Henceforth he and angling have parted
-for ever. Such in effect for a while is the lament of most men who have
-the evil hap to pin so much of their present and prospective happiness
-upon one cast—and lose it. The proud man suffers deeply, in secret. The
-selfish man mourns for the loss of personal gain. The true and manly
-lover is shaken to the centre of his being. The vain man is wroth
-exceedingly with childish anger; furious that any woman should disdain
-him—_him_! The susceptible, fickle suitor, who promptly bears his
-incense to another shrine, is to be envied, if not commended. But
-
- To each his sufferings, all are men,
- Condemned alike to groan.
-
-Who loves vainly is stricken with a poisoned arrow. The wound rankles in
-the flesh of every son of Adam, oft producing anguish, even unto death,
-long after the apparent hurt is healed.
-
-Wilfred Effingham was not more than ordinarily vain. He had not been, in
-so many words, rejected. Indeed, he had been nearly accepted. But he
-could not disguise from himself that it amounted to much the same thing.
-Yet he reflected that he had cause to be thankful that the girl had not
-been permitted to complete the measure of her self-deception—to promise
-her hand where she could not truly have given her heart. Better far, a
-thousand times, that this should have happened beforehand, he thought,
-‘than that I should have seen after marriage the look that came into her
-eyes when they rested on Bob Clarke.’
-
-He did not admit that permanent injury to his health would result from
-this defeat. It was not a crushing disaster, from which he could never
-rally. Rather was it a sharp repulse, useful in teaching caution. Brave
-men, great men, had profited by blows like this ere now. He would retire
-within his entrenchments—would perhaps be the better fitted to take the
-field in a future campaign.
-
-A necessity lay upon him of acquainting his family with a portion, at
-any rate, of such momentous events. He did not go too deeply into his
-feelings for Christabel Rockley, yet permitted his mother and sisters to
-perceive that all probability of her appearing at The Chase as Mrs.
-Effingham, junior, was swept away by arrangement with Bob Clarke—duly
-ratified by the irrevocable if reluctant consent of Mr. Rockley.
-
-His condition of mind was, doubtless, closely gauged by his relatives.
-With instinctive delicacy they ministered indirectly to his hurt spirit.
-While not displeased that the lovely Christabel had not appropriated the
-beloved, their Wilfred, they never permitted him to perceive how widely
-their estimate differed from his own. They counselled steady occupation,
-and led him to take pleasure once more in intellectual pursuits.
-
-A diversion, happily, was effected in due time. He commenced to discover
-that his mental appetite had returned—that he could read once more and
-even _laugh_ occasionally at the conceits of authors, much indeed as if
-his heart had not been broken. Then letters with good news from Beatrice
-and her father arrived. The voyage had been safe and speedy. On their
-arrival they had found the Colonel—such was his present rank—better than
-their fears had led them to expect. Ghastly and numerous, in all truth,
-were his still unhealed wounds; his state of weakness pitiable to see.
-But the fever from which he had suffered had left him. And when the eyes
-of the sick soldier met those of Beatrice Effingham, beaming upon him
-with a world of love and tenderness, all felt that a stage on the way to
-recovery had been reached. Such, too, came to be the opinion of the
-doctor and nurse, a portion of whose duties the two ladies had assumed.
-
-Then letters came from the new country, _via_ Port Phillip:—‘The climate
-was more moist than that of New South Wales, but the water never failed,
-and the grass was beyond all description. Immigrants from all the world
-were pouring in fast; the place bade fair to be another Britain. Money
-was being made rapidly. Stock were any price you chose to ask. A cattle
-trade was springing up with Tasmania. Argyll thought he would go home
-for a couple of years, leaving Hamilton in charge. Fred Churbett was in
-great form, fully convinced that he was intended for a dweller in the
-waste places of the earth. He felt so happy and contented that he didn’t
-think he would take a free passage to England, with a season box at the
-Royal Opera, if it were offered to him.’
-
-As for Guy, all written symbols were inadequate to express the length,
-breadth, and depth of his happiness under the new and romantic
-conditions. The cattle were doing splendidly—no one would know them. And
-no wonder—the feed was unparalleled. He had got up two good slab huts, a
-stock-yard, and a calf-pen. They were now splitting rails for a horse
-paddock.
-
-The Port Phillip news (from Guy) became presently more sensational. The
-Benmohr people, with Ardmillan, Churbett, and the rest, had arranged to
-leave their stations for a while, and come to Yass for Christmas. A
-better time to get away might never come. There was no chance of
-bush-fires. The blacks were quiet. The cattle were thoroughly broken in;
-you couldn’t drive them off the runs if you tried. There was nothing to
-do this year but brand calves. So they would turn up before Christmas
-Day.
-
-He didn’t think he would have been able to get away, but Jack Donnelly
-had offered to look after the run in his absence, and with old Tom
-there, no harm could come to the cattle. A couple of months would see
-them back, and he really thought they deserved a holiday.
-
-Such intelligence had power to renovate the morale of the whole
-household, from Mrs. Effingham—who, in good sooth, had with difficulty
-kept up a reasonably cheerful appearance, in default of her absent
-husband and daughter—down to Mrs. Evans, expectant of the errant Dick.
-
-Jeanie and Andrew were overjoyed at the tidings, and Duncan was at once
-despatched to Benmohr to acquaint Mrs. Teviot and Wullie with the
-glorious news, in case they had not as yet received a letter. But they
-had; and Mrs. Teviot threatened Duncan with the broom for daring to
-think ‘her gentlemen wadna acquent her the vara meenute they kenned they
-could win hame to Benmohr.’
-
-Comes then a letter from Sternworth. News had been received from
-O’Desmond, who had discovered a splendid tract of country beyond the
-lower Oxley marshes, hitherto considered impassable, and after remaining
-upon it during the winter and spring, was coming back to Badajos. _He_
-too hoped to arrive before Christmas. The long-vacant homes of the
-district would be again filled up, thank God!
-
-‘Won’t it be delightful to see dear Guy again,’ said Annabel, ‘and to
-have the old house full once more, with friends and neighbours. I _must_
-kiss one of them. Mr. Churbett, I think. You would not object to that,
-mamma, would you?’
-
-‘_He_ would not,’ said Wilfred. ‘I don’t wonder that you and Rosamond
-are delighted at the chance of seeing their faces again. It seems hard
-that fate should have decided to separate us. Either they should have
-remained here, or we should have pulled up stakes, like Rockley, and
-migrated there.’
-
-‘There is another friend coming that I shall be charmed to welcome—whom,
-like Annabel, I shall be ready to embrace, and indeed _shall_ kiss on
-the spot.’
-
-‘Is my last belief in womanhood to be uprooted?’ exclaimed Wilfred
-languidly. ‘Is my immaculate sister Rosamond actually going to join the
-“fast” division?’
-
-‘You need not be alarmed,’ she replied. ‘It is only Vera Fane; and I did
-not speak of her visit before, because I was not sure she would be able
-to come.’
-
-‘Vera Fane!’ said Wilfred. ‘How does she happen to come our way? I
-thought she was in Sydney. Didn’t some one say she was going to be
-married?’
-
-‘Oh, to that handsome cousin, Reginald, that came from England, _via_
-Melbourne, the other day. You heard that, did you? So did we, and were
-agonised at the thought of losing her for good. But she is coming up
-here at mamma’s invitation, given long ago, to stay with us over
-January. Her father won’t be at Black Mountain till then; he can’t leave
-Norman, who has had a bad time with scarlet fever.’
-
-‘Well, you will have another lady in the house to fill Beatrice’s place,
-and help to amuse your guests. She is quite equal to a pair of ordinary
-young ladies in the matter of rational conversation, perhaps more.’
-
-‘So Mr. Argyll thinks, evidently,’ said Annabel; ‘he paid her the
-_greatest_ attention once he met her over here. I know she thinks him
-very clever and distinguished-looking. They would suit one another
-famously.’
-
-‘I don’t think so at all,’ said Wilfred shortly. ‘But I must get away to
-my work.’
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVI
- THE RETURN FROM PALESTINE
-
-
-Matters had been pleasant enough in the early days at Lake William, and
-the Benmohr men considered that nothing could be more perfect than their
-old life there. But this new region was so much more extensive, with a
-half-unknown grandeur, rendering existence more picturesque and exciting
-in every way. There were possibilities of fortunes being made, of cities
-being built, of a great Dominion in the future—vast though formless
-visions, which dwarfed the restricted aims of the elder colony. Such
-aspirations tended to dissuade them from residing permanently in their
-former homesteads.
-
-But they were coming back for a last visit—a long farewell. There were
-friends to see, adventures to relate, transactions to arrange. A
-pleasant change from their wild-wood life, an intoxicating novelty; but
-once experienced, they must depart to return no more.
-
-The absentees did not await Christmas proper, but arrived beforehand,
-having tempted the main in the yacht _Favourite_, sailing master
-Commodore Kirsopp, R.N., from Melbourne. Such passengers as Ned White,
-Jack Fletcher, Tom Carne, and Alick Gambier offered such an irresistible
-combination.
-
-Once more the homesteads around Lake William appeared to awaken and put
-on their former hospitable expression. Mrs. Teviot had scrubbed and
-burnished away at Benmohr, until when ‘her gentlemen’ arrived, welcomed
-with tears of joy, they declared themselves afraid to take possession of
-their own house, so magnificently furnished and spotlessly clean did it
-appear to them after their backwoods experience.
-
-Mr. Churbett stood gazing at his books in speechless admiration (he
-averred) for half an hour; afterwards inspecting his stable and Grey
-Surrey’s loose-box with feelings of wonder and appreciation. Neil
-Barrington declared that he was again a schoolboy at home for the
-holidays, not a day older than fourteen, and thereupon indulged himself
-in so many pranks and privileges proper to his assumed age that Mrs.
-Teviot scolded him for a graceless laddie, and threatened to box his
-ears, particularly when he kissed her assistant, an apple-cheeked damsel
-lured from one of the neighbouring farms in order to help in her work at
-this tremendous crisis.
-
-Guy Effingham was hardly recognisable, so his sisters declared, in the
-stalwart youngster who galloped up to The Chase in company with Gerald
-O’More, whom he had invited to spend Christmas in his father’s house.
-There was the old mischievous, merry expression of the eyes, the frank
-smile for those he loved; but all save his forehead was burned several
-shades darker, and a thick-coming growth of whisker and moustache had
-changed the boyish lineaments and placed in their stead the sterner
-regard of manhood.
-
-Gerald O’More had also sustained a change. His manner was more subdued,
-and his spirits, though ready as of old to respond to the call of mirth,
-did not seem to be so irrepressible. He had altered somewhat in figure
-and face, having lost the fulness which marks the newly-arrived
-colonist, and along with the British fairness of complexion, sacrificed
-to the Australian sun, had put away the half-inquiring, half-critical
-tone of manner that characterises the immigrant Briton for his first
-year in Australia. He now ranked as the soldier who had shared in the
-toil, the bivouac, the marches of the campaign; no longer a recruit or
-supernumerary.
-
-‘He has never been so jolly since poor Hubert’s death,’ whispered Guy to
-Rosamond in their first confidential talk. ‘He thought it was his fault
-that the poor chap wasn’t able to defend himself. But he’ll get over it
-in time. A better-hearted fellow couldn’t be. He’s a stunning bushman
-now, and a tiger to work.’
-
-‘What’s “a tiger to work”?’ asked Rosamond, laughing. ‘I must make you
-pay a forfeit for inelegant expressions, as I used to do in old
-school-days.’
-
-‘I should never have known half as much,’ said the boy, as he turned to
-his sister with a look of deepest love and admiring respect, ‘if it
-hadn’t been for you, Rosamond. How early you used to get up on those
-winter mornings, and how Blanche and I and Selden hated the sound of
-that bell! But there’s nothing like it,’ he added with a tone of manly
-decision. ‘I polished off a fellow about the date of the battle of Crecy
-in great style the other day. You would have been quite proud of me.’
-
-‘You keep up your reading, then, dear Guy, and don’t forget your
-classics, though you are in the bush? When you go to England, some day,
-you must show our friends that we do more than gallop after cattle and
-chop down trees in Australia.’
-
-‘Oh, we have great reading at night, I can tell you; only those tallow
-candles are such a nuisance. I’ve got a new friend, a Cambridge fellow,
-just out from home, on the other side of me, and he’s a regular
-encyclopædia. So, between him and the Benmohr people, I shan’t rust
-much.’
-
-‘I am delighted to hear it. I hope you will have an Oxford man on your
-other side, as you call it. A literary atmosphere is everything for
-young people. Who is your other neighbour?’
-
-‘Jack Donnelly, and not half a bad fellow either. Though his father
-can’t read or write, he knows Latin, but not Greek, and he’s awfully
-fond of reading. You should hear the arguments he and Cavendish have—the
-Cambridge man, I mean.’
-
-‘What do they argue about?’
-
-‘Oh, everything—England and Ireland, Conservative and Democratic
-government, native Australians and Britishers. They’re always at it.
-Jack’s a clever fellow, and very quick; awfully good-looking too. You
-should see him ride. Cavendish says he’ll make his mark some day—he’s
-full of ambition.’
-
-‘It is very creditable of him to try. If his father had not cared for
-his children in that way, he might never have risen above his own grade.
-Young gentlemen, too, should maintain the position which they have
-inherited. Don’t lose sight of that.’
-
-‘That’s what Hamilton’s always saying; he’s a wonderful fellow himself.
-See him in town, you’d think he never had his hands out of kid gloves,
-and yet he can keep time with the best working man we have, at any rough
-work.’
-
-‘You cannot have a better model, my dear Guy. Mamma and I are so
-thankful that you are among men who would do honour to any country.’
-
-Great was the joy expressed and many were the congratulations which
-passed on both sides when the explorers returned. They had so much to
-tell about the new home, so much to admire in the old one. It was a
-suburb of Paradise in their eyes, with its cultured aspect and gracious
-inhabitants, after the untamed wilderness.
-
-They were never tired of praising their former homes and neighbours. If,
-by some Arabian Nights arrangement, they could transport them bodily to
-the new colony, complete happiness, for once in this imperfect world,
-would be attained.
-
-The Benmohrs found their apartments in apparently the same state of
-faultless order in which they had quitted them. No smallest article had
-been moved or changed. A velveteen shooting-jacket, which Argyll
-remembered hanging up just as he started, was the very object which
-greeted his eyes when he awakened after the first night in his own bed.
-
-The worst of it was that the breaking up of all this comfort and
-domesticity would be so painful. The climate had changed permanently
-(people always jump to this conclusion in Australia directly they begin
-to forget the last drought), and was simply Elysian. The lake was full;
-once more they listened to the music of its tiny surges. But for choice,
-the new country was about ten times more valuable. The pleasant old
-station homesteads must go. However, they were here now for a spell of
-pure enjoyment, not to bother their heads with the future.
-
-Money was plentiful, the gods be praised! Everything was _couleur de
-rose_; they would revel in ease and enjoyment with a free spirit until
-Christmas was over. The cares of this world might then have their
-innings, but by no means till the New Year chimes called them to new
-duties. There was nothing now but such pleasant rides and drives;
-lingering rambles, after the heat of the day; expeditions into Yass,
-where they were fêted as if they had included the South Pole in their
-discoveries. Mr. Sternworth alluded to their return in his sermon,
-drawing tears from his congregation when he spoke of the strong, brave
-man they would never see more, whom many there present had known from
-childhood. But he had died as a Warleigh should die, doing his duty
-gallantly, and giving his life to save that of a comrade.
-
-Before the third week of December had passed, another sensational
-arrival was chronicled. O’Desmond drove through the town on his way to
-Badajos in his four-in-hand, looking as if he had encountered no
-discomforts to speak of. His horses were in high condition; the bits and
-brasses were faultlessly polished; the drag hardly looked as if it had
-been a thousand miles from a coach-builder, much less covered up with
-boughs during the deadly summer of the waste.
-
-But observers noted that Harry O’Desmond, upright and well set up as
-ever, was thinner and older-looking; that, although he received their
-greetings with his old stately cordiality, there was an expression upon
-his worn and darkened countenance rarely imprinted save by dread
-wayfaring through the Valley of the Shadow——
-
-So had it been with him, in truth. Passing the farthest known
-explorations, his party came into a waste and torrid region,
-indescribably dread and hopeless. There, apparently, no rain had fallen
-for years. The largest trees had perished from desiccation of the soil;
-even the wild animals had died or migrated. The few they encountered
-were too weak to flee or resist. For weeks they had undergone fearful
-privations; had tasted the tortures of thirst and hunger, well-nigh unto
-death.
-
-With men weakened and disheartened, O’Desmond knew that to linger was
-death. With a picked party of his long-tried followers he pushed on,
-leaving just sufficient to support life with the depôt. On the _very
-last_ day which exhausted nature could have granted them they passed the
-barriers of the Land of Despair. They saw before them—such are the
-wondrous contrasts of the Australian waste—a land of water-pools and
-pastures, of food and fruit.
-
-But simultaneously with their glimpse of the haven of relief came the
-view of a numerous, athletic party of blacks, clustered near the
-river-bank. For war or hunting, this section of the tribe had surely
-been detailed. There were no women or children visible—a bad sign, as
-the sinking hearts of the emaciated wayfarers well knew. They were brave
-enough under ordinary circumstances of fight or famine. But this bore
-_too_ hardly upon human nature, coming, as it did, after the toils and
-privations of the terrible desert.
-
-But there was one heart among the fainting crew which neither hunger,
-thirst, nor the shadow of coming death had power to daunt. Aware that
-with savages a bold yet friendly bearing is the acme of diplomacy,
-O’Desmond decided upon his course.
-
-The chief stood before his leading braves, doubtful if not hostile.
-
-Suddenly recollecting that among his private stores, faithfully
-distributed, upon which alone they had been subsisting of late, was a
-package of loaf sugar, the idea flashed across his mind of tempting the
-palate of the savage.
-
-Raising a handful of lumps of the rare and precious commodity, he
-advanced cheerfully and presented them to the leader, who regarded them
-distrustfully. His retinue stared with pitiless eyes at the wasted white
-weaklings. It was the supreme moment. Life and death swayed in the
-scales.
-
-Harry O’Desmond so recognised it, under his forced smile, as he lifted
-one of the smaller fragments to his lips, and with great appearance of
-relish began to masticate. Slowly and heedfully did the chief likewise.
-The charm worked. The flavour of the far-borne product, for which so
-many of the men of his colour had died in slavery, subjugated the
-heathen’s palate. He smiled, and motioned the others to advance.
-O’Desmond followed up his advantage. Every remaining grain was
-distributed. In a few minutes each warrior was licking his lips
-appreciatively. A treaty of alliance, offensive and defensive, was as
-good as signed.
-
-That day the starving wanderers feasted on fish and flesh, brought in
-profusion by their new comrades. They had never seen a white man before,
-and were, like many of the first-met tribes, not indisposed to be
-peaceful.
-
-When shown the encampment, the clothes, the equipment, the strange
-beasts, they pointed to the sky, snapping their fingers in wonder as
-they marked the leader’s height and stalwart frame, but made no attempt
-to raid the treasures of the white ‘medicine man.’
-
-So the expedition was made free of a waste kingdom, bisected by the
-deep-flowing stream of the Moora-warra, with its plains and forests, its
-lagoons and reed-brakes. And for long years after, until O’Desmond sold
-out the full-stocked runs for the high prices of the day, never was shot
-fired or spear lifted in anger between the dwellers on the Big River.
-
-Wilfred had called at Badajos to congratulate their old friend. Upon his
-return he found that the household had received an important addition.
-Dr. Fane had ridden over with his daughter from Yass, and was with
-difficulty persuaded to rest for a few days at The Chase before
-returning to Black Mountain. Like most people who lead uneventful lives,
-he was in a hurry to get home, though compelled to admit that he had
-nothing particular to do when he got there.
-
-The Parson had stolen a day, he said, and driven over with them, proud
-of the honour, he further stated, of taking charge of Miss Fane’s
-impedimenta, which, though the most reasonable of damsels in that
-respect, could not be carried upon Emigrant. That accomplished palfrey
-she had brought over chiefly for the pleasure of having him to ride
-while at The Chase. Besides, his presence saved her a world of anxiety,
-as when they were separated she was always imagining that he had got out
-of his paddock, been stolen, or fallen lame, such accidents being proper
-to valuable horses in Australia.
-
-So when Wilfred arrived he found every one in most cheerful and animated
-vein. Argyll was describing the features of the new country to Dr. Fane,
-who was deeply interested in its geological aspect; his daughter,
-apparently, had found the narrative, interspersed as it was with ‘moving
-incidents by flood and field,’ equally entertaining.
-
-Mr. Sternworth, with Rosamond beside him, was questioning Hamilton about
-the spiritual welfare of the infant settlement of Melbourne; promising,
-moreover, a handsome subscription to St. James’s, the new Church of
-England, at that time in course of erection. Gerald O’More, with Fred
-Churbett and Neil Barrington, was having an animated, not to say noisy,
-conversation with Annabel. Peals of laughter, of which a large
-proportion was contributed by the young lady, were the first sounds that
-met his ear upon entering the room. All seemed so capable of mutual
-entertainment, without his aid, countenance, or company, that he was
-sensible of a _soupçon_ of pique as he surveyed the festive scene.
-
-However, he cordially welcomed Miss Fane and her father to The Chase,
-mentally remarking that he had never seen that young lady look so well
-before, or had thought her half so handsome. Her response did much to
-clear his brow and banish from his heart all unworthy feelings. The
-steadfast gaze was frank and kindly as of yore. She appeared
-unaffectedly pleased to see him again.
-
-‘You know you belong to the band of heroes whom we have felt so proud to
-honour upon their return,’ she said. ‘Papa has a famous classical
-parallel, I know, for your exploits and safe arrival at Lake William. He
-did explain it to me, but I have forgotten. Mr. Sternworth, what is it?’
-
-‘Never mind, Vera,’ replied the old gentleman, ‘I never talk Latin in
-the presence of young ladies. I can always find something more amusing
-to say. You must sing us those new songs you brought from Sydney. That
-would be more appropriate, wouldn’t it, Mrs. Effingham?’
-
-‘I don’t know much Latin, you unkind old godfather, but what I do know I
-am not in the least ashamed of.’
-
-‘Argyll’s making the pace pretty good, isn’t he, Fred,’ remarked Neil
-Barrington, ‘with that nice Miss Fane? She’s the only “model girl” I
-ever took to. I’m her humble slave and adorer. But I never expected to
-have the great MacCallum More for my rival. Did you ever see him hard
-hit before, Fred?’
-
-‘Never, on the word of a gentleman-pioneer,’ rejoined Mr. Churbett.
-‘It’s this exploration, new country, perils-of-the-wilderness business
-that has done it. “None but the brave deserve the fair.” _We_ are the
-brave, sir, in this fortunate instance. We have solved the mystery of
-the unconquered Bogongs. We have gazed at the ocean outlets of the Great
-Lakes. We have proved ourselves to be the manner of men that found
-empires. Under the circumstances heroes always hastened to contract
-matrimonial alliances. Cortez did it. Dunois did it. William of Argyll
-is perilously near the Great Hazard. And I, Frederick de Churbett, am
-hugely minded to do likewise, if that confounded Irishman would only
-leave off his nonsense and let a fellow get a word in edgeways.’
-
-Mr. Churbett had reason for complaint, inasmuch as Gerald O’More, when
-his national gallantry was kindled to action, appeared determined to
-permit ‘no rival near the throne,’ as he successively devoted himself to
-Annabel, Rosamond, and Miss Fane, or indeed occasionally kept all
-engaged in conversation and entertainment at the self-same time. It
-became difficult to discover, for a while, so rapid as well as brilliant
-were his evolutions, whom he intended to honour with his exclusive
-admiration. At length, however, those who were in the position of calm
-spectators had no doubt but that Annabel, with whom he kept up a
-ceaseless flow of badinage and raillery, was the real attraction. If so,
-he was likely to find a rival in the sarcastic Ardmillan, with whom he
-had more than once bade fair to pass from jest to earnest. For the
-cooler Scot was in the habit of waiting until he saw his antagonist upon
-the horns of a dilemma, or luring him on to the confines of a manifest
-absurdity. This he would explode, blowing his rival’s argument into the
-air, and graciously explaining his triumph to the surrounding fair.
-
-Such was the satisfaction which filled the heart of Mrs. Effingham, that
-but for the absence of her husband and daughter she would certainly have
-gone the daring length of giving a party. But the absence of her husband
-was, to the conscience of the matron, an insuperable objection. No
-amount of specious argument or passionate appeal could alter her
-determination.
-
-‘My dears, it would be wrong,’ she quietly replied, in answer to
-Annabel’s entreaty and Rosamond’s sober statement that there could not
-be any objection on the point of etiquette. ‘Suppose anything should
-happen to your father or Beatrice about the time—travelling is so very
-uncertain—we should never have another happy moment.’
-
-So the project, much to Annabel’s openly expressed and Rosamond’s
-inwardly felt disappointment, was given up. However, Mrs. Effingham
-relented so far as to say that, although her principles forbade her to
-give a party, there could be nothing indecorous in asking their friends
-to dine with them on Christmas Day, when the time for dear Guy’s
-departure for the station would, alas! be drawing nigh.
-
-This was a grand concession, and all kinds of preparations were made for
-the celebration of the festival. In the meanwhile, as there was next to
-nothing doing on any of the stations, what between riding-parties,
-chance visits, special arrivals for the purpose of bringing over new
-books or new music, it seemed as if The Chase had been changed into the
-caravanserai of the district. It would have been difficult to tell
-whether the neighbours lived more of their time with the Effinghams or
-at their own stations.
-
-During this exciting season Wilfred Effingham was commencing to
-experience the elaborated torture of seeing the woman he _now_
-discovered to be his chief exemplar made love to by another man,
-apparently with prospects of success. When he set himself to work
-seriously to please, William Argyll was rarely known to fail. The
-restless spirit was stilled. The uncontrollable temper was lulled, like
-the wave of a summer sea. All the powers of a rare intellect, the stores
-of a cultivated mind, were displayed. Brave, athletic, of a striking
-personal appearance, if not regularly handsome, he was a man to whom few
-women could refuse interest, whom none could scorn. Besides all this, he
-was the heir to a fine estate in his native land.
-
-When, therefore, day by day, he devoted himself in almost exclusive
-attendance to the appropriation of Miss Fane, keeping close to her
-bridle-rein in all excursions, monopolising her in the evenings, and
-holding æsthetic talks, in which she apparently took equal interest, the
-general conclusion arrived at was that Miss Fane was only awaiting a
-decorous interval to capitulate in due form.
-
-Yet Wilfred was constrained to confess that however much he may have
-deserved such punishment, there was no change in her manner towards him.
-When he touched upon any of their old subjects of debate, he found she
-had not forgotten the points on which they had agreed or differed, and
-was ready, as of old, to maintain her opinions.
-
-She seemed pleased to linger over reminiscences of those days and the
-confidences then made.
-
-‘Nobody would know Black Mountain now,’ she said. ‘Since we have grown
-rich, comparatively speaking, from “the providential rise in the price
-of store cattle” (as one auctioneer called it), papa has indulged me by
-making all kinds of additions, and I suppose we must say
-improvements—new fences, new furniture, new stables, plants in the
-garden, books in the library. Money is the latter-day magician
-certainly.’
-
-‘And you are proportionately happier, of course,’ said Wilfred.
-
-‘Frankly,’ said Miss Fane, ‘I am, just at present. I feel like one of
-Napoleon’s generals, who were ennobled and enriched after having risen
-from the ranks. No doubt they enjoyed their new dignities immensely. If
-they didn’t, their wives did. I won’t say we were _roturiers_, but we
-were very, _very_ poor. And it is so nice now to think we can dress as
-well as other people, and have the ordinary small luxuries of our
-position, without troubling about the everlasting ways and means.’
-
-‘We are much alike in our experiences,’ answered Wilfred. ‘We should
-soon have been absolutely ruined—the ways and means would have simply
-been obliterated.’
-
-‘I suppose so; but I never could believe in the poverty of any of you
-Lake William people. You seemed to have everything you could possibly
-want. The best part of our present good fortune is, that the boys are at
-a good school, while papa can buy as many new books as he can coax me,
-in mercy to his eyesight, to let him read. So I can say that we are
-quite happy.’
-
-‘I wonder you don’t think of going to Europe. Dr. Fane could easily sell
-at a high price now; and then, fancy “the kingdoms of the earth and the
-glory of them.”’
-
-‘You are quoting the Tempter, which is not quite respectful to me—for
-once; but there is a reason why papa cannot bear the thought of leaving
-our dear, lonely old home. My poor mother was buried there, and his
-heart with her. For me, I have from childhood imbibed his feelings for
-the place of her grave.’
-
-Rosamond here approached, and carried off her friend upon some mission
-of feminine importance. Wilfred, feeling that the conversation had taken
-a direction of melancholy which he could not fathom or adequately
-respond to, rejoined his other guests. But he could not help dwelling
-upon the fact that his conversations with Miss Fane seemed so utterly
-different from those with any other woman. Before the first sentences
-were well exchanged, one or other apparently struck the keynote, which
-awakened sympathetic chords, again vibrating amid harmonious echoes and
-semi-tones.
-
-To complete the universal jubilation, Mr. O’Desmond, in acknowledgment
-of the interest which the inhabitants of the district had shown in his
-safe return, announced his intention of giving an entertainment at
-Badajos on New Year’s Day, at which amusements would be provided for his
-humbler neighbours as well as for the gentry of the district. He had
-ridden over to The Chase, and entreated Mrs. Effingham’s advice as to
-decorations and dispositions. It was to be a _very_ grand affair. No one
-who knew O’Desmond doubted but that, having undertaken such a project,
-he would carry it out with elaborate completeness. So that, among the
-young people and general population of the district, the Badajos Revels
-were looked forward to with intense expectation.
-
-‘What will the general plan of arrangement be?’ said Fred Churbett to
-Hamilton. ‘Something in the Elizabethan style, with giants, salvage-men,
-and dwarfs, speeches and poetical addresses to the Queen of the land,
-whoever she may be? Anyhow, he is going to spend a lot of money about
-it. I hear the preparations are tremendous.’
-
-‘In that case it will form a telling relief to the general lack of
-variety in these affairs,’ said Hamilton. ‘Every one has made such a
-heap of money now, that it hardly matters what is spent, in reason. We
-shall have to turn to hard work again in January. I wonder whether the
-old boy has fallen in love, like everybody else, and is going to make
-his proposals with what he considers to be “befitting accessories.”’
-
-‘Shouldn’t wonder at all,’ said Fred. ‘It appears to me that we are
-beginning to enter upon a phase of existence worthy of Boccaccio,
-without the plague—and the—perhaps unreserved narratives. It certainly
-is the realm of Faerye at present. The turning out into the world of
-fact will come rather hard upon some of us.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-So matters passed on, materially unchanged, until the actual arrival of
-Christmas Day, on which sacred commemoration Mr. Sternworth, who had
-been temporarily relieved by the Dean of Goulburn, stayed with them at
-The Chase for a week, and performed services to a reasonable-sized
-congregation in the dining-room, which was completely filled by the
-family, with friends and humble neighbours. On the evening before, too,
-which invested the service with additional feelings of hope and
-thankfulness, most satisfactory letters had been received from India.
-Mr. Effingham told how—
-
-‘The Colonel was recovering rapidly. His medical attendant advised a
-visit of at least two years to Europe. As the cold weather season had
-set in, he might take his passage. Beatrice and he were to be married
-before he left. He (Mr. Effingham) would sail for Australia directly the
-ceremony was over. Indeed, he was tired of India, and now that the
-Colonel, poor fellow, was recovering, would have been bored to death had
-it not been for his menagerie. Then followed a list of profitable and
-unprofitable beasts, birds, and even fishes, which, if he could
-transport successfully to The Chase, would make him a happy man for the
-rest of his life. People might say he was amusing himself, but the
-profits of some of his ventures would in days to come be _enormous_. For
-instance, take the Cashmere goats, of which he had succeeded in getting
-a small flock. The fine hair or “pushta,” combed from near the skin, in
-contrast to the coarse outer fleece, was worth a guinea a pound. A shawl
-manufactured from it sold for a fabulous sum. These animals would thrive
-(he felt certain) in Australia; and then what would be the consequence?
-Why, the merino industry would be dwarfed by it—positively dwarfed!’
-
-The family of this sanguine gentleman did not go the whole length of his
-conclusions, having found that some unexpected factor commonly
-interfered with the arithmetical working out of his projects. But they
-were delighted to think they should shortly see his face again. And
-Beatrice was to receive the reward of her unchanged love and devotion!
-She would have, dear girl, a lifelong claim to care for the health and
-happiness of him whom she had, as the Surgeon-General averred, ‘raised
-up from the dead.’
-
-Files of Indian papers showed that on every side honours and decorations
-had been heaped upon the gallant and now fortunate soldier. Here was one
-of the mildest extracts—
-
-‘Colonel Glendinning, V.C., has been made a Companion of the Bath. He
-will probably be knighted. But will the country tolerate this tardy and
-barren honour? Of his stamp are the men who have more than once saved
-India. If the present Government, instead of making promotions at the
-bidding of parliamentary interest, would appoint a _proved leader_ as
-Commander-in-Chief, Hindostan might be tranquil once more and Russia
-overawed.’
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVII
- THE DUEL IN THE SNOW
-
-
-Just before the commencement of the stupendous festivities of Badajos, a
-letter arrived, by which the parson was informed that Mr. Rockley,
-having business at Yass, had resolved to run up from Port Phillip and
-see them all. Mr. St. Maur, who had an equally good excuse, would
-accompany him.
-
-This was looked upon as either a wondrous coincidence or a piece of
-pure, unadulterated good luck. When the hearty and sympathetic accents
-of William Rockley were once more heard among them, everybody was as
-pleased as if he, personally, had been asked to welcome a rich uncle
-from India.
-
-‘I never dreamed of seeing St. Maur in these parts,’ said Neil
-Barrington. ‘He’s such a tremendous swell in Melbourne that I doubted
-his recognising us again. What business can he possibly have up here?’
-
-‘Perhaps he is unwilling to risk a disappointment at the game which will
-be lost or won before January, “for want of a heart to play,”’ said
-Ardmillan. ‘He may follow suit, like others of this worshipful company.
-Hearts are trumps this deal, unless I mistake greatly.’
-
-‘Didn’t we hear that he had been left money, or made a fortune by town
-allotments down there? Anyhow he’s going home, I believe; so this will
-be his last visit to Yass for some time.’
-
-‘If we make money at the pace which we have been going for the last
-year, we shall all be able to go home,’ pronounced Ardmillan. ‘Yet,
-after all the pleasant days that we have seen here and at Benmohr, the
-thought is painful. This influx of capital will break up our jolly
-society more completely than the drought. In that case we should have
-had to cling to a sinking ship, or take to the boats; now, the vessel is
-being paid off, and the crew scattered to the four winds.’
-
-‘Sic transit,’ echoed Neil lugubriously. ‘I forget the rest; but
-wherever we go, and however well lined our pockets may be, it is a
-chance if we are half as happy again in our lives as we have been in
-this jolly old district.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-Christmas had come and gone. The Badajos Revels were imminent. Rockley
-and St. Maur had declared for remaining until they were over, in despite
-of presumably pressing engagements.
-
-‘I believe old Harry O’Desmond would have made a personal matter of it
-if we had left him in the lurch,’ said Mr. Rockley. ‘He spoke rather
-stiffly, St. Maur, when you said all Melbourne was waiting to know the
-result of our deputation to the Governor-General, and that they would be
-loth to take the excuse of a country picnic.’
-
-‘The old boy’s face was grim,’ said St. Maur; ‘but I had made up my mind
-to remain. I like to poke him up—he is so serious and stately. But we
-should not have quarrelled about such a trifle.’
-
-In the meantime, terrific preparations were made for the fête; one to be
-long remembered in the neighbourhood. O’Desmond’s magnificence of idea
-had only been held down, like most men of his race and nature, by the
-compulsion of circumstances. Now, he had resolved to give a free rein to
-his taste and imagination. It was outlined, in his mind, as a
-recognition of the enthusiasm which had greeted his return to the
-district in which he had lived so long. This had touched him to the
-heart. Habitually repressive of emotion, he would show them, in this
-form, how he demonstrated the feelings to which he denied utterance.
-
-In his carefully considered programme, he had by no means restricted
-himself to a single day or to the stereotyped gaieties of music and the
-dance. On this sole and exemplary occasion, the traditional glories of
-Castle Desmond would be faintly recalled, the profuse, imperial
-hospitalities of which had lent their share to his present sojourn near
-the plains of Yass. Several days were to be devoted to the reception of
-all comers. Each was to have its special recreation; to include picnics
-and private theatricals, with dresses and costumes from a metropolitan
-establishment. A dinner to the gentry, tradespeople, and yeomen of the
-district; to be followed by a grand costume ball in a building
-constructed for the purpose, to which all ‘the county’ would be invited.
-
-‘What a truly magnificent idea!’ said Rosamond Effingham, a short time
-before the opening day, as they all sat in the verandah at The Chase,
-after lunch and a hard morning’s work at preparations. ‘But will not our
-good friend and neighbour ruin himself?’
-
-‘Bred in the bone,’ said Gerald O’More. ‘Godfrey O’Desmond, this man’s
-great-grandfather, gave an entertainment which put a mortgage on the
-property from that day to this. Had a real lake of claret, I believe.
-Regular marble basin, you know. Gold and silver cups of the Renaissance,
-held in the hands of fauns, nymphs, and satyrs—that kind of
-thing—hogsheads emptied in every morning. Everything wonderful, rich,
-and more extravagant than a dream. Nobody went to bed for a fortnight,
-they say. Hounds met as usual. A score of duels—half-a-dozen men left on
-the sod. County asleep for a year afterwards.’
-
-‘The estate never raised its head again, anyhow,’ said Mr. Rockley, ‘and
-no wonder. An extravagant, dissolute, murdering old scoundrel, as they
-say old Godfrey was, that deserved seven years in the county gaol for
-ruining his descendants and debauching the whole country-side. And do
-you believe me, when I mentioned as much to old Harry one day, he was
-deuced stiff about it; said we could not understand the duties of a man
-of position in those days. I believe now, on my solemn word, that he’d
-be just as bad, this day, if he got the chance. I daren’t say another
-word to him, and I’ve known him these twenty years.’
-
-‘Let us hope there won’t be so much claret consumed,’ said Miss Fane. ‘I
-believe deep drinking is no longer fashionable. I should be grieved if
-Mr. O’Desmond did anything to injure his fortune. It may be only a
-temporary aberration (to which all Irishmen are subject, Mr. O’More),
-and then our small world will go on much as before.’
-
-‘If we could induce a sufficient number of Australian ladies to colonise
-Ireland,’ said O’More, bowing, ‘as prudent and as fascinating as Miss
-Fane,’ he continued, with a look at Annabel, ‘we might hope to change
-the national character. It only wants a dash of moderation to make it
-perfect. But we may trust to O’Desmond’s colonial experience to save him
-from ruin.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-Thus the last hours of the fortunate, still-remembered year of 1840
-passed away. A veritable jubilee, when the land rejoiced, and but few of
-the inhabitants of Australia found cause for woe. Great were the anxious
-speculations, however, as to weather. In a _fête champêtre_, everything
-depends upon that capricious department. And this being ‘a first-class
-season,’ unvarying cloudlessness could by no means be predicted.
-
-The malign divinities must have been appeased by the sacrifices of the
-drought. A calm and beauteous summer morn, warm, but tempered by the
-south sea-breeze, bid the children of the Great South Land greeting.
-
-The New Year opened radiantly as a season of joy and consolation. The
-whole district was astir from earliest hours; the preparations for the
-momentous experiences of the day were utterly indescribable, save by a
-Homeric Company of Bards (limited).
-
-As the sun rose higher,
-
- From Highland, Lowland, Border, Isle,
- How shall I name their separate style,
- Each chief of rank and fame,
-
-with his ‘following,’ appeared before the outer gates of Badajos, where
-such a number were gathered as would almost have sufficed to storm the
-historic citadel, in the breach of which Captain O’Desmond had fallen,
-and from which the estate had been named.
-
-The first day had been allotted to a liberally rendered lawn party,
-which was to include almost the whole available population of town and
-district, invited by public proclamation as well as by special
-invitation. Indeed, it had been notified through the press that, on New
-Year’s Day, Mr. O’Desmond would be ‘at home’ prepared to receive _all_
-his friends who desired to personally congratulate him upon his return
-from the interior.
-
-Never was there such a muster before, since the first gum-tree was
-felled, within sight of Yass Plains. An uninterrupted procession wound
-its way steadily on from the town, from all the country roads, down
-gullies, and across flats and marshes. Every farm sent its
-representative. So did every shop in the town, every station in the
-district. Not a woman in the land had apparently remained at home. Who
-minded the infant children on the 1st of January 1840 will always remain
-an unsolved mystery.
-
-The arrangements had been carefully considered by a past-master of
-organisation; and they did not break down under the unprecedented
-strain. As the horsemen and horsewomen, tax-carts, dog-carts, carriages,
-tandems, waggons and bullock-drays even, arrived at the outer gate, they
-were met by ready servitors, who directed them, through a cunningly
-devised system of separate lanes, to temporarily constructed enclosures,
-where they were enabled to unharness and otherwise dispose of their
-draught animals and vehicles.
-
-Sheds covered with that invaluable material the bark of the eucalyptus
-had been erected, and hay provided, as for the stabling of a regiment of
-cavalry; while small paddocks, well watered and with grass ‘up to their
-eyes’ (as the stock-riders expressed it), suited admirably those not
-over-particular rovers, who, having turned loose their nags, placed
-their saddles and bridles in a place of security, and thus
-disembarrassed themselves of anxiety for the day.
-
-When these arrangements had been satisfactorily made, they were guided
-towards the river-meadow, on a slope overlooking which the homestead and
-outbuildings were situated. Here was clustered an encampment of tents
-and booths, of every size and shape, and apparently devoted to as many
-various classes of amusement and recreation.
-
-The short grass of the river flat, as it was generally called, was
-admirably adapted for the present purposes and intentions. The
-propitious season, with its frequent showers, had furnished a fair
-imitation of English turf, both in verdure and in thickness of sward,
-the latter quality much assisted by the stud flock of the famed Badajos
-merinoes.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The concluding day of the memorable Badajos Revels, the unrivalled
-and immortal performance, had arrived. The last act was about to be
-called on. All the arrangements had been more than successful. The
-sports and pastimes had gone through without hitch or contention.
-The populace was enthusiastic in praise of the liberality which had
-ministered so lavishly to their amusement. The aristocracy were no
-less unanimous in their approbation. That battues, the picnics, the
-costume ball, had been, beyond all description, delightful,
-fascinating, well carried out, in such perfect taste—extraordinary
-good form—intoxicating—heavenly—utterly, indescribably delicious;
-the adjectives and superlatives varying with the age, position, sex,
-or character of the speaker.
-
-And now the modern miracle-play was to finish with a presentment, unique
-and marvellous beyond belief. The main body of guests and revellers had
-departed soon after daylight. ‘Conclamatum est, Poculatum est,’ said a
-young Irish priest. ‘I shall have to go into “retreat” if Father Mahony
-gets word of me at the ball. Wasn’t I Lord Edward Fitzgerald to the
-life? But I durstn’t stay away an hour longer from my flock.’ Many were
-the half-repentant, homeward-bound wayfarers who held similar opinions.
-And the continuous passage of the fords of the Yass River might have
-suggested to the Scots, by birth or extraction, King James’ army after
-Flodden—
-
- Tweed’s echoes heard the ceaseless plash,
- While many a broken band,
- Disordered through her currents dash,
- To gain the Scottish land.
-
-There was not, it is true, such need for haste, but the pace at which
-the shallower fords were taken might have suggested it.
-
-However, a considerable proportion of the house parties and guests of
-the neighbouring families, with such of the townspeople and others whose
-time was not specially valuable, remained for the closing spectacle.
-Much curiosity was aroused as to the nature of it.
-
-‘Perhaps you can unfold the mystery of this duel which we are all taking
-about,’ said Annabel to St. Maur, with whom she had been discussing the
-costumes of the ball.
-
-‘I happen to be in O’Desmond’s confidence,’ he replied; ‘so we may
-exchange secrets. Many years ago, in Paris, he fell across an old
-picture representing a fatal duel between Masks, after a ball. So he
-pitched upon it for representation, as a striking if rather weird
-interlude.’
-
-‘What a strange idea! How unreal and horrible. Fancy any of the people
-here going out to fight a duel. Is any one killed?’
-
-‘Of course, or there wouldn’t be half the interest. He proposes to dress
-the characters exactly like those in the picture, and, indeed, brought
-up the costumes from town with him. Your brother, by a coincidence,
-adopted one—that of a Red Indian. It will do for his second.’
-
-‘Thoroughly French, at any rate, and only for the perfect safety of the
-thing would be horrible to look at. However, we must do whatever Mr.
-O’Desmond tells us, for _years_ to come. I shall be too sleepy to be
-much shocked, that’s one thing. But what are they to fight with?
-Rapiers?’
-
-‘With foils, which, of course you know, are the same in appearance, only
-with a button on the end which prevents danger from a thrust.’
-
-‘Wilfred, my boy!’ had said O’Desmond, making a progress through the
-ball-room on the preceding night, ‘you look in that Huron dress as if
-you had neglected to scalp an enemy, and were grieving over the
-omission. Do the ladies know those odd-looking pieces of brown leather
-on the breast fringe are _real scalps_? I see they are. You will get no
-one to dance with you. But my errand is a selfish one. You will make a
-principal man in that “Duel after the Masquerade” which I have set my
-heart upon getting up to-morrow.’
-
-‘But in this dress?’
-
-‘My dear fellow, that is the very thing. Curiously, one of the actors in
-that weird duel scene is dressed as a Huron or Cherokee. You know Indian
-arms and legends, even names, were fashionable in Paris when
-Chateaubriand made every one weep with his Atala and Chactas? You could
-not have been more accurately dressed, and you will lay me under lasting
-obligation by taking the foils with Argyll, and investing your second
-with this dress.’
-
-‘With Argyll!’ echoed Wilfred with an accent of surprise.
-
-‘I know he is called the surest fencer in our small world, but I always
-thought you more than his match. He never, to my mind, liked your thrust
-in tierce.’
-
-‘You are right,’ said Wilfred. ‘Grisier thought me perfect in that. I
-shall meet him with pleasure. If only to show him—— Bah! I am getting so
-infected with the spirit of your Masquerade that one would think it a
-real duel. Command me, however.’
-
-‘A thousand thanks. Not later than three to-morrow afternoon. The ladies
-will not forgive us if we are not punctual.’
-
-From Wilfred Effingham’s expression of relief one might have thought
-that he had received good tidings. Yet, what was it after all—what could
-it lead to? A mock duel; a mere fencing match. What was there to clear
-his visage and lighten his heart in such a game as this?
-
-A trifle, doubtless. But William Argyll was to be his antagonist.
-Towards him he had been unconsciously nurturing a causeless resentment,
-which threatened to drift into hatred. Argyll was sunning himself daily
-(he thought) in the smiles of Vera Fane, pleased with the position and
-confident of success. And though she, from time to time, regarded
-Wilfred with glances of such kindly regard that he was well-nigh tempted
-to confess his past sins and his present love, he had resolutely kept
-aloof.
-
-Why should he court repulse, and only be more hopelessly humiliated? Did
-not all say—could he not see—that Miss Fane was merely waiting for
-Argyll’s challenge to the citadel of her heart to own its conquest and
-surrender?
-
-The Benmohr people, who knew something of everything and did not suffer
-their knowledge to decay for lack of practice, were devoted to fencing.
-Their lumber-room was half an armoury, holding a great array of foils,
-wire masks, single-sticks, and boxing-gloves. With these and a little
-pistol practice the dulness of many a wet afternoon had been enlivened.
-Perhaps in their trials of skill those with the foils were most popular.
-
-This was Argyll’s favourite pastime. A leading performer with all other
-weapons, he had a passion for fencing, for which his mountain-born
-activity pre-eminently fitted him. Effingham, a pupil of the celebrated
-Grisier, was thought to be nearly, if not quite his match. And more than
-once Argyll’s hasty temper had blazed out as Wilfred had ‘touched him’
-with a succession of rapid hits, or sent the foil from his hand by one
-of the artifices of the fencing school. Now, however, a trial would be
-afforded, the issue of which would be final and decisive. To each the
-requisite notice had been given, and each had accepted the chances of
-the contest. No one in future would be able to assert that this or that
-man was the better swordsman.
-
-A larger gathering took place at luncheon than could have been expected.
-Many were the reasons assigned for the punctuality with which all the
-ladies showed up. Fred Churbett, indeed, openly declared that the
-gladiator element was becoming dangerously developed, and that it would
-be soon necessary to shed blood in good earnest, to enjoy a decent
-reputation with the ladies of the land.
-
-‘I saw O’Desmond’s people making astounding changes in the anterior of
-the amphitheatre, Miss Annabel, from my bedroom window this morning. I
-should not be surprised at the arena being changed to an African forest,
-with a live giraffe and a Lion Ride, after Freiligrath. Do you remember
-the doomed giraffe? How
-
- With a roar the lion springs
- On her back now. What a race-horse!’
-
-‘I should not be surprised at anything,’ said Annabel. ‘Badajos is
-becoming an Enchanted Castle. How we shall endure our daily lives again,
-I can’t think. Every one is going home to-morrow, so perhaps the spell
-will be broken. Heigh-ho! When are we to be allowed to take our seats? I
-shall fall asleep if they put it off too long.’
-
-‘At three o’clock precisely the herald’s horn will be blown, and we
-shall see what we shall see. I hope Argyll will be in a good temper, or
-terrible things may happen.’
-
-‘What is this about Mr. Argyll’s temper?’ said Miss Fane. ‘Is he so much
-more ferocious than all the rest of you? I am sure that _I_ have seen
-nothing of it.’
-
-‘Only my nonsense, Miss Fane,’ said Fred, instantly retreating from his
-position. ‘The best-hearted, most generous fellow possible. Impetuous
-and high-spirited, you know. Highlanders and Irishmen—all the world, in
-fact, except that modern Roman, the Anglo-Saxon—are inclined to be
-choleric. Ha! there goes the bugle.’
-
-All were ready, indeed impatient, for the commencement. Many
-acquaintances had indeed ridden out from Yass, and reinforced the
-spectators. Mr. Rockley had appeared at lunch—scarcely in the best of
-tempers—and had given vent to his opinion that it was quite time for
-this foolery to be over. Not that he made this suggestion to O’Desmond
-personally.
-
-When the entrances were thrown open, and the spectators pressed into
-their seats with something of the impatience which in days of old seems
-to have characterised the frequenters of the amphitheatre, a cry of
-delighted surprise broke from the startled guests.
-
-In order to reproduce the accessories of the imaginary conflict with
-fidelity of detail, O’Desmond has spared no trouble. The Bois de
-Boulogne had been simulated by the artifice of transplanting whole
-trees, especially those which more closely resembled European
-evergreens. These had been mingled with others stripped of their
-foliage, by which deciduous deception the illusion of a northern winter
-was preserved. A coating of milk-white river sand had been strewn over
-the arena, imparting the appearance of the snow, in which the now
-historical masqueraders fought their celebrated duel. By filling up the
-openings left for windows, and excluding the sun from the roof as much
-as possible, an approach to the dim light proper to a Parisian December
-morning was produced. As hackney-coaches appeared, one at either end of
-the arena, and driving in, took their stations under trees, preparatory
-to permitting their sensational fares to alight, the burst of applause
-both from those familiar with the original picture, and others who were
-overcome by the realism of the scene, was tremendous. And when forth
-stepped from one of the carriages a Red Huron Indian, and with stately
-steps took up his position as second, to so great and painful a pitch
-rose the excitement among the ladies that ‘the boldest held’ her ‘breath
-for a time.’
-
-Pierrot now, with elastic springing gait, moved lightly forward towards
-his antagonist, a reckless Debardeur, who looked as if he had been
-dancing a veritable ‘Galop d’Enfer’ before he quitted the ‘Bal d’Opera.’
-Each performed an elaborate salute as they took their ground. The
-seconds measured their swords punctiliously.
-
-As the enthusiasm of the crowd broke forth in remark and exclamation,
-before the first passes were interchanged, Harry O’Desmond himself made
-his appearance among the ladies, and took his seat between Rosamond
-Effingham and Miss Fane, prepared to receive the shower of
-congratulations at once poured upon him.
-
-‘Yes, I _have_ taken a little trouble; but I am amply repaid, Miss
-Effingham, if I have succeeded in adding to the amusement of my lady
-friends. For those I have the honour to address’—and here the gallant
-_impresario_ looked as if the lady beside him had but to ask for a
-Sultan’s circlet, to have it tossed in her lap—‘what sacrifices would I
-not make?’
-
-‘Our distinguished host is becoming desperate,’ thought Rosamond. ‘I
-wonder who _she_ is? I am nearly certain it is Vera Fane. He and the
-Doctor are great friends. Now I think of it, he said the other day that
-she was, with one exception, the pearl of the district. Mamma, too, has
-been hinting at something. A nice lady neighbour at Badajos would be
-indeed a treasure.’
-
-‘What an exciting piece of sword-play this will be, Mr. O’Desmond,’ she
-said. ‘One cannot help thinking that there is something real about it.
-And I have an uneasy feeling that I cannot account for, such as I should
-call a presentiment, if all were not so perfectly safe. What do you say,
-Vera?’
-
-‘I say it is a most astonishing picture of a real duel. I ought to enjoy
-it very much, only that, like you, I feel a depression such as I have
-never had before. Oh, now they are beginning! Really it is quite a
-relief.’
-
-‘I must take a foil with the winner,’ said O’Desmond, ‘if you think it
-is so serious, just to see if I have forgotten my Parisian experiences.
-It reminds one of the Quartier Latin, and the students’ pipes—long hair
-and duels—daily matters of course. Ha! a wonderfully quick carte and
-counter-carte. There is something stirring in the clink of steel, all
-the world over, is there not, Miss Effingham?’
-
-The pictured scene was accurately reproduced. Each man, with his second,
-fantastically arrayed. The nearer combatant, in his loose garb, had his
-sword-arm bared to the elbow, for the greater freedom required with the
-weapon. Four other men, picturesquely attired, were present. Of these,
-two stood near to him whose back was towards the part of the theatre
-where the Effinghams and Miss Fane were sitting.
-
-The contest proceeded with curious similitude to an actual encounter.
-Attack and defence, feint and challenge, carte, tierce, ripeste,
-staccato, all the subtle and delicate manœuvres of which the rapier
-combat is susceptible, had been employed, to the wonder and admiration
-of the spectators.
-
-It was evident, before they had exchanged a dozen passes, that the men
-were most evenly matched. Much doubt was expressed as to who would prove
-the victor.
-
-Latterly, Wilfred, who, with equal tenacity and vigilance, had the
-cooler head, commenced to show by small but sure signs that he was
-gaining an advantage. Step by step he drew his antagonist nearer to him,
-and employing his favourite thrust, after a brilliant parry, touched him
-several times in succession. At each palpable hit the spectators gave a
-cheer, which evidently disturbed Argyll’s fiery temperament. He bit his
-lip, his brow contracted, but no token, excepting these and a burning
-spot on his cheek, showed the inward conflict. Suddenly he sprang
-forward with panther-like activity, and for one second Wilfred’s eye and
-hand were at fault, as, with a lightning lunge, Argyll delivered full
-upon his adversary’s chest a thrust, so like the real thing that, though
-the foil (as the spectators imagined) passed outside, the hilt of the
-mimic weapon rapped sharply, as if he had been run through the body. At
-the same moment he sank down, and was scarcely saved from falling, while
-Argyll, impatiently drawing back his weapon, threw it down and turned as
-if to leave the scene—half urged by his second—as was the successful
-combatant in the weird picture.
-
-‘Why—how wonderfully our brave combatants have imitated the originals,
-Mr. O’Desmond?’ said Rosamond, with unfeigned admiration. ‘The Debardeur
-sinks slowly from the arms of his second to the ground; his sword-point
-strikes the earth; his comrade and the Capuchin bend over him. They act
-the confusion of a death-scene well. His antagonist casts down his
-blood-stained sword—why, it _looks_ red—and hurries from the spot.’
-
-‘Yes,’ O’Desmond continued, ‘everything is now concluded happily,
-successfully, triumphantly, may I say; it needs but, dearest Miss
-Effingham, that I should offer you——’ What Mr. O’Desmond was minded to
-offer his fair neighbour can never be known, for at that moment a
-shriek, so wild and despairing, rent the air, that all conversation,
-ordinary and extraordinary, ceased.
-
-More astonishing still, Miss Fane sprang from her seat, and rushing into
-the arena with the speed of frenzy, knelt by the side of the defeated
-combatant, and with every endearing epithet supported his head, wringing
-her hands in agony as she gazed on the motionless form beside her.
-
-O’Desmond, leaping down without a thought of his late interesting
-employment, gave one glance at the fallen sword, another at the fallen
-man, and divined the situation.
-
-‘By ——!’ he said, ‘_the button has come off the foil_, and the poor boy
-is run through the body. He’ll be a dead man by sundown.’
-
-‘Not so sure of that; keep the people back while I examine him,’ said
-Mr. Sternworth, pushing suddenly to the front. ‘Stand back!’ he cried
-with the voice of authority. ‘How can I tell you what’s wrong with him
-if you don’t give him air? Miss Fane, I entreat you to be calm.’
-
-He lowered his voice and spoke in softened tones, for he had seen a look
-in Vera Fane’s face which none had ever marked there before. As she
-knelt by the side of the wounded man, from whose hurt the blood was
-pouring fast, in a bright red stream; as with passionate anxiety she
-gazed into his face, while her arms supported him in his death-like
-faint, her whole countenance betrayed the unutterable tenderness with
-which a woman regards her lover.
-
-The spectators stood assembled around the ill-fated combatant. Great and
-general was the consternation.
-
-The nature of the mischance—the loss of the button which guards the
-fencer in all exercises with the foil—was patent enough to those
-acquainted with small-sword practice. But a large proportion of the
-crowd, with no previous experience of such affairs, could with
-difficulty be got to believe that Argyll had not used unjustifiable
-means to the injury of his antagonist. These worthy people were for his
-being arrested and held to bail. His personal friends resented the idea.
-Words ran high; until indeed, at one time, it appeared as if a form of
-civic broil, common in the middle ages, would be revived with
-undesirable accuracy.
-
-Now, alas! the festive aspect of the scene was abruptly changed.
-O’Desmond’s grief at this most untoward ending to his entertainments was
-painful to witness. Argyll’s generous nature plunged him into a state of
-deep contrition for his passionate action.
-
-The women, one and all, were so shocked and excited by the sight of
-blood and the rumour, which quickly gained credence, that Wilfred
-Effingham was dying, that tearful lamentations and hysterical cries were
-heard in all directions. Nor indeed until it was authoritatively stated
-by the medical practitioner of the district, who was luckily present,
-that Mr. Effingham having been run through the body, had therefore
-received a dangerous but not necessarily fatal wound, was consolation
-possible.
-
-This gentleman, however, later on would by no means commit himself to a
-definite opinion. ‘Without doubt it was a critical case. Though the
-cœliac axis had been missed, by a miracle, the vasa-vasorum blood-vessel
-had suffered lesion. The left subclavian artery had been torn through,
-yet, from its known power of contraction, he trusted that the interior
-lining would be closed, when further loss of blood would cease. Of
-course, unfavourable symptoms might supervene at any moment—at any
-moment. At present the patient was free from pain. Quiet—that is,
-absolute rest—was indispensable. With no exciting visits, and—yes—with
-the closest attention and good nursing, a distinctly favourable
-termination might be—ahem—hoped for.’
-
-But an early doom, either alone or with all the aids that affection,
-friendship, ay or devoted love, could bring, was not written in the book
-of fate against Wilfred Effingham’s name. In the course of a week the
-popular practitioner alluded to had the pleasure of informing the
-anxious inhabitants of the Yass district ‘that the injury having, as he
-had the honour to diagnose, providentially not occurred to the trunk
-artery, the middle coat of the smaller blood-vessel had, from its
-elastic and contractile nature, after being torn by the partially
-blunted end of the foil, caused a closure. In point of fact, the injury
-had yielded to treatment. He would definitely pledge himself, in fact,
-that the patient was bordering upon convalescence. In a week or two he
-would be ready to support a removal to The Chase, where doubtless his
-youth, temperate habit, and excellent constitution would combine to
-produce a complete recovery.’
-
-These agreeable predictions were fulfilled to the letter. Yet was there
-another element involved in the case, which was thought to have
-exercised a powerful influence, if, indeed, it was not the chief factor
-in his recovery. The vision of sudden death which had passed before the
-eyes of the guests at Badajos had surprised the secret of Vera Fane’s
-heart. Of timid, almost imperceptible growth, the faint budding
-commencement of a girl’s fancy had, all in silence and secrecy, ripened
-into the fragrant blossom of a woman’s love. Pure, devoted,
-imperishable, such a sentiment is proof against the anguish of
-non-requital, the attacks of rivalry, even the ruder shocks of falsehood
-or infidelity. Let him, then, to whom, all unworthy, such a prize is
-allotted by a too indulgent destiny, sacrifice to the kind deities, and
-be thankful. It may have been—was doubtless—urged by Miss Fane’s
-admirers, that ‘that fellow Effingham was not half good enough for her,
-more especially after his idiotic affair with Christabel Rockley’; but,
-pray, which of us, to whom the blindly swaying Eros has been gracious,
-is not manifestly overrated, nay, made to blush for shortcomings from
-his early ideal?
-
-So must it ever be in the history of the race—were the secrets of all
-hearts known. Let us be consoled that we are not conspicuously inferior
-to our neighbours, and chiefly strive, in spite of that mysterious
-Disappointment—poor human nature—to gain some modest eminence. Let
-Wilfred Effingham, then, enjoy his undeserved good fortune, _comme nous
-autres_, assured that with such companionship he will be stronger to
-battle for the right while life lasts.
-
-‘How could you forgive me?’ he said, at the close of one of the happy
-confidences which his returning strength rendered possible. ‘I should
-never have dared to ask you after my folly.’
-
-‘Women love but once—that is, those who are worthy of the name,’ she
-said softly. ‘I had unwisely, it would seem, permitted my heart to
-stray. It passed into the possession of one who—well, scarce valued
-sufficiently the simple offering. But you do _now_, dearest, do you not?
-I will never forgive you, or rather, on second thoughts, I _will_
-forgive you, if hereafter you love any other woman but me.’
-
-‘You are an angel. Did I say so before? Never mind. Truth will bear
-repetition.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-Old Tom Glendinning commenced to fail in health soon after the permanent
-settlement of the district; his detractors averred, because the blacks
-left off spearing the cattle and took to station work. He lived long
-enough to hear of General Glendinning’s marriage, at which he expressed
-great satisfaction, coupled with the hope that the Major (as he always
-called him) would return to India, ‘av it was only to have another turn
-at thim murdtherin’ nay-gurs, my heavy curse on thim, from Bingal to
-Galantapee.’
-
-He was carefully nursed by Mrs. Evans, who had at length followed her
-husband to the new country, after repeated assurances that it was
-impossible for him to return to Lake William, but that she might please
-herself.
-
-They buried the old stock-rider, in accordance with his last wishes, on
-an island in the lake, within sight of Guy’s homestead, near his ancient
-steed Boney, who had preceded him in decease. The dog Crab survived him
-but a few weeks, and was carefully interred at his feet. It was noticed
-that no black of any description whatever, young or old, male or female,
-wild or tame, would ever set foot on the green, wave-washed islet
-afterwards.
-
-Andrew and Jeanie, after a few years, retired to a snug farm within easy
-distance of The Chase, at which place, for one reason or other, they
-spent nearly as much time as at home. Andrew’s aid was continually
-invoked in agricultural emergencies, more particularly when business
-called Wilfred away; while Jeanie’s invaluable counsel and reassuring
-presence, when the inmates of Mrs. Wilfred’s nursery developed alarming
-symptoms, was so largely in request that Andrew more than once remarked
-that ‘he didna ken but what he saw far mair o’ his auld dame before he
-had a hame o’ his ain. But she had aye ta’en a’ her pleasure in life at
-ither folk’s bedsides. Maist unco-omon!’
-
-Duncan, having once enjoyed an independent life in the new country,
-could not be induced to return to The Chase. He saved his money, and
-with national forecast commenced business in the rising township of
-Warleigh. Of this settlement he became in time the leading alderman (the
-burgesses obtained a municipality in the after-time), and rose finally
-to be mayor.
-
-The _Melbourne Argus_ printed _in extenso_ Mr. Cargill’s address to the
-electors of West Palmerston when a candidate for a vacancy in the
-Legislative Council. It was certain he would be returned at the head of
-the poll, doubtless to represent a Liberal Ministry before long. May
-there never be invited a less worthy personage to the councils of the
-land than the Hon. Duncan Cargill, M.L.C.
-
-Mr. Rockley, after his return to Port Phillip, hurled himself with his
-accustomed energy at every kind of investment. Not satisfied with
-extensive mercantile transactions, he bought agricultural lands, the
-nucleus of a fine estate. In Parliament he made such vigorous, idiomatic
-onslaughts upon the Government of the day as led the Speaker
-occasionally to suggest modification. He developed Warleigh, the town to
-which he had originally attached himself, wonderfully, and besides
-aiding all struggling settlers in the bad times, which arrived, as he
-had prophesied, close on the heels of inflation and over-trading. In a
-general way he benefited by good advice, friendly intercourse, and
-substantial assistance, everybody with whom he came into contact. As a
-magistrate, a perfect Draco (in theory), he was never known to remit a
-fine for certain offences. It was whispered, nevertheless, that he had
-many a time been known to pay such out of his own pocket.
-
-It is comforting to those who honour liberality and unselfishness to
-know that he amassed a large fortune. He continued to invest from time
-to time in land, the management of which chiefly served to occupy his
-mind in declining years. When the grave closed over the warm heart and
-eager spirit of William Rockley, men said that he left no fellow behind
-him. There are still those who believe him to have been unsurpassed for
-energy of mind and body, with a clear-headed forecast in affairs, joined
-to the warm sympathy which rendered it impossible to omit a kindness or
-forgo a benefit.
-
-The larger portion of the estate was willed to Christabel and her
-husband, but from the number of junior Clarkes of all sorts and sizes
-who fill the commodious family drag, a considerable subdivision of
-landed property will probably take place in another generation. Bob
-Clarke adopted easily the position of country gentleman. He no longer
-rides steeple-chases, but his four-in-hand team is certainly superior in
-blood, bone, matching, and appointments to anything south of the line.
-
-But little remains to tell. Our small community reached that stage when,
-as with nations, the less history needed the better for their happiness.
-As to this last apocryphal commodity (as some have deemed), Wilfred
-Effingham avers that Vera and he have such a large supply on hand that
-he is troubled in spirit only by the thought that something in the
-nature of evil _must_ happen, were it only in accordance with the law of
-averages.
-
-The Port Phillip investments paid so well that, upon the sale of Benmohr
-by Argyll and Hamilton, he purchased that ever-memorable historic
-station. Mrs. Teviot and Wullie remained in possession almost as long as
-they lived, but never could be brought to regard Mr. Effingham in any
-other light than that of a neighbour and a visitor of ‘their gentlemen.’
-He was often reminded of the muddy winter evening when he first arrived.
-
-Dean Sternworth—thus promoted—lives on, growing still more wonderful
-roses, and experiencing an access of purest pleasure when a Marie Van
-Houte or Souvenir de Malmaison excites the envy of the district.
-
-Marrying, christening, and, indeed, burying the inhabitants of Yass—for
-death also is in Arcadia—his unobtrusive path is daily trodden, ‘and,
-sure the Eternal Master found, his single talent well employed.’
-
-Among his chief and enduring pleasures are his monthly visits to Lake
-William to perform service in the freestone church, which has been
-erected by the Effingham family and their neighbours on a spot easy of
-general access. On such occasions Dr. Fane is generally found at The
-Chase, where the friends argue by the hour together. Such a period of
-continuous mutual entertainment must it have been that, on one occasion,
-was familiarly referred to by Master Hubert Warleigh Effingham as
-lasting ‘till all was blue.’
-
-Howard Effingham has once more been placed by circumstances in the
-enviable position of a man who has nothing in this world to attend to
-but his favourite hobby, to which he is sufficiently attached to devote
-every moment of his spare time to it. That fortunate ex-militaire has
-now few other foes to consider than the native cat (dasyura), the black
-cormorant, and the dingo.
-
-It must be confessed that they give him more trouble than ever—in his
-youth—did the Queen’s enemies. The cormorants eat his young fish, and
-when the captain extracted from the dead body of one of them no less
-than six infantine trout, the tears (so his grandson averred) came into
-his eyes. The partridges, even the gold and silver pheasants were not
-sacred from the native cat. An occasional dingo makes his appearance,
-wandering from Black Mountain (the doctor was always an indifferent
-‘poisoner,’ says the parson), and a brace of gazelle fawns have never
-been sufficiently accounted for. But the exhibition of strychnine
-crystals provides a solution, and the land has peace.
-
-On the whole, progress has been made. The furred, feathered, or finned
-emigrants are steadily increasing; fair shooting can soon be allowed,
-and extermination will be impossible.
-
-Between ourselves, a leash of foxes were turned loose in the
-gibba-gunyahs, near which the first dingo was killed, by the Lake
-William hounds, and Jack Barker swore (only he ‘stretches’ so) that he
-saw the vixen feeding five cubs—one with a white tag to his brush (Jack
-is always circumstantial), with the biggest buck ’possum he ever saw.
-
-The Lake William hounds have long been back in their kennels. John
-Hampden makes a point of attending the first meet, and O’Desmond (whose
-heart was not broken, or was at least successfully repaired by his
-subsequent marriage) is a steady supporter, as of yore.
-
-But somehow the whole affair doesn’t feel so jolly as when Argyll and
-Hamilton, Ardmillan and Forbes, Fred Churbett and Neil, Malahyde and
-Edward Belfield—all the ‘Benmohr mob’ in fact—were safe for every meet.
-
-Perhaps, though with enthusiasts his steady march is disregarded, old
-Time may possibly have had something to do with the decrease of
-enthusiasm. Mrs. Wilfred does not approve of her husband riding so hard
-as in the brave days of old. She herself, from circumstances, is often
-absent, and scarcely enjoys lending Emigrant, still _nearly_ as good as
-ever, to lady visitors. A heavy autumn shower, too, acted unfavourably
-upon the health of the M.F.H., and explained practically what lumbago
-most closely resembles.
-
-Still Howard Effingham, nobly loyal to his ideal, presses gallantly
-forward to the realisation of his hopes. The coming year will see an
-opening meet of the Lake William hounds, such as, in _one_ respect, at
-least, was never ridden to in Australia before.
-
-On some grey-hued, red-dawning May morn, freshly recalling, like the
-verse of an old song, how many a hunting day of yore, will he view a
-_fox_ away from the upper corner of the ti-tree covert, on the rocky
-spur of the yellow-box range—a _real_ fox—as red, as wiry, with as white
-a tag to his brush as ever a straight-goer that stretched across the
-pastures before the Pytchley or the Quorn. Nevertheless _Australian born
-and bred_.
-
-Standing in his stirrups, he watches the leading hounds pour through the
-paddock fence, the remainder settling to the scent, or at silent speed
-sweeping over the forest parks that border the lake meadows. Rosamond
-St. Maur is far away, alas! and Fergus out at grass; but Major-General
-Sir Walter Glendinning, on leave from India, is trying the speed of the
-best Arab in the Mofussil. Mrs. O’Desmond is watching her husband
-anxiously, Guy is home from Port Phillip, with Bob Clarke and Ardmillan,
-each on a horse ‘fit to go for a man’s life,’ and wild with frolic
-spirits. Mrs. Vera Effingham is out, and, as luck would have it, ready
-and willing to remind Emigrant of old Black Mountain days. John Hampden,
-taking The Caliph by the head, now snow white, but still safe across
-timber, echoes back Wilfred’s ‘Forrard, forrard, away!’ as he sails off
-with the lead, and forgetting his wife and family, feels perfectly,
-ecstatically happy. Then, and then only, will Howard Effingham
-acknowledge that he has at length achieved the position of which he has
-so often dreamed—then will he hold himself to be in real, completest
-earnest—an Australian Squire.
-
- THE END
-
- _Printed by_ R. & R. CLARK, LIMITED, _Edinburgh_
-
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- JOHNNY LUDLOW. Fifth Series. Fifteenth Thousand.
- JOHNNY LUDLOW. Sixth Series.
-
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-
- THE NOVELS OF ROSA NOUCHETTE CAREY.
-
- _Popular Edition. Crown 8vo. 3s. 6d. each._
-
-NELLIE’S MEMORIES. 30th Thousand.
-
- _STANDARD._—“Miss Carey has the gift of writing naturally and simply,
-her pathos is true and unforced, and her conversations are sprightly and
-sharp.”
-
-WEE WIFIE. 22nd Thousand.
-
- _LADY._—“Miss Carey’s novels are always welcome; they are out of the
-common run, immaculately pure, and very high in tone.”
-
-BARBARA HEATHCOTE’S TRIAL. 20th Thousand.
-
- _DAILY TELEGRAPH._—“A novel of a sort which it would be a real loss to
-miss.”
-
-ROBERT ORD’S ATONEMENT. 17th Thousand.
-
- _STANDARD._—“A most delightful book.”
-
-WOOED AND MARRIED. 21st Thousand.
-
- _STANDARD._—“There is plenty of romance in the heroine’s life. But it
-would not be fair to tell our readers wherein that romance consists or
-how it ends. Let them read the book for themselves. We will undertake to
-promise that they will like it.”
-
-HERIOT’S CHOICE. 18th Thousand.
-
- _MORNING POST._—“Deserves to be extensively known and read.... Will
-doubtless find as many admirers as readers.”
-
-QUEENIE’S WHIM. 18th Thousand.
-
- _GUARDIAN._—“A thoroughly good and wholesome story.”
-
-MARY ST. JOHN. 16th Thousand.
-
- _JOHN BULL._—“The story is a simple one, but told with much grace and
-unaffected pathos.”
-
-NOT LIKE OTHER GIRLS. 19th Thousand.
-
-_NEW YORK HOME JOURNAL._—“One of the sweetest, daintiest, and most
-interesting of the season’s publications.“
-
-FOR LILIAS. 14th Thousand.
-
- _VANITY FAIR._—“A simple, earnest, and withal very interesting story;
-well conceived, carefully worked out, and sympathetically told.”
-
-UNCLE MAX. 15th Thousand.
-
- _LADY._—“So intrinsically good that the world of novel-readers ought
-to be genuinely grateful.”
-
-ONLY THE GOVERNESS. 15th Thousand.
-
- _PALL MALL GAZETTE._—“This novel is for those who like stories with
-something of Jane Austen’s power, but with more intensity of feeling
-than Jane Austen displayed, who are not inclined to call pathos twaddle,
-and who care to see life and human nature in their most beautiful form.”
-
-LOVER OR FRIEND? 12th Thousand.
-
- _GUARDIAN._—“The refinement of style and delicacy of thought will make
-_Lover or Friend?_ popular with all readers who are not too deeply
-bitten with a desire for things improbable in their lighter literature.”
-
-BASIL LYNDHURST. 10th Thousand.
-
- _PALL MALL GAZETTE._—“We doubt whether anything has been written of
-late years so fresh, so pretty, so thoroughly natural and bright.”
-
-SIR GODFREY’S GRAND-DAUGHTERS. 8th Thousand.
-
- _OBSERVER._—“A capital story.”
-
-THE OLD, OLD STORY. 9th Thousand.
-
- _DAILY NEWS._—“Miss Carey’s fluent pen has not lost its power of
-writing fresh and wholesome fiction.”
-
-THE MISTRESS OF BRAE FARM. 10th Thousand.
-
- _PALL MALL GAZETTE._—“Miss Carey’s untiring pen loses none of its
-power, and her latest work is as gracefully written, as full of quiet
-home charm, as fresh and wholesome, so to speak, as its many
-predecessors.”
-
-MRS. ROMNEY and “BUT MEN MUST WORK.”
-
- _PALL MALL GAZETTE._—“By no means the least attractive of the works of
-this charming writer.”
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
- STALKY AND CO.
-
-
- By RUDYARD KIPLING
-
-
-
-
- Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
- THE
- METTLE OF THE PASTURE
-
-
-
-
- By JAMES LANE ALLEN
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
-
- MIRANDA OF THE BALCONY
-
-
- By A.E.W. MASON
-
-
-
-
- Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
- YOUNG APRIL
-
-
- By EGERTON CASTLE
-
-
- _WITH ILLUSTRATIONS_
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
-
- VALDA HÂNEM
- THE ROMANCE OF A TURKISH HARÎM
-
- By DAISY HUGH PRYCE
-
-
-
-
- Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
- THE ENCHANTER
-
-
- By U.L. SILBERRAD
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
-
-
-
- DONNA TERESA
-
-
- By F.M. PEARD
-
-
-
-
- Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
- VIA CRUCIS
-
-
- By F. MARION CRAWFORD
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
- RICHARD CARVEL
-
-
- By WINSTON CHURCHILL
-
- AUTHOR OF “THE CELEBRITY,” ETC. ETC.
-
- _WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY_
-
- CARLTON T. CHAPMAN AND MALCOLM FRASER
-
- _Upwards of 130,000 Copies have been sold in America since
- publication._
-
- _BOOKMAN._—“A spirited tale of wandering and adventure, with a
-wholesome love story to keep it fresh and sweet and provide for it a
-happy ending.”
-
- _OBSERVER._—“A fine historical story of early American days; full of
-incident and ‘go,’ and admirably written.”
-
-
- Second Impression. Extra Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
- ONE OF THE GRENVILLES
-
- By SYDNEY ROYSE LYSAGHT
-
- AUTHOR OF “THE MARPLOT”
-
- _GUARDIAN._—“We shall tell no more of Mr. Lysaght’s clever and
-original tale, contenting ourselves with heartily recommending it to any
-on the look-out for a really good and absorbing story.”
-
- _SATURDAY REVIEW._—“Mr. Sydney Lysaght should have a future before him
-among writers of fiction. _One of the Grenvilles_ is full of interest.”
-
- _BOOKMAN._—“Is so high above the average of novels that its readers
-will want to urge on the writer a more frequent exercise of his powers.”
-
- _ACADEMY._—“There is freshness and distinction about _One of the
-Grenvilles_.... Both for its characters and setting, and for its
-author’s pleasant wit, this is a novel to read.”
-
- _DAILY TELEGRAPH._—“Since he wrote _The Marplot_, Mr. Lysaght has
-degenerated neither in freshness, originality, nor sense of humour.”
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Second Impression. Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
-
- THE GAME AND THE CANDLE
-
- By RHODA BROUGHTON
-
- _OBSERVER._—“The story is an excellent one.... Miss Rhoda Broughton
-well maintains her place among our novelists as one capable of telling a
-quiet yet deeply interesting story of human passions.”
-
- _SPECTATOR._—“The book is extremely clever.”
-
-
- Second Impression. Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
- THE
- TREASURY OFFICER’S WOOING
-
-By CECIL LOWIS
-
- _GUARDIAN._—“An exceedingly well-written, pleasant volume.... Entirely
-enjoyable.”
-
- _LITERATURE._—“A capital picture of official life in Burma.”
-
- _DAILY TELEGRAPH._—“Emphatically of a nature to make us ask for more
-from the same source.... Those who appreciate a story without any
-sensational incidents, and written with keen observation and great
-distinction of style, will find it delightful reading.... Cannot fail to
-please its readers.”
-
- _SPECTATOR._—“Mr. Lowis’s story is pleasant to read in more senses
-than one. It is not only clever and wholesome, but printed in a type so
-large and clear as to reconcile us to the thickness of the volume.”
-
- _ATHENÆUM._—“The author writes in a clear, attractive style, and
-succeeds in maintaining the reader’s interest from the first page to the
-last.”
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
- OFF THE HIGH ROAD
-
- By ELEANOR C. PRICE
-
- AUTHOR OF “YOUNG DENYS,” “IN THE LION’S MOUTH,“ ETC.
-
- _ATHENÆUM._—“A pleasant tale.”
-
- _SPEAKER._—“A charming bit of social comedy, tinged with just a
-suspicion of melodrama.... The atmosphere of the story is so bright and
-genial that we part from it with regret.”
-
- _DAILY TELEGRAPH._—“At once ingenious, symmetrical, and
-entertaining.... Miss Price’s fascinating romance.”
-
- _LITERATURE._—“A simple, but very pleasant story.”
-
- _SPECTATOR._—“The notion of an orphan heiress, the daughter of an
-Earl, and the cynosure of two London seasons, flying precipitately from
-her guardians, who are endeavouring to force her into a match with a man
-she detests, and hiding herself under an assumed name in a remote rural
-district of the Midlands, is an excellent motive in itself, and gains
-greatly from the charm and delicacy of Miss Price’s handling.”
-
- _ACADEMY._—“A quiet country book in the main, with more emotion than
-action, and continuous interest.”
-
-
- Second Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
- THE PRIDE OF JENNICO
-
- _BEING A MEMOIR OF_
-
- CAPTAIN BASIL JENNICO
-
- By EGERTON CASTLE
-
- _ACADEMY._—“A capital romance.”
-
- _COUNTRY LIFE._—“This story of the later years of the eighteenth
-century will rank high in literature. It is a fine and spirited romance
-set in a slight but elegant and accurate frame of history. The book
-itself has a peculiar and individual charm by virtue of the stately
-language in which it is written.... It is stately, polished, and full of
-imaginative force.”
-
- _LIVERPOOL DAILY MERCURY._—“The book is written in a strong and terse
-style of diction with a swift and vivid descriptive touch. In its grasp
-of character and the dramatic nature of its plot it is one of the best
-novels of its kind since Stevenson’s _Prince Otto_.”
-
- Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
- STORIES FROM AMERICAN HISTORY
-
- BUCCANEERS AND PIRATES
- OF OUR COASTS
-
- By FRANK R. STOCKTON
- AUTHOR OF “RUDDER GRANGE”
-
- _WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY_
- GEORGE VARIAN AND B. WEST CLINEDINST
-
- _PALL MALL GAZETTE._—“A fine book.... They are exciting reading....
-Eminently informing.”
-
- _ACADEMY._—“Mr. Frank R. Stockton is always interesting, whether he
-writes for young or old.”
-
-
- Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
- HER MEMORY
-
- By MAARTEN MAARTENS
-
- AUTHOR OF “MY LADY NOBODY,” ETC.
-
- _DAILY TELEGRAPH._—“Full of the quiet grace and literary excellence
-which we have now learnt to associate with the author.”
-
- _DAILY NEWS._—“An interesting and characteristic example of this
-writer’s manner. It possesses his sobriety of tone and treatment, his
-limpidity and minuteness of touch, his keenness of observation.... The
-book abounds in clever character sketches.... It is very good.”
-
- _ST. JAMES’S GAZETTE._—“There is something peculiarly fascinating in
-Mr. Maarten Maartens’s new story. It is one of those exquisitely told
-tales, not unhappy, nor tragic, yet not exactly ‘happy,’ but full of the
-pain—as a philosopher has put it—that one prefers, which are read, when
-the reader is in the right mood, with, at least, a subdued sense of
-tears, tears of pleasure.”
-
- _ATHENÆUM._—“Maarten Maartens has never written a brighter social
-story, and it has higher qualities than brightness.”
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
- THE
-
- ADVENTURES OF FRANCOIS
-
- _Foundling, Thief, Juggler, and Fencing Master
- during the French Revolution_
-
- By S. WEIR MITCHELL, M.D.
-
- AUTHOR OF “HUGH WYNNE,” ETC.
-
- _DAILY TELEGRAPH._—“It is delightfully entertaining throughout, and
-throws much instructive light upon certain subordinate phases of the
-great popular upheaval that convulsed France between 1788 and 1794....
-Recounted with unflagging vivacity and inexhaustible good humour.”
-
- _DAILY MAIL._—“This lively piece of imagination is animated throughout
-by strong human interest and novel incident.”
-
-
- Sixth Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
- CHARACTERISTICS
-
- By S. WEIR MITCHELL, M.D. LL.D. (Harvard)
-
- AUTHOR OF “THE ADVENTURES OF FRANCOIS”
-
- _SPECTATOR._—“Very well worth reading.”
-
- _ST. JAMES’S GAZETTE._—“This charming book.”
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
- “WAR TO THE KNIFE”
-
- OR TANGATA MAORI
-
- By ROLF BOLDREWOOD
-
- _SPEAKER._—“A stirring tale.... We are inclined to think that _War to
-the Knife_ is the best story we have had from Mr. Boldrewood since he
-gave us the inimitable _Robbery under Arms_.”
-
- _ACADEMY._—“A stirring romance.”
-
- _OUTLOOK._—“Anyone who likes a good story, combined with any amount of
-information on strange lands, should get this book.”
-
-
-
-
- Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
- A
- ROMANCE OF CANVAS TOWN
- _AND OTHER STORIES_
-
- By ROLF BOLDREWOOD
-
- CONTENTS
-
-A ROMANCE OF CANVAS TOWN—THE FENCING OF WANDAROONA: A RIVERINA
- REMINISCENCE—THE GOVERNESS OF THE POETS—OUR NEW COOK: A TALE OF THE
- TIMES—ANGELS UNAWARES
-
- _DAILY TELEGRAPH._—“Eminently readable, being written in the breezy,
-happy-go-lucky style which characterizes the more recent fictional works
-of the author of that singularly earnest and impressive romance,
-_Robbery under Arms_.”
-
- _DAILY MAIL._—“As pleasant as ever.”
-
- _GLASGOW HERALD._—“They will repay perusal.”
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
- THE FOREST LOVERS
-
- A ROMANCE
-
- By MAURICE HEWLETT
-
- _SPECTATOR._—“_The Forest Lovers_ is no mere literary _tour de force_,
-but an uncommonly attractive romance, the charm of which is greatly
-enhanced by the author’s excellent style.”
-
- _DAILY TELEGRAPH._—“Mr. Maurice Hewlett’s _Forest Lovers_ stands out
-with conspicuous success.... He has compassed a very remarkable
-achievement.... For nearly four hundred pages he carries us along with
-him with unfailing resource and artistic skill, while he unrolls for us
-the course of thrilling adventures, ending, after many tribulations, in
-that ideal happiness towards which every romancer ought to wend his
-tortuous way.... There are few books of this season which achieve their
-aim so simply and whole-heartedly as Mr. Hewlett’s ingenious and
-enthralling romance.”
-
-
- Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
- THE
- GOSPEL OF FREEDOM
-
- By ROBERT HERRICK
-
- AUTHOR OF “THE MAN WHO WINS,” “LITERARY LOVE LETTERS, AND
- OTHER STORIES”
-
- _DAILY MAIL._—“Distinctly enjoyable and suggestive of much profitable
-thought.”
-
- _SCOTSMAN._—“The book has a deal of literary merit, and is well
-furnished with clever phrases.”
-
- _ATHENÆUM._—“Remarkably clever.... The writing throughout is clear,
-and the story is well constructed.”
-
- W.D. HOWELLS in _LITERATURE_.—“A very clever new novel.”
-
- _GUARDIAN._—“The novel is well written, and full of complex interests
-and personalities. It touches on many questions and problems clearly and
-skilfully.”
-
- _DAILY CHRONICLE._—“A book which entirely interested us for the whole
-of a blazing afternoon. He writes uncommonly well.”
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
- _100,000 copies of this work have been sold_
-
- THE CHOIR INVISIBLE
-
- By JAMES LANE ALLEN
-
- AUTHOR OF “SUMMER IN ARCADY,” “A KENTUCKY CARDINAL,” ETC.
-
- _ACADEMY._—“A book to read, and a book to keep after reading. Mr.
-Allen’s gifts are many—a style pellucid and picturesque, a vivid and
-disciplined power of characterization, and an intimate knowledge of a
-striking epoch and an alluring country.... So magical is the wilderness
-environment, so fresh the characters, so buoyant the life they lead, so
-companionable, so well balanced, and so touched with humanity, the
-author’s personality, that I hereby send him greeting and thanks for a
-brave book.... _The Choir Invisible_ is a fine achievement.”
-
-_PALL MALL GAZETTE._—“Mr. Allen’s power of character drawing invests the
-old, old story with renewed and absorbing interest.... The fascination
-of the story lies in great part in Mr. Allen’s graceful and vivid
-style.”
-
-
- Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
- A DRAMA IN SUNSHINE
-
- By HORACE ANNESLEY VACHELL
-
- CONTENTS
-
-THE PROLOGUE
-
-CHAPTER I. SAUSAGES AND PALAVER—II. ILLUMINATION—III. WILLIAM
- CHILLINGWORTH—IV. CALAMITY CAÑON—V. SPECULATIONS—VI. WHICH CONTAINS
- A MORAL—VII. OF BLOOD AND WATER—VIII. WHICH ENDS IN FLAMES—IX. “IS
- WRIT IN MOODS AND FROWNS AND WRINKLES STRANGE”—X. THE DAUGHTERS OF
- THEMIS
-
- _LITERATURE._—“It has the joy of life in it, sparkle, humour,
- charm.... All the characters, in their contrasts and developments,
- are drawn with fine delicacy; and the book is one of those few which
- one reads again with increased pleasure.”
-
- _DAILY TELEGRAPH._—“A story of extraordinary interest.... Mr.
- Vachell’s enthralling story, the dénouement of which worthily crowns
- a literary achievement of no little merit.”
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
- HUGH GWYETH
-
- A ROUNDHEAD CAVALIER
-
- By BEULAH MARIE DIX
-
- _PALL MALL GAZETTE._—“A thoroughly interesting story.... We hope
- it will not be the last of its kind from the author.”
-
- _SATURDAY REVIEW._—“We found it difficult to tear ourselves away
- from the fascinating narrative.”
-
- _SPECTATOR._—“There is no gainsaying the spirit and fluency of the
- narrative.”
-
- _LEEDS MERCURY._—“The boy hero is admirably drawn, and his
- stirring adventures are told with uncommon vivacity.”
-
-
- Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
- BISMILLAH
-
- By A.J. DAWSON
-
- AUTHOR OF “MERE SENTIMENT,” “GOD’S FOUNDLING,” ETC.
-
- A romantic story of Moorish life in the Riff Country and in Tangier
- by Mr. A.J. Dawson, whose last novel, _God’s Foundling_, was well
- received in the beginning of the year, and whose West African and
- Australian Bush stories will be familiar to most readers of fiction.
- _Bismillah_ is the title chosen for Mr. Dawson’s new book, which may
- be regarded as the outcome of his somewhat adventurous experiences
- in Morocco last year.
-
- _ACADEMY._—“Romantic and dramatic, and full of colour.”
-
- _GUARDIAN._—“Decidedly clever and original.... Its excellent local
- colouring, and its story, as a whole interesting and often dramatic,
- make it a book more worth reading and enjoyable than is at all
- common.”
-
- _SPEAKER._—“A stirring tale of love and adventure.... There is
- enough of exciting incident, of fighting, intrigue, and love-making
- in _Bismillah_ to satisfy the most exacting reader.”
-
- _MANCHESTER GUARDIAN._—“An interesting and pleasing tale.”
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
- RUPERT, BY THE GRACE OF GOD—
-
- By DORA GREENWELL McCHESNEY
-
- _DAILY TELEGRAPH._—“Miss McChesney shows that she possesses both
- graphic powers and imagination in the course of her story, and those
- parts of it which are historical are told with a due regard for
- truth as well as picturesqueness.”
-
- _ATHENÆUM._—“A singular successful specimen of the ‘historical’
- fiction of the day.”
-
- _WORLD._—“The reader will rapidly find his attention absorbed by a
- really stirring picture of stirring times.”
-
- _OBSERVER._—“Miss McChesney has mastered her period thoroughly,
- and tells an attractive story in a very winning fashion.”
-
- _GUARDIAN._—“The description of the flight from Naseby is one of
- real eloquence, and profoundly moving. There is brilliancy, insight,
- and feeling in the story.”
-
-
- Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
- THE DAY’S WORK
-
- By RUDYARD KIPLING
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
-THE BRIDGEBUILDERS—A WALKING DELEGATE—THE SHIP THAT FOUND HERSELF—THE
- TOMB OF HIS ANCESTORS—THE DEVIL AND THE DEEP SEA—WILLIAM THE
- CONQUEROR—·007—THE MALTESE CAT—BREAD UPON THE WATERS—AN ERROR OF THE
- FOURTH DIMENSION—MY SUNDAY AT HOME—THE BRUSHWOOD BOY
-
- _ST. JAMES’S GAZETTE._—“This new batch of Mr. Kipling’s short stories
-is splendid work. Among the thirteen there are included at least five of
-his very finest.... Speaking for ourselves, we have read _The Day’s
-Work_ with more pleasure than we have derived from anything of Mr.
-Kipling’s since _The Jungle Book_.... It is in the Findlaysons, and the
-Scotts, and the Cottars, and the ‘Williams,’ that Mr. Kipling’s true
-greatness lies. These are creations that make one feel pleased and proud
-that we are also English. What greater honour could there be to an
-English writer?”
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
- MEN’S TRAGEDIES
-
- By R.V. RISLEY
-
-CONTAINING:—THE MAN WHO LOVED, THE MAN WHO HATED, THE MAN WHO BORE, THE
- MAN WHO CARED, THE MAN WHO FELL, THE MAN WHO SNEERED, THE MAN WHO
- KILLED, THE MAN WHO DIED, THE MAN WHO WAS HIMSELF.
-
- _OUTLOOK._—“Mr. R.V. Risley may be congratulated on having produced a
-set of really moving studies.”
-
- _SCOTSMAN._—“The stories are powerful studies of human nature, which
-show considerable art in presenting the stronger passions.”
-
- _GLASGOW HERALD._—“Clever, striking, and impressionist sort of
-stories.”
-
-
- Globe 8vo. Gilt top. 6s.
-
- THE SHORT-LINE WAR
-
- By MERWIN-WEBSTER
-
- _LITERATURE._—“The story is well written, and full of exciting
-intrigue.”
-
- _SPECTATOR._—“The story is well put together, well told, and
-exciting.”
-
- _SPEAKER._—“Short, exciting, well composed.”
-
- _ACADEMY._—“Told with much spirit.”
-
- _PALL MALL GAZETTE._—“The book is briskly written by a man who is
-interested in his subject.”
-
- _SCOTSMAN._—“The story is told with capital spirit, and the reader is
-not given time to feel dull.”
-
- _GLASGOW HERALD._—“Vivid and interesting.”
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
- THE
-
- TRAIL OF THE GOLDSEEKERS
-
- A RECORD OF TRAVEL IN PROSE
- AND VERSE
-
- By HAMLIN GARLAND
-
- _SPEAKER._—“It consists of vivid prose pictures of adventure in the
-wild North West, interspersed with unconventional and often extremely
-beautiful snatches of verse. The book reflects better than anything else
-we have seen the pitiless majesty of the scenery and the tragic
-conditions of the quest.”
-
- _OBSERVER._—“Racy, invigorating, and informing.... Interspersed with
-some admirable verses.”
-
- _BOOKMAN._—“To read the volume is to make the overland journey to the
-Yukon River. We have enjoyed the book most thoroughly.”
-
-
- Crown 8vo. 6s.
-
- THE LOVES
-
- OF THE
-
- LADY ARABELLA
-
- By M.E. SEAWELL
-
- _SPEAKER._—“A story told with so much spirit that the reader tingles
-with suspense until the end is reached.... A very pleasant tale of more
-than common merit.”
-
- _PALL MALL GAZETTE._—“It is short and excellent reading.... Old Peter
-Hawkshaw, the Admiral, is a valuable creation, sometimes quite ‘My Uncle
-Toby’.... The scene, when the narrator dines with him in the cabin for
-the first time, is one of the most humorous in the language, and stamps
-Lady Hawkshaw—albeit, she is not there—as one of the wives of fiction in
-the category of Mrs. Proudie herself.... The interest is thoroughly
-sustained to the end.... Thoroughly healthy and amusing.”
-
- _WORLD._—“Brisk and amusing throughout.”
-
- MACMILLAN AND CO., LTD., LONDON
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s note:
-
-Minor errors, attributable to the printer, have been corrected.
-
-The following issues should be noted. There were a number of confusions
-about nested quotation marks, which have been addressed to ease the
-reading experience. Where the author’s intent is unclear, the text is
-retained.
-
-Errors of punctuation in the advertisement section at the end of the
-text were corrected, silently, in the interest of consistency.
-
- p. 5 intercour[es/se] Transposed.
-
- p. 41 [‘]Well, I don’t deny Added.
-
- p. 74 [‘]Quite right, Dick; Added.
-
- p. 94 and considerable[./,] Mick and his sons Corrected.
-
- p. 99 ‘Ladies and gentlemen!’ he shouted[.] Added.
-
- p. 109 the English thoroughbred.[’] Added.
-
- p. 116 labouring up and [and] glanced Removed.
-
- p. 118 Dick [road/rode] up straight Corrected.
-
- p. 147 about one another,[’] Added.
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- p. 178 licks [’]im Added.
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- p. 206 Fred Churbett out of [of] his bed Removed.
-
- p. 224 villians _sic._
-
- p. 225 [“]if we meet any Added.
-
- back you go to the barracks[’/”] Corrected.
-
- [‘]They’d take me ... and free from Added.
- trouble,”[’]
-
- p. 227 'What a tragedy!['] Added.
-
- p. 232 any other[ other] part Removed.
-
- p. 252 [‘]I like forest Added.
-
- p. 269 compressd _sic._
-
- p. 275 I see it in your face[.] Added.
-
- p. 287 wild-f[l]owl Removed.
-
- p. 298 he became a finder of continents.[’] Added.
-
- p. 310 [‘]You will enjoy Added.
-
- Hu[r]bert Removed.
-
- p. 313 Gera[r/l]d Corrected.
-
- p. 315 my dear boy[,/.] Corrected.
-
- p. 318 but the old who die![’] Removed.
-
- p. 367 home at last——[”/’] Corrected.
-
- Hu[r]bert Removed.
-
- p. 373 well-featured, manly[.] Added.
-
- p. 419 But some[w]how Removed.
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BABES IN THE BUSH***
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-located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: Babes in the Bush</p>
-<p>Author: Rolf Boldrewood</p>
-<p>Release Date: February 13, 2016 [eBook #51209]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BABES IN THE BUSH***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4 class="nf-center">E-text prepared by KD Weeks, MWS,<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive/American Libraries<br />
- (<a href="https://archive.org/details/americana">https://archive.org/details/americana</a>)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive/American Libraries. See
- <a href="https://archive.org/details/babesinbush00boldrich">
- https://archive.org/details/babesinbush00boldrich</a>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<div class='tnotes'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>Transcriber’s Note:</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>Please
-see the transcriber’s <a href='#endnote'>note</a> at the end of this text
-for details regarding the handling of any textual issues encountered
-during its preparation.</p>
-
-</div>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>BABES IN THE BUSH</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_002.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c003'>BABES IN THE BUSH</h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div><span class='small'>BY</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>ROLF BOLDREWOOD</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='small'>AUTHOR OF</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>‘ROBBERY UNDER ARMS,’ ‘THE MINER’S RIGHT,’ ‘THE SQUATTER’S DREAM,’</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>‘A COLONIAL REFORMER,’ ETC.</span></div>
- <div class='c004'><span class="blackletter">London</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>MACMILLAN AND CO., <span class='sc'>Limited</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='small'>NEW YORK: THE MACMILLAN COMPANY</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>1900</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='small'><em>All rights reserved</em></span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_v'>v</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
- <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>CHAPTER I</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'></td>
- <td class='c008'>PAGE</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>‘<span class='sc'>Fresh Fields—and Pastures New</span>’</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_1'>1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>CHAPTER II</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The First Camp</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_21'>21</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>CHAPTER III</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The New Home</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_43'>43</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>CHAPTER IV</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mr. Henry O’Desmond of Badajos</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_59'>59</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>CHAPTER V</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>‘<span class='sc'>Called on by the County</span>’</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_77'>77</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>CHAPTER VI</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>An Australian Yeoman</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_93'>93</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'><span class='pageno' id='Page_vi'>vi</span>CHAPTER VII</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Tom Glendinning, Stock-rider</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_111'>111</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>CHAPTER VIII</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mr. William Rockley of Yass</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_125'>125</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>CHAPTER IX</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Hubert Warleigh, Yr., of Warbrok</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_139'>139</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>CHAPTER X</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>A Provincial Carnival</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_149'>149</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XI</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Mr. Bob Clarke schools King of the Valley</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_161'>161</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XII</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Steeplechase Day</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_173'>173</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XIII</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Miss Vera Fane of Black Mountain</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_189'>189</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XIV</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Duel</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_204'>204</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'><span class='pageno' id='Page_vii'>vii</span>CHAPTER XV</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Life Story of Tom Glendinning</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_220'>220</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XVI</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>‘<span class='sc'>So we’ll all go a-hunting to-day</span>’</td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_238'>238</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XVII</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The First Meet of the Lake William Hunt Club</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_251'>251</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XVIII</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Major discovers his Relative</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_265'>265</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XIX</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Black Thursday</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_282'>282</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XX</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>An Unexpected Development</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_296'>296</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XXI</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>A Green Hand</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_312'>312</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XXII</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Injun Sign</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_328'>328</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'><span class='pageno' id='Page_viii'>viii</span>CHAPTER XXIII</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Battle of Rocky Creek</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_339'>339</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XXIV</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Gyp’s Land</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_352'>352</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XXV</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Bob Clarke once more wins on the Post</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_366'>366</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XXVI</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Return from Palestine</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_387'>387</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c006' colspan='2'>CHAPTER XXVII</td></tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Duel in the Snow</span></td>
- <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_401'>401</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER I <br /> ‘FRESH FIELDS AND PASTURES NEW’</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>‘What letter are you holding in your hand all this time, my
-dear?’ said Captain Howard Effingham to his wife during a
-certain family council.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Really, I had almost forgotten it. A foreign postmark—I
-suppose it is from your friend Mr. Sternworth, in Australia
-or New Zealand.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Sternworth lives in New South Wales, not New Zealand,’
-returned he rather testily. ‘I have told you more than once
-that the two places are a thousand miles apart by sea. Yes!
-it is from old Harley. When he was chaplain to our regiment
-he was always hankering after a change from routine duty.
-Now he has got it with a vengeance. He was slightly eccentric,
-but a better fellow, a stauncher friend, never stepped.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Don’t people go to Australia to make money?’ asked
-Rosamond Effingham, a girl of twenty, with ‘eldest daughter’
-plainly inscribed upon her thoughtful features. ‘I saw in a
-newspaper that some one had come home after making a
-fortune, or it may have been that he died there and left it to
-his relatives.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Sternworth has not made a fortune. He is not the man
-to want one. Still, he seems wonderfully contented and raves
-about the beauty of the climate and the progress of his colony.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Let me read his letter out,’ pleaded the anxious wife
-softly, and, with a gesture of assent, the father and daughter
-sat expectant.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mrs. Effingham had the gift of reading aloud with effect,
-which, with that of facile, clear-cut composition, came to her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>as naturally as the notes of a song-bird, which indeed her
-tuneful voice resembled.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The letter is dated from Yass—(what a funny name! a
-native one, I suppose)—in New South Wales, and June the
-20th, 1834. Nearly six months ago! Does it take all
-that time to come? What a long, long way off it must be.
-Now then for the contents.</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>‘<span class='sc'>My dear Effingham</span>—I have not written for an age—though
-I had your last in reply to mine in due course—partly
-because, after my first acknowledgment, I had nothing
-particular to say, nor any counsel to offer you, suitable for
-the situation in which you appear to have landed yourself.
-When you were in the old regiment you were always a bad
-manager of your money, and the Yorkshireman had to come
-to your assistance with his hard head more than once. I
-thought all that sort of thing was over when you succeeded
-to a settled position and a good estate. I was much put out
-to find by your last letter that you had again got among the
-shallows of debt. I doubt it is chronic with you. But it is
-a serious matter for the family. If I were near you I would
-scold you roundly, but I am too far off to do it effectually.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>‘My reason for writing now—for I am too busy a man to
-send the compliments of the season across the globe—is that
-a tempting investment in land—a perfect gift, as the phrase
-is—has come to my knowledge.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>‘Now, I am not hard-natured enough to tempt you to
-come here with your amiable wife, whose praises, not always
-from yourself, I have often heard—[really, my dear, I had no
-idea you paid me compliments in your letters to your friends]—and
-your tenderly nurtured family; that is, if you can retain
-your position, or one in any way approaching it. But I know
-that the loss of fortune in the old country entails a more
-complete stripping of all that men hold dear, than in this new
-land, where aristocratic poverty, or rather, scantiness of money,
-is the rule, and wealth, as yet, the exception.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>‘I cannot believe that you are <em>totally</em> without means.
-Here, cash is at a premium. Therefore, if you have but the
-shreds and fragments of your fortune left, you may still have
-capital available from the wreck sufficient to make a modest
-venture, which I shall explain.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>‘A family long resident near this rising town—say forty
-or fifty miles distant—have been compelled, like you, to offer
-their estate for sale. I will not enter into the circumstances
-or the causes of the step. The fact that we are concerned
-with is, that a valuable property—as fair judges consider
-it—comprising a decent house and several thousand acres
-of good land, may be bought for three or four thousand
-pounds.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>‘I do not hide from you that many people consider that
-the present bad times are likely to last, even to become more
-pressing. <em>I</em> fully expect a reaction. If you can do better
-in any way I do not ask you for one moment to consider this
-matter, much as I should like to see my old comrade and his
-family here.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>‘But if otherwise, and the melancholy life of the ruined
-middle-aged Briton stares you in the face, I say boldly, do
-not go to Boulogne, or other refuge for the shady destitute,
-where a man simply counts the days which he must linger
-out in cheap lodgings and cheese-paring idleness, but come
-to Australia and try a more wholesome, more manly, if
-occasionally ruder life. I know what you home-keeping
-English think of a colony. But you may find here a career
-for your boys—even suitable marriages for your girls, whose
-virtues and accomplishments would doubtless invest them
-with distinction.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>‘If you can get this sum together, and a few hundreds to
-have in your pocket at landing, I can guarantee you a
-livelihood—you know my caution of old—with many of the
-essentials, God forbid I should say <em>all</em>, of “the gentle life.”
-Still, you may come to these by and by. The worst of my
-adopted country is that there is a cruel uncertainty of
-seasons, at times sore on man and beast. That you must
-risk, like other people. If you come, you will have one friend
-here in old Harley Sternworth, who, without chick or child,
-will be proud to pour out whatever feelings of affection God
-has given him, into the lap of your family. If you decide on
-coming, send a draft for three thousand pounds payable to my
-order at once. I will manage the rest, and have Warbrok
-ready to receive you in some plain way on your arrival. So
-farewell for the present. God bless you and yours, says
-your old friend,</p>
-
-<div class='c012'><span class='sc'>Harley Sternworth.</span>’</div>
-
-<p class='c009'><span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>As the letter disclosed this positive invitation and plan of
-emigration which, whether possible or impossible, was now
-brought into tangible form, the clasp in which lay the father’s
-hand and the daughter’s slightly tightened. Their eyes met,
-their faces gradually softened from the expression of pained
-endurance which had characterised them, and as the clear
-tones of the reader came to an end, Rosamond, rising to her
-feet, exclaimed, ‘God has sent us a friend in our need. If
-we go to this far land we may work together and live and
-love undivided. But oh, mother, it breaks my heart to
-think of <em>you</em>. We are young, it should matter little to us;
-but how will you bear to be taken away from this pleasant
-home to a rude, waste country, such as Australia must be?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘My darling,’ said the matron, as she folded the letter
-with an instinctive habit of neatness, and handed it to her
-husband, ‘the sacrifice to me will be great, far greater than
-at one time I should have thought it possible to bear. But
-with my husband and children are my life and my true
-dwelling-place. Where they are, I abide thankfully to life’s
-close. Strength, I cannot doubt, will be given to us all to
-bear our—our——’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Here the thought, the inevitable, unimaginable woe of
-quitting the loved home of youth, the atmosphere of early
-friendship, the intertwining ties of relationship, completely
-overcame the courage of the speaker. Her eyes overflowed
-as, burying her face in her husband’s arms, which were
-opened to receive her, she wept long and silently.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘How could we think of such a thing, my darling, for one
-moment?’ said Effingham. ‘It would kill you to part, at
-one blow, from a whole previous existence. I hardly foresaw
-what a living death it would be for you, more than all, to
-leave England <em>for ever</em>. There is a world of agony in that
-thought alone! I certainly gave Sternworth a full account
-of my position in my last letters. It was a relief. He has
-always been a true friend. But he has rashly concluded that
-we were prepared to go to his wild country. It would be your
-death-blow, darling wife; and then, what good would our
-lives be to us? Some of our friends will help us, surely.
-Let us live quietly for a year or two. I may get some
-appointment.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It relieves my bursting heart to weep; yet it will fit me
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>for future duty. No, Howard, we must not falter or draw
-back. You can trust, I know, in Mr. Sternworth’s practical
-wisdom, for you have a hundred times told me how far-seeing,
-shrewd, and yet kindly he was. In his plan there is the
-certainty of independence; together we can cheer each other
-when the day’s work is done. As for living in England,
-trusting to the assistance of friends, and the lingering uncertainty
-of a provision from the Government, I have seen
-too many families pitiably drifting towards a lower level.
-There is no middle course. No! Our path has been
-chosen for us. Let us go where a merciful Providence would
-seem to lead us.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The fateful conference was ended. A council, not much
-bruited about, but fraught with momentous results to those
-yet unborn, in the Effingham family, and it may be to other
-races and sections of humanity. Who may limit the effects
-produced in the coming time, by the transplantation of but
-<em>one</em> rarely endowed family of our upward-striving race?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Nothing remained but to communicate the decision of the
-high contracting parties of the little state to the remaining
-members. The heir was absent. To him would have been
-accorded, as a right, a place in the parliament. But he was
-in Ireland visiting a college chum, for whom he had formed
-one of the ardent friendships characteristic of early manhood.
-Wilfred Effingham was an enthusiast—sanguine and
-impulsive—whose impulses, chiefly, took a good direction.
-His heart was warm, his principles fixed. Still, so sensitive
-was he to the impressions of the hour, that only by the
-sternest consciousness of responsibility could he remain faithful
-to the call of duty.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Devoted primarily to art and literature; sport, travel, and
-social intercourse likewise put in claims to his attention and
-mingled in his nature the impulses of a refined Greek with
-the energy and self-denial of his northern race.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It must be confessed that these latter qualities were
-chiefly in the embryonic stage. So latent and undeveloped
-were they, indeed, that no one but his fond mother had fully
-credited his possession of them.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But as the rounded limbs of the Antinous conceal the
-muscles which after-years develop and harden, so in the
-graceful physique and sensitive mind of Wilfred Effingham
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>lay hidden powers, which, could he have foreseen their future
-exercise, would have astonished no one more than himself.
-Such was the youth recalled from his joyous revel in the
-Green Isle, where he had been shooting and fishing to his
-heart’s content.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A letter from his mother first told that his destiny had
-been changed. In a moment he was transformed. No
-longer was he to be an enjoyer of the hoarded wealth of
-art, letters, science, sitting on high and choosing what he
-would, as one of the gods of Olympus. His lot, henceforth,
-would be that of a toiler for the necessaries of life! It was
-a shrewd blow. Small wonder had he reeled before it! It
-met him without warning, unsoftened, save by the tender
-pity and loving counsel so long associated with his mother’s
-handwriting. The well-remembered characters, so fair in
-delicate regularity, which since earliest schooldays had
-cheered and comforted him. Never had they failed him;
-steadfast ever as a mother’s faith, unfailing as a mother’s love!</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Grown to manhood, still, as of old, he looked, almost at
-weekly intervals, for the missive, ever the harbinger of home
-love, the herald of joy, the bearer of wise counsel—never
-once of sharp rebuke or untempered anger.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>And now—to the spoiled child of affection, of endowment—had
-come this message fraught with woe.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A meaner mind, so softly nurtured, might have shrunk
-from the ordeal. To the chivalrous soul of Wilfred Effingham
-the vision was but the summons to the fray, which bids
-the knight quit the tourney and the banquet for the stern
-joys of battle.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>His nature, one of those complex organisms having the
-dreamy poetic side much developed, yet held room for
-physical demonstration. Preferring for the most part contemplation
-to action, he had ever passed, apparently without
-effort, from unchecked reverie and study to tireless bodily
-toil in the quest of sport, travel, or adventure. Possessed of a
-constitution originally vigorous, and unworn by dissipation,
-from which a sensitive nature joined with deference to a
-lofty ideal had hitherto preserved him, Wilfred Effingham
-approached that rare combination which has ere now resulted,
-under pressure of circumstance, in the hero, the poet, the
-warrior, or the statesman.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>He braced himself to withstand the shock. It was a
-shrewd buffet. Yet, after realising its force, he was conscious,
-much to his surprise, of a distinct feeling of exaltation.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I shall suffer for it afterwards,’ he told his friend Gerald
-O’More, half unconsciously, as they sat together over a turf
-fire which glowed in the enormous chimney of a rude but
-comfortable shooting lodge; ‘but, for the soul of me, I can’t
-help feeling agreeably acted upon.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Acted upon by what?’ said his companion and college
-chum, with whom he had sworn eternal friendship. ‘Is it
-the whisky hot? It’s equal to John Jameson, and yet it
-never bothered an exciseman! Sure that same is amaylioratin’
-my lot to a degree I should have never believed
-possible. Take another glass. Defy Fate and tell me all
-about it. Has your father, honest man, discovered another
-Roman tile or Julius Cæsar’s tobacco-pouch? [the elder
-Effingham was an antiquarian of great perseverance], or have
-ministers gone out, to the ruin of the country, and the
-triumph of those villains the radicals? ’Tis little that ever
-happens in that stagnant existence that you Saxons call
-country life, barring a trifle of make-believe hunting and
-shooting. Sure, didn’t me uncle Phelim blaze away into a
-farmer’s poultry-yard in Kent for half-an-hour, and swear (it
-was after lunch) that he never saw pheasants so hard to rise
-before.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Thus the light-hearted Irishman rattled on, well divining,
-for all his apparent mirth, that something more than common
-had come in the letter, that had the power to drive the
-blood from Wilfred’s cheek and set Care’s seal upon his brow.
-That impress remained indelible, even when he smiled, and
-affected to resume his ordinary cheerfulness.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At length he spoke: ‘Gerald, old fellow! there is news
-from home which most people would call bad. It is distinct
-of its kind. We have lost everything; are ruined utterly.
-Not a chance of recovery, it seems. My dear mother bids
-me understand <em>that</em> most clearly; warns me to have no hope
-of anything otherwise. The governor has been hard hit,
-it seems, in foreign bonds; Central African Railways, or
-Kamschatka telegraph lines,—some of the infernal traps for
-English capital at any rate. The Chase is mortgaged and
-will have to go. The family must emigrate. Australia is to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>be the future home of the Effinghams. This appears to be
-settled. That’s a good deal to be hid in two sheets of note-paper,
-isn’t it?’ And he tossed up the carefully directed
-letter, caught it as it fell, and placed it in his pocket.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘My breath is taken away; reach me the whisky, if you
-wish to save my life, or else it will be——’ (prompt measures
-were taken to relieve the unfortunate gentleman, but without
-success). ‘Wilfred, me dear fellow, do you tell me that
-you’re serious? What will ye do at all, at all?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Do? What better men have had to do before now.
-Face the old foe of mortals, Anagkaia, and see what she can
-do when a man stands up to her. I don’t like the idea any
-the worse for having to cross the sea to a new world, to find
-a lost fortune. After all, one was getting tired of this sing-song,
-nineteenth century life of fashionable learning, fashionable
-play, fashionable work—everything, in fact, regulated by
-dame Fashion. I shall be glad to stretch my limbs in
-a hunter’s hammock, and bid adieu to the whole unreal
-pageant.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Bedad! I don’t know. I’d say the reality was nearer
-where we are, with all the disadvantages of good dinners,
-good sport, good books, and good company. But you’re
-right, me dear fellow, to put a bold face on it; and if you
-have to take the shilling in the divil’s regiment, sure ye’ll die
-a hero, or rise to Commander-in-Chief, if I know ye. But
-your mother, and poor Miss Effingham, and the Captain—without
-his turnips and his justice-room and his pointers and
-his poachers, his fibulæ and amphoræ—whatever will he do
-among blackfellows and kangaroos? My heart aches for ye
-all, Wilfred. Sure ye know it does. If ye won’t take any
-more potheen, let us sleep on it; and we’ll have a great day
-among the cocks, if we live, and talk it over afterwards.
-There never was that sorrow yet that ye didn’t lighten it if
-ye tired your legs well between sun and sun!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>With the morrow’s sun came an unwonted calm and settled
-resolve to the soul of Wilfred Effingham. Together, gay, staunch
-Gerald O’More and he took the last day’s sport they were likely
-to have for many a day. The shooting was rather above than
-under the average, as if the ruined heir was willing to show
-that his nerves had not been affected by his prospects.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I must take out the old gun,’ he said, ‘and keep up my
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>shooting. Who knows but that we may depend upon it for a
-meal now and then in this New Atlantis that we are bound
-for. But one thing is fixed, old fellow, as far as a changeable
-nature will permit. I shall have to be the mainstay of my
-father’s house. I must play the man, if it’s in me. No more
-dilettantism, no more mediæval treasures, no more tall copies.
-The present, not the past, is what we must stand or fall by.
-The governor is shaken by all this trouble; not the best
-man of business at any time. My dear mother is a saint <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>en
-habit de Cour</em></span>; she will have to suffer a sea-change that might
-break the hearts of ordinary worldlings. Upon Rosamond
-and myself will fall the brunt of the battle. She has prepared
-herself for it, happily, by years of unselfish care and thought.
-I have been an idler and a loiterer. Now the time has come
-to show of what stuff I am made. It will mean good-bye to
-you, Gerald O’More, fast friend and <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>bon camarade</em></span>. We shall
-have no more shooting and fishing together, no more talk
-about art and poetry, no more vacation tours, no more
-rambles, for long years—let us not say for ever. Good-bye to
-my old life, my old Self! God speed us all; we must arm
-and away.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I’d say you might have a worse life, Wilfred, though it
-will come hard on you at first to be shooting kangaroos and
-bushrangers, instead of grouse and partridges, like a Christian.
-But we get used to everything, I am told, even to being a
-land-agent, with every boy in the barony wondering if he
-could tumble ye at sixty paces with the ould duck gun.
-When a thing’s to be done—marrying or burying, standing
-out on the sod on a foggy morning with a nate shot opposite
-ye, or studying for the law—there’s nothing like facing it cool
-and steady. You’ll write me and Hallam a line after you’re
-landed; and we’ll think of ye often enough, never fear. God
-speed ye, my boy! Sure, it’s Miss Annabel that will make
-the illigant colonist entirely.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The friends parted. Wilfred lost no time in reaching
-home, where his presence comforted the family in the midst
-of that most discouraging state of change for the worse, the
-packing and preparing for departure.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But he had utilised the interval since he left his friend by
-stern self-examination, ending in a fixed, unalterable resolve.
-His mother, his sisters, and his father were alike surprised at
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>his changed bearing. He had grown years older in a week.
-He listened to the explanation of their misfortune from his
-father with respectful silence or short, undoubting comment.
-He confirmed the decision to which the family counsel had
-arrived. Emigration to Australia was, under the circumstances,
-the only path which promised reparation of the fortunes of the
-house. He carefully read the letter from Mr. Sternworth, upon
-which their fate seemed to hang. He cheered his mother by
-expressing regret for his previous desultory life, asking her to
-believe that his future existence should be devoted to the
-welfare of all whom both held so dear.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘<em>You</em> have never doubted, my dearest mother,’ he said,
-‘but that your heedless son would one day do credit to his
-early teaching? I stand pledged to make your words good.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The arrival of the heir, who had taken his place at his
-father’s right hand in so worthy a spirit, seemed to infuse
-confidence into the other members of the family. Each and
-all appeared to recognise the fact that their expatriation was
-decided upon, and while lamenting their loved home, they
-commenced to gather information about their new abode,
-and to dwell upon the more cheering probabilities.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The family was not a small one. Guy Effingham was a high-spirited
-schoolboy of fourteen, whose cricket and football engagements
-had hitherto, with that amount of the humanities
-which an English public schoolboy is compelled to master, under
-penalties too dire for endurance, been sufficient to fill up his irresponsible
-life. It was arranged that he was to remain at school
-until the week previous to their departure. His presence at
-home was not necessary, while his mother wished him to utilise
-the last effective teaching which he was likely to have. To her
-was committed the task of preparing him for his altered position.
-Two younger daughters, with a boy and girl of tender years,
-the darlings of the family, completed the number of the
-Effinghams. The third daughter, Annabel, was the beauty
-of the family. A natural pride in her unquestioned loveliness
-had always mingled with the maternal repression of all save
-the higher aims and qualities which it had been the fond
-mother’s life-long duty to inculcate. Annabel Effingham had
-received from nature the revival of the loveliness of some
-ancestress, heightened and intensified by admixture of family
-type. She was fair, with the bright colouring, the silken hair,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>the delicate roseate glow which had long been the boast of
-the women of her mother’s family—of ancient Saxon blood—for
-many generations. But she had superadded to these
-elements of beauty a classical delicacy of outline, a darker
-shade of blue in the somewhat prouder eye, a figure almost
-regal in the nobility of carriage and unconscious dignity of
-motion, which told of a diverse lineage. Beatrice, the second
-daughter of the house, had up to the present time exhibited
-neither the strong altruistic bias which, along with the faculty
-of organisation, characterised Rosamond, nor the universally
-confessed fascination which rendered Annabel’s path a species
-of royal progress. Refined, distinguished in appearance, as
-indeed were all the members of the family, she had not as
-yet developed any special vocation. In her appearance one
-saw but the ordinary traits which stamp a highly cultured girl
-of the upper classes. She was, perhaps, more distinctly
-literary in her tastes than either of her sisters, but her reserved
-habits concealed her attainments. For the rest, she appeared
-to have made up her mind to the inevitable with less apparent
-effort than the other members of the family.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What can it avail—all this grieving and lamenting?’ she
-would say. ‘I feel parting with The Chase, with our relations
-and friends—with all our old life, in fact—deeply and bitterly.
-But that once admitted, what good end is served by repeating
-the thought and renewing the tears? Other people are ruined
-in England, and have to go to Boulogne and horrid continental
-towns, where they lead sham lives, and potter about, unreal in
-everything but dulness and poverty, till they die. We shall
-go to Australia to <em>do</em> something—or not to do it. Both are
-good in their way. Next to honest effort I like a frank
-failure.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But suppose we <em>do</em> fail, and lose all our money, and have
-nothing to eat in a horrid new country,’ said Annabel, ‘what
-<em>will</em> become of us?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Just what would become of us here, I suppose; we should
-have to work—become teachers at a school, or governesses,
-or hospital nurses; only, as young women are not so plentiful
-in Australia as in England, why, we should be better paid.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, but here we know so many people, and they would
-help us to find pleasant places to live in,’ pleaded Annabel
-piteously. ‘It does seem so dreadful to be ten thousand
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>miles away from your own country. I am sure we shall
-starve!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Don’t be a goose, Annabel. How can we starve? First,
-we have the chance of making money and living in plenty, if
-not in refinement, on this estate that papa is going to buy.
-And if that does not turn out a success, we must find you a
-place as companion to the Governor-General’s wife, or as
-nursery governess for <em>very</em> young children. I’ll become a
-“school marm” at Yass—that’s the name—and Rosamond
-will turn dressmaker, she has such a talent for a good fit.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh dear, oh dear! don’t talk of such dreadful things.
-Are we to go all over the world only to become drudges and
-work-women? We may as well drown ourselves at once.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘My child! my child!’ said a gentle voice. ‘What folly
-is this? What are we, that we should be absolved from the
-trials that others have to bear? God has chosen, for His
-own good purpose, to bring this misfortune upon us. He
-will give us strength to bear it in a chastened spirit. If we
-do not bear it in a resigned and chastened spirit, we are untrue
-to the teaching which we have all our lives affected to
-believe in. We have all our part to perform. Let us have
-no repining, my dearest Annabel. Our way is clear, and we
-have others to think of who require support.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But you <em>like</em> to be miserable, you know, mother; you
-think it is God’s hand that afflicts you,’ sobbed the desponding
-spoiled child. ‘I can’t feel that way. I haven’t your
-faith. And it breaks my heart; I shall die, I shall die, I
-know.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Pray, my darling, pray for help and grace from on high,’
-continued the sweet, sad tones of the mother, as she drew
-her child’s fair head upon her lap, and passed her hand amid
-‘the clustering ringlets rich and rare,’ while Beatrice sat
-rather unsympathetically by. ‘You will have me and your
-sisters to cheer you.’ Here the fair disconsolate looked distrustfully
-at Beatrice.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>By degrees the half-mesmeric, instinctive influence of the
-loved mother’s pitying tones overcame the unwonted fit of
-unreason.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I will try and be good,’ she murmured, looking up with
-a soft light in her lovely eyes, ‘but you know I am a poor
-creature at best. You must bear with me, and I will help as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>much as I can, and try to keep from repining. But, oh, my
-home, my home, the dear old place where I was born. How
-dark and dreary do this long voyage and journey seem!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Have we not a yet longer voyage, a more distant journey
-to make, my own one?’ whispered the mother, in accents
-soft as those with which in times gone by she had lulled the
-complaining babe. ‘We know not the time, nor the hour.
-Think! If we do not prepare ourselves by prayer and faith,
-how dark <em>that</em> departure will appear!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You are always good and kind, always right, mother,’
-said the girl, recovering her composure and assuming a more
-steadfast air. ‘Pray for me, that I may find strength; but
-do I not know that you pray for all of us incessantly? We
-ought—that is—I ought to be better than I am.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Among the lesser trials which, at the time of his great
-sorrow, oppressed Howard Effingham, not the least was the
-necessity for parting with old servants and retainers. He was
-a man prone to become attached to attendants long used to
-his ways. Partly from kindly feeling, partly from indolence,
-he much disliked changing domestics or farm labourers.
-Accustomed to lean against a more readily available if not a
-stronger support than his own, he was, in most relations of
-life, more dependent than most men upon his confidential
-servants.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In this instance, therefore, he had taken it much to heart
-that his Scotch land-steward, a man of exceptional capacity
-and absolute personal fidelity, having a wife also, of rare
-excellence in her own department, should be torn from him
-by fate.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Backed up by his trusty Andrew, with his admirable wife,
-he felt as if he could have faced all ordinary colonial perils.
-While under Jeanie Cargill’s care, his wife and daughters
-might have defied the ills of any climate, and risked the
-absence of the whole College of Physicians.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Andrew Cargill was one of those individuals of strongly
-marked idiosyncrasy, a majority of whom appear to have been
-placed, by some mysterious arrangement of nature, on the north
-side of the Tweed. Originally the under-gardener at The Chase,
-he had risen slowly but irresistibly through the gradations of
-upper-gardener and under-bailiff to the limited order of land-steward
-required by a moderate property. He had been a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>newly-married man when he formed the resolution of testing
-the high wages of the Southron lairds. His family, as also
-his rate of wages, had increased. His expenses he had
-uniformly restricted, with the thoroughness of his economical
-forefathers. He despised all wasteful ways. He managed
-his master’s affairs, as committed to his charge, with more
-than the rigorous exactitude he was wont to apply to his own.
-Gaining authority, by the steady pressure of unrelaxing forecast
-habit of life, he was permitted a certain license as to advice
-and implied rebuke. Had Andrew Cargill been permitted to
-exercise the same control over the extra-rural affairs that he
-was wont to use over the farm-servants and the plough-teams,
-the tenants and the trespassers, the crops and the orchards,
-the under-gardeners and the pineries, no failure, financial or
-otherwise, would have occurred at The Chase.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When the dread disaster could no longer be concealed, it
-is questionable whether Mr. Effingham felt anything more
-acutely than the necessity which existed of explaining to this
-faithful follower the extent, or worse, the cause of his misfortune.
-He anticipated the unbroken silence, the incredulous
-expression, with which all attempts at favourable explanation
-would be received. Open condemnation, of course, was out
-of the question. But the mute reproach or guarded reference
-to his master’s inconceivable imbecility, which on this occasion
-might be more strongly accented than usual, would be
-hard to endure.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Effingham could not depute his wife, or one of the
-girls, to convey the information to the formidable Andrew.
-So he was fain to pull himself together one morning, and go
-forth to this uncompromising logician. Having briefly related
-the eventful tale, he concluded by dispensing with his faithful
-servant, as they were going to a new country, and very probably
-would never be able to employ servants again.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Having thrown down the bombshell, the ‘lost leader’
-looked fixedly at Andrew’s unmoved countenance, and awaited
-the particular kind of concentrated contempt which he
-doubted not would issue forth.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>His astonishment was great when, after the hurried conclusion,
-‘I shall miss you, Andrew, you may be sure,
-more than I say; and as for Jeanie, I don’t know how the
-young ladies and the mistress will get on without her,’ the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>following words issued slowly and oracularly from Andrew’s
-lips:—</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Ye’ll no miss me ava, Maister Effingham. Dinna ye
-think that it’s a’ news ye’re tellin’ me. I behoved just to
-speer a bit what garred the puir mistress look sae dowie and
-wae. And the upshot o’ matters is that I’m gaun wi’ ye.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And your wife and children?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Ye didna threep I was to leave them ahint? Andra’
-Cargill isna ane o’ thae kind o’ folk, sae just tak’ heart, and
-for a’ that’s come and gane ye may lift up your heid ance
-mair; it’s nae great things o’ a heid, as the auld wife said o’
-the Deuk’s, but if Botany Bay is the gra-and country they ca’ it,
-and the book-writers and the agents haena been tellin’ the
-maist unco-omon set o’ lees, a’ may gang weel yet.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But what’s put this in <em>your</em> head, of all people in the
-world, Andrew?’ queried his master, becoming bold, like individuals,
-or corporate bodies, of purely defensive ideas, after
-observing tokens of weakness in the besieging force.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Weel, aweel, first and foremost, Laird, ye’ll no say that
-we haena eaten your bread and saut this mony a year;
-there’s been neither stint nor stay till’t. I hae naething to say
-against the wage; aiblins a man weel instructed in his profession
-should aye be worthy o’ his hire. Jeanie has been
-just spoiled by the mistress—my heart’s sairvice to her and
-the young leddies—till ilka land they were no in, wad
-be strange eneugh to her, puir body. And the lang and
-short o’ the hail matter is, that we loe ye and your bonnie
-lads and lassies, Laird, sae weel that we winna be pairted
-frae ye.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As Mr. Effingham grasped the hand of the staunch, true
-servitor, who thus stood by him in his need, under whose
-gnarled bark of natural roughness lay hid so tender and true
-a core, the tears stood in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I shall never forget this, Andrew,’ said he; ‘you and
-Jeanie, old friend, will be the comfort of our lives in the
-land over-sea, and I cannot say what fresh courage your
-determination has given me. But are you sure it will be for
-your own advantage? You must have saved money, and
-might take a farm and live snugly here.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I was aboot to acquent ye, Laird,’ said the conscientious
-Scot, too faithful to his religious principles to take credit for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>a disinterestedness to which he felt but partially entitled.
-‘Ye’ll see, Laird, for ye’re weel acquent wi’ the Word, that the
-battle’s no always to the strong, nor the race to the swift. Ye’ll
-ken that, frae your ain experience—aweel, I winna just say
-that neither’—proceeded Andrew, getting slightly involved
-between his quotations and his determination to be ‘faithful’
-to his erring master, and by no means cloaking his sins of
-omission. ‘I’ll no say but what ye’ve been lettin’ ither
-folks lead ye, and throw dust in ye’re een in no the maist
-wiselike fashion, as nae doot ye wad hae dune wi’ the tenants,
-puir bodies, gin I had letten ye. But touchin’ my ain affairs,
-I haena sae muckle cause to brag; for maybe I was unco
-stiff-necked, and it behoved to chasten me, as weel’s yersell;
-I hae tint—just flung awa’—my sma’ scrapin’s and savin’s,
-these saxteen years and mair, in siccan a senseless daft-like
-way too!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Here Andrew could not forbear a groan, which was echoed
-by an exclamation from his master.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I am sincerely grieved—astonished beyond expression!
-Why, Andrew, surely <em>you</em> have not been dabbling in stocks
-and foreign loans?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Na—nae ga-amblin’ for <em>me</em>, Laird!’ replied Andrew
-sourly, and with an accentuation which implied speedy
-return to his ordinary critical state of mind; ‘but if I had
-minded the Scripture, I wadna hae lost money and faith at
-one blow. “Strike not hands for a surety,”’ it saith, ‘but I
-trusted Geordie Ballantyne like a brither; my ain cousin,
-twice removed. He was aboot to be roupit oot, stock and
-lock, and him wi’ a hoosefu’ o’ weans. I just gaed surety to
-him for three hunder pound!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You were never so mad—a prudent man like you?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And he just flitted to America, fled frae his ain land, his
-plighted word, and left me to bear the wyte o’t. It’s nae
-use greetin’ ower spilt brose. The money’s a’ paid, and
-Andra’ Cargill’s as puir a man’s when he cam’ to The Chase,
-saxteen years last Michaelmas. Sae, between the heart-break
-it wad be to pairt wi’ the family, and the sair heart I hae
-gotten at pairtin’ wi’ my siller, the loss o’ a friend—“mine
-own familiar freend,” as the Psawmist says—as weel’s
-the earnings o’ the maist feck o’ my days, at ae blast,
-I hae settled to gang oot, Laird, to Austra-alia, and maybe
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>lay oot a wheen straight furrows for ye, as I did lang syne on
-the bonnie holms o’ Ettrick.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Here Andrew’s voice faltered, and the momentous unprecedented
-conversation ended abruptly.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The unfeigned delight with which his wife and daughters
-received the news did much to reconcile Mr. Effingham to
-his expatriation, and even went far to persuade him that he
-had, in some way, originated the whole idea. Nor was their
-satisfaction unfounded. Andrew, with all his apparent sternness
-and occasional incivility, was shrewd, capable, and even
-versatile, in the application of his industry and unerring
-common sense to a wide range of occupations. He was the
-ideal colonist of his order, as certain to succeed in his own
-person as to be the most helpful and trustworthy of retainers.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As for Jeanie, she differed from her husband in almost
-every respect, except in the cardinal virtues. She had been
-a rustic celebrity in her youth, and Andrew occasionally
-referred still, in moments of unbending, to the difficulties of
-his courtship, and the victory gained over a host of rival
-suitors. She still retained the softness of manner and tenderness
-of nature which no doubt had originally led to the
-fascination of her masterful, rugged-natured husband.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>For the rest, Jean Cargill had always been one of those
-servants, rare even in England, the land of peerless domestics,
-whose loving, unselfish service knew no abatement in sickness
-and in health, good fortune or evil hap. Her perceptive
-tastes and strong sense of propriety rendered her, as years
-rolled on, a trusted friend; an infinitely more suitable companion
-for the mistress and her children, as she always called
-them, than many a woman of higher culture. A tireless
-nurse in time of sickness; a brave, clear-headed, but withal
-modest and cautious, aid to the physician in the hour of
-peril. She had stood by the bedstead of more than one
-member of the family, in the dark hour, when the angel of
-death waited on the threshold of the chamber. Never had
-she slackened or faltered, by night or day, careless of food or
-repose till the crisis had passed, and the ‘whisper of wings
-in the air’ faded away.</p>
-
-<p class='c009'>Mrs. Effingham, with all her maternal fondness and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>devotion, had been physically unable at times to bear up
-against the fatigue of protracted watching and anxiety. She
-had more than once, from sheer bodily weakness, been
-compelled to abandon her post. But to Jeanie Cargill, sustained
-by matchless love and devotion, such a thing had
-never occurred. At noon or midnight, her hand was ever
-ready to offer the needful food, the vital draught; her ear
-ever watchful to catch the faint murmur of request; her eye,
-sleepless as a star, was ever undimmed, vigilant to detect the
-slightest change of symptom. Many nurses had been heard
-of, seen, and even read of, in the domestic circles of Reigate,
-but in the estimation of every matron capable of giving an
-opinion, Jeanie Cargill, by countless degrees of comparison,
-outshone them all.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>That night, when Mrs. Effingham, as was her wont, sought
-relief from the burden of her daily cares, and the crowding
-anxieties of the morrow, ‘meekly kneeling upon her knees,’
-it appeared to her as if in literal truth the wind had been
-tempered to the shorn lamb. That terrible travel into the
-unknown, the discomforts and dangers of the melancholy
-main, with the dreary waste of colonial life, would be quite
-different adventures, softened by the aid and companionship
-of everybody’s ‘dear old Jeanie.’ Her patient industry, her
-helpful sympathy, her matchless loyalty and self-denial, would
-be well-springs of heaven-sent water in that desert. Andrew’s
-company, though not socially exhilarating, was also an invigorating
-fact. Altogether, Mrs. Effingham’s spirits improved,
-and her hopes arose freshly strengthened.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>No sooner was it settled that Andrew and his fortunes
-were to be wafted o’er the main, in the vessel which bore the
-Effingham family, than, with characteristic energy, he had
-constituted himself Grand Vizier and responsible adviser.
-He definitely approved of much that had been done, and
-counselled still further additions to the outfit. Prime and
-invincible was his objection to leave behind a certain pet
-‘Jersey coo,’ ‘a maist extraordinar’ milker, and for butter,
-juist unco-omon. If she could be ta’en oot to thae parts,
-she wad be a sma’ fortune—that is, in ony Christian land
-where butter and cheese were used. Maybe the sea-captain
-wad let her gang for the value o’ her milk; she
-was juist in the height o’t the noo. It wad be a sin and a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>shame to let her be roupit for half price, like the ither kye,
-puir things.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Persistent advocacy secured his point. Daisy had been
-morally abandoned to her fate; but Wilfred, goaded by
-Andrew’s appeals, had an interview with the shipping clerk,
-and arranged that Daisy, if approved of, should fill the place
-of the proverbial milch cow, so invariably bracketed with the
-‘experienced surgeon’ in the advertisements of the Commercial
-Marine. Her calf also, being old enough to eat hay,
-was permitted to accompany her.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Andrew also combated the idea that the greyhounds, or
-at least a pair, should be left behind, still less the guns or
-fishing-rods.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Wasna the Laird the best judge of a dog in the haill
-country-side, and no that far frae the best shot? What for
-suld he walk aboot the woods in Australia waesome and
-disjaskit like, when there might be kangaroos, or whatna
-kind o’ ootlandish game, to be had for the killing? Hoot,
-hoot, puir Page and Damsel couldna be left ahint, nor the
-wee terrier Vennie.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There was more trouble with the greyhounds’ passage
-than the cows, but in consideration of the large amount of
-freight and passage-money paid by the family, the aristocratic
-long-tails were franked. Andrew, with his own hands, packed
-up the fowling-pieces and fishing-rods, which, with the exaggerated
-prudence of youth, Wilfred had been minded to
-leave behind, considering nothing worthy of removal that
-would not be likely to add to their material gains in the ‘new
-settlement.’ He had yet to learn that recreation can never
-be advantageously disregarded, whether the community be
-a young or an old one.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Little by little, a chain of slow yet subtle advances, by
-which, equally with geologic alterations of the earth’s surface,
-its ephemeral living tenants proceed or retrograde, effected
-the translation of Howard Effingham, with wife and children,
-retainers and household goods. Averse by nature to all
-exertion which savoured of detail, reserving his energy for
-what he was pleased to dignify with the title of great occasions,
-as he looked back over the series of multitudinous
-necessary arrangements, Howard Effingham wondered, in his
-secret soul, at the transference of his household. Left to himself,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>he was candid enough to admit, such a result could never
-have been achieved. But the ceaseless ministration of Jeanie
-and Andrew, the calm forethought of Mrs. Effingham, the
-unsparing personal labour of Wilfred, had, in due time,
-worked the miracle.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER II <br /> THE FIRST CAMP</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>Whatever may be the loss or injury inseparable from misfortune,
-no one of experience denies that the pain is lightened
-when the blow has fallen. The shuddering terror, the harrowing
-doubts, which precede an operation, far outrun the torture
-of the knife. Worse a thousandfold to endure than actual
-misery, poverty and disgrace, is the dull sense of impending
-doom, the daily anxiety, the secret dread, the formless, unhasting,
-unsparing terror, which each day brings nearer to the
-victim.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Howard Effingham had, for weeks past, suffered the
-torments of the lost. An unwise concealment of the coming
-ruin which his reserved temperament forbade him to announce,
-had stretched him upon the rack. The acute agony was
-now past, and he felt unspeakably relieved as, with increasing
-completeness, the preparations for departure were accomplished.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>After the shock of the disaster he commenced the necessary
-duties with an unwontedly tranquil mind. He had despatched
-a bank draft for the amount mentioned by his friend and
-counsellor the Rev. Harley Sternworth. Prior to this needful
-act, he held various conferences with the trustees of Mrs.
-Effingham’s settlement. In many instances such authorities
-are difficult, even impracticable, to deal with, preferring the
-minimum interest which can be safely procured in the matter
-of trust money, to the slightest risk. In this instance, the
-arbiter of destiny was an old gentleman, at once prudent yet
-liberal-minded, who did not disdain to examine the arguments
-in favour of the Australian plan. After reading Mr. Sternworth’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>letter, and comparing the facts therein stated with
-colonial securities, to which he had access, he gave in his
-adhesion to the investment, and converted his coadjutor, a
-mild, obstinate personage, who could with difficulty be induced
-to see any other investment legally open to them but the
-‘sweet simplicity of the three per cents.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Long was the last day in coming, but it came at last.
-Their stay in the old home was protracted until only time
-was given for the journey to Southampton, where the staunch,
-old-fashioned wool-ship lay, which was to receive their condensed
-personal effects and, as it seemed to them, shrivelled-up
-personalities.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Adieus were said, some with sore weeping and many
-tears; some with moderate but sincere regret; some with
-the half-veiled indifference with which any action not affecting
-their own comfort, interest, or reputation is regarded by a large
-class of acquaintances. The minor possessions—the carriages,
-the horses, the library, the furniture—were sold. A selection
-of the plainest articles of this last requisite, which, the freight
-being wonderfully low, their chief adviser had counselled them
-to carry with them, was alone retained.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It will sell for next to nothing,’ his last letter had said,
-‘judging from my experience after the regiment had “got the
-route,” and you will have it landed here for less than the price
-of very ordinary substitutes. Bring all the small matters you
-can, that may be useful; and don’t leave the piano behind.
-I must have a tune when I come to see you at Warbrok, and
-hear Mrs. Effingham sing “Auld Robin Gray” again. You
-recollect how our old Colonel broke down, with tears rolling
-over his wrinkled cheeks, when she sang it?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>All was now over. The terrible wrench had been endured,
-tearing apart those living fibres which in early life are entwined
-around hearth and home. They had gazed in mournful
-farewell upon each familiar thing which from childhood’s
-hour had seemed a portion of their sheltered life. Like
-plants and flowerets, no denizens of hothouse or simulated
-tropic clime, but not the less carefully tended from harmful
-extremes, climatic or social, had the Effingham family grown
-and flourished. Now they were about to be abandoned to
-the elemental forces. Who should say whether they would
-wither under rude blasts and a fiercer sun, or, from natural
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>vigour and inherent vitality, burgeon and bloom beneath the
-Southern heavens?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Of the whole party, she who showed less outward token of
-sorrow, felt in her heart the most unresting anguish. To a
-woman like Mrs. Effingham, reared from infancy in the
-exclusive tenets of English county life, the idea of so comprehensive
-a change, of a semi-barbarous migration, had been
-well-nigh more bitter than death—but for one source of aid
-and spiritual support, unendurable.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Her reliance had a twofold foundation. The undoubting
-faith in a Supreme Being, who ordered aright all the ways of
-His creatures, even when apparently remote from happiness,
-remained unshaken. Firmly had she ever trusted in that God
-by whom her former life had been guided. Events might
-take a mysteriously doubtful course. But, in the wilderness,
-under leafy forest-arches, beneath the shadow of the gathering
-tempest, on land or ocean, she would trust in God and her
-Redeemer. Steadfast and brave of mien, though with trembling
-lip and sickened heart, she marshalled her little troop and
-led them on board the stout ship, which only awaited the
-morrow’s dawn to spread her wings and sweep southward—ever
-southward—amid unknown seas, until the great island
-continent should arise from out the sky-line, telling of a land
-which was to provide them with a home, with friends, even
-perhaps a fortune. What a mockery in that hour of utter
-wretchedness did such hope promptings appear!</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>After protracted mental conflict, no more perfect system of
-rest can be devised than that afforded by a sea-voyage. Anxiety,
-however mordant, must be lulled to rest under the fixed conditions
-of a journey, before the termination of which no battle
-of life can be commenced, no campaign resumed.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Toil and strife, privation and poverty, labour and luck, all
-the contending forces of life are hushed as in a trance. As
-in hibernation, the physical and mental attributes appear to
-rally, to recruit fresh stores of energy. ‘The dead past buries
-its dead’—sorrowfully perchance, and with silent weeping.
-But the clouds which have gathered around the spirit disperse
-and flee heavenwards, as from a snow-robed Alp at morning
-light. Then the roseate hues of dawn steal slowly o’er the
-silver-pure peaks and glaciers. The sun gilds anew the dark
-pine forest, the purple hills. Once more hope springs forth
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>ardent and unfettered. Endeavour presses onward to victory
-or to death.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To the Effingham family came a natural surprise, that,
-under their circumstances of exile and misfortune, any
-cheerfulness could occur. The parents possessed an air of
-decent resignation. But the younger members of the family,
-after the first days of unalloyed wretchedness, commenced to
-exhibit the elastic temperament of youth.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The seamanship displayed on the staunch sailing ship
-commenced to interest them. The changing aspects of sea
-and sky, the still noon, the gathering storm-cloud, the starry
-midnight, the phosphorescent fire-trail following the night-path
-of their bark—all these had power to move the sad hearts of the
-exiles. And, in youth, to move the heart is to lighten the spirit.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred Effingham, true to his determination to deliver
-himself over to every practical duty which might grow out of
-their life, had procured books professing to give information
-with regard to all the Australian colonies.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>With difficulty he managed, after an extended literary tour
-involving Tasmania, Swan River, and New Zealand, to distinguish
-the colony to which they were bound, though he failed
-to gather precise information regarding the district in which
-their land was situated. He made out that the climate was
-mild, and favourable to the Anglo-Saxon constitution; that
-in mid-winter, flowering shrubs and delicate plants bloomed in
-spite of the pretended rigour of the season; that the heat in
-summer was considerable, as far as shown by the reading of
-the thermometer, but that from the extreme dryness of atmosphere
-no greater oppressiveness followed than in apparently
-cooler days in other climates.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Here, mother,’ he said, having mastered the latter fact,
-‘we have been unconsciously coming to the exact country
-suited to your health and pursuits. You know how fond of
-flowers you are. Well, you can have a winter garden now,
-without the expense of glass or the trouble of hothouse flues;
-while you can cheat the season by abstaining from colds, which
-you could never do in England, you know.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I shall be happy to have a little garden of my own, my
-son,’ she replied, ‘but who is to work in it? We have done
-for ever, I suppose, with head and under gardeners. You and
-Guy and everybody will always, I suppose, be at farm-work,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>or herding cattle and sheep, busy from morning to dark.
-How glad we shall be to see your faces at night!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It does not follow,’ replied Wilfred, ‘that we shall never
-have a moment to spare. Listen to what this author says:
-“The colonist who has previously been accustomed to lead a
-life, where intervals of leisure and intellectual recreation hold
-an acknowledged place, must not consider that, in choosing
-Australia for his home, he has forfeited all right to such
-indulgences. Let him not think that he has pledged himself
-to a life of unbroken toil and unremitting manual labour. On
-the contrary, he will discover that the avocations of an
-Australian country gentleman chiefly demand the exercise of
-ordinary prudence and of those rudimentary business habits
-which are easily acquired. Intelligent supervision, rather
-than manual labour, is the special qualification for colonial
-success; and we do not err in saying that by its exercise
-more fortunes have been made than by the rude toils which
-are supposed to be indispensable in the life of an Australian
-settler.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There, mother!’ said the ardent adventurer. ‘That writer
-is a very sensible fellow. He knows what he is talking about,
-for he has been ever so many years in Australia, and has been
-over every part of it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, there certainly seems permission given to us to have
-a flower-garden for mamma without ruining ourselves or
-neglecting our business,’ said Rosamond. ‘And if the climate
-is so beautiful as they say, these dreadful February neuralgia-martyrdoms
-will be things of the past with you, dearest old
-lady.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There, mother, what do you say to that? Why, you will
-grow so young and beautiful that you will be taken for our
-elder sister, and papa would be ashamed to say you are his
-wife, only that old gentlemen generally marry young girls
-nowadays. Then, fancy what a garden we shall have at The
-Chase—we <em>must</em> call it The Chase, no matter what its present
-name is. It wouldn’t feel natural for us to live anywhere but
-at a Chase. It would be like changing our name.’</p>
-
-<hr class='c013' />
-
-<p class='c001'>On board ship there is always abundant leisure for talk and
-recreation, especially in low latitudes and half calms. The
-Effinghams, after they had been a month out, began to feel
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>sensibly the cheering effects of total change of scene—the
-life-breathing atmosphere of the unbounded sea. The demons
-of Regret and Fear, for the most part, shun the blue wave and
-lie in wait on land for unwary mortals. The ship was seaworthy
-and spacious, the officers capable, the few passengers
-passably agreeable. Gradually the tone was restored of
-Captain Effingham’s nervous system. He ceased to repine
-and regret. He even beheld some grains of hope in the
-future, black as the outlook had until now appeared. While
-the expression of sweet serenity and calm resignation which
-ever dwelt upon the features of Mrs. Effingham became
-heightened and assured under the concomitants of the voyage,
-until she appeared to radiate peace and goodwill sufficient to
-affect beneficially the whole ship’s company. As for the two
-little ones, Selden and Blanche, they appeared to have been
-accustomed since infancy to a seafaring life. They ran about
-unchecked, and were in everybody’s way and every one’s affections.
-They were the youngest children on board, and many
-a rough sailor turned to look, with something like a glistening
-in his eye, on the saucy brown-eyed boy, and the delicate
-little five-year-old fairy, whose masses of fair hair floated in
-the breeze, or were temporarily confined with an unwilling
-ribbon.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It seemed but the lengthening limit of a dream when the
-seaman at the good ship’s bow was commanded to keep a lookout
-for land; when, yet another bright blue day, fading into
-eve, and a low coast-line is seen, rising like an evening cloud
-from out a summer sea.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Hurrah!’ said Wilfred Effingham, as the second mate
-pointed out the land of promise, ‘now our life begins. We
-shall belong to ourselves again, instead of being the indulgently
-treated slaves—very well treated, I confess—but still the
-unquestionable bond-slaves of that enlightened taskmaster,
-Captain Henry Fleetby of the <cite>Marlshire</cite>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We have been very happy, my dear,’ said Mrs. Effingham,
-‘happier than I should have thought possible in a ship, under
-any circumstances. Let us hope our good fortune will continue
-on land. I shall always look back to this voyage as the
-most wonderful rest that our poor wounded hearts could have
-enjoyed. Your papa looks quite himself again, and I feel
-better than I have done for years. I shall remember our
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>captain, his officers, and his ship, with gratitude, as long as I
-live.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I feel quite attached to the dear old vessel,’ said Annabel,
-‘but we can’t go sailing about the world all our lives, like
-respectable Flying Dutchmen. I suppose the captain must
-turn us out to-morrow. Who would have thought we should
-regret coming to the end of the voyage?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>How calm was that last day of the long, but not too long,
-voyage, when they glided for hours on a waveless sea, by a
-great wall of sandstone cliffs, which finally opened, as if by
-magic, and discovered the portal of an Enchanted Haven!
-Surely the prospect could not all be real, of this wondrous
-nook, stolen from the vast, the limitless Pacific, in which
-they discerned, through the empurpling eve, villas, cottages,
-mansions, churches, white-walled and fantastic to their
-eyes, girt with strange shrubs and stately forest trees of unknown
-aspect. As the <cite>Marlshire</cite> floated to her anchorage,
-threading a fleet of skiffs, which made the waters gay with
-many a sail, the full heart of the mother and the wife overflowed.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Involuntarily a fervent prayer of thanksgiving went up to
-that Being who had safely guarded them o’er the waste of
-ocean; had permitted their entrance into this good land,
-which lay ready to receive them in their need.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Passengers concluding a short voyage are nervously anxious
-to land, and commence the frantic enjoyment of existence
-on <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>terra firma</em></span>. Not so with the denizens of the good ship
-<cite>Marlshire</cite>, which had been their home and dwelling-place for
-more than a quarter of a year. Having grown, with the
-strange adaptiveness of our nature, to love the gallant bark,
-you revere the captain, respect the first officer, and believe in
-the second. Even the crew is above the average of the
-mercantile Jack-tar novel. You will always swear by the old
-tub; and you will not go on shore till to-morrow morning, if
-then.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>All things considered, the family decided to stay quietly
-on board the <cite>Marlshire</cite> that night, so as to disembark in a
-leisurely way in the morning, when they would have the day
-before them in which to make arrangements.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>They talked of staying quietly on board, but the excitement
-of being so near the land was too much for them. The
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>unnatural quietude of the ship, the calm water of the bay,
-the glancing lights, which denoted the thousand homes of
-the city, the cries and sounds of the massed population of a
-seaport, the warm midnight air, the woods and white beaches
-which denoted the shore-line, the gliding harbour-boats, all
-seemed to sound in one strangely distinct chorus: ‘Land,
-land, land at last.’ All magically exciting, these sounds and
-scenes forbade sleep. Long after the other members of the
-family had gone below for the night, Wilfred and Rosamond
-paced the deck, eagerly discussing plans for the future, and,
-with the sanguine temper of youth, rapidly following each
-freshly-formed track to fortune.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>No one was likely to indulge in slumber after sunrise. A
-babel of sounds announced that the unlading of cargo had
-commenced. Their last ship breakfast prefaced the actual
-stepping upon the friendly gangway, which now alone divided
-them from the other side of the world. Before that feat was
-performed, a squarely-built, grey-headed personage, in clerical
-garb, but withal of a somewhat secular manner, walked
-rapidly from the wharf to the deck and confronted the party.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Here you are at last, all safe and sound, Howard, my
-dear fellow!’ said he, shaking hands warmly with Mr.
-Effingham. ‘Not so much changed either; too easy-going
-for that. Pray present me to Mrs. Effingham and the young
-ladies. Your eldest son looking after the luggage?—proper
-place for him. Allow me to take your arm, my dear madam,
-and to conduct you to the hotel, where I have engaged
-rooms for you. May as well set off—talk as we go along.
-Only heard of the <cite>Marlshire</cite> being signalled the day before
-yesterday. Came a long journey—slightly knocked up this
-morning, but soon recovered—splendid climate—make a
-young man of you, Earl Percy, in a year or two. We always
-called him Earl Percy in the regiment, Mrs. Effingham.
-Perhaps he told you. And all this fine family too—two,
-four, six, seven. I can hardly credit my senses. Plenty of
-room for them in this country—plenty of room—that’s one
-thing.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We have every reason to be thankful for the comfortable
-way in which we have voyaged here,’ said Mrs. Effingham;
-‘and now that you have so kindly come to meet us, I feel as
-if half our troubles were over.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>‘Your troubles are just commencing, my dear madam, but
-with Harley Sternworth’s help something may be done to
-lighten them. Still I feel sure that these young ladies will
-look upon difficulties in a sensible way, not expecting too
-much, or being discouraged—just at first, you know.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Your country, my old friend, will have to look bad
-indeed if my wife cannot find a good word to say for it,’
-said Mr. Effingham, roused to unwonted cheerfulness. ‘At
-any rate, it suits you well; you look as hard as a west country
-drover.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Never was better. Haven’t had a dose of medicine for
-years. Ride fifty miles a day if necessary. Finest climate—finest
-country—under the sun. Lots of parish work and
-travelling, with a dash of botanising, and a pinch of geology
-to fill up spare time. Wouldn’t go back and live in a country
-town for the world. Mope to death.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>All this time the reverend gentleman was pressing forward
-up a gentle incline, towards the lower end of George Street,
-and after walking up that noble thoroughfare, and discreetly
-refraining from mention of the buildings which ornament that
-part of it, he turned again towards the water and piloted his
-party successfully to Batty’s Hotel.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Here, my dear madam, you will find that I have secured
-you pleasant apartments for a week or ten days, during which
-time you will be able to recruit after the voyage, and do
-justice to the beauties of the city. You are not going up
-country at once. A few days’ leisure will be economy in the
-end.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘So we are not to start off hundreds of miles at once, in a
-bullock dray, as the captain told us?’ said Rosamond.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘No, my dear young lady, neither now nor, I hope, at
-any time will such a mode of travelling be necessary. I
-cannot say too much for your conveyance, but it will be fairly
-comfortable and take you to your destination safely. After
-that will commence what you will doubtless consider to be a
-tolerably rough life. Yes—a rough life.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘These young people have made up their minds to anything
-short of living like Esquimaux,’ said Mr. Effingham.
-‘I don’t think you will frighten them. You and I saw
-curious backwoods places when we were quartered in Canada,
-didn’t we? You will hardly match them in Australia.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>‘Nothing to be compared to it,’ said Mr. Sternworth
-earnestly. ‘We have no winter here, to begin with; that is,
-none worth speaking about for cold. Moreover, the people
-are intensely British in their manners and customs, in an
-old-fashioned way. But I am not going to explain everything.
-You will have to <em>live</em> the explanation, which is far
-better than hearing it, and is sure to be retained by the
-memory.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It was decided that no move was to be made for the
-interior until the baggage was landed, and arrangements made
-for its safe carriage by dray.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘If you leave before all is ready,’ said their mentor, ‘you
-run risk of the loss of a portion, by mistake or negligence;
-and this loss may never be repaired. You will find your
-furniture of immense value in the new abode, and will congratulate
-yourself upon having brought it. It is astonishing
-with what different eyes you look upon a table or sideboard
-here and in England.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I was anxious to bring out some of our old possessions,’
-said Mrs. Effingham. ‘But I had hard work to persuade my
-husband that we might not be able to procure such here.
-Your advice was most opportune. I feel more pleased than
-I can say that we were able to act upon it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At lunch they were joined by Wilfred, who had discovered
-that there was no chance of all the furniture coming ashore
-that day. He had arranged with the captain that Andrew
-and his family should remain on board, as also Daisy the
-cow, until everything was ready to load the drays with the
-heavy baggage.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Andrew had expressed himself much pleased with the
-arrangement, regarding the ship as ‘mair hamelike’ than the
-busy foreign-looking city, to the inhabitants of which he did
-not take kindly, particularly after an exploring stroll, which
-happened to be on the Sunday after arrival.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘A maist freevolous folk, given up to mammon-worship
-and pleesure-huntin’,—walkin’ in thae gairdens—no that
-they’re no just by-ordinar’ for shrubs and floorin’ plants
-frae a’ lands—walkin’ and haverin’ in the gairdens on the
-Sawbath day, a’ smilin’ and heedless, just on the vairge o’
-happiness. Saw ye ever the like? It’s juist fearsome.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Upon the lady portion of the family, the city with its
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>shops, parks, and inhabitants made a more favourable impression.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Sternworth was untiring in showing them, in the
-excursions which Mrs. Effingham and the girls made under
-his guidance, the beauties of the city. They wandered much
-in the lovely public gardens, to Mrs. Effingham’s intense
-delight, whose love of flowers was, perhaps, her strongest
-taste. They drove out on the South Head road, and duly
-noted the white-walled mansions, plunged deeply in such
-luxuriant flower-growth as the Northern strangers had rarely
-yet beheld. Wonderfully gracious seemed the weather. It
-was the Australian spring with air as soft and balmy as that
-of Italy in her fairest hours.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>How enjoyable was that halt between two stages of
-existence! Daily, as they rose from the morning meal, they
-devoted themselves to fresh rambles around the city, under the
-chaperonage of the worthy person. They commenced to feel
-an involuntary exhilaration. The pure air, the bright days,
-the glowing sun, the pleasant sea-breeze, combined to cause
-an indefinable conviction that they had found a region formed
-for aid and consolation.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The streets, the equipages, the people, presented, it is
-true, few of the contrasts, to their English experience, which a
-foreign town would have afforded. Yet was there the excitement,
-strong and vivid, which arises from the first sight of a
-strange land and an unfamiliar people.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘This town has a great look of Marseilles,’ said Wilfred,
-as they loitered, pleasantly fatigued, towards their temporary
-home in the deepening twilight. ‘The same white, balconied,
-terraced houses of pale freestone; the southern climate, the
-same polyglot water-side population, only the Marseilles quay
-might be stowed away in a hundred corners of this wonderful
-harbour; and the people—only look at them—have a Parisian
-tendency to spend their evenings in the streets. I suppose
-the mildness of the climate tends to it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘This kind of thing, I suppose, strikes you sharply at first,’
-said Mr. Sternworth; ‘but my eyes have become so accustomed
-to all the aspects of my little world, that I cannot see
-much difference between it and many English places I have
-known in my day. The variations noted at first have long
-since disappeared; and I feel as much at home as I used
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>to do at Bideford, when I was quartered there with the old
-regiment.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But surely the people must be different from what they
-are in England,’ said Beatrice. ‘The country is different,
-the trees, the plants—how beautiful many of them are!—and
-the climate; surely all this must tend to alter the character or
-the appearance of the people.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It may in a few centuries have that effect, my dear young
-lady,’ said the old gentleman, ‘but such changes are after the
-fashion of nature’s workings, imperceptibly slow. You will
-agree with me in another year, that many old acquaintances
-in men and manners are to be met with out here, and the
-rest present only outward points of divergence.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The days of restful peace had passed. The valuable
-freight—to them invaluable—having been safely loaded, Mr.
-Sternworth unfolded the plan which he had arranged for
-their journey.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You are aware,’ he said, ‘that Warbrok Chase, as the
-young ladies have decided to call your estate, is more than 200
-miles from Sydney. It lies 40 miles beyond Yass, which town
-is distant 180 miles from the Metropolis. Now, although we
-shall have railways in good time, there is nothing of the sort
-yet, and the roads are chiefly in their natural state. I would
-therefore suggest that you should travel in a roomy horse-waggon,
-comfortably fitted up, taking a tent with you in
-which to sleep at night. I have procured a driver well
-acquainted with the country, who knows all the camps and
-stopping-places, and may be depended upon to take you
-safely to your journey’s end.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘No railways, no coaches,’ said Mr. Effingham; ‘yours is
-rather a primitive country, Harley, it must be confessed; but
-you know what is best for us all, and the weather is so mild
-that none of us can suffer from the bivouac.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I should not have hazarded it if there had been any risk
-to health,’ said the old gentleman, bowing courteously. ‘There
-are coaches, however, and you might reach your destination in
-four days, after hurried travelling. But the tariff is expensive
-for so large a party; you would be crowded, or meet unsuitable
-fellow-travellers, while you could take but little of your
-luggage with you.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I vote for the overland journey,’ said Rosamond. ‘I am
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>sure it will be quite refreshingly eastern. I suppose Andrew
-and Jeanie and poor dear Daisy and the dogs and everything
-can go.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Everything and everybody you please but the heavy
-luggage. Your servants will be able to sleep under a part of
-the waggon-tilt, which will be comfortable enough at night.
-The cow will give you milk for your tea. Even the greyhounds
-may catch you a wallaby or two, which will come
-in for soup.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There could not be a better scheme,’ said Wilfred
-exultingly. ‘My dear sir, you are a second father to us.
-How long do you think it will take us to get to Warbrok
-altogether?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You will have to make up your minds to ten or twelve
-days’ travelling, I am afraid—say, twenty miles a day. I really
-believe you will not find it tedious, but, as with your water
-journey, get quite to like it. Besides, there is one grand
-advantage, as far as the young ladies are concerned.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What is that?’ said Annabel, with added interest, but
-somewhat doleful countenance. ‘Is there <em>any</em> advantage in
-travelling like gipsies?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It is this, then, my dear girls,’ said the old man, bending
-upon them his clear, kindly beaming eyes, ‘that you will
-make acquaintance with the rougher habitudes (and yet not
-unduly so) of country life in Australia by this primitive
-forest journeying. When you arrive at your destination you
-will therefore be proportionately satisfied with your new
-residence, because it will represent <em>a settled home</em>. Your daily
-journey will by that time have become a task, so that you
-will hail the prospect of repose with thankfulness.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Is that all?’ asked Annabel with a disappointed air.
-‘Then we are to undergo something dreadful, in order that
-something only disagreeable may not look so bad after it.
-Is all Australian life like that? But I daresay I shall die
-young, and so it won’t matter much. Is the lunch nearly
-ready? I declare I am famishing.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Every one laughed at this characteristic sequence to Annabel’s
-prophecy, and the matter of the march having been
-settled, their friend promised to send up the waggon-driver
-next morning, in order that the proper fittings and the lamps—indispensable
-articles—and luggage might be arranged
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>and packed. A tent also was purchased, and bedding,
-cooking utensils, provisions, etc., secured.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You will find Dick Evans an original character,’ said the
-parson, ‘but I do not know any man in the district so well
-suited for this particular service. He has been twenty years
-in Australia, and knows everything, both good and evil, that
-can be known of the country and people. He is an old
-soldier, and in the 50th Regiment saw plenty of service. He
-has his faults, but they don’t appear on the surface, and I
-know him well enough to guarantee that you will be wholly
-ignorant of them. His manners—with a dash of soldier
-servant—are not to be surpassed.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At an hour next morning so soon after dawn that Andrew
-Cargill, the most incorruptible of early birds, was nearly caught
-napping, Mr. Dick Evans arrived with two horses and his
-waggon. The rest of the team, not being wanted, he had
-left in their paddock at Homebush. He immediately placed
-the waggon in the most convenient position for general
-reference, took out his horses, which he accommodated with
-nose-bags, and with an air of almost suspicious deference
-inquired of Andrew what he could commence to do in the
-way of packing.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The two men, as if foreseeing that possible encounters
-might henceforth take place between them, looked keenly at
-each other. Richard Evans had the erect bearing of which
-the recipient of early drill can rarely divest himself. His wiry
-figure but slightly above the middle height, his clean-shaved,
-ruddy cheek, his keen grey eye, hardly denoted the fifty years
-and more which he carried so lightly.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A faultless constitution, an open-air occupation with habits
-of great bodily activity, had borne him scatheless through a
-life of hardship and risk.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This personage commenced with a request to be shown
-the whole of the articles intended to be taken, gently but
-firmly withstanding any opinion of Andrew’s to the contrary,
-and replying to his protests with the mild superiority of the
-attendant in a lunatic asylum. After the whole of the light
-luggage had been displayed, he addressed himself to the task
-of loading and securing it with so much economy of space
-and advantage of position, that Andrew readily yielded to
-him the right to such leadership in future.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>‘Nae doot,’ he said, ‘the auld graceless sworder that he
-is, has had muckle experience in guiding his team through
-thae pathless wildernesses, and it behoves a wise man to
-“jouk and let the jaw gae by.” But wae’s me, it’s dwelling
-i’ the tents o’ Kedar!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Dick Evans, who was a man of few words and strong in
-the heat of argument, was by no means given to mixing up
-discussion with work. He therefore kept on steadily with
-his packing until evening, only requiring from Andrew such
-help and information as were indispensable.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There,’ said he, as he removed the low-crowned straw
-hat from his heated brow, and prepared to fill his pipe, ‘I
-think that will about do. The ladies can sit there in the
-middle, where I’ve put the tent loose, and use it as a
-sofy, if they’ve a mind to. I can pitch it in five minutes at
-night, and they can sleep in it as snug as if they had a
-cottage with them. You and your wife can have the body
-of the waggon to yourselves at night, and I’ll sleep under
-the shafts. The captain and the young gentlemen can have
-all the room between the wheels, and nobody can want
-more than that. I suppose your missis can do what cooking’s
-wanted?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Nae doot,’ Andrew replied with dignity, ‘Mistress Cargill
-wad provide a few bits o’ plain victual. A wheen parritch,
-a thocht brose, wad serve a’ hands better than flesh meat,
-and tea or coffee, or siccan trash.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Porridge won’t do for me,’ said the veteran firmly, ‘not
-if I know it. Oatmeal’s right enough for you Scotchmen,
-and not bad stuff either, <em>in your own country</em>, but beef and
-mutton’s our tack in Australia.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And will ye find a flesher in this “bush,” as they ca’ it,
-that we’ve to push through?’ demanded Andrew. ‘Wad it no
-be mair wiselike to keep to victual that we can carry in our
-sacks?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Get plenty of beef and mutton and everything else on the
-road,’ said Mr. Evans, lighting his pipe and declining further
-argument. ‘Don’t you forget to bring a frying-pan. I’ll take
-the horses back to the paddock now and be here by daylight,
-so as we can make a good start.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It had been arranged by Mr. Sternworth that the boys, as
-he called them, should set forth in the morning with Evans
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>and the waggon, as also Andrew and Jeanie, taking with
-them the cow, the dogs, and the smaller matters which the
-family had brought. No necessity for Captain Effingham
-and the ladies to leave Sydney until the second day. He
-would drive them in a hired carriage as far as the first camp,
-which Evans had described to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>They would thus avoid the two days’ travel, and commence
-their journey after the expedition had performed its trial trip,
-so to speak.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What <em>should</em> we have done without your kind care of
-us?’ said Mrs. Effingham. ‘Everything up to this time has
-been a pleasure trip. When is the hard life that we heard
-so much of to begin?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Perhaps,’ said Rosamond, ‘Mr. Sternworth is going to
-be like the brigand in the romances, who used to lure
-persons from their homes. I have no doubt but that there
-are “hard times” awaiting us somewhere or somehow.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘My dear young lady, let me compliment you on your
-good sense in taking that view of the future. It will save
-you from disappointment, and fill your mind with a wholesome
-strength to resist adversity. You may need all your
-philosophy, and I counsel you to keep it, like armour,
-well burnished. I do not know of any evil likely to befall
-you, but that you will have trouble and toil may be taken
-as certain. Only, after a time, I predict that you will
-overcome your difficulties, and find yourselves permanently
-benefited.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The old gentleman, whose arrangements were as successfully
-carried out as if he had been the commissary instead of
-the chaplain of his former regiment, made his appearance on
-the following day in a neat barouche drawn by a pair of
-good-looking bay horses, and driven by a highly presentable
-coachman.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Why, it might pass muster for a private carriage,’ said
-Annabel. ‘And I can see a crest on the panels. I suppose
-we shall never own a carriage again as long as we live.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘This <em>is</em> a private carriage, or rather was, once upon a
-time,’ said Mr. Sternworth; ‘the horses and the coachman
-belonged to it. Many carriages were put down last year,
-owing to a scarcity of money, and my old friend Watkins here,
-having saved his wages, like a prudent man, bought his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>master’s carriage and horses, and commenced as cab
-proprietor. He has a large connection among his former
-master’s friends, and is much in demand at balls and other
-festivities.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The ex-coachman drove them at a lively pace, but steadily,
-along a macadamised turnpike road, not so very different
-from a country lane in Surrey, though wider, and not confined
-by hedges. The day was fine. On either side, after the
-town was left behind, were large enclosures, wherein grazed
-sheep, cattle, and horses. Sometimes they passed an orangery,
-and the girls were charmed with the rows of dark green trees,
-upon which the golden fruit was ripe. Then an old-fashioned
-house, in an orchard, surrounded by a wall—wall and house
-coloured red, and rusty with the stains of age—much like a
-farmhouse in Hertfordshire. One town they passed was so
-manifestly old-fashioned, having even <em>ruins</em>, to their delight
-and astonishment, that they could hardly believe they were
-in a new country.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Some one has been playing Rip Van Winkle tricks upon
-us,’ said Rosamond. ‘We have been asleep a hundred years,
-and are come back finding all things grown old and in
-decay.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You must not forget that the colony has been established
-nearly fifty years,’ said Mr. Sternworth, ‘and that these are
-some of the earliest settlements. They were not always
-placed in the most judicious sites; wherefore, as newer towns
-have passed them in the race for trade, these have submitted
-to become, as you see them, “grey with the rime of
-years,” and simulating decay as well as circumstances will
-permit.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, I think much more highly of Australia, now that I
-have seen a <em>real</em> ruin or two,’ said Annabel decisively. ‘I
-always pictured the country full of hideous houses of boards,
-painted white, with spinach green doors and windows.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The afternoon was well advanced as the inmates of the
-carriage descried the encampment which Mr. Evans had
-ordered, with some assistance from his military experience.
-So complete in all arrangements for comfort was it—not
-wholly disregarding the element of romantic scenery—that
-the girls cried aloud in admiration.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The streamlet (or creek) which afforded the needful water
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>meandered round the base of a crag, jutting out from a
-forest-clothed hill. The water-hole (or basin) in the channel
-of the creek was larger than such generally are, and reflected
-brightly the rays of the declining sun. The meadow, which
-afforded space for the encampment, was green, and fertile of
-appearance. The waggon stood near the water; the four
-horses were peacefully grazing. At a short distance, under a
-spreading tree, the tent had been pitched, while before it
-was a wood fire, upon which Jeanie was cooking something
-appetising. Wilfred and his brother were strolling, gun in
-hand, up the creek; the cow was feeding among the rushes
-with great contentment; Andrew was seated, meditating, upon
-a box which he had brought forth from the recesses of the
-waggon; while Dick Evans, not far from a small fire, upon
-which stood a camp-kettle at boiling-point, was smoking with
-an air of conscious pride, as if not only the picturesque
-beauty, but the personages pertaining to the landscape,
-belonged to him individually.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I could not leave you more comfortably provided for,’
-said their ‘guide, philosopher, and friend.’ ‘Old Dick may be
-trusted in all such matters as implicitly as the Duke of
-Wellington. I never knew him at fault yet in this kind of
-life.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You must positively stay and have afternoon tea with
-us,’ exclaimed Annabel. ‘It is exactly five, and there is Dick
-putting a tin cupful of tea into the teapot. What extravagant
-people you colonists are! I never drank tea in the
-open air before, but it seems quite the right thing to do. I
-see Jeanie has made griddle-cakes, like a dear old thing.
-And I know there is butter. I am so hungry. You <em>will</em>
-stay, won’t you?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I think, sir,’ said the ex-family coachman, looking
-indulgently at the special pleader, ‘that we shall have time
-to get back to the Red Cow Inn to-night, after a cup of
-tea, as the young lady wishes it. I’ll run you into town
-bright and early to-morrow.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Very well then, Miss Annabel, I shall have the honour to
-accept your invitation,’ bowed the old man. ‘I go away
-more cheerfully than I expected, now that I leave you all so
-comparatively snug. It will not be for long. Be sure that I
-shall meet you on the threshold of Warbrok.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>The <em>al fresco</em> meal was partaken of with much relish,
-even gaiety, after which civilisation—as personified by the
-reverend gentleman and the carriage—departed. Annabel
-looked after it ruefully, while Jeanie and Mrs. Effingham
-took counsel together for the night. It was for the first time
-in the family history. Never before had the Effinghams slept,
-so to speak, in the open air. It was a novel adventure in
-their uneventful lives—a marked commencement of their
-colonial career. It affected them differently, according to
-their idiosyncrasies. Rosamond was calmly resolute, Annabel
-apprehensive, and Beatrice indifferent; the boys in high spirits;
-Mr. Effingham half in disapproval, despondently self-accusing;
-while Mrs. Effingham and Jeanie were so fully absorbed in
-the great bedding question that they had no emotions to
-spare for any abstract consideration whatever.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The moon, in her second quarter, had arisen lustrous in
-the pure, dark blue firmament, fire-besprinkled with ‘patines
-of bright gold,’ before this important matter (and supper) was
-concluded. Then it was formally announced that the tent
-was fully furnished, and had turned out wonderfully commodious.
-The mattresses were placed upon a layer of ‘bush-feathers,’
-as Dick Evans called them, and which (the small
-twigs and leaf-shoots of the eucalyptus) he had impressed
-Wilfred and his brother to gather. There was a lantern
-secured to the tent-pole, which lighted up the apartment;
-and sheets, blankets, coverlets being brought forth, Annabel
-declared that she was sure they would all sleep like tops, that
-for her part she must insist on going to bed at once as the
-keen air had made her quite drowsy. A dressing-table had
-been improvised, chiefly with the aid of Mr. Evans’ mechanical
-skill. When the matron and her daughters made their
-farewell for the night, and closed their canvas portal, every one
-was of the opinion that a high degree of comfort and effective
-lodging had been reached.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. and Mrs. Cargill and family retired to the inmost
-recesses of the upper waggon, where the ends of the tilt,
-fastened together, protected them. Mr. Effingham and his
-sons joined Dick Evans at his briskly burning fire, where the
-old man was smoking and occasionally indulging in a
-refresher of tea as if he had no intention of going to bed till
-he reached Warbrok.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>‘We are having glorious weather to travel in, Evans,’ said
-Mr. Effingham. ‘You have been in the service, Mr. Sternworth
-tells me; what regiment?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I was in the old 50th for many a year, Captain,’ he
-said, unconsciously standing erect and giving the salute. ‘I
-served under Sir Hugh Gough in India, where I got this
-slash from a Mahratta sabre. Didn’t seem a hard cut
-neither; the fellow just seemed to swing his wrist, careless-like,
-as he rode by, but it was nigh deep enough to take the
-“wick” out of me. Their swords was a deal sharper than
-ours, and their wooden scabbards kept ’em from getting
-blunt again. I had a great argument with my sergeant about
-it once,’ continued the old man. ‘I couldn’t a-bear to see
-our poor chaps sliced up by them razor-edged tulwars, while
-our regulation swords was a’most too dull to cut through a
-quilted cotton helment. Ah! them was fine times,’ said the
-old soldier, with so genuine a regret in his tones that
-Howard Effingham almost believed he had, for the first time
-in his life, fallen across a noble private, pleased with his
-profession, and anxious to return to it.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I have rarely heard a soldier regret the army,’ said he.
-‘But you still retain zeal for the service, I am pleased to
-find.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, sir, that’s all very well,’ said the philosophical man-at-arms;
-‘but what I was a-thinking of was the “loot.” It’s
-enough to bring tears into a man’s eyes that served his Queen
-and country, to think of the things as we passed over. Didn’t
-Jimmy O’Hara and two or three more men of my company
-get together once and made bold to stick up the priest of one
-of them temples. No great things either—gold earrings and
-bangles, and a trifle of gold mohurs, the priest’s own. There
-was a copper-coloured, bronze-looking idol—regular heathen
-god, or some such cretur—which the priest kept calling out
-“Sammy” to, or “Swammi.” The ugly thing had bright glittering
-eyes, and Jim wanted to get ’em out badly, but the priest
-said, “Feringhee wantee like this?” and he picked up a bit of
-glass, and smiled contempshus like. At last we left him and
-“Swammi,” eyes and all. I don’t ever deserve to have a
-day’s luck, sir, agin, as long as I live.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Why so?’ said Mr. Effingham, astonished at the high
-moral tone, which he had not been used to associate with the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>light infantry man of the period. ‘Not for taking the image
-away, surely?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘No!’ shouted the old man, roused from his ordinary
-respectful tone. ‘But for leavin’ him behind! That Sammy,
-sir, was pure gold, and his eyes was di’monds, di’monds!
-Think o’ that. We left a thousand pound a man behind, because
-we didn’t know gold when we seen it. It will haunt
-me, sir, to my dying day.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The boys laughed at the unsentimental conclusion of the
-veteran’s tale. Their father looked grave.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I cannot approve of the plunder of religious edifices,
-Evans; though the temptation was too great for soldiers, and
-indeed for others in those days.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The chief personages having retired, Mr. Effingham and
-his sons essayed to make their couch under the waggon.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It is many a year since I had any experience in this kind
-of thing,’ said he; ‘but, if I remember rightly, it was in Spain
-that I bivouacked last. This locality is not unlike Estramadura.
-That rocky ravine, with the track running down it, is
-just where you would have expected to see the muleteer stepping
-gaily along beside his mules singing or swearing, as the
-case might be; and they do both with great vigour.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I remember Don Pedro, Captain,’ said Dick. ‘I mind
-the wine-skins putty well too. It wasn’t bad stuff; but I
-don’t know as dark brandy doesn’t come handier if ye wants
-a stir up. But there’s one thing you can’t have forgot,
-Captain, that beats this country holler.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You must mean the fleas,’ said Effingham; ‘<em>they</em> certainly
-could not be surpassed. I hope you don’t mean to rival
-them here.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, I don’t deny, Captain, that in some huts, where the
-people aren’t particular, in a sandy country, in summer you
-will find a few, and likewise them other reptiles, ’specially
-where there’s pine slabs, but in a general way we’re pretty
-clean in this country, and you’ve no call to be afeard to
-tackle your blankets.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I’m glad to hear it, Evans,’ said Effingham, yawning. ‘I
-have no doubt that your camp is always fit for inspection.
-I think we may say good-night.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Between the keen air of the forest, and the unwonted
-exercise, a tendency to drowsiness now set in, which Mr.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>Effingham and his sons discovered by the time that the
-blankets were drawn over them. The sides of their apartment,
-represented by the wheels of the waggon, were covered
-by the canvas tilt, the ceiling was low but sufficient. It was
-the ideal chamber in one respect. Ventilation was unimpeded,
-while shelter was secured.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER III <br /> THE NEW HOME</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>When Wilfred awoke from deep untroubled slumber, the sun
-seemed gazing at the encampment with haughty, fixed regard,
-as of a monarch, enthroned upon the summit of the purple
-mountain range.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Unwitting of the lengths (fortunately) to which the unsparing
-archer could go in Southern lands, he essayed to
-commence dressing.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Rising hurriedly, he was reminded by a tap on the head
-from the axle-tree that he was in a bedroom of restricted
-accommodation. More guarded in his after-movements he
-crawled outside, first placing on the dewy grass a rug upon
-which to stand. He commenced his toilette, and cast a comprehensive
-glance around.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The first thing he saw was the upright form of Richard
-Evans, who, returning from a search after his hobbled
-horses, drove them before him towards the camp, at the
-same time smoking his pipe with a serene and satisfied air.
-The morning was chilly, but he had not thought a coat
-necessary, and in a check shirt and moleskin trousers
-calmly braved an atmosphere not much above forty degrees
-Fahrenheit.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘This must be a fine climate,’ said Wilfred to his father.
-‘We shall be well wrapped up till breakfast time, at any rate,
-and yet that old buffer is wandering about in his shirt-sleeves
-as if he were in Naples.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘He is pretty hard-bitten, you may depend,’ said Mr.
-Effingham. ‘I think some of our old “die-hards” are as
-tough samples of humanity as could anywhere be met. I do
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>not uphold the British soldier as a model, but they were men
-in my time, beyond any manner of doubt.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Dick marched up his team to the waggon, whence the
-lodgers had by this time issued—Andrew to make a fire
-near the tent, and Jeanie to penetrate that sacred enclosure,
-and presumably to act as tire-woman in the interior.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The shafts, which had served Dick as a sleeping apartment
-during the night, aided by a shroud of tarpaulin, were
-uplifted, and bagging being thereon stretched, were converted
-into a manger for the chaff and maize, which the horses
-quickly commenced to consume.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Presently Jeanie issued from the tent, and finding the
-camp-kettle boiling, proceeded to make tea. Andrew, in the
-meantime, milked the cow. The gridiron was brought into
-requisition, and certain mutton chops broiled. Eventually
-Mrs. Effingham and her daughters issued from the tent,
-fresh and dainty of aspect as if they had just left their bedrooms
-at The Chase. Then the day commenced, and also
-breakfast.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Good-morning, O mother! Hail, O tender maidens!
-What do you think of camping out?’ was Wilfred’s greeting,
-‘Have you been sitting up weeping, or did you forget everything
-till daylight, as we did?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We all slept like tops,’ said Annabel. ‘I never was
-so sleepy in my life. I was almost off before I could undress.
-I think it’s splendid. And oh! what is there for
-breakfast?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Grilled chops, smoking cups of tea, with bread and butter,
-constituted the repast. Worse meals have been eaten. The
-appetites were, like the travellers, highly respectable. By
-the time the meal was finished, Mr. Richard Evans had
-harnessed his team, and bringing himself up to the attitude
-of ‘attention,’ requested to know when the ladies would like
-to make a start.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>After consultation, it was notified to their guide and
-courier that as soon as the tent was struck and the baggage
-packed, every one would be ready.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The troops being in high health and spirits, in a comparatively
-short space of time the march was resumed.
-Wilfred and Guy walked ahead, fowling-piece in hand.
-Andrew drove the cow, which followed quietly in the rear.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>The coupled greyhounds looked eagerly around, as if sensible
-that they were now in hunting country. They were with
-difficulty restrained when a wallaby, in two bounds, crossed
-the road and disappeared in an adjoining scrub.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The dry air was pure and fresh, the unclouded sky blue
-as a sapphire dome, the winding forest road free from all
-impediment but an occasional ledge of sandstone. If there
-is any portion of the day ‘when the poor are rich in spirits
-and health,’ when the heart of youth stirs, when age is
-soothed with dreams of happiness, it is in that sweetest hour
-which follows the early morning meal in rural Australia.
-Dawn is austere, mid-day often sultry, but nowhere will he,
-whose heart and intelligence respond alike gratefully to that
-charmed time, find its inspirations more invigorating than
-in the early summer of Australia. Then the fortunate
-traveller experiences coolness without cold, and warmth
-without the heat which produces lassitude.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As the waggon rolled easily along, the horses stepping
-cheerily on the track, the wayfarers paced over the unwonted
-herbage with an alertness of mien which would have suggested
-a very different history.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘How lovely the shrubs are that we see in all directions!’
-said Mrs. Effingham. ‘What should we have given for that
-golden flowering mimosa at The Chase, or this blue-leaved, pink
-pointed tree, which I suppose must be a young eucalyptus.
-Here they are so common that no one heeds them, and yet
-there are rare plants enough to set up a dozen greenhouses.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Everything is so utterly different,’ said Rosamond. ‘I
-am most agreeably surprised at the landscape. What
-erroneous ideas one has of far countries! I suppose it is
-because we seldom feel sufficient interest to learn about
-them thoroughly. I pictured Australia a sandy waste, with
-burned-up reedy grass, and a general air of the desert. Now,
-here we have woods, a pretty little brook rippling by, rocks
-and hills, and in the distance a mountain. I could make
-quite an effective sketch.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The country isn’t all like this, Miss,’ said Dick Evans,
-with a deferential air. ‘If you was to go two or three
-hundred miles into the bush, there’s no timber at all; you’ld
-find it all sand and salt-bushes—the curiousest place ever
-you see.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>‘How can it be the “bush,”’ inquired Wilfred, ‘if there
-are no trees? But we are not going so far, at any rate.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Finest grazing land out,’ said Richard the experienced.
-‘All the stock rolling fat—no trouble in looking after ’em.
-If I was a young gentleman, that’s the place I’d make for.
-Not but what Warbrok’s a pleasant spot, and maybe the
-young ladies will like it better than the plains.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I fancy we all shall, Richard,’ said Rosamond. ‘The
-plains may be very well for sheep and cattle, but I prefer a
-woodland country like this. I suppose we can have a garden
-there?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Used to be the best garden in all the country-side, Miss,
-but the Warleighs were a wild lot; they let everything go to
-wrack. The trees and bushes is mostly wore out, but the
-sile’s that good, as a handy man would soon make it ship-shape
-again.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What are we to do for lunch?’ said Annabel, with some
-appearance of anxiety. ‘If we are to go on roaming over
-the land from sunrise to sunset without stopping, I shall die
-of hunger—I’m sure I shall. I keep thinking about those
-cakes of Jeanie’s.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘My dear child,’ said her mother, ‘I daresay we shall
-manage to feed you and the rest of the flock. I am pleased
-to find that you have such a famous appetite. To be sure,
-you have not stopped growing yet, and this fresh air acts as
-a tonic. So far, we must not complain of the climate.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It’s only a few miles furder on, ma’am, to the King
-Parrot Waterhole, where we can stop in the middle of the
-day, and have a bit to eat if the young ladies is sharp-set. I
-always stop on the road and feed my horses about twelve
-o’clock. And if the young gentlemen was to walk on, they
-might shoot a pair of ducks at the waterhole, as would come
-in handy for the pot.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When about mid-day they reached the King Parrot Waterhole,
-a reed-fringed pool, about as large as their English
-horse-pond, they found Wilfred in possession of a pair of the
-beautiful grey-breasted wood-ducks (<em>Anas Boscha</em>), a teal,
-with chestnut and black feathers and a brilliant green neck,
-also a dark-furred kangaroo, which Dick pronounced to be a
-rock wallaby.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Australia isn’t such a bad place for game,’ said Guy.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>‘We found the ducks swimming in the pool, three brace
-altogether, and “Damsel” caught this two-legged hare, as she
-thought it, as it was making up that stony hill. <em>I</em> like it
-better than Surrey.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We shall find out ever so many interesting things,’ said
-Rosamond. ‘I shall never feel thankful enough to that good
-old Professor Muste for teaching me the small bit of botany
-that I know. Now, look at this lovely Clianthus, is it not
-enough to warm the heart of a Trappist? And here is that
-exquisite purple Kennedya, which ought, in an Australian
-novel, to be wreathed round the heroine’s hat. Do my eyes
-deceive me, or is not that a white heath? I must dig it up.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I believe, Rosamond, that you could comfort yourself on
-Mount Ararat,’ said Annabel. ‘Why, it will be <em>ages</em> before
-those ducks can be picked and roasted. Oh, Jeanie, Jeanie,
-can’t we have them before tea-time? I wish I had never
-seen them.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘If you like, you can help me take off the feathers, and
-spare Jeanie’s everlastingly busy fingers,’ said Beatrice.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Here Annabel looked ruefully at her tiny, delicate hands,
-with a child’s pout.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, it’s no use looking at your pretty hands,’ said the
-more practical Beatrice. ‘This is the land of work, and all
-who can’t make themselves useful will be treated like the
-foolish virgins in the parable. It always makes me smile
-when that chapter is read. I can fancy Annabel holding out
-her lamp, with an injured expression, saying, “Well, nobody
-told me it was time to get ready.”’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Beatrice, my daughter,’ said Mrs. Effingham gravely,
-‘sacred subjects are not befitting matter for idle talking; dispositions
-vary, and you may remember that Martha was not
-praised for her anxiety to serve.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At mid-day the kettle bubbled on the fire, kindled by the
-ever-ready Richard, cakes and sandwiches were handed round,
-the tea—thanks to Daisy—was gratefully sipped.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The sun shone brightly on the green flat, where the horses
-grazed in peace and plenty. The birds chirped and called at
-intervals; all Nature seemed glad and responsive to the joyous
-season of the southern spring.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Thus their days wore on, in peaceful progression, alike free
-from toil, anxiety, or adventure. The daily stage was accomplished,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>under Dick’s experienced direction, without mistake
-or misadventure. The evening meal was a time of rest and
-cheerful enjoyment, the night’s slumbers refreshing and unbroken.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What a delightful country this is! I feel quite a new
-creature, especially after breakfast,’ exclaimed Annabel one
-morning. ‘I could go on like this for months, till we
-reached the other side of the continent, if there is any other
-side. Will it be as nice as this, I wonder, at Malbrook, or
-Warbrok, or whatever they call it? Warbrok Chase won’t
-look so bad on our letters, when we write home. I must send
-a sketch of it to cousin Elizabeth, with a bark cabin, of
-course. She will never believe that we have a real house to
-live in among the backwoods. What sort of a house is it,
-Dick? Is it thatched and gabled and damp and delightful,
-with dear little diamond casements like the keeper’s lodge,
-or is it a horrid wooden barn? Tell me now, there’s a dear
-old man!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We shall be there, Miss, the day after to-morrer, please
-God,’ responded Dick with respectful solemnity. ‘Parson
-Sternworth said I was to say nought about the place, but let
-it come on you suddent-like. And I’m a man as is used to
-obey orders.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Very well, you disagreeable old soldier,’ said the playful
-maiden. ‘I’ll be even with you and the parson, as you call
-him. See if I don’t.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Sorry to disobleege you, Miss Anniebell,’ said the
-veteran, ‘but if my old General, Sir Hugh Gough, was to
-come and say, “Corporal Richard Evans, hand me over the
-chart of the country,” I should have to tell him that he
-hadn’t got the counter-sign.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And quite right too, Evans,’ interposed Mr. Effingham,
-‘to keep up your good old habits in a new country.
-Discipline is the soul of the army.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I was allers taught <em>that</em>, sir,’ replied Dick, with an air of
-military reminiscence which would have befitted a veteran of
-the Great Frederick. ‘But when we reaches Warbrok my
-agreement’s out with the Parson, and Miss can order me
-about all day.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In spite of Annabel’s asseverations that the party would
-never reach the spot indicated, and that she believed there
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>never was any such place, but that Dick would lead them
-into a trackless forest and abandon them, the journey ended
-about the time specified. A rugged track, indeed, one afternoon
-tried their patience. The horses laboured, the docile
-cow limped and lagged, the girls complained, while Andrew’s
-countenance became visibly elongated.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At length Dick Evans’s wooden facial muscles relaxed, as
-halting on the hardly-gained hill-top he pointed with his
-whip-handle, saying simply, ‘There’s Warbrok! So the
-young ladies and gentlemen can see for theirselves.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>How eagerly did the whole party gaze upon the landscape,
-which now, in the clear light of the Southern eve, lay softly
-in repose before them!</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The character of the scenery had changed with the
-wondrous suddenness peculiar to the land in which they had
-come to dwell. A picture set in a frame of forest and
-unfriendly thickets! Now before their eyes came with
-magical abruptness a vision of green slopes, tall groves, and
-verdurous meadows. It was one of nature’s forest parks.
-Traces of the imperfect operations of a new country were
-visible, in felled timber, in naked, girdled trees, in unsightly
-fences. But nature was in bounteous mood, and had
-heightened the contrast with the barren region they had over-passed,
-by a flushed abundance of summer vegetation.
-This lavish profusion of herb and leaf imparted a richness of
-colouring, a clearness of tone, which in a less favourable
-season of the year Warbrok must perceptibly have lacked.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, what a lovely, lovely place!’ cried Annabel, transported
-beyond herself as she stood on tip-toe and gazed
-rapturously at the scene. ‘Those must be the Delectable
-Mountains. Dick, you are a Christian hero [the old man
-smiled deprecatingly], I forgive you on the spot. And there
-is the house, a <em>real</em> house with two storeys—actually two—I
-thought there were only cottages up the country—and an
-orchard; and is that a blue cloud or the sea? We must
-have turned round again. Surely it can’t be <em>our lake</em>?
-That would be too heavenly, and those glorious mountains
-beyond!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘That’s Lake William, miss, called after His Gracious
-Majesty King William the Fourth,’ explained Dick, accurate
-and reverential. ‘Fourteen miles long and seven broad.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>You’ll find the house big enough, but it’s a long way from
-being in good order; and it’s a mercy there’s a tree alive in
-the orchard.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, never mind, we’ll soon put things to rights, won’t
-we, mamma? And what splendid creatures those old trees
-will be when they come out in leaf. I suppose it’s too early
-in the spring yet?’ continued she.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Dead—every one of ’em, miss,’ explained their conductor.
-‘They’ve been ring-barked, more’s the pity. They
-was beauties when I knowed ’em fust, before the blessed
-tenants was let ruinate everything about the place. I
-wonder there’s a stone of the house standing, that I do.
-And now, sir, we’ll get on, and the young ladies can
-have tea in their own parlour, if my old woman’s made a
-fire, accordin’ to orders.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The hearts of the more reflective portion of the party
-were too full for comment, so Annabel’s chatter was allowed
-to run on unchecked. A feeling of despondency had been
-gradually stealing over Howard Effingham and his wife, as
-for the two last stages they had pictured to themselves the
-toil of building up a home amid the barren solitudes, such
-as, in their innocence, they thought their new property
-might resemble. Now, here was a spot in which they
-might live out their lives with cheerful and contented minds,
-thankful that ‘their lines had fallen in pleasant places’;
-having reason to hope that their children might dwell in
-peace and prosperity after them.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We can never be sufficiently grateful to your dear old
-friend,’ said Mrs. Effingham. ‘If he had not in the first place
-written you that letter, Howard, and afterwards acted upon
-his opinion so boldly, what might have been our fate?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘He always used to look after me when we were in the
-regiment,’ said her husband acquiescingly; ‘I daresay he’ll
-find a similar pleasure in taking charge of us now.
-Fortunately for you and the girls, he never married.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A few miles only needed to be traversed before Mr. Evans
-triumphantly drove his team through the gate of the
-dilapidated garden fence surrounding the front of a large
-old-fashioned stone mansion, with wide verandah and lofty
-balcony, supported upon freestone pillars. A stout, elderly
-woman of decided aspect opened the creaking hall door,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>and casting a searching glance at Mr. R. Evans, made the
-strangers welcome.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I’m sure I’m very glad to see you, my lady,’ said she,
-bobbing an antiquated curtsey, ‘and you, sir, and the young
-ladies and gentlemen. I’ve done all I could to clean up the
-old barrack of a house; it was that lonesome, and made me
-frighted with ghosts, as I thought I’d never live to see you
-all; and Dick here, I knew there was no certainty of, as
-might have gone to Timor, or the Indies, and never let on a
-word about it. Please you to come in, my lady.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘My old woman’s temper is none of the best, Captain,’
-said Dick, stating the fact with philosophical calmness, ‘but
-I’ll warrant she’s cleaned up as much as any two, and very
-bad it wanted it when Parson Sternworth brought us over.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Now that a nearer view was afforded of the demesne and
-dwelling, it was evident that the place had been long
-abandoned to natural decay and sordid neglect. The fences
-were rotten, gapped, or fallen; the orchard, though the aged
-trees were high out of the reach of browsing cattle, had been
-used as a convenient species of stock paddock; the climbers,
-including a magnificent bignonia and a wistaria, the great
-laterals of which had erstwhile clothed the verandah pillars
-with beauty and bloom, were broken and twisted. In the
-rear of the building all the broken bottles and bones of the
-land appeared to be collected; while, with windows broken,
-shutters hanging on a single hinge, doors closing with difficulty,
-or impossible to open, all things told of the recklessness
-of ruined owners.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Still, in despite of all deficiencies, the essentials of value
-could not be overlooked. The house, though naked and
-desolate of aspect, was large and commodious, promising in
-its shingled roof and massive stone walls protection against
-the heat of summer, the cold of winter. The deep black
-mould needed but ordinary culture to respond generously.
-The offices might be mouldering and valueless, but the <em>land</em>
-was there, thinly timbered, richly grassed, well adapted for
-stock of all kinds. And though the gaunt limbs of the
-girdled trees looked sadly unpicturesque between the front of
-the house and the lake shore, some had been left untouched,
-and the grass was all the more richly swarded. The lake
-itself was a grand indisputable fact. It was deep and fresh,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>abounding in water-fowl, a priceless boon to dwellers in a
-climate wherein a lack of rivers and permanent reservoirs is
-unhappily a distinguishing characteristic.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Let it not be supposed that Wilfred and his mother, the
-girls and Jeanie were outside the house all this time. Very
-promptly had Dick unloaded the household stores, pressing
-all able-bodied persons, including his wife, into the service,
-until the commissariat was safely bestowed under shelter.
-His waggon was taken to the rear, his horses unharnessed,
-and he himself in a marvellously short space of time enjoying
-a well-earned pipe, and advising Andrew to bestow Daisy’s
-calf in a dilapidated but still convertible calf-pen, so that his
-mother might graze at ease, and yet be available for the family
-breakfast table in the morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The grass here is fust-rate,’ he said, in a tone of explanation
-to Andrew. ‘There’s been a lot of rain in spring. It’s
-a pity but we had a few good cows to milk. It would be
-just play for you and me and the young master in the
-mornings. Teach him to catch hold like and learn him the
-use of his hands.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘<em>Him</em> milk!’ exclaimed Andrew, in a tone of horrified
-contempt. ‘And yet—I dinna say but if it’s the Lord’s will
-the family should ha’ been brocht to this strange land, it may
-be no that wrang that he should labour, like the apostles,
-“working with his hauns.” There’s guid warrant for’t.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Meanwhile, inside the house important arrangements were
-proceeding. The sitting-room, a great, bare apartment, had
-an ample fireplace, which threw out a genial warmth from
-glowing logs. There was a large, solid cedar table, which
-Mrs. Evans had rubbed and polished till the dark red grain
-of the noble wood was clearly visible. Also a dozen <em>real</em>
-chairs, as Annabel delightedly observed, stood around, upon
-which it was possible to enjoy the long-disused comfort of
-sitting down. Of this privilege she promptly availed herself.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The night-draperies were disposed in the chief bedchamber,
-though until the arrival of the furniture it was apparent that
-the primitive sleeping accommodation of the road would
-need to be continued. Mr. Effingham and his sons were
-luxuriously billeted in another apartment, where, after their
-axle-tree experiences, they did not pity themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Andrew and his family were disposed of in the divisions
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>of the kitchen, which, in colonial fashion, was a detached
-building in the rear. Mr. and Mrs. Evans had, on their
-previous entry on the premises, located themselves in an
-outlying cottage (or hut, as they called it), formerly the abode
-of the dairyman, where their possessions had no need of
-rearrangement. Even the dogs had quarters allotted to them,
-in the long range of stabling formerly tenanted by many a
-gallant steed in the old extravagant days of the colony, when
-unstinted hospitality and claret had been the proverbial rule
-at Warbrok.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh dear!’ exclaimed Annabel from her chair, ‘what a
-luxurious feeling it is to be once more in a <em>home</em> of one’s
-own! Though it’s a funny old place and must have been
-a tempting refuge for ghosts wandering in search of quarters.
-And then to think that to-morrow morning we shall not have
-to move on, for ever and ever. I was beginning to get the
-least bit tired of it; were not you, mamma? Though I
-would have died sooner than confess it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Words cannot describe how thankful I am, my dear
-child,’ said her mother, ‘that we have had the good
-fortune to end this land journey so well. It is the first one
-of the kind I ever undertook, and I trust it will be the last.
-But let us remember in our prayers to-night <em>whose</em> hand has
-shielded us from the perils of the deep, and whatever
-dangers we may have escaped upon the land.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I feel as if we had all been acting a charade or
-an extended <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>tableau vivant</em></span>,’ said Rosamond. ‘Like you,
-Annabel, dear, I am not sorry that the theatricals are over,
-though the play has been a success so far. It has no more
-nights to run, fortunately for the performers. Our everyday
-life will commence to-morrow. We must enter upon it in a
-cheerful, determined spirit.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I cannot help fancying,’ said Beatrice, ‘that colonial
-travellers enjoy an unnecessary amount of prestige, or some
-experiences must differ from ours. We might have had
-a Dick who would have lost his horses or overturned the
-waggon, and bushrangers (there <em>are</em> bushrangers, for I saw
-in a paper that Donohoe and his gang had “stuck-up,”
-whatever that means, Mr. Icely’s drays and robbed them)
-might have taken us captive. We have missed the romance
-of Australian life evidently.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>Howard Effingham felt strangely moved as he walked
-slowly forth at dawn. He watched the majestic orb irradiate
-the mist-shrouded turrets of the great mountain range which
-lay to the eastward. Endless wealth of colour was evoked
-by the day-god’s kiss, softly, stealingly, suffusing the neutral-tinted
-dome, then with magical completeness flashing into
-supernal splendour. The dew glistened upon the vernal
-greensward. The pied warbler rolled his richest notes in
-flute-like carol. The wild-fowl, on the glistening mirror of
-the lake, swam, dived, or flew in playful pursuit. The
-bracing air was unspeakably grateful to Howard Effingham’s
-rurally attuned senses. Amid this bounty of nature in her
-less sophisticated aspects, his heart swelled with the thought
-that much of the wide champaign, the woodland, and the
-water, over which his eye roamed wonderingly, called him
-master. He saw, with the quick projection of a sanguine
-spirit, his family domiciled once more with comfort and
-security. And not without befitting dignity, so long
-despaired of. He prized the ability to indulge again the
-disused pursuits of a country life. Though in a far land,
-among strange people, separated by a whole ocean from the
-scenes of his youth and manhood, he now felt for the first
-time since the great disaster that contentment, even happiness,
-was possible. Once more he felt himself a country
-gentleman, or at the least an Australian squire. With
-the thought he recalled the village chimes in their lost
-home, and his wife’s reference of every circumstance of life
-to the special dispensation of a benign, overruling Providence
-occurred to him. With unconscious soliloquy he exclaimed,
-‘I have not deserved this; God be merciful to me a sinner!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Dick Evans, with his horses, now appeared upon the scene,
-bells, hobbles, and all. He bore every appearance of having
-been up at least two hours.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What a wonderful old fellow that is!’ said Wilfred, who
-had joined his father; ‘day or night seems alike to him.
-He is always hard at work at something or other—always
-helpful and civil, apparently good at a score of trades, yet
-military as a pipe-clayed belt. Mr. Sternworth admitted that
-he had faults, but up to this time we have never discovered
-them.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘If he has none, he is such an old soldier as I have never
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>met,’ said his father mildly. ‘Longer acquaintance will, I
-suppose, abate his unnatural perfection. But, in any case,
-we must keep him on until we are sufficiently acclimatised to
-set up for ourselves.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Quite so, sir! We cannot have our reverend mentor
-always at beck and call. We want some one here who knows
-the country and its ways. Guy and I will soon pick up the
-lie of the land, as he calls it, but at present we are all raw
-and ignorant together.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Then we had better engage him at once. I suppose he
-can tell us the proper wages.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Very possibly; but now I think of it, sir, hadn’t you
-better delegate the executive department to me? Of course
-to carry out your instructions, but you might do worse than
-appoint me your responsible minister.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘My boy!’ said Effingham, grasping his son’s hand, ‘I
-should have made the suggestion if you had not anticipated
-me. I cheerfully yield the management to you, as you will
-have the laborious part of the work. Many things will need
-to be done, for which I am unfit, but which you will
-gradually master. I fully trust you, both as an example to
-Guy and Selden, and the guardian of your mother and sisters.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘As God will help me in my need, they will need no
-other,’ replied the eldest son. ‘So far I have led a self-indulgent
-life. But the spur of necessity (you must admit)
-has been wanting. Now the hour has come. You never
-refused me a pleasure; trust me to fulfil every duty.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I never have doubted it, my boy! I always knew that
-higher qualities were latent in your nature. As you say, the
-hour has come. We were never laggards when the trumpet-call
-sounded. And now, let us join the family party.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As they reached the house, from which they had rambled
-some distance, the sun was two hours high, and the smoke
-issuing from the kitchen chimney denoted that culinary
-operations were in progress. At that moment a serviceable-looking
-dogcart, drawn by a wiry, roan horse, trotted briskly
-along the track from the main road, and in drawing up,
-displayed in the driver the welcome presentment of the Rev.
-Harley Sternworth.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘How do, Howard? How are you, Wilfred, my boy?
-Welcome to Warbrok—to Warbrok Chase, that is. I shall
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>learn it in time. Very proper addendum; suits the country,
-and gratifies the young ladies’ taste. Thought I’d catch
-you at your first breakfast. Here, Dick, you old rascal—that
-is, you deserving veteran—take Roanoke.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The somewhat decided features of the old army chaplain
-softened visibly as, entering the bare uncarpeted apartment,
-he descried Mrs. Effingham and her daughters sitting near
-the breakfast table, evidently awaiting the master of the
-house. His quick eye noticed at once the progress of
-feminine adaptation, as well as the marked air of comfort
-produced with such scanty material.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He must surely have been gratified by the sensation he
-produced. The girls embraced him, hanging upon his
-words with eagerness, as on the accents of the recovered
-relative of the melodrama. Mrs. Effingham greeted him with
-an amount of warmth foreign to her usual demeanour. The
-little ones held up their faces to be kissed by ‘Uncle Harley.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We are just going to have our first breakfast,’ said
-Annabel. ‘Sit down this very minute. Haven’t we done
-wonders?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Indeed, by the fresh, morning light, the parlour already
-looked homelike and attractive. The breakfast table,
-‘decored with napery,’ as Caleb Balderstone phrased it,
-had a delicately clean and appetising appearance. A
-brimming milk jug showed that the herbage of Warbrok
-had not been without its effect upon their fellow-passenger
-from the Channel Islands. A goodly round of beef, their
-last roadside purchase, constituted the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>pièce de résistance</em></span>.
-A dish of eggs and bacon, supplied by Mrs. Evans, whose
-poultry travelled with her everywhere, and looked upon the
-waggon as their home, added to the glory of the repast. A
-large loaf of fresh bread, baked by the same useful matron,
-stood proudly upon a plate, near the roadside tea equipage,
-and a kettle like a Russian <em>samovar</em>. Nor was artistic ornamentation
-wholly absent. Annabel had fished up a broken
-vase from a lumber room, which, filled with the poor remnants
-of the borders, ‘where once a garden smiled,’ and supplemented
-with ‘wild buttercups and very nearly daisies,’
-as she described the native flora, made an harmonious
-contribution.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Before commencing the meal, as Mr. Effingham took his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>seat at the head of his own table once more, humble as were
-the surroundings, his wife glanced at the youngest darling,
-Blanche. She ran across to a smaller table covered with a
-rug, and thence lifting off a volume of some weight, brought
-it to their guest. His eyes met those of his old comrade
-and of her his life’s faithful companion. The chaplain’s
-eyes were moistened, in despite of his efforts at composure.
-What recollections were not summoned up by the recurrence
-of that simple household observance? His voice faltering,
-at first, with genuine emotion, Harley Sternworth took the
-sacred volume, and read a portion, before praying in simple
-phrase, that the Great Being who had been pleased to lead
-the steps of His servants to this far land, would guide them
-in all their ways, and prosper the work of their hands in
-their new home. ‘May His blessing be upon you all, and
-upon your children’s children after you, in this the land of
-our adoption,’ said the good priest, as he arose in the midst
-of the universal amen.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Do you know that it was by no means too warm when I
-left Yass at daylight this morning? This is called a hot
-climate. But in our early summer we have frosts sometimes
-worthy of Yorkshire. Yesterday there was rather a
-sharp one. We shall have rain again soon.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, I hope not,’ said Annabel. ‘This is such lovely,
-charming weather. So clear and bright, and not at all too
-warm. I should like it to last for months.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Then, my dear young lady, we should all be ruined.
-Rain rarely does harm in this country. Sometimes there
-are floods, and people who live on meadowlands suffer.
-But the more rain the merrier, in this country at least. It
-is a land of contradictions, you know. Your Lake William,
-here, will never overflow, so you may be easy in your minds,
-if it rains ever so hard.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And what does my thoughtful young friend, Rosamond,
-think of the new home?’ inquired the old gentleman, looking
-at her with affectionate eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘She thinks, Uncle Sternworth, that nothing better for
-us all could have been devised in the wide world, unless
-the Queen had ordered her Ministers to turn out Sir Percy
-de Warrenne and put us in possession of Old Court. Even
-that, though Sir Percy is a graceless kinsman, might not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>have been so good for us, as making a home for ourselves
-here, out of our own heads, as the children say.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And you are quite satisfied, my dear?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘More than satisfied. I am exulting and eager to begin
-work. In England I suffered sometimes from want of
-occupation. Here, every moment of the day will be well
-and usefully employed.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And Miss Beatrice also approves?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘<em>Miss</em> Beatrice says,’ replied that more difficult damsel,
-who was generally held to be reserved, if not proud, ‘she
-would not have come to Australia if it could have been
-helped. But having come, supposes she will not make more
-useless lament than other people.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Beatrice secretly hates the country, I know she does,’
-exclaimed Annabel, ‘and it is ungrateful of her, particularly
-when we have such a lovely place, with a garden, and a
-lake, and mountains and sunsets, and everything we can
-possibly want.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I am not so imaginative as to expect to live on mountains
-and sunsets, and I must confess it will take me a long
-time to become accustomed to the want of <em>nearly</em> all the
-pleasures of life, but I suppose I shall manage to bear up my
-share of the family burdens.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You have always done so hitherto, my dear,’ said Mrs.
-Effingham; ‘but you are not fond of putting forward your
-good deeds—hardly sufficiently so, as I tell you.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Some one has run away with Beatrice’s share of vanity,’
-said Rosamond. ‘But we must not stay talking all the morning.
-I am chief butler, and shall have to be chief baker too,
-perhaps, some day. I must break up the meeting, as every
-one has apparently breakfasted.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And I must have a serious business conversation with
-your father and Wilfred,’ said Mr. Sternworth. ‘Where is
-the study—the library, I mean? Not furnished yet! Well,
-suppose we adjourn to the ex-drawing-room. It’s a spacious
-apartment, where the late tenant, a practical man, used to
-store his maize. There is a deal table, for I put it there
-myself. Guy, you may as well ask Dick Evans to show you
-the most likely place for wild-fowl. Better bring chairs,
-Wilfred. We are going to have a “sederunt,” as they say in
-Scotland.’</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER IV <br /> MR HENRY O’DESMOND OF BADAJOS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>‘Now, Howard, my young friend!’ said the worthy man, as
-they settled themselves at a small table, near a noble mantelpiece
-of Australian gray marble, curiously marked with the
-imprints of the fossil encrinite, ‘I address you as I used to do
-in our army days, for, with regard to money matters, I feel
-sure you are as young as ever. In the first place, I must
-render an account of my stewardship. Observe, here is the
-conveyance to you and your heirs for ever of the estate of Warbrok,
-a Crown grant to Colonel Rupert Falkland Warleigh, late
-of Her Majesty’s 80th Regiment, dated as far back as 1805,
-comprising 5174 acres, 1 rood, 3 perches, by him devised in
-equal shares to his sons—Randal, Clement, and Hubert. It
-was not entailed, as were most of the early grants. They fell
-away from the traditions of the family, and lived reckless,
-dissipated lives. Their education was neglected—perhaps
-not the best example exhibited to them by the old Colonel—he
-was always a gentleman though—what wonder the poor
-boys went wrong? They came to be called the “Wild Warleighs
-of Warbrok.” At last the end came. Hopelessly in
-debt, they were forced to sell. Here are their signatures,
-duly attested. Your purchase money, at the rate of 10s. per
-acre—a low price, but ready money was very scarce in the
-colony at the time—amounted to £2587:5s., mentioned as
-the consideration. Out of your draft for £3000 remained,
-therefore, £412:15s.; expenses and necessary farm work
-done, with wages to Dick Evans and his wife, have amounted
-to £62:7s. This includes the ploughing and sowing of a
-paddock—a field you would call it—of 20 acres of wheat, as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>the season had to be availed of. I hand you a deposit
-receipt for £350:8s., lodged to your credit in the Bank of
-New Holland, at Yass, where I advise you to place the rest
-of your capital, and I thereby wash my hands of you, pecuniarily,
-for the present.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘My dear old friend,’ said Effingham, ‘it is not for the
-first time that you have pulled me through a difficulty,
-though never before did we face one like this. But how
-comes it that I have money to receive? I thought the draft
-of £3000 would barely suffice to pay for the estate.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You must know that I transacted this piece of business
-through a solicitor, a shrewd man of business, who kept my
-counsel, making no sign until the property was put up to
-auction. The terms being cash, he had a decided advantage,
-and it was not known until after the sale, for whom he had
-purchased. So the Warleighs having retired, we must see
-what the Effinghams will make of it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There will be no riotous living, at any rate,’ said Wilfred;
-‘and now, as you have done with the Governor, please advise
-me as to our future course. I am the duly-appointed overseer—I
-believe that is the proper title—and intend to begin
-work this very day.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Couldn’t do better. We may as well call Dick Evans
-into council. He was hired by me at 18s. per week, with
-board and lodging. For this wage he engaged to give his
-own and wife’s services, also those of his team and waggon.
-The wages are under the ordinary rate, but he explained that
-his horses would get fat here, and that he liked being
-employed on a place like Warbrok, and under an ex-officer in
-Her Majesty’s service. I should continue the engagement
-for a few months, at all events; you will find him most
-useful.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Up to this time he has been simply perfect,’ said Wilfred.
-‘It’s a pleasure to look at such an active worker—so respectful,
-too, in his manner.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Our experience of the Light Infantry man, Howard,’ said
-Mr. Sternworth, ‘must prevent us from fully endorsing Wilfred’s
-opinion, but Dick Evans is a good man; at all country
-work better, indeed, than most of his class. Let us hear
-what he says.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Probably anticipating some such summons he was not far
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>off, having returned from showing Guy a flock of wild-fowl.
-He walked into the room and, saluting, stood at ease, as if
-such a thing as a chair had never been by him encountered
-in the whole course of existence.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Corporal Evans!—pshaw! that is, Dick,’ said the worthy
-ex-military priest, ‘I have sent for you to speak to Captain
-Effingham, and Mr. Wilfred, who is to be farm manager and
-stock overseer. I have told them that you are the very man
-for the place, when you behave yourself.’ Here the keen
-grey eyes looked somewhat sternly at Mr. Evans, who put on
-a look of mild surprise. ‘Are you willing to hire for six
-months at the same rate of wages, with two rations, at which
-I engaged you? You will work your team, I know, reasonably;
-and Mrs. Evans will wash and help the ladies in any
-way she can?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, Mr. Chaplain, the wages is not too high,’ replied
-Evans, ‘but I like the place, and my horses knows the run,
-and does well here. <em>You</em> know I like to serve a gentleman,
-’specially one that’s been in the service. I’ll stay on at the
-same rate for six months.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, that’s settled. Now, let us have a talk about requirements.
-How to use the grass to the best advantage?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There’s no better place in the country-side for dairying,’
-said Dick, addressing himself to his clerical employer, as alone
-capable of understanding the bearings of the case; ‘it’s a
-wonderful fine season, and there’s a deal of grass going to
-waste. There’s stray cattle between here and the other end
-of the lake as will want nothing better than to clear it
-all off, as they’re used to do, if we’re soft enough to let ’em.
-Many a good pick they’ve had over these Warbrok flats, and
-they naturally looks for it again, ’specially as there’s a new
-gentleman come as don’t know the ways of the country.
-Now, what I should do, if I was the master, would be to buy
-two or three hundred mixed cattle—there’s a plenty for sale
-just now about Yass—and start a dairy. We might make as
-much butter between now and Christmas as would pay
-middlin’ well, and keep other people’s cattle from coming on
-the place and eating us out of house and home, in a manner
-of speakin’.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Good idea, Richard,’ said Mr. Sternworth; ‘but how about
-the yard and cowshed? It’s nearly all down, and half-rotten.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>Mr. Effingham doesn’t want to engage fencers and splitters,
-and have all the country coming here for employment.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There’s no call for that, sir,’ said the many-sided veteran.
-‘I had a look at the yard this morning. If I had a man to
-help me for a fortnight I’ll be bound to make it cattle-proof
-with a load of posts and rails, that I could run out myself,
-only we want a maul and wedges.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I’ll be your man,’ said Wilfred, ‘if that’s all that’s necessary.
-I may as well learn a trade without delay. Andrew
-can help, too, I daresay.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘<em>He’s</em> not much account,’ quoth Dick disdainfully. ‘He
-thinks he knows too much already. These new hands—no
-offence to you, sir—is more in the way than anything else.
-But if you’ll buckle to, sir, we’ll soon make a show.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I know a stock agent who can get the exact cattle you
-want,’ said Mr. Sternworth. ‘He told me that Mr. O’Desmond
-had a hundred young cows and heifers for sale. They are
-known to be a fine breed of cattle.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The best in the country,’ said Dick. ‘Old Harry
-O’Desmond never had any but right down good horses,
-cattle, and sheep at Badajos, and if we give a little more for
-them at the start it will be money saved in the end. He’s
-the man to give us an extra good pick, when he knows
-they’re for an officer and a gentleman.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Our friend Richard has aristocratic notions, you observe,’
-said the parson, smiling. ‘But Harry O’Desmond is just the
-man to act as he says. You will do well to treat with him.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Only too happy,’ said Effingham. ‘Everything arranges
-itself with surprising ease, with your aid. Is this kind of
-settling made easy to go on for ever? It was almost a pity
-we took the voyage at all. You might have made our
-fortunes, it seems to me, as a form of recreation, and left us
-to receive the profits in England.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And how am I to be paid, you heedless voluptuary, may
-I ask, if not by the presence of your charming family? Since
-I’ve seen them I wouldn’t have had the colony lose them for
-twice the value of the investment. Besides, seriously, if the
-seasons change or a decline takes place in the stock market
-you’ll need all <em>your</em> brains and Wilfred’s to keep the ship
-afloat. Never lose sight of the fact that this is an uncertain
-land, with a more uncertain climate.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>‘It’s all right if you don’t overstock, sir,’ spoke the practical
-Richard. ‘But Mr. Sternworth’s right. I mind the ’27
-drought well. We was forced to live upon kangaroo soup,
-rice, and maize meal, with marshmallers and “fat hen” for a
-little salad. But they say the climate’s changed like, and
-myster than it used to be.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Climates <em>never</em> change in their normal conditions,’ said
-Sternworth positively. ‘Any assertion to the contrary is
-absurd. What has been will be again. Let us make such
-provision as we can against droughts and other disasters, and
-leave the rest to Providence, which has favoured this land and
-its inhabitants so far.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The fences seem dilapidated. Ought they not to be
-repaired at once?’ said Wilfred.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘By degrees, all in good time,’ said the old gentleman
-testily. ‘We must not go deeply into “improvements,” as
-they are called here, lest they run away with our money at
-the commencement of affairs. Dick will explain to you that
-the cattle can be kept in bounds without fencing for a time.
-And now I feel half a farmer and half an exhausted parson.
-So I think I must refresh myself with another look at the
-lady part of the establishment, have a mouthful of lunch, and
-start for home.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It’s a murder you didn’t take to farming, sir, like Parson
-Rocker,’ said Dick, with sincere regret in his tones. ‘You’d
-ha’ showed ’em whether sojer officers can’t make money,
-though the folks here don’t think so.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I have my own work, Richard,’ said the old gentlemen.
-‘It may be that there is occasionally rather more of the
-church militant about me than is prudent. But the town
-and neighbourhood of Yass will be the better for old Harley
-Sternworth’s labours before we say farewell to one another.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I can now leave you all with perfect confidence,’ he said
-after lunch, as Dick Evans brought Roanoke and the dogcart
-to the door. ‘The next time I come I must bring an old
-friend to pay his respects, but that will not be till the furniture
-has arrived. I foresee you will make astonishing changes,
-and turn The Chase into the show mansion of the district.
-I must bring you some of my <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Souvenirs de Malmaison”</span> and
-“Madame Charles.” “The Cloth of Gold” and others I see
-you have. I am prouder of my roses than of my sermons, I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>think. I don’t know which require most care in pruning.
-Good-bye, my dear friends!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The roan tossed his head, and set off at such a pace along
-the grass-grown track which led to the main ‘down the
-country’ road, as the highway from Yass to Sydney was
-provincially termed, that it was easy to see he had been making
-a calculation as to the homeward route. The girls looked
-after the fast-receding vehicle for a while before recommencing
-their household tasks. Howard Effingham and his wife
-walked to and fro along the pleasant sun-protected colonnade
-of the south verandah. When they separated, little had been
-said which was free from praise of their tried friend, or from
-thankfulness to the Almighty Disposer of events, who had
-shown them His mercy in the day of need.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This eventful colloquy concluded, settled daily employment
-commenced for all the denizens of The Chase. They
-rose early, and each one attended to the duties allotted by
-special arrangement. Breakfast over, Wilfred shouldered an
-axe and marched off with Dick Evans to some forest tree,
-to be converted into posts and rails for the fast-recovering
-dairy-yard.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Andrew had betaken himself to the renovation of the
-orchard and garden with grateful persistence, as he recalled
-his earlier feats at the English home of the family, duly
-thankful for the opportunity of exercising his energies in a
-direction wherein he could show himself capable.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It’s gra-and soil,’ he was pleased to observe, ‘and I hae
-nae doot whatever that I shall be able to grow maist unco-omon
-vegetables, gin I had some food—that is, manure—to gie the
-puir things. The trees are sair negleckit and disjaskit, but
-they’ll come round wi’ care and the knife. The spring is a
-thocht advanced, as that auld carle Evans has gi’en me to
-understand. I winna say he’s no auld farrand wi’ a’ the
-“bush” ways, as they ca’ them, but he’s an awfu’ slave o’
-Satan wi’ his tongue—just fearsome. But gin ye’ll put me a
-fence round this bit park, Maister Wilfred, I’ll show yon folks
-here that auld Andrew Cargill can grow prize kail in baith
-hemispheres.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We are going to split some palings before we are done,’
-said Wilfred, smiling at the old man’s rounding off of his
-sentence. ‘Then we’ll pull this old fence down and take in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>more ground, so that you may exercise your landscape gardening
-talent.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘This bit garden will keep my body employed and my
-thochts frae unprofitable wanderings, brawly, during this season
-o’ inexperience. Ye see, Maister Wilfred, it wadna become
-me, as a pairson o’ reflection, to da-ash presumptuously into
-a’ matters o’ practice, but they canna haud me to obsairve
-and gather up the ootcome of thae bush maitters, and bide
-my time a wee, till the day comes when I can take my place
-at the laird’s right hand ance mair.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘No one will be better pleased than I shall be, Andrew,’
-said Wilfred, heartily grasping the hand of his faithful servitor.
-‘I’ll no deny that he kens maist things befitting a dweller
-in the wilderness. The de’il’s aye guid at gifts to his ain
-folk. But, wae’s me, he’s lightsome and profane abune a’
-belief.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The great event of the year, after all, was the arrival of
-the drays with the heavy luggage and the furniture reserved
-from sale.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Joy and thankfulness all too deep for words greeted the
-welcome wains, promptly unladen, and their inestimable
-contents brought into the shelter of the wide verandah
-before unpacking.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I never could have believed,’ said Mrs. Effingham, ‘that
-anything in Australia could have had the power to afford me
-so much pleasure. The refurnishing of our house at The
-Chase never produced half such pleasure as I now feel at
-the prospect of seeing the old tables and chairs, the sideboard,
-and my dear old davenport again.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And the piano!’ cried Annabel. ‘What a luxury to us,
-who have been tuneless and songless all these months! Even
-the morning “scales” would have been better than nothing.
-I shall really go in for steady practising—I know I never did
-before. There is nothing like being starved a little.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Starving seems to agree with you in a bodily sense,’ said
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>Rosamond, ‘if I may judge from certain alterations of dresses.
-But you are right in believing that it gives a wonderful relish
-for mental food. Look at these two lovely boxes of books.
-The library was sold, but here are many of our old favourites.
-How I shall enjoy seeing their faces again!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I am certain Jeanie must have <em>stolen</em> a quantity of things
-after the sale,’ asserted Beatrice, who had been examining
-the externals of the packages; ‘bedding and curtains, and
-every kind of thing likely to be useful. I expect my room
-will be so like the one at the old Chase that I shall never
-find out the difference of a morning, till I go downstairs and
-see the verandahs.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There are no verandahs in England,’ said Guy, who was
-one of the ‘fatigue party,’ as Dick expressed it. ‘They
-ought to take a hint from the colonies—stunning places they
-make on a wet day, or a hot one, I can tell you.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Where shall we tek this sideboard, mem?’ said Dick
-Evans, with his ultra-respectful, family-servant intonation.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Into the dining-room, of course,’ screamed the delighted
-Annabel. ‘Why, <em>every</em> room in the house will be furnished
-more or less; it will be quite a palace.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Willing hands abounded, Mr. Evans in person superintending
-the opening of the cases, taking care to draw nails in
-order to fit the boards for future usefulness, so that, very
-shortly, the whole English shipment was transferred to its
-final Australian resting-place.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Robinson Crusoe, when he had made the last successful
-raft-passage and transhipment from the Guinea trader before
-she went down, could not have been more grateful than our
-deported friends when the litter and the cases and Dick and
-Andrew were cleared off, and they were free to gloat over their
-precious property.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>How different the rooms looked! There was an air of
-comfort and refinement about the well-preserved furniture
-which was inexpressibly comforting to the ex-dwellers in tents.
-The large rooms looked perhaps a shade too bare, but in
-warm climates an Indian non-obtrusion of upholstering is
-thought becoming. The well-remembered tones of the piano,
-which glorified an unoccupied corner of the drawing-room,
-echoed through that spacious apartment, now provided with
-a carpet almost as good as new, which Jeanie’s provident
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>care had abstracted from the schoolroom at The Chase.
-The dear old round table was there, ‘out of mother’s morning-room;
-the engravings from father’s study, particularly those
-favourite ones of “The fighting Temeraire” and “Talavera”—all
-were here. When the climbers grew up over the verandah
-pillars, shading the front windows with the purple masses of
-the wistaria, there might be a prettier room in Sydney, but in
-the bush they were sure it was unsurpassed.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Nor were Andrew and Jeanie devoid of personal interest
-in the arrival of the treasure-waggons. Certain garden tools
-and agricultural implements, dear to Andrew’s practical soul,
-now gladdened his eyes, also a collection of carefully packed
-seeds. Besides all these, a rigorously select list of necessaries
-in good order and preservation, once the pride of his snug
-cottage, came to hand. For days after this arrival of the
-Lares and Penates, the work of rearrangement proceeded
-unceasingly. Mrs. Effingham and Rosamond placed and
-replaced each article in every conceivable position. Annabel
-played and sang unremittingly. Jeanie rubbed and polished,
-with such anxious solicitude, that table and chair, wardrobe
-and sideboard, shone like new mahogany. Beatrice had
-possessed herself of the bookcase, and after her morning
-share of housekeeping work was performed, read, save at
-dinner, without stopping until it was time to go for that
-evening walk which the sisters never omitted.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Once it fell upon a day that a gentleman rode up in
-leisurely fashion towards the entrance gate. He was descried
-before he came within a hundred yards, and some trepidation
-ensued while the question was considered as to who should
-take his horse, and how that valuable animal should be
-provided for.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Effingham, Guy, and Wilfred were away at the stock-yard,
-which by this time was reported to be nearly in a state
-of efficiency. Andrew had disappeared temporarily. The
-gentleman, for such plainly was his rank, was a stalwart,
-distinguished-looking personage, sitting squarely, and with
-something of military pose in his saddle. He was mounted
-upon a handsome, carefully-groomed hackney. He reined
-up at the dilapidated garden fence, and after looking about
-and seeing no appearance of an entrance gate, as indeed that
-portal had been long blocked up by rails, gathered up his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>reins, and clearing the two-railed fence with practised ease,
-rode along the grass-grown path to the front door of the house.
-At the same moment Dick Evans, who had just arrived with
-a load of palings, appeared from the rear, and took his horse.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The stranger briskly dismounted, and knocked at the hall
-door with the air of a man who was thoroughly acquainted
-with the locale. He bowed low to Mrs. Effingham who
-opened it.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Permit me to make myself known as Henry O’Desmond,
-one of your neighbours, my dear madam,’ said he, with the high-bred
-air of a man of the world of fashion, who possesses also the
-advantage of being an Irishman. ‘I presume I am addressing
-Mrs. Effingham. I have anticipated the proper time for
-paying my respects; but there has been a matter of business
-named by my agent, in which I hope to be able to serve
-Captain Effingham. He is quite well, I trust?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mrs. Effingham explained that her husband had been
-perfectly well that morning; furthermore, if Mr. O’Desmond
-would give them the pleasure of his company to lunch, he
-would be enabled to make his acquaintance.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>That gentleman bowed with an air of heartfelt gratitude,
-and asserted that it would give him the sincerest gratification
-to have such an opportunity of meeting Captain Effingham,
-to which he had looked forward, since hearing of the good
-fortune that was about to befall the district, from his respected
-friend the Rev. Mr. Sternworth.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Being introduced to the young ladies, Mr. O’Desmond, a
-handsome, well-preserved man, promptly demonstrated that
-he was capable of entertaining himself and them until
-his host should think fit to arrive. Indeed, when Mrs.
-Effingham, who had left the room for reasons connected with
-the repast, returned, having captured her husband, and
-superintended his toilet, she found her daughters and their
-guest considerably advanced in acquaintance.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, papa,’ said Annabel, ‘Mr. O’Desmond says there’s
-such a lovely view about ten miles from here—a ravine full
-of ferns, actually <em>full</em> of them; and a waterfall—a real one!
-It is called Fern-tree Gorge; and he has invited us all to a
-picnic there some day.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Very happy to make Mr. O’Desmond’s acquaintance,’
-said Effingham, advancing with a recollection of old days
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>strong upon him. ‘We are hardly aware yet in what
-consists the proper proportion of work and play in Australia;
-and in how much of the latter struggling colonists can
-indulge. We shall be very grateful for information on the
-subject.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And right welcome you are, my dear sir, to both,
-especially to the latter. They’ll tell you that Harry O’Desmond
-is not unacquainted with work during the twenty
-years he has spent in this wild country. But for fun and
-recreation he’ll turn his back on no man living.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Here is my lieutenant, and eldest son; permit me to
-introduce him. He is burning to distinguish himself in the
-practical line.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Then he couldn’t have a better drill instructor than my
-old acquaintance, Dick Evans—wonderfully clever in all bush
-work, and scrupulous after his own fashion. But, see here
-now, I came partly to talk about cows, till the young ladies
-put business clean out of my head. I’m told you want to
-buy cattle, Mr. Wilfred; if you’ll mount your horse and take
-old Dick with you to-morrow morning, he’ll show you the
-way to Badajos, and I’ll pick you the best hundred cows this
-day in the country.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This was held to be an excellent arrangement, and lunch
-being now proclaimed, a temporary cessation of all but
-society talk took place. Every one being in the highest
-spirits, it was quite a brilliant symposium. It was a novel
-luxury to be again in the society of a pleasant stranger, well
-read, travelled, and constitutionally agreeable. O’Desmond
-sketched with humour and spirit the characteristic points of
-their nearest neighbours; slightly satirised the local celebrities
-in their chief town of Yass; and finally departed,
-having earned for himself the reputation of an agreeable,
-well-bred personage; a perfect miracle of a neighbour, when
-ill-hap might have made him equally near and unchangeably
-disagreeable.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What a delightful creature!’ said Annabel. ‘Didn’t
-some one say before we left home that there were no gentlemen
-in Australia—only “rough colonists”? I suppose that
-English girls will call us “rough colonists” when we’ve been
-here a few years. Why, he’s like—oh, I know now—he’s
-the very image of the Knight of Gwynne. Fancy lighting on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>a facsimile of that charming old dear—of course Mr. Desmond
-is not nearly so old. He’s not young though, and takes
-great care of himself, you can see.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘He’s not so <em>very</em> old, Annabel,’ said Beatrice mischievously.
-‘That is the kind of man I should advise you to marry.
-Not a foolish boy of five-and-twenty.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Thank you, Beatrice,’ said Annabel, with dignity. ‘I’ll
-think over it and let you know. I don’t think it’s probable I
-should ever marry any one only a little older than myself.
-What could he know? I should laugh at him if he was
-angry. But Wilfred is going over to Badajos, or whatever is
-the name of the O’Desmond’s place, to-morrow, so he can
-bring us back a full, true, and particular account of everything,
-and whether Rosamond, or you, dear, would be the
-fitter helpmate for him. I’m too young and foolish at
-present, and might be more so—that is, foolish, not young,
-of course.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I notice that the air of this climate seems to have a
-peculiar effect upon young people’s tongues,’ said the soft
-voice of Mrs. Effingham. ‘They seem to run faster here than
-in England.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Desmond’s property, Badajos, was nearly twenty
-miles from Warbrok Chase. As it had been clearly settled
-that Wilfred should go there on the following day, arrangements
-had to be made. Dick must accompany him for the
-double purpose of confirming any selection of cattle. That
-veteran cheerfully endorsed the idea, averring that now the
-yard was all but finished, and the fencing stuff drawn in,
-leave of absence could be well afforded. He therefore put
-on a clean check shirt, and buckled a pea-jacket in front of his
-saddle, which he placed upon his old mare, and was ready
-for the road.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Provided with a stock-whip, taken from his miscellaneous
-possessions, with lighted pipe and trusty steed, his features
-wore the expression of anticipated happiness, which distinguishes
-the schoolboy out for a holiday. He passed
-Andrew Cargill with an air of easy superiority, as that conscientious
-labourer, raising his moistened brow as he delved
-at the long-untilled beds, could not refrain from a look of
-astonishment at this new evidence of universal capacity, as
-he marked Dick’s easy seat and portentous whip.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>He muttered, ‘I wadna doot but that the auld graceless
-sorrow can ride through braes and thickets, and crack yon
-muckle clothes-line they ca’ a stock-wheep like ony lad. The
-de’il aye makes his peets o’ masterfu’ men, wae’s me.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A difficulty arose as to Wilfred’s steed. Mr. Sternworth
-had declined the delicate task of remount agent. Thus The
-Chase was temporarily unprovided with horseflesh. However,
-Dick Evans was not a man to be prevented from carrying
-out a pleasant expedition for want of a horse to ride. Sallying
-out early, he had run in a lot of the ownerless animals, always
-to be found in the neighbourhood of unstocked pastures.
-Choosing from among them a sensible-looking cob, and putting
-Wilfred’s English saddle and bridle on him, he led him up to
-the garden gate, where he stood with his ordinary air of deep
-respectability.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I was just wondering how in the world I was to get a
-horse,’ said Wilfred. ‘I see you have one. Did you borrow,
-or buy, or steal one for my use?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I’ve been many a year in this country, Mr. Wilfred,
-without tekkin’ other people’s property, and I’m too old to
-begin now. But there’s 2C on this chestnut pony’s near
-shoulder. I’m nigh sure it’s Bill Chalker’s colt, as he lost
-two years ago, and told me to keep him in hand, if ever I
-came acrost him.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Then I may ride him without risk of being tried for
-horse-stealing, or lynched, if they affect that here,’ said
-Wilfred gaily. ‘I shouldn’t care to do it in England, I
-know.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Things is quite different on the Sydney Side,’ said Mr.
-Evans with mild dogmatism.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred did not consider this assertion to be conclusive,
-but time pressing, and the ready-saddled horse inviting his
-approval, he compounded with his conscience by taking it
-for granted that people were not particular as to strayed
-horses. The fresh and spirited animal, which had not been
-ridden for months, but was (luckily for his rider) free from
-vice, snorted and sidled, but proceeded steadily in the main.
-He soon settled down to the hand of a fair average horseman.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Noticing fresh objects of interest in each flowering shrub,
-in the birds that flew overhead, or the strange animals that
-ever and again crossed their path, about each and all of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>which his retainer had information to offer, the time did not
-hang heavily on hand. They halted towards evening before
-a spacious enclosure, having passed through which, they
-came upon a roomy cottage, surrounded by a trim orchard,
-and backed up by farm buildings.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Here’s Badajos, Mr. Wilfred,’ said his guide. ‘And a
-better kept place there ain’t in the whole country side.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Welcome to Badajos, Mr. Effingham,’ said the proprietor.
-‘William, take this gentleman’s horse; you know your way,
-Dick. We’ll defer business till the morning. I have had
-the cattle yarded, ready for drafting; to-morrow you can
-choose the nucleus of a good herd. I shall be proud to put
-you in the way of cattle-farming in the only true way to
-succeed—by commencing with females of the right kind.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As Wilfred followed his entertainer into the house, he
-felt unaffectedly surprised at the appearance of elegance
-mingled with comfort which characterised the establishment.
-The rooms were not large, but arranged with an attention of
-detail which he had not expected to find in a bush dwelling.
-The furniture was artistically disposed. Books and periodicals
-lay around. High-class engravings, with a few oil-paintings,
-which recalled Wilfred Effingham’s past life, hung
-on the walls. Couches and lounges, of modern fashion,
-looked inviting, while a Broadwood piano stood in the corner
-of the drawing-room, into which he followed his host.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I am a bachelor, more’s the pity,’ said Mr. O’Desmond;
-‘but there’s no law against a little comfort in the wilderness.
-Will you take some refreshment now? Or would you like to
-be shown to your room?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred accepted the latter proposal. In a very comfortable
-chamber he proceeded to divest himself of the traces of
-the road, after a leisurely and satisfactory fashion. He had
-barely regained the drawing-room, when a gong sounded with
-a melodiously reminiscent clang.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The dinner was after the fashion of civilised man. Soup
-and fish, fresh from a neighbouring stream, with meritorious
-entrées and entremets, showed skill beyond that of an
-ordinary domestic. While the host, who had sufficiently
-altered his attire for comfort, without committing the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>bêtise</em></span>
-of out-dressing a guest, as he recommended a dry sherry, or
-passed the undeniable claret, seemed an embodied souvenir
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>of London, Paris, Vienna, of that world of fortune and
-fashion which Wilfred was vowed to forsake for ever.
-Next morning the sun and Mr. W. Effingham arose simultaneously.
-Dick Evans had anticipated both, and was
-standing at ease near the stable.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘This place is worth looking at, sir. You don’t see
-nothing to speak of out of order—tidy as a barrack-yard.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wonderfully trim and orderly was the appearance of all
-things. The enclosure referred to was neatly gravelled, and
-showed not a vagrant straw. The garden was dug, raked,
-and pruned into orderly perfection. The servants’ quarters,
-masked by a climber-covered trellis, were ornamental and
-unostentatious. The dog-kennels, tenanted by pointers,
-greyhounds, collies, and terriers, were snug and spacious.
-The stables were as neat as those of a London dealer. It
-was a show establishment.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Mr. O’Desmond’s servants must be attached to him, to
-work so well,’ said Wilfred.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Humph!’ replied the veteran, ‘he makes ’em toe the
-line pretty smart, and quite right too,’ he added, with a grim
-setting of his under jaw. ‘He was in the colony afore there
-was many free men in it. Shall we walk down to the milking-yard,
-sir?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The full-uddered shorthorn cows, with their fragrant
-breath and mild countenances, having been admired in their
-clean, paved milking-yard, a return was made towards the
-cottage. As they neared the garden, O’Desmond rode
-briskly up to the stable door, and dismounting, threw the
-reins to a groom, who stood ready as a sentinel.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The top of the morning to you, Mr. Effingham; I trust
-you slept well? I have had a canter of a few miles, which
-will give me an appetite for breakfast. I rode over to the
-drafting-yards, to make sure that the cattle were there,
-according to orders. Everything will be in readiness, so
-that you can drive easily to Warbrok to-night. You can
-manage that, Dick, can you not?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Easy enough, if you’ll send a boy with us half-way, Mr.
-O’Desmond,’ replied Dick. ‘You see, sir, Mr. Effingham’s
-rather new to cattle-driving, and if the young heifers was to
-break back, we might lose some of them.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Quite right, Dick; you are always right where stock are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>concerned—that is, the driving of them,’ he added. ‘I look
-to you to stay with Mr. Effingham till his dairy herd is
-established. I shall then have the pleasure of adding his
-name to that of the many gentlemen in this district whose
-fortunes I have helped to make.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Quite true, sir,’ assented Dick heartily. ‘The Camden
-sheep and the Badajos cattle and horses are known all over
-the country by them as are judges. But you don’t want me
-to be praising on ’em up—they speak for themselves.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Breakfast over, as faultless a repast as had been the
-dinner, it became apparent that Mr. O’Desmond held punctuality
-nearly in as high esteem as comfort. His groom
-stood ready in the yard with his own and Wilfred’s horses
-saddled, the shining thorough-bred, which he called his
-hackney, offering a strong contrast to the unkempt though
-well-conditioned animal which his guest bestrode.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As they rode briskly along the winding forest track, Wilfred,
-observing the quality of his host’s hackney, the silver
-brightness of his bit and stirrup-irons, the correctness of his
-general turn-out, remembering also the completeness of the
-establishment and the character of the hospitality he had
-enjoyed, doubted within himself whether, in course of time,
-the owner of Warbrok Chase might ever attain to such a
-pinnacle of colonial prosperity.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘How incredible this would all appear to some of my
-English friends!’ he thought. ‘I can hardly describe it without
-the fear of being supposed to exaggerate.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Here we are,’ said O’Desmond, reining up, and dismounting
-at a substantial stock-yard, while a lad instantly
-approached and took his horse. ‘I have ordered the heifers
-and young cows to be placed in this yard. We can run them
-through before you. You can make your choice, and reject
-any animals below the average.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘They look rather confused at present,’ answered Wilfred;
-‘but I suppose Dick here understands how to separate them.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I’ll manage that, never you fear, sir—that is, if you and
-Mr. O’Desmond have settled about the price.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I may state now,’ remarked that gentleman, ‘that the
-price, four pounds per head, mentioned to me on your
-account by your agent is a liberal one, as markets go. I
-shall endeavour to give you value in kind.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>‘It’s a good price,’ asserted Dick; ‘but Mr. O’Desmond’s
-cattle are cheaper at four pounds all round than many
-another man’s about here at fifty shillings. If he lets me
-turn back any beast I don’t fancy, we’ll take away the primest
-lot of cattle to begin a dairy with as has travelled the line
-for years.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I will give you my general idea of the sort of cattle I
-prefer,’ said Wilfred, not minded to commence by leaving the
-<em>whole</em> management in any servant’s hands, ‘then you can
-select such as appear to answer the description.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘All right, sir,’ quoth Mr. Evans, mounting the fence. ‘I
-suppose you want ’em large-framed cattle, good colours,
-looking as if they’d run to milk and not to beef, not under
-three, and not more than five year old, and putty quiet in
-their looks and ways.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘That is exactly the substance of what I was going to say
-to you,’ said Wilfred, with some surprise. ‘It will save me
-the trouble of explaining.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We may as well begin, sir,’ said Dick, addressing himself
-to the proprietor. Then, in quite another tone, ‘Open the
-rails, boys; look sharp, and let ’em into the drafting-yards.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The cattle were driven through a succession of yards after
-such a fashion that Wilfred was enabled to perceive how the
-right of choice could be exercised. By the time the operation
-was concluded he felt himself to be inducted into the
-art and mystery of ‘drafting.’ Also, he respected himself as
-having appreciably helped to select and separate the one
-hundred prepossessing-looking kine which now stood in a
-separate yard, recognised as his property.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You will have no reason to be dissatisfied with your
-choice,’ said O’Desmond. ‘They look a nice lot. I always
-brand any cattle before they leave my yard. You will not
-object to a numeral being put on them before they go? It
-will assist in their identification in case of any coming back.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Coming back!—come back twenty miles?’ queried Wilfred,
-with amazement. ‘How could they get back such a
-distance?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Just as you would—by walking it, and a hundred to the
-back of that. So I think, say, No. 1. brand—they are <span class='fss'>A1</span>
-certainly—will be a prudent precaution.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Couldn’t do a better thing,’ assented Dick. ‘We’ll brand
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>’em again when we go home, sir; but if we lost ’em anyway
-near the place, they’d be all here before you could say Jack
-Robinson.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A fire was quickly lighted, the iron brands were heated,
-the cows driven by a score at a time into a narrow yard, and
-for the first time in his life Wilfred saw the red-hot iron
-applied to the hide of the live animal. The pain, like much
-evil in this world, if intense, was brief; the cows cringed
-and showed disapproval, but soon appeared to forget. The
-morning was not far advanced when Wilfred Effingham found
-himself riding behind a drove, or ‘mob’ (as Dick phrased
-it), <em>of his own cattle</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There goes the best lot of heifers this day in the country,’
-said the old man, ‘let the others be where they may. Mr.
-O’Desmond’s a rare man for givin’ you a good beast if you
-give him a fair price; you may trust him like yourself, but
-he’s a hard man and bitter enough if anybody tries to take
-advantage of him.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And quite right too, Dick. I take Mr. O’Desmond to
-be a most honourable man, with whom I shouldn’t care to
-come to cross purposes.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘No man ever did much good that tried that game, sir.
-He’s a bad man to get on the wrong side of.’</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER V <br /> ‘CALLED ON BY THE COUNTY’</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>When the important drove reached Warbrok, great was the
-excitement. Wilfred’s absence was the loss of Hamlet from
-the play; his return the signal for joy and congratulation.
-The little commonwealth was visibly agitated as the tired
-cattle trailed along the track to the stock-yard, with Dick
-sitting bolt upright in his saddle behind them, and Wilfred
-essaying to crack the inconveniently long whip provided for
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The girls made their appearance upon the verandah;
-Andrew looked forth as interested, yet under protest. Guy
-walked behind, and much admired the vast number and
-imposing appearance of the herd; while Captain and Mrs.
-Effingham stood arm in arm at a safe distance appreciating
-the prowess of their first-born.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Now, sir,’ quoth the ready Dick, ‘we’ll put ’em in the
-yard and make ’em safe to-night; to-morrow, some one will
-have to tail ’em.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Tail them?’ said Wilfred. ‘Some of their ears have
-been scolloped, I see; but surely it is not necessary to cut
-their tails in a hot climate like this?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘S’cuse me, sir,’ said Dick respectfully, ‘I wouldn’t put
-the knife to them for pounds; “tailing” means shepherdin’.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And what does “shepherding” mean? I thought
-shepherds were only for sheep?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, sir, I never heerd talk of shepherdin’ at home, but
-it’s a currency word for follerin’ anything that close, right
-agin’ their tails, that a shepherd couldn’t be more careful
-with his sheep; so we talk of shepherdin’ a s’picious c’rakter,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>or a lot of stock, or a man that’s tossicated with notes stickin’
-out of his pocket, or a young woman, or anything that wants
-lookin’ after very partickler.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Now I understand,’ said Wilfred. ‘It’s not a bad word,
-and might be used in serious matters.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘No mistake about that, sir. Now the yard’s finished
-off and topped up, we’ll soon be able to make a start with
-the dairy. There’ll be half-a-dozen calves within the week,
-and more afore the month’s out. There’s nothin’ breaks in
-cows to stop like their young calves; you’ll soon see ’em
-hanging about the yard as if they’d been bred here, ’specially
-as the feed is so forrard. There’s no mistake, a myst season
-do make everything go pleasant.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When the cattle were in the yard, and the slip rails made
-safe by having spare posts put across them, Wilfred unsaddled
-his provisional mount and walked into the house in a satisfactory
-mental condition.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘So, behold you of return!’ quoted Rosamond, running
-to meet him, and marching him triumphantly into the dining-room,
-where all was ready for tea. ‘The time has been
-rather long. Papa has been walking about, not knowing
-exactly what to do, or leave undone; Guy shooting, not
-over-successfully. The most steadily employed member of
-the household, and the happiest, I suppose, has been Andrew,
-digging without intermission the whole time.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I wish we could dig too, or have some employment
-found for us,’ said Annabel; ‘girls are shamefully unprovided
-with real work, except stocking-mending. Jeanie won’t let
-us do anything in the kitchen, and really, that is the only
-place where there is any fun. The house is so large, and
-echoing at night when the wind blows. And only think, we
-found the mark of a pistol bullet in the dining-room wall
-at one end, and there is another in the ceiling!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘How do you know it was a pistol shot?’ inquired Wilfred.
-‘Some one threw a salt-cellar at the butler in the good old
-times.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Perhaps it was fired in the good old times; perhaps it
-killed some one—how horrible! Perhaps he was carried out
-through the passage. But we know it was a shot, because
-Guy poked about and found the bullet flattened out.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, we must ask Evans; very likely old Colonel
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>Warleigh fired pistols in his mad fits. He used to sit, they
-say, night after night, drinking and cursing by himself after
-his wife died and his sons left him. No one dared go near
-him when his pistols were loaded. But we need not think
-of these things now, Annabel. He is dead and gone, and
-his sons are not in this part of the country. So I see you
-have had flower-beds made while I was away. I declare
-the wistaria and bignonia are breaking into flower. How
-gorgeous they will look!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Yes, mamma said she could not exist without flowers
-any longer, so we persuaded Andrew, much against his will,—for
-he said “he was just fair harassed wi’ thae early
-potatoes,”—to dig these borders. Guy helped us to transplant
-and sow seeds, so we shall have flowers of our own
-once more.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We shall have everything of our own in a few years if
-we are patient,’ said Wilfred; ‘and you damsels don’t want
-trips to watering-places, and so on. This life is better than
-Boulogne, or the Channel Islands, though it may be a trifle
-lonely.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Boulogne! A thousandfold,’ said Rosamond. ‘Here we
-have life and hope. Those poor families we used to see
-there looked liked ghosts and apparitions of their old selves.
-You remember watching them walking down drearily to see
-the packet come in—the girls dowdy or shabby, the old
-people hopeless and apathetic, the sons so idle and lounging?
-I shudder when I think how near we were to such horrors
-ourselves. The very air of Australia seems to give one fresh
-life. Can anything be finer than this sunset?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In truth, the scene upon which her eyes rested might
-have cheered a sadder heart than that of the high-hearted
-maiden who now, with her arm upon her brother’s shoulder,
-directed his gaze to the far empurpled hills, merging their
-violet cloud masses and orange-gold tints in the darkening
-eve. The green pastures, relieved by clumps of heavy-foliaged
-trees, glowed emerald bright against the dark-browed mountain
-spur. The dying sun-rays fell in fire-flakes of burning
-gold on the mirrored silver of the lake. Wrapped in soft
-tremulous mist lay the hills upon the farther shore, vast with
-the subtle effect of limitless distance. At such times one
-could dream with the faith of older days—that Earth, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>universal mother, loved her children, and breathed forth in
-growth of herb and flower her smiling welcome.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>That night, as the Effinghams sat around their table, an
-unconscious feeling of thankfulness swelled each heart. The
-parents saw assurance of a well-provided suitable home for
-the little troop, the probable disbanding of which had cost
-such sad forebodings. The sons, strong in the faith of youth,
-saw a future of adventure, well-rewarded labour, perhaps
-brilliant success. The girls felt that their lives would not
-be henceforth deprived of the social intercourse which had
-once been an ordinary condition of existence.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘How did you fare at Mr. O’Desmond’s, my son? What
-kind of an establishment does he keep?’ inquired Mrs.
-Effingham.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You will all be rather astonished,’ answered Wilfred
-mysteriously. ‘What should you think, Annabel? You are
-a good hand at guessing.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Let me think. He is very aristocratic and dignified, yet
-he might live in a hut. Men are so independent of rooms
-or houses, almost of looking-glasses. Now a woman in a
-poky little place always shows it in her dress. I should say
-he lives in a comfortable cottage, and has everything very
-complete.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And you would be right. We shall have to mind our
-manners and dinners when he comes again. He lives like a
-club bachelor, and is as well lodged as—let us say—a land
-steward on an absentee nobleman’s estate.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You must be romancing, Wilfred,’ said Beatrice. ‘Where
-could he get the luxuries that such a great man as you have
-described could procure? What a wonderful difference a few
-thousand miles makes! We think ourselves not so much
-worse, essentially, than we were in England; but we must be
-deteriorating.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Don’t talk nonsense, my dear Beatrice,’ said Rosamond.
-‘Is it not a little vulgar to attach so much weight to externals?
-As long as we are doing our duty, why should
-there be any deterioration? It will be our own fault if we
-adopt a lower level of manners.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, but how can any one expect to be the same in
-colonial society?’ exclaimed Annabel. ‘See how insignificant
-even the “best people” are out here. Why, I was reading
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>yesterday about a “country baronet,” and even a “well-meaning,
-unfashionable countess,” being looked down upon—positively
-laughed at—in England. Now think what
-tremendous potentates they would be out here! I’m sure
-that proves what I say.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Your propositions and proofs are worthy of one another,
-my dear,’ said Wilfred. ‘But as to society, I shan’t be sorry
-when more of our neighbours call.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Now that the house is fit to receive them I shall be
-pleased, my dear son, to see the people of the land. I am
-sure I hope there are some nice ones.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred rose early next morning to indulge himself with
-another look at the new cattle. He was only just in time,
-as Dick had breakfasted, caught his horse, and was about
-to let out the imprisoned drove.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I’ll tail ’em for the first few days, sir,’ he said, ‘till I
-give ’em the way of camping under them big trees near the
-little swamp. It will make a first-rate camp for ’em, and
-learn ’em to run handy to the place. After that we must
-get some sort of a lad to foller ’em. It won’t pay you to
-keep me at blackfellow’s work.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What’s that?’ inquired Wilfred.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Why, simple work like this, that any black boy could
-do, if he didn’t give his mind to ’possums. Besides, we
-wants a horse-yard, and a bit of a paddock, and another
-field cleared, to plough for next year.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘That seems a good deal of work to carry on, Richard.
-Won’t it take more hands? Remember, we must go economically
-to work. My father is by no means a rich man.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘That’s quite right, sir; no one should run themselves
-out of pocket, high or low. But if we had some one to go
-with these cows till the calves come, and that won’t be long,
-you and I could do what work I’ve chalked out.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Why should not Guy “tail” the cows, as you call it?’
-suggested Wilfred, pleased with the idea that they would be
-able to provide labour from their own community. ‘It would
-do him no harm.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Perhaps the young gentleman mightn’t like it,’ said Dick,
-with deep respect. ‘It’s dull work, every day, like.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, he <em>must</em> like it!’ decided Wilfred, with the despotic
-elder brother tone. ‘We have come out here to work, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>he must take his share. He may find it dull for a time;
-but he can shoot a little and amuse himself, as long as he
-doesn’t come home without them, like Little Bo-peep. What
-would a boy cost?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘About six or eight shillings a week, and his rations, sir,
-which would come to as much again. But the young master
-needn’t stay out after four o’clock.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Then we make a saving at once of say sixteen shillings
-a week. Guy never earned so much in his life before. He
-will be quite proud of his value in the labour market. You
-and I can begin splitting and fencing at once.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But we shall want some more cattle, sir,’ suggested Dick.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘More cattle!’ said Wilfred in amazement, to whom a
-hundred head was an awe-striking number. ‘What for?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Why, to eat! It don’t do to buy meat every time you
-want a roast or a steak. Cheapest to kill your own. If
-we was to buy a mob of common cattle, they’d cost nothing
-to speak of; the bullocks soon fatten, and the cows would
-breed you up a fair mixed herd in no time.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, but we have these cattle you have just let out,’
-pleaded Wilfred, looking admiringly at the red, white, and
-roan shorthorn crosses, which, spreading over the rich
-meadow, were feeding quietly, as if reared there.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Them’s all very well, sir; but it’ll be years before you
-kill a bullock out of that lot; they’ve got to come, all in
-good time. But the quiet steers, and the worst of the cows,
-in a mixed herd, will be fat before you can look round, in
-a season like this, and your beef won’t cost you above a
-penny a pound.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It was decided that Guy was to ‘tail’ or herd the new
-cows at present. Upon this duty being named to him, he
-made no objection—rather seemed to like it.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I suppose as long as I don’t lose them I can do anything
-I like,’ he said; ‘hunt ’possums, shoot, ferret out ferns
-for Rosamond, or even read.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The more you lets the cattle alone the better, Mr. Guy,’
-said Dick. ‘As long as they don’t sneak away from you,
-you can’t take it too easy. There’s fine feed all roads now,
-and after the first hour or two they’ll fill theirselves and lie
-down like working bullocks. But you’ll want a horse.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘That I shall,’ said the boy, beginning to take up the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>fashions of the bush, and to rebel at the idea of going on
-foot, as if mankind was a species of centaur.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Must have more horses too, sir,’ announced Dick, with
-a calm air of ask and have.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘How many?’ returned Wilfred uncomplyingly; ‘it
-seems we shall want more horses—we haven’t any, certainly—more
-cattle, more tillage, more yards, more paddocks;
-it will soon come to wanting more money, and where to get
-<em>that</em> I don’t know.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Horses are dirt cheap, sir, just now, and can’t be done
-without, nohow. You’ll want a cob for the Captain to potter
-about on, a couple of hacks for yourself, one apiece for Mr.
-Guy and the young ladies—they’d like a canter now and
-then afore Christmas. I hear Mick Donnelly’s selling off,
-to clear out for Monaro. You couldn’t do better than ride
-over and see his lot; they’ll be pretty sure to live on our
-grass, if any of the neighbours gets ’em, and you may as well
-have that profit out of ’em yourself.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The conversation having come to an end, Mr. Evans
-was about to move after his cattle, now indulging in a
-pretty wide spread, when a horseman joining them, greeted
-Wilfred.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Good-morning, sir,’ said the stranger, with loud, peculiar,
-but not unpleasant voice, having a note of culture too.
-‘Glad to make your acquaintance; Mr. Effingham, I believe?
-We’re neighbours, on the south, about ten miles from
-Benmohr. You haven’t seen a chestnut pony about, branded
-2C? He used to run here in Hunt’s time. Why, hang me!
-if he isn’t coming up to show himself!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The chestnut pony which had borne Wilfred so successfully
-in the journey for the new cattle now trotted up,
-having followed Evans’s mare, to which animal he had
-attached himself, after the manner of horses, prone to contract
-sudden friendships.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred, about to disclaim any knowledge of the strange
-gentleman’s chestnut, not dreaming that the estray which
-had come in so handily could be his property, and as yet not
-given to reading at a glance 2C or other hieroglyph, felt
-rather nonplussed, more especially when he noticed the
-stranger’s eye attracted to the saddle-mark on the pony’s
-fat back.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>‘I must confess to having ridden your horse, if he be
-so, a short journey. We were not aware of his ownership,
-and I had no horse of my own. I trust you will forgive the
-liberty.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘He <em>has</em> rather nice paces. How did you like him?’
-inquired the stranger urbanely, much as if he had a favour
-conferred upon him. ‘I’ll run him into the yard now with
-your permission, and lead him home.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Pray come in, and allow me to introduce you to my
-people,’ said Wilfred, satisfied, from the stranger’s bearing,
-that he was a desirable acquaintance. ‘With the exception
-of Mr. O’Desmond, from whom I bought these cattle, we
-have not seen a neighbour yet.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Know them all in time,’ said the stranger; ‘no great
-shakes, some of them, when you <em>do</em> know them. My name’s
-Churbett, by the bye—Fred Churbett, of The Oaks; cattle
-station on Banksia Creek, used to be called She-oak Flat—had
-to change it. Nice cattle O’Desmond let you have;
-got good stock, but makes you pay for them.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘How you have improved the old place!’ continued Mr.
-Churbett, as they approached the house. ‘Who would
-believe that so much could have been made of it? Never
-saw it in the palmy days of Colonel Warleigh, though. Seems
-to have run in the military line of ownership. The old boy
-kept up great state. Four-in-hand always to Yass, they say.
-Coachman, butler, lots of servants—convicts, of course. Awful
-temper; cursed freely, drank ditto. Sons not behindhand,
-improved upon the paternal sins—gambling, horse-racing, Old
-Harry generally. Had to clear out and sell. Great pull for
-the district having a family straight from “home” settled
-in it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I trust the advantage will be mutual,’ said Wilfred. ‘We
-hope to be neighbourly when we are quite settled. But you
-will understand that it has taken us a little time to shake
-down.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Thought of that,’ said Mr. Churbett, ‘or should have
-had the pleasure of calling before. Trotted over to look up
-master “Traveller” for the muster, or should have waited
-another week.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Churbett’s horses having been disposed of, he was
-duly introduced. He proved if anything a greater success
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>than Mr. O’Desmond. He was musical, and the sight of the
-piano immediately brought up talk about the last opera he
-had heard in London. He was also a great reader, and
-after touching upon half a score of authors, promised to
-bring over a new book which he had just got up from town.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Really,’ said Annabel innocently, ‘this is a surprise.
-I never dreamed of getting a new book in the bush. Why,
-it only came out just before we left. I was longing to read
-it; but, of course, we were too miserable and worried. How
-can it have got here so quickly?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Just the same way that we did, I suppose,’ said Beatrice—‘in
-a ship. You forget the time that has passed since we
-landed.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Still, it is a pleasant surprise. I shouldn’t wonder, perhaps
-we may get some new music soon. But I should as
-soon have thought of a book-club in the moon.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Talking of book-clubs,’ said Churbett, ‘we are trying to
-get up one; I hope you will join. With twelve members, and
-a moderate subscription, we can import a very fair lot of books
-every year. A brother of mine in London can choose them
-for us; I am to be librarian. The books are divided into
-sets, which each subscriber sends on in turn.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Annabel clapped her hands. ‘How delightful! Wilfred,
-of course, will join. Fancy, dear, <em>clean</em> new books every
-month. Really, life is becoming quite intoxicating, and I
-thought we should die of dulness and ennui.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘No; did you, though?’ echoed Mr. Churbett compassionately.
-‘I confess to feeling inclined to cry when I came
-up to Murson Creek and saw the hut I was to live in for the
-first year. But one’s feelings get wonderfully altered after a
-while.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And are you <em>quite</em> resigned, that is contented, to give up
-operas and picture galleries, clubs and travel, all the pleasant
-parts of English life?’ asked Rosamond.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It <em>was</em> hard at first, Miss Effingham; but here I have
-independence, with the prospect of a fortune. In England
-such was not the case, particularly the independence. Operas
-and other memories recall a fairy realm which I may yet
-re-enter. Meantime, I ride about all day, work now and
-then, smoke and read at night, and if not exactly happy, am
-decently cheerful.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>‘What the world calls pleasure you never see, I suppose?’
-said Beatrice philosophically.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Do we not? I forgot one compensation in our virtuous,
-self-denying lives. Once a year, at least, we have races in
-Yass, which is our metropolis. Then we all meet together,
-as a solemn, social obligation. Pilgrimage to Mecca, and so
-on. Very few true believers absent. Balls, picnics, any
-amount of dancing, flirtation, what not. Enough to last for
-the rest of the year. After a week or two we go home
-sorrowfully, staying at each other’s houses on the way, to let
-down the excitement by degrees.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Where do the ladies come from?’ asked Annabel. ‘I
-suppose there are very few?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Very few!’ said Mr. Churbett in tones of horror. ‘<em>Ever</em>
-so many. Is it possible you have never heard, even in
-Europe, of the beautiful Miss Christabel Rockley, the
-fascinating Mrs. Snowden, the talented Mrs. Porchester?
-Ladies! They abound, or how should we remain civilised?
-Yass is well known to be the home of all the graces. Could
-O’Desmond retain his <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>grand seigneur</em></span> air but for the
-advantage of refined association? I wish I could take you
-round, Miss Effingham, on an introductory tour. What a
-book we could write of our experiences!—“Travels and
-Sketches in the Upper Strata of the Social System of the
-Yass District, by Miss Annabel Effingham, illustrated by F.
-Churbett, F.R.Y.A.S.S., Fellow of the Royal Yass Analytical
-Squatting Society,” reads well.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Quite delicious,’ said Annabel. ‘But everything that is
-nice is improper, so, of course, I shouldn’t be let go. Not
-even Rosamond, who is prudence personified. I’m afraid
-there is no more liberty for poor women in a new country
-than an old one. That <em>is</em> the bell—I was sure of it. Mr.
-Churbett, allow me to invite you to dinner—an early one,
-which is about the extent of my privileges.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Churbett accepted the invitation, as he no doubt
-would have acceded to any proposition emanating from the
-speaker even less manifestly beneficial. He kept the whole
-party amused, and lingered until he declared he should have
-to gallop Grey Surrey all the way home to get there before
-dark.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘He’s like me,’ he explained, upon being charged with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>cruelty; ‘he only does a day’s work now and then, and he
-doesn’t mind it when it does come.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Resisting all invitation to stop for the night, on the plea
-that the effort necessary in his case must be made some
-time and might as well be undergone now, he departed in
-the odour of high consideration, if not of sanctity.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In order that no opportunities might be lost, Wilfred commenced
-the habit of rising at dawn and joining Dick at the
-stock-yard, where the old man had initiated a dairy, with the
-aid of the few cows of the O’Desmond brand which had
-produced calves. Here he was attended by Andrew, who
-sturdily proceeded to take his share of the work, in spite of
-Dick’s sarcastic attitude. He evidently considered the dairy
-to be his province, and regarded Andrew as an interloper.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Na, na, Maister Wilfred,’ said Andrew, ‘I hae been
-acquent in my time wi’ a’ manner o’ kye, and had a collie
-following me these thretty years. It’s no because we’re in
-a new land that I’m to turn my back on ilka occupa-ation
-that will bring in profit to the laird and his bairns. Jeanie
-can mak’ as sweet butter as ever a gudewife in Lothian, and
-we hae to depend maistly on the butter-keggies, for what I see.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You’ll find that garden of yours, when the weeds come
-up, quite enough for one, I’m thinking. There’s enough of
-us here, if Mr. Wilfred takes to it kind, as he seems to do.
-But if you’re such a dab hand at milking, you can tek that
-red cow that’s come in this morning.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And a gra-and show o’ milk she has,’ quoth Andrew, ‘maist
-unco-omon!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Dick commenced, with a stolid expression, to arrange the
-slip-rails, which apparently took time to adjust. Andrew,
-meanwhile, proud of the opportunity of exhibiting his familiarity
-with the art and science of milking, moved the red cow
-into one of the bails, or stalls, in which cows are ordinarily
-milked in Australia.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Sitting upon a three-legged stool, he commenced his
-ancient and classical task. He had succeeded in, perhaps,
-drawing a pint from the over-full udder of the red cow aforesaid,
-when she suddenly raised her hind leg and caught him
-with such emphasis that man and milk, pail and stool, went
-clattering down into the corner of the yard.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Gude save us!’ exclaimed Andrew, picking himself up,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>and rubbing his person, while he collected all that was recoverable
-of the scattered properties. ‘What garred the fell
-beastie act sae daft-like. I hae milket a hunner coos, and
-ne’er was whummled like yon.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Perhaps they was Scotch cows, and understood your talk,
-Mr. Cargill,’ said Dick, with great politeness, covering a grim
-enjoyment; ‘but in this country we mostly <em>leg-ropes</em> cows
-when we bail ’em up, for fear of accidents.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Weel, I winna say that these queys, being brocht up in a
-mair savage fashion than in bonnie Scotland, wadna need
-head and heel fastenings. But, ma certie, they would glower
-in my part of the country, gin ye tied a coo’s leg like a thrawn
-ox at the smithy.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I suppose “we must do at Rome, etc.,” and all the rest
-of it, Andrew,’ said Wilfred. ‘Here, Dick, make a beginning
-with your cow, and Andrew and I will put a leg-rope
-on this one. Never too late to mend. I’ll back Andrew to
-hold his own yet in the milking-yard, or anywhere else.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Old Dick, having satisfied his grudge by compassing the
-downfall of Andrew, whom he had shrewdly guessed never
-to have been accustomed to a leg-rope, condescended to
-instruct Wilfred in the proper way to knot it. The cows were
-eventually milked <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>secundum artem</em></span>, and when the full buckets,
-foaming over with creamy fluid, stood on a bench outside
-the yard, Wilfred saw with distinct gratification the first dividend
-from the cattle investment.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We must calculate now, Andrew,’ he said, as they walked
-over to the house, ‘how much butter can be made from the
-milk of these cows. It is a small matter, of course; but
-multiplied by ten—as we shall have at least fifty cows in
-milk, Dick says, before Christmas—it will not be so bad.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘After conseederin’ the matter maist carefully,’ said
-Andrew, ‘I am free to give it as ma deleeberate opeenion
-that gin the pasture keeps aye green and plenteous we
-may mak’ baith butter and cheese o’ the best quality. As
-to price, I canna yet say, havin’ nae knowledge o’ the
-mairkets.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, we have made a beginning, Andrew, and that is a
-great matter. If we can only pay current expenses, without
-employing more hands, we shall be doing well, I consider.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We must work gey and close at the first gang aff, Maister
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>Wilfred, and then dinna ye fear. Wi’ the Lord’s blessing,
-we’ll be spared to set up our horn on high, as weel as thae
-prood Amalekites, that have had the first grip o’ this gra-and
-Canaan. I was doon yestreen and lookit at the field o’
-victual—the paddock, as yon auld carle ca’s it. It’s maist
-promising—forbye ordinar’—maist unco-omon.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Among the list of indispensable investments which Dick
-Evans had urged upon Wilfred, but which he had not at
-present thought it necessary to undertake, were another lot
-of cattle, a dozen horses (more or less), and some kind of
-taxed cart, or light vehicle. Apparently these would be
-advantageous and profitable, but Wilfred had determined to
-be most sparing in all outlay, lest the reserve fund of the
-family should come to a premature end.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On this day it seemed that the advanced guard of the
-neighbouring gentry had commenced to lay formal siege to
-Warbrok Chase. On his return to the house in the afternoon,
-Wilfred descried two good-looking horses hanging up
-to the garden fence, and upon entering the sitting-room beheld
-their owners in amicable converse with his mother and
-sisters. He was promptly introduced to Mr. Argyll and Mr.
-Charles Hamilton. Both men were well, even fashionably
-dressed, and bore about them the nameless air which stamps
-the holder of a degree in the university of society.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We should have called before,’ said Mr. Argyll, a tall
-fair-haired man, whose quick glancing blue eye and mobile
-features betrayed natural impetuosity, kept under by training;
-‘but my partner here is such an awfully hard-working
-fellow, that he would not quit the engineering with which he
-was busied, to visit the Queen of Sheba, if she had just
-settled in the neighbourhood.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I was not aware,’ said Mr. Hamilton coolly, and with an
-air of settled conviction upon his regular and handsome
-features, ‘of the extent of my sacrifice to duty. I may
-venture to assure Mrs. Effingham that my neighbourly duties
-for the future will not be neglected.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I hope not,’ said Mrs. Effingham; ‘for, now that the
-excitement of settling in such a very different world has
-passed away, we begin to feel rather lonely—may I say
-dull?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘No, mamma,’ said Rosamond, ‘you must not say that.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>We are all so fully occupied, from morning to dusk, that we
-have no time to be dull.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, but we cannot get on without society,’ remarked
-Annabel. ‘I feel in the highest spirits as long as there is so
-much to do, that there is no time for thinking; indeed, I
-hate to have a moment to myself. But in the afternoons,
-when papa and the boys are out, I begin to realise our solitary
-position, and the feeling becomes oppressive.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Very naturally too,’ said Mr. Argyll. ‘But as yet you
-have no idea of the social resources which you will be able
-to draw upon when you are acquainted with everybody.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And who is everybody?’ asked Beatrice. ‘How can we be
-sociable if people don’t come to see us? Suppose you tell
-us who are the nice people of the district, and we shall be
-able to enjoy them in anticipation.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You will see most of them within the month; but I
-shrink from describing them. Charles, you are afraid of
-nobody, suppose you give us a <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>catalogue raisonné</em></span>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Certainly, if Miss Effingham wishes it,’ assented Mr.
-Hamilton, who had the imperturbable look which goes with
-a temperament difficult to surprise or intimidate. ‘I shall
-have great pleasure in trotting out our friends for her information.
-We have been here only three years, so in case of
-mistakes you must be considerate.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, we shall be most discreet,’ said Annabel; ‘besides,
-we have no acquaintance yet to chatter to—that’s the best
-guarantee for prudence.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I think I may take your solemn affirmation not to betray
-me,’ said Mr. Hamilton, looking admiringly into Annabel’s
-lovely eyes, ‘and even then I would face the risk. First,
-there is Captain Snowden with his wife. He was in the
-navy, I think; he has rather more of the sailor about him
-than—what shall I say?—the courtier, though he can be very
-agreeable when he likes. Madame is extremely lady-like,
-clever, travelled, what not. You must see her and judge for
-yourself.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Are there any more ladies?’ asked Rosamond. ‘They
-possess an absorbing interest for us.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Ever so many more,’ laughed Hamilton. ‘Mrs. Porchester,
-who is rather a “blue”; Mrs. Egremont, who is a
-beauty; the Misses Carter, who are good-nature itself. The
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>others, I think, you must find out by degrees. In Yass there
-are some very nice families, particularly that of Mr. Rockley.
-He is the leading merchant in these parts, and rules like a
-benevolent despot. His wife is hospitable and amiable
-beyond compare; his daughter, Miss Christabel, dangerously
-beautiful. I <em>must</em> leave something to the imagination.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I assure you we are most grateful to you as it is,’ said
-Mrs. Effingham. ‘It is really encouraging to find that there
-are so many charming people in the neighbourhood. We
-should hardly consider them in the same county at home;
-but here they don’t seem to mind riding any distance.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I am mistaken,’ said Hamilton, ‘if you do not find people
-riding wonderful distances to visit Warbrok. We are less
-than twenty miles away, I am thankful to say, so you will see
-us as often as you care for. By the way,’ turning to Wilfred,
-‘did I hear you say you were going to Donnelly’s sale?
-If you buy stock there, you had better stay a night at
-Benmohr on your return. It is just a fair stage.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Thanks. I shall be most happy. Do you think it a good
-idea to invest at Donnelly’s?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘If I were in your place I should buy all his cattle and a
-few horses. They can’t fail to be a profitable purchase, as you
-seem to have any amount of grass. But we must be going.
-We shall expect you at Benmohr the day after the sale. Mrs.
-Effingham, I shall do myself the honour of another visit, after
-you have been able to verify my portraitures.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What gentlemanlike young men!’ said Mrs. Effingham,
-when the guests were fairly away. ‘I am so sorry that your
-papa was out. He would have been so pleased. Mr. Argyll
-seems so clever, and Mr. Hamilton is very handsome—both
-wonderfully well dressed for the bush.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I should say Mr. Argyll was disposed to be sarcastic,’ said
-Rosamond; ‘and I am mistaken if he has not a fierce
-temper. He told us he was a Highlander, which accounts
-for it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Mr. Hamilton is one of the nicest-looking men I have
-seen for a long time,’ said Annabel; ‘what splendid eyes he
-has! He is very particular about his gloves too; gives time
-and reflection to his toilet, I should say.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I have heard Dick say that he is the hardest-working
-squatter in the district,’ said Wilfred. ‘He is devoted to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>ploughing, digging, navvy-work, horse-breaking—“all manner
-of slavery,” as Dick says.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Who would have thought it!’ exclaimed Mrs. Effingham
-in tones of astonishment. ‘From his appearance I should have
-thought that he was afraid to soil those white hands of his.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The best-dressed people are not the most backward at
-work or fighting,’ said Wilfred.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But how <em>can</em> he keep his hands white,’ inquired Annabel
-with a great appearance of interest, ‘if he really works like a
-labourer?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Perhaps he works in gloves; a man can get through a
-great deal of work in a pair of old riding-gloves, and his
-hands be never the worse. There is something about those
-two men that I like extremely. Mr. Argyll puts me in mind
-of Fergus MʻIvor with that fiery glance; he looks as if he had
-a savage temper, well held in.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘They are both very nice, and I hope you will make real
-friends of them, Wilfred,’ said Mrs. Effingham. ‘Might I
-also suggest that, as it is evidently practicable to dress like a
-gentleman and work hard, a certain young man should be
-more careful of his appearance?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I deserve that, I know, old lady,’ said her son laughingly;
-‘but really there is a temptation in the wilderness to costume
-a little. I promise you to amend.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Our circle of acquaintance is expanding,’ said Beatrice;
-‘certainly it has the charm of variety. Mr. O’Desmond is
-Irish, Mr. Churbett from London, our last visitors Scots—one
-Highland, one Lowland. All differing among themselves
-too. I am sure we shall be fully occupied; it will be a task
-of some delicacy <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>tenir de salon</em></span>, if we ever have them here
-at a party.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘A party!’ said Mrs. Effingham; ‘don’t think of it for
-<em>years</em> to come, child. It would be impossible, inappropriate
-in every way.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But there’s no harm, mamma, surely, in <em>thinking</em> of it,’
-pleaded Annabel. ‘It encourages one to keep alive, if
-nothing else.’</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER VI <br /> AN AUSTRALIAN YEOMAN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>A week of laborious work preceded the day when circumstances
-permitted Wilfred and his serving-man to ride forth for
-the purpose of attending the sale of Mr. Michael Donnelly’s
-stock and effects. Formerly known as ‘Willoughby’s Mick,’ he
-had, during an unpretending career as stock-rider for that
-gentleman, accumulated a small herd of cattle and horses,
-with which to commence life on a grazing farm near Yass.
-Here, by exercise of the strictest economy as to personal
-expenses, as well as from the natural increase of stock, he
-had, during a residence of a dozen years, amassed a considerable
-property. Yet on his holding there was but scant
-evidence of toil or contrivance. A few straggling peach
-trees represented the garden. The bark-roofed slab hut
-which he found when he came had sufficed for the
-lodging of himself and wife, with nearly a dozen children.
-The fences, not originally good, were now ruinous. The
-fields, suffered to go out of cultivation, lay fallow and
-unsightly, only half-cleared of tree-stumps. The dress of this
-honest yeoman had altered for the worse since the hard-riding
-days of ‘Willoughby’s Mick.’ The healthy boys and
-girls were more or less ragged; the younger ones barefooted.
-The saddles and cart harness were patched with raw hide, or
-clumsily repaired. The cow-shed was rickety; the calves
-unsheltered. Yet with all this apparent decay and disorder,
-any one, judging from appearances, who had put down
-Michael Donnelly as an impoverished farmer, would have
-been egregiously deceived. His neighbours knew that his
-battered old cabbage-tree hat covered a head with an
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>unusual amount of brains. Uneducated and bush-bred,
-he possessed intuitive powers of calculation and forecast
-frequently denied to cultured individuals. Early in life he
-had appropriated the fact, that in this land of boundless
-pasturage, profitable up to a certain point, without the
-necessity of one <em>farthing</em> of expenditure, the multiplication of
-stock was possible to any conceivable extent. Once make a
-commencement with a few cows, and it was a man’s own
-fault if he died without more cattle than he could count.
-Hadn’t Johnny Shore begun that way? <em>Walked</em> over to
-Monaro with half-a-crown in his pocket. He saved his wages
-for a few years and got the needful start.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Become a capitalist, his instincts revolted against spending
-money needlessly, when every pound, often less, would buy
-a cow, which cow would turn into fifty head of cattle in a
-few years. ‘What could a man do that would pay him half
-as well? Why employ labour that could be done without?
-It was all very well for Mr. Willoughby, who had raised his
-wages gradually from twenty pounds per annum and one
-ration. Mr. Willoughby was a gentleman with a big station,
-and threw his money about a bit; but why should he, Mick
-Donnelly, go keeping and feeding men to put in crops when
-farming didn’t pay? Therefore his fields might lie fallow
-and go out of cultivation.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>His boys were getting big lumps of fellows, old enough to
-help brand and muster. The girls could milk, and break in
-the heifers, as well as all the men in the country. His wife
-could cook—there wasn’t much of that; and wash—it didn’t
-fatigue her; and sweep—that process was economised—as
-well as ever. Any kind of duds did for working people, as
-long as they went decent to chapel on Sundays. That they
-had always done and would do, please God. But all other
-occasions of spending money were wasteful and unnecessary.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The sole expenses, then, of this large family were in the
-purchase of flour, tea, sugar, and clothes, none of which
-articles came to an extravagant sum for the year. While
-the sales were steady and considerable, Mick and his sons
-drove many a lot of cattle, fat or store, to the neighbouring
-markets. The profits of the dairy in butter and bacon, the
-representatives of which latter product roamed in small herds
-around the place, paid all the household expenses twice over;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>while the amount of his credit balance at the Bank of New
-Holland in Yass would have astonished many a tourist who
-watched Mick smoking on his stock-yard rails, or riding an
-unshod mare down the range after a mob of active cattle.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But now a more ambitious idea was evolved from the
-yeoman’s slowly maturing, but accurate mental processes.
-He had been noting the relative scale of outlay and income
-of a neighbouring sheep-farmer. After certain cautious
-comparisons, he fixed the conclusion that, other things being
-equal, sheep would pay him better than cattle. He heard
-from an old comrade of the forced sale of a sheep station in
-the then half-explored, unstocked district of Monaro, lying
-between the Great Range and the Snowy River. His offer
-of cash, at a rate far from remunerative to the late owner,
-had been accepted.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>That part of his plan settled, he sold his freehold to a
-neighbouring proprietor who was commencing to found an
-estate, receiving rather more than double his original
-purchase money. Stock being at a reasonable price,
-Donnelly determined to sell off the whole of his possessions,
-merely reserving his dray, team, and a sufficiency of
-saddle-horses for the family. His herd had become too
-numerous for the run. His boys and girls would make
-shepherds and shepherdesses for a while—by no means a
-picturesque occupation in Australia, but still profitable as
-of old. He would be enabled to continue independent of
-hired labour. He trusted to the duplication of stock to
-do the rest. Hence the clearing-off sale, which a number
-of farmers in the neighbourhood were likely to attend, and
-to which Wilfred and his chief servitor were at present
-wending their way.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On this occasion Wilfred had resisted the idea of mounting
-any of the strayed horses, still numerous upon the enticing
-pastures of Warbrok. Having unwittingly placed himself in
-a false position, he was resolved not to repeat the impropriety.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Mr. Churbett had behaved most courteously,’ he said;
-‘but it might have been otherwise. I was not aware that
-it was other than a colonial custom. There must be no
-more mistakes of this kind, Dick, or you and I shall quarrel.
-Go to one of the nearest farmers and see if you can hire
-me a decent hack.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>So Dick, though chafing at the over-delicacy which led
-his master to pay for a mount while available steeds were
-eating his grass, proceeded to obey orders, and shortly
-returned with a substantial half-bred, upon which Wilfred
-bestowed himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Dick Evans was always in good spirits at the prospect of
-a cruise in foreign parts. Mrs. Evans, on the other hand,
-was prone to dwell upon the unpleasant side of domestic
-matters. Her habit of mind had doubtless resulted in the
-philosophic calm with which her husband bore his frequent,
-and occasionally protracted, absences from the conjugal
-headquarters. As before, he mounted his old mare with a
-distinct air of cheerfulness.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The dairy work will get along all right for a day or two,
-sir,’ he said. ‘Old Andy begins to be a fairish milker—he
-was dead slow at first—and Mr. Guy’s a great help bailin’
-up. There’s nothing brisks me up like a jaunt somewheres—I
-don’t care where it is, if it was to the Cannibal Islands.
-God Almighty never intended me to stop long in one place,
-I expect.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘A rolling stone gathers no moss, Dick,’ said Wilfred.
-‘You’ll never save up anything if you carry out those ideas
-always.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I don’t want to save nothing, sir. I’ve no call to keep
-money in a box; I can find work pretty well wherever I go
-that will keep me and my old woman in full and plenty.
-I’m safe of my wages as long as I can work, and when I
-can’t work no more I shall die—suddent like. I’ve always
-felt that.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But why don’t you get a bit of land, Dick, and have a
-place of your own? You could easily save enough money
-to buy a farm.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Bless your heart, sir, I wouldn’t live on a farm allers,
-day in, day out, if you’d give me one. I should get that
-sick of the place as I should come to hate the sight of it.
-But hadn’t you better settle with yourself like, sir, what
-kind of stock you’re agoin’ to bid for when we get to Mick’s?
-There’ll be a lot of people there, and noise, and perhaps a
-little fighting if there’s any grog goin’, so it’s best to be ready
-for action, as old Sir Hugh Gough used to tell us.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Mr. Churbett and Mr. Hamilton thought I should buy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>all the mixed cattle, as many of them would be ready for
-the butcher before winter.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘So they will, sir, or my name’s not Richard Evans, twice
-corporal in the old 50th, and would have been sergeant, if
-I’d been cleverer at my book, and not quite so clever at the
-canteen. But that’s neither here nor there. What I look
-at is, they’re all dairy-bred cattle, and broke in close to your
-own run, which saves a power of trouble. If you can get
-a hundred or two of ’em for thirty shillings or two pound
-a head, they’ll pay it all back by next season—easy and
-flippant.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Finishing up with his favourite adjective, which he used
-when desirous of showing with what ridiculous ease any given
-result might be obtained, Mr. Richard Evans lighted his pipe
-with an air of assurance of success which commenced to
-infect his employer.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>About mid-day they reached the abode of Michael Donnelly,
-Esq., as such designated by the local papers, who
-‘was about to submit to public competition his quiet and
-well-bred herd of dairy cattle, his choice stud, his equipages,
-farming implements, teams, carts, harness, etc., with other
-articles too numerous to mention.’ Other articles there were
-none, except he had decided to sell the olive branches.
-Wilfred was shocked at the appearance of the homestead
-of this thriving farmer. The falling fences, the neglected
-orchard, the dilapidated hut, the curiously patched and
-mended stock-yard, partly brush, partly of logs, with here
-and there a gap, secured by a couple of rude tree-forks, with
-a clumsy sapling laid across—all these did not look like the
-surroundings of a man who could give his cheque for several
-thousand pounds. However, the personal appearance of
-Mick himself, an athletic, manly, full-bearded fellow, as also
-that of his family, was decidedly prepossessing. They were
-busily attending to the various classes of stock, with much
-difficulty kept apart for purposes of sale. Whatever else
-these Australian Celts lacked, they had been well nourished
-in youth and infancy. A finer sample of youthful humanity,
-physically considered, Wilfred had never seen. The lack of
-order everywhere visible had in no way reacted upon their
-faculties. All their lives they had known abundant nutriment,
-unrestricted range. Healthful exercise had been theirs,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>congenial labour, and diet unstinted in the great essentials.
-Few other considerations had entered into the family councils.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>And now they were about to migrate, like the world’s
-elder children, to a land promising more room. Then, as
-now, a higher life was possible, where the sheep and the
-oxen, the camels and the asses, would enjoy a wider range.
-The sale over, they would once more resume that journey
-which, commencing soon after the marriage day of Michael
-Donnelly and Bridget Joyce, was not ended yet.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred Effingham was soon confirmed in his opinion that
-he had done well to attend. Many of the neighbouring
-settlers were there, as well as farmers and townspeople from
-Yass, brought together by the mysterious attraction of an
-auction sale. One of the townspeople, asking first if he was
-Mr. Effingham of Warbrok, put into his hand a note which
-ran as follows:—</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>‘<span class='sc'>My dear Wilfred</span>—I thought you were likely to be at
-Donnelly’s sale, so I send you a line by a parishioner of mine.
-I have made inquiries about the stock, and consider that
-you could not do better than buy as many of the cattle as
-you have grass for. They are known to be quiet, having
-been used to dairy tending, and are certain to increase in
-value and number, as you have so much grass at Warbrok.
-Price about two pounds. A few horses would not be superfluous,
-and there are some good ones in Donnelly’s lot, or
-they would hardly have stood his work. Mention my name
-to Mick, and say he is to let you down easy. I have
-had a touch of rheumatism lately—<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>et ego in Arcadia</em></span>—there’s
-no escape from old age and its infirmities in any
-climate, however good, or I’d have looked you up before now.
-Tell your father I’m coming over soon.—Always yours
-sincerely,</p>
-
-<div class='c012'><span class='sc'>Harley Sternworth</span>.’</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>The hour of sale having arrived, and indeed passed, the
-auctioneer, who had driven out from Yass for the purpose,
-commenced his task, which he did by climbing on to the
-‘cap’ of the stock-yard and rapping violently with a hammer-handled
-hunting-crop. A broad-chested, stout-lunged, florid
-personage was Mr. Crackemup, and if selling by auction
-deserved to be ranked as one of the fine arts, he was no mean
-professor.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>‘Ladies and gentlemen!’ he shouted. ‘I say ladies, for I
-notice quite a number of the fair sex have honoured me with
-their presence. Let me mention, in the first place, that the
-owner of this valuable stock we see before us has resolved to
-leave this part of the country. Yes, my friends, to leave
-Gumbaragongara for good and all! Why do I mention this
-fact—why do I dwell upon it? Because, ladies and gentlemen,
-it makes all the difference as to the <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>bona fide</em></span> nature of
-the sale which we are met together to-day to celebrate—that
-is—a—to carry out—according to these written conditions.
-My principal, Mr. Donnelly, with the shrewdness which has
-characterised him through life, seized upon this view of the
-case. “If I leave the country bodily,” he said to me, “and
-sell the stock for what they’ll fetch, no one can say that I
-went away and took the best with me.” No, ladies and
-gentlemen, Mr. Donnelly departs to-morrow for Monaro,
-taking only a dray and team, with a few riding-horses, so
-that all his well-bred, quiet, beautiful herd of dairy cattle,
-selected with great care from some of the best herds in the
-colony [here divers of the audience grinned irreverently], I
-shall have the honour of submitting to public competition
-this day.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The first lot, ladies and gentlemen, is No. 1. Generally
-so, isn’t it? Ha! ha! One hundred and fifty-four cows
-and heifers, all broken to bail; most of them with calves at
-foot, or about to—to—become mothers.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Crackemup was a man of delicate ideas, so he
-euphemised the maternal probabilities.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Any one buying this choice lot, with butter at a shilling,
-and cheese not to be bought, buys a fortune. I will sell a
-“run out” of twenty head, with the option of taking the
-lot. “Fifteen shillings a head”—nonsense; one pound,
-twenty-two and six, twenty-five-thank you, miss; thirty shillings,
-thirty-five, thirty-seven and six-thank you, sir. One
-pound seventeen and sixpence, once; one pound seventeen
-and sixpence, twice; for the third and last time, one pound
-seventeen shillings and sixpence. Gone! What name shall
-I say, sir? “Howard Effingham, Warbrok Chase.” Twenty
-head. Thank you, sir.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At this critical moment the voice of Dick Evans was
-heard by Wilfred, in close proximity to his ear: ‘Collar the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>lot, sir; they’re dirt cheap; soon be in full milk. Don’t let
-’em go.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I believe,’ said Wilfred, raising his voice, ‘that I have the
-option of taking the whole.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Quite correct, sir; but if I might advise——’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I take the lot,’ said Wilfred decisively.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>And though there was a murmur from the crowd, and one
-stalwart dame said, ‘That’s not fair, thin; I med sure I’d get
-a pen of springers myself,’ the auctioneer confirmed his right,
-and the dairy lot became his property.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It turned out, as is often the case, that the first offered
-stock were the most moderate in price. Many of the buyers
-had been holding back, thinking they would go in lots of
-twenty, and that better bargains might be obtained. When
-they found that the stranger had carried off all the best dairy
-cows, their disappointment was great.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Serves you right, boys,’ was heard in the big voice of the
-proprietor; ‘if you had bid up like men, instead of keeping
-dark, you’d have choked the cove off taking the lot. Serves
-you all dashed well right.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The remaining lots of cattle consisted of weaners, two and
-three-year-old steers and heifers. Of fat cattle the herd had
-been pretty well ‘scraped,’ as Donnelly called it, before the
-sale. For most of these the bidding was so brisk and spirited
-that Wilfred thought himself lucky in securing forty steers at
-twenty-five shillings, which completed his drove, and were
-placed in the yard with the cows.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Then came the horses; nearly a hundred all told—mares,
-colts, fillies, yearlings, with aged or other riding-horses.
-These last Donnelly excused himself for selling by the statement
-that if he took them to Monaro half of them would be
-lost trying to get back to where they had been bred, and
-that between stock-riders and cattle-stealers his chance of
-regaining them would be small.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There they are,’ he said; ‘there’s some as good blood
-among them as ever was inside a horse-skin. They’re there
-to be sold.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The spirit of speculation was now aroused in Wilfred, or
-he would not have bought, as he did, half-a-dozen of the
-best mares, picking them by make and shape, and a general
-look of breeding. They were middle-sized animals, more
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>like Arabs than the offspring of English thoroughbreds, but
-with a look of caste and quality, their legs and feet being
-faultless, their heads good, and shoulders fair. They fell to
-a bid of less than ten pounds each, and with foals at foot,
-Wilfred thought they could not be dear.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Them’s the old Gratis lot,’ said Mr. Donnelly. ‘I
-bought ’em from Mr. Busfield when they was fillies. You
-haven’t made a bad pick for a new hand, sir. I wish you
-luck with ’em.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I hope so,’ said Wilfred. ‘If you breed horses at all,
-they may as well be good ones.’ As he turned away he
-caught the query from a bystander—</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Why, you ain’t going to sell old Barragon?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Yes, I am,’ said Mick, who was evidently not a man of
-sentiment; ‘all fences in the country wouldn’t keep him
-away from these parts. He’s in mostly runs near the lake,
-and eats more of that gentleman’s grass than mine. He
-don’t owe me nothin’.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You buy that horse, sir,’ said Dick, who was acting the
-part of a moral Mephistopheles. ‘He’s as old as Mick, very
-near, and as great a dodger after cattle. But you can’t throw
-him down, and the beast don’t live that can get away from
-him on a camp.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred turned and beheld a very old, grey horse cornered
-off, and standing with his ears laid back, listening apparently
-to Mr. Crackemup’s commendations.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Here you have, ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Donnelly’s
-favourite riding-horse Barragon, an animal, he informs me,
-that has done some of the most wonderful feats ever credited
-to a horse in any country—some exploits, indeed, which he
-scarcely likes to tell of. [‘I’ll be bound he don’t,’ drawled
-out a long, brown-faced bystander.] You have heard the
-reasons assigned for disposing of him here, rather than, as of
-course he would prefer to do, still keeping him attached to
-the fortunes of the family. His instinct is so strong, his intelligence
-so great, ladies and gentlemen, that he would
-unerringly find his way back from the farthest point of the
-Monaro district. What shall I say for him?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘May as well have him, sir,’ said his counsellor. ‘He’ll
-go cheap. He’ll always stick to the lake; and if any one else
-gets him, they’ll be wanting us to run him in, half the time.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>Wilfred looked at the horse. The type was one to which
-he had not been accustomed—neither a roadster, a hunter,
-a hackney, nor a harness horse—he was <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>sui generis</em></span>, the
-true Australian stock-horse, now rarely seen, and seldom up
-to the feats and performances of which grizzled veterans of
-the stock-whip love to tell.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>No one with an eye for a horse could look at the war-worn
-screw without interest. A long, low horse, partaking
-more of the Arab type than the English, he possessed the
-shapes which make for endurance, and more than ordinary
-speed. The head was lean and well shaped, with a well-opened,
-still bright eye. The neck was arched, though not
-long; but the shoulder, to a lover of horses, was truly magnificent.
-Muscular, fairly high in the wither, and remarkably
-oblique, it permitted the freest action possible, while
-the rider who sat behind such a formation might enjoy a
-feeling of security far beyond the average. Battered and
-worn, no doubt, were the necessary supports, by cruelly
-protracted performances of headlong speed and wayfaring.
-Yet the flat cannon-bones, the iron hoofs, the tough tendons,
-had withstood the woeful hardships to which they had been
-subjected, with less damage than might have been expected.
-The knees slightly bent forward, the strained ligaments,
-showed partial unsoundness, yet was there no tangible
-‘break down.’ What must such a horse have been in his
-colthood—in his prime?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A sudden feeling of pity arose in Wilfred’s heart as he
-ran his eye critically over the scarred veteran. At a small
-price he would, no doubt, be a good investment, old as he
-was. He would be reasonably useful; and as a matter of
-charity one might do worse alms before Heaven than save
-one of the most gallant of God’s creatures from closing his
-existence in toil and suffering. Mick’s neighbours not
-being more sentimental than himself, Wilfred found himself
-the purchaser of the historical courser at a price considerably
-under five pounds.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘By George! I’m glad you’ve got him, mister,’ said Mr.
-Donnelly, with vicarious generosity. ‘I’m not rich enough
-to pension him, and the money he’s fetched, put into a cow,
-will be something handsome in ten years. But he’s a long
-ways from broke down yet; and you’ll have your money’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>worth out of him, with luck, before he kicks the bucket.
-You’d better ride him home, and I’ll send my boy Jack with
-you as far as Benmohr. He’ll lead Bob Jones’s moke, that
-you rode here, and leave him in Argyll and Hamilton’s
-paddock till he’s sent for. You’d as well get off with your
-mob, if you want to get to Benmohr before dark.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred recognised the soundness of this advice, and in
-a few minutes afterwards found himself upon Barragon.
-While Dick Evans promptly let out the cattle, Jack Donnelly,
-a brown-faced young centaur, riding a half-broken colt, and
-leading his late mount, commanded two eager cattle dogs
-to ‘fetch ’em up.’ The drove went off at a smart pace, and
-in five minutes they were out of sight of the yard, the farm,
-and the crowd, jogging freely along a well-marked track,
-which Dick stated to be the road to Benmohr.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This cheerful pace was, however, not kept up. The
-steers at the ‘head’ of the drove were inclined to go even
-too fast. It was necessary to restrain their ardour. The
-cows and calves became slow, obstinate, and disposed to
-spread, needing all the shouting of Dick and young Donnelly,
-as well as the personal violence of the latter’s dogs, to keep
-them going. Wilfred rejoiced that he had obeyed the
-impulse to possess himself of old Barragon, when he found
-with what ease and comfort he was carried by the trained
-stock-horse in these embarrassing circumstances. Finally
-the weather changed, and it commenced to rain in the face
-of the cortège. Dick once or twice alluded to the uncertainty
-which would exist as to their getting all the cattle
-again if anything occurred to cause their loss this night.
-Lastly, just as matters began to look dark, Wilfred descried
-Benmohr.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The ‘semi-detached’ cottage which did duty as a spare
-bedroom had an earthen floor, and was not an ornate
-apartment; still, a blazing fire gave it an air of comfort after
-the chill evening air. Needful toilet requisites were provided,
-and the manifest cleanliness of the bed and belongings
-guaranteed a sound night’s rest.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Upon entering the cottage, along a raised stone causeway,
-pointed out by Mr. Hamilton, Wilfred found his former
-acquaintance Mr. Argyll, and Mr. Churbett, with a
-neighbour, who was introduced as Mr. Forbes. The table
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>was already laid, and furnished with exceeding neatness for
-the evening meal. A glowing fire burned in the ample stone
-chimney, and as the three gentlemen rose to greet him,
-Wilfred thought he had never seen a more successful union
-of plainness of living, with the fullest measure of comfort.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You have made the port just in time,’ remarked Argyll;
-‘the rain is coming down heavily, and the night is as black
-as a wolf’s throat. You seem to have bought largely at
-Donnelly’s sale.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘All the dairy cows and heifers, and a few steers for
-fattening,’ answered Wilfred. ‘I suppose we might have
-had some trouble in collecting them if they had got away
-from us to-night.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘So much that you might have never seen half of them
-again,’ said Mr. Churbett promptly. ‘You would have been
-hunting for them for weeks, and picked them up “in twos
-and threes and mobs of one,” as I did my Tumut store
-cattle, that broke away the first night I got them home.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred felt in a condition to do ample justice to the
-roast chicken and home-cured ham, and even essayed a
-shaving of the goodly round of beef, which graced one end
-of the table. After concluding with coffee, glorified with
-delicious cream, Wilfred, as they formed a circle round the
-fire, came to the conclusion, either that it was the best
-dinner he had eaten in the whole course of his life, or else
-that he had never been quite so hungry before.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In despite of Mrs. Teviot’s admonitions, none of the party
-sought their couches much before midnight. There was a
-rubber of whist—perhaps two. There was much general
-conversation afterwards, including literary discussion. One
-of the features of the apartment was a well-filled bookcase.
-Finally, when Mr. Hamilton escorted Wilfred to his chamber,
-he said, ‘You needn’t bother about getting up early to-morrow.
-Trust old Dick to have the cattle away at sunrise;
-he and the boy can drive them easily now, till you overtake
-them. We breakfast about nine o’clock, and Fred Churbett
-will keep you company in lying up.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The night was murky and drizzling; the morning would
-probably resemble it. Wilfred was tired. He knew that
-Dick would be up and away with the dawn. He himself
-wished to consult his new friends about points of practice
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>germane to his present position. On the whole he thought
-he could safely take Mr. Hamilton’s advice.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>His slumbers that night, in bed-linen fragrant as Ailie
-Dinmont’s, were deep and dreamless. Surely it could not
-have been morning, it was so dark, and still raining, when
-he heard knocking at a window, and a voice thrice repeat
-the words, ‘Maister Hamilton, are ye awauk?’ but the words
-melted away—a luxurious drowsiness overpowered his senses.
-The rain’s measured fall and tinkling plash changed into the
-mill-wheel dash of his childhood’s wonder in Surrey. When
-he awoke, the sky was dark, but there was the indefinable
-sensation that it was not very early. So he dressed, and
-beholding a large old pair of ‘clodhoppers’ standing temptingly
-near, he bestowed himself in them and cautiously made
-towards the milking-yard. He looked across to the enclosure
-where his cattle had been during the previous night.
-It was a smooth and apparently deep sea of liquid mud, so
-sincerely churned had it been during the wet night. He
-felt grieved for the discomfort of the poor cattle, but relieved
-to know that they had been hours before on the grass, and
-were well on their way to Warbrok Chase.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At the milking-yard he saw a sight which had never
-before met his eyes. The morning’s work had apparently
-been just completed. Argyll was walking towards the dairy,
-a pisé building with thick, earthen walls. He carried two
-immense cans full to the brim with milk. Hamilton was
-wading through the yard behind about sixty cows and calves,
-which were stolidly ploughing through a lake of liquid mud.
-As they quitted the rough stone causeway, they appeared to
-drop with reluctance into a species of slough. An elderly
-Scot, approaching the type of Andrew Cargill, was labouring,
-nearly knee-deep, solemnly after. He and Mr. Hamilton
-were splashed from head to foot; it would have been a
-delicate task to recognise either. The latter, coming to a
-pool of water, deliberately walked in, thus purifying both
-boot and lower leg.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Muddy work, this milking in wet weather,’ said he
-calmly, scraping a piece of caked mud about the size of a
-cheese-plate from the breast of his serge shirt. ‘It would
-need to pay well, for it <em>is</em> exceedingly disagreeable.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Very much so, indeed, I should think,’ assented Wilfred,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>rather shocked. ‘I had no idea that dairy work on a large
-scale could be so unpleasant.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Ours is perhaps more mud-larking than most people’s,’
-said Mr. Hamilton reflectively, ‘chiefly from the richness of
-the soil, so we endure it. But you must look into the cheese-room—the
-bright side of the affair financially.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred was much impressed with the dairy, a substantial,
-thatched edifice, having a verandah on four sides. The
-pisé walls—nearly two feet thick—were of earth, rammed in
-a wooden frame after a certain formula.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Here is the best building on the station,’ said his guide.
-‘We reared this noble pile ourselves, in the days of our
-colonial inexperience, entirely by the directions contained
-in a book, with the aid of old Wullie and our emigrant
-labourers. After we became more “Australian” and “less
-nice” we took to slabs. It was quicker work, but our
-architecture suffered.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In one portion of this building were rows of milk-vessels,
-while ranged on shelves one above another, and occupying
-three sides of the building, were hundreds of fair, round,
-orthodox-looking cheeses, varying in colour from pale yellow
-to orange. They presented an appearance more akin to
-a midland county farm than an Australian cattle-station.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There, you see the compensation for early rising, wet
-feet, and mud-plastering. We have a ready sale for twice
-as many cheeses as Mrs. Teviot can turn out, at a very
-paying price. Her double Stiltons are famed for their
-richness and maturity. We pay a large part of the station
-expenses in this way; besides, what is of more importance,
-improving the cattle, by keeping the herd quiet and promoting
-their aptitude to fatten.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You have no sheep, I think?’ inquired Wilfred.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘No; but we breed horses on rather a large scale. I must
-show you my pet, Camerton, by and by. Now I must
-dress for breakfast, for which I daresay you are quite ready.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>After a reasonable interval the partners appeared neatly
-attired, though still in garments adapted for station work.
-It was an exceedingly cheerful meal, the proverbial Scottish
-breakfast, admitted to be unsurpassable—devilled chicken
-and grilled bones, alternated with the incomparable round of
-beef, which had excited Wilfred’s admiration on the preceding
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>day. Piles of boiled eggs, and <em>such</em> a jug of cream! fresh
-butter, short-cake, and the unfailing oatmeal porridge completed
-the fare, to which Wilfred, after his observations and
-inquiries, felt himself fully qualified to do justice.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, Charles,’ said Mr. Churbett, desisting from a sustained
-attack upon the toast and eggs, ‘how do you feel
-after your day’s work? What an awful number of hours
-you have been up and doing! That’s what makes you so
-frightfully arrogant. It’s the comparison of yourself with
-ordinary mortals like me, for instance, who lie in bed.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You certainly do take it easy, Master Fred,’ returned
-Hamilton, ‘to an extent I cannot hope to imitate. Every
-man to his taste, you know. You have a well-grassed, well-watered,
-open country at The She-oaks; once get your cattle
-there and they are no trouble to look after. Nature has
-done so much that I am afraid—as in South America—man
-does very little.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Shows his sense,’ asserted Mr. Churbett calmly. ‘Don’t
-you be imposed upon, Effingham, by these people here;
-they have a mania for bodily labour, and all sorts of unsuitable
-employment. I didn’t come out to Australia to be a
-navvy or a ploughman; I could have found similar situations
-at home. I go in for the true pastoral life—an Arab steed,
-a tent, cool claret, and a calm supervision of other men’s
-labours.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Did the Sheik Ibrahim drink claret, or go to the theatre,
-leaving his flocks and herds to the Bedaween?’ said Mr.
-Forbes. ‘Some people appear to be able to combine the
-pleasures of all religions with the duties of none.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Smart antithesis, James,’ said Churbett approvingly.
-‘I’ll take another cup of tea, please, to keep. I’m going to
-read Sydney Smith in the verandah after breakfast. Yes,
-I <em>am</em> proud of that theatre exploit. Few people would have
-nerve for it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You would have needed all your nerve if you had found
-a hundred and fifty fat cattle scattered and gone next
-morning,’ said Mr. Forbes, a quietly sarcastic personage.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But they were <em>not</em> gone, my dear fellow; what’s the use
-of absurd suppositions? We got back before daylight. Not
-a beast had left the camp. Now there are a great many
-people who would never have thought of doing that.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>‘I should say not,’ said Hamilton. ‘Fred, your natural
-advantages will be the death of you yet. Come with me,
-Effingham, if you want to see the dam and the old horse.
-They are our show exhibits, and we are rather proud of them.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Walking through the garden to the lower end of the slope
-upon which the homestead of Benmohr was built, Wilfred
-saw that the course of the creek, dignified with the name of
-a river, had been arrested by a wide and solid embankment,
-half-way up the broad breast of which a sheet of deep, clear
-water came, while for a greater distance than the eye could
-reach along its winding course was a far-stretching reservoir,
-lake-like, reed-bordered, and half-covered with wild-fowl.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Here you see our greatest difficulty, Effingham, and our
-greatest triumph. When we took up this run a shallow
-stream ran in winter and spring, but in summer it was
-invariably dry. This exposed us to expense, even loss. So
-we resolved to construct a dam. We did so, at some cost in
-hired labour; a spring flood washed it away. Next year we
-tried again, and the same result followed. Then the neighbours
-pitied and “I told you so’d” us to such an extent that
-we felt that dam <em>must</em> be made and rendered permanent.
-We had six months’ work at it last summer; during most of
-the time I did navvy work, wheeling my barrow up and down
-a plank like the others. It was a stiff job. I invented
-additions, and faced it with stone. That fine sheet of water
-is the result of it; I believe it will stand now till the millennium,
-or the alteration of the land laws.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I quite envy you,’ said Wilfred. ‘A conflict with natural
-forces is always exciting. I am quite of your opinion; the
-great advantage of this Australian life is that a man enjoys
-the permission of society to work with his hands as well as
-his head.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Leaving the water for an isolated wooden building in the
-neighbourhood of the offices, Mr. Hamilton opened the
-upper half of a stable-door and discovered to view a noble,
-dark chestnut thoroughbred in magnificent condition.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Here is one of my daily tasks,’ said he, removing the
-gallant animal’s sheet and patting his neck. ‘In this case
-it is a labour of love, as I am passionately fond of horses,
-and have a theory of my own about breeding which I am
-trying to carry out. Isn’t he a beauty?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>Wilfred, looking at the satin skin of the grand animal
-before him, thought he had rarely seen his equal.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You observe,’ said Hamilton, ‘in this sire, if I mistake
-not, characteristics not often seen in English studs. Camerton
-combines the perfect symmetry, the beauty and matchless
-constitution of the desert Arab with the size and bone of the
-English thoroughbred.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘He does give me that idea, precisely,’ said Wilfred.
-‘Wonderful make and shape. His back rib has the cask-like
-roundness of the true Arab; and what legs and feet!
-Looking at him you see an enlarged Arab.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘His grand-dam was a daughter of The Sheik, an Arab
-of the purest Seglawee strain of the Nejed, imported from
-India many years ago by a cavalry officer, whose charger he
-was. He has besides the Whisker, Gratis, and Emigrant
-blood. In him we have at once the horse of the new and
-of the old world—the size and strength of the Camerton
-type, the symmetry of the Arab, and such legs and feet as
-might have served Abdjar, the steed of Antar.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When they re-entered the cottage they saw Mr. Churbett,
-who had intended to go home that morning, but finding the
-witty Canon such pleasant reading, thought he would start
-in the afternoon, finally making up his mind to stay another
-day and leave punctually after breakfast. There was nothing
-to do—he observed—and no one to talk to, when he did get
-home, so there was the less reason for haste.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You had better stay, Fred, and go with me to Yass,’
-suggested Argyll. ‘I am going there next week, and I daresay
-you have some business there.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I believe I have; indeed, I know that I have been putting
-off something old Billy Rockley blew me up about last month,
-and I’ll go in with you and get it over. But I won’t stay
-now. I’ll go to-morrow, or my stock-rider will think I’m
-lost and take to embezzling my bullocks, instead of stealing
-my neighbour’s calves, which is his duty to do. One must
-keep up discipline.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>After lunch Wilfred mounted his ancient charger and
-departed along the track to Warbrok, Mr. Churbett volunteering
-to show him the way past divers snares for the unwary,
-yclept ‘turn-off’ roads.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘These two fellows,’ said he, ‘have no end of what they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>call duties to perform before nightfall, and can’t be spared
-of course; but I can spare myself easily, and give Duellist
-exercise besides.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Presently Mr. Churbett, who was a very neat figure,
-having assumed breeches and boots, appeared mounted
-upon a magnificent bay horse, the finest hackney, in appearance,
-which Wilfred had yet seen. A bright bay with black
-points, showing no white but a star in the centre of his
-broad forehead; he stood at least fifteen hands three inches
-in height, with all the appearance of high caste and courage.
-As they started he showed signs of impatience, and then,
-arching his neck, set off at a remarkably fast walk, which
-caused Barragon’s stock-horse jog to appear slow and ungraceful.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What a glorious hackney!’ said Wilfred, half enviously.
-‘Did you breed him?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘No, don’t breed horses; too much expense and bother.
-Fools breed—that is, enthusiasts—and wise men buy. He’s
-a Wanderer, bred by Rowan of Pechelbah. Got him rather
-cheap about six months ago; gave five-and-twenty pounds
-for him. The man that <em>did</em> breed him, of course, couldn’t
-afford to ride him; thought he had others as good at home,
-which I take leave to doubt.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I should think so! What a price for a horse of his
-figure—five years old, you say, and clean thoroughbred. A
-gift! Is he fast?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Pretty well. I shall run him for the Maiden Plate at
-Yass Races. And now, do you see that turn-off road? Well,
-don’t turn off; by and by you will come to another; follow
-it, and you will have no further chance of losing your way.
-I’ll say good-afternoon.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>His amusing friend turned, and as Duellist’s hoofs died
-away in the distance, Wilfred took the old horse by the
-head and sent him along at a hand-gallop, only halting
-occasionally until, just as the dusk was impending, the
-far-gleaming waters of the lake came into view. Dick had
-arrived hours before, and had all his charge secured in the
-now creditable stock-yard. The absentee was welcomed with
-enthusiasm by the whole family, who appeared to think he
-had been away for months, to judge by the warmth of their
-greetings.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER VII <br /> TOM GLENDINNING, STOCK-RIDER</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>‘Come in at once, this moment, and tell us all about everybody,’
-said Annabel; ‘tea is nearly ready, and we are
-hungry for news, and even just a little gossip. Have you enjoyed
-yourself and seen many new people? What a fine
-thing it is to be a man!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I have seen all the world, like the little bird that flew
-over the garden wall. I have enjoyed myself very much,
-have bought a few horses and many cattle, also spent a
-very pleasant evening at Benmohr. Where shall I begin?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, about the people of course; you can come to the
-other things later on. People are the only topics of interest
-to us. And oh, what do you think? We have seen
-strangers too. More wonderful still, a lady. What will you
-give me if I describe her to you?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Don’t feel interested in a sketch of a lady visitor,’ said
-Wilfred. ‘A description of a good cheese-press, if you
-could find one, would be nearer the mark.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You would not speak in that way if you had seen Mrs.
-Snowden,’ said Rosamond, ‘unless you are very much
-changed.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘She is a wonder, and a paragon, of course; did she
-grow indigenously?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘She’s so sweet-looking,’ said Annabel impetuously; ‘she
-rode such a nice horse too, very well turned out, as you
-would say. She talks French and German; she has
-travelled, and been everywhere. And yet they have only a
-small station, and she sometimes has to do housework—there
-now!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>‘What a wonderful personage! And monsieur—is he
-worthy of so much perfection?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘He’s a gentlemanlike man, rather good-looking, who made
-himself agreeable. Rosamond has been asked to go and stay
-with them. Really, the place seems <em>full</em> of nice people. Did
-you see or hear of any more?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Yes; now I come to think of it, I heard of two more,
-great friends of Argyll and Hamilton and of Mr. Churbett,
-whom I saw there. Their names are D’Oyley; Bryson, the
-younger brother, is a poet; at any rate these are some of his
-verses which Mr. Churbett handed to me <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>apropos</em></span> of our lives
-here, shutting out all thoughts but the austerely practical.
-Yes; I haven’t lost them.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘So you talk of cheese-presses and bring home poetry! Is
-that your idea of the practical? I vote that Rosamond reads
-them out while we are having tea. Gracious! Ever so many
-verses.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘They seem original; and not so many of one’s neighbours
-could write them in any part of the world,’ said Rosamond.
-‘I will read them out, if Annabel will promise not to interrupt
-in the midst of the most pathetic part.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I am all attention,’ said Annabel, throwing herself into an
-easy-chair. ‘I wonder what sort of a man Mr. D’Oyley is,
-and what coloured eyes he has. I like to know all about
-authors.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Never saw him; go on, Rosamond,’ said Wilfred, and the
-elder sister, thus adjured, commenced—</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>A FRAGMENT</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>Deem we our waking dreams</div>
- <div class='line in2'>But shadows from the deep;</div>
- <div class='line'>And do the offspring of the mind</div>
- <div class='line in2'>In barrenness descend</div>
- <div class='line in2'>To an eternal sleep?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>Each print of Beauty’s feet</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Leads upward to her throne;</div>
- <div class='line'>For every thought by conscience bless’d,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Benignant virtue yields</div>
- <div class='line in2'>A jewel from her zone.</div>
- <div class='line'>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- <div class='line in2'><span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>The rainbow hath its cloud,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>The seasons gird the sphere,</div>
- <div class='line'>We know their time and place, but thou,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Whence art thou, Child of Light,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And what thy mission here?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>Like meteor stars that stream</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Adown the dark obscure,</div>
- <div class='line'>Didst thou descend from angel homes,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>To bless with angel joys</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Abodes less bright and pure?</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>Thy beauty and thy love</div>
- <div class='line in2'>May mortal transports share,</div>
- <div class='line'>Aspire with quivering wings to reach</div>
- <div class='line in2'>The spirits of thy thought</div>
- <div class='line in2'>That breathe celestial air.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>Thou art no child of Earth.</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Earth’s fairest children weep</div>
- <div class='line'>That o’er affection’s sweetest lyre,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>By phantom minstrels stirred,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Unhallowed strains will sweep.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>While zephyr-wings may guard,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>The rose its bloom retains;</div>
- <div class='line'>The autumn blast o’er sere leaves wails;</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Upon the naked stem</div>
- <div class='line in2'>The thorn alone remains.</div>
- <div class='line'>*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
- <div class='line in2'>The sun-rays scattered far</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Seek now the parent breast,</div>
- <div class='line'>In gentler glory gathering o’er</div>
- <div class='line in2'>The floating isles that speck</div>
- <div class='line in2'>The landscape of the West.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>Mute visitants! their smiles</div>
- <div class='line in2'>A fleeting welcome bear,</div>
- <div class='line'>Light on thy form the glad beams play,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And mingling with its folds</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Curl down thy golden hair.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>Methinks, as standing thus</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Against the glowing sky,</div>
- <div class='line'>That shadowy form, faint-tinged with gold,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And raptured face, recall</div>
- <div class='line in2'>A dream of days gone by.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'><span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>Glimpses of shadows past,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>That boyhood’s mind pursued,</div>
- <div class='line'>In curious wonder shaping forth</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Its visions of the pure,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>The beautiful, the good.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>Till, like the moon’s full orb</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Above the silent sea,</div>
- <div class='line'>One Form expanding bright arose,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And fancy’s mirror showed</div>
- <div class='line in2'>An image like to thee.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in2'>Of headlong hopes that spurned</div>
- <div class='line in2'>The curb of destiny,</div>
- <div class='line'>When my soul asked what most it craved,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Still, still, the mirror showed</div>
- <div class='line in2'>An image like to thee.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I think they are beautiful and uncommon,’ said Annabel
-decidedly; ‘only I don’t understand what he means.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Obscurity is a quality he has in common with distinguished
-latter-day poets,’ said Wilfred. ‘Commencing with the ideal,
-he has finished with the real and personal, as happens much
-in life. I think “A Fragment” is refined, thoughtful, and
-truly poetic in feeling.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘So do I,’ agreed Rosamond. ‘Mr. Bryson D’Oyley is no
-every-day squatter, I was going to say, but as all our neighbours
-seem to be distinguished people, we must agree that he is fully
-up to the average of cattlemen, as they call themselves.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I <em>must</em> tell Mrs. Snowden about the cheese-press simile.
-You will be ready to commit suicide after you have seen her.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Then I must keep out of her way. Rosamond, suppose
-you sing something. I have not heard a piano since I left.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Mrs. Snowden tried it, and sang <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">“Je n’aimerai, jamais.”</span>
-Her voice was not wonderful, but it is easy to see what
-thorough training she has had.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There is a forfeit for any one who mentions Mrs. Snowden
-again this evening,’ said Mrs. Effingham. ‘We must not
-have her spread out over our daily life, fascinating as I grant
-her to be. Beatrice and Annabel have been learning a new
-duet, which they will sing after Rosamond. I think you will
-like it, and this is such a charming room to sing in.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘That’s one advantage belonging to this old house,’ said
-Rosamond, ‘our music-room is perfect. It is quite a pleasure
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>to hear one’s voice in it; and when we <em>do</em> furnish the dining-room,
-if we are ever inclined to give a party—a most unlikely
-thing at present—it is large enough to hold all the people in
-the district.’</p>
-
-<hr class='c013' />
-
-<p class='c001'>During the following week the men of the family occupied
-themselves in branding and regulating the new cattle. A
-portion of these, having young calves at foot, were at once
-amalgamated with the dairy herd. This being accomplished,
-it was apparent that some division must be made between the
-old and the new cattle. There were too many of them to be
-mixed up in one herd, and the steers, in close quarters, were
-not good for the health of the cows and smaller cattle. From
-all this it resulted that the oracle (otherwise Dick), being
-consulted, made response that a stock-rider must be procured
-who would look after all the cattle, other than the milch kine,
-and ‘break them into the Run.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred was inclined to be opposed to this project, but
-reflected that if any were lost, it would soon amount to
-more than a man’s wages; also, that the labour of the dairy,
-with the rapid increase of the O’Desmond cattle, was
-becoming heavier, and required all Guy’s and Andrew’s
-attention to keep it in order.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘For what time would a stock-rider be required?’ he
-asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Why, you see, sir,’ said Dick, ‘these here cattle, if
-they’re not watched for the next three months, may give us
-the slip, and be back among the ranges, at Mick’s place,
-where they was bred, afore you could say Jack Robinson.
-You and I couldn’t leave the dairy, and the calves coming so
-fast, if we was never to see ’em again.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I understand,’ said Wilfred; ‘but how are we to pick
-up a stock-rider such as you describe? I suppose we shall
-have to pay him forty or fifty pounds a year.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I don’t know as we should, sir. There’s a man, if we
-could get hold on him, as would jest do for the work and
-the place. I heard of him being in Yass last week, finishing
-his cheque, and if you’ll let me away to-morrow, I’ll fetch
-him back with me next day, most likely. He’ll come
-reasonable for wages; he used to live here, in the old
-Colonel’s time, and knows every inch of the country.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>‘Very well, Dick, you can go. I daresay we can manage
-the dairy for a day.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On the next morning, after milking-time, Mr. Richard
-Evans presented himself in review order, when, holding his
-mare by the bridle, he asked for the advance of two pounds
-sterling, for expenses, and so on.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You see, I want a pair of boots, Mr. Wilfred, and I may
-as well get ’em in Yass while I’m about it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, certainly,’ assented Wilfred, thinking that he never
-saw the veteran look more respectable. ‘The air of
-Warbrok agrees with you, Dick; I never saw you look
-better.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Work allers did agree with me, sir,’ he answered modestly,
-unhitching his bridle with a slight appearance of haste, as
-Mrs. Evans came labouring up and glanced suspiciously
-at the notes which he placed in his pocket.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I hope he’ll look as well when he comes back,’ said she,
-with a meaning glance; ‘but if he and that old rascal Tom
-gets together, they’ll ——’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Never you mind, old woman,’ interrupted Dick, riding
-off, ‘you look after them young pigs and give ’em the skim
-milk reg’lar. Tom Glendinning and I’ll be here to-morrow
-night, if I can find him.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mrs. Evans raised her hand in what might be accepted
-as a warning or a threatening gesture, and Wilfred, wondering
-at the old woman’s manner, betook himself to his daily
-duties.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘A grumbling old creature,’ he soliloquised. ‘I don’t
-wonder that Dick is glad to get away from her tongue.
-She ought to be pleased that he should have a holiday
-occasionally.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On the morning following Richard Evans’s departure,
-extra exertion was entailed upon Wilfred and Guy, as also
-upon Andrew Cargill, by reason of their having to divide
-the milking of his proportion of the cows among them. As
-Dick was a rapid and exhaustive operator, his absence was
-felt, if not regretted. As they returned from the troublesome
-task, a full hour later than usual, Wilfred consoled
-himself by the thought that the next day would find this
-indispensable personage at his post.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I wadna hae thocht,’ confessed Andrew, ‘that the auld,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>rough-tongued carle’s absence could hae made siccan a
-camstairy. But he’s awfu’ skeely wi’ thae wild mountain
-queys, and kens brawly hoo tae daiker them. It’s no said
-for naught that the children o’ the warld are wiser in their
-generation than the children o’ licht. He’ll be surely back
-the morn’s morn.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Explaining Dick’s eminence in the milking-yard by this
-classification, and undoubtedly including himself in the
-latter category, Andrew betook himself to an outer apartment,
-where the scrupulous Jeanie had provided full means
-of ablution.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The next day passed without the appearance of the confidential
-retainer. Another, and yet another. In default
-of his aid, Wilfred exerted himself to the utmost and succeeded
-in getting through the ordinary work; yet a sense
-of incompleteness pervaded the establishment. Ready-witted,
-tireless, and perfect in all the minor attainments of
-Australian country life, Dick was a man to be missed in a
-hundred ways in an establishment like Warbrok Chase.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>New cows had calved and required milking for the first
-time. One of them had shown unexpected ferocity; indeed,
-knocking over Andrew, and disabling his right arm.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The old fellow may have had an accident,’ suggested
-Mr. Effingham; ‘I suppose such things occur on these
-wild roads; or he <em>may</em> have indulged in an extra glass or
-two.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I said as much to that old wife of his,’ said Wilfred,
-‘but she grumbled something about the devil taking care of
-his own; he would be back when he had had his “burst”—whatever
-that means—and that he and that old villain
-Tom Glendinning would turn up at the end of this week or
-next, whenever their money was done.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Why, if there isn’t old Dick coming along the road now,’
-said Guy; ‘that’s his mare, anyhow, I know the switch of her
-tail. There’s a man on a grey horse with him.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In truth, as the two horsemen came nearer along the
-undulating forest road, it became apparent that their regretted
-Richard, and no other, was returning to his family
-and friends. His upright seat in the saddle could be
-plainly distinguished as he approached on the old bay mare.
-The London dealer’s phrase of a ‘good ride and drive
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>horse’ held good in her case, as she came along at her
-usual pace of a quick-stepping walk, with her head down
-and her hind legs brought well under her at every stride.
-The other horseman rode behind, not caring apparently to
-quicken the unmistakable ‘stockman’s jog’ of his wiry, high-boned
-grey horse. His lounging seat was in strong contrast
-to his companion’s erect bearing, but it told of the stock-rider’s
-long days and nights passed in the saddle. Not
-unlike the courser of Mazeppa was his hardy steed in more
-than one respect.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Shaggy and swift and strong of limb,</div>
- <div class='line'>All Tartar-like he carried him.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Arab blood, which old Tom’s charger displayed, prevented
-any particular shagginess; but in the bright eye, the
-lean head, the sure unfaltering step, as well as in the power
-of withstanding every kind of climate, upon occasion, upon
-severely restricted sustenance, ‘Boney’ might have vied with
-the Hetman’s, or any other courser that</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in9'>... grazed at ease</div>
- <div class='line'>Beside the swift Borysthenes.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>Such in appearance, and so mounted, were the horsemen
-who now approached. Their mode of accost was characteristic.
-Dick rode up straight till within a few paces of his
-employer, when he briskly dismounted, and stood erect,
-making the ordinary salute.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The effects of the week’s dissipation were plainly visible
-in the veteran’s countenance, gallant as were his efforts to
-combine intrepidity with the respectful demeanour of discipline.
-A bruise under one eye, with other discolorations,
-somewhat marred the effect of his steady gaze, while a
-tremulous muscular motion could not be concealed.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘How is this, Evans?’ said his commander; ‘you have
-broken your leave, and put us to much inconvenience;
-what have you been doing with yourself all this time?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Got drunk, Captain!’ replied the veteran, with military
-brevity, and another salute of regulation correctness.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I am sorry to hear it, Richard,’ said Mr. Effingham.
-‘You appear to have had a skirmish also, and to have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>suffered in engagement. I daresay it will act as a caution
-to you for the future.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Did me a deal of good—begging your honour’s pardon—though
-I didn’t ought to have promised to come back next
-day. I was that narvous at breakfast afore I went that I
-couldn’t scarce abear to hear the old woman’s voice. I’ll be
-as right as a Cheshire recruit till Christmas now. But I’ve
-done the outpost duty I was told off for, and brought Tom
-Glendinning. He’s willin’ to engage for ten shillin’ a week
-and his keep, and his milkin’s worth that any day.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The individual addressed moved up his elderly steed,
-and touching his hat with a faint flavour of the gentleman’s
-servant habitude long past, fixed upon the group the
-gleaming eyes which surmounted his hollow cheek. The
-face itself was bronzed, well-nigh blackened out of all resemblance
-to that of a white man. Trousers of a kind of
-fustian, buttressed with leather under the knees and other
-places (apparently for resisting the friction involved by a life
-in the saddle), protected his attenuated limbs. The frame
-of the man was lean and shrunken. He had a worn and
-haggard look, as if labour, privation, and the indulgence of
-evil passions had wrecked the frail tenement of a soul. Yet
-was there a wiry look about the figure—a dauntless glitter
-in the keen eyes which told that their possessor could yet
-play a man’s part on earth before he went to his allotted
-place. A footsore dog with a rough coat and no particular
-tail had by this time limped up to the party and lay down
-under the horses’ feet.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Are you willing to engage with me on the terms mentioned
-by Richard Evans?’ asked Mr. Effingham. ‘You are
-acquainted with this place, I believe?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I was here,’ answered the ancient stock-rider, ‘when the
-Colonel first got a grant of Warbrok from the Crown. A lot
-of us Government men was sent up with the overseer, Ben
-Grindham, to clear a paddock for corn, where all that horehound
-grows now. We had a row over the rations—he
-drove us like niggers, and starved us to boot (more by
-token, it’s little we had to ate)—and big Jim Baker knocked
-his head in with an axe, blast him! He was always a fool.
-I seen him carried to the old hut where you see them big
-stones—part of the chimney, they wor.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>‘Good heavens!’ said Wilfred. ‘And what was done?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Jim was hanged, all reg’lar, as soon as they could get
-him back to Sydney. We was all “turned in to Government,”’
-said the chronicler. ‘After a bit, the Colonel got me back for
-groom, so I stayed here till my time was out. I know the
-old place (I had ought to), every rod of it, back to the big
-Bindarra.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You can milk well, I believe?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘He can do most things, sir,’ said Dick, comprehensively
-guaranteeing his friend, and mounting his mare, he motioned
-to the old fellow, who had just commenced to emit a derisive
-chuckle from his toothless gums, to follow him. ‘If you’ll
-s’cuse us now, sir, we’ll go home and get freshened up a
-bit. Tom won’t be right till he’s had a sleep. He’s
-hardly had his boots off for a week. You’ll see us at the
-yard in the morning all right, sir, never fear.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, I’m glad you’ve come back, Dick,’ said Guy;
-‘we’ve missed you awfully. The heifers are too much for
-Andrew. However, it’s all right now, so the sooner you get
-home and make yourself comfortable the better.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This suggestion, as the ancient prodigals ambled away
-together, caused old Dick to grin doubtfully. ‘I’ve got to
-have it out with my old woman yet, sir.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Whatever might have occurred in the progress of a difficult
-explanation with Mrs. Evans, the result was so far
-satisfactory that on the following morning, when Wilfred
-went down to the milking-yard, he found the pair in full
-possession of the situation, while the number of calves in
-companionship with their mothers, as well as the state of
-the brimming milk-cans, testified to the early hour at which
-work had commenced.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Dick had regained his easy supremacy, as with a mixture
-of fearlessness and diplomacy he exercised a Rarey-like influence
-over the wilder cows, lately introduced to the milking-yard.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>His companion, evidently free of the guild, was causing
-the milk to come streaming out of the udder of a newly
-calved heifer, as if by the mere touch of his fingers, the
-bottom of his bucket rattling the while like a small-sized
-hailstorm.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Greeting the old man cheerfully, and making him a compliment
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>on his milking, Wilfred was surprised at the alteration
-in his appearance and manner.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The half-reckless, defiant tone was replaced by a quiet
-bearing and respectful manner. The expression of the
-face was changed. The eyes, keen and restless, had lost
-their savage gleam. An alert step, a ready discharge of
-every duty, with the smallest details of which he seemed
-instinctively acquainted, had succeeded the lounging bearing
-of the preceding day. Wilfred thought he had never seen a
-man so markedly changed in so short a time.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You both seem improved, Dick. I suppose the morning
-air has had something to do with it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Yes, sir—thank God,’ said he, ‘I’m always that fresh after a
-good night’s sleep, when I’ve had a bit of a spree, that I could
-begin again quite flippant. Old Tom had a goodish cheque
-this time, and was at it a week afore I came in. <em>He looked</em>
-rather shickerry. But he’s as right as a toucher now, and
-you won’t lose no calves while <em>he’s</em> here, I’ll go bail. He
-can stay in my hut. My old woman and he knowed one
-another years back, and she’ll cook and wash for him, though
-they do growl a bit at times.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It soon became apparent, making due deductions for
-periodical aberrations, that Mr. Effingham possessed in Dick
-Evans and Tom Glendinning two rarely efficient servitors.
-They knew everything, they did everything; they never
-required to be reminded of any duty whatsoever, being apparently
-eager to discover matters for the advantage of the
-establishment, in which they appeared to take an interest not
-inferior to that of the proprietor. Indeed, they not infrequently
-volunteered additional services for their employer’s
-benefit.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The season had now advanced, until the fervid height of
-midsummer was near, and still no hint of aught but continuous
-prosperity was given to the emigrant family.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Though the sun flamed high in the unspecked firmament,
-yet from time to time showers of tropical suddenness kept
-the earth cool and moist, refreshing the herbage, and causing
-the late-growing maize to flourish greenly, in the dark
-unexhausted soil. Their wheat crop had been reaped with
-but little assistance from any but the members and retainers
-of the family. And now a respectable stack occupied
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>jointly, with one of oaten hay, the modest stack-yard, or
-haggard, as old Tom called it.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The cheese operations developed, until row upon row of
-rich orange-coloured cheeses filled the shelves of the dairy.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The garden bore token of Andrew’s industry in the
-pruned and renovated fruit trees, which threw out fresh
-leaves and branches; while the moist open season had been
-favourable to the ‘setting’ of a much more than ordinary
-yield of fruit. The crops of vegetables, of potatoes, of other
-more southern esculents looked, to use Andrew’s phrase,
-‘just unco-omon.’ Such vegetables, Dick confessed, had not
-been seen in it since the days of the Colonel, who kept two
-gardeners and a spare boy or two constantly at work.
-Gooseberries, currants, and the English fruits generally, were
-coming on, leading to the belief that an extensive jam manufacture
-would once more employ Jeanie and the well-remembered
-copper stew-pan—brought all the way from
-Surrey.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The verandah was once more a ‘thing of beauty’ in its
-shade of ‘green gloom.’ The now protected climbers had
-glorified the wreathed pillars; again gay with the purple
-racemes of the Wistaria and the deep orange flowers of the
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>Bignonia venusta</em></span>. The lawn was thickly carpeted with
-grass; the gravelled paths were raked and levelled by
-Andrew, whenever he could gain an hour’s respite from
-dairy and cheese-room.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The increase of the cattle had been of itself considerable,
-while the steers of the Donnelly contingents fattened on the
-newly matured grasses, which now commenced to send forth
-that sweetest of all summer perfumes, the odour of the new-mown
-meadows.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The small but gay parterres, which the girls and Mrs.
-Effingham kept, with some difficulty, free from weeds, were
-lovely to the eye as contrasted with the bright green sward
-of the lawn.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The wildfowl dived and flew upon the lake, furnishing
-forth for a while—as in obedience to Mr. Effingham’s wishes
-a close season was kept—unwonted supplies to the larder.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>All the minor living possessions of the family appeared to
-bask and revel in the sunshine of the general prosperity.
-The greyhounds, comfortably housed and well fed, had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>reared a family, and were commencing to master the science
-of killing kangaroos without exposing themselves to danger.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Jersey cow, Daisy, had produced a miniature copy of
-herself, in a fawn-coloured heifer calf, while her son, ‘The
-Yerl of Jersey,’ as Andrew had christened him, had become
-a thick-set, pugnacious, important personage, pawing the
-earth, and bellowing unnecessarily, as if sensible of the
-exalted position he was destined to take, as a pure bred
-Jersey bull, under two years of age, at the forthcoming Yass
-Agricultural Show.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As the days grew longer, and the daily tasks of labour
-became less exciting in the neighbourhood, as well as at
-Warbrok Chase, much occasional visiting sprang up. The
-stable was once more capable of modest entertainment, though
-far from emulating the hospitalities of the past, when, in the
-four-in-hand drag of the reigning regiment, the fashionables
-of the day thought worth while to rattle over the unmade
-roads for the pleasure of a week’s shooting on the lake by
-day, with the alternative of the Colonel’s peerless claret by
-night. Andrew’s boy, Duncan, a solemn lad of fourteen,
-whom his occasionally impatient sire used to scold roundly,
-was encouraged to be in attendance to receive the stranger
-cavalry.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>For one afternoon, Fred Churbett’s Grey Surrey, illustrious
-as having won the Ladies’ Bag two years running at the
-Yass Races, and, as such, equal in provincial turf society to a
-Leger winner, would canter daintily up to the garden gate,
-followed perhaps at no great interval by Charlie Hamilton’s
-chestnut, Red Deer, in training for the Yass Maiden Plate,
-and O’Desmond’s Wellesley, to ensure whose absolute safety
-he brought his groom. On the top of all this Captain
-and Mrs. Snowden would arrive, until the dining-room, half
-filled with the fashion of the district, did not look too large
-after all.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>By degrees, rising to the exigencies of his position,
-Wilfred managed to get hold of a couple of ladies’ horses,
-by which sensible arrangement at least three of the family
-were able to enjoy a ride together, also to return Mrs.
-Snowden’s call, and edify themselves with the conversation
-of that amusing woman of the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>And the more Mr. Effingham and his sons saw of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>men composing the little society which shared with them
-the very considerable district in which they resided, the
-more they had reason to like and respect them.</p>
-
-<hr class='c013' />
-
-<p class='c001'>The blessed Christmastide was approaching. How
-different was it in appearance from the well-remembered
-season in their own beloved home! A thousand reminiscences
-came rushing across the fields of memory, as the
-Effinghams thought of the snow-clad hedges, the loaded
-roofs, the magical stillness of the frost-arrested air. Nor
-were all the features of the season attractive. Heavy wraps,
-closed doors, through which, in spite of heaped-up fires,
-keen draught and invisible chills would intrude; the long
-evenings, the dark afternoons, the protracted nights, which
-needed all the frolic spirits of youth, the affection of home
-life, and the traditional revelry of the season to render
-endurable.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>How different were all things in this strange, far land!</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Such soft airs, such fresh, unclouded morns, such far-reaching
-views across the purple mountains, such breeze-tossed
-masses of forest greenery, such long, unclouded days
-were theirs, in this the first midsummer of what Annabel
-chose to call ‘Australia Felix.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I should have just the same feeling,’ she said, ‘if I lived
-in the desert under favourable circumstances. Not the
-horrid sandy, simoomy part of it, of course. But some of
-those lovely green spots, where there is a grey walled-in
-town, an old, old well, thousands of years old, and such
-lovely horses standing at the doors of the tents. Why can’t
-we have our horses broken in to stand like that, instead
-of having to send Duncan for them, who takes hours? And
-then we could ride out by moonlight and <em>feel</em> the grand
-silence of the desert; and at sunset the grey old chiefs and
-the maidens and the camels and the dear little children
-would come to the village well, like Rebekah or Rachel—which
-was it? I shall go to Palestine some day, and be a
-Princess, like Lady Hester Stanhope. This is only the first
-stage.’</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER VIII <br /> MR. WILLIAM ROCKLEY OF YASS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>Upon his next visit to The Chase, which took place shortly
-after this conversation, the Reverend Harley Sternworth was
-accompanied by a pleasant-looking, alert, middle-aged personage,
-who, descending from the dog-cart with alacrity, was
-introduced as Mr. William Rockley of Yass.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Bless my soul!’ said this gentleman, looking eagerly
-around, ‘what a fine property! Never saw it look so well
-before. I’m delighted to find it has got into such good
-hands; neglected in Colonel Warleigh’s time, even worse
-since by rascally tenants. Nearly bought it myself, but
-couldn’t spare the money. Splendid investment; finest land
-in the whole district, finest water, finest grass. I ought to
-know.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It is most gratifying to hear a gentleman of your experience
-speak so highly of Warbrok,’ said Mr. Effingham.
-‘Our good friend here has been the making of our fortunes.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Just like him! just like him!’ said the new-comer,
-lighting a cigar and puffing out smoke and sentences with
-equal impetuosity. ‘Always attending to other people’s
-business; might have made his own fortune, two or three
-times over, if he’d taken my advice.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I know some one else who is tarred with the same brush,’
-returned the parson. ‘Who bought in young Harding’s
-place the other day, when his mortgagee sold him up, and
-re-sold it to him on the most Utopian terms? But shouldn’t
-you like to walk round while you smoke your cigar this
-morning? We can pay our respects to the ladies afterwards.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Just the very thing. Many a time I’ve been here in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>old days. What a change! What a change! Bless my
-soul, how well the garden looks; never expected to see it
-bloom again! And the old house!—one would almost think
-Mrs. Warleigh was alive.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The best of wives and mothers,’ said Mr. Sternworth
-with feeling. ‘What a true lady and good Christian she
-was! If she had lived, there would have been a different
-household.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Daresay, daresay,’ said Mr. Rockley meditatively. ‘Precious
-rascals, the sons; hadn’t much of a chance, perhaps.
-Wild lot here in those days, eh? So I see you have had
-that mound moved from the back of the cellar.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We couldn’t think what it was,’ said Mr. Effingham.
-‘The excavation must have been made long ago.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Not heard the story, then? Wonderful how some secrets
-are kept. Never mind, Sternworth, I won’t tell Captain
-Effingham the <em>other</em> one. Randal Warleigh, the eldest son,
-was one of the wildest devils that even <em>this</em> country ever saw.
-Clever, handsome, but dissipated; reckless, unprincipled, in
-fact. Old man and he constantly quarrelling. Not that the
-Colonel was all that a father should have been, but he drank
-like a gentleman. Never touched anything before dinner.
-He finished his bottle of port then, and sometimes another,
-but no morning spirit-drinking. Would as soon have smoked
-a black pipe or worn a beard. It came to this at last, that
-when he went away he locked up sideboard and cellar, forbidding
-the housekeeper to give his sons any liquor.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The Colonel left home for a week in Yass, when Randal
-arrived with some cattle and two fellow-roysterers. No grog
-available. Naturally savage. Swore he would burn the old
-rookery down before he would submit to be treated so.
-Behaved like a madman. Ordered up his men, got picks
-and shovels, dug a tunnel under the cellar wall, and helped
-himself, <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>ad libitum</em></span>, to wine and spirits.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The governor’s a soldier,’ he said; ‘I’ve given him a
-lesson in civil engineering. Here’s his health, boys!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What an outrage!’ said Mr. Effingham.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You would have said so if you had seen Warbrok when
-the old gentleman returned. Every soul on the place—all
-convict servants in those days—had been drunk for a week.
-Cellar half-emptied, house in confusion. Randal and his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>friends had betaken themselves, luckily, the day before, to
-the Snowy River, or there might have been murder done.
-As it was——’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I think we may spare our friend any more chronicles of
-the good old times, Rockley; let us go down and see the
-dairy cows, those that Harry O’Desmond sold him.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘All right!’ said his friend good-humouredly, accepting
-the change of subject. ‘I daresay Harry O’ had his price,
-but they <em>are</em> the best cattle in the country.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Rockley was equally hearty and complimentary as to
-the live stock. Didn’t think he had ever seen finer cows,
-finer grass; he believed Mr. Effingham, if he went on as he
-was doing, would make a fortune by dairying. If old Colonel
-Warleigh had not been ignorant of rural matters, and his
-elder sons infernal low-lived scoundrels, a fortune would have
-been made before at Warbrok. Nothing could have prevented
-that family from becoming rich, with this estate for
-a home farm, and two splendid stations on Monaro, but
-the grossest mismanagement, incompetence, and vicious
-tendencies—he might say depravity—of course, he meant
-on the part of the young men. The Colonel was indiscreet—in
-fact, a d——d old fool—but everybody respected him.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The three gentlemen completed the round of the establishment,
-during which progress their mutual friend had
-praised the stock-yard, the wheat stack, the lake, the garden,
-and had pretty well exhausted his cigar-case. It was high
-noon in Warbrok, and the shelter of the broad verandah,
-which he eulogised by declaring it to be the finest verandah
-he had ever been under in his life, was distinctly grateful.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Upon his introduction to Mrs. Effingham and the young
-ladies, he was afflicted with an inability to express adequately
-his respectful admiration of the whole party. Everything
-elicited a cordial panegyric. It was apparent, even without
-the aid of a few guarded observations from Harley Sternworth,
-that Mr. Rockley’s compliments arose from no weak
-intention of flattery, no foolish fondness or indiscriminate
-praise. It was simply the outpouring of a spring of benevolence
-which brimmed over in an important organ, which,
-for greater convenience in localising the emotions, is known
-as the heart. Longing to do good to all mankind, with
-perceptions of rare insight and keenness, much of Mr.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>Rockley’s philanthropy was necessarily confined to words.
-But when the opportunity arrived of translating good wishes
-into good deeds, few—very few—of the sons of men embarked
-in that difficult negotiation with half the pleasure, patience,
-and thoroughness of William Rockley.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The friends had not intended to stay the night, the time
-of a business man being limited, but upon invitation being
-pressingly made, first by Mrs. Effingham and then by the
-young ladies, one after another, Mr. Rockley declared that
-he couldn’t resist such allurements, but that they must make
-a cruelly early start and get back to Yass to breakfast next
-day. He believed they would see him there often. Mrs.
-Rockley had not had the pleasure of calling upon Mrs.
-Effingham, because she had been away in Sydney visiting
-her children at school, as well as an aunt who was very ill—was
-always ill, he added impatiently. But she would
-drive over and see them, most likely next week; and whenever
-Mrs. Effingham and the young ladies came to Yass, or
-the Captain and his sons, they must make his house their
-home—indeed, he would be deeply offended if he heard of
-their going to an hotel.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, really I’m afraid——’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘My dear sir,’ interrupted Mr. Rockley, ‘of course you
-meant what you said about the need of recreation for young
-people. Your sons have not had any since you came here,
-except an odd slap at a flock of ducks—and these Lake
-William birds are pretty shy. Then the ladies have hardly
-seen any one in the district, except the half-dozen men that
-have been to call. Don’t you suppose it’s natural that they
-should like to know the world they’ve come to live in?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We are such a large party, Mr. Rockley,’ said Mrs.
-Effingham, who felt the necessity of being represented at
-this important council. ‘It is extremely kind of you,
-but——’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But look here, Mrs. Effingham,’ interrupted Mr. Rockley
-with fiery impatience, so evidently habitual that she could
-not for a moment consider it to be disrespectful, ‘don’t
-you think it probable, in the nature of things, that you may
-visit Yass—which is your county town, remember—at the
-time of the races? All the world will be going. It’s a time
-of year when there is nothing to do—as the parson here will
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>tell you. There will be balls, picnics, and parties for the
-young ladies—everything, in fact. <em>You must go</em>, you see
-that, surely? You’ll be the only family of position in the
-country-side that won’t be there. And if you go and don’t
-make my house your home, instead of a noisy, rackety
-hotel, why—I’ll never speak to one of you again.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Here Mr. Rockley closed his rapidly delivered address,
-with a look of stern determination, which almost frightened
-Mrs. Effingham.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You will really offend my good friend and his most
-amiable and hospitable lady if you do not accept his invitation,’
-said Mr. Sternworth. ‘It is hardly an ordinary
-race-meeting so much as a periodical social gathering, of
-which a little racing (as in most English communities, and
-there never was one more thoroughly British than this) is
-the ostensible <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>raison d’être</em></span>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, Howard, for the young people’s sake, we really
-must think of it,’ said Mrs. Effingham, answering, lest her
-husband, in distrust of a colonial gathering, might definitely
-decline. ‘There will be time enough to apprise Mrs. Rockley
-before the event.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘My wife will write to you when I get home,’ said Mr.
-Rockley, ‘and explain matters more fully than I can do.—Everything
-goes off pleasantly at our annual holiday, doesn’t
-it, Harley?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘So much so, that in my office of priest I have never had
-occasion to enter my protest. The people need a respite
-from the toils and privations of their narrow home world,
-almost more than we do.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The evening passed most pleasantly. The parson and
-the soldier talked over old army days. While Mr. Rockley,
-who had been a squatter before finally settling down at
-Yass as principal merchant and banker, gave Wilfred and
-Guy practical advice. Then he assured Mrs. Effingham that
-at any time when she or the young ladies required change,
-they had only to write to Mrs. Rockley—or come, indeed, without
-writing—and make their house a home for as long as
-ever it suited them. Subsequently he declared that he had
-never heard any music in the least degree to be compared
-to the duet which Rosamond and Annabel executed for his
-especial benefit. He charmed Mrs. Effingham by telling
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>her that her son Wilfred was the most promising and
-sensible young man he had ever noticed as a beginner in
-the bush, and must infallibly do great things. Lastly, he
-begged that he might be provided with a cup of coffee at
-daylight, as, if he and Mr. Sternworth were not at Yass by
-breakfast-time, dreadful things might happen to the whole
-district. Annabel declared that she would get up and make
-it for him herself. Their visitors then retired for the night,
-all hands being in a high state of mutual appreciation.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Your friend seems a most genial and sterling person,
-Harley,’ said Mr. Effingham, as they indulged in a final
-stroll up the verandah, after the general departure. ‘Is he
-always so complimentary?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘He can be extremely the reverse, upon occasion; but
-he is, perhaps, the man of all others in whose good feeling
-I have the most undoubting faith. Under that impetuous,
-explosive manner, the outcome of a fervid, uncompromising
-nature, he carries an extraordinary talent for affairs, and one
-of the most generous hearts ever granted to mortal man.
-He has the soul of the Caliph Haroun Alraschid, and has
-secretly done more good deeds, to my knowledge, in this
-district than all the rest of us put together. His correct
-taste has enabled him to appreciate all my dear children
-here. From this time forth you may reckon upon a powerful,
-untiring friend in William Rockley.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I know <em>one</em> friend, Harley,’ said Effingham as their hands
-met in a parting grasp, ‘who has been more than a brother
-to me in my hour of need. We can never divide the gratitude
-which is your due from me and mine.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Pooh! pooh! a man wants more friends than one,
-especially in Australia, where a season of adversity—which
-means a dry one—may be hanging over him; and a better
-one than William Rockley will be to you, henceforth, no man
-ever saw or heard of. Good-night!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>So passed the happy days of the first early summer-time
-at Warbrok—days which knew no change until the great
-festival of Christmas approached, which closes the year in
-all England’s dependencies with hallowed revelry and
-honoured mirth. Christmas was imminent. The 20th of
-December had arrived; a day of mingled joy and sorrow,
-as more freshly, vividly came back the buried memories of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>old days, the echo of the lost chimes of English Christmas
-bells. But in spite of such natural feelings, the advent of
-Christmas was not suffered to pass without tokens of gladness
-and services of thanksgiving.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It had been decided to invite Messrs. Hamilton and
-Argyll, with Mr. Churbett and Mr. Forbes, to join the
-modest family festivities on this occasion. Old Tom had
-been duly despatched with the important missives, and the
-invitations were frankly accepted.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On the 24th of December, therefore, late in the afternoon,
-which is the regulation hour for calling in Australian
-country society, the visitor being aware that he is expected
-to stay all night, and not desiring, unless he is <em>very</em> young, to
-have more than an hour to dispose of before dinner, the
-gentlemen aforesaid rode up. They had met by appointment
-and made the expedition together.</p>
-
-<hr class='c013' />
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Fancy this being Christmas Day!’ exclaimed Annabel, as—the
-time-honoured greetings being uttered—the whole
-party disposed themselves comfortably around the breakfast-table.
-‘And what a lovely fresh morning! Not a hot-wind
-day, as old Dick said it would be. It makes me shiver when
-I think of how we were wrapped up this time last year.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Are you certain it <em>is</em> Christmas, Miss Annabel?’ said
-Fred Churbett; ‘I doubt it, because of the absence of holly
-and snow, and old women and school children, and waits
-and the parish beadle—all the belongings of our forefathers.
-There <em>must</em> be some mistake. The sun is too fast, depend
-upon it. I must write to the <cite>Times</cite>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Old Dick brought a load of scarlet-flowering bushes from
-the hills yesterday,’ said Rosamond, ‘with which he solemnly
-decorated his hut and our verandah pillars. He wished to
-make Andrew a present of a few branches as a peace-offering,
-but he declined, making some indignant remark about Prelatism
-or Erastianism, which Dick did not understand.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At eleven o’clock <span class='fss'>A.M.</span> a parade of the ‘full strength of
-the regiment,’ as Effingham phrased it, was ordered. Chairs,
-with all things proper, and a reading-desk, had been arranged
-on the south side of the wide verandah.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To this gathering-point the different members of the
-establishment had been gradually converging, arrayed in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>garments, which, if varying from the fashion-plates of the
-day, were neat, suitable, and of perfect cleanliness. Mrs.
-Evans’s skill as a laundress, which was in the inverse ratio to
-her mildness of disposition, enabled Dick to appear in white
-duck trousers and a shirt-front which distanced all rivalry.
-They contrasted strongly with the unbroken tint of brick-dust
-red presented by his face and throat, the latter encircled by
-an ancient military stock. Mrs. Evans was attired with such
-splendour that it was manifest she had sacrificed comfort to
-fashion.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Old Tom’ had donned, as suitable for the grandeur and
-solemnity of the occasion, a well-worn pair of cord breeches,
-the gift of some employer of sporting tendencies, which, ‘a
-world too wide for his shrunk shanks,’ were met at the knee
-by carefully polished boots, the long-vanished tops being replaced
-by moleskin caps. A drill overshirt, fastened at the
-waist with a broad leather belt, from which depended a
-tobacco-pouch, completed this effective costume. The iron-grey
-hair was carefully combed back from his withered
-countenance; his keen eyes gleamed from their hollow orbits,
-imparting an appearance of mysterious vitality to the ancient
-stock-rider.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Andrew and Jeanie, of course, attended, the latter dressed
-with the good taste which always characterised her, and the
-former having in charge the sturdy silent Duncan, with their
-younger offspring. Of these, Jessie bade fair to furnish a
-favourable type of the ‘fair-haired lassie’ so frequently met
-with in the ballads of her native land, while Colin, the second
-boy, was a clever, confident youngster, in whose intelligence
-Andrew secretly felt pride, though he repressed with outward
-sternness all manifestations of the same.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Andrew himself, it must be stated, appeared under protest,
-holding that ‘thae Yerastian, prelatic festivals,’ in his opinion,
-‘were no warranted by the General Assembly o’ the Kirk o’
-Scotland, natheless, being little mair than dwellers in the
-wilderness, it behoved a’ Christians, though they should be
-but a scattered remnant in the clefts o’ the rocks, to agree
-in bearing testimony to the Word.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Across the broad verandah the members of the family,
-with their visitors, were seated, behind them the retainers.
-A table covered with a cloth was placed before Mr. Effingham,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>with the family Bible and a prayer-book of the Church
-of England.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As he made commencement, and with the words, ‘When
-the wicked man turneth away,’ the congregation stood up, it
-was a matter of difficulty with Mrs. Effingham to restrain her
-tears. How the well-remembered sentences seemed to smite
-the rock of her well-guarded emotions as with the rod of the
-Prophet! She trembled lest the spring should break forth
-from her o’erburdened heart, whelming alike prudence and
-the sense of fitness. The eyes of the girls were dewy, as
-they recalled the white-robed, long-remembered pastor, the
-ivy-covered church, storied with legend and memorial of
-their race, the villagers, the friends of their youth, the unquestioned
-security of position, long guaranteed by habit and
-usage, apparently unalterable. And now, where stood they,
-while the sacred words proceeded from the lips of the head
-of the household, whom they had followed to this far land?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In a ‘lodge in the wilderness,’ a speck in a ‘boundless
-contiguity of shade,’ with its unfamiliar adjuncts and a
-company of strangers—pilgrims and wayfarers—even as they.
-For a brief interval the suddenly realised picture of distance
-and isolation was so real, the momentary pang of bitterness
-so keenly agonising, that more than one sob was heard, while
-Annabel, whose feelings were less habitually under control,
-threw her arms round Jeanie’s neck (who had nursed her as
-a babe) and wept unrestrainedly.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>No notice was taken of this natural outburst of emotion.
-Jeanie, with unobtrusive tenderness and unfailing tact,
-comforted the weeping girl. Solemnly the words of the
-service sounded from her father’s lips, while the ordinary
-responses concealed the occasional sobs of the mourner for
-home and native land. She had unconsciously translated
-the unspoken words of more disciplined hearts.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Gradually, as the service continued, the influences of the
-scene exercised a healing power upon the group—the fair,
-golden day, the tender azure of the sky, the wandering breeze,
-the waters of the lake lapping the shore, the whispering of
-the waving trees, even the hush of</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Beautiful silence all around,</div>
- <div class='line'>Save wood-bird to wood-bird calling,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>commenced insensibly to soothe the hearts of the exiles.
-Gradually their faces recovered serenity, and as the repetitions
-of belief and trust, of submission to a Supreme Benevolence,
-were repeated, that ‘peace which passeth all understanding,’
-an indwelling guest with some, a memory, a long-forgotten
-visitant with others, appeared for a space to have
-enveloped the little company on that day assembled at
-Warbrok.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The simply-conducted service was verging on conclusion
-when a stranger appeared upon the track from the high road.
-In bushman’s dress, and carrying upon his back the ordinary
-knapsack (or ‘swag’) of the travelling labourer, he strode
-along the path at a pace considerably higher in point of
-speed than is usual with men who, as a class, being confident
-of free quarters at every homestead, see no necessity for haste.
-A tall, powerfully-built man, his sun-bronzed countenance
-afforded no clue to his social qualification.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Halting at the garden gate, he stood suddenly arrested as
-he comprehended the occupation of the assembled group.
-He looked keenly around, then easing the heavy roll by a
-motion of his shoulders, awaited the final benediction.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What is your business with me?’ said Mr. Effingham,
-closing his book, and regarding with interest the stranger,
-whose bold dark eyes roved around, now over the assembled
-company, now over the buildings and offices, and lastly
-settled with half-admiration, half-diffidence, on the bright
-faces of the girls. ‘I have no employment here at present.
-Perhaps you would like to stay to-night. You are heartily
-welcome.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Come along o’ me, young man,’ interposed Dick Evans,
-as promptly divining the wayfarer’s habitudes. ‘Come along
-o’ me; you’ll have a share of our Christmas dinner, and you
-might come by a worse.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘All right,’ replied the stranger cheerfully, and with a nod
-of acknowledgment to Mr. Effingham he jerked back his
-personal effects into their position and strode after his interlocutor,
-who, with old Tom Glendinning, quitted the party,
-leaving Mrs. Evans to follow at her convenience.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Fine soldier that man would have made,’ said Mr.
-Effingham, as he marked the well-knit frame, the elastic
-step of the stranger. ‘I wonder what his occupation is?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>‘Horse-breaker, bullock-driver, station hand of some sort,’
-said Argyll indifferently. ‘Just finished a job of splitting,
-probably, or is bringing his shearing cheque to get rid of in
-Yass.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘He appeared to have seen better days, poor fellow,’
-said Mrs. Effingham, ever compassionate. ‘I noticed a
-wistful expression in his eyes when he first came up.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I thought he looked proud and disdainful,’ said Annabel,
-‘and when old Dick said “come along,” I half expected him
-to reply indignantly. But he went off readily enough. I
-wonder if he’s a gentleman in disguise?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Or a bushranger,’ suggested Churbett. ‘Donohoe is
-“out” just now, and is said to have a new hand with him.
-These gentry have been occasionally entertained, like angels,
-unawares.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What a shocking idea!’ exclaimed Annabel. ‘You have
-no sentiment, Mr. Churbett. How would <em>you</em> like to be
-suspected by everybody if you were reduced to poverty? He
-is very handsome, at any rate.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Fred would be too lazy to walk, that is one thing certain,
-Miss Annabel,’ said Hamilton. ‘He would prefer to take the
-situation of cook or hut-keeper at a quiet station, where there
-were no children. Fancy his coming up, touching his hat
-respectfully, and saying, “I suppose you haven’t a berth about
-the kitchen as would suit a pore man, Miss?”’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Here the speaker gave so capital an imitation of Mr.
-Churbett’s accented tone in conversation that everybody
-laughed, including the subject of the joke, who said it was
-just like Hamilton’s impudence, but that <em>other</em> people
-occasionally had mistakes made as to their station in life.
-What about old MʻCallum sending him and Argyll to pass
-the night in the men’s hut?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The old ruffian!’ said Argyll, surprised out of his usual
-serenity, ‘I had two minds to knock him down; another, to
-tell him he was an ignorant savage; and a fourth, to camp
-under a gum-tree.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What did you do finally?’ asked Rosamond, much interested.
-‘What an awkward position to be placed in.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The night happened to be wet,’ explained Hamilton;
-‘we had ridden far, and were <em>so</em> hungry—no other place
-of abode within twenty miles; so—it was very unheroic—but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>we had to put our pride in our pockets, and sleep, or
-rather <em>stay</em>, in an uncomfortable hut, with half-a dozen farm-servants.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What a bore!’ said Wilfred. ‘Did he know your names?
-It seems inconceivable.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The real truth was,’ said Mr. Churbett, volunteering an
-explanation, ‘that the old man, taking umbrage somewhere
-at what he considered our friend Hamilton’s superfine
-manners and polite habit of banter, had vowed to serve him
-and Argyll out if ever they came his way. This was how
-he carried out his dark and dreadful oath.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What a terrible person!’ exclaimed Annabel, opening
-her eyes. ‘Were you very miserable, Mr. Hamilton?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Sufficiently so, I am afraid, to have made our friend
-chuckle if he had known. We had to ride twenty miles
-before we saw a hair-brush again, and Argyll, I must say,
-looked dishevelled.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A simultaneous inclination to laughter seized the party, as
-they gazed with one accord at Argyll’s curling locks.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I should think that embarrassments might arise,’ said
-Mr. Effingham, ‘from the habit of claiming hospitality when
-travelling here. There are inns, I suppose, but they are
-infrequent.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Not so many mistakes are made as one might think,’
-explained Churbett. ‘Squatters’ names are widely known,
-even out of their districts, and every one accepts a night’s
-lodging frankly, as he expects to give one in return.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But how can we know whether the stranger be a gentleman,
-or even a respectable person?’ said Mrs. Effingham.
-‘One would be so sorry to be unkind, and yet might be led
-into entertaining undesirable guests.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Every gentleman should send in his card,’ said Argyll,
-‘if he wishes to be received, or give his name and address to
-the servant. People who will not so comply with the usages
-of society have no right to consideration.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But suppose people are not well dressed,’ said Wilfred,
-‘or are outwardly unlike gentlemen, what are you to do? It
-would be annoying to make mistakes in either way.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘When people are not dressed like gentlemen,’ said
-Hamilton, ‘you may take it for granted that they have
-forfeited their position, or are contented to be treated as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>steerage passengers, so to speak. In such cases the safer
-plan, as far as my experience goes, is to permit them to
-please themselves. I had a good look at our friend yonder,
-as he came up, and I have a shrewd suspicion that he
-belongs to the latter category.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Poor young man!’ said Mrs. Effingham. ‘Couldn’t anything
-be done for him? Think of a son of ours being placed
-in that position!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘He is making himself comfortable with old Dick Evans,
-most likely, however unromantic it may appear,’ said
-Churbett. ‘He will enjoy his dinner—I daresay he hasn’t
-had many good ones lately—have a great talk with Dick and
-the old stock-rider, and smoke his pipe afterwards with much
-contentment.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But a <em>gentleman</em>, if he be a gentleman, never could lower
-himself to such surroundings, surely?’ queried Rosamond.
-‘It is not possible.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh yes, it <em>is</em>,’ said Beatrice. ‘Because, you remember,
-Sergeant Bothwell was more comfortable in the butler’s room
-with old John Gudyill than he would have been with Lady
-Bellenden and her guests, though she longed to entertain
-him suitably, on account of his royal blood.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Miss Beatrice, I congratulate you on your familiarity with
-dear Sir Walter,’ said Argyll. ‘It is a case perfectly in point,
-because Francis Stewart, otherwise Bothwell, had at one
-time mixed in the society of the day, and must have had the
-manners befitting his birth. Nevertheless in his lapsed
-condition he preferred the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>sans gêne</em></span> of his inferiors. There
-are many such in Australia, who “have sat at good men’s
-feasts,” but are now, unfortunately, more at ease in the
-men’s hut.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Of course you’ve heard of Carl Hotson, the man they
-used to call “the Count”?’ said Hamilton. ‘No? He
-lived at Carlsruhe, on the other side of the range, near the
-Great South Gap, where every one was obliged to pass, and
-(there being no inn) stay all night. Now “the Count” was a
-fastidious person of literary tastes. He chafed against entertaining
-a fresh batch of guests every night. “Respectable
-persons—aw—I am informed, but—aw—I don’t keep an
-hotel!” Unwilling to be bored, and yet anxious not to be
-churlish, he took a middle course. He invented “the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>stranger’s hut,” which has since obtained in other parts of
-the country.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Whatever was that?’ asked Guy.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘He had a snug cottage built at a short distance from
-the road. Into this dwelling every traveller, without
-introduction, was ushered. A good dinner, with bed and
-breakfast, was supplied. His horse was paddocked, and in
-the morning the guest, suitably entertained, but ignorant of
-the personnel of the proprietor, as in a castle of romance, was
-free to depart.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And a very good idea it was,’ said Mr. Effingham. ‘I
-can imagine one becoming tired of casual guests.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Some people were not of that opinion,’ said Mr. Forbes,
-‘declaring it to be in contravention of the custom of the
-country. One evening Dr. Portman, an elderly gentleman,
-of majestic demeanour, came to Carlsruhe. He relied on
-a colonial reputation to procure him unusual privileges, but
-not receiving them, wrote a stiff note to Mr. Hotson, regretting
-his inability to thank him personally for his peculiar hospitality,
-and enclosing a cheque for a guinea in payment of
-the expense incurred.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What did “the Count” say to that?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘He was equal to the occasion. The answer was as
-follows:—</p>
-
-<p class='c010'>‘<span class='sc'>Sir</span>—I have received a most extraordinary letter signed
-J.D. Portman, enclosing a cheque for one guinea. The latter
-document I have transmitted to the Treasurer of the Lunatic
-Asylum.—Obediently yours,</p>
-
-<div class='c012'><span class='sc'>Carl Hotson</span>.’</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>The Christmas dinner, which included a noble wild
-turkey, a fillet of veal, a baron of beef, with two brace of
-black duck, as well as green peas, cauliflowers, and early
-potatoes from the now productive garden, was a great success.
-Cheerful and contented were those who sat around the
-board. Merry and well-sustained was the flow of badinage,
-which kept the young people amused and amusing. In the
-late afternoon the guests excused themselves, and left for
-home, alleging that work commenced early on the morrow,
-and that they were anxious as to the results of universal
-holiday-making.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER IX <br /> HUBERT WARLEIGH, YR., OF WARBROK</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>Next morning early, Mr. Effingham was enjoying the fresh,
-cool air when Dick marched up to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, Evans,’ said Effingham, ‘Christmas Day is over.
-Tell me, were you able to abstain?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Believe me, I got drunk, sir,’ answered the veteran, ‘but
-I’m all right now till New Year’s Day.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I am afraid that your constitution will suffer, Evans, if
-you continue these regular—or rather irregular—excesses.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Can’t say for that, sir. Been drunk every Christmas since
-the year as I ’listed in the old rigiment; but I wanted to
-tell you about that young man as was in our hut last night.
-Do you know who he is, sir?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘No, indeed, Evans! I suspected he was no ordinary
-station-hand.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, no, sir; that’s the youngest of the old Colonel’s
-sons. Him as they used to call “Gyp” Warleigh. He was
-allers fond of ramblin’ and campin’ out, from a boy, gipsy
-fashion. When the Colonel died, he went right away to some
-of the far-out stations beyond Monaro, and never turned up
-for years. Old Tom knowed him at once, but didn’t let on.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Poor fellow! How hard that he should have come back
-to his father’s house penniless and poorly clad. I wonder if
-we could find him employment here?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘H—m! I don’t know, sir; we haven’t much to keep
-hands goin’ at this season, but you can see him yourself. I
-daresay he’ll come up to thank you afore he goes.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Dick’s conjecture proved true, inasmuch as before the
-breakfast bell rang the prodigal walked up to the garden gate.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>This time he underwent a more careful examination, the
-result of which was to impress the master of the house in a
-favourable manner. Though dressed much as before, there
-was some improvement in his appearance. He came forward
-now, with the advantage conferred by rest and good entertainment.
-His regular features, as Mr. Effingham now
-thought, showed plainly the marks of aristocratic lineage.
-The eyes, especially, were bold and steadfast, while his figure,
-hardened by the toils of a backwoods life, in its grand outline
-and muscular development, aroused the admiration of a
-professional connoisseur. The bronzed face had lost its
-haggard expression, and it was with a frank smile that he
-raised his hat slightly and said, ‘Good-morning, sir. I have
-come to thank you for your kindness and hospitality.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I am pleased to have been enabled to afford it,’ said the
-master of the establishment; ‘but is there nothing more that
-I can do for your father’s son?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The man started; a frown set the lower part of his face
-in rigid sternness. After a moment’s pause the cloud-like
-expression cleared, and with softened voice he said:</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I see they have told you. I thought the old stock-rider
-knew me; he was here before we lived at Warbrok. Yes,
-it is all true. I am Hubert Warleigh.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Effingham’s impulsive heart was stirred within him,
-at these words, to a degree which he himself would hardly
-have admitted. The actual presentment of this cadet of an
-old family—once the object of a mother’s care, a mother’s
-prayers—fallen from his position and compelled to wander
-over the country, meanly dressed and carrying a burden in
-this hot weather, touched him to the heart. He walked up
-to the speaker, and laying his hand upon his arm, said in
-tones of deep feeling:</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘My dear fellow, will you let me advise you, as I should
-thank any Christian man to do for my son in like need? Stay
-with us for a time. I may be able to assist you indirectly, if
-not otherwise. At the worst, the hospitality of this house—of
-your old home—is open to you as long as you please to
-accept it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You are kind—too kind, sir,’ said the wanderer, while his
-bold eyes softened, and for a moment he turned his face
-towards the lake. ‘The old place makes me feel like a boy
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>again. But it will never do—<em>it’s too late</em>. You don’t know
-the ways of this country yet, and you might come to repent
-being so soft—I mean so good-natured.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I will take the risk,’ persisted Effingham. ‘Let me see
-you restored to your proper standing in society, and following
-any occupation befitting a gentleman, and I shall hold myself
-fully repaid.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The stranger smiled, half-sadly, half-humorously, as he
-seated himself on a fence-rail.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘That is not so easy as you think, sir,’ he said. ‘Though
-there’s very few people in this country would bother about
-trying. When a fellow’s been rambling about the bush,
-working and living with the men, for years and years, it is not
-so easy to turn him into a gentleman again. Worst of all
-when he’s come short of education, and has half-forgotten
-how to behave himself before ladies. Ladies! I swear, when
-I saw your daughters, looking like rosebuds in the old
-verandah, I felt like a blackfellow.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘That a feeling of—of rusticity—would be one of the
-consequences of a roving life, I can understand; but you are
-young—a mere boy yet. Believe one who has seen something
-of the world, that the awkwardness you refer to would soon
-disappear were you once more among your equals.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Too late—too late!’ said the man gloomily. ‘Gyp
-Warleigh must remain in the state he has brought himself
-to. I know him better than you do, worse luck! There’s
-another reason why I’m afraid to trust myself in a decent
-house.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Good heavens!’ said Effingham. ‘Then what is that?
-You surely have not——’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Taken to the bush? Not yet; but it’s best to be straight.
-I learned the trick of turning up my little finger too early and
-too well; and though I’m right enough for months when I’m
-far in the bush, or have had a spell of work, I’m helpless
-when the drinking fit comes on me. I <em>must</em> have it, if I was
-to die twenty times over. And the worst of it is, I can feel
-it coming creeping on me for weeks beforehand; I can no
-more fight it off than a man who’s half-way down a range can
-stop himself. But it’s no use talking—I must be off. How
-well the old place looks! It’s a grand season, certainly.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You have had adventures here in the old days,’ said
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>Effingham, willing to lead him into conversation. ‘Had you
-a fight with bush-rangers in the dining-room ever?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Then the bullet-marks <em>are</em> there yet?’ said the stranger
-carelessly. ‘Well, there was wild work at Warbrok when that
-was done, but bushrangers had no say in it. It was the old
-governor who blazed away there. He was always a two-bottle
-man, was the governor, and after poor mother died he scarcely
-ever went to bed sober. Randal and Clem were terrible wild
-chaps, or they might have kept matters together. I was the
-youngest, and let do pretty much as I liked. I never learned
-anything except to read and write badly. Always in the men’s
-huts, I picked up all the villainy going before I was fourteen.
-But about those bullet-marks in the wall.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I feel deeply interested, believe me; and if you would
-permit me to repair the neglect you have experienced, something
-may yet be done.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You don’t know men of my sort, Captain, or you wouldn’t
-talk in that way. Not that I haven’t a feeling towards you
-that I’ve never had since poor mother died, and told me to
-be a good boy, as she stroked my hair for the last time. But
-how could I? What chance is there for a lad in the bush,
-living as we did in those days? I remember Randal’s coming
-home from Bathurst races—he’d go any distance to a race
-meeting. He was like a madman. It was then that the
-row came about with the governor, when they nearly shot one
-another.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Nearly shot one another! Good heavens! How <em>could</em>
-that happen?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘After the cellar racket Randal had the sense to stay
-away at Monaro and work at our station there for months.
-He could work when he liked, and a smarter man among
-stock never handled a slip-rail. But he had to come home
-at last. The governor talked to him most polite. Hoped
-he’d stay to dinner. He drank fair; they were well into the
-fourth bottle when the row began. He told us afterwards
-that the old man, instead of flying into a rage, as usual, was
-bitter and cool, played with him a bit, but finished up by
-saying that “though it was the worst day’s work he ever did
-to come to this accursed country, he hardly expected his
-eldest son would turn out a burglar and a thief.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Randal was off his head by this time—been ‘a bit on’
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>before he came—swore he wouldn’t stand that from any man,
-not even his own father. The old man glared at him like a
-tiger, and fetching out the loaded duelling pistols, which
-people always had handy in those days, gave him one, and
-they stood up at different ends of the long room.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We heard the shots and rushed in. There was Randal
-holding on by the wall, swaying about, and, pointing to the
-ceiling, saying, as well as he could, “Fired in the air!
-by ——! fired in—the—air!” Sure enough, there was the
-mark of his bullet in the ceiling, but the <em>other one</em> had hit the
-wall, barely an inch from Randal’s head.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What an awful affair! How your father must have
-rejoiced that he was spared the guilt of such a crime.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I don’t know about that; all he <em>said</em> next day was, that
-his hand must have been shaky, or he would have rid the
-world of an infernal scoundrel, who had disgraced his family
-and was no son of his. He never spoke to him again.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Miserable father—lost son! What became of your
-brothers, may I ask, since you have told me so much?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Randal was in a vessel coming back from Adelaide with
-an exploring party. He’d been lushing pretty heavy, and
-they thought he must have gone overboard one night in a fit
-of the horrors. Anyhow, he was never seen alive afterwards.
-Poor Clem—he wasn’t half as bad as Randal, only easy
-led—died at the Big River: was shepherding when we last
-heard of him. I’m all that’s left of the Warleighs. Some fine
-day you’ll hear of me being drowned crossing a river, or
-killed by the blacks, or broke my neck off a horse; and a
-good job too. I must be off now. It’s years since I’ve said
-as much to any one.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But why—why not stay and commence a happier career?
-Scores of men have done so, years after your age. You will
-have encouragement from every member of my family.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Family!’ answered the outcast, with a bitter smile.
-‘Am I fit to associate with <em>ladies</em>? Why, even while I’m
-speaking to you I can hardly open my mouth without an
-oath or a rough word. No! It might have been once; it’s
-years too late now. But I thank you all the same; and if
-ever a chance comes in my way of doing your people a good
-turn, you may depend your life on Gyp Warleigh. Good-bye,
-sir!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>As he rose to his feet, squaring his shoulders and towering
-to the full height of his stature, Mr. Effingham instinctively
-held out his hand. Closing his own upon it for one moment
-in an iron grasp, the wanderer strode forth upon his path,
-and was lost behind a turn in the timber.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Howard Effingham returned to his household filled with
-sad thought. He had seen ruined men of all sorts and
-kinds before; had known many who, with every social aid
-and endowment, had chosen to tread the path of degradation.
-But there was, to his mind, an element of unusual pathos in
-this acquiescent yet resentful debasement of a noble nature.
-In the hall he met Wilfred and Guy. Contrasting their frank,
-untroubled countenances with that of the ill-fated son of his
-predecessor his heart swelled with thankfulness.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What a long talk you have been having with our dark
-friend,’ said Wilfred. ‘Does he want a situation as stock-rider?
-or has he a project requiring the aid of a little capital?
-He doesn’t look like an enthusiast.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Nor is he one,’ answered the father briefly. ‘He is an
-unhappy man, whom you will compassionate when I tell you
-that he is Hubert Warleigh—the Colonel’s youngest son.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Good heavens!’ cried Wilfred. ‘Who said there was no
-romance in a new country? I thought he was a fine-looking
-fellow, with something uncommon about him. What a
-history!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What a dreadful, what an astonishing thing!’ exclaimed
-Annabel, who, having an appetite for novelty, and
-seldom being so absorbed in her household duties as to
-escape early notice of such, had joined the group. ‘To
-think that that sunburned, roughly-dressed man, carrying a
-bundle with his blanket and all kinds of things, should be a
-gentleman, the son of an old officer; just like Wilfred and
-Guy here! To be sure, he <em>was</em> handsome, in spite of his
-disguise; and did you notice what splendid black eyes he had?
-Poor fellow, poor fellow! Why didn’t you make him stay,
-papa?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘My child! I did try to persuade him; I promised to see
-what we could do for him. My heart yearned to the youngster,
-thinking that if, in the bounds of possibility, any child of mine
-was in such evil case, so might some father’s heart turn to
-him in his need. But he only said it was too late, with a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>kind of proud regret. Yet I think he was grateful, for he
-wrung my hand at parting, said it had done him good to
-speak with me, and if he could ever do us a service I might
-count upon him.’</p>
-
-<hr class='c013' />
-
-<p class='c001'>In the dreamy days of the late summer one and all derived
-great solace and enjoyment from the Lake William Book Club,
-now become, thanks to Mr. Churbett’s brother in London, a
-working institution. That gentleman had forwarded a well-selected
-assortment, comprising the newest publications of the
-day, in various departments of literature, not forgetting a
-judicious sprinkling of fiction. The books brought out by the
-family, neither few nor of humble rank, had been read and
-re-read until they were known by heart. This fresh storehouse
-of knowledge was, for the first time in their lives, truly
-appreciated.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Churbett had employed himself in his solitary hours
-in covering with strong white paper and carefully entitling
-each volume. These he divided into ‘sets,’ comprising, say,
-a modicum of history, travel, biography, or science, with a
-three-volume novel. The sets being duly numbered, a sketch
-circuit was calculated, and proper arrangements made. He,
-for instance, forwarded a set to Benmohr, whence they were
-enjoined to forward them at the expiration of a month to The
-Chase; at the same time receiving a fresh supply from headquarters.
-O’Desmond sent them on to the Snowdens, to be
-despatched by them to Mr. Hampden at Wangarua. So it
-came to pass that when the twelfth subscriber forwarded the
-first-mentioned set to its original dwelling-place at Mr. Churbett’s,
-the year had completed its cycle, and each household
-had had ample, but not over-abundant, time to thoroughly
-master the contents of their dole of literature.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The autumn month of March was chiefly characterised by
-the rural population of the district, as being the season in
-which was held the Annual Yass Race Meeting. This
-tournament was deservedly popular in an English-speaking
-community. There was no wife, widow, or maid, irrespectively
-of the male representatives, who did not feel a
-mild interest in the Town Plate, the delightfully dangerous
-Steeplechase, and finally in the ‘Ladies’ Bag.’ This thrilling
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>event comprised a collection of fancy-work—slippers, embroidered
-smoking-caps, and gorgeous cigar-cases, suitable
-for masculine use or ornament.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The coveted prize was fabricated by the fair hands of the
-dames and damsels of the district. The race was confined
-to amateurs, and those only were permitted to compete who
-had received invitations from the Secretary of the Ladies’
-Committee.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Great interest was taken, it may be supposed, in the
-carrying-off of this trophy, and many a youthful aspirant
-might be seen ‘brushing with hasty step the dew away,’ as
-he reviewed at dawn his training arrangements with a face
-of anxiety, such as might become the owner of a Derby
-favourite.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>By direct or devious ways the echoes of battle-cries, proper
-to the approaching fray, commenced to reach The Chase.
-Faintly interested as had been the family in the probable
-pleasures of such an assemblage, they could not remain
-wholly insensible. With each succeeding week tidings and
-murmurs of the Carnival swelled into sonorous tone. One
-day a couple of grooms, leading horses sheeted and hooded,
-of which the satin skins and delicate limbs bore testimony
-to their title to blue blood, would pass by on their way to
-Yass; or Mr. Churbett would ride over with the latest
-news, declaring that Grey Surrey was in such condition
-that no horse in the district had a chance with him, though
-Hamilton’s No Mamma had notoriously been in training
-for a month longer. Also, that the truly illustrious steeplechaser,
-The Cid, had been stabled at Badajos for the
-night; but that, in his opinion, he could not be held at his
-fences, and if so, St. Andrew would make such an exhibition
-of him as would astonish his backers and the Tasmanian
-division generally. Then Mrs. Snowden would arrive to
-lunch, and among other items of intelligence volunteer the
-information that the ball, which the Racing Club Committee
-was pledged to give this year, would exceed in magnificence
-all previous entertainments. Borne on the wings of the
-weekly post there came a missive from Mrs. Rockley, reminding
-Mrs. Effingham of her promise to come and bring
-her daughters for the race week, assuring her that rooms at
-Rockley Lodge awaited them, and that wilful child Christabel
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>was prepared to die of grief in the event of anything preventing
-their having the pleasure of their company.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Then Bob Clarke was, after all, to ride The Cid. He
-was the only man that could hold him at his fences. So
-there would be such a set-to between him and St. Andrew,
-with Charlie Hamilton up, as had never been seen in the
-district. The western division were going to back The
-Cid to the clothes on their back. Hamilton was a cool
-hand across country, and a good amateur jock wherever
-you put him up, but Bob Clarke, who had had his early
-training among the stiff four-railers and enclosed pasture-lands
-of Tasmania, was an extraordinary horseman, and had
-a way of getting a beaten horse over his last fences which
-stamped him as the man to put your money on.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It was not in human nature altogether to disregard current
-opinions, which, in default of more important public events,
-swayed the pastoral community as well as the dwellers in
-the rural townships. The Effinghams gradually abandoned
-themselves to the stream, and decided to accept Mrs.
-Rockley’s invitation for the lady part of the family. To
-this end Wilfred made a flying visit to the town, where he
-had been promptly taken in custody by Mr. Rockley and
-lodged in safe keeping at his hospitable mansion.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He returned with what Beatrice called a rose-coloured
-description of the whole establishment; notably of the
-marvellous beauty of Christabel Rockley, the only daughter.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Why, you haven’t seen girls for I don’t know how long,’
-said Annabel, ‘except us, of course—and you don’t see any
-beauty in fair people—so how can you tell? The first young
-woman with a pale face and dark eyes is a vision of loveliness,
-of course. Wait till <em>we</em> go to Yass, and you will hear
-a proper description.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Women are always unsympathetic about one another,’ he
-retorted. ‘That’s the reason one can hardly trust the best
-woman’s portrait of her friend.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And men are so credulous,’ said Beatrice. ‘I wonder
-any sensible woman has the patience to appropriate one.
-See how they admire the merest chits with the beauty of a
-china doll, and so very, <em>very</em> little more brains. There is a
-nice woman, I admit, here and there, but a man doesn’t
-know her when he sees her.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>‘All this is premature,’ said the assaulted brother, trying
-to assume an air of philosophical serenity. ‘I know nothing
-about Miss Christabel save and except that she is “beautiful
-exceedingly,” like the dame in Coleridge. But you will find
-Mr. Rockley’s the nicest house to stay in, or I much mistake,
-that you have been in of late years, and, in a general way,
-you will enjoy yourselves more than you expect.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I expect <em>great things</em>,’ said Annabel, ‘and I intend to
-enjoy myself immensely. Fancy, what a pleasure it will be
-to me to see quantities of new people! Even Rosamond
-confessed to me that she felt interested in our coming
-glimpse of Australian society. We <em>have</em> been a good deal
-shut up, and it will do us good; even Beatrice will fall
-across a new book or a fresh character to read, which
-comes to much the same thing. I prefer live characters
-myself.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And I prefer the books,’ said Beatrice; ‘there’s such a
-dreadful amount of time lost in talking to people, very often,
-about such wretched commonplaces. You can’t skip their
-twaddle or gossip, and you can in a book.’</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER X <br /> A PROVINCIAL CARNIVAL</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>The last week of March at length arrived, by which time the
-nights had grown perceptibly colder, and the morning air
-was by no means so mild as to render wraps unnecessary.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>No rain had fallen for some weeks, though before that
-time there had been a succession of showers; so that, there
-being no dust, while the weather was simply perfect, the grass
-green, and the sky cloudless, a more untoward time might
-have been selected for recreation.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It was indeed the carnival of a community of uncompromising
-toilers, as were, in good sooth, the majority of the inhabitants
-of the town and district of Yass.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Not without misgiving did Wilfred consent to leave the
-homestead entirely to itself. Yet he told himself that, while
-the farm and dairy were in the hands of such capable persons
-as Dick Evans, old Tom, and Andrew, without some
-kind of social or physical earthquake, no damage could
-occur.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Dick, in spite of his love of excitement, did not care to
-attend this race meeting. Aware of his weakness, he was
-unwilling to enter on a fresh bout of dissipation before the
-effects of the last one had faded from recollection. ‘I looks
-to have a week about Michaelmas,’ said he, as gravely as if
-he had been planning a hunting or fishing excursion, ‘then
-I reckon to hold on till after harvest, or just afore Christmas
-comes in. Two sprees a year is about the right thing for a
-man that knows himself. I don’t hold with knockin’ about
-bars and shanties.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Crede old Tom, the last Yass races had chiefly impressed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>themselves on his mind as a festivity wherein he spent
-‘thirty-seven pounds ten in six days, and broke his collar-bone
-riding a hurdle race. Whether he was getting older he
-could not say, but he felt as if he did not care to go in just
-now. He was going to keep right till next Christmas, when,
-of course, any man worth calling a man would naturally go
-in for a big drink.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>For far other reasons, and in widely differing language,
-did Andrew Cargill protest his disinclination to join revelries
-which, based on the senseless sport of horse-racing, he felt to
-be indefensible, immoral, and worthy only of the heathen,
-who were so unsparingly extirpated by the children of Israel.
-‘I haena words to express my scorn for thae fearless follies,
-and I thocht that the laird and the mistress wad ha’ had mair
-sense than to gang stravaigin’ ower the land like a wheen
-player-bodies to gie their coontenance to siccan snares o’
-Beelzebub. It’s juist fearsome.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Conflict of opinion in this case resulted in similarity of
-action, inasmuch as the two unregenerates, conscious that
-their hour was not yet come, conducted themselves with the
-immaculate propriety nowhere so apparent as in those
-Australian labourers who are confessedly saving themselves
-up for a ‘burst.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Nothing could have been descried upon this lower earth
-more deeply impressive than the daily walk of these two ancient
-reprobates, as Andrew, in his heart, always designated them.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The sun never saw them in bed. Old Tom had his
-morning smoke while tracking the nightly wandering dairy
-cows long before that luminary concerned himself with the
-inhabitants of the district. As day was fairly established, the
-cows were in the yard, and the never-ending work of milking
-commenced. Andrew’s northern perseverance was closely
-taxed to keep pace in the daily duties of the farm with these
-two swearing, tearing old sinners.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>All preliminaries having been concluded, which Mrs.
-Effingham declared fell but little short of those which preceded
-their emigration, the grand departure was made for
-their country town in what might justly be considered to be
-high state and magnificence.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>First of all rode Rosamond and Beatrice on their favourite
-palfreys. Touching the stud question, Wilfred and Guy had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>gradually developed the love of horses, which is inseparable
-from Australian country life. The indifferent nags upon
-which the girls had taken their early riding lessons had, by
-purchase or exchange, been replaced by superior animals.
-Rosamond, whose nerve was singularly good, and whose
-‘hands’ had reached a finish rarely accorded to the gentler
-sex, was the show horsewoman of the family, being entrusted
-with the education of anything doubtful before the younger
-girls were suffered to risk the mount. She rode a slight,
-aristocratic-looking dark bay, of a noble equine family, which,
-like themselves, had not long quitted the shores of Britain.
-Discharged from a training-stable upon the charge of unfitness
-to ‘stay,’ he had fallen into unprofessional hands, from which
-Wilfred had rescued him, giving in exchange a fat stock-horse
-and a trifle more ‘boot’ than he was ready to acknowledge.
-He had been right in thinking that in the delicate head, the
-light arched neck, the rarely oblique shoulder, the undeniable
-look of blood, he saw sufficient guarantee for a peerless light-weight
-hackney. This in despite of a general air of height rather
-than stability, which caused the severe critics of Benmohr
-and The She-oaks to speak of him as being unduly ‘on the
-leg.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There are some metals which compensate in quality for lack
-of weight and substance; so among horses we find those which,
-indomitable of spirit and tireless of muscle, are capable of
-wearing out their more solidly-built compeers. To such a
-class belonged ‘dear Fergus,’ as Rosamond always called the
-matchless hackney with which Wilfred had presented her.
-Gay and high-couraged, temperate, easy, safe, fast, with a
-walk and canter utterly unapproachable, the former, indeed,
-assimilating to the unfair speed of a ‘pacer,’ while the latter
-was free, floating, graceful, and elastic as that of the wild
-deer, he was a steed to dream of, to love and cherish in life,
-to mourn over in death. Many an hour, in the gathering
-twilight, by the shores of the lake, had Rosamond revelled in,
-mounted upon this pink of perfection, when Wilfred jumped
-upon a fresh horse after his day’s work and called upon his
-sister to come for her evening ride. How anxiously, after
-the lingering, glaring afternoon, did Rosamond watch for the
-time which brought the chief luxury of the day, when she
-lightly reined the deer-like Fergus as he sped through
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>the twilight shadows, over the greensward by the lake
-shore.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Beatrice had also her favourite, which, though of different
-style and fashion, was yet an undeniable celebrity. A small
-iron-grey mare, scarce above pony height, was Allspice, with
-a great flavour of the desert-born, from which she traced her
-descent, in the wide nostril, high croup, and lavish action.
-Guy picked her up at a cattle muster, where he was amazed
-at seeing the ease with which she carried a thirteen-stone
-stock-rider through the ceaseless galloping of a day’s ‘cutting-out.’
-Asking permission to get on her back, he at once
-discovered her paces, and never rested till he had got her in
-exchange for a two-year-old colt of his own, which had
-attracted the attention of Frank Smasher, the stock-rider in
-question. Frank, returning with him to Warbrok, roped the
-colt, the same day putting the breaking tackle on him, and
-within a week was cutting out cattle, on the Sandy Camp,
-with no apparent inferiority to the oldest stock-horse there.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Whether Allspice had been broken in after this Mexican
-fashion is not known, but as she could walk nearly as fast as
-Fergus, trot fourteen miles an hour, and canter ‘round a
-cheese-plate,’ if you elected to perform that feat, we must
-consider that she was otherwise trained in youth, or inherited
-the talent which dispenses with education. The light hand
-and light weight to which she was now subjected apparently
-suited her taste. After a few trials she was voted by the
-family and all friendly critics to be only inferior to the
-inimitable Fergus.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Churbett had volunteered to come over the evening
-before and accompany the young ladies, as otherwise Guy
-would have been their only cavalier, Wilfred being absorbed
-in the grave responsibility of the dogcart and its valuable
-freight.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This sporting vehicle contained Mrs. Effingham and
-Annabel, together with an amount of luggage, easily calculable
-when the possibility of a few picnics, a couple of balls,
-and any number of impromptu dances are mentioned. Mr.
-Effingham also, and his sons, found it necessary upon
-this occasion to look up portions of their English outfit,
-which they had long ceased to regard as suited for familiar
-wear.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>The light harness work of the family had been hitherto
-performed by a single horse, a sensible half-bred animal, and
-a fair trotter withal. On this occasion Wilfred had persuaded
-himself that a second horse was indispensable. After
-divers secret councils among the young men, it ended in
-Mr. Churbett’s Black Prince, the noted tandem leader of the
-district, being sent over. He was docile, as well as distinguished-looking,
-so all went well, in spite of Mrs. Effingham’s
-doubts, fears, and occasional entreaties, and Annabel’s
-plaintive cries when a nervous ‘sideling’ was passed, or a
-deeper creek than usual forded.</p>
-
-<hr class='c013' />
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, what a pretty place Rockley Lodge is—a nice, roomy
-bungalow; and how trim the garden looks!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Apparently inhabited,’ said Annabel, ‘and rather affected
-by visitors, I should say. I can see horses fastened to the
-garden fence, a carriage at the door, and a dogcart coming
-round from the back, as well as two side-saddle horses. So
-this is Mr. Rockley’s place! He said it was just a little way
-from the town; and there—Mr. Churbett and Rosamond
-are turning in at the entrance gate.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Duellist, having gone off in his training, thereafter not
-unwillingly retained for hackney purposes, evidently knew
-his way to the place, for he marched off at once, along the
-track which turned to the white gate. Followed by the
-tandem, with Beatrice and Guy bringing up the rear, the
-whole party drew up before the hall door.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Churbett, giving his horse to a hurried groom, who
-made his appearance from the offices, assisted Rosamond to
-dismount, by which time a youthful-looking personage,
-whom the Effinghams took to be Miss Christabel, but
-who turned out to be her mother, advanced with an air of
-unfeigned welcome, and greeted the visitors.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Mr. Churbett, introduce me at once. I am afraid you
-are all very tired. Come in this moment, my dear girls, and
-rest yourselves; we must have no talking or excitement until
-dinner-time. Mr. Effingham, I count upon you; Mr. Rockley
-charged me to tell you that he had asked Mr. Sternworth to
-meet you. Mr. Churbett, of course you are to come, and
-bring the two young gentlemen. Perhaps we might have a
-little dance, who knows? You can go now. Mr. Rockley
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>had rooms and loose boxes kept for you at the Budgeree, or
-you wouldn’t have had a hole to put your head in; what do
-you think of that?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Churbett, much affected by his narrow escape of
-arriving in Yass and finding every room and stall appropriated,
-with no more chance of a lodging than there is in
-Doncaster on the Leger day, moved on, leading Fergus, and
-murmuring something about Rockley being a minor Providence,
-and Mrs. Rockley all their mothers and aunts rolled
-into one. He recovered his spirits, however, as was his
-wont, and caracolled ahead on Duellist, leading the way
-into a large stable-yard, around which were open stalls and
-loose boxes, apparently calculated for the accommodation of
-a cavalry regiment.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘This is the Budgeree Hotel, and a very fair caravanserai
-it is. Jim, look alive and take off the tandem leader.
-Joe, I want a box for Duellist. Bowcher, this is Captain
-Effingham of Warbrok, and these young gentlemen his sons;
-did Mr. Rockley order rooms for them and me?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Mr. Rockley, sir. Yes, sir. He come down last week
-on purpose to see if I’d kep’ rooms for Mr. Argyll and Mr.
-Hamilton, as the place was that full, and like to be fuller;
-and then he asked if your rooms was took, and the Captin’s
-and two young gents’, and when I said they wasn’t, he went
-on terrible, as it was just like you, and ordered ’em all right
-off, besides four stalls and a box.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Ah, well, it’s all right, Bowcher. Mr. Rockley knows my
-ways. I wonder you hadn’t sense enough to keep rooms for me
-and my friends, as I told you I was coming. Town very full?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Never see anythink like it, sir. Horses coming from all
-directions, and gents from Hadelaide, I should say. Least-ways,
-from all the outside places. They’re that full at the
-Star, as they have had to put half the horses in the yard,
-and rig up stalls timpry like.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Ha! that’s all very well; but don’t try that with Black
-Prince or these ladies’ horses, or they’ll kick one another sky
-high.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>While this conversation was proceeding, Mr. Effingham
-and his sons had been ushered upstairs, where, at the extreme
-end of a long corridor, the Captain was provided with a
-reasonable bedroom, enjoying a view of the town and surrounding
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>country. Wilfred and Guy had to content themselves
-with a smaller double-bedded apartment, the waiter
-apologising, as everything, to the attics, was crammed full,
-and visitors hourly, like crowds at the theatre, turned away
-from the doors. Slight inconveniences are not dwelt upon
-in the ‘brave days when we were twenty-one.’ So they
-cast their modest wardrobes on the beds, and tried to realise
-the situation.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This was a marked divergence from the circumstances
-of their mode of life for the past year. It appeared that
-every room on both sides of the corridor was tenanted by
-at least one person of an emotional and vociferous nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Boots were carried to the staircase and hurled violently
-down, accompanied by objurgations. Friendly, even confidential,
-conversations were carried on by inmates of contiguous
-apartments. Inquiries were made and answered as
-to who were going to dine at Rockley’s or Bower’s; and one
-gentleman, who had come in late, publicly tossed up as to
-which place he should go uninvited, deciding by that ancient
-test in favour of a certain Mr. Bower, apparently of expansive
-hospitality.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In addition to the dinner-chart, much information was
-afforded to such of the general public as had ears, as to the
-state and prospects of the horses interested in the coming
-events. Senator had a cough; and there were rumours about
-the favourite for the Leger. St. Maur and the Gambiers had
-come in, and brought a steeplechaser, which Alec was to ride,
-which would make Bob Clarke’s Cid go down points in the
-betting. Mrs. Mortimer had arrived and those pretty girls
-from Bunnerong. The fair one would be the belle of the
-ball. ‘No!’ (in three places) was shouted out, ‘Christabel
-Rockley was worth a dozen of her,’ and so on. Mr. Effingham
-began to consider what his position would be if he should
-have to listen to a discussion upon the merits of his daughters.
-This complication happily did not arise, the tide of mirthful
-talk flowing into other congenial channels.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It must be confessed that if the company had been
-charged for the noise they made, the bill would have been
-considerable. But after all, the speakers were gentlemen,
-and their unfettered speech and joyous abandon only reminded
-Effingham of certain old barrack days, when the untrammelled
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>spirit of youth soared exultingly free, unheeding of the shadow
-of debt or the prison bars of poverty.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In due time the splashing, the dressing, and the jesting
-were nearly brought to an end. Leaving Fred Churbett to
-follow with Guy, Mr. Effingham and his heir departed to
-Rockley House.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There <em>is</em> something exhilarating, after all, in dressing
-for dinner,’ said he. ‘After the day is done it is befitting
-to mingle with pleasant people and drink your wine in
-good society. It reminds one of old times. My blood is
-stirred, and my pulses move as they have not done since
-I left England. Change is <em>the</em> great physician, beyond all
-doubt.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I did not think that I should have cared half as much
-about these races,’ said Wilfred. ‘I had doubts about coming
-at all, and really I don’t think I should have done so but for
-the girls and my mother. It is sure to do them good. But
-after all, Dick and Tom, not to speak of Andrew, are equal to
-more than the work they have to do at present, and I suppose
-one need not be always in sight of one’s men.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Rockley Lodge was profusely lighted. From the murmur
-of voices and rustle of dresses there appeared to be a large
-number of persons collected in the drawing-room, redolent of
-welcome as it ever was.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As they entered the house a voice was heard, saying, in
-tones not particularly modulated, ‘Order in dinner; I won’t
-wait another moment for any man in Australia.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Effingham recognised his late visitor in the speaker, who,
-arrayed in correct evening costume, immediately greeted him
-with much deference, mingled with that degree of welcome
-usually accorded to a distinguished, long-absent relative.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘My dear Captain Effingham, I am proud to see you.
-So you’ve found your way to Yass at last. Hope to see you
-here often. St. Maur, let me make you known to Captain
-Effingham. I heard him mention having met your brother
-in India. Bob Clarke; where’s Bob Clarke? Oh, here he
-is. You’ll know one another better before the races are
-over. Christabel, come here; what are you going away for?
-Mr. Wilfred Effingham you know, Mr. Guy you never saw;
-capital partners you’ll find them, I daresay. Is the dinner
-coming in, or is it not? [this with a sudden change of voice].
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>Mr. Churbett not come? Wait for Fred Churbett, the most
-unpunctual man in New South Wales! I’ll see him——’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Fortunately for Mr. Rockley’s ante-dinner eloquence the
-necessity for finishing this sentence was obviated by the
-appearance of the butler, who announced dinner, after which
-Mr. Rockley, saying, ‘Captain Effingham, will you take in
-Mrs. Rockley? I see your friend Sternworth has just made
-his way in with Fred Churbett; it’s well for them they
-weren’t ten minutes later,’ offered his arm to Mrs. Effingham,
-and led the way with much dignity.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The room was large, and the table, handsomely laid and
-decorated, looked as if it was in the habit of being furnished
-for a liberal guest list. There could not have been less than
-thirty people present, exclusive of the six members of Mr.
-Rockley’s own family. Their friends Hamilton and Argyll
-were there, as also Mr. St. Maur, a tall, aristocratic-looking
-personage from the far north; Mr. Clarke, a pleasant-faced,
-frank youngster, whom everybody called Bob; Mr. and Mrs.
-Robert Malahyde, and other prepossessing-looking strangers,
-male and female; and lastly, their old friend Harley Sternworth.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>What warmth, friendliness, cordiality, pervaded the entertainment!
-All apparently felt and talked like near relations,
-between whom had never arisen a question of property or
-precedence.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mrs. Rockley, her daughter, and nieces were lively and
-unaffected, and beyond all comparison considerately hospitable.
-Rosamond and her sisters, dressed, for the first time
-since their arrival, in accordance with the laws of fashion as
-then promulgated, looked, to the eyes of their fond parents
-and brothers, as though endowed with fresh beauty and a
-distinction of air hitherto unmarked.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The dinner was in all respects a success—well served,
-well cooked; and as Mr. Rockley was severe as to his taste
-in wines, that department fully satisfied a fastidious critic,
-as was Howard Effingham. Messrs. Churbett, Argyll, and
-Hamilton, as habitués, had numberless jokes and pleasantries
-in common with the young ladies, which served to elicit
-laughter and general merriment; while Hampden, St. Maur,
-the parson, and Mr. Rockley in turn diverged into political
-argument, in which their host was exceptionally strong.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>When they entered the drawing-room, to which Fred
-Churbett, Bob Clarke, and others of the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>jeunesse dorée</em></span>, who
-cared little for port or politics, had retreated in pursuance
-of a hint from Mrs. Rockley, they were surprised to find that
-spacious apartment wholly denuded of its carpet and partially
-of its furniture. There was but little time to express the
-feeling, as a young lady seated at the piano struck up a waltz
-of the most intoxicating character, and before Mr. Rockley
-had time to get fairly into another argument with the parson,
-the room was glorified with the rush of fluttering garments,
-and the joyous inspiration of youthful sentiment.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Everybody seemed to like dancing, and no more congenial
-home for the graces Terpsichorean than Rockley Lodge
-could possibly be found. The host, who was not a dancing
-man, smoked tranquilly in the verandah, much as if the
-entertainment were in a manner got up for his benefit, and
-had to be gone through with, while he from time to time
-debated the question of State endowments with Sternworth,
-or that of non-resident grants from the Crown with John
-Hampden, who was characteristically inflexible but nonaggressive.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>What with their neighbours Argyll and Hamilton, Ardmillan,
-Forbes, and Neil Barrington, the ever-faithful Fred
-Churbett, and divers newly-formed acquaintances who had
-arrived during the evening, the Miss Effinghams found so
-many partners that they scarcely sat down at all. Mr. St.
-Maur, too, perhaps the handsomest man of the party, singled
-out Beatrice and devoted himself to her for the greater part
-of the evening. During the lulls, music was suggested by
-Mrs. Rockley, who was ever at hand to prevent the slightest
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>contretemps</em></span> during the evening. Rosamond and Beatrice
-were invited to play, and finally Annabel and Beatrice to
-sing.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Beatrice was one of the most finished performers upon
-the pianoforte that one could fall across, outside professional
-circles; many of them even might have envied her light,
-free, instinctively true touch, her perfect time, her astonishing
-execution. Her voice was a well-trained contralto. When
-she sang a world-famed duet with Annabel, and the liquid
-notes—clear, fresh, delicately pure as those of the mounting
-skylark—rose in Annabel’s wondrous soprano, every one was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>taken by storm, and a perfect chorus of admiration assured
-the singers that no such performance had been heard in the
-neighbourhood since a time whereof the memory of man
-runneth not to the contrary.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It must not be supposed that Wilfred Effingham permitted
-much time to elapse before he took measures which resulted
-in an improvement of his recent acquaintance with Miss
-Christabel Rockley. He had seen many girls of high claim
-to beauty in many differing regions of the old world. He
-had walked down Sackville Street, and sauntered through
-the great Plaza of Madrid, bought gloves in Limerick, and
-lace in the Strada Reale; but it instantly occurred to him
-that in all his varied experiences he had never set eyes
-upon so wondrously lovely a creature as Christabel Rockley.
-Her complexion, not merely delicate, was wild-rose tinted
-upon ivory; her large, deep-fringed eyes, dark, melting,
-wondering as they opened slowly, with the half-conscious
-surprise of a startled child, reminded him of nothing so
-much as of the captured gazelle of the desert; her delicate,
-oval face, perfect as a cameo; her wondrous sylph-like figure,
-which swayed and glided in the dance like a forest nymph
-in classic Arcady; her rosebud mouth, pearly teeth, her
-childish pout smiling o’er gems—pearls, if not diamonds;
-how should these angel-growth perfections have ripened in
-this obscure outpost of Britain’s possessions? He was
-startled as by a vision, amazed. He would have been hopelessly
-subjugated there and then had he not been at that
-time such a philosophical young person.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Lovely as was the girl, calculated as were her unstudied
-graces and matchless charms to enthral the senses and drag
-the very heart from out of any description of man less congenial
-than a snow-drift, Wilfred Effingham escaped for the
-present whole and unharmed.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At the same time he enjoyed thoroughly the gay tone and
-joyous feelings which characterised the whole society, and
-insensibly caught, in spite of his ever-present feeling of
-responsibility, the contagion of free and careless mirth.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Dance succeeded dance, the quick yet pleasantly graduated
-growth of friendly intimacy arose under the congenial conditions
-of gaiety unrestrained and mingled merriment, till,
-soon after midnight, the joyous groups broke up.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>Mr. Rockley suddenly intimated that, as they would have
-a long day at the races next day, and the ladies would need
-all their rest after the journey some of them had made, to
-withstand the necessary fatigues, he thought it would be
-reasonable, yes, he <em>would</em> say he thought it would occur to
-any one who was not utterly demented and childishly incapable
-of forethought, that it was time to go to bed.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This deliverance decided the lingering revellers; adieus
-were made with much reference to <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">‘au revoir,’</span> one of those
-comprehensive phrases into which our Gallic friends contrive
-to collect several meanings and diverse sentiments.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At the Budgeree Hotel a desultory conversation was kept
-up for another hour between such choice spirits who stood
-in need of the ultimate refreshment of a glass of grog and a
-quiet pipe; but the wonders and experiences of the day had
-so taxed the energies of Mr. Effingham and his sons that
-the latter fell asleep before Fred Churbett had time to offer
-six to four on St. Andrew for the steeplechase, or Hamilton
-to qualify young Beanstalk’s rapturous declaration that
-Christabel Rockley looked like a real thorough-bred angel,
-and that there wasn’t a girl from here to Sydney fit to hold
-a candle to her.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XI <br /> MR. BOB CLARKE SCHOOLS KING OF THE VALLEY</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>The eventful day at length arrived. How many hundreds
-would have been disappointed if it had rained! From the
-sporting squatters, who looked out of window to see if the
-weather was favourable for Harlequin or Vivandière, to the
-farmer’s son, busy at sunrise grooming his unaccustomed
-steed, and pulling the superfluous hair from that grass-fed
-charger’s mane and tail, while his sister or cousin danced
-with joy, even before she donned the wide straw hat and
-alpaca skirt, with the favourably disposed bow of pink or
-blue ribbon, in which to be beautiful for the day.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>And what more innocent pleasure? So very seldom
-comes it in the long months of inland farming life, that no
-moralist need grudge it to his fellow-creatures for whom fate
-has not provided the proverbial silver spoon. That brown-cheeked
-youngster believes that his bay Camerton colt,
-broken in by himself, will make a sensation on the course;
-perhaps pull off a ten-pound sweep in the Hurry-scurry Hack-race
-(post entry), and he looks forward with eager anticipation
-to the running for the Town Plate and the steeplechase.
-Besides, he has not been in town since he took in the last
-load of wheat. It is slow at home sometimes, though there
-is plenty of work to do; and he has not seen a new face or
-heard a new voice since he doesn’t know when.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In sister Jane’s heart, whose cheek owns a deeper glow
-this morning, what unaccustomed thoughts are contending
-for the mastery.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Will it not be a grand meeting, with ever so many more
-people there than last year? And the gentlefolks and the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>young ladies, she does like so to see how they dress and how
-they look. It is worth a dozen fashion books. Such fun,
-too, is a sweeping gallop round the course, and to feel the
-breeze blow back her hair. Everything looks splendid, and
-the lunch in the pavilion is grand, and every one so polite.
-Besides, there is Ben Anderson that she knows “just to speak
-to”; she saw him at a school feast last year, and he is certainly
-<em>very</em> nice looking; he said he would be sure to be at the
-Yass races. She wonders whether he <em>will</em> be there; nobody
-wants him, of course, if he likes to stay away—but still he
-<em>might</em> come; his father has a farm away to the westward.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>So the rhythm of human life, hope or fear, love or doubt,
-curiosity or sympathy, chimes on, the same and invariable
-in every land, in every age.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Thanks to the occasionally too fine climate of Australia,
-‘the morning rose, a lovely sight,’ and if the sun flashed not
-‘down on armour bright,’ he lit up a truly animated scene.
-Grooms, who long before day had fed and watered their
-precious charges, were now putting on the final polish, as if
-the fate of Europe depended upon the delicate limbs and
-satin-covered muscles. Owners, backers, jockeys, gentlemen
-riders, all these were collecting or volunteering information;
-while the ordinary business of the town—commercial, civil,
-or administrative—was suffered to drift, as being comparatively
-unimportant.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At an hour not far from nine o’clock the guests under the
-hospitable roof of the Budgeree Hotel were assembled at the
-breakfast-table. What a meal! What a feast for the gods
-was that noble refection! What joyous anticipation of
-pleasure was on all sides indulged in! What mirthful conversation,
-unchecked, unceasing! There had been, it would
-seem, a dinner and a small party at Horace Bower’s, and,
-strange to say, every one had there enjoyed themselves much
-after the same fashion as at Rockley’s. Bower had been in
-great form—was really the cleverest, the most amusing fellow
-in the world. Mrs. Bower was awfully handsome, and her
-sister, just arrived from Sydney, was a regular stunner, would
-cut down all before her. Mrs. Snowden had been there too—smartest
-woman in the district; seen society everywhere—and
-so on.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A race day owns no tremendous possibilities, yet is there
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>a savour of strife and doom mingled with the mimic warfare.
-Many a backer knows that serious issues hang upon the
-favourite’s speed and stamina; on even less, on chance or
-accident. The steeplechase rider risks life and limb; it <em>may</em>
-be that ‘darkness shall cover his eyes,’ that from a crushing
-fall he may rise no more.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>These entanglements weighed not in any wise upon the
-soul of Wilfred Effingham, as he arose with a keener sense of
-interest and pleasure in expectation than had for long
-greeted his morning visions. His responsibilities for the
-day were bounded by his vehicle and horses, so that his
-family should be safely conveyed to and from the course.
-Mrs. Effingham had at first thought of remaining quietly in
-the house, but was reassured by being told that the course
-was a roomy park, that the view of the performances was
-complete, that the carriages and the aristocracy generally
-would be provided with a place apart, where no annoyance
-was possible; that the country people were invariably well-behaved;
-and that if she did not go, her daughters would
-not enjoy themselves, and indeed thought of remaining away
-likewise. This last argument decided the unselfish matron,
-and in due time the horses were harnessed, the side-saddles
-put in requisition, and after a decent interval Black Prince
-was caracolling away in the lead of the dogcart, and Fergus
-exhibiting his paces among a gay troop of equestrians, which
-took the unused, but all the pleasanter, road to the racecourse.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At this arena it was seen that the stewards had been
-worthy of the confidence reposed in them. A portion of the
-centre of the course had been set apart for the exclusive
-use of the carriages and their occupants. Not that there
-was any prohibition of humbler persons; but, with instinctive
-propriety, they had apparently agreed to mass themselves
-upon a slight eminence, which, behind the Grand Stand, a
-roomy weather-board edifice, afforded a full view of the proceedings.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In the centre enclosure were shady trees and a sward of
-untrampled grass, which answered admirably for an encampment
-of the various vehicles, with a view to ulterior lunching
-and general refreshment combinations at a later period of
-the day.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>Here all could be seen that was necessary of the actual
-racing, while space was afforded for pleasant canters and
-drives between the events, round the inner circle of the
-course; and indeed in any direction which might suit the
-mirth-inspired members of the party. The view, too, Mrs.
-Effingham thought, as she sat in Mrs. Rockley’s phaeton, in
-which a seat of honour had been provided for her, was well
-worth a little exertion. The park-like woodlands surrounded
-three sides of the little amphitheatre, with a distant dark
-blue range amid the dusk green forest tints; while on the
-south lay a great rolling prairie, where the eye roved
-unfettered as if across the main to the far unknown of the
-sky-line. Across this glorious waste the breeze, at times,
-blew freshly and keen; it required but little imagination on
-the part of the gazers to shadow forth the vast unbroken
-grandeur, the rippling foam, the distant fairy isles of the
-eternal sea.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Without more than the invariable delay, after twelve
-o’clock, at which hour it had of course been advertised in
-the <cite>Yass Courier</cite> of the period that the first race would
-punctually commence, and after sharp remonstrance from
-Mr. Rockley, who declared that if he had a horse in the
-race he would start him, claim the stakes, and enter an
-action against the stewards for the amount, a start <em>was</em>
-effected for the St. Leger. This important event brought
-six to the post, all well bred and well ridden. Wilfred
-thought them a curiously exact reproduction of the same
-class of horses in England.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>His reflections on the subject were cut short by a roar
-from the assemblage as the leading horses came up the
-straight in a close and desperate finish. ‘Red Deer—Bungarree—<em>no</em>!
-Red Deer!’ were shouted, as Hamilton’s
-chestnut and a handsome bay colt alternately seemed to
-have secured an undoubted lead. The final clamour
-resolved itself into the sound of ‘Red Deer! <em>Red Deer!!</em>’ as
-that gallant animal, answering to the last desperate effort of
-his rider, landed the race by ‘a short head.’ Hamilton’s
-early rising and months of sedulous training had told. It
-was a triumph of condition.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Much congratulation and hand-shaking ensued upon this,
-and Wilfred commenced to feel the uprising of the partisan
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>spirit, which is never far absent from trials of strength or
-skill. He had more than once flushed at disparaging
-observations touching the studs in his immediate neighbourhood,
-at gratuitous assertions that the Benmohr horses were
-not to be spoken of in the same day as So-and-so’s whatsyname
-of the west, or another proprietor’s breed in the north, and
-so on. Now here was a complete answer to all such, as
-well as a justification of his own opinion. He had determined
-not to risk a pound in the way of betting, holding the
-practice inexpedient at the present time. But the thought
-did cross his brain that if he had taken the odds more than
-once pressed upon him, he might have paid his week’s
-expenses as well as confuted the detractors of the Benmohr
-stud. This deduction, <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>ex post facto</em></span>, he regarded as one of the
-wiles of the enemy, and scorned accordingly.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He found the party more disposed to take a canter, after
-the enforced quietude of the last hour, than to remain
-stationary, so possessing himself of Guy’s hack, whom he
-placed temporarily in charge of the dogcart, taking off the
-leader as a precautionary measure, he rode forth among the
-gay company for a stretching canter round the course, which
-occasionally freshened into a hand-gallop, as the roll of
-hoofs excited the well-conditioned horses.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Town Plate—a locally important and much-discussed
-event—having been run, and won, after an exciting struggle,
-by Mr. O’Desmond’s Bennilong, a fine old thoroughbred,
-who still retained the pace, staying power, and ability to
-carry weight, which had long made him the glory of the
-Badajos stud and the pride of the Yass district, preparations
-for lunch on an extensive scale took place.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The horses of the different vehicles, as well as the
-hackneys, were now in various ways secured, the more
-provident owners having brought halters for the purpose.
-Mrs. Rockley and Mrs. Bower, with other ladies, had
-arranged to join forces in the commissariat department, the
-result of which was a spread of such comprehensive dimensions
-that it required the efforts of the younger men for
-nearly half an hour to unpack and set forth the store of
-edibles and the array of liquors of every kind and sort.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Rich and rare the viands were,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Diversified the plate,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>inasmuch as each family had sent forth such articles as, while
-available for immediate use, would cause less household
-mourning if reported wounded or missing. But the great
-requisities of an <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>al fresco</em></span> entertainment were fully secured.
-An ample cold collation, with such relays of the beloved
-Bass and such wines of every degree as might have served
-the need of a troop of dragoons. The last adjuncts had been
-forwarded by the male contingent, under a joint and several
-responsibility.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Eventually the grand attack was commenced by the
-impetuous Rockley, who, arming himself with a gleaming
-carver, plunged the weapon into the breast of a gigantic
-turkey, in the interests of Mrs. Effingham, who sat on his
-right hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>After this <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>assaut d’armes</em></span> the fray commenced in good
-earnest. The ladies had been provided with seats from the
-vehicles, overcoats, rugs, and all manner of envelopes, which
-could be procured, down to a spare suit of horse-clothing.
-Shawls and cloaks were brought into requisition, but the
-genial season had left the sward in a highly available
-condition, and with a cool day, a pleasant breeze, the shade
-of a few noble eucalypti, fortunately spared, nothing was
-wanting to the arrangements. As the devoted efforts of the
-younger knights and squires provided each dame and damsel
-with the necessary aliment, as the champagne corks commenced
-to fusilade with the now sustained, now dropping
-fire of a brisk affair of outposts, the merry interchange of
-compliments, mirthful badinage, and it may be eloquent
-glances become no less rapid and continuous.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Our Youth! our Youth! that spring of springs.</div>
- <div class='line'>It surely is one of the blessedest things</div>
- <div class='line in8'>By Nature ever invented!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>sang Tom Hood, and who does not echo the joyous, half-regretful
-sentiment. How one revelled in the$1‘$2’$3at the casual concourse of youthful spirits, where
-the poetic sentiment was inevitably heightened by the mere
-proximity of beauty. Surely it is well, ere the bright sky of
-youth is clouded by Care or gloomed by the storm-signal of
-Fate, to revel in the sunshine, to slumber in the haunted
-shade. So may we gaze fondly on our chaplet of roses,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>withered, alas! but fragrant yet, long ere the dread summons
-is heard which tells that life’s summer is ended, and the
-verdant alleys despoiled.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Another race or two, of inferior interest, was looked for,
-and then the party would take the road for town, concluding
-the day’s entertainment with a full-sized dance at the expansive
-abode of Mr. Rockley, which would combine all
-contingents.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The next day’s more exciting programme included the
-steeplechase, to be run after lunch. In this truly memorable
-event some of the best cross-country horses in Australia were
-to meet, including those sensational cracks, The Cid and
-St. Andrew, each representing rival stables, rival colonies.
-The former with Bob Clarke up, the latter with Charles
-Hamilton; each the show horseman of his district, and
-backed by his party to the verge of indiscretion.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The less heroic melodramas having been acted out with
-more or less contentment to performers, there was a general
-return to boot and saddle, previous to the leisurely progress
-homeward from the day’s festivities. This, as the hours were
-passing on towards the shadowy twilight, was not one of the
-least pleasant incidents of the day’s adventures.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The road skirted the great plain which bounded the
-racecourse, and as the westering sun flamed gorgeous to his
-pyre, fancy insensibly glided from the realism of the present
-to the desert mysteries of the past.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, what a sunset!’ said Christabel Rockley, whom
-fate and the impatience of her horse had placed under
-the control of Mr. Argyll. ‘How grand it is! I never see
-sunset over the plains from our verandah without thinking
-of the desert and the Israelites, camels, and pillared palaces.
-Is it like that? How I <em>should</em> love to travel!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The desert is not so unlike that plain, or any plain in
-Australia,’ explained Argyll (who had seen the Arab’s camel
-kneel, and watched the endless line of the Great Caravan
-wind slowly over the wind-blown hollows), ‘inasmuch as it
-is large and level; but the vast, awe-striking ruins, such as
-Luxor or Palmyra—records of a vanished race—these we can
-only dream of.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, how wonderful, how entrancing it must be,’ said
-Miss Christabel, ‘to see such enchanted palaces! Fancy us
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>standing on a fallen column, in a city of the dead, with those
-dear picturesque Arabs. Oh, wouldn’t it be heavenly! And
-you must be there to explain it all to me, you know!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As the girl spoke, with heightened colour, and the eager,
-half-girlish tones, so full of melody in the days of early
-womanhood, as the great dark eyes emitted a wondrous
-gleam, raised pleadingly to her companion’s face, even the
-fastidious Argyll held brief question whether life would not
-be endurable in the grand solitudes of the world, ‘with one
-(such) fair spirit to be his minister.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘My dear Miss Christabel,’ he made answer, ‘I should be
-charmed to be your guide on such an expedition. But if
-you will permit me to recommend you a delightful book,
-called——’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Here he was interrupted by the deeply-interested fair one,
-who, pointing with her whip to the advanced guard of the
-party, now halted and drawn to the side of the road, said
-hurriedly, ‘Whatever <em>are</em> they going to do, Mr. Argyll? Oh,
-I see—Bob Clarke’s going to jump King of the Valley
-over Dean’s fence. It’s ever so high, and the King is
-such a wretch to pull. I hope he won’t get a fall.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This seemingly abrupt transition from the land of romance
-to that of reality was not perhaps so wide a departure in the
-spirit as in the letter. The age of chivalry is <em>not</em> past;
-but the knights who wear khaki suits in place of armour,
-and bear the breech-loader in preference to the battle-axe,
-have to resort to means of proving their prowess before their
-ladies’ eyes other than by splintering of lances and hacking
-at each other in the sword-play of the tournament.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The King of the Valley was a violent, speedy half-bred.
-His owner was anxious to know whether he was clever enough
-over rails, to have a chance for the coming steeplechase.
-An unusual turn of speed he undoubtedly possessed, and, if
-steadied, the superstition was that the King could jump
-anything. But the question was—so hot-blooded and
-reckless was he when he saw his fence—could he be
-controlled so as to come safely through a course of three
-miles and a half of post and rail fencing, new, stiff and
-uncompromising?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To the cool request, then, that he would give him a
-schooling jump over Dean’s fence, which some men might have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>thought unreasonable, Bob Clarke, with a smile of amusement,
-instantly acceded, and making over his hackney to a friend,
-mounted the impatient King, shortened his stirrups, and
-then and there proceeded to indulge him with the big fence.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Then had occurred the sudden halt and general attitude
-of expectation which Miss Rockley had noted, and with
-which she had so promptly sympathised. Bob Clarke was
-a slight, graceful youngster, with regular features, dark hair
-and eyes, and a mild expression, much at variance with
-the dare-devilry which was his leading characteristic.
-Passionately fond of field sports, he had ridden more steeplechases,
-perhaps, than any man in Australia of his age. He
-had been carried away ‘for dead’ more than once; had
-broken an arm, several ribs, and a collar-bone—this last more
-than once. These injuries had taken place after the horse
-had fallen, for of an involuntary departure from the saddle
-no one had ever accused him.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As he gathered up his reins and quietly took the resolute
-animal a short distance back from the fence, unbroken
-silence succeeded to the flow of mirthful talk. The fence
-looked higher than usual; the close-grained timber of the
-obstinate eucalyptus was uninviting. The heavy posts and
-solid rails, ragged-edged and sharply defined, promised no
-chance of yielding. As the pair had reached the moderate
-distance considered to be sufficient for the purpose, Bob
-turned and set the eager brute going at the big dangerous
-leap. With a wild plunge the headstrong animal made as
-though to race at the obstacle with his usual impetuosity.
-Now was seen the science of a finished rider; with lowered
-hand and closely fitting seat, making him for a time a part
-of the fierce animal he rode, Bob Clarke threw the weight of
-his body and the strength of his sinewy frame into such a
-pull as forced the powerful brute to moderate his pace.
-Such, however, was his temper when roused, that the
-King still came at his fence much too fast, ‘reefing’ with
-lowered head and struggling stride—an unfavourable state of
-matters for measuring his distance. As he came within the
-last few yards of the fence more than one lady spectator
-turned pale, while a masculine one, <span lang="it" xml:lang="it"><em>sotto voce</em></span>, growled out,
-‘D——n the brute! he’ll smash himself and Bob too.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As the last half-dozen strides were reached, however, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>rusé</em></span> hero of many a hard fought fray ‘over the sticks,’
-suddenly slackening his grasp of the reins, struck the King
-sharply over the head with his whip, thus causing him to
-throw up his muzzle and take a view of his task. In the
-next moment the horse rose from <em>rather</em> a close approach,
-and with a magnificent effort just cleared the fence. A cheer
-from every man present showed the general relief.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, how beautifully he rides!’ said the fair Christabel,
-whose cheek had perhaps lost a shade of its wild-rose tint.
-‘No one looks so well on horseback as Mr. Clarke. Don’t
-you think he’s very handsome?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Not a bad-looking young fellow at all, and certainly
-rides well,’ said Argyll, without enthusiasm. ‘I daresay he
-has done little else all his lifetime, like your friends the
-Arabs. Watch him as he comes back again.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The margin by which he had escaped a fall had been
-estimated by the experienced Bob, who, taking advantage
-of a field heavy from early ploughing, gave King of the
-Valley a deserved breather before he brought him back.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>By the time they were within a reasonable distance of the
-fence, the excited animal had discovered that he had a
-rider on his back. As he came on at a stretching gallop, he
-was seen to be perfectly in hand. Nearing the jump, it
-surprised no experienced spectator to see him shorten stride
-and, ‘taking off’ at the proper distance, sail over the stiff top
-rail, ‘with (as his gratified owner said) a foot to spare, and
-Bob Clarke sitting on him, with his whip up, as easy as if he
-was in a blooming arm-chair.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There, Champion,’ said the victor as he resumed his
-hackney. ‘He can jump anything you like. But if you
-don’t have a man up who can hold him, he’ll come to grief
-some day.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A few trials and experiments of a like nature were indulged
-in by the younger cavaliers before they reached town,
-most of which were satisfactory, with one exception, in
-which the horse by a sudden and wily baulk sent his rider
-over the fence, and calmly surveyed the obstacle himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Another dance, at which everybody who had been at the
-races, and who was <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>du monde</em></span>, finished worthily the day so
-auspiciously commenced. Wilfred Effingham, who had
-declared himself rather fatigued at the first entertainment,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>and had at that festival asserted that it would do for a
-week, now commenced to enjoy himself <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>con amore</em></span>—to sun
-himself in the light of Christabel Rockley’s eyes, and to
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>badiner</em></span> with Mrs. Snowden, as if life was henceforth to be
-compounded of equal quantities of race meetings by day and
-dances by night.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I suppose you are a little tired, Miss Rockley,’ he said,
-‘after the riding and the picnic and the races; it <em>is</em> rather
-fatiguing.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Tired!’ echoed the Australian damsel in astonishment.
-‘Why should I be tired? What is the use of giving in
-before the week is half over? I shall have lots of time to
-rest and enjoy the pleasure of one’s own society after you
-have all gone. It will be dull enough then for a month or
-two.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But are there any more festivities in progress?’ he asked
-with some surprise.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Any more? Why, of course, lots and quantities. You
-English people must be made of sugar or salt. Why, there’s
-the race ball to-morrow night, at which <em>everybody</em> will be
-present—the band all the way from Sydney. The race
-dinner the next night—only for you gentlemen, of course,
-<em>we</em> shall go to bed early. Then Mrs. Bower’s picnic on
-Saturday, with a dance here till twelve o’clock—I must get
-the clock put back, I think. And Sunday——’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Sunday! haven’t you any entertainment provided for
-Sunday?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, no; not exactly. But everybody will go to
-church in the morning, and Mr. Sternworth will preach us
-one of his nice sensible sermons—they do me so much good—about
-not allowing innocent pleasures to take too great
-hold upon our hearts. In the afternoon we are all going for
-a long, long walk to the Fern-tree Dell. You’ll come, won’t
-you? It’s such a lovely place. And on Monday——’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Of course we shall begin all over again on Monday;
-keep on dancing, racing, and innocently flirting, like inland
-Flying Dutchmen, for ever and ever, as long as we hold
-together. Isn’t that the intention?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Now you’re beginning to laugh at me. It will be serious
-for some of us when you all go away. Don’t you think so,
-now?’ (Here the accompaniment was a look of such distracting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>pathos that Wilfred was ready to deliver an address
-on ‘Racing considered as the chief end of man,’ without
-further notice.) ‘No; on Monday morning you are all to
-pay your bills at the Budgeree—those that have money
-enough, I mean; not that it matters—Bowker will wait for
-ever, they say. Then you go back to your stations, and
-work like good boys till the next excuse for coming into
-Yass, and that finishes up the week nicely, doesn’t it?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘So nicely that I believe there is a month of ordinary
-life compressed into it—certainly as far as enjoyment
-goes. I shall never forget it as long as I live—never forget
-some of the friends I have made here during the brightest,
-happiest time of my life, especially——’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Look at that ridiculous Mr. Tarlton dancing the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>pas
-seul</em></span>!’ exclaimed Miss Christabel, not quite disposed to enter
-upon Wilfred’s explanation of his sensations. ‘Do you know,
-I think quadrilles are rather a mistake after all. I should
-like dances to be made up of nothing but valses and galops.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Life would be rather too rapid, I am afraid, if we carried
-that principle out. Don’t you think Mrs. Snowden is looking
-uncommonly well to-night?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘She always dresses so well that no one looks better.’</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XII <br /> STEEPLECHASE DAY</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>In despite of the mirthful converse continued around him,
-during the small hours, and the complicated condition of his
-emotions, Wilfred Effingham slept so soundly that the breakfast
-bell was needed to arouse him. He felt scarcely eager
-for the fray; but after a shower-bath and that creditable
-morning meal ever possible to youth, his feelings concerning
-the problems of life and the duties of the hour underwent a
-change for the better.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Charles Hamilton, Bob Clarke, and the turf contingent
-generally had been out at daylight, personally inspecting the
-steeds that were to bear them to victory and a modest raking
-in of the odds or otherwise. How much ‘otherwise’ is there
-upon the race-courses of the world! How often is the
-favourite amiss or ‘nobbled,’ the rider ‘off his head,’ the
-certainty a ‘boil over’! Alas, that it should be so! That
-man should barter the sure rewards of industry for the
-feverish joys, the heart-shaking uncertainties, the death-like
-despair which the gambling element, whether in the sport
-or business of life, inevitably brings in its train!</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Why, this <em>is</em> life,’ sneers the cynic; ‘you are describing
-what ever has been, is, and shall be, the worship of the great
-god “Chance.” The warrior and the statesman, the poet
-and the priest, the people especially, have from all time
-placed their lives and fortunes on a cast, differently named,
-it is true. And they will do so to the end.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Such causticities scarcely apply to the modest provincial
-meeting which we chronicle, inasmuch as little money changed
-hands. What cash was wagered would have been treated
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>with scorn by the layers of the odds and inventors of ‘doubles,’
-those turf triumphs or tragedies. Nevertheless, the legitimate
-excitement of the steeplechase, three and a half miles over
-a succession of three-railed fences, with the two ‘hardest’
-men in the Southern District up, would be a sight to see.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Independently of the exciting nature of the race, an intercolonial
-element was added. Bob Clarke and his steed were
-natives of Tasmania; the cool climate and insular position
-of which have been thought to be favourable to human
-and equine development. Much colour for the supposition
-was recognised by the eager gazers of Mr. Bob Clarke and
-his gallant bay, The Cid.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The former was evidently born for a career of social
-success. Chivalrous and energetic, with a bright smile, a
-pleasant manner, his popularity was easy of explanation.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In a ball room, where his modesty was in the inverse ratio
-to his iron-nerved performances across country, he was a
-rival not to be despised. Among men he was voted ‘an out-and-out
-good fellow,’ or a gentlemanlike, manly lad, from
-whatever side emanated the criticism.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Cid was a grand horse, if not quite worthy of the
-exaggerated commendation which his admirers bestowed.
-A handsome, upstanding animal, bright bay, with black
-points, he had a commanding-looking forehand, ‘that you
-could hardly see over,’ as a Tasmanian turfite observed,
-besides a powerful quarter, with hips, the same critic was
-pleased to observe, ‘as wide as a fire-place.’ In his trials
-he was known to have taken leaps equal in height to anything
-ever crossed by a horse. But a stain in his blood
-occasionally showed out, in a habit of baulking. Of this
-peculiarity he gave no notice whatever, sometimes indulging
-it at the commencement, sometimes at the end of a race,
-to the anguish of well-wishers and the dismay of backers.
-A determined rider was therefore indispensable. As on
-this occasion the only man in the country-side ‘who could
-ride him as he ought to be ridden,’ according to popular
-belief, was up, who had also trained him for this particular
-race, little apprehension was felt as to the result.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Not less confident were the friends of St. Andrew, a
-different animal in appearance, but of great merit in the eyes
-of judges. Not so large as his celebrated antagonist, he had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>the condensed symmetry of the racehorse. Boasting the
-blue blood of Peter Fin (imported) on his mother’s side,
-his Camerton pedigree on the other, entitled him to be
-ticketed ‘thorough-bred as Eclipse.’ A compact and level
-horse, with the iron legs of the tribe, every muscle stood out,
-beautifully developed by a careful preparation. His dark
-chestnut satin coat, his quiet, determined air, the unvarying
-cleverness with which he performed in private, together with
-the acknowledged excellence of his rider, rendered the
-Benmohr division confident of victory.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The others which made up the race were fine animals,
-but were not entrusted to any great extent with the cash or
-the confidence of the public. Of these the most formidable
-was a scarred veteran named Bargo, who had gone through
-or over many a fence in many a steeplechase. His rider
-being, like himself, chiefly professional, they were both undoubted
-performers. But though the old chaser would
-refuse nothing, his pace had declined through age. It was
-understood that he was entered on the chance of the two
-cracks destroying each other, in which case Bargo would
-be a ‘moral.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The remaining ones, with the exception of King of the
-Valley, were chiefly indebted for their entry to the commendable
-gallantry of aspiring youth. It was something to
-turn out in ‘the colours’ and other requisites of costume
-before an admiring crowd; something, doubtless, to see a
-cherry cheek deepen or pale at the thought of the chances
-of the day; something to try a local favourite in good
-company. All honour to the manly and honest-hearted
-feeling!</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Of these, briefly, it may be stated that Currency Lass
-was a handsome chestnut mare with three white legs, and
-much of the same colour distributed over her countenance.
-She was fast, and jumped brilliantly, if she could be prevailed
-upon not to take off too near to her fences, or ridiculously
-far off, or to pump all the breath out of her body by unnecessary
-pulling. The regulation of these tendencies
-provided a task of difficulty for the rider.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wallaby and Cornstalk were two useful, hunter-looking
-bays, which would have brought a considerably higher price
-in the old land than they were ever likely to do here.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>The course had been arranged so that the horses should
-start near the stand, and going across country take a
-circuitous course, but eventually finishing at the stand after
-negotiating a sensational last fence. This was not thought
-to be good management, but the enclosures admitted of no
-other arrangement.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The morning’s racing having been got through, everybody
-adjourned to lunch, it being decided that <em>the</em> important
-event should take place at three o’clock, after which the
-excitement of the day might be considered to be over. In spite
-of the approaching contest, which doubtless contained an
-element of danger, as it was known that the riders of the
-two cracks would ‘go at each other for their lives,’ not
-less than the usual amount of mirth and merriment was
-observable. The two chief actors were altogether impervious
-to considerations involving life and limb, although they
-had seen and suffered what might have made some men
-cautious.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Bob Clarke had been more than once ‘carried away for
-dead’ from under a fallen horse, while Charles Hamilton had
-won a steeplechase after having employed the morning in
-tracking a friend who had gone out to ‘school’ a young
-horse, and whom the search-party discovered lying dead
-under a log fence.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The ladies exhibited a partisanship which they were at no
-pains to conceal. Bets (in gloves) ran high; while the danger
-of the imminent race rendered a fair cheek, here and there,
-less brilliant of hue, and dimmed the sparkle of bright eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, I <em>hope</em> no one will get hurt,’ said Christabel Rockley;
-‘these horrid fences are so high and stiff. Why can’t they
-have all flat races? They’re not so exciting, certainly, but
-then no one can get killed.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Accidents occur in these, you know,’ said Mrs. Snowden,
-philosophically; ‘and, after all, if the men like to run a little
-risk while <em>we</em> are looking on, I don’t see why we should
-grudge them the pleasure.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It seems very unfeeling,’ says the tender-hearted damsel.
-‘I shall feel quite guilty if any one is hurt to-day. Poor Mrs.
-Malahyde, Bob Clarke’s sister, is dreadfully anxious; the
-tears keep coming into her eyes. She knows how reckless
-he can be when he’s determined to win.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>‘I fancy Mr. Hamilton’s St. Andrew will win,’ said Mrs.
-Snowden; ‘he is better bred, they say, and he looks to me
-so well-trained. What do you think, Mr. Effingham?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I am a thick and thin supporter of the Benmohr stable,’
-said Wilfred. ‘The Cid is a grand horse, but my sympathies
-are with St. Andrew.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I’ll bet a dozen pairs of gloves The Cid wins,’ said Miss
-Christabel impetuously, looking straight at Mrs. Snowden.
-‘He can beat anything in the district when he likes; Mr.
-Hamilton rides beautifully, but Bob can make <em>any</em> horse win.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘My dear child, you are quite a “plunger,”’ said Mrs.
-Snowden. ‘Doubtless, they will cover themselves with glory.
-I’m afraid they can’t both win.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At this moment one of the heroes joined the speakers,
-sauntering up with a respectful expression of countenance,
-proper to him who makes a request of a fair lady.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Miss Christabel, I have come to ask you to give me one
-of your ribbons for luck. I see Miss Effingham has decorated
-Hamilton. It’s only fair that I should have a charm too.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Here it is, if you care for it, Bob!’ said the girl, hastily
-detaching a ‘cerise’ knot from her dress, while her varying
-colour told how the slight incident touched an unseen chord
-beneath the surface; ‘only I wish you were not going to ride
-at all. Somebody will be killed at these horrid steeplechases
-yet, I know.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Why, you’re nearly as bad as my sister,’ said the youthful
-knight reassuringly, and giving his fair monitress an unnecessary
-look of gratitude, as Wilfred thought. ‘I shan’t
-let her come on the course next time I ride. There’s the
-saddling bell. We’ll see whether the pink ribbon or the blue
-goes farthest.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The arrangements had been made with foresight, so that
-beyond the customary galloping across the course for a
-surcingle at the last moment by a friend in the interests of
-Currency Lass, a proceeding which aroused Mr. Rockley’s
-wrath, who publicly threatened her rider that he would bring
-the matter before the Turf Club, little delay was caused. At
-length all preliminaries were complete, and high-born St.
-Andrew passed the stand, shining like a star, with Charles
-Hamilton, in blue and gold, utterly <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>point devise</em></span>, on his
-back. Horse and rider seemed so harmonious, indeed, that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>a ringing cheer burst from the crowd, and all the throats
-whose owners inhabited the hills and vales south of the
-Great Lake shouted themselves hoarse for St. Andrew and
-Mr. Hamilton.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘He’s as fit as hands can make him,’ said one of this
-division—a groom of O’Desmond’s. ‘There’s few of us can
-put on the real French polish like Mr. Hamilton; he’s a
-tiger to work, surely; and the little ’oss is fast. I know his
-time. If that Syd, or whatever they call him, licks ’im
-to-day, he’ll have his work to do. My guinea’s on St.
-Andrew.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘He’s a good ’un, and a stayer,’ said the man who stood
-next to him in the closely-packed temporary stand; ‘but
-there’s a bit of chance work in a steeplechase. The Cid’s
-a trimmer on the flat, or cross the sticks, but you can’t
-depend on him. I wouldn’t back him for a shillin’ if young
-Clarke wasn’t on him. But he’s that game and strong in the
-saddle, and lucky, as my note would be on a mule if he was
-up. Here he comes!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As he spoke, The Cid came by the post at speed, ‘a pipe-opener’
-having been thought necessary by his master, and
-as the grand horse extended himself, showing the elastic
-freedom of his magnificent proportions, with the perfection
-of his rider’s seat and figure, standing jockey-like in his saddle,
-moveless, and with hands down, it was a marvel of equestrian
-harmony.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The roar of applause with which the crowd greeted the
-exhibition showed a balance of popularity in favour of horse
-and rider as the long-repeated cheers swelled and recommenced,
-not ending indeed until the pair came walking
-back, The Cid raising his lofty crest, and swinging his head
-from side to side, as he paced forward with the air of a
-conqueror.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, what lovely, lovely creatures!’ said Annabel
-Effingham, who had never been to a race meeting before.
-‘I had no idea a horse could be so beautiful as St. Andrew
-or The Cid. Why can’t they both win? I hope Mr. Hamilton
-will, I’m sure, because he’s our neighbour; but I shall be
-grieved if The Cid loses. How becoming jockey costume is!
-And what a lovely jacket that is of Mr. Clarke’s! If I were
-a man I should be passionately fond of racing.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>‘Bob’s a great deal too fond of it,’ said Mrs. Malahyde,
-a bright-eyed matron of seven- or eight-and-twenty. ‘I wish
-you girls would combine and make him promise to give it up.
-I can’t keep away when he’s going to ride, but it’s all agony
-with me till I see him come in safe.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘When you look at it in that way,’ assented Annabel, ‘it
-certainly doesn’t seem right, and it’s unfair of us to encourage
-it. What a pity so many nice things are wrong!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘They’re off!’ said Miss Christabel, who had been eagerly
-watching the proceedings, during which the other performers
-had severally displayed themselves, receiving more or less
-qualified ovations, and then finally been taken in charge
-severely by Mr. Rockley as far as the distance post. ‘They’re
-off! Oh, don’t say a word till they’re over the first fence!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>All the horses of the little troop had sufficient self-control
-to go ‘well within themselves’ from the start except King of
-the Valley and Currency Lass. The mare’s nervous system
-was so shaken by the thunder of the horse-hoofs and the
-shouting of the crowd at her introduction to society, that she
-pulled and tore, and ‘took it out of herself,’ as her rider, Billy
-Day, afterwards expressed himself, to that extent, that he felt
-compelled to let her have her head, with a lead over the first
-fence.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This barrier she at first charged at the rate of a liberal
-forty miles an hour, with her head up, her mouth open, and
-such an apparently reckless disregard of the known properties
-of iron-bark timber, that Billy’s friends began to cast
-about for a handy vehicle, as likely to be in immediate demand
-for ambulance work. But whether from the contrarieties said
-to govern the female sex, or from some occult reason,
-Currency Lass no sooner had her own way than she displayed
-unexpected prudence. She slackened pace, and cocking her
-delicately-pointed ears, rewarded her rider’s nerve and patience
-by making a magnificent though theatrical jump, and being
-awfully quick on her legs, was half-way to the next fence
-before another had crossed the first.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, what a lovely jump Currency Lass took!’ said one
-of the young ladies, ‘and what a distance she is in front of
-all the rest. Do you think she will win, Mr. Smith? How
-slowly all the others are going.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There’s plenty of time,’ said the critic of the sterner sex.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>‘She’s a clever thing, but she can’t stay the distance. Ha!
-very neatly done indeed. That’s what I call workmanlike.
-Cornstalk baulks—well done—good jump! All over the
-first fence, and no one down.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>These latter remarks were called forth by seeing St.
-Andrew, The Cid, and Bargo charge the fence nearly in
-line, the latter rather in the rear, and go over with as little
-haste or effort as if it had been a row of hurdles. Wallaby
-hit the top rail hard, but recovered himself, and Cornstalk,
-after baulking once, was wheeled short, and popped over
-cleverly, without losing ground.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The same style of performance was repeated with so little
-variation for the next half-dozen leaps, that the eager public
-began to look with favour upon the enthusiastic Currency
-Lass, still sailing ahead with undiminished ardour, and flying
-her leaps like a deer. The sarcastic inquiry, ‘Will they ever
-catch her?’ commenced to be employed, and the provincial
-prejudice in favour of a true bushman and a country-trained
-horse, ‘without any nonsense about her,’ began to gather
-strength.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But at this stage of the proceedings it became apparent
-that the struggle between the two cracks could not longer be
-postponed. With one bound, as it appeared to the spectators,
-St. Andrew and The Cid were away at speed, their riders
-bearing themselves as if they had only that moment started
-for the race.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘They’re at one another now,’ said Argyll to O’Desmond.
-‘We shall see how the Camerton blood tells in a finish.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Don’t you think Charlie’s making the pace too good?’
-said Mr. Churbett. ‘I wanted him to wait till he got near
-the hill, but he said he thought the pace would try The Cid’s
-temper, and half a mistake would make him lose the race.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘They’re both going too fast now, in my opinion,’ said
-Forbes. ‘One of them will have a fall soon, and then the
-race is old Bargo’s, as sure as my name’s James.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, what a pretty sight!’ said Mrs. Snowden, as a large
-fence in full view of the whole assemblage was reached.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The native damsel was still leading, but the distance had
-visibly decreased which separated her from the popular
-heroes. All three horses were going best pace, and as the
-mare cleared the fence cleverly, but with little to spare,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>pressed by The Cid and St. Andrew, as they took the jump
-apparently in the same stride, a great cheer burst from the
-crowd.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well done, Bargo!’ shouted the complimentary crowd, in
-high good-humour, as the old horse came up, quietly working
-out his programme, and topping the fence with but little
-visible effort, followed his more brilliant leaders. The others
-were by this time considerably in the rear, but took their
-jumps creditably still. The next fence was known to be the
-most dangerous in the whole course. The ground was
-broken and stony, the incline unpleasantly steep, and a small
-but annoying grip caused by the winter rains interfered with
-the approach. In the hunting field it would have been
-simply a matter for careful riding. But here, at the speed
-to which the pace had been forced, it was dangerous.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Why don’t they pull off there?’ muttered Mr. Rockley,
-virtuously indignant. ‘No one but a madman would go over
-ground like that as if they were finishing a flat race. That
-fellow Hamilton is as obstinate as a mule. I know him; he
-wouldn’t pull off an inch for all the judges of the Supreme
-Court.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I’m afraid Bob Clarke won’t,’ said John Hampden; ‘that’s
-the worst of steeplechasing, the fellows <em>will</em> ride so jealous.
-Well done, The Cid! By Jove! the mare’s down! and—yes—no!—St.
-Andrew too. Don’t be frightened, anybody,’
-as more than one plaintive cry arose from among the carriages
-on which the ladies stood thickly clustering. ‘Both men up,
-and no harm done. Hamilton’s away again, but it’s The
-Cid’s race.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>These hurried observations, made for the benefit of the
-visibly distressed <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>clientèle</em></span> of Hamilton, were called forth by
-the most sensational proceedings which had obtained yet.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As the two rivals came down the slope at the highly
-improper pace alluded to, they overtook Currency Lass at
-her fence, which confused that excitable animal. Getting
-her head from her rider, who had been prudently steadying
-her across this unpleasant section, with the idea that he would
-be unaccompanied till he was clear of it, she went at the fence
-with her usual impetuosity. A gutter threw her out a little;
-it may be that her wind had failed. It is certain that, taking
-off too closely to the stiff fence, she struck the top rail with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>tremendous force, the impetus casting her rolling over on her
-back into the adjoining paddock, while her rider, fortunately
-for him, was ‘sent rods and rods ahead of her’ (as a comrade
-described it), and so saved from being crushed under the
-fallen horse. The mare rose to her legs trembling and half
-stunned, glared for one moment at surrounding objects, and
-then went off at full speed, with flapping stirrups and trailing
-reins. The Cid had sailed over the fence a yard to the left
-of her, and was going at his ease, with nothing near him.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Where, then, was St. Andrew? He had also come to
-grief.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Putting his foot on a rolling stone, he had been unable to
-clear his leap, though he made a gallant effort. Striking
-heavily, he went down on the farther side.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>His rider, sitting well back, and never for one instant
-losing his proverbial coolness, was able to save him as much
-as, under the circumstances, a horse can be saved. Down
-on nose and knee only went the good horse, his rider falling
-close to his shoulder, and never relinquishing the reins.
-Both were on their feet in an instant, and before the crowd
-had well realised the fact, or the ‘I told you so’ division had
-breath to explain why St. Andrew <em>must</em> fall if the pace was
-kept really good, Charlie Hamilton was in the saddle and
-away, with his teeth set and a determination not to lose the
-race yet, if there was a chance left. Bargo came up with
-calculated pace and line, and performed his exercise with the
-same ease and precision as if he had been practising at a
-leaping bar. Cornstalk baulked again, and this time with
-sufficient determination to lose him half a mile. Wallaby
-gave his rider a nasty fall, breaking his collar-bone and preventing
-further efforts. While King of the Valley, going
-reasonably up to this stage, overpowered his rider at last, and
-hardly rising at his fence, rolled over, and did not rise. He
-had broken his neck, and his rider was unconscious for twelve
-hours afterwards. The race therefore lay between The Cid,
-St. Andrew, and the safe and collected Bargo, coming up
-<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>pedo claudo</em></span>, and with a not unreasonable chance, like Nemesis,
-of appearing with effect at the close of the proceedings.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The next marked division of the course was known as ‘the
-hill,’ an eminence of no great altitude between two farms, but
-possessing just sufficient abruptness to make the fence a more
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>than average effort. This ‘rise,’ as the country people called
-it, lay about three-quarters of a mile from home, and the horse
-that first came down the long slope which led towards the
-winning-post, divided from it but by several easy fences, had
-a strong chance of winning the race.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Before The Cid reached the base of this landmark, still
-keeping the pace good, but going comparatively at his ease,
-it was apparent that Hamilton, who had been riding St.
-Andrew for his life, and had indeed resolved to tax the
-courage and condition of the good horse to the last gasp, was
-closing in upon his leader. ‘Sitting down’ upon his horse,
-Charles Hamilton extorted praise from the assemblage by the
-determination with which he fought a losing race. He was
-well seconded by the son of Camerton, as, extending himself
-to the utmost, he flew fence after fence as if they were so
-many hurdles.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What a pity poor St. Andrew came down at that abominable
-place!’ said Annabel. ‘I really believe he might have
-won the race. He was not so far behind Mr. Clarke when
-he disappeared behind the hill.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘He’s only playing with him, I’m afraid,’ said Mr. Hampden
-kindly. ‘Hamilton and his horse deserve to win, but
-that fall made too great a difference between horses so evenly
-matched.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The Cid’s heart’s not in the right place,’ here broke in
-an admirer of Miss Christabel’s, who had been cut down by
-the fascinating Bob. ‘You know that, Hampden. I saw
-him refuse and lose his race, which he had easy in hand, at
-Casterton. He might baulk at that sidling jump behind the
-hill yet. It’s a nasty place.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I believe he will too,’ said Fred Churbett, staunch to
-the Benmohr colours. ‘We ought to see them soon now;
-they’re a long time coming. Take all the odds you can get,
-Miss Annabel.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Will <em>you</em> take seven to four, Churbett?’ said Mr. Hampden.
-‘I know The Cid’s peculiarities, but I’ll back him out,
-and my countryman, Bob Clarke, as long as there is a Hereford
-at Wangarua.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Done!’ said the friendly Fred; ‘and “done” again, Mr.
-Hampden,’ said Bob’s rival.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Just as the words were finished a great shout of ‘St.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>Andrew wins, Benmohr for ever!’ arose from the country
-people as <em>one horse</em> was seen coming down the long, green
-slope. On the rider could plainly be discovered the blue
-and golden colours of Charles Hamilton.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Baulked, by Jove! the sidling fence was too much for
-him; thought Bob was sending him along too fast. Deuced
-uncertain brute; not the real thing; never could stay;
-nothing like the old Whisker and Camerton strain. Here
-comes Bargo! By Jove! Hurrah!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Such comments and condemnations were freely expressed
-as St. Andrew came sailing along. The concluding cheer,
-however, was evoked by the apparition of a second horse
-which followed St. Andrew with a flogging rider, who was
-evidently making his effort. It immediately became apparent
-that this was Bargo, whom his rider was ‘setting to with,’
-believing that the tremendous pace which St. Andrew had
-sustained for the last part of the race must now tell upon
-him. Where, then, was The Cid? Where, indeed? His
-admirers were dumb; his opponents jubilant. It is the way
-of the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Where’s your seven to four now, Mr. Hampden?’ said
-the youthful partisan.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Possibly quite safe; never be quite certain till the
-numbers are up. Here comes The Cid at last; Bob’s not
-beaten yet.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Another sustained shout from the excited crowd showed
-what a new element of interest this apparition of the lost
-horseman had added to the race. Bargo, carefully saved,
-and comparatively fresh, sorely pressed the gallant St.
-Andrew, whose bolt was nearly shot. Still, struggling
-gamely to keep his lead, and well held together, he had
-crossed the third fence from home before he was challenged
-by Bargo.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But down the hill, at an awful pace, ridden with the
-desperation of a madman, came The Cid. Bob Clarke, with
-cap off and reckless use of whip and spur, could not have
-increased the pace by one single stride had he been going
-for a man’s life. Had a doomed criminal been standing on
-the scaffold, ready for the headsman’s axe, did the reprieve of
-the old romances not be displayed in time, not another
-second could The Cid have achieved.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>‘He’ll do it yet if they’re not too close at the last fence,’
-said Hampden, with his usual calmness. ‘I never knew The
-Cid baulk <em>twice</em> in one race, and he has a terrible turn of
-speed for a short finish. Bob’s in earnest, I should say.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>That fact was doubted by none who saw him that day.
-His face was pale; his eyes blazed with a flame which few
-had ever seen who looked upon the handsome features and
-pleasant smile of Robert Clarke. The excitement became
-tremendous. The ladies made emotional remarks—some of
-pity for his disappointment, some of sympathy with his probable
-hurts, if he had had a fall. All joined in reprobating
-the unlucky Cid.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Christabel Rockley alone said no word, but her fixed eyes
-and pale cheek showed the absorbing interest which the
-dangerous contest, now deepening to a possible tragedy, had
-for her.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The furious pace appeared not to interfere with The Cid’s
-wondrous jumping powers. At the speed he was driven at
-his fences he must have gone over or through them. He
-seemed to prefer the former, and cheer after cheer broke the
-unusual silence as high in air was seen the form of horse and
-rider, as every fence was crossed but the last, and perhaps the
-stiffest, a hundred yards from home.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>St. Andrew and Bargo were now neck and neck, stride and
-stride. The indomitable chestnut had begun to roll; the
-stout but not brilliant Bargo was at his best. As they near
-the last fence it is evident that The Cid, still coming up with
-a ‘wet sail,’ is overhauling the pair. The question is,
-whether St. Andrew is not too near home.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The anxiety of the crowd is intense, the breathless
-suspense of the friends of the rival stables painful, the
-fielders are at the acme of excited hope and fear, when
-St. Andrew and Bargo, closely followed by The Cid, rise at
-this deciding leap. The chestnut just clears it, with nothing
-to spare; Bargo, overpaced, strikes heavily, and rolls in the
-field beyond; Bob Clarke charges the panel on the right like
-a demon, and, after a deadly neck-and-neck struggle with St.
-Andrew, who still has fight left, outrides him on the post.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The conclusion of this ‘truly exciting race, covering with
-glory all concerned therein,’ as the local journal phrased it,
-was felt to be almost too solemn a matter for the usual hackneyed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>congratulations. The overwrought emotions of the
-young ladies rendered a prompt adjournment necessary to
-side-saddles and vehicles, which, after refreshment supplied
-to the protagonists, were made ready for the homeward route.
-Bob Clarke received a congratulatory glance from Christabel
-Rockley, which no doubt helped to console him, as did such
-guerdon many a good knight of old, for the dust and dangers
-of the tourney.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>His sister, Mrs. Malahyde, who could hardly have been
-said either to have seen or enjoyed the thrilling performance,
-for ‘mamma was lying down crying in the bottom of the dogcart
-all the time,’ as her little daughter testified, now arranged
-her bonnet and countenance, and expressed her heartfelt
-thanks for Bob’s safety.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Charles Hamilton received assurances from the ladies
-generally, and particularly from his neighbours of The Chase,
-that his courage and perseverance had been to them astonishing,
-and beyond all praise; while St. Andrew, beaten only by
-a head, after all his gallant endeavours to repair ill-luck, was
-lauded to the skies.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Poor dear fellow!’ said Annabel. ‘I wonder if horses
-ever feel disappointed. He does droop a little, and it was
-wicked of you to spur him so, Mr. Hamilton. Now that
-naughty Cid goes swinging his head about as if he was quite
-proud of himself. How <em>he</em> has been spurred! Dear me!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Yes, and well flogged,’ said one of the Hobart division.
-‘Bob said when he baulked behind the hill he could have
-killed him. However, it will do him good. He took his
-last fences as if he would never refuse again as long as he
-lived.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I will just say this, as my calm and deliberate opinion,
-and I should like to hear any man contradict me,’ said
-Mr. Rockley, ‘that there never was a race better ridden
-in the colony than Hamilton’s on St. Andrew. If he hadn’t
-made that mistake at the stony creek he <em>must</em> have had the
-race easily. His recovering his place was one of the best bits
-of riding I ever saw.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, of course; but if The Cid hadn’t baulked, <em>he</em> would
-have come in as he liked. Suppose we get them to run it
-over again to-morrow as a match for a hundred. I’ll put a
-tenner on The Cid.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>‘The race is run, Mr. Newman, and that’s enough,’ said
-Rockley decisively; ‘quite enough danger for one year.
-The next thing is to get back to Yass in time to dine comfortably,
-and see that everything is ready for the race ball to-night.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This sensible advice, which, like the suggestions of royal
-personages, savoured somewhat of a command, was duly
-acted upon, and in a short time the greater part of the
-company, who intended to recompense themselves for the
-fatiguing emotions of the day by the fascinations of the
-night, took the homeward road, leaving ‘The Hack Stakes’
-and the ‘Scurry’ (post entry) to be run without them. There
-was ample time. The afternoon was mild and fair of aspect;
-a friendly breeze, sighing over the plain, had come wandering
-up from the south. The equestrian portion of the company
-formed themselves unconsciously into knots and pairs.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Bob Clarke, having shifted into mufti, was lounging homeward
-on a well-bred hackney on the offside of Christabel
-Rockley’s Red King, whose arching neck he felt impelled
-to pat, while he replied to the eager questioning of the fair
-rider. Her cheeks were brilliant again with youth’s bright
-tints, and her eyes glittered like imprisoned diamonds beneath
-her tiny lace veil.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I hope you sympathise with me, Miss Effingham,’ said
-Hamilton, as they rode in advance of the rest of the party, a
-position to which Fergus’s extraordinary walking powers
-generally promoted him. ‘Bob is receiving the victor’s meed
-from Miss Christabel—how happy they both look!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I really do, sincerely,’ said Rosamond, ignoring the
-episodical matter. ‘It must be most provoking to have one’s
-prize wrested away in the moment of victory. But every one
-saw what a gallant struggle you and St. Andrew made. Were
-you hurt at all when you fell?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I shall be pretty stiff to-morrow,’ he answered carelessly;
-‘but I have had no time to think about it. I thought my
-arm was broken, as it was under St. Andrew’s shoulder. It
-is all right, though numbed for a while. I am inwardly very
-sore and disgusted, I don’t mind telling you. That tall
-fellow, Champion, and Malahyde, with all the Tasmanians,
-will crow so.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It can’t be helped, I suppose,’ said Rosamond soothingly.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>‘Mr. Hampden, at least, did not show any disposition to do
-so, for he praised your riding and St. Andrew’s good finish
-warmly. He said all steeplechases were won either by luck,
-pluck, a good horse, or good riding, and that you had all but
-the first requisite.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Hampden is a good fellow and a gentleman,’ said the
-worsted knight, rather consoled, ‘and so is Bob Clarke. If
-one has done one’s best, there is no more to be said. But I
-had set my heart on winning this particular race. Heigh-ho!
-our pleasure week is coming to an end.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Yes; to-night, the ball; to-morrow, the Ladies’ Bag and
-a picnic. We are all off home on Monday. I shall not be
-sorry, though I have enjoyed myself thoroughly; every one
-has been so pleasant and friendly, and Mrs. Rockley kind
-beyond description. I never had so much gaiety in so short
-a time. But I shall be pleased to return to our quiet life
-once more.’</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XIII <br /> MISS VERA FANE OF BLACK MOUNTAIN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>After a due amount of dining and dressing, the former
-performed by the male and the latter by the feminine portion
-of the gathered social elements, ‘The great Terpsichorean
-event, which marked this most harmonious Turf reunion,
-was inaugurated with <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>éclat</em></span>,’ as the editor of the <cite>Yass Standard</cite>
-(in happy ignorance of the illegal arrangement which divers
-magnates, chiefly being Justices of the Peace, were at that very
-hour transacting) described it in the following Monday’s issue.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>All the bachelors, and not a few of the married men, had
-quarters at the Budgeree Hotel, so that they had no unnecessary
-fatigue to undergo, but were enabled to present
-themselves in the grand ballroom of that imposing building
-nearly as soon as it was ascertained that the Rockley contingent,
-which apparently combined everybody’s favourite partner,
-had arrived.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The brass band included a wandering minstrel from the
-metropolis, whose aid, both instrumentally and in the selection
-of dance music, proved truly valuable. The invitations,
-owing to the liberal views of Mr. Rockley, had been
-comprehensive, taking in all the townspeople who could by
-any chance have felt aggrieved at being left out.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The ball was opened by a quadrille, in which Mrs. Rockley
-and Hampden took part, while Rockley, with deferential demeanour,
-led out Mrs. Effingham, who consented on that
-occasion only to revive the recollections of her youth. Mrs.
-Snowden and Argyll, Hamilton and Rosamond Effingham,
-with other not less distinguished personages, ‘assisted’ at this
-opening celebration.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>After this ceremonious commencement the first waltz took
-place, in which Wilfred found himself anticipated as to a
-dance with Christabel Rockley, who, with an utterly bewildering
-look, regretted that she was engaged to Bob Clarke.
-That heroic personage swiftly whirled away with the goddess
-in his arms, leaving Wilfred more annoyed than he liked to
-confess, and divided in his resolutions whether to stay at home
-and work austerely, avoiding the lighter amusements, or to
-buy the best horse in the Benmohr stud, train him at The
-Chase, and ride against Bob Clarke for his life at the next
-meeting. He had called up sufficient presence of mind to
-place his name again on Miss Christabel’s very popular card,
-rather low down, it is true, but still available for a favourite
-waltz, in which Fred Churbett had promised to assist with
-his cornet, and Hamilton with his Sax-horn, a new instrument,
-believed to be the combination of all sweet and
-sonorous sounds possible to the trumpet tribe.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But all inappropriate thoughts were driven out by the
-next partner, a striking-looking girl, to whom he was introduced
-by Mr. Rockley, very properly doing duty as chief
-steward.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This young lady’s name was stated to be Vera Fane, with
-great clearness of intonation. He further volunteered the
-information that she was the daughter of his old friend, Dr.
-Fane, and (in what was meant to be a whisper) ‘as nice a
-girl as ever you met in your life.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The young lady smiled and blushed, but without discomposure,
-at this evidence of the high value at which she was
-rated.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Rather too good to be true, don’t you think?’ she said,
-with a frank yet modest air. ‘I ought to declare myself
-much honoured, and all the rest of it. But you know Mr.
-Rockley’s warm-hearted way of talking, and I really think he
-believes every word of it. He has known me from a child.
-But I apologise, and we’ll say no more about it, please.
-Very good racing there seems to have been. I was <em>so</em> sorry,
-in despair I may say, to miss the steeplechase.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Then you only came in to-day?’ asked Wilfred. ‘How
-was that? I didn’t think any lady in the district could
-have forgone the excitement. It seems to rank with the
-miracle plays of the Middle Ages.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>‘Or rather the masques and tournaments of those of
-chivalry. But I was away from home, and had to ride a
-long way for the ball and the Ladies’ Bag to-morrow.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I am afraid you must be tired. How far have you come
-to-day?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Really,’ said the young lady, with some hesitation, ‘I
-must plead guilty to having ridden fifty miles to-day. I am
-afraid it shows over-eagerness for pleasure, and dear old Mr.
-Sternworth might scold me, if he was not so indulgent to
-what he calls “the necessities of youth.” But our home is a
-lonely spot, and I have so <em>very</em> little change.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Fifty miles!’ said Wilfred, in astonishment. ‘And do you
-really mean to say that you have ridden that immense
-distance, and are going to dance afterwards? It will kill
-you.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You must be thinking of young ladies in England, Mr.
-Effingham,’ said the girl, with an amused look; ‘not but
-what some of them rode fair distances for the same reasons
-a hundred years ago, papa says. I daresay I shall feel tired
-on Sunday; but, as I’ve ridden ever since I could walk, it is
-nothing so very wonderful. You mustn’t think me quite an
-Amazon.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘On the contrary,’ said Wilfred, looking at the girl’s
-graceful figure, and recognising that air of refinement which
-tells of gentle blood, ‘I am lost in astonishment only. You
-look as if you had made a start from “The Big House” with
-the rest of Mrs. Rockley’s flock. But we must join this
-waltz, if you don’t mind, or your journey will have been in
-vain.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Miss Fane smiled assent, and as they threaded the lively
-maze, practically demonstrated that she had by no means
-so overtired herself as to interfere with her dancing.
-Wilfred immediately established her among the half-dozen
-perfections he had discovered in that line. There was,
-moreover, a frank, unconcealed enjoyment of the whole
-affair, which pleased her partner. Her fresh, unpremeditated
-remarks, showing original thought, interested him; so much
-so, that when he led her to a seat beside her chaperon,
-having previously secured a second dance at a later period
-of the evening—and the <em>very last</em>—even Sir Roger de Coverley—the
-bitterness of soul with which he had seen Christabel
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>Rockley borne off by the all-conquering Bob Clarke, was
-considerably abated. He would have been incensed if any
-one had quoted <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">‘<em>surgit amari aliquid</em></span>,’ nevertheless; if one
-may so render the cheerful bard, ‘some charming person
-generally turns up, with power to interest.’ It would not
-have been so far inapplicable to his, or indeed to the (comparatively)
-broken hearts of most of us.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>By the time the dance of dances had arrived, when he
-was privileged to clasp the slight waist and gaze into the
-haunting eyes of the divine Christabel, he was conscious of a
-more philosophical state of mind than in the beginning of
-the evening. Nevertheless, the mystic glamour of beauty
-came over him, fresh and resistless, as the condescending
-charmer let her witching orbs fall kindly on his countenance,
-smiled merrily till her pearly teeth just parted the rosy lips,
-and blushed enchantingly when he accused her of permitting
-Bob Clarke to monopolise her. She defended herself, however,
-in such a pleading, melodious voice; said it was cruel in
-people to make remarks, altogether looking so like a lovely
-child, half penitent, half pouting, that he felt much minded
-to take her in his arms and assure her of his forgiveness,
-promising unbounded confidence in her prudence, and
-obedience to her commands for the time to come.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There will be some more excitement, do you know, for
-the Ladies’ Bag to-morrow,’ said the enchantress. ‘Mr.
-Churbett’s Grey Surrey may not win it, after all. Bob told
-me that a horse of Mr. Greyford’s, that nobody knows about,
-has a chance. He’s suspected of having been in good company
-before. Won’t it be fun if he wins, though I shall be
-sorry for Mr. Churbett. Only Mr. Greyford can’t get a
-gentleman rider the proper weight. What is yours?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Really,’ said Wilfred, ‘I’m not sure to a few pounds.
-But why do you ask?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Don’t you see? If you’re not under eleven stone, you
-can ride him. We can’t let any one in without an invitation
-received before the race. You had one, I know.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh yes, I believe so; but I never thought of riding.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, but you <em>can</em> ride, of course. Now, if you’re the
-proper weight, you might ride Mendicant for Mr. Greyford;
-it would do him a service, and make the race better fun.
-Besides, all the girls would like to see you ride, I know.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>‘Would <em>you</em> take any interest in my winning, Miss
-Rockley? Say the word, and I will do that or anything else
-in the wide world.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, I daresay; just as if you cared what <em>I</em> thought.
-Now there’s Vera Fane, that papa introduced you to, she
-would be charmed to see you win it. Oh, I know——’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But yourself? Only say the word.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Then <em>do</em> ride—there, don’t look at me like that, or
-you’ll have mamma thinking I’m ill and knocked up with
-excitement; and if she begins to say I look pale, papa’s
-capable of carrying me off before the ball’s over.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred, thus adjured, veiled the ardent fire of his glances,
-and then and there pledged himself to ride Mr. Greyford’s
-Mendicant for the Ladies’ Bag, and to win, if Miss
-Rockley would only back him, which she promised to do.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It was surprising how much more interest Wilfred took in
-the coming contest, now that he was about to guide one of
-the chariot racers, to disperse <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>pulverem Olympicum</em></span> in his
-own person. He danced perseveringly with all the partners
-suggested to him, covering himself with glory in the eyes of
-Mr. Rockley. He had another and yet another dance with
-Miss Fane, being much gratified at the interest she expressed
-concerning the coming race. He made the acquaintance,
-too, of Mr. Greyford.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘<span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>Re</em></span> Mendicant, he’s a lazy beggar,’ said that gentleman
-frankly, ‘but well-bred, and can come at the finish if he
-likes. I had given up the idea of starting him for want of a
-jock, but I shall be happy if you will ride him for me. We’ll
-go halves in this wonderful bag if Mendicant pulls it off.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>And so the great race ball was relegated to the limbo of
-dead joys and pleasures, to that shadow-land where the
-goblets we have quaffed, the chaplets which wreathed our
-brows, the laughter that kindled our hearts, the hands that
-pressed, the hearts—ah me!—that throbbed, have mostly
-departed. There do they lie, fair, imperishable, awaiting
-but the blast of the enchanted horn to arise, to sparkle and
-glow, to thrill once more. Or has the cold earth closed
-remorselessly, <em>eternally</em>, over our joys and those who shared
-them, never again to know awakening till Time shall be no
-more?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Much must be conceded to the influence of the Australian
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>climate or to the embalming influences of active pleasure-seeking,
-which seems to possess an Egyptian potency for
-keeping its votaries <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>in statu quo</em></span> while engaged in the worship
-of the goddess. Whatever may have been the secret of unfailing
-youth, most of the race meeting constituents seemed
-to possess it, as they turned out after breakfast on Friday
-morning, apparently ready to commence another week’s
-racing by day, and dancing by night, if the gods permitted.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>About a dozen horses were qualified to start for the
-Ladies’ Bag. Hamilton had one, Forbes had one, Bob
-Clarke (of course) another, so that the two stables would
-again be well represented. O’Desmond, who did not ride
-himself, had a likely young horse in, and there were several
-others with some sort of provincial reputation. There was
-the great Grey Surrey, and lastly that ‘dark,’ unassuming,
-dangerous Mendicant of Greyford’s with Mr. Wilfred Effingham
-up.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>That gentleman had never ridden a race before, but was
-a fair cross-country rider before he saw Australia, and since
-then the riding of different sorts of horses had, of course,
-tended to improve both seat and hands. He was aware of
-the principles of race-riding, and though Bob Clarke,
-Hamilton, Forbes, and Churbett had semi-professional skill,
-he yet trusted, with the befitting courage of youth, to hold
-his own in that tilt-yard.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He had borrowed a set of colours, and looking at himself
-in the glass arrayed as in the traditional races of England,
-was not dissatisfied with his appearance. He found himself
-wondering whether he should be regarded with indulgence
-by the critical eyes of Miss Christabel, or indeed the penetrating
-orbs of Miss Fane. Was there a chance of his
-winning? Would it not be a triumph if, in spite of the consummate
-horsemanship of Hamilton and Bob Clarke, the
-reputation of Grey Surrey, he should win the prize? The
-thought was intoxicating. He dared not indulge it. He
-partially enveloped himself in an overcoat, which concealed
-the glories of his black and scarlet racing-jacket, the only
-silken garment which the modern cavalier is permitted to
-wear (how differently they ruffled it in the days of the second
-Charles!), and hied him to the course.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Here he was met by congratulations on all sides.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>‘Glad to see you’ve taken to the amateur jock line,
-Effingham,’ said Churbett. ‘There’s a world of fun in it,
-though it involves early rising. It’s awfully against the
-grain with me, but I assure you I look forward to it every
-year now. It <em>compels</em> me to take exercise.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘That view of racing never struck me before,’ said Wilfred.
-‘But when we’re at Yass, you know, one must follow the
-fashion.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Especially when certain people look interested. Aha!
-Effingham, you’re an awfully prudent card; but we’re all
-alike, I expect.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Pooh, pooh! why shouldn’t I take a turn at the pigskin
-as well as you and the others?’ said Wilfred, evading the
-impeachment; ‘and this sort of thing is awfully catching,
-you know.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Very catching, indeed,’ assented Mr. Churbett. ‘Is that
-Miss Fane on the brown horse next to Mrs. Snowden?
-Ladylike-looking girl, isn’t she? Suppose we go and get a
-bet out of her?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Following up this novel idea they rode over to the little
-group, where Mr. Churbett was assailed with all sorts of
-compliments and inquiries about the state and prospects of
-Grey Surrey.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I think the articles should have been selected with
-reference to your complexion, Mr. Churbett,’ said Mrs.
-Snowden; ‘you seem so certain of carrying it off. I know
-blue is your favourite colour, and I made my smoking-cap
-and slippers of the last fashionable shade on purpose.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Always considerate, Mrs. Snowden,’ said the object of
-this compliment, as a smile became general at this allusion
-to Fred’s auburn-tinted hair. ‘You must have been thinking
-of Snowden, who resembles me in that way, and the
-<em>very</em> early days when you used to work slippers for him.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Really I forget whether I ever did much in that line for
-Snowden. It must have been centuries ago.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, but I don’t agree with that at all,’ said the fair
-Christabel. ‘Suppose some one with dark hair wins it,
-then he would have to go about with all sorts of unbecoming
-trash. Let every one be guided by their own taste.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I daresay a few trifles that will look well on Bob Clarke
-will be found in the bag,’ said Hamilton. ‘I heard something
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>about a gorgeous crimson and gold smoking-cap. I
-wonder if anybody has been studying <em>my</em> complexion? If
-Effingham wins, you will all be thrown out.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Then you <em>are</em> going to ride, Mr. Effingham?’ said the
-fair Christabel, with a smile so irresistible that it fully repaid
-him for his troubles and misgivings. ‘I am sure I hope
-you will win, though I’m afraid, between Grey Surrey, No
-Mamma, and Bolivar, you haven’t a good chance.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I wouldn’t be too certain about that,’ said Miss Fane,
-who had recognised Wilfred with a pleasant, cordial greeting,
-and whom he thought looking uncommonly well in her habit,
-and indisputably well mounted. ‘Don’t be alarmed by these
-great reputations. A little bird told me about Mendicant,
-and I’ll take the odds (in gloves), which are eight to one, I
-believe, that he’s first or second.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This daring proposal brought rejoinders and wagers upon
-the head of the fair turfite, who quietly accepting a few of
-the latter, declared that her book was full, but was not to be
-dislodged from her position.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred felt much encouraged, and proportionately grateful
-to the fair friend who had stood by him and his unknown
-steed. So he registered a vow to remember her in the future—to
-like and respect and approve of her—in short, to pay
-her all those guarded tributes which men in early life keep
-for the benefit of women they admire, trust, and look up to,
-but alas! do not love.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Among his few well-wishers must be classed Wilfred’s
-sisters and mother, who, honestly pleased to see him ‘respeckit
-like the lave,’ as Andrew would have said, secretly thought
-that he looked handsomer and better turned out when
-mounted than almost anybody else in the race—in fact,
-nearly as well as Bob Clarke. But even these partial critics
-could not assert to themselves, when they saw Master Bob
-come sailing past the stand upon Bolivar, a dark bay thoroughbred,
-looking like a brown satin angel (Bolivar, not Bob),
-as one enthusiastic damsel observed, that he equalled in
-appearance and get-up that inimitable workman. Still, he
-looked very nice, they lovingly thought, and of Wilfred’s
-clear complexion, brown hair, well-knit frame, and animated
-countenance other fair spectators held a like opinion.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Grey Surrey came next, ‘terrible’ for a mile, and owing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>to his Arab ancestry, a better stayer than might have been
-thought from his violent manners. His rider’s admirably
-fitting nether garments, the wrinkles of his boots, the shading
-of his tops, were accurate to a degree. His bright blue
-colours had many a time been in the van. Kindly and
-affable in the widest sense, with a vein of irresistible comic
-humour, he was the most popular squatter in his district—a
-man of whom none thought evil—to whom none would
-dream of doing harm more than to the unweaned child.
-To a rare though not too sedulously cultivated intellect
-Fred Churbett joined the joyous disposition of a moderate
-viveur, the soul of a poet, and the heart of a woman. But
-the gold held not the due proportion of alloy—too often,
-alas! the case with the finer natures.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The comprehensive cheer which the whole assemblage
-instinctively gave showed their appreciation. From the
-crowd (not so many as on the previous day, but still were
-the people not wholly unrepresented) rose cries of ‘Well done,
-Mr. Churbett! Hope you’ll win again. Grey Surrey and
-The She-oaks for ever!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>And as the silky flowing mane glistened in the sun, while
-the proud favourite arched his neck and with wide nostril
-and flashing eye trod the turf with impatient footstep, as
-might his Arab ancestors have spurned the sands of Balk or
-Tadmor, every friend he had on the course, which comprehended
-all the ladies, all the gentlemen, all the respectable
-and most of the disrespectable persons, thought that if Fred
-Churbett and Grey Surrey did not win yet another victory,
-there must be something reprehensible about turf matters
-generally.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Probably, in order that the ladies might have a liberal
-allowance of sport in recompense for their contributions, and
-partly in compliance with the undeveloped turf science of
-the day, the fashion of ‘heats’ had always been the rule of
-this race. Thus, when Grey Surrey came in leading by a
-length, with Bolivar and No Mamma racing desperately for
-second place, every one of experience stated that the third,
-or even the fourth, would be the deciding heat if Bolivar or
-No Mamma was good enough to ‘pull it off’ from the
-brilliant Surrey. Wilfred had adopted the advice he had
-received from Mr. Greyford, and while keeping a fair place,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>had taken care to save his sluggish steed. He nevertheless
-managed to come through the ruck without apparent effort
-during the last part of the running, and finished an unpretending
-fifth.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On delivering over his horse to Mr. Greyford’s trainer, he
-was gratified to find that he had won that official’s unqualified
-approval by his style of riding. ‘There isn’t a mark on him,
-sir,’ he said; ‘and that’s the way to take him for the first
-couple of heats. Mendicant’s a lazy ’oss, and an uncommon
-queer customer to wind up. But if Surrey don’t win the
-next heat—and I think Mr. Forbes’s No Mamma will give
-him all he can do to get his nose in front—it’s this old
-duffer’s race, as safe as if the rest was boiled.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But how about Bolivar?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, sir, Bolivar and No Mamma are a-cuttin’ their own
-throats the way they’re a-bustin’ theirselves for second place,
-and if you go at whatever wins the third heat from <em>the</em> jump,
-and take it easy the next ’un, you’ll have this ’ere bag to a
-moral.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Returning from this diplomatic colloquy to the vortex of
-society, Wilfred found himself to be already an object of
-interest in sporting circles. Much advice was tendered to
-him, and counsels offered as to his future plan of action, but
-as these were mostly contradictory, he thought himself
-justified in holding his tongue and abiding by the professional
-opinion of the stable.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Before the final heat he found Fireball Bill walking the
-veteran up and down, with a serious and thoughtful countenance.
-‘Look ’ere, sir, don’t you make too sure of this ’ere
-’eat afore you’ve won it. The old ’oss seems right enough;
-he’s bound to win if he stands up, but I don’t like the way he
-puts down that near foreleg. It’s allers been a big anxiety
-to me. He might go away as sound as a roach and crack
-up half-way round. But you make the pace from the jump,
-and keep ’em goin’, or else one on ’em ’ll do yer at the
-bloomin’ post.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What chance is there of that?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Every chance, sir. You mind me. I’m a man as has
-follered racing since I was the height of a corn-bin, and
-I knows the ways on ’em. Mr. Clarke ain’t easy beat, nor
-Mr. Hamilton neither. They’ll go off steady, yer see, as if
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>there was no use tryin’ to pass yer, along o’ their havin’
-busted their ’orses in them ’eats as went afore.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And a very natural idea. It seems a pity to knock them
-about, after all they’ve done.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We’ve got <em>to win this race</em>, sir, and a race ain’t won till
-the numbers is up. Now, Mr. Bob Clarke’s dart is jest this.
-If he sees you don’t keep the old ’orse on his top, he and Mr.
-Hamilton will wait on yer, savin’ their own ’orses till they
-come to the straight. Then they’ll go at you with a rush,
-and there’s no hamatoor in Australia can take as much out
-of a horse in the last ten strides as Bob Clarke. <em>You’re</em>
-caught afore the old ’orse can get on to his legs, and the
-race is snatched out of the fire by nothin’ but ridin’ and
-head-work, and we’re—smothered!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Beaten and laughed at! I understand clearly, Bill. I
-shall always think you have had more to do with the winning
-of the race than I have.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘That’s all right, sir, but keep it dark. All this is confidential-like
-between the trainer and the gen’leman as rides.
-There goes the bell again. I can hear Mr. Rockley cussin’
-all the way from where he stands. Here’s your ’orse, sir;
-you’ve got to win, or kill him!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Delivering over the unsuspecting Mendicant with this
-sound professional but scarcely humane injunction, Fireball
-Bill gazed after his charge, and scrutinised the leg he
-suspected him of ‘favouring.’ ‘He’s right!’ he finally exclaimed,
-after anxious deliberation; ‘but if I hadn’t primed
-the cove, ’e’d a’ lost that race, sure’s my name’s William
-Scraper.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred rode on his way in dignified fashion, as befitting
-the position of probable winner, but in his heart a feeling of
-thankfulness to the old trainer by whose advice he had
-escaped a catastrophe. What a mortification it would have
-been; how the vane of public opinion would have veered
-round! He trembled to think of it; and as he drew up
-after the others, he hardened his heart, resolved that no
-artifice of the turf should mar his triumph that day.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>His rivals went off with an assumption of indifference,
-as if merely going round for form’s sake; but he took the
-old horse by the head and sent him away as if he was riding
-against Time from end to end. His two chief antagonists—for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>O’Desmond had very properly withdrawn his colt—waited
-at a reasonable rate of speed until it became apparent
-that Mendicant’s rider had no intention of altering his pace.
-Then they set to, and by the way they came up, showed how
-accurate was Fireball Bill’s calculation.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Suddenly, and without a sign of premeditation, Bob
-Clarke took his horse by the head, and with one of his
-many desperate efforts, sent him up so suddenly to the flank
-of Mendicant, that Wilfred thought the race was lost in good
-earnest.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But as he heard the approaching hoofs, he too commenced
-to ‘do the impossible,’ and found that, though
-nearly level, Bolivar was unable to improve his position,
-while Mendicant, answering whip and spur, gradually drew
-in advance, as the winning post and the judge’s stand (and,
-as it seemed to Wilfred, half Yass at gaze) came to meet him.
-A few strides, a deafening shout, a rally of whips, and the
-race is over. But the long, lean head had never been overlapped;
-and as he pulls up, head down and distinctly
-‘proppy,’ half-a-dozen men struggle for the honour of leading
-Mendicant into the weighing-yard, and his rider knows
-that he has won. Bolivar, with distended nostril and
-heaving flank, follows next, with Bob Clarke sitting languidly
-on his back, and looking nearly as exhausted as his horse;
-while No Mamma, eased at the distance, drags in, as if she
-had had enough of it for some time to come. Wilfred takes
-his saddle and mechanically goes to scale. ‘Weight!’ says
-Mr. Rockley decisively, and all is over.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In all turf contests, bitter disappointments, deep and
-lasting mortifications, sharpened by loss and inconvenience,
-occur. But when there comes a real triumph, the sweets
-of success are rich of flavour.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred was the hero of the occasion, Fortune’s latest
-favourite, impossible to be deposed until next year. No
-newer victor could therefore take away the savour and
-memorial of his triumph, as, to a certain extent, he had now
-done from Bob Clarke.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Such is the inconsistency of human nature that, although
-the steeplechase required about ten times the amount
-of horsemanship, besides nerve, experience, and a host of
-qualities unneeded in a flat race, Wilfred found himself the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>observed of all observers, and could not but discern that his
-rivals were temporarily in the shade.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He lost no time in bestowing himself into his ordinary
-raiment and joining the homeward-bound crowd, secure of
-the smiles which ladye fair never refuses to bestow upon the
-knight who has worthily done his devoir.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Christabel Rockley congratulated him warmly upon his
-good fortune, and then turned to console Bob Clarke, a
-process which apparently involved more time and explanation,
-so much so that Wilfred changed his locale, under
-pretence of looking after his mother and sisters, and soon
-found himself in more sympathetic company.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He saw that Miss Fane had become a great friend and
-associate of his sister Rosamond, so quickly are lifelong
-alliances cemented among young ladies. Mrs. Snowden was
-also in the neighbourhood, and among them he was flattered
-to his heart’s content.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I was sure you were going to win it from the first,’ said
-Mrs. Snowden, as if stating an incontestable fact. ‘I said to
-Mrs. Rockley, “How cool Mr. Effingham looks! Depend
-upon it, he has ridden in good company before.”’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I never bet anything more substantial than gloves,’ said
-Miss Fane, with a gleam of mischief in her eyes; ‘but I can
-quite understand the gambling spirit now. I longed to put
-a five-pound note papa gave me at parting on Mendicant.
-Dreadfully wicked, wasn’t it? But I should have won fifty
-or sixty pounds, perhaps a hundred. I have made a small
-fortune, however, in gloves.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I shall always think that you were the cause of my
-winning, Miss Fane,’ said Wilfred, looking most grateful.
-‘No one else believed in me, except these girls here,’ looking
-at his sisters.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We are prejudiced,’ said Rosamond, ‘and will remain
-so to the end of the chapter. But I thought you were
-fighting against odds, with such champions as Mr. Hamilton
-and Mr. Clarke. Now you have won the tilt and are the
-favoured knight. Is the queen of beauty to give you the
-victor’s wreath?—and who is she?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, Christabel the peerless, of course,’ said Miss Fane.
-‘And I think her the prettiest creature in the world—that
-is, for a dark beauty, of course,’ looking at Annabel, who
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>now came up. ‘It’s a case of honours divided, all the men
-say.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I wonder how we shall settle down in our peaceful
-homes again,’ said Beatrice, ‘after all these wild excitements
-and thrilling incidents. I feel as if we were leaving the first
-or second volume of a novel.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Why the first or second,’ said Miss Fane, ‘and not the
-third?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Because there’s no possibility of our story being complete
-in one volume. There are materials for romances here,
-but the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>dénouement</em></span> is wanting. Every one will go home
-again on Monday; the actors and actresses will throw on
-their wrappers, the lights will be put out, the theatre shut
-up, and no piece announced until next year. There is
-something theatrical about all pleasure. This indeed is
-real melodrama, with plenty of scene-shifting, comedy in
-proper proportion, leading actors, and a hint of tragedy in
-the last act.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>For the Effinghams this had been a completely new experience.
-Without complications of the affections, except in
-Wilfred’s case, a wider estimate of Australian country life had
-been afforded to them. Besides the squirearchy of the land,
-they had met specimens of the best of the younger sons whom
-England’s ancient houses still send, year by year, to carry
-her laws, her arts, her ambition, and her energy to the most
-distant of her possessions. These include, literally, the
-ends of the earth, where they may aid in the heroic work of
-colonisation, planting the germs of nations, and raising the
-foundations of empires. Such men they had among their
-immediate neighbours. Still it was pleasant to know that
-others of the same high nature and standard of culture, the
-Conquistadors of the South, were distributed over the entire
-continent.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Moreover, they had fallen across several perfect feminine
-treasures, as Annabel declared them to be—friends and
-acquaintances, most rare and valuable. Nothing could have
-exceeded the hospitality and thoughtful kindness of the
-ladies of the Rockley family. Mrs. Rockley had been
-unwearied in providing for the comfort of her guests, and in
-that congenial employment partaking as well in her own
-person of a reasonable share of the pleasures of the continuous
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span><span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>festa</em></span>, underwent such fatigue, that nothing but an unruffled
-temper, with great natural advantages of constitution, prevented
-her from breaking down hopelessly before the week
-was over. As it was, though there was a slight look of
-weariness, an air of responsibility, in the morning, the least
-occasion sufficed to bring the ever-cordial smile to the kind
-face, when all gravity of mien instantly disappeared.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XIV <br /> THE DUEL</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>In Ireland’s good old days, before the decline of unlimited
-hospitality and claret, debt, duelling, and devilment generally,
-when the Court of Encumbered Estates was not, the whole
-duty of man apparently being transacted with an enviable
-scorn of ready-money payments, no doubt exists, that after
-such a race week as we have essayed to recall, more than one
-gentleman’s hackney would have gone home without him,
-unless the pistol practice was worse than usual.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As it was, a contretemps <em>did</em> occur, which could not be
-settled without the intervention of seconds. These gentlemen
-decided that a meeting must take place. It chanced
-after this wise. As will happen in all lands, there had arisen
-a veiled but distinct antagonism between two men who
-aspired to social leadership. These were William Argyll and
-John Hampden.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The former, haughtily impatient of opposition, was prone
-to follow out likes and dislikes, with the enthusiasm of his
-Highland blood. Culture, travel, and the drill of society had
-but modified his natural temperament. Under provocation it
-was as untamed as that of any son of MacCallum Mohr who
-had never quitted the paternal glen. He undervalued
-the opinions of his Australian-born neighbours who had not,
-like himself, enjoyed the advantages of travel. Hasty in
-word or deed, habituated to high consideration from the
-dwellers near his paternal estate, he was careless to a fault
-about giving offence.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Hampden, though a proud and self-respecting man, was
-singularly imperturbable of demeanour. Open-minded,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>generous, interested in every idea calculated to advance the
-welfare of his native land, his position was high and unquestioned.
-In his own part of the country he was respected
-by his equals and reverenced by his inferiors to a degree
-uncommon, but by no means unknown in Australia. The
-people were much in the habit of resorting to him for aid or
-counsel in their difficulties. And whatever Mr. Hampden
-said in such cases carried with it the weight and authority
-of law. His decisions, indeed, were more often quoted,
-more rarely disputed, than those of any bench of magistrates
-in the land.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Although cautious in forming his opinions and chary of
-expressing them, John Hampden was noted as one who
-never gave back an inch from any position which he
-assumed. This trait chafed the choleric Argyll, who had
-also a considerable ‘following’—admirers of his attainments,
-and dominated by his unrelaxing though generous despotism.
-It therefore happened that, in public matters, Argyll and
-Hampden were mostly observed to take different sides.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Before the race meeting there arose a dispute, common
-enough in those days, between the stock-riders of the two
-establishments as to the ownership of certain calves at the
-annual muster of Mount Wangarua. Some ill-considered
-remarks of Argyll’s, reflecting on Hampden’s management,
-were repeated with additions. Allusion had been made to
-‘indiscriminate branding,’ than which nothing could have
-been more uncalled for. A scrupulously exact man in such
-matters, many a poor man had reason to bless the day when
-his few head of strayed cattle found their way into the herds
-which bore the J.H. brand. Rarely was it placed on an
-animal without satisfactory proof of ownership. However,
-‘accidents will occur in the best regulated (cattle) families,’
-and so had come to pass the mistake, fully explained afterwards,
-upon which Argyll had commented unfavourably.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The opportunity afforded for withdrawing his hasty expressions
-was not availed of. So after a formal interview, the
-alternative was reached which, by the laws of society in
-that early day, compelled a resort to the pistol.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Of course, this ultimatum, though known to a few
-intimate friends, was carefully concealed from the general
-public. The rivals met without suspicious coldness, were
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>seen at the ordinary gatherings, and bore themselves as
-became the average pleasure-seekers of the hour. But the
-meeting had been fixed for the Monday following the race
-week, and it was agreed that the principals, with their seconds,
-should visit a certain secluded spot on the homeward route
-of Hampden’s party, and there arrange their difficulty.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Both men were known to be good shots; with rifle and
-pistol (not yet had Colonel Colt impressed his revolving
-signet on the age) Hampden was known to have few equals.
-But no surprise was manifested when it was announced on
-the eventful Monday that Hampden and his friend Neville,
-together with Forbes, Argyll, and Churbett, had departed at
-daylight and taken the same road. Every one was in the
-confused state of mind which is prone to succeed a season
-of indulgence. There were bills to pay, clothes to pack,
-resolutions as to improvement to be made by those who had
-exceeded their usual limit in love, loo, or liquor. So that,
-except an expression of astonishment that any reason whatever
-should have had power to take Fred Churbett out of
-his bed at such an abnormal hour, little was said.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As they rode through the silent streets of the sleepy town,
-a moaning breeze betokened that the exceptionally fine
-weather they had enjoyed was about to change for the
-worse.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To Fred Churbett, as he rode along with a young surgeon
-impressed in case of accident, the day seemed chilly, the
-fitful wind boding, the darkening sky gloomy and drear.
-‘What if one of these men, in all the pride of manhood, so
-lately rejoicing in the sport in which they had been jointly
-engaged, should never leave the Granite Glen alive?
-What a mockery was this life of ours! And for what? for
-a careless word—a hasty jest—for this might a man go down
-to the dark unknown, with all his sins upon his head.
-A melancholy ending to their pleasant days and joyous
-nights!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>These cheerless meditations were probably compounded
-in equal proportions of bilious indigestion and natural regret.
-Fred’s inner man had come off indifferently under a regimen
-of late hours and mixed refreshments; so much so, that he
-had professed his intention, when he returned to the peaceful
-shades of The She-oaks, ‘to lie on his back for a month
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>and live on blue-pill.’ Such thoughts would not have
-occurred to him had he been engaged as principal. But as
-a mere spectator of a mortal combat they were impressively
-urgent.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Besides all this, Hampden was a married man—had a
-wife and half-a-dozen boys and girls at Mount Wangarua.
-When he thought that a messenger might ride up through
-the far-famed meadows, where the white-faced Herefords lay
-thick on the clover sward the summer through, to tell the
-expectant wife that the husband—the father, the pattern
-country gentleman—would return no more! Fred felt as if
-he must strike up everybody’s sword, as in old melodramas,
-and call upon them in the name of God and man to desist
-from a deed at once puerile and immoral.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But like a dream when morning breaks, and princess
-and noble, castle and dragon flee into the shadow-land,
-whence they came, so his purpose vanished into thin air, as
-they suddenly debouched upon the Granite Glen, and he
-saw by the set faces of the men, as they dismounted, how
-unavailing would be all interference.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>With sudden revulsion of feeling, he prepared to act his
-part. Motioning the young surgeon to follow him to the little
-creek which rippled plaintively over the grey blocks, shaded
-by the funereal, sighing casuarina, they took charge of the
-horses of the combatants. Forbes and Neville each produced
-one of the oblong cases ‘which no gentleman could be without’
-in those days. Twelve paces were stepped by Forbes,
-in deference to his similar experiences. The principals took
-their ground.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Fred Churbett scanned narrowly, at the moment, the
-faces he knew so well. On Argyll’s he saw the look of
-vehement resolve which he had seen a hundred times
-before, while his eyes glowed with angry light. Fred knew
-that whenever any one alluded to Hampden’s alleged expression,
-‘that he was a hot-blooded Highlander, accustomed
-to rule semi-savages, and who did not know how to conduct
-himself among gentlemen,’ or words to that effect, Argyll
-could not be held accountable for his actions. When the
-passion fit was over, a more accomplished, courteous gentleman
-did not live—generous to a fault, winning, nay, fascinating,
-of manner to all with whom he came into contact.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>Hampden’s face, on the other hand, bore its usual serious
-expression, with no shadow of change o’er the mild, contemplative
-gaze. He looked, as he always appeared to those
-who knew him, as if he were thinking out the subject
-on hand with painstaking earnestness in the interests of
-truth.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Duels were always rare in Australia. Now they are unknown.
-Society appears to manage without them in disputes
-affecting the honour of individuals. Whether manners
-have suffered in consequence, is a point upon which opinions
-have differed. It had so chanced that Hampden had never
-stood ‘on the ground’ before, although in skirmishes with
-the wild tribes of his native land it was well known that his
-cool intrepidity and unerring aim had more than once saved
-life.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On this occasion an observer of character might have
-believed that he was more closely occupied in analysing his
-own and his adversary’s sensations than in attending to his
-personal interest.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>That opinion would have been modified, when the critic
-observed him raise his hand with quiet precision at the
-signal. He fired with instinctive rapidity, and at the falling
-handkerchief two reports rang out.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As each man preserved his position unaltered, a sigh of
-relief broke from Fred Churbett. The features of Hampden
-had not in the slightest degree altered their expression. The
-eager observer even thought he detected a tendency to the
-slow, humorous smile which was wont to be his substitute
-for laughter, as Argyll threw down his weapon with a hasty
-exclamation, while a red line on his pistol arm showed that
-the accuracy of Hampden’s aim had not been altered by the
-nature of his target.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You are hit, Argyll?’ said Churbett, starting forward.
-‘For God’s sake, stop this mummery! I know Hampden
-regrets anything inconsiderate he may have said.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The brow of Argyll was black with suppressed fury.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘A d——d graze, can’t you see, sir?’ he said, as he
-reluctantly pulled up his coat-sleeve for the inspection of the
-surgeon. ‘The matter cannot stop here. An apology at this
-stage would be absurd. I am in Mr. Forbes’s hands, I
-believe.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>That gentleman had already walked gravely forward to
-meet Mr. Neville, who, with equal seriousness of demeanour,
-conferred with his antagonistic diplomate. Words were exchanged,
-ending with an ominous shaking of the head on
-Forbes’s part. The seconds, having courteously bowed, departed
-to their former positions. There they placed pistols
-in the hands of the opponents, and took their stations.
-Even at this stage the manner of the two men remained
-as essentially apart as their constitutions. Argyll stood
-chafing with impatience, while Hampden’s eyes wandered
-calmly over the whole scene—the valley, the little stream, the
-threatening sky—as if considering the chances of the season.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As the pistols were handed to them, Argyll took his
-weapon with a quick gleam of the eye, which spoke of inward
-strife, while Hampden accepted his mechanically and proceeded
-to gaze fixedly at Argyll, as if prepared to give the
-matter his serious attention.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At the signal he raised his hand as before, but one report
-only startled the birds on the adjacent tree-tops. Hampden
-held his pistol in the steady hand which so few had ever
-known to swerve from a deadly aim, and then, elevating the
-muzzle, fired carelessly into space.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We should have improved in our shooting,’ he said, ‘as
-we went on; Argyll’s second shot was not so wide as the
-first. He has spoiled my coat collar.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘By Jove!’ ejaculated Neville, ‘rather a near thing. This
-must end the matter; I’ll be no party to another shot.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I have no objection to state <em>now</em>,’ said Hampden, ‘that
-I regret the expressions used by me. I beg unreservedly to
-withdraw them.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>After a short colloquy between Argyll and Forbes, the
-latter came forward, and with great precision of intonation
-thus delivered himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I have much pleasure in stating, on the part of my
-principal, that while accepting Mr. Hampden’s handsome
-apology and retractation, he desires to recognise cordially his
-generous behaviour.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Only the Spartan laws of the duello, inexorably binding
-upon all men soever of a certain rank in society, prevented
-Fred Churbett from throwing his hat into the air at this
-termination of the affair.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>As each party moved off in opposite directions, after
-Argyll had, rather against his will, submitted to having his
-arm bandaged, <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>secundum artem</em></span>, Hampden said to Neville:</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What mockeries these affairs are! I could have shot
-Argyll “as dead as a herring.” It’s better as it is, though.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It’s a good thing his last shot wasn’t an inch or two
-<em>inside</em> your collar instead of out,’ said Neville gravely.
-‘After all, as you say, these things are mockeries, and worse.
-Suppose he <em>had</em> drilled you, and I was on my way to tell Mrs.
-Hampden that her husband would never return to her?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But <em>you</em> wouldn’t be able to have given the sad intelligence,
-old fellow,’ said Hampden; ‘you would have been
-fleeing from justice, or surrendering yourself. Deuced troublesome
-affair to all concerned, except the departed. But a
-man must live or die, in accordance with the rules of society.
-After all, there’s nearly as much chance of breaking one’s
-neck mustering over that lava country of ours as being
-snuffed out in this way. Life’s a queer lottery at best.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘H—m, ha!’ said Neville, ‘great deal to be got out of
-the subject; don’t feel in the humour for enlarging on it
-just now. What a good fellow that Churbett is! He had
-a mind to read the Riot Act himself.’</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>An angry man ye may opine,</div>
- <div class='line'>Was he, the proud Count Palatine!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>And dire would have been the wrath of our provincial
-potentate, William Rockley, had he but known on Sunday
-morning what deeds were about to be enacted within his
-social and magisterial jurisdiction.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>No sympathy had he, a man of strictly modern ideas, with
-what he called the mediæval humbug of duelling. He looked
-upon the policeman as the proper exponent of such proceedings.
-Could he have but guessed where this discreditable
-anachronism, according to his principles, was being perpetrated,
-all concerned would have found themselves in the
-body of Yass gaol, in default of sufficient sureties to keep
-the peace. The news, however, did not leak out until afterwards,
-owing to the discretion of the persons concerned, and
-the fortunate absence of serious results. When it did become
-matter of public comment, his imperial majesty was furious.
-He abused every one concerned in unmeasured terms; swore
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>he would never speak to Argyll or Forbes again, and would
-have Hampden struck off the Commission of the Peace. As
-for Fred Churbett, he considered him the worst of the lot,
-because of his deceitful, diabolical amiability, which permitted
-him to assist in such infamous bloodthirsty designs unsuspectedly.
-Not one of them should ever darken his doors
-again. He would never subscribe another shilling to the
-Yass Races; indeed, he believed he would sell out, wind up
-his business, and leave that part of the colony altogether.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>However, not receiving intimation of this infraction of the
-law until matters were somewhat stale, the <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>status in quo</em></span> was
-undisturbed. The whole of the company, with the exception
-of the few who were in the secret, were similarly innocent;
-so the air remained unclouded. An afternoon walk to
-Fern-tree Hollow, a shady defile which lay a couple of miles
-from the town, was the accepted Sunday stroll.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Every one turned up to say farewell, thinking it a more
-suitable time than on the hurried, packing, saddling, harnessing-up,
-bill-paying morrow. Then once more the work of
-the hard world would recommence. The idyll had been
-sung to the last stanza. The nymphs would seek their
-forest retreats, the listening fauns would disappear amid the
-leaves. The rites of that old world deity ‘Leisure,’ now
-sadly circumscribed, had been honoured and ended. This
-was the last day, almost the last hour, when Phyllis could be
-expected to listen to soft sighings, or Neæra to be seen in
-proximity to the favouring shade.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As they strolled homewards, in the evening, with a troubled
-sunset and a cooler breeze, as if in sympathy with the imminent
-farewell, the scraps of conversation which might have
-been gathered were characteristic. Something more than
-half-confidences were occasionally interchanged, and semi-sentimental
-speculations not wholly wanting.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At the close of the evening, and the end of the stroll,
-every one, of course, went to the Maison Rockley, and comforted
-their souls with supper, Sunday being an early dinner
-day, as in all well-regulated British families. Conversations
-which had not been satisfactorily concluded had here a
-chance of definite ending, as the guests somehow seemed
-unwilling to separate when the probability of meeting again
-was uncertain or remote.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>With the exception of a little music, there was no attempt
-at other than conversational occupation, which indeed appeared
-to suffice fully for the majority of the guests. And
-though ordinary topics gradually introduced themselves, and
-Rockley, in the freedom of the verandah, reiterated his
-opinions to Mr. Effingham upon the iniquities of the land
-law, a subdued tone pervaded, half unconsciously, the various
-groups, as of members of one family about to separate for a
-hazardous expedition.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I feel terribly demoralised,’ said Mrs. Snowden, ‘after all
-this dissipation; it is like a visit to Paris must have been to
-Madame Sevigné, after a summer in the provinces. Like
-her, we shall have to take to letter-writing when we go home
-to keep ourselves alive. The poultry are my great stand-by
-for virtuous occupation. They suffer, I admit, from these
-fascinating trips to Yass; for the last time I returned I
-found two hens sitting upon forty-five eggs. Now what
-philosophy could support that?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Whose philosophy, that of the hens?’ inquired Hamilton,
-who, with his observant companion, had been mildly reviewing
-the confidentially occupied couples. ‘It looks to me
-like a case of overweening feminine ambition on their part.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It was all the fault of that careless Charlotte Lodore
-who was staying with me—a cousin of mine, and a dreadful
-girl to read. She was so deeply interested in some new book
-that she left the poor fowls to their own devices, and never
-thought about adjusting their “clutches”—that’s the expression—until
-I returned. If you could have seen our two
-faces as we gazed at the pile of addled eggs you would have
-been awed. I <em>was</em> so angry.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As for Wilfred, he concluded an æsthetic conversation with
-Miss Fane by trusting that she would be enabled to accept
-his mother’s invitation, and pay them a visit at Warbrok
-Chase before the winter set in.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Nothing would give me greater pleasure, really,’ said she,
-‘but I seldom manage to leave home, except to see a relation
-in Sydney, or when our good friends Mr. and Mrs.
-Rockley insist on my coming here. But for them, papa
-would hardly consent to my visiting in the country at all.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There was evidently some constraint in the manner of
-the girl’s explanation, and Wilfred did not press for the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>solution, trusting to time and the frank candour with which
-every one discussed every other person’s affairs in the neighbourhood.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Miss Fane took an opportunity of quitting her seat and
-joining Mrs. Effingham and Beatrice, with whom, much to
-Wilfred’s satisfaction, she maintained a friendly and confidential
-talk until the little party commenced to disperse.
-He discovered at the same time that Christabel Rockley and
-Bob Clarke had exhausted their powers of mutual fascination
-for the present, so he could not forgo the temptation
-of hastening, after the manner of moths of all ages, to
-singe his wings in a farewell flutter round the fatal Christabel.
-That enchantress smiled upon him, and rekindled his regrets
-with a spare gleam or two from out her wondrous eyes, large
-as must have been the consumption of soul-felt glances
-during the evening; yet such is the insatiable desire for
-conquest that she listened responsively to his warm acknowledgments
-of the pleasure they had enjoyed during the
-week, nearly all of which was attributable to the great kindness
-of Mrs. Rockley and the hospitality of her father. ‘He
-should <em>never</em> forget it. The remembrance would last him all
-his life,’ and so on, and so on.</p>
-
-<hr class='c013' />
-
-<p class='c001'>On Monday morning business in its severest sense set
-in for the world of Yass, its belongings, and dependencies.
-Before dawn all professionals connected with race-horses
-were hard at work with the silent energy which characterises
-the breed. Jockeys and trainers, helpers and boys, were
-steadily employed, each in his own department, strapping,
-packing, or saddling up with a taciturn solemnity of mien,
-as if racing had been abolished by Act of Parliament, and
-no further rational enjoyment was to be hoped for in a
-ruined world. Correspondingly, the tide of labour and rural
-commerce swelled and deepened. Long teams of bullocks
-slowly traversed the main street, with the heavy, indestructible
-dray of the period, filled with loads of hay, wheat,
-maize, oats, or flour. Farmers jogged along in spring-carts,
-or on rough nags; the shops were open and busy, while the
-miscellaneous establishment of Rockley and Company, which
-accommodated with equal ease an order for a ton of sugar or
-a pound of nails, a hundred palings, or sawn timber for a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>bridge, was, as usual, crowded with every sort of client and
-customer, in need of every kind of merchandise, advice, or
-accommodation.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Shortly after breakfast, therefore, Black Prince pranced
-proudly up before his wheeler to the door of Rockley House,
-looking—but by no means likely to carry out that impropriety—as
-if he was bent upon running away every mile of
-the homeward journey. Portmanteaus and, it must be admitted,
-parcels of unknown size and number (for when did
-women ever travel forth, much less return, without supplementary
-packages?) were at length conveniently bestowed.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Adieus and last words—the very last—were exchanged
-with their kind hostess and her angelic daughter, who had
-vowed and promised to visit The Chase at an early period.
-Rockley had betaken himself to his counting-house hours
-before. Fergus and Allspice were once more honoured with
-the weight of their respective mistresses, and the little
-cortège departed. Our cavalier had, we know, been prevented
-by a pressing engagement from accompanying them
-on the homeward route; but it was not to be supposed that
-two young ladies like Rosamond and Beatrice were to be
-permitted to ride through the forest glades escorted merely
-by relations. Most fortunately Mr. St. Maur happened to
-be visiting his friend O’Desmond, combining business and
-pleasure, for a few days. As his road lay past The Chase,
-he was, of course, only too happy to join their party.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Annabel Effingham thought that Bertram St. Maur was
-perhaps the prince and seigneur of their by no means undistinguished
-circle of acquaintances. A tall, handsome
-man, with a natural air of command, he was by Blanche and
-Selden, immediately after they had set eyes on him, declared
-to be the image of a Norman King in their History of England,
-and invested accordingly with grand and mysterious
-attributes. A well-known explorer, in the first days of his residence
-in Australia he had preferred the hazards of discovery
-to the slower gains of ordinary station life. He was therefore
-looked upon as the natural chief and leader in his own
-border district, a position which, with head and hand, he was
-well qualified to support.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The homeward journey was quickly performed, a natural
-impatience causing the whole party to linger as little as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>possible on the road. Once more they reached the ascent
-above their home, from which they could look down upon the
-green slopes, the tranquil lake, the purple hills, of the well-known
-landscape. The afternoon had kept fine; the change
-from the busy town, the late scene of their dissipation, was
-not unpleasing.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I am pleased to think that you young people have enjoyed
-yourselves,’ said Mrs. Effingham, ‘and so, I am sure, has papa.
-It has been a change for him; but, oh, if you knew how
-delighted I am to see home again!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘So am I; so are we all,’ said Annabel. ‘I for one will
-never say a word against pleasure, for I have enjoyed myself
-tremendously. But “enough is as good as a feast.” We
-have had a grand holiday, and like good children we shall go
-back cheerfully to our lessons—that is, to our housekeeping,
-and dear old Jeanie.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Your mother is right in thinking that I enjoyed myself,’
-said Mr. Effingham. ‘I found most pleasant acquaintances,
-and had much interesting talk about affairs generally. It
-does a man good, when he is no longer young, to meet men
-of the same age and to exchange ideas. But I must say that
-the pleasure was of an intense and compressed description; it
-ought to last you young people for a year.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘<em>Half a year</em>,’ said Annabel, ‘I really think it might. <em>We</em>
-met improving acquaintances too,—though I am popularly
-supposed not to care about sensible conversation,—Miss Fane,
-for instance. We shared a room, and I thought her a delightful,
-original, clever creature, and so good too. Can’t we
-have her over here, mamma? She lives at a place called
-Black Mountain, ever so far away, and can hardly ever leave
-home, because she has little brothers to teach, and all the
-housekeeping to do. I am sorry she is so far off.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘So am I, Annabel. We should all like to see more of
-her.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I think that there were an unusual number of pretty girls,’
-continued Annabel. ‘As for Christabel Rockley, I could
-rave about her as much as if I were a man. She is a lovely
-creature, and as good-natured and unselfish as a child.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I must say,’ said Mr. Effingham, ‘that for hospitality in
-the largest sense of the word, I never saw anything to surpass
-that of our friends. I knew Ireland well when I was young,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>but even that proverbially generous land seems to me to be
-outdone by our Australian friends.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I hope Jeanie will have a nice dinner for us,’ said
-Annabel. ‘But we need never be afraid of the dear old
-thing not doing everything she ought to have done. She
-knew we were coming home to-day, and she will be ready and
-prepared for a prince, if we had picked up a stray one at Yass.
-Home, sweet home! How glad I am! There is nothing
-like dissipation for making one feel truly virtuous.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Of a truth, there is always something sacred and precious
-connected in the minds of the widely scattered families of the
-Anglo-Saxon race about the very name of ‘home!’ There
-was no one of the Effinghams whose heart was not stirred as
-they rode and drove up to the hall door, and saw the kindly,
-loving face of Jeanie, the seriously satisfied countenance of
-Andrew, and even the silent Duncan, quite excited for him,
-as he stood ready to assist with the horses. The garden in
-the neighbourhood of the entrance gate was trim and neat,
-while showers had preserved the far-stretching verdure which
-glorifies the country in whatever hemisphere. No great time
-was consumed in unsaddling. Guy personally superintended
-the stabling of St. Maur’s horse, while Wilfred conducted
-him to one of the spare rooms. Dick Evans, always handy
-in emergencies, turned up in time to dispose of the tandem.
-And in less than half an hour Effingham and his new
-acquaintance were walking up and down the verandah awaiting
-the dinner-bell, much refreshed and comforted, and in a
-state of mind fitted for admiring the landscape.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘How fortunate you seem to have been in falling across
-such a family residence,’ said St. Maur. ‘You might have
-been for years in the country and never heard of anything
-half so good. What a lovely view of the lake; and first-class
-land, too, it seems to be.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We owe our good fortune in great part, or I may say
-altogether, to my old friend Sternworth. But for him we
-should never have seen Australia, or have been stumbling
-about in the dark after we did come here. And if it were
-possible to need any other aid or advice, I feel certain Mr.
-Rockley would insist on giving it. I must say that the soil
-of Australia produces more friends in need to the square mile
-than any other I know.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>‘It may be overrated in that respect,’ said St. Maur,
-smiling; ‘but you are in no danger of overrating Rockley’s
-benevolence or his miraculous ways and means of carrying
-out his intentions. As for Mr. Sternworth, he is the “Man
-of Ross”—or rather of Yass—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>To all the country dear,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>and passing rich on not exactly ‘forty pounds a year,’ but
-the Australian equivalent. If he introduces any more such
-desirable colonists we must have him made rural Dean. You
-are satisfied with your investment, I take it?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘So much so, that I look forward with the keenest relish
-to the many changes and improvements [here his visitor gave
-a slight involuntary motion of dissent] which I trust to carry
-out during the next few years. Everything is reassuring in
-a money-making aspect, so I trust not to be indiscreet in
-developing the property.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘My dear sir, nothing can be more proper than that we
-should carry out plans for the improvement of our estates,
-after they have shown annual profit balances for years. But to
-spend money on improvements in Australia <em>before</em> you have
-a reserve fund is—pardon my frankness—held to be imprudent.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But surely a property well improved must pay eventually
-better than one where, as at present, all the stock are permitted
-to roam almost in a state of nature?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘When you come to talk of stock paying, my dear sir, you
-must bear in mind that it is not the finest animal that yields
-the most profit, but the one on which, at a saleable age, you
-have <em>expended the least money</em>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The evening passed most pleasantly, with just sufficient
-reference to the experiences of the week to render the conversation
-entertaining. In the morning their guest departed,
-and with him the last associations of the memorable race
-meeting, leaving the family free to pursue the calm pursuits
-of their ordinary life.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred found himself freshly invigorated and eager to take
-up again occupations connected with the policy of the
-establishment. He praised Dick Evans and old Tom warmly
-for the exact order in which he found all departments, not
-forgetting a word of approval for Andrew, of whose good
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>conduct, however, he was assured under all possible circumstances.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As the season passed on, it seemed as though the family
-of the Effinghams had migrated to one of the poets’ isles—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>Happy with orchard lawns,</div>
- <div class='line'>Where never wind doth blow or tempest rave—</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>so flawless were all the climatic conditions, upon which their
-well-being depended.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Pleasant it was, after the day’s work was done, when the
-family gathered round the substantial fire which, red-glowing
-with piled-up logs, thoroughly warmed but did not oppressively
-heat the lofty room. Then came truly the season of</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Rest, and affection, and stillness.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>Although a certain reaction was apparent after the
-stupendous adventures and experiences of the race meeting,
-yet moderate social intercourse survived. Mr. Churbett
-was the first of the personages from the outer world who
-presented himself, and the historiette of the duel having
-leaked out, he had to undergo a grave lecture and remonstrance
-from Mrs. Effingham, which, as he said afterwards,
-reminded him so of his own mother that it brought the
-tears into his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Argyll, luckily for his peace of mind, had occasion to
-go to Sydney, otherwise, not to mention chance reviewers
-and critics, it is hard to imagine how he could have protected
-himself against the uncompromising testimony which
-Mrs. Teviot felt herself compelled to take up against him.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Spillin’ the bluid o’ the Lord’s anointed; no that Maister
-Hampden was mair than a magistrate, but still it is written,
-‘they bear not the sword in vain.’ And oh, it’s wae to
-think if Hampden’s bullet had juist gane thro’ the heart o’
-Maister Argyll, and his mither, that gracious lady, wearyin’
-for him by the bonny hills o’ Tarbert! And that Maister
-Churbett, I wadna hae thocht it. I could fell him.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Howard Effingham, in a general way, disapproved of
-duelling, but as a soldier and a man of the world was free
-to confess that, as society was constituted, such an ultimatum
-could not be dispensed with. He was happy to hear no
-casualty had occurred. His own opinion, judging from what
-he had seen of colonial society, was that the men composing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>it were an exceptionally reasonable set of people, whose lives,
-from circumstances, were of exceptional value to the community
-at large as well as to their families. In the older
-countries of Europe, where duelling had formerly flourished,
-the direct converse of this proposition often obtained. He
-believed that in course of time the practice of duelling would
-become so unnecessary, even unfashionable, as to be practically
-obsolete.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Hampden did not belong to their ‘side of the
-country’ (or neighbourhood); thus he was necessarily left
-to receive his share of admonition from his wife, and such
-of his personal friends who cared to volunteer reproof or
-remonstrance. There were those who smiled sardonically at
-this view of the case.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XV <br /> THE LIFE STORY OF TOM GLENDINNING</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>During one of the long rides which Wilfred was obliged to
-take from time to time with Tom Glendinning, it occurred
-to him to ask about his previous history. The old man
-was unusually well; that is, free from rheumatism and
-neuralgia. The demons which tortured his irritable temper
-were at rest. For a wonder, Tom was communicative.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Sure there’s little use in knowin’ the finds and the kills
-and blank days of a toothless old hound like meself. I’m
-broken-mouthed enough to know better; but the oulder some
-gets, the wickeder they are. Maybe it’s because there’s little
-hope for them. I was born in the north of Ireland, where
-my people was dacent enough. Linen factories they had—no
-less. My great grandfather came from Scotland, my
-father was dead, and my uncle that I lived with was the
-sourest old miser that ever the Black North turned out.
-I was a wild slip of a youngster always, like a hawk among
-barn-door fowl. My mother came from the West. It was
-her blood I had, and it ran too free and merry in thim days.
-She was dead too, but I loved her people. I liked the
-sporting notions of ’em, and took to their ways, their fights,
-their fairs and the very brogue, just to spite my uncle and
-his canting breed.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I hated everything they liked, and liked everything they
-hated. I was flogged and locked up for runnin’ away from
-school. Why should I stay in and larn out of a dog’s-eared
-book when the hounds met within five Irish miles of me?
-I was always with them when I could slip off—sleepin’ in
-the stables, helpin’ the grooms, doin’ anything so they’d let
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>me stay about the stables and kennel. I could ride any
-hunter they had at exercise and knew every fox-covert in the
-neighbourhood, every hare’s form, besides being able to tie
-a fly and snare rabbits. When I was twelve years old I ran
-away and made my way down to Mayo, to my mother’s
-people—God be with them all their days! I was happy
-then.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I suppose you were, indeed,’ said Wilfred.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Why wouldn’t I be? My mother’s brother was but a
-small farmer, but he was a king’s ayqual for kind-heartedness,
-divilment and manliness. He could follow the hounds on
-foot for a ten-mile run. He was the best laper, wrestler,
-hurler, and stick-fighter in the barony. The sort of man I
-could have died for. More by token, he took to me at once
-when I stumbled in sore-footed and stiff like a stray puppy.
-I was the “white-headed boy” for my dead mother’s sake.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You had all you could wish for, then.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I had. I was a fool, too, but sure I didn’t know it.
-’Tis that same makes all the differ. The Squire took a
-fancy to me, after I rode a five-year-old for him over the
-ox-fences one day. I was made dog-boy, afterwards third
-whip; and sure, when I had on the cord breeches and the
-coat with the hunt button, I was prouder than the king.
-There was no divilment in all the land I wasn’t in; but I
-didn’t drink in thim days, and I knew my work well. Whin
-I was twenty-two a fit took me to go to Belfast and see the
-ould place again.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Did you wish to ask for your uncle’s blessing?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Not if I was stritched for it! But my cousin Mary!
-sure I could never get her out of my head, and thim black
-eyes of hers. She kissed me the night I ran away, and the
-taste of her lips and the sweet look of her eyes could never
-lave me. I can see her face now. I wonder where is she?
-And will I see her again when I go to my place!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The old man turned away his head; his voice was still
-for some moments. Were there tears in those evil-glowing
-eyes, that never lowered before mortal man or quailed under
-the shadow of death? Who shall say? Wilfred played with
-his bridle-rein. When the henchman spoke next he gazed
-resolutely before him, towards the far purple mountain peak;
-his voice once more was strong and clear.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>‘Whin I seen her again she was a woman grown, but
-her eyes were the same, and her heart was true to the wild
-boy that was born to ruin all that was nigh or kind to
-him. The old man scowled at me. There was little love
-between us.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘“So you’ve grown into a useless man instead of a disobedient
-lad,” he said. “Why didn’t ye stay among the
-rebels and white-boys of the West? It’s the company that
-fits ye well; you’ll have the better chance of being hanged
-before you’re older. Change your name before it’s a by-word
-and a disgrace to honest folks.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I swore then I’d make him repent his words, and that if
-I was hanged my name should be known far and wide. I
-went back to the wild West. But if I did I gave him good
-raison to curse me to his dyin’ day. I soothered over Mary
-to marry me, and the day after we were well on the way to
-Athlone.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Surely then you had a happy life before you, Tom?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘True for you. If I wasn’t happy, no man ever was. But
-the divil was too strong in me. I was right for the first year.
-I loved my work with the hounds, and the master—rest his
-sowl—used to say there wasn’t a whip west of Athlone could
-hold a candle to me. He gave me a snug cottage. Mary
-was a great favourite entirely with the ladies of the house.
-For that year—that one blessed year of my life—I was free
-from bad ways. Within the year Mary had a fine boy in her
-arms—the moral of his father, every one said—and as she
-smiled on me, I felt as if what the priest said about being
-good and all the rest of it, might be true, after all.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And what made the change, Tom?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The ould story—restlessness, bad company, and saycret
-societies. I got mixed up in one, that I joined before I was
-married, more for the fun of the night walks and drillin’s and
-rides than anything else. The oath once taken—a terrible
-oath it was, more by token—I thought shame of breakin’ it.
-It’s little I’d care <em>now</em> for a dozen like it. The end of it was,
-one night I must go off with a mob of young fools, like
-myself, to frighten a strong farmer who had taken the land
-over a poor man’s head. I didn’t know then that the best
-kindness for a strugglin’ holder there, was to hunt him out
-of the overstocked land to this place, or America, or the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>West Indies. Anyhow, we burned a stack. After I left,
-the boys were foolish and bate him. He took to his bed
-and died—divil mend him! Two days afterwards I was
-arrested on a warrant, and lodged in the county gaol. ’Twas
-the first time I heard a prison lock turn behind me. Not
-the last, by many a score times.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I had no chance at the Assizes. A girl swore to me as
-Huntsman Tom. Five of thim was hanged. I got off with
-transportation. I was four miles away whin they were heard
-batin’ Doran. I asked the Judge to hang me with the rest.
-He said it couldn’t be done. Mary came every day to see
-me, poor girleen; she liked to show me the boy; but I could
-see her heart was broke, though she tried to smile—such a
-smile—for my sake. I desarved what I got, maybe. But if
-I’d been let off then, as there’s a God in heaven I’d have
-starved rather than have done a wrong turn agin as long as
-I lived. If them judges knew a man’s heart, would they let
-one off, wonst in a way? Mary was with me every day, wet
-or dry, on board the prison ship till she sailed. Is there
-angels come to hell, I wonder, to see the wretches in torment?
-If they do, they’ll look like <em>her</em>, as she stood on the deck and
-trembled whin the chained divils that some calls men filed
-by. She looked at me with her soft eyes, till I grew mad,
-and told her roughly to go home and take the child with
-her. Then she dropped on her knees and cried, and kissed
-my hands with the irons on them and the face of me, like a
-madwoman. She lifted the baby to me for a minute, and
-it held out its hands. I kissed its wheeshy soft face, and
-she was gone out of my sight—out of my life—for ever.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘How did you like the colony?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well enough at the first. I worked well, and did what
-I was tould. It was all the relafe there was. I made sure I
-should get my freedom in a few years. The first letther I
-got was from my old uncle. Mary was dead! He said
-nothin’ about the child, but he would bring it up, and
-never wished to hear my name again. This changed me
-into a rale divil, no less. All that was bad in me kem out.
-I was that desperate that I defied the overseers, made friends
-with the biggest villians among the prisoners, and did everything
-foolish that came into my head. I was punished, and
-the worse I was trated the worse I grew. I was chained
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>and flogged and starved and put into dark cells. ’Tis
-little satisfaction they got of me, for I grew that savage and
-stubborn that I was all as one as a wild baste, only wickeder.
-If ye seen my back now, after the triangles, scarred and
-callused from shoulder to flank! I was marked out for
-Norfolk Island; ye’ve heard tell of that place?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred nodded assent.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘That <em>hell</em>!’ screamed the old man, ‘where men once
-sent never came back. Flogged and chained; herded like
-bastes, when the lime that they carried off to the boats burned
-holes in their naked flesh, wading through the surf with it!
-But I forgot, there was <em>one</em> way to get back to Sydney.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And what way was that?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You could always <em>kill</em> a man—one of your mates—only
-a prisoner—sure, it couldn’t matter much!’ said the old man
-with a dreadful laugh; ‘but ye were sent up to Sydney in the
-Government brig, and tried and hanged as reg’lar as if ye wor
-a free man and owned a free life. There was thim there
-thin that thought the pleasure trip to Sydney and the comfort
-of a new gaol and a nate condimned cell all to yourself,
-well worth a man’s blood, and a sure rope when the visit was
-over. Ha! ha!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He laughed long and loud. The sound was so unnatural
-that Wilfred fancied if their talk had occurred by a lonely
-camp in a darksome forest at midnight, instead of under the
-garish light of day, he might have imagined faint unearthly
-cries and moans strangely mingled with that awful laughter.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Thim was quare times; but I didn’t go to ‘the island
-hell’ after all. An up-country settler came to the barracks
-to pick a groom, as an assigned servant—so they called us.
-He was a big, bold-lookin’ man, and as I set my eyes on him,
-I never looked before me or on the floor as most of thim did.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘“What’s that man?” he said. “I like the look of him;
-he’s got plenty of devil in him; that’s my sort. He can ride,
-by the look of his legs. I’m just starting up-country.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘They wouldn’t give me to him at first; said I was too
-bad to go loose. But he had friends in high places, and they
-got me assigned to him. Next day we started for a station.
-When I felt a horse between my legs I began to have the
-feelings of a man again. He gave me a pistol to carry, too.
-Bushrangers wor on the road then, and he carried money.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>‘“You can fight or not, as you like, Tom,” he said, “if we
-meet any of the boys; but if you show cur, back you go to the
-barracks.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘“Sooner to hell,” says I. I felt that I would go through
-fire and water for him. He trated me liked a <em>man</em>!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And did you meet any bushrangers?’ said Wilfred.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We did then—the Tinker’s gang—three of them, and a
-boy. They bailed us up in a narrow place. I took steady
-aim and shot the Tinker dead. As well him as me—not
-that I cared a traneen for my life. My master dropped a
-second man; the other one and the boy bolted for their
-lives.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘“Well done, Tom!” says my master, when it was all over.
-“You were a good cavalry man lost”—he was in the Hussars,
-no less, at home. “We don’t part asy, I can tell you. You
-deserve your freedom, and you’ll get it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘He was betther than his word. I got a conditional
-pardon, not to go beyond the colonies. Sure I had little
-taste for lavin’ them. I stayed with him till he died; the
-next place I went to was Warbrok, as I tould ye the first
-day I seen you.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Did you ever hear what became of your child?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Ne’er a one of me knows, nor cares. If he’s turned out
-well, the less he knows of me the better. If he’s gone to the
-dogs, there’s scoundrels enough in the country already.
-But I nigh forget tellin’ ye, I made money once by dalin’ in
-cattle, and every year I sent home £50, thinkin’ it might do
-good to the child.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And do you know if it went safe?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Sure I got a resate for every pound of it, just as if a
-lawyer had written it, thankin’ me, but never sayin’ a word
-about the boy, but that it would be used for his larning.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And what made you leave it off?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I didn’t lave it off. They sent back the last of it without
-a word or message. That made me wild, and I started
-drinkin’, and never cried crack till it was gone. I began to
-wander about and take billets as a stock-rider. ’Tis the way
-I’ve lived iver since. If it wasn’t for the change and wild
-life now and thin—fightin’ them divils of blacks, gallopin’
-after wild cattle, and campin’ out where no white man had been
-before—I’d been dead with the drink long ago. But something
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>keeps me; something tells me I can’t die till I’ve seen
-one from the ould country. Who it is, I can’t tell. Sometimes
-I see Mary in my drames, holdin’ up the child like
-the last day I seen her. I’d have put a bullet through me,
-when I was in “the horrors,” only for thim drames. I shall
-go when my time comes. It’s little I’d care if it was in the
-night that’s drawin’ on.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Here he rode on for some minutes without speaking, then
-continued in an altered voice:</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘See here now, Mr. Wilfred, it’s little I thought to say to
-mortial man the things I’ve let out of my heart this blessed
-day. But my feeling to you and your father is the same as I
-had to my first master—the heavens be his bed! If he’d
-always been among such people here—rale gintry—that
-cared for him and thought to help him, Tom Glendinning
-would maybe have been a different man. But the time’s
-past. I’m like a beaten fox, nigh run down; and I’ll never
-die in my bed, that much I know. You won’t spake to
-me agen about this. My heart’s burstin’ as it is; and—I’ll
-maybe drop—if it comes on me again—like it—does—now——’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He pressed his hand closely, fiercely, upon the region of
-the heart. He grew deadly pale, and shook as if in mortal
-agony; his face was convulsed as he bowed himself upon
-the saddle-bow, and Wilfred feared he was about to fall from
-his horse. But he slowly regained his position, and quivering
-like one who had been stretched upon the rack, guided
-his horse along the homeward path.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘’Tis spasms of the heart, the doctor tould me it was,’ he
-gasped at length. ‘They’d take me off some day, before you
-could light a match, “if I didn’t keep aisy and free from
-trouble,”’ he said. ‘Maybe they will, some day; maybe something
-else will be too quick for them. It’s little I care.
-Close up, Mr. Wilfred, we’re late for home, and I’d like to
-regulate thim calves before it’s dark.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Much Wilfred mused over the history of the strange old
-man who had now become associated with their fortunes.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What a life!’ thought he. ‘What a tragedy!’ How
-changed from the days when he followed the Mayo hounds;
-reckless then, perhaps, and impatient of control, but an unweaned
-child in innocence compared to his present condition.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>And yet he possessed qualities which, under different treatment
-might have led to honour and distinction.</p>
-
-<hr class='c013' />
-
-<p class='c001'>As far as personal claims to distinction were concerned,
-few districts in which the Effinghams could have been
-located, would have borne comparison with the vicinity of
-Lake William. It abounded, as we have told, in younger sons
-of good family, whom providence would appear to have thus
-guided but a few years before their own migration. This
-fortunate concurrence they had themselves often noted, and
-fully did they appreciate the congenial companionship.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Besides the local celebrities, few tourists of note passed
-along the southern road without being intercepted by the
-hospitality of one or other household. These captives of
-their bow and spear were shared honourably. When the
-Honourable Cedric Rotherwood, who had letters to Mr.
-Effingham, was quartered for a month at The Chase, fishing,
-shooting, and kangaroo-hunting, the Benmohr men and their
-allies were entreated to imagine there was a muster at The
-Chase every Saturday, and to rendezvous in force accordingly.
-A strong friendship accordingly was struck up between the
-young men. The Honourable Cedric was only five-and-twenty,
-and years afterwards, when Charlie Hamilton went
-home with one station in his pocket, and two more paying
-twenty per cent per annum upon the original outlay, his
-Lordship, having then come into his kingdom, had him
-down at Rotherwood Hall, and gave him such mounts in
-the hunting field, and such corners in the battues, not to
-mention a run over to his Lordship’s deer forest in the Highlands,
-that Charlie, on befitting occasions, refers to that
-memorable visit with enthusiasm (and at considerable length,
-say his friends) even unto this day.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Against this court card, socially marked for the Effinghams’
-fortune, one day turned up a couple of trumps, which
-might be thought to have made a certainty of the odd trick
-in favour of Benmohr. Charles Hamilton, coming home
-after a day’s ploughing, found two strangers in the sitting-room,
-one of whom, a quiet plainly dressed personage, shut
-up a book at his entrance, and begged to introduce his
-friend and travelling companion, Major Glendinning, ‘who (his
-own name Kinghart) had brought a letter from a mutual
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>friend, he believed, Mr. Machell of Langamilli. The Major
-had been good enough to accompany him, being anxious to
-see the country.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Delighted to see you, I’m sure,’ said Hamilton, pocketing
-the letter unread. ‘I hope Mrs. Teviot gave you some
-refreshment. I seldom come home before dark, now the
-days are getting short.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The old lady did the honours, I assure you,’ said the
-Major, ‘but we preferred awaiting dinner, as we had tiffin on
-the road. As for Kinghart, he found an old edition in your
-book-case which was meat and drink to him.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘In that case, if you will allow me, I will ask you to
-excuse me till the bell rings, as dressing is a serious business
-after my clay furrows.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Hamilton had time to look at Willie Machell’s letter, in
-which he found Mr. Kinghart described as an out-and-out
-brick, though reserved at first, and unreasonably fond of
-books. Played a goodish game of whist, too. Henry Kinghart
-was brother to the famous clergyman and writer of that
-name, and was so deuced clever that, if there had been any
-material for fiction in this confounded country, which there
-was not, he shouldn’t be surprised if he wrote a book himself
-some day. As for the Major, he was invaluable. He
-(Machell) had met him at the Australian Club, and brought
-him up forcibly from Sydney. He was the best shot and
-horseman he ever saw, and fought no end with his regiment
-of Irregular Horse in India. Siffter, N.I., who denied everybody’s
-deeds but his own, admitted as much. Relative in
-Australia—cattle-station manager or something—that he
-wanted to look up. He (Hamilton) was not to keep them
-all the winter at Benmohr, as he (Machell) was deucedly dull
-without them.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Kinghart fully answered his warranty, inasmuch as
-he volunteered little in the way of remark, and fastening
-upon one or two rare books in the Benmohr collection,
-hardly looked up till Mrs. Teviot came in with the bedroom
-candles. The Major seemed indisposed to literature, but
-had seen so much, and indeed had transacted personally
-so large a share of modern history in Indian military service,
-that Hamilton, who, like most Scottish gentlemen, had a
-brother in the line there and several cousins in the Civil
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>Service, was deeply interested. He had been in every battle
-of note since the commencement of the Mahratta war, and</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>A scar on his brown cheek revealed</div>
- <div class='line'>A token true of ‘Moodkee’ field.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>Without a shade of self-consciousness he replied to Hamilton’s
-eager questionings, whom he found to be (from his brother’s
-letters) accurately informed about the affairs of Northern India.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Unfortunately for Mr. Kinghart’s studies, Neil Barrington
-and Bob Ardmillan turned up next morning—two men who
-would neither be quiet themselves, nor suffer other mortals to
-enjoy repose. Part of the day was spent in shooting round
-the borders of the dam, when the Major topped Ardmillan’s
-bag, who was considered the crack shot of the neighbourhood.
-In the afternoon, there being many horses, colts and others,
-in the stables, Neil proposed an adjournment to the leaping-bar,
-an institution peculiar to Benmohr, for educating the inexperienced
-steeds to jump cleverly with the aid of a shifting
-bar enwrapped in brambles.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At this entertainment the Major showed himself to be no
-novice, riding with an ease of seat and perfection of hand, to
-which, doubtless, years of pig-sticking and tent-pegging had
-contributed.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In the evening whist was suggested, when Mr. Kinghart
-showed that his studies had by no means prevented his paying
-due attention to an exacting and jealous mistress. The
-exigencies of the game thawed his reserve, and in his new
-character he was pronounced by the volatile Neil and the
-shrewd satirist Bob Ardmillan to be a first-rate fellow. He
-displayed with some dry humour the results of a habit of
-close observation; in addition, a chance allusion served to
-reveal such stores of classical lore, that Argyll’s absence was
-deplored by Neil Barrington, who believed that his friend,
-who was always scolding him for not keeping up his classics,
-would have been for once out-quoted.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Of course such treasures of visitors could not be allowed
-to lie hid, and after a few allusions to the family at The
-Chase had paved the way, Mr. Kinghart and the Major were
-invited to accompany Hamilton on a visit (which he unblushingly
-asserted to be chiefly on business) to that popular
-homestead on the next ensuing Saturday.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>The Effingham family were devoted admirers of the elder
-and Kinghart, had but recently read and discussed <cite>Eastward
-Ho</cite>, <cite>Dalton</cite>, <cite>Rocke</cite> and other products of the large, loving mind
-which was then stirring the hearts of the most generous
-portion of English society. It may be conjectured with what
-secret triumph, veiled under an assumption of formal politeness,
-Hamilton introduced Major Glendinning and Mr.
-Henry Kinghart.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Will you think me curious if I ask whether you are
-related to the Rector of Beverly?’ inquired Rosamond soon
-after preliminaries had come to an end. ‘You must pardon
-our enthusiasm, but life in the provinces seems as closely
-concerned with authors as with acquaintances or friends,
-almost more so.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘My brother Charles would feel honoured, I assure
-you, Miss Effingham, if he knew the interest he has aroused
-in this far-off garrison of the Norseman he so loves to
-celebrate,’ said the stranger, with a pleasant smile. ‘I wish,
-for a hundred reasons, that he could be here to tell you so.
-How he would enjoy roaming over this land of wonders!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Rosamond’s eyes sparkled with an infrequent lustre.
-Here was truly a miraculous occurrence. A brother—actually
-a brother—of the great, the noble, the world-renowned
-Charles Kinghart, with whose works they had been
-familiar ever since they could read; most of whose characters
-were to them household words!</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Certainly there was nothing heroic about the personnel of
-their literary visitor—an unobtrusive-looking personage. But
-now that he was decorated with the name of Kinghart,
-glorified with the reflected halo of genius, there was visible to
-the book-loving maiden a world of distinction in his every
-gesture and fragment of speech.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Then Major Glendinning, too, a man whom few would
-pass without a second glance. Slightly over middle height,
-his symmetrical figure and complete harmony of motion
-stamped him as one perfected by the widest experiences of
-training and action. ‘Soldier’ was written emphatically by
-years of imprint upon the fearless gaze, the imperturbable
-manner, the bronzed cheek, and accurate but unostentatious
-dress. A man who had shouldered death and had mocked
-danger; who had actually shed blood in action—‘in single
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>fight and mixed array’ (like Marmion, as Annabel said).
-Not in old, half-forgotten days, like their father, but in <em>last
-year’s</em>, well-nigh last month’s, deadly picturesque strife, of
-which the echoes were as yet scarcely silent. Annabel and
-Beatrice gazed at him as at a denizen of another planet, and
-left to Rosamond the more rare adoration which exalts the
-image of the scholar to a higher pedestal than that of the
-warrior.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There was, however, a sufficing audience and ample
-appreciation for both the recent lions, who were by no
-means suffered by their original captors to roar softly or feed
-undisturbed. Before sitting down to the unceremonious
-evening meal, Charles Hamilton begged Mrs. Effingham to
-defer leaving the drawing-room for a few moments while he
-made a needful explanation.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You will not be surprised to hear, Mrs. Effingham,’ he
-commenced, with an air of great deference, ‘that Mr.
-Kinghart shares his distinguished brother’s views as to our
-duties to the (temporarily) lower orders, and the compulsion
-under which the nobler minds of the century lie, to advance
-by personal sacrifice the social culture of their dependents,
-more particularly in the colonies, where (necessarily) the
-feelings are less sensitive. Mr. Kinghart, therefore, declines
-to partake of a meal in any house, unless the servants are
-invited to share the repast.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What nonsense!’ said the gentleman referred to, rather
-hastily; ‘but I daresay you recognise our friend’s vein of
-humour, Mrs. Effingham.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It’s all very well, Kinghart,’ replied Hamilton gravely;
-‘but I feel pained to find a man of your intellect deserting
-his convictions when they clash with conventionalities. You
-know the Rector’s opinions as to our dependents, and here
-you stand, ashamed to act up to the family principles.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘My dear fellow, of course I support Charles’s gallant
-testimony to the creed of his Master, but he had no “colonial
-experience,” whereas I have had a great deal, which may
-have led me to believe that I am the deeper student of human
-nature. I don’t know whether I need assure Mrs. Effingham
-that she will find me outwardly much like other people.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘How few beliefs shall I retain henceforth,’ said Hamilton
-sorrowfully.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>‘Putting socialism out of the question,’ said Mr. Kinghart,
-‘I shall always regret that Charles did not avail himself of an
-opportunity he once had to visit Australia. He would have
-been charmed beyond description.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I’m sure <em>we</em> should have been, only to see him,’ said
-Beatrice; ‘but I don’t know what we should have had to
-offer in exchange for what he would have to forgo.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You are leaving out of the question the fact of my
-brother’s passionate love of geology, botany, and adventure.
-The facts in natural history to which even my small researches
-have led are so wonderful that I hesitate to assert them.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘How fascinating it must be,’ said Rosamond, ‘to be able
-to walk about the earth and read the book of Nature like a
-scroll. You and our dear old Harley seem alike in that
-respect. I look upon you as magicians. You have the
-“open sesame,” and may find the way to Ali Baba caverns
-full of jewels.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘This last is not so wildly improbable, though you over-rate
-my attainments,’ said their visitor, with a quiet smile.
-‘I have certainly found in this neighbourhood indications of
-valuable minerals, not even excluding that Chief Deputy of
-the Prince of the Air—Gold.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Why, Kinghart, you are as mad as Mr. Sternworth,’ said
-Hamilton. ‘All <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>savants</em></span> have a craze for impossible discoveries.
-How <em>can</em> there be gold here?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I took Mr. Hamilton to be a gentleman of logical mind,’
-said the Englishman quietly. ‘Why should not the sequences
-from geological premisses be as invariable in Australia as in
-any other part of the globe. The South Pole does not
-invert the principle of cause and effect, I presume.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I did not mean that,’ explained Hamilton, with something
-less than his ordinary decisiveness, ‘but there seems
-something so preposterous in a gold-field in a new country
-like this.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It is not a new country, it is a very old one; there was
-probably gold here long before it was extracted from Ophir.
-But your men, in digging holes yesterday for the posts of
-that new hut, dislodged fragments of hornblendic granite
-slightly decomposed and showing minute particles of gold.
-I had not time to examine them, but I noted the formation
-accurately.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>‘What then?’ said his male hearers in a kind of chorus.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What then? Why, it follows inexorably that we are standing
-above one of the richest goldfields in the known world!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But assuming for a moment, which God forbid,’ said
-Hamilton, ‘that gold—<em>real</em> gold—in minute quantities could
-be extracted from the stone you picked up, does it follow
-that rich and extensive deposits should be contiguous?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘My dear Hamilton, you surely missed the geological
-course in your college studies! Gold once found amid
-decomposed hornblendic granite, in alluvial drifts in company
-with water-worn quartz, has <em>never</em> failed to demonstrate itself
-in wondrous wealth. In the Ural Mountains, in Mexico,
-and most likely in King Solomon’s time, there were no <em>little</em>
-mines where once this precise formation was verified.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I devoutly trust that it may not be in our time,’ said
-Argyll. ‘What a complete overturn of society would take
-place; in Australia, of all places! I should lose interest in
-the country at once.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There might be inconvenience,’ said Mr. Kinghart
-reflectively, ‘but the Anglo-Saxon would be found capable of
-organising order. We need not look so far ahead. But of
-the day to come, when the furnace-chimney shall smoke on
-these hillsides, and miles of alluvial be torn up and riddled
-with excavations, I am as certain as that Glossopteris, of
-which I have seen at least three perfect specimens in shale,
-denotes coal deposits.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We must buy you out, Kinghart, that is the whole of it,’
-said Ardmillan, ‘and direct your energies into some other
-channel. If you go on proving the existence of gold
-and black diamonds under these heedless feet of ours the
-social edifice will totter. Hamilton will abandon his
-agriculture, Argyll his stock-keeping, Churbett his reading
-and early rising, Mrs. Teviot will leave off cheese-making,
-Forbes will cease to contradict—in short, the whole Warbrok
-and Benmohr world will come to an end.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It is a very pleasant world, and I am sorry to have
-hinted at the flood which will some day sweep over it,’ said
-Mr. Kinghart; ‘but what is written is written, and indelibly,
-when the pages are tables of stones, set up from the foundation
-of the world.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Most enjoyable and still well remembered were the days
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>which followed this memorable discussion. A succession of
-rides, drives, and excursions followed, in which Mr. Kinghart
-pointed out wonders in the world of botany, which
-caused Rosamond to look upon him as a sage of stupendous
-experiences.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To Howard Effingham the presence of Major Glendinning
-was an unalloyed pleasure. Familiar chiefly with service in
-other parts of the world, he was never tired of listening or
-questioning. Varied necessarily were incidents of warfare
-conducted against the wild border tribes of Hindostan with
-her hordes of savage horsemen. Such campaigns necessarily
-partook of the irregular modes of combat of the foe. Without
-attaching importance to his own share of distinction,
-their guest permitted his hearers to learn much of the
-picturesque and splendid successes of the British arms in the
-historic land of Ind.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>For himself, his manner had a strange tinge of softness
-and melancholy. At one time his mien was that of the
-stern soldier, proud of the thoroughness with which a band
-of marauders had been extirpated, or the spirit of a dissolute
-native ruler broken. Scarcely had the tale been told when
-a settled sadness would overspread his face, as if in pity for
-the heathens’ spoil and sorrow. To his hearers, far from
-war’s alarms, there was a strong, half-painful fascination in
-these tales of daring, heightened by the frequent presence of
-death in every shape of hot-blooded carnage or military
-execution.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘How difficult it is to imagine,’ said Beatrice one day,
-suddenly arousing herself, after staring with dilated eyeballs
-at the Major, who had been recounting a realistic incident
-for Guy’s special edification (how the Ranee of Jeypore had
-hanged a dozen of his best troopers, and of the stern
-reprisal which he was called upon to make), ‘that you,
-actually sitting here quietly with us, are one and the same
-person who was chief actor in these fearful doings. What a
-wonderful change it must be for you.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Let me assure you,’ said the Major, ‘that it is a most
-pleasant change. I am tired of soldiering, and my health is
-indifferent. I almost think that if I could fish out this old
-uncle of mine, I should be content to settle in the bush, and
-take to rural life for the rest of my days.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>‘Don’t you think you would find it awfully dull?’ said
-Annabel; ‘you would despise all our life so much. Unless
-there happened to be an outbreak of bushrangers, you might
-never have a chance of killing any one again, as long as you
-lived.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I could manage without that excitement. I have had
-enough, in all conscience, to last a lifetime. The climate of
-your country suits us old Indians so well. If I were once
-fairly established, I think I could rear horses and cattle,
-especially the former, with great contentment.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There is no one of your name in this part of the country,’
-said Guy, ‘except our old stock-rider, Tom. He’s such a
-queer old fellow. I remember asking him what his surname
-was one day, and he told me it was Glendinning. He’s
-away now, mustering at Wangarua.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It is not an uncommon name where my family lived,’
-said the Major. ‘I should like to see him if he is a namesake.
-He may have heard of the person I am in search of.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The whole party was extremely sorry to permit their
-guests to depart; but after a few days spent in luxurious
-intercourse, during which sight-seeing and sport were organised
-day by day, and every imaginable book and author reviewed
-with Mr. Kinghart in the evening, while Guy had fully made
-up his mind to go to India, and had got up Indian history
-from the Mogul dynasty to the execution of Omichund, a
-parting had to be made. It was only temporary, however,
-as Mr. Kinghart had promised to visit an old schoolfellow
-long settled at Monaro, and after a fortnight’s stay had
-promised to return this way with the Major before they
-said farewell finally. At Warbrok Chase there was great
-dismay at the inevitable separation.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I declare,’ said Annabel, ‘that I begin to doubt whether
-it is prudent to make such delightful acquaintances. One is
-so dreadfully grieved when they depart. It is much better
-to have everyday friends, who can’t run away, isn’t it?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And who mightn’t be much missed if they did; quite so,
-Miss Annabel,’ said Forbes, to whom this lament was made.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, of course <em>you</em> are different at Benmohr and just
-about here. We are all one family, and should be a very
-united one if Mr. Churbett would leave off teasing me about
-what silly people say, and Mr. Forbes would give up his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>sarcasms, Mr. Hamilton his logic, Mr. Argyll his tempers, and
-so on. How I could improve you all, to be sure! But I
-mean friends—that is, strangers—like Mr. Kinghart and
-Major Glendinning, that are birds of passage. I can’t
-explain myself; but I’m sure there’s something true and new
-about the idea.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It may be quite true that young ladies prefer recently
-acquired friends to those of long standing, but I am afraid it
-is not altogether new in the history of the sex,’ said Mr.
-Forbes. ‘Still I think I understand you, Miss Annabel.
-Which of the illustrious strangers do <em>you</em> chiefly honour with
-your regrets, Miss Beatrice?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I mourn over Mr. Kinghart,’ said Beatrice, with instinctive
-defensive art. ‘He is a library that can talk, and yet, like a
-library, prefers silence. I wonder if one would ever get tired
-of listening to him, and having everything so delightfully explained.
-He is sarcastic about women, too. Perhaps he has
-been ill-treated by some thoughtless girl. I should like to
-wither her.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Why don’t you comfort him, Beatrice? Your love for
-reading would just suit, or perhaps not suit,’ said Annabel.
-‘You would have to toss up which was to order dinner or
-make tea. I can see you both sitting in easy-chairs, with
-your foreheads wrinkled up, reading away the whole evening.
-I wonder if two poets or two authors ever agreed in married
-life? Of course, he might scratch out her adjectives, or she
-might sneer at his comic element. But, do you know, a
-thought strikes me. Don’t you see a likeness to some one
-in the Major that you’ve seen before? I do, and it haunts
-me.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘No, I never saw any one the <em>least</em> like him; his expression,
-his figure, his way of walking, riding, and talking are quite
-different from other people. How a man’s life moulds him!
-I am sure I could tell what half the men I see have been or
-<em>not</em> been, quite easily, by their appearance and ways.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But did you notice his eyes?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, they are soft, and yet piercing, which is unusual;
-but that is all.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘On second thoughts I won’t say, lest I might be thought
-less sensible even than I am. I have no capital to fall back
-upon in that respect.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>‘You do say such odd things, my dear Annabel. I think
-you ought to get on with our last duet. You only half know
-your part.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>That a certain reaction follows hard upon the most unalloyed
-pleasure is conceded. The dwellers at The Chase
-recognised a shade of monotony, even of dulness, falling
-upon their uneventful lives as the friends and visitors
-departed.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XVI <br /> ‘SO WE’LL ALL GO A-HUNTING TO-DAY’</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>The cheering results of this season of prosperity were not
-without effect upon the sanguine temperament of Howard
-Effingham. Prone to dismiss from his mind all darkly-shaded
-outlines, he was ever eager to develop projects which
-belong to the enjoyments rather than to the acquisitions
-of life. Few human beings had commenced with a smaller
-share of foresight. <em>He</em> required no exhortation to refrain
-from taking heed for the morrow and its cares. For him
-they could hardly be said to exist, so little did he realise in
-advance the more probable evils.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The time had arrived, in his opinion, to dwell less fixedly
-upon the problem of income. The greater question of
-cultured living could no longer be neglected. All danger
-of poverty and privation overtaking the family being removed,
-Mr. Effingham for some time past had devoted his mind to
-the assimilation of the lives of himself and his neighbours to
-those of the country gentlemen of his own land. Something
-he had already effected in this way. He had received a
-shipment of pheasants and partridges, which, in a suitable
-locality, were making headway against their natural enemies.
-Much of his time was spent, gun in hand, clearing the
-haunts of the precious Gallinæ from the unsparing dasyurus
-(the wild cat of the colonists), while Guy’s collection of
-stuffed hawks had increased notably. Orders had been given
-to shoot every one that could be seen, from the tiny merlin,
-chiefly devoted to moths and grasshoppers, to the wedge-tailed
-eagle eight feet between the wings, discovered on a
-mighty iron-bark tree, thence surveying the bright-plumaged
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>strangers. Hares, too, and rabbits had been liberated, of
-which the latter had increased with suspicious rapidity.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Coursing, fishing, shooting, all of a superior description,
-Howard Effingham now saw with prophetic vision established
-for the benefit of his descendants at The Chase. They
-would be enabled to enjoy themselves befittingly in their
-seasons of leisure, and cadets of the House, when they visited
-England, would not have to blush for their ignorance of the
-out-door accomplishments of their kinsfolk. In imagination
-he saw</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>The merry brown hares come leaping</div>
- <div class='line'>Over the crest of the hill,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>or starting from their ‘forms’ in the meadows which bordered
-the lake. He saw the partridge coveys rise from the stubbles,
-and heard once more the whirr of the cock pheasant as he
-‘rocketted’ from the copse of mimosa saplings. He saw
-carp, tench, and brown trout in the clear mountain streams,
-and watched far down the Otsego ‘laker’ in the still depths
-of their inland bay. At the idea of these triumphs, which
-long years after his bones rested in an exile’s grave, would
-be associated with the name of Howard Effingham, his heart
-swelled with proud anticipation. But there was one deficiency
-as yet unfilled; one difficulty hitherto not confronted. Much
-had been attempted, even something done. Why should he
-not be more nobly daring still? Why not organise that sport
-of kings, that eminently British pastime, nowhere enjoyed in
-perfection, hitherto, outside of the ‘happy isles’? <em>Why not
-go in for fox-hunting?</em> Could its transplantation be possible?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>True, the gladdening variety of pasture and plough,
-meadow and woodland, over which hound and horse sweep
-rejoicingly in Britain, was not possible in the neighbourhood.
-Hedges and ditches, brooks and banks, as yet gave not
-change and interest to the programme while educating horse
-and rider. Still, he would not despair.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In the pensive, breezeless autumn, or the winter mornings,
-when the dew lay long on the tall grass, and the soft, hazy
-atmosphere gradually struggled into the brilliant Australian
-day, could there be better scenting weather? Would not
-the first cry of the hounds, as a dozen couples, to begin with,
-hit off the scent of a dingo or a blue forester, sound like a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>forgotten melody in his ears? There would be an occasional
-fence to give the boys emulative interest; for the rest, a
-gallop in the fresh morn through the park-like woodlands, or
-even across the spurs of the ranges, would be worth riding a
-few miles to enjoy. All the neighbours—now making money
-fast and not indisposed for amusement—would be glad to
-join. A better lot of fellows no Hunt ever numbered amongst
-its subscribers. Subscription? Well, he supposed it must
-be so. It would be a proprietary interest, and he was afraid
-Wilfred would object to the whole burden of maintenance
-falling upon the resources of The Chase.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This brilliant idea was not suffered to lapse for want of
-expansion. Energetic and persistent in the domain of the
-abstract or the unprofitable, Howard Effingham at once
-communicated with a few friends. He was surprised at the
-enthusiasm which the project evoked. A committee was
-formed, comprising the names of the Benmohr firm, Churbett,
-Ardmillan, Forbes, and the D’Oyleys, besides Robert Malahyde,
-a neighbour of Hampden’s and an enthusiastic sportsman.
-Never was a more happy suggestion. It pleased everybody.
-O’Desmond declared that the very idea recalled ‘The Blazers’;
-he felt himself to be ten years younger as he put down
-his name for a handsome subscription on the spot. Fred
-Churbett had always known that Duellist was thrown away
-as a hackney; and now that there was something more to be
-jumped than the Benmohr leaping-bar, did not care how
-early he got up. This announcement was received with
-shouts of incredulous laughter.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred alone was not enamoured of this new project.
-He foresaw direct and, still more serious, indirect expenses.
-It was no doubt a great matter to have even the semblance
-of the Great English Sport revived among them. Still,
-business was business. If this sort of thing was to be
-encouraged, there was no knowing where it would stop. He
-himself would be only too glad to have a run now and then,
-but his instinctive feeling was that he would be better
-employed attending to his cattle and consolidating the
-prosperity, which now seemed to be flowing in with a steady
-tide.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In truth, of late, affairs had commenced to take a most
-encouraging, even intoxicating turn for the better. The
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>whole trade of the land—pastoral, commercial, and agricultural—was
-in a satisfactory condition, owing chiefly to
-unprecedentedly good seasons. All the Australian colonies,
-more particularly New South Wales, have within them
-elements of vast, well-nigh illimitable development. Nothing
-is needed but ordinary climatic conditions to produce an
-amount of material well-being, which nothing can wholly
-displace. The merchants of the cities, the farmers of the
-settled districts, the squatters of the far interior, were alike
-prospering and to prosper, it seemed, indefinitely. The
-export trade, Mr. Rockley assured him, had increased
-astonishingly, while the imports had so swelled that England
-would soon have to look upon Australia as one of her best
-customers.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘So you are going to have a pack of foxhounds in your
-neighbourhood, Mr. Effingham?’ said Mrs. Rockley. ‘I think
-it a splendid idea. Chrissie and I will ride over and see one
-of your meets, if you ask us.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Then did Wilfred begin solemnly to vow and declare that
-the chief reason he had for giving the idea his support was,
-that perhaps the ladies at Rockley Lodge might be induced
-to attend a meet sometimes; otherwise, he confessed he
-thought it a waste of money.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, you mustn’t be over-prudent, Mr. Effingham. Mr.
-Rockley says you Lake William people are getting alarmingly
-rich. You must consider the unamused poor a little, you
-know. It is a case of real distress, I assure you, sometimes
-in Yass when all you men take fits of hard work and staying
-at home. Now hunting is such a delightful resource in
-winter time.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Every one in our neighbourhood has joined,’ said Wilfred,
-‘but we shall want more subscriptions if we are to become a
-strong Hunt club.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Put me down,’ said Mr. Rockley. ‘I haven’t much time,
-but I might take a turn some day. Hampden, the Champions,
-Malahyde, Compton, and Edward Bellfield are most eager.
-Bob Clarke wrote forwarding their subscriptions, though they
-live rather far off. They hope to have a run now and
-then for their money.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I think I shall ask your father to let me work him a pair
-of slippers,’ said Miss Christabel, ‘or an embroidered waistcoat,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>if he would like it better. He deserves the thanks of
-every girl in the district for his delightful idea and his spirited
-way of carrying it out. I hope some of us won’t take to
-riding jealous, but I wouldn’t answer for it if ever Mrs.
-Snowden and I get together. I’ll tell you who could cut us
-both down.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And who may that be?’ asked Wilfred.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Why, Vera Fane, of course. Didn’t you know that she
-rode splendidly? When she was quite a little child she used
-to gallop after the cattle at Black Mountain, where they live,
-and they say, though she is very quiet about it, that she can
-ride <em>anything</em>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What sort of a place is this Black Mountain? It hasn’t
-altogether a sound of luxury.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, it’s a terrible place, I believe, for poor Vera to have
-to live in always,’ said the good-natured Christabel. ‘They
-say it is as much as you can do to ride there, it’s so rough,
-and they had to pack all their stores, I believe, till the new
-road was made. And they’re very poor. Mr. Fane is one of
-those men who never make money or do anything much
-except read all day. If it wasn’t for Vera, who teaches her
-brothers (she’s the only girl), and keeps the accounts, and
-looks after the stores, and manages the servants, and does a
-good deal of the housework herself, the whole place would go
-to ruin.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Apparently, if such a good genius was to be withdrawn;
-but why doesn’t her father sell out and go away? There are
-plenty of other stations to be got in more habitable places.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, his wife is buried there—no wonder she died, poor
-thing. He won’t hear of leaving the place; and I really
-believe, lonely as it is, that Vera likes it too. She is a
-wonderful girl, always teaching herself something, when she
-isn’t darning stockings, or cooking, or having a turn at the
-wash-tub, for Nelly Jones, who stayed with her one summer,
-told me that they lost their servant once, and Vera <em>did everything</em>
-for a month. Sometimes she gets out, as she did to
-the races last year, and she enjoys that, as you may believe.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I hope she does,’ said Wilfred reflectively. ‘I thought
-her a very nice girl, but I had no idea she was such a
-paragon.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘She’s a grand girl, and an ornament to her sex,’ said Mr.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>Rockley suddenly. ‘I couldn’t have believed such a woman
-was possible, but I stopped there a week once, weatherbound.
-All the creeks were up, and as you had to cross the river about
-fifty times to get out of the confounded hole, I was bound to
-let the water go down. I should have hanged myself looking
-at old Fane’s melancholy phiz and listening to the rain, if it
-hadn’t been for Miss Fane. But I’ll tell you all about her
-another time. I must be off now. You’ll stay to dinner?
-I’ll find you here, I suppose, when I come back.’</p>
-
-<hr class='c013' />
-
-<p class='c001'>If Howard Effingham could only have bent his mind with
-the same unflagging perseverance to matters of material
-advantage that he devoted to the establishment of the Lake
-William Hunt, he would have been a successful man in any
-country. Never would he have needed to quit his ancestral
-home.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In some enterprises everything appears to go contrary from
-the commencement. Hindrances, breakdowns, and mortifications
-of all kinds arise, as it were, out of the earth. On the
-other hand, occasionally, it appears as though ‘the stars in
-their courses fought <em>for</em> Sisera.’ The Hunt scheme had its
-detractors, who looked upon it as unnecessary and injurious,
-if, indeed, it were not also impossible. These amiable
-reviewers were discomfited. The sportsmen communicated
-with proved sympathetic. All sent a couple or two of hounds,
-above the average of gift animals; and one gentleman, relinquishing
-his position of M.F.H. in Tasmania, shipped the
-larger portion of his pack, firmly refusing to accept remuneration.
-He further stated that he should feel amply compensated
-by hearing of their successful incorporation in the Hunt of so
-well known a sporting centre as that of Lake William.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A kennel had been put up, of course, by Dick Evans. He
-had the dash and celerity of a ship carpenter, ensuring stability,
-but avoiding precision, the curse of your average mechanic.
-His colleague, old Tom, who grumbled at most innovations,
-was, wonderful to relate, in a state of enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Everybody in the district had a couple of hunters, it seemed,
-which he desired to get into condition, a task for which there
-had never before been sufficient inducement. Stalls and
-boxes were repaired, and the tourist through the famed
-district which lay around Lake William was enabled to report
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>that nowhere in Australia had he seen such an array of well-bred,
-well-conditioned horses.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Eventually, all necessary preparations were completed.
-Ten or twelve couple of hounds had been got together, had
-been regularly exercised, and, thanks to old Tom’s efficient
-services as whip, persuaded to confine themselves to one
-kangaroo at a time, also to follow the scent in early morn
-with a constancy truly remarkable, considering the characters
-which they mostly enjoyed. So forward were all things, so
-smoothly had the machinery worked, that after several
-councils of war a day was at length fixed for the formal
-establishment of the ‘Lake William Hunt Club.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Notices and invitations were sent out in all directions.
-Even here fortune favoured them. It so happened that
-Hampden and St. Maur, with the Gambiers and a few more
-<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>esprits forts</em></span>, had business (real, not manufactured) which compelled
-their presence within such distance as permitted
-attendance. John Hampden was supposed to ride to hounds
-in such fashion that he had few equals. Formerly, in
-Tasmania, a Master of Hounds himself, his favourite hunter,
-The Caliph, was even now a household word.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Such a glorious season, too! Why does not Nature more
-frequently accommodate us with such easy luxuries—weather
-wherein every one is prosperous, easy of mind, and, as a
-natural consequence, charitably disposed? Everybody’s stock
-was looking well. Prices were high and rising. There was
-a report gaining ground of rich lands having been discovered
-and settlements formed in the far south. That fact meant
-increased demand for stock, and so tended to make all things
-more serene, if possible. Nobody was afraid to leave home,
-no bush fires were possible at this time of year, the stock were
-almost capable of minding themselves, and if a man had a
-decent overseer, why, he might go to England without imprudence.
-Such was the wondrous concurrence of fortune’s
-favours.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The great and glorious day arrived. Following the run
-of luck which had marked the whole enterprise, its beauty
-would have rejoiced the heart of any M.F.H. in the three
-kingdoms.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As the party commenced to assemble on the green knoll
-which lay in front of the garden fence in view of the lake,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>all connoisseurs united in the verdict that there could not
-have been invented a better scenting day. There had been
-rain lately, and during the night anxiety had been felt lest
-a downpour might mar the enjoyment of the unprecedented
-pastime.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Too kind, however, were the elements. The hazy dawn
-had gradually yielded to a sunrise toned by masses of slowly
-moving soft grey clouds. The air, saturated with moisture,
-became mild and spring-like as the morning advanced. The
-wind changed to a few points nearer west and gradually lulled
-to an uncomplaining monotone. The thick, green, glistening
-sward, though reasonably damp, was firm and kindly in the
-interests of the contending coursers. It was a day of days,
-a day of promise, of fullest justification of existence. In such
-a day hope returns to each heart, strong and triumphant;
-care is a lulled and languid demon, and sorrow an untranslated
-symbol.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Nearly all the ladies who were to assist at the grand
-ceremonial had ridden or driven over the night before.
-Warbrok was nearly as fully occupied as Rockley Lodge had
-been at the races. It was many a day since the old walls
-had included so large and mirthful a party, had listened to
-such joyous babble, had echoed to like peals of innocent
-laughter.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Of course, the fair Christabel and her mother were early
-invited guests. They had brought a girl cousin. Mrs.
-Snowden had also asked leave to bring a friend staying with
-her at the time. Miss Fane had, of course, been entreated
-by Mrs. Effingham to be sure to come, but that young lady
-had written, sorrowfully, to decline as Dr. Fane was absent
-on business. A postscript, partially reassuring, stated that
-he was expected home the next day, and if the writer could
-possibly manage it she might ride part of the way to Warbrok
-and join some friends who were to come to the breakfast.
-But this was a hazardous supposition, too good to come off.
-Deep regret was expressed at The Chase on the receipt of
-this note, but the world went on nevertheless, as it does in
-default of all of us.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Can I essay to describe the array of dames and demoiselles,
-knights and squires and retainers, yeomen, men-at-arms, and
-others of low degree, who, on that ever-memorable autumn
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>morn, trampled the green meadow in front of old Warbrok
-House? Many a day has passed since the shadows of the
-waving forest trees flecked the greensward, since the hillside
-resounded to horse-hoof and jingling bridle, while mirthful
-words and silvery laughter blended ever and anon with the
-unaccustomed bay of the foxhound.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Ah me! Of the manly forms and bold, eager brows of
-those who kept tryst that day, how many have gone down
-before the onset of battle, the arrow of pestilence, the
-thousand haps of a colonist’s life? The stark limbs are
-bowed, the bold eyes dimmed, the strong hearts tamed by
-the slow sorcery of Time—even of those o’er whom the
-forest tree sighs not, or the wild wave moans no requiem.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>How many of that fair company have ridden away for
-ever into the Silent Land! What bright eyes have forgotten
-to shine! How many a joyous tone is heard no more!</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>The halls her bright smile lighted up of yore,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>Are lonely now!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>Gone to the Valhalla, doubtless, are many brave souls of
-heroes; but in the good year of grace eighteen hundred and
-thirty-six the chances of life’s battle sat but lightly on the
-gallant troop that reined up at the first meet at Warbrok
-Chase. Many a goodly muster of the magnates of the land
-had been held in that home of many memories ere this;
-but never within the ken of the oldest chronicler had
-anything occurred so successful, so numerously attended, of
-such great and general interest to the district or neighbourhood.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Resolved that all the concomitants and accessories should
-be as thoroughly English as could in any way be managed,
-Howard Effingham had personally superintended the details
-of a Hunt breakfast, such as erstwhile he had often enjoyed
-or dispensed within the bounds of Merrie England.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>North and south, and east and west,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>The ‘visitors’ came forth,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>as though minded to give the Squire of Warbrok—a name
-by which Howard Effingham was commencing to be known
-in the neighbourhood—a substantial acknowledgment of the
-interest taken by the country-side in his highly commendable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>enterprise. The younger squatters, then, as now, the aristocracy
-of the land, mustered gallantly in support of the hereditary
-pastime of their order. A list might be attempted, were it
-only like the names of the ships in Homer’s <cite>Iliad</cite>, some day to
-be read to curious listening ears by one unknowing of aught
-save that such, in the dear past, were the names of heroes.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But no thought of the irony of fate fell darkly on the merry
-party issuing from The Chase to greet the Badajos and Benmohr
-contingents, as they came up from opposite directions.
-With Harry O’Desmond rode a tall man in a green hunting
-frock, whose length of limb and perfect seat showed off the
-points of an inestimable grey of grand size and power, whom
-all men saw at once to be The Caliph, well known on both
-sides of the Straits. It was in truth John Hampden’s famous
-hunter, a very Bayard among horses, at whom no horse-loving
-junior could look without tears in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Of that party also were the Gambiers—Alick, Jimmy, and
-Jack—with their friend Willie Machell. A trio of cheerful
-hard-riding young squatters, having made names for themselves
-as leading dare-devils where anything dangerous was to be done
-with the aid of horse-flesh. Their ‘Romeo’ five-year-olds,
-with matchless shoulders, but imperfect tempers, carried them
-admirably. Will Machell was a tall, mild, gentlemanlike,
-musical personage, by no means so ‘hard’ as his more robust
-friends. He would be available as a chaperon for the
-feminine division, as he did not intend to do more than
-canter a mile or two after the throw-off.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Came from the broad river-flats and forest parks of the
-Murray, Claude Waring and his partner Rodder, the former
-tall, dark, jovial; the latter neat, prudent, and fresh-coloured.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Came from the volcanic cones and scoria-covered plateaus
-of Willaree the broad frame and leonine visage of Herman
-Bottrell. He was well carried by his square-built ambling
-cob, while beside him on a dark bay five-year-old, with the
-blood of Tramp in his veins, sat the well-known figure of
-‘Dolly’ Goldkind, a man who in his day had shared the costliest
-pleasures of the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>haute volée</em></span> of European capitals. Commercial
-vicissitudes in his family had forced him to importune
-fortune afresh in the unwonted guise of an Australian squatter.
-She had, in this instance, not disdained to ‘favour the brave,’
-and Dolly was now in a fair way to see the pavement of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>Faubourg St. Germain once yet again, and to bask amid the
-transient splendour of the Tuileries. He had faced gallantly
-his share of uncongenial solitude, unadorned Nature, and rude
-surroundings, always awaiting, with the philosophy born of
-English steadfastness, and Parisian <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>insouciance</em></span>, the good time
-coming.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Came Bernard Wharton, bronzed by the fierce unshadowed
-sun of that dread waste where clouds rarely linger or the
-blessed rains of heaven are known to fall. His last whoo-hoop
-had been heard in his own county, in the ancestral land. His
-blue eye was bright, and his smile ready, as though he had
-known naught but lightsome toil and the sport of his
-Northamptonshire forefathers.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Ardmillan, Forbes, and Neil Barrington, with all the
-‘Benmohr mob,’ as they were familiarly called, were in the
-vanguard. Neil Barrington possessed one valuable attribute
-of the horseman, inasmuch as he was ready, like Bob Clarke,
-to ride anything and at anything. No man had ever seen
-Neil decline a mount or a fence, however unpromising. But
-his skill was inferior to his zeal, usually provoking comment
-from the bystanders.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On one of these occasions, when he had hit a top rail very
-hard in an amateur steeplechase, an expostulatory friend said,
-‘Why don’t you lift your horse, Neil?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Lift, be d——d!’ replied the indignant Neil; ‘I’ve enough
-to do to stick on.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>However, being muscular, active, and fearless, Neil’s star
-had hitherto favoured him, so that he was generally well up
-at the finish.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>One needs a staunch horse for ‘cutting out’ work, but the
-great raking Desborough which Bob Clarke brought with him
-was surely too good to be knocked about in the Benmohr
-bogs and volcanic trap ‘rises’ at a muster, while his condition
-savoured more of the loose-box than the grass paddock. Bob
-was one of those fortunate individuals that every one everywhere,
-male and female, gentle and simple, is glad to welcome.
-So there was no dissentient to the view of duty he had
-adopted but Mr. Rockley. And though that gentleman stated
-it as his opinion that Master Bob would have been better at
-home minding his work if he ever intended to make money,
-he extended the right hand of fellowship to him, and was as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>gracious as all the world and distinctly the world’s wife (and
-probably daughter) was wont to be.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There were those who thought that Christabel Rockley’s
-eyes glowed with a deeper light after Bob’s coming was
-announced. But such an occasion would have brightened
-the girl’s flower-like face even if Bob had been doomed to eat
-his heart the while in solitude and disappointment on the far
-Mondarlo Plain.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘None of the ladies who belonged to “our set,” and could
-ride at all, were absent,’ Neil Barrington remarked, ‘except
-Miss Fane; and it was a beastly shame she was prevented
-from coming—most likely by that old Turk of a father of hers.
-It was a real pleasure to see her ride, and now they were all
-done out of it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Just as Neil had concluded his lamentation for Vera Fane,
-who had won his heart by comforting him after one of his
-tumbles, saying that she never saw any one who rode so
-straight without turning out a horseman in the end, the
-Granville party, who had a long distance to come, made their
-appearance through the trees of the north gully, and there,
-on the well-known bonnie brown Emigrant, between Jack
-Granville and his sister Katie, was Vera Fane, or the evil one
-in her sweet guise.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>So the grateful Neil was appeased, and straightway modified
-his language with respect to Dr. Fane’s parental shortcomings;
-while Wilfred Effingham, who never denied his
-interest in the young lady—chiefly, he avowed, as a study of
-character—felt more exhilarated than he could account for.
-The Granvilles were congratulated, first of all upon their own
-appearance, and assured they were not at all late (Rockley
-had been devoting them to the infernal deities for the last
-half-hour), then upon their thoughtful conduct in bringing
-Miss Fane.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Deal of trouble, of course,’ quoth Jack Granville. ‘Miss
-Fane is one of that sort, ain’t she? She rode over with a
-small black boy for an escort, and roused us up about midnight.
-Nearly shot her, didn’t I, Katie?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I’m afraid I frightened you,’ said Miss Fane, with an
-apologetic expression, ‘but papa had only just come home
-from Sydney. I knew if I missed this eventful day I should
-never have such another chance, so I lifted up Wonga by his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>hair, poor child, to wake him, and then started off for a night
-ride.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There was no time for further amenities, as the Master,
-triumphant and distinguished in the eyes of the Australian-born
-portion of the Hunt, gorgeous in buckskins, accurate top-boots,
-and a well-worn pink, moved off with fourteen couple
-of creditable foxhounds. A very fair, even-looking lot they
-were admitted to be. Old Tom had proved an admirable
-whip, displaying a keenness in the vocation which verified the
-tales with which he had regaled his acquaintances as to feats
-and frolics with the Blazers in the historic County Galway, in
-the kingdom of Long Ago.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A roan cob, with a reputation for unequalled feats in the
-jumping line, had, after many trials, been secured by Wilfred
-as a ‘safe conveyance’ for his father. He was, indeed, an
-extraordinary animal; the sort that some elderly gentlemen
-are always talking about and never seem able to get.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wallaby was a red roan, low set, of great power and
-amazing activity. ‘He could jump anything,’ his former
-owner declared, ‘and was that fond of it, as you could lead
-him up to this ’ere three-railed fence with a halter and he’d
-clear it and jump back without pulling it out of your hand.’
-This he proceeded to do before Wilfred and his father, after
-which there was no question as to his cross-country capability.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Not above 14 hands 2 inches in height, with short legs,
-his neat head and neck, with sloping shoulders and short
-back, ranked him as fit to carry a bishop or a banker in
-Rotten Row. His thighs and gaskins showed where the
-jumping came from. Besides these excellences, he was
-quiet, fast, and easy in his paces; so that Mrs. Effingham
-and the girls had no anxiety about the head of the house
-when so mounted.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XVII <br /> THE FIRST MEET OF THE LAKE WILLIAM HUNT CLUB</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>‘What a delightful sight!’ said Miss Fane to Rosamond; ‘and
-how glad I am that I was so determined to come. I have
-rather a craze for horses, I know, but doesn’t it look magnificent.
-What an array! Everybody within a hundred miles
-must be here. I feel as if I could go out of my senses with
-excitement. This is strictly between ourselves. But of
-course you have seen far larger fields.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I was too young before I left home for much in the
-hunting way,’ said Rosamond, ‘but I was taken to see a
-throw-off now and then on the first day of the season.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What was it like? A much finer sight than this?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We cannot, of course, compete in appointments—the
-Hunt servants so neatly got up; the huntsman such a picture,
-with his weather-beaten face, and the whips so smart and
-trim. Then the grey-haired squires on their favourite hunters
-give such a tone to the affair. But we have good horses out
-to-day, including yours and mine, which would not be
-unnoticed, even that dear Fergus. He wonders what it is
-all about.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And the scenery and the belongings?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, a lawn in front of a grand historic mansion that
-has been besieged more than once since the Wars of the
-Roses must have the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>pas</em></span> over anything in Australia. Still,
-as for scenery, it was often tame, and scarcely came up to
-that.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Here she pointed with her whip as the hounds spread
-eagerly over a grassy flat immediately beneath them. They
-had been for some time imperceptibly ascending a slope.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>The mists which had shrouded the mountain-tops had
-rolled back, and a panorama of grand and striking beauty
-stood revealed. Westward lay the lake, a silver sheet, amid
-the green slopes which marked its shores. On the south
-rose sheer and grim the enormous darkened cone which
-terminated the mountain range which they had approached.
-The released effulgence of the morning sun magically transfigured
-to purple masses the outline of the curving ridge,
-before crowning it with a tremulous aureole. Trending
-westerly, the level ground increased in width, until, but
-for its groves of eucalyptus, it might have been dignified by
-the name of plain. This gradually merged into a region of
-park-like forest.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What a charming place for a gallop!’ said Christabel
-Rockley. ‘I do so hope the fox, or whatever he is, will be
-found here. I should not be afraid to ride fast over this nice,
-clear country.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It is almost too easy,’ said Miss Fane, drawing her bridle-rein,
-as she watched old Tom closely. ‘I like forest and
-range work, I must confess. But we must look out, or the
-hounds will be away, and we shall be left lamenting like so
-many Lord Ullins.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The girl’s instinct had not deceived her. She had ridden
-many a day at her father’s side, when the shy cattle of a
-neglected herd, ready for headlong speed at the snapping of
-a twig, needed quick following to live with. Keeping her
-eye on old Tom, she had noted the signs of an approaching
-start.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A leading hound ran along a cattle track, and giving
-tongue, went off at score. Three or four comrades of position
-followed suit, and in the shortest possible time the whole
-pack was away, running with a breast high scent.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The black dingo for a thousand,’ said old Tom to the
-Master, as he hustled Boney alongside of the roan cob.
-‘I seen Hobart Gay Lass put up her bristles the minit
-she settled to the scent. It’s a true tongue the slut has, and
-I’ll back her against ’ere a dog of the English lot, though
-there’s good hounds among them. We’ll have the naygur
-to-day, if there’s vartue in a good scent and a killing pack.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Then you know him, Tom?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘By coorse, I do; he killed Strawberry’s calf, and didn’t
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>I go down on my two knees and swear I’d have the heart’s
-blood of him.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Then how did you manage to lay the hounds on him
-here—I thought he was a lake dog?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Divil a doubt of it; but I seen him here one day, just
-under the range, pinning a “joey,” and I kept lavin’ a bit
-of mate for him, just to make him trot over regular—maybe
-a bullock’s heart or a hock of a heifer’s calf, maybe a bird
-I’d shot. Dingoes is mortial fond of birds. I seen his
-tracks here yesterday, and med sure he’d be here wonst
-more, for the last time, and here he is forenint us now—glory
-be to God!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Then he’s safe to be a straight goer?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It’s twelve mile to the lake, and he’ll make for the little
-rise, where there’s rocks, just before you come to Long
-Point. If he’s pushed there, he’ll maybe turn to the Limestone
-Hill, at the back of the big house, where there’s caves—my
-curse on thim—and then good-bye.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘This is pretty country, if there was more fencing,’ said
-the Master. ‘Perhaps it is as well, though, as there are so
-many ladies out. The hounds are running like smoke.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The nature of the ground at this point of the hunt was
-such as to admit of all being reasonably well up. True, the
-pack went at considerable speed. The scent was burning,
-and there were no small enclosures, as in ‘Merrie England,’
-to check the more delicate damsels or inexperienced horsemen.
-The sward was sound and firm, the tall-stemmed
-eucalypti stood far apart in the southern forest-park. Bob
-Clarke and the Benmohr division, Hampden and the Gambiers,
-rode easily in front. Rosamond, Miss Rockley, Miss
-Fane, and a few other ladies, who were exceptionally well
-mounted, had no difficulty in keeping their places.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘So this is fox-hunting!’ said Miss Fane. ‘That is, so
-far as we can have the noble sport without the fox. It
-is nice to see the hounds running so compactly. And I
-like the musical composite cry with its harmonies and
-variations.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘This dingo,’ said Wilfred, who had established himself
-at her bridle-rein, ‘is running very straight and fast. If he
-makes for the range behind the house, we shall see him and
-have a little fencing too.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>‘I don’t object to a jump or two,’ said the young lady,
-‘if they are not too stiff. This is the sort of pace that
-enables one to look about. But I should like to see the
-hounds work a little more.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>While this conversation was proceeding, every one was at
-their ease, and voted the sport most delightful. The front
-rankers were sailing along, while the hounds were carrying a
-good head and forcing Master Dingo along at a pace which prevented
-him from availing himself of one or two hiding-places.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>However, just as Rosamond had compared herself to the
-Landgrave, in the German ballad, sweeping on in endless
-chase, with a horseman on either hand—St. Maur on the
-right on a coal-black steed, and Fred Churbett on the left
-on the rejoicing Duellist—wondering how long they were
-going to have such a pleasant line of country, through which
-Fergus was luxuriously striding as if he had commenced the
-first part of a fifty-mile stage, the scene changed. The confident
-pack checked, and commenced a circular performance
-which betrayed indecision, if not failure of scent.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What’s the matter?’ said Miss Fane. ‘Is the whole
-thing over? Was the dingo a myth?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We have overrun the scent, Miss Fane,’ said Wilfred with
-dignity. ‘The hounds have checked, but we shall hit it off
-again in a few minutes.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He had hardly finished speaking when Miss Fane, who,
-if it was her first day after hounds, had ‘kept her side’
-well up for many a day in early girlhood, ‘when they wheeled
-the wild scrub cattle at the yard,’ took her horse by the head,
-with a rapid turn towards two couple of hounds that she
-had descried racing down the side of a creek. A neat jump,
-following old Tom over the narrow but deep water-course
-at a bend, placed her on easy terms with the pack. A new
-line of country lay spread out before them at right angles to
-their late course.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The hounds had now settled again to the scent. Another
-‘blind’ creek, waterless, but respectable in the jumping way,
-lay in front. At this Miss Fane’s horse went so fast and took
-so extensive a fly, that Wilfred felt himself compelled to be
-hard on his Camerton chestnut and ride, if he intended to
-keep his place in the front alongside of this ‘leading lady,’
-as Miss Fane’s nerve and experience entitled her to become.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>But the rest of the field were not doomed to defeat and
-extinction, although Miss Fane’s knowledge of emergencies
-had enabled her to fix the moment when the scent was
-recovered.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Scarcely did the hounds swing to their line, for the dingo
-had turned, at right angles, in the creek, and so occasioned
-the outrunning of the scent, when Forbes, Ardmillan, Neil
-Barrington, and Fred Churbett were seen coming up hand
-over hand. Miss Effingham’s ‘dear Fergus’ was slipping
-along with his wonted graceful ease, and permitting the
-interchange of a few sentences with Mr. Churbett, who rode
-at her bridle-rein. Hampden, with whom was Beatrice, on
-Allspice, was riding wide of the hounds, but only waiting for
-serious business to show what manner of work he and The
-Caliph were wont to cut out for themselves. Bob Clarke,
-wonderful to relate, was <em>not</em> among the first flight. It could
-not have been the fault of Desborough—faster than any horse
-in the hunt—and as to jumping, why, he had a man on his
-back who was a sufficient answer to any reflections on that
-score.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘May I niver be d——d!’ exclaimed old Tom, ‘if the
-varmint isn’t going straight for the paddock! One would
-think he was a rale fox, to see the divilment of him. Sure it
-must be the hounds puts them up to all the villainy. Well,
-the bigger the lape, the more divarshion.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Satisfying himself with this view of the matter, old Tom
-watched with interest the field gradually approaching a large
-outer paddock, which lay at some distance from the house.
-It was the ordinary two-railed fence of the colonists, and
-though fairly stiff, not formidable to any one who intended
-going.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The hounds slipped quietly under the lower rail, and in
-another moment were racing, unchecked, along the flat which
-it enclosed. But with the field, this obstacle commenced to
-alter the state of matters.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The first flight, it is true, came rattling round a point of
-timber at any number of miles an hour, when they encountered
-this obstacle, to the sardonic entertainment of Tom Glendinning,
-who had eased his horse to see the effect. Wilfred
-and Miss Fane were still leading when the line of fence
-suddenly appeared. Wilfred, from his knowledge of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>country, was aware that it was coming, and had prepared his
-companion for it.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It is not very high,’ she said. ‘We are going so charmingly
-that I could not bear to be stopped. Emigrant here’—and
-she fondly patted the dark brown neck of the adamantine
-animal she rode—‘is good for anything in a moderate way.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It is scarcely four feet,’ said Wilfred, ‘but don’t go at it
-if you are not quite sure. We can go round.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I’m not going round, I can promise you,’ said the girl,
-with a clear light glowing in her steadfast eyes. ‘Oh, here
-it is. Two-railed fences are not much. Besides, we are leading,
-and must show a good example.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Whereupon Emigrant’s head was turned towards the
-nearest panel. The well-bred horses quickened their speed
-slightly; Emigrant shook his arched neck as both cleared
-the rail with little more trouble than a sheep-hurdle. As
-they alighted on the sound greensward, Miss Fane was
-sitting perfectly square with her hands down, just a little backward
-in her seat, but without the slightest sign of haste or
-discomposure.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well done,’ said Wilfred. ‘Prettily jumped. Emigrant
-has been at it before.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘He has been at most things,’ said Miss Fane, looking
-fondly at her experienced palfrey. ‘He had all kinds of work
-before I managed to make private property of him; but
-nobody rides him but me now, and I think I shall manage to
-keep his old legs right for years to come.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The next advancing pairs were not quite so secure of their
-horses’ abilities, and a slight uncertainty took place. It was
-all very well for Miss Fane to say the fence was not much;
-but rails are rails. When they happen to be new and unyielding,
-though scarcely four feet in height, a mistake causes
-a severe fall. There is no <em>scrambling</em> through an Australian
-fence, as a rule. It must be jumped clean or let alone.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Fergus, the unapproachable, was in good sooth no great
-performer over anything stiff. Peerless as a hackney in all
-other respects, he was not up to much across country; nor
-had he been required hitherto, in the houndless state of the
-land, to do aught in that line. Nevertheless, Rosamond,
-fired by the example of Miss Fane, and inspirited by the
-apparent ease with which Emigrant negotiated the obstacle,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>would have doubtless run the risk, trusting to Fergus’s
-gentlemanlike feeling to see her safe. But all risk of danger
-was obviated by Bob Clarke’s promptitude.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>That chivalrous youth, knowing all about Red King, as
-indeed he did about every horse in the land, was aware that
-he was a difficult horse to ride at timber. ‘Handsome as
-paint,’ was the general verdict, but he needed two pairs of
-hands in company.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On this occasion the fact of there being other ambitious
-animals in front, and the ‘great club of the unsuccessful’ in
-his rear, had roused his temper.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The fair Christabel was by no means deficient in courage,
-but to-day Red King had been too much for her. He had
-fretted himself into foam, and her pretty hands were sore with
-holding the ‘reefing’ horse, whose mouth became more and
-more callous.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Don’t you ride him at that fence, Miss Christabel,’ said
-Bob, in a tone of entreaty. ‘He’ll go through it as sure as
-you’re alive. I know him.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The girl’s face grew a shade paler, but she set her teeth,
-and, pointing with her whip to Miss Fane, who was sailing
-away in ease and luxury on the farther side, said, ‘I <em>must</em>;
-they’re all going at it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Very well,’ said he—mentally reprobating Red King’s
-mouth and temper, and it may be the obstinacy of young
-women—‘keep behind me, and we’ll be next.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Upon this the wily Bob shot out from the leading ranks,
-closely followed by the wilful Christabel, whose horse, indeed,
-left her no option. Sending Desborough at a hog-backed
-rail at the rate of forty miles an hour, with a reprehensibly
-loose rein, that indignant animal declined to rise, and, chesting
-the rail, snapped it like a reed. As Master Bob lay back
-in the saddle with his head nearly on his horse’s tail, he had
-the pleasure of seeing Christabel pop pleasantly over the
-second rail, followed by the other ladies, excepting Mrs.
-Snowden, who faced the unbroken fence with considerable
-resolution. As for the attendant cavaliers, they negotiated it
-pleasantly enough, with the exception of a baulk or two and
-one fall. Indeed, another rail gave way soon after, making a
-gap through which the rear-guard, variously mounted and
-attired, streamed gallantly.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>As for Bob Clarke, Red King had managed to run up to
-Desborough—(great turn of speed that old King)—and he
-fancied he saw in the marvellous eyes a recognition of his
-unusual mode of easing a stiff leap.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The next happened to be one rare in Australia, having its
-origin in Mr. Effingham’s British reminiscences. A fence
-was needed in the track of a marshy inlet from the lake. A
-ditch with a sod wall thrown up on the farther side made a
-boundary sufficing for all the needs of an enclosure, yet
-requiring no carriage of material.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We need not make it quite so broad or deep,’ he said, ‘as
-the ox fences in Westmeath; but if I can get a couple of
-hedgers and ditchers, I shall leave my memorial here, to outlast
-Dick’s timber skeletons.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Two wandering navvies, on the look-out for dam-making,
-were fortunately discovered. The result of their labours was
-‘The Squire’s Ditch,’ as the unusual substitute was henceforth
-named. It certainly was a relief after the austerity of posts
-and rails proper. In a few places the ditch had been filled
-in and a partial gap made in the sod wall. At any rate horse
-and rider would all go at it with light hearts. So, with the
-exception of Wilfred and Miss Fane—the latter having picked
-out the worst place she could see—everybody treated themselves
-indulgently; hit the wall, or scrambled over the ditch,
-just as their horses chose to comport themselves, and rode
-forward rejoicing.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The hounds have now lengthened out, while their leaders
-are racing, with lowered sterns, at a pace that leaves the
-heavy brigade an increasing distance behind. The flat is
-broken only by an occasional sedgy interval where the fall to
-the lake has not been sufficient. For the same reason the
-creek, or natural outlet of the watershed, is, though not very
-wide, less unequal as to depth than are most Australian watercourses,
-while the perpendicular banks show how the winter
-rains of ages have channelled the rich black soil.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We have something like a water-jump here,’ said Wilfred
-to his companion, as they watched the hounds disappear
-and climb up, giving tongue as they scour forward with
-renewed energy. ‘It is not so very wide, but the sides are
-steep. If your horse does not know that sort of jump, we
-had better follow it down to the ford, near the lake.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>‘Black Mountain is full of small rivers and treacheries
-of all sorts,’ said the girl. ‘A horse that can go there can go
-anywhere, I <em>think</em>.’ Sending Emigrant at it pretty fast, he
-lowered his head slightly and ‘flew it like a bird.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>By the time they approached the Deep Creek, as old Tom
-averred it had been christened ever since he knew Warbrok,
-the greater part of the field seemed aware that no common
-obstacle was before them.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘See here now, Mr. Churbett,’ said old Tom. ‘It’s an ugly
-lape unless you know where to take it, and some of the ladies
-might get hurted. You make for the point half a mile down,
-where ye see thim green reeds. There’s a little swamp fills
-it up there, and ye can wade through easy. More by token,
-I’m thinkin’, the hounds will turn to ye before ye cross the
-three-railed fence into the horse paddock.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Churbett at once made sail for the point indicated,
-successfully piloting, with Forbes and a few men who were
-more chivalrous than keen, the feminine division. He was
-followed by the greater portion of the rear-guard, who, seeing
-that there was an obstacle to free discussion in front, wisely
-turned when they did. Hamilton, Argyll, and Hampden
-rode at the yawner with varied success.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As for Bob Clarke, seeing that it was impossible to adopt
-his last method of simplifying matters, he persuaded Miss
-Rockley to gallop up the creek with him, on the off-chance
-of finding a crossing, which they did eventually, but so far
-up that they were nearly thrown out altogether.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>We cannot claim for the sheep-killing denizen of the
-Australian waste, mysteriously placed on our continent a
-century in advance of the merino, the wondrous powers of
-Reynard the Great. But in the pace which enables him to
-bring to shame an inferior greyhound, and in the endurance
-which keeps him ahead of a fair pack of foxhounds, as well
-as in his ardent love of poultry, he undoubtedly does resemble
-‘the little tyrant of the fields.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The distance the black dingo had already come was considerable,
-the pace decidedly good. The long slopes, all
-with an upward tendency, began to tell. When the fence of
-the home-paddock was reached, the farther corner of which
-impinged upon a steep spur of the main range, the bolt of
-the gallant quarry was nearly shot.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>He was viewed by Tom crawling under the lower rail; an
-enthusiastic view-holloa rang out from the old man. One
-more fence and a kill was certain, unless his last effort sufficed
-to land him within reach of one of the ‘gibbah-gunyahs’ (or
-rock caves) which the aboriginals and their canine friends
-had inhabited apparently from remote ages.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As the field ranged up to the horse-paddock fence, it was
-seen to be by no means so moderate a task as the other post
-and rails. Old Dick, who had superintended its erection,
-had been careful that it should be one of the best pieces of
-work in the district,—substantial, of full height, and with
-solid posts nearly two feet in the ground. Hence it loomed
-before the hunt fully four feet six inches in height, with top-rails
-which forbade all chance of cracking or carrying out.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Fortunately for the ladies and a large proportion of the
-sterner sex, who would have to ‘jump or go home,’ Wilfred
-knew of ‘slip-rails’ a little more than a hundred yards
-from where the quick eyes of old Tom had marked the dingo
-steal through.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I have no doubt you would try it, Miss Fane,’ said Wilfred,
-who marked with admiration the game sparkle in his
-companion’s eye, as her gaze ranged calmly over the barrier;
-‘but it is a high, stiff fence, and dangerous for a lady. At
-any rate, as your temporary guardian, I must forbid your
-taking it, if you would defer to my control.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Certainly, oh, certainly, and many thanks,’ said the
-girl, blushing slightly; ‘it is very good of you to take care of
-me. But what are we to do? We <em>can’t</em> miss the finish after
-this delightful run.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Certainly not. Do you see the road to the right of us?
-There is a slip-rail on the track, which I fancy will be patronised.
-Follow me.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Slip-rails are contemned by advanced pastoralists, but
-they stood the Lake William Hunt in good stead on this
-occasion. As they rode to the opening, Miss Fane said:</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Pray leave the middle rail up. It will be the last jump,
-and I daresay the other ladies will agree with me.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Very well,’ said Wilfred. ‘I need not get off.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Riding up to the fence, he lifted out the shifting end of
-the stout round rail, and, allowing it to fall to the ground,
-cantered back to his fair companion.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>‘Now then,’ she said, ‘see how prettily you will take this,
-Master Emigrant! It is quite stiff, though not very high.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In truth the rail, as high as a sheep-hurdle, was slightly
-hog-backed, and strong enough to have capsized a buffalo.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You will go first, of course,’ said Wilfred, turning his
-horse’s head in the same direction.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The nice old hackney, albeit his best years had been
-spent as a stock-horse amid the unfair country of the Black
-Mountain run, was within a shade of thoroughbred. He
-went at the jump with his hind legs well under him, and,
-rising at exactly the proper moment, popped over with so
-little effort or disturbance of seat that Miss Fane might have
-held a glass of water in her whip-hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>If she had turned her head she might not have been so
-self-possessed; for, the moment her back was turned, Wilfred
-Effingham, foreseeing that the talent would be sure to
-ride this, the only sensational fence of the run, turned his
-horse’s head to the big three-railer.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He rode an upstanding chestnut five-year-old, which he
-had selected as a colt from the Benmohr stud. For some
-time past he had employed himself in ‘making’ him, a
-pleasant task to a lover of horses. He had given the resolute
-youngster much schooling over logs, rails, and any kind of
-fence which came handy, avoiding those which were not unyielding.
-He was aware that no more dangerous idea can be
-contracted by a timber-jumper, than that he can break
-through anything, the first new fence that he meets being
-likely fatally to undeceive him. He flattered himself that
-Troubadour, from repeated raps, would take care to rise high
-enough over any fence.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At the moment he set him going he saw Argyll and
-Churbett, with Hampden, St. Maur, and all the ‘no denial’
-division converging on the slip-rails, having witnessed Miss
-Fane’s disappearance through them.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Whether Troubadour was over-anxious to regain Emigrant,
-cannot be known. But he went at the fence too fast, hit
-the top-rail a tremendous bang, and rolled over into the
-paddock, narrowly escaping a somersault across his master.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He, however, was lucky enough to be thrown, by the mere
-impetus of the fall, clear of his horse. Jumping to his feet
-with the alacrity of youth, he caught the bridle-rein of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>astonished Troubadour, who stood staring and shaking, just
-in time to see The Caliph sail over the high fence with a
-great air of ease and authority, followed by the others, among
-whom Churbett’s horse hit the fence hard, ‘but no fall.’
-The ladies followed Miss Fane’s example and negotiated
-the middle rail successfully, as Wilfred jumped into his
-saddle, and sending his spurs into the unlucky Troubadour,
-rejoined his charge without further delay.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>That young lady had pulled up, and was looking at the
-scene of the disaster with an anxious expression. Her face
-had assumed a paler hue, and her hands fidgeted with the
-bridle-rein.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I am <em>so</em> glad you are not hurt,’ she said. ‘I thought all
-sorts of things till I saw you get up and mount.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Thank you very much,’ said Wilfred, with a grateful
-inflection in his voice. ‘It was very awkward of Troubadour;
-but accidents will happen, and it will teach him to
-lift his legs another time. But we must ride for it now;
-we have been in the front so far. Ha! the hounds are
-turning to us; they will have Master Dingo before he reaches
-the cliffs.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Another mile and the dark quadruped, still at a stretching
-wolf-gallop, was decidedly nearer the leading hounds,
-whose bristles began to rise, ominous of blood. Old Tom,
-waving his cap, cheered them on as he rode rejoicingly forward
-on the wiry, unflinching grey. Slower and more laboured
-became the pace of the aboriginal canine. Before him was
-the cliff, upon the lower tier of which, could he have crawled,
-lay sanctuary. But in vain he scans eagerly the frowning
-masses of sandstone, denuded by the storms of ages. In
-vain he glances fiercely back at the remorseless pack, showing
-his glittering teeth. His doom is sealed. With a half-turn
-and a vicious snap, in which his teeth meet like a steel-trap
-through Cruiser’s neck, he confronts destiny. The next
-moment there is a confused heap of struggling, tearing hounds,
-a few seconds of dumb, despairing resistance, and the
-mothers of the herd are avenged.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Miss Fane turns away her head and joins the group of
-‘first families,’ by this time enabled to be in respectably at
-the death.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Old Tom in due time appeared with the brush of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>dingo, which he held on high for inspection. It was not
-unlike that of the true Reynard, though larger and fuller. It
-had also a white tag. The old man, advancing to Miss
-Fane’s side, thus spoke:</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The Masther said I was to give ye the brush, Miss; it’s
-well ye desarve it. Sure I’d like to have seen ye with the
-Blazers. My kind sarvice to ye, and wishin’ ye the hoith of
-good fortune.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well done, Tom!’ said Argyll, ‘you have made a very
-neat speech; and we all congratulate Miss Fane upon her
-very spirited riding to-day. As you say, she well deserves
-the brush, and I hope she will grace many more of our
-meets.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We must send the “cap” round for the huntsman, Tom,’
-said Hampden, ‘who found such a straight-goer for the
-first run of the Lake William Hounds, and hit off the scent
-so neatly after the check.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As he spoke he lifted it from the old man’s grey head,
-and placing a sovereign in it, rode along the ranks. He
-returned it with such a collection of coin as the old man,
-long accustomed to cheques and ‘orders,’ had not seen for
-years.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It’s fortunate the fox—the dingo, I mean,’ said Wilfred,
-‘chose to make for the cliffs, instead of the other end of the
-lake. We should have had a terrible distance to ride home,
-though not in the dark, as one often was in the old country.
-Now, you must all come in, as we are so near The Chase.
-We can put up everybody who hasn’t pressing work to do at
-home.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The day was done. The hunt was over, with the first
-pack of hounds that had ever been followed amid the green
-pastures which bordered the Great Lake. It was by no
-means the last. And indeed a hunter, bred and broken by
-one of the very men who then aided to establish that
-traditional sport, was fated, when shipped to England, to
-be one of the few well up in the quickest thing that the
-Pytchley saw that season, to be chronicled in Bell, and to
-win enduring renown for Australian horses and Australian
-riders. But that day, with much of Fate’s glad or sorrowful
-doings, was far in the unborn future. So the band of
-friends and neighbours returned to The Chase, pleased with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>themselves, with the day, and the feats performed, and above
-all, congratulating Squire Effingham upon the triumphant
-opening meet of the season.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Not all the meets were so well attended. But the grand
-fact remained that, at regular intervals, dawn saw the dappled
-beauties trooping forth at the heels of old Tom and the
-Master across the dewy meadows, beneath the century-old
-trees of the primeval forest. Still rang out the music, dear
-to Howard Effingham’s soul, when the scent lay well in the
-soft, cloudy, autumnal mornings. Still were there, occasionally,
-incidents of hunting spirit and feats of horsemanship
-worthy of the traditional glories of the ne’er-forgotten Fatherland.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XVIII <br /> THE MAJOR DISCOVERS HIS RELATIVE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>After the inauguration, hunting became an organised and
-well-supported recreation among the dwellers within the
-influence of the social wavelets of the lake. The Benmohr
-firm found, on the whole—though the stabling of hunters
-was not unaccompanied by expense—that it brought their
-stud prominently before the public. Hence they found
-ready sale, at an ascending scale of prices, for all the colts
-they could turn out. Strangers came for the hunting, and
-made purchases. The hounds, too, meeting regularly once
-a week during the winter months, exercised a repressive
-influence upon the dingos, so much so, that M.F.H. (not
-being a sheep-owner) began seriously to think of preserving
-these much-maligned yet indispensable animals.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>So widely spread and honourably mentioned was the fame
-of the Lake William Hunt Club, that His Vice-regal Highness
-the Governor himself more than once deigned to partake
-of the hospitality of The Chase, bringing with him aides-de-camp
-and private secretaries, pleasant of manner, and
-refreshing as such to the souls of the daughters of the
-house.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Meanwhile Wilfred worked away at the serious business
-of the estate, only taking occasional interest in these extraneous
-pleasures; grumbling, moreover, at the expense,
-indirect or otherwise, that the kennel necessitated.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>However, it must be said in justice to him, that it was
-rarely he was betrayed into impatience with regard to an occupation
-which, with other branches of acclimatised field sports,
-had become the mainstay of his father’s interest in life.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>‘Really,’ Mr. Effingham would say, ‘in a few years—say
-about eighteen hundred and forty-five or thereabouts—I
-believe we shall be nearly as secure of decent sport as
-we were in old England. The Murray cod are increasing in
-the lake. I have brown trout, dace, and tench in the little
-river. There are almost too many rabbits; and as to hares,
-pheasants, and partridges, we can invite half-a-dozen guns
-next season, without fear of consequences. I have been
-offered deer from Tasmania. With the inducement of a stag-hunt
-and a haunch of venison, I don’t see why we
-shouldn’t finish our season right royally. Depend upon it,
-New South Wales only wants enterprise, in the department
-of field sports, to become one of the finest countries under
-the sun.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There was no doubt that in the eyes of an observer
-not endowed with the apprehensive temperament which
-numbers so many successful men amongst its possessors, the
-appearance of matters generally at The Chase justified
-reasonable outlay.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred had made a few guarded investments—all successful
-so far. What, for instance, could pay better than the
-purchase of the quiet, dairy steers from the small farmers
-in the autumn, when grass and cash were scarce, to fatten
-them in the lake paddocks? Adjacent freeholds, from time
-to time in the market, were added to the snug estate of The
-Chase. True, he could not always find the cash at call for
-these tempting bargains—(is there anything so enticing as
-the desire to add farm to farm and house to house, as in the
-old, old days of Judah?)—but Mr. Rockley was ready to
-endorse his bill, which, with his credit at the Bank of New
-Holland, was as good as cash.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Thus passed the time until the close of the hunting season,
-before which Major Glendinning had returned and apparently
-taken up his abode in the neighbourhood, in great request at
-all the stations, and earning for himself daily the character of
-a thorough sportsman. He purchased a couple of horses
-from the Benmohr stud, on which, from time to time, he
-performed such feats across country as caused it to be
-surmised that, in the event of his settling in the neighbourhood,
-Bob Clarke would find a rival.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He spoke highly of the standard as to blood and bone of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>the horses bred in the district, openly stating that, in the
-event of the proprietors being minded to establish a system of
-shipment to India, they might expect extraordinary prices for
-their best horses, while the medium ones would be worth
-double or treble their colonial value.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Rockley, after reckoning up expenses, together with
-the rather serious item of risk of loss on ship-board, decided
-that there was a handsome margin. He finished by
-declaring that in the following spring, which would be in
-time for the cool season at Calcutta, he would send a dozen
-horses of his own breeding, and join them in a cargo from
-the district.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The idea was adopted. Preparations were made by
-handling and stable-feeding as many of the saleable horses as
-could be spared. O’Desmond was a warm supporter of the
-movement. He offered to find from his long-established stud
-fully half the number necessary for the undertaking. The
-Major, who was compelled to revisit India once more, if but
-for the last time, had agreed to accompany the emigrants,
-and to see them safely into the stables of old Sheik Mahommed,
-the great Arab horse-dealer.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Fancy getting a hundred or two for our colts!’ said
-Hamilton. ‘Not more than they are worth when you come
-to think of their breeding. I look upon the Camerton stock
-as the very best horses in New South Wales, probably in
-Australia. But of course we never expect more than a third
-of such prices in these markets.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The Major deserves a statue,’ said Argyll, ‘inscribed—<span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Ad
-centurionem fortissimum, qui, equis canibusque gaudens,
-primus in Indis et in Nova Cambria erat.”</span>’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Very neat and classical,’ affirmed Fred Churbett. ‘I
-intend to send Duellist. I should be sure to get three
-hundred for him, shouldn’t I? He’s a sweet hack, but the
-price <em>is</em> tempting. I daresay I could pick up another one up
-to my weight.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘A horse of Duellist’s blood, size, and fashion would sell
-for that sum any day in Calcutta,’ assented the Major. ‘He
-would be a remarkable horse anywhere, and I need not tell
-you, would fetch more as a park hack in London.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Would we were both there!’ murmured Fred softly. ‘I
-fancy I see myself on him doing Rotten Row. I have half a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>mind to go with you to Calcutta, Major. If the trade
-develops we might make money a little faster than at
-present, and have our fling in the old country before these
-locks are tinged with grey,’ melodramatically patting his
-auburn <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>chevelure</em></span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It might be a desirable change,’ said Forbes. ‘Many
-people are said to improve in appearance as they grow older.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But not in mildness of disposition, James,’ retorted
-Churbett. ‘A tendency to flat contradiction and aggressive
-argument has rarely been known to abate with advancing
-years. But this is wide of the Indian Remount Association.
-I don’t see why we shouldn’t offer to ship and sell on commission.
-Many people in the district breed a good nag and
-don’t know what to do with him afterwards. Suppose we
-consult the Squire about it. He’s not a business man, but
-he knows India well.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It was agreed that they should make up a party, consisting
-of Forbes, Churbett, the Major, and Argyll, to ride over to
-The Chase that afternoon. This was always a popular
-proceeding if any colour of business, news, or sport could be
-discovered for the visit.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As they were nearing the gate of the home-paddock, they
-encountered Wilfred Effingham, accompanied by his old
-stock-rider, bringing in a draft of cattle. They amused themselves
-watching the efficient aid rendered by the dog, and
-remarked incidentally the fiery impatience and clever horsemanship
-of old Tom, who, roused by the difficulty of driving
-some of the outlying younger cattle, was flying round the
-drove upon old Boney at a terrific pace.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘How well that old vagabond rides!’ said Fred Churbett,
-as Tom came racing down the range after a perverse heifer,
-forcing her along at the very top of her speed, with Boney’s
-opened mouth just at her quarter, at which, with ears laid
-back and menacing teeth, he reached over from time to time,
-the old man’s whip meanwhile rattling over her in a succession
-of pistol-cracks, while he audibly devoted her to the infernal
-deities.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There, thin, may the divil take ye for a cross-grained,
-contrairy, brindle-hided baste of a scrubber; may I niver if I
-don’t have ye in the cask the first time yer bones is dacently
-covered!’ he wrathfully ejaculated, as Boney stopped dead at
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>the rear of the drove, into which the alarmed heifer shot with
-the velocity of a shell.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As they rode up to Wilfred and his man, Major Glendinning
-addressed the old stock-rider:</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘By the way, Tom, do you happen to know any one of
-your own name in this part of the country—or elsewhere in
-the colony, as you have been such a traveller?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The divil a know I know,’ replied Tom (who was in one
-of his worst humours, and at such times had little control
-over himself), ‘of any man but Parson Glendinning that lives
-on the Hunter River, and he’s a Scotchman and never seen “the
-black North” at all. But what raison have ye to ask <em>me</em>?
-I’m Tom Stewart Glendinning, the stock-rider, and barrin’
-that I was “lagged” and was a fool to myself all my life
-long, I’ve no call to be ashamed of my name, more than
-another man.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As he spoke the old man raised himself in his saddle and
-looked steadily, even fiercely, into the eyes of his interlocutor,
-who in turn, half astonished, half irritated at the old
-man’s manner, frowned as he returned the gaze with military
-sternness of rebuke.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred came up with the intention of rating his follower
-for his acerbity, but as he marked the fixed expression of the
-two men, something prevented him interposing. A similar
-feeling took possession of the others, as they stopped speaking
-and unconsciously constituted themselves an audience during
-this peculiar colloquy. Did a shadow of doubt, a half-acknowledged
-idea cross the minds of the spectators, as they
-watched the two men whose paths in life lay so wide apart?
-Was it the fire which burned with sudden glow, at that
-moment, in the eyes of both speakers, as they confronted
-each other, the chance similarity of their aquiline features,
-closely compressd lips, and knitted brows? Whatever the
-unseen influence, it was simultaneous, as it awed to silence
-men, at no time easy to control, and placed them in a
-position of mesmeric domination.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Major rapidly, but with strangely husky intonation,
-then said:</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Under that name did you send to Simon Glendinning, in
-the county of Derry, certain sums of money?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I did thin; and why wouldn’t I, if it was my own? It
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>was asy made in thim days; the country was worth living in,—not
-like now, overstocked with “jimmies” and foreign trash.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You sent that money, as I was informed,’ continued the
-Major, persistently unheeding the old man’s petulance, ‘for
-the benefit of a child, a nephew of your own, whom you
-desired to provide for?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Nephew be hanged! The boy was <em>my son</em>, Owen Walter
-Glendinning by name. Maybe he’s dead and gone this
-many a day, for I niver heard tale or tidings of him since.
-It’s as well for him and betther. ’Tis little use I see in
-draggin’ on life in this world at all, unless you’ve great luck
-intirely. But what call have ye to be cross-examinin’ me—like
-a lawyer—about my family affairs, and what makes the
-colour lave yer face like a dead man’s? Who are ye at all?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I am Owen Walter Glendinning! It was for me that
-your money was used. I am—your—son!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As he spoke an ashen hue overspread the bronzed cheek,
-and the strong man swayed in his saddle as if he would
-have fallen to the ground. His lips were clenched, and
-every feature bore the impress of the agony that strains
-nature’s every capacity. As for the spectators, they looked
-upon the actors in this life drama, of which the catastrophe
-had been so unexpectedly sprung upon them, with silent
-respect accorded to those beyond human aid. Words would
-have been worse than useless. They could but look, but
-sit motionless on their horses, but school every feature to
-passive recipiency, until the end should come.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘God in Heaven!’ cried the old man; ‘do you tell me
-so? May the tongue be blistered that spoke the word! It
-was a lie I tould you—lies—lies—I tell ye; sure ye don’t
-belave a word of it?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Then he looked at the despairing face of the soldier with
-wistful entreaty and bitter regret, piteous to behold.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It is too late; it is useless to declare that you misled
-me. You have betrayed the truth, which in pity for my
-unworthy pride you attempt to conceal.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It’s all a lie—a lie—a hellish lie!’ screamed the old
-man, transported with rage and regret. ‘What you, my
-son! You! Major Glendinning, a fine gintleman, and a
-soldier every inch of ye, the ayquals of the best gintry in the
-land and they proud of ye, the son of a drunken old convict
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>stock-rider! I tell ye it <em>can’t</em> be. I swear it’s a lie. I
-knew the man ye spake of. He’s dead now, but he was
-book-larned and come of an old family. I heard tell of
-his sending home money to his nephew in the North, and
-our names being the same I just said it out of divilment.
-Sure I’d cut my throat if I thought I’d be the manes of
-harmin’ ye. Why don’t ye curse me? Why don’t ye tell
-thim gintlemen I’m a lyin’ old villain? They know me well.
-Here, I’ll swear on my bended knees, by the blessed Virgin
-and all the saints, there’s no word of truth in what I said.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As old Tom raved, implored, and blasphemed, cursing at
-once his own folly and evil hap, his face writhed with the
-working of inward feeling. His features were deadly pale,
-well-nigh livid; the tears ran down his furrowed cheeks,
-while his eyes blazed with an unearthly light. As he fell on
-his knees and commenced his oath of renunciation the calm
-tones of the Major were again heard.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘All this is vain and useless. Get up, and listen to reason.
-That you are my—my father, I have now not the slightest
-reason to doubt. Your knowledge of the name, of the
-annual sum sent, is sufficient evidence; if these facts were
-not ample, the resemblance of feature is to me at this
-moment, as doubtless to our good friends here, unmistakable.
-Fate has brought about this meeting, why, I dare not
-question. You are too excited to listen now’—here the
-old man made as though he would burst in with a torrent
-of imprecations on the childish absurdity of the speaker—‘but
-we shall meet again before I leave for India.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘May we niver meet again on God’s earth! ’Tis yerself
-that’s to blame if this divil’s blast gets out. Sure the
-Benmohr gintlemen and Mr. Churbett won’t let on. Mr.
-Wilfred’s close enough. Kape your saycret, and divil a soul
-need hear of the sell ould Tom gave ye. My sarvice to ye,
-Major!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Here the old man mounted and devoted his energies to
-the cattle. Wilfred moved forward, by no means sorry that
-the strange scene had concluded.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Look here, Effingham, I will ride on to The Chase and
-make my adieus; as well now as another time. I return at
-once to India. You understand my position, I feel sure.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He rode forward with a more upright seat, a firmer hand
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>upon his bridle-rein, and that stern lighting of the eyes that
-may be seen when, and when only—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Bridle-reins are gathered up,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>And sabres blaze on high,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>ere each man spurs to the death feast, wherein his own name
-has, perchance, been sounded on a shadowy roll-call by a
-phantom herald.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Hamilton urged his horse alongside of the Major and
-held out his hand. Their eyes met as each wrung the
-proffered palm. But no word was spoken. Argyll and
-Churbett rode slightly ahead. Before long they reached
-the gate of The Chase, which, with its peculiar fastening,
-their horses began to know pretty well, either sidling steadily
-up or commencing to gambade at the very sight of it, in
-token of detestation, as did Grey Surrey.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It seems odd that I shall perhaps never see this house
-again,’ said Major Glendinning, slowly and reflectively. ‘I
-was beginning to be very fond of it, and had made up my
-mind to buy a place for a stud farm and settle near it. But
-why think of it now, or of anything else? “What is decreed
-by Allah is decreed,” as saith the Moslem. Who am I to
-complain of the universal fate?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But as the strong man spoke there was an involuntary
-tremor in his voice, a contraction of the muscles, as when
-the dumb, tortured frame quivers under the surgeon’s knife.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, how glad I am that you all came to-day,’ said
-Annabel, as they walked in; ‘that is, if a girl is permitted
-to express her pleasure at the arrival of gentlemen. Perhaps
-I should have said “how fortunate a coincidence.” But, as
-a fact, all our horses are in to-day, and we were just wondering
-if we could make up a riding-party after lunch. Mr.
-Churbett, I can order you to come, because you never have
-any work to do; not like some tiresome people who <em>will</em> go
-home late at night or early in the morning.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I never get credit for my labours, Miss Annabel. I’m
-too good-natured and easily intimidated—by ladies. But
-did you never hear of my memorable journey with cattle
-from Gundagai to the coast, all in the depth of winter; and—and—in
-fact—several other exploring enterprises?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What, really, Mr. Churbett? Then I recant. But I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>thought you managed the station from your verandah, sitting
-in a large cane chair, with a pile of books on the floor.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘An enemy hath done this,’ said Mr. Churbett impressively.
-‘Miss Annabel, I never shall be exonerated till you
-immortalise The She-oaks with your presence at a muster.
-Then, and then only, can you dimly shadow forth the deeds
-that the knight Frederico Churbetto, with his good steed
-Grey Surrey, is capable of achieving.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘“I wadna doot,” as Andrew says; and indeed, Mr.
-Churbett, I should like very much to see all the galloping
-and watch you and your stock-riders at work. You must
-ask mamma. Only, the present question is, can we have a
-canter down to the lake side?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We shall be truly thankful,’ said Hamilton. ‘I can
-answer for it. We did not know the good fortune in store
-for us when we started.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, thanks, thanks! Consider everything nice said on
-both sides. But what have you done to Major Glendinning?
-He looks so serious.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, he’s all right,’ said Hamilton, thinking it best to
-suffer their friend to make his explanations personally.
-‘Indian warriors, you know, are apt to suffer from old wounds.
-Change of weather, I think.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Poor fellow!’ said Annabel. ‘It seems hard that if one
-is not killed in battle, he should have to suffer afterwards.
-However, we must cheer him up. I will go and put my
-habit on.’</p>
-
-<hr class='c013' />
-
-<p class='c001'>The afternoon was fine, so after a preliminary saddling-up,
-the whole party filed off, apparently in high spirits. The
-roads in one direction were always sound, while by ascending
-slightly one of the spurs of the range a grand view was
-always obtainable.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Rosamond rode foremost, as she generally did, by right of
-the exceptional walking of Fergus. She was accompanied by
-Forbes, whose hackney had been selected after great research,
-his friends averred, in order that he might rank as the next
-fastest pacer in those parts. Argyll and Wilfred brought up
-the rear, occasionally joining company with Annabel and
-Fred Churbett. The Major and Beatrice went next behind
-the leaders. The couples preserved the order in which they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>set out, with the exception of the inroad upon Fred and
-Annabel’s eager colloquies, which were not deeply sentimental.
-That amiable personage complained that no one scrupled
-to break in upon his <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>tête-à-têtes</em></span>. He ‘thought he should
-have to grow a moustache and call some one out, in order
-to inspire respect.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Major Glendinning had made frequent visits to Warbrok,
-and familiar intercourse having naturally resulted from his
-intimacy with their friends at Benmohr, the family had come
-to look upon him as one of their particular set. Of a
-nature constitutionally reserved, and more specially self-contained
-from long residence as a military autocrat in one
-of the provinces of Northern India, he had read and thought
-more deeply than men of his class are apt to do. In proportion,
-therefore, to his general reticence was his satisfaction
-in unlocking his stores of experience when he met with
-congenial minds.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A few chance questions on the part of Beatrice Effingham,
-after his first introduction to the family, had discovered
-to him that she was better informed as to the administration
-of Northern India than most people. Hence grew up
-between them a common ground of interest in which he
-could expatiate and explain. And his listener was never
-tired of hearing from an eye-witness and an actor the
-true story of the splendours and tragedies of that historic
-land.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The real reason of this research, apart from the hunger
-for literary pabulum, which at all times possessed Beatrice,
-was an affectionate interest in the life of an uncle, who,
-after entering upon a brilliant career, had perished through
-the treachery of a native Rajah. His adventures had fascinated
-the romantic girl from early childhood; hence she
-had loved to verify every detail of the circumstances under
-which the star of the ill-fated Raymond Effingham had
-faded into darkness.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>By those indescribable degrees of advance, of which the
-heart can note the progress, but rarely the first approach,
-a friendship between the Major and the thoughtful girl
-became so apparent as to be the subject of jesting remark.
-When, therefore, he had announced his intention of settling
-in the neighbourhood, a thrill of unusual force invaded the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>calm pulses of Beatrice Effingham. Had his retirement
-from the service, from the profession he loved so well, some
-reason in which her future was concerned? If so, if he
-settled down on one of the adjoining properties, could any
-union be more consonant with her every feeling, taste, and
-aspirations than with one whom, in every way, she could so
-fully respect and admire, whose deeds in that wonderland
-of her fancies were written on the records of his country’s
-fame? It was a dream too bright for reality. And though
-it would occasionally disturb the even tenor of Beatrice’s
-hours in the library, her well-regulated mind refused to dwell
-upon possibilities as yet unsanctioned.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When, therefore, Major Glendinning promptly availed
-himself of the opportunity afforded by the ride to the lake
-to constitute himself her escort; when, after a few commonplace
-observations, she observed that his countenance, though
-more grave than was usual in her presence, had yet an expression
-of fixed resolve, an indefinable feeling of expectation,
-almost amounting to dread, took possession of her, and it was
-with a beating heart and changing cheek that she listened.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I take advantage of this opportunity, Miss Beatrice, to
-say the words which must be said before we part.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Part!’ said the girl, shaking in every limb, though she
-bravely struggled against her emotions and tried to impart
-firmness to her voice. ‘Then you are going to leave us for
-India? Have you been ordered back suddenly?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘That is as it may be,’ said the soldier; and as he spoke
-their eyes met. His face wore a look of unalterable decision,
-yet so fraught was it with misery, even despair, that she instinctively
-felt that Fate had dealt her a remorseless stroke.
-‘I have heard this day,’ he continued, ‘what has altered the
-chief purpose of my life—has killed my every hope. I return
-to India by the next ship.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You have heard terribly bad news,’ she answered very
-softly. ‘I see it in your face. I need not tell you how we
-shall all sympathise with you; how grieved we shall be at
-your departure.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Here the womanly instinct of the consoler proved stronger
-than that of the much-vaunted ruler of courts and camps,
-inasmuch as Beatrice lost sight of her personal feelings
-in bethinking herself how she could aid the strong man,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>whose features bore evidence of the agony which racked
-every nerve and fibre.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I feel deeply grateful for your sympathy. I knew you
-would bestow it. No living man needs it more. This
-morning I rode out fuller of pleasant anticipation than I can
-recall, prepared to take a step which I hoped would result
-in my life’s happiness. I had arranged for an extension of
-leave, after which I intended to sell out and live in this
-neighbourhood, which for many reasons—for every reason—I
-have found so delightful.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And your plans are altered?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This query was made in tones studiously free from all
-trace of interest or disapproval, although the beating heart
-and throbbing brain of the girl almost prevented utterance.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I have this day—this day only—you will do me the
-justice hereafter to believe—heard a statement, unhappily
-too true, which clears up the mystery which has rested upon
-me from my birth. That cloud has been removed. But
-behind it lies a foul blot, a dark shadow of dishonour, which
-I deemed could never have rested on the name of Walter
-Glendinning.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Dishonour!’ echoed Beatrice. ‘Impossible! How can
-that be?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It is as I say—deep and ineradicable,’ groaned out the
-unhappy man. ‘You will hear more from your brother.
-All is known to him and your friends of Benmohr. Enough
-that I have no personal responsibility. But it is a burden
-that I must carry till the day of a soldier’s death. You
-will believe me when I say that my honour demands that I
-quit Australia—to me so dear, yet so fatal. The years that
-may remain to me belong to my country.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I feel,’ said the girl, with kindling eye and a pride of
-bearing which equalled his own, ‘that you are doing what
-your high sense of honour, of duty, demands. I can but
-counsel you to take them, for guide and inspiration. I know
-not the doom which has fallen on you, but I can bid you
-God-speed, and pray for you evermore.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You have spoken my inmost thoughts. God help us
-that it should be so. But I were disloyal to every thought
-and aspiration of my nature if I stooped to link the life of
-another, as God is my witness and judge, to my tarnished
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>name. We must part—never, perhaps, to meet on earth—but,
-Beatrice, dearest and only loved—may I not call you so?—I
-who now look upon your face, and hear your voice for
-the last time—you will think in your happy home of one
-who tore the heart from his bosom, which a dark fate forbade
-him to offer you. When you hear that Walter Glendinning
-died a soldier’s death, give a tear to his memory—to his fate
-who scorned death, but could not endure dishonour.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Neither spoke for some moments. The girl’s tears flowed
-fast as she gazed before her, while both rode steadily onward.
-The man’s form was bowed, and his set features wore the
-livid aspect of him who has received a death-wound but
-strives to hide the inward agony. Slowly, mechanically, they
-rode side by side along the homeward track, in the rear of
-the others until the entrance gate was reached. Then, as if
-by mutual impulse, they turned towards each other, and
-their eyes met in one long sorrowful glance. Such light has
-shone in the eyes of those who parted ere now, sanctified by
-a martyr’s hope—a martyr’s death.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We shall meet,’ she said, ‘no more on earth; but oh,
-if you value my love, cherish the thought of a higher life—of
-a better world, where no false human pride, no barrier of
-man’s cruelty or injustice may sever us. I hold the trust
-which my heart, if not my lips, confessed. Till then, farewell,
-and may a merciful God keep our lives unstained until
-the day of His coming.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>She drew the glove from her hand hurriedly. It fell at
-his horse’s feet. He dismounted hastily, and placed it in his
-bosom, and raising her ice-cold hand to his lips, pressed it
-with fervour. Then accompanying her to the hall door, he
-committed her to the charge of Wilfred, who, with his mother
-and sister, stood on the verandah, took a hurried leave of the
-family, regretting that he was compelled, by sudden summons,
-to rejoin his regiment, and with his friends, who with ready
-tact made excuse for returning, took the familiar track to
-Benmohr.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Few words were spoken on the homeward road, which was
-traversed at a pace that tried the mettle of the descendants
-of Camerton. That night the friends sat late, talking
-earnestly. It was long after midnight before they separated.
-On the following day Major Glendinning and his father met
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>at a spot half-way between The Chase and Benmohr, the
-interview being arranged by Hamilton, who rode over and
-persuaded the old man to accompany him. What passed
-between them was never known, but ere that night was ended
-the Major was far on his way to Sydney, which he reached in
-time to secure a passage in the good ship <cite>Governor Bourke</cite>,
-outward bound for China. In the course of the week Mr.
-Effingham received a letter in explanation of the circumstances,
-signed Owen Walter Glendinning, declaring his unworthiness
-to aspire to his daughter’s hand, as well as his
-inability to remain in the country after the mystery of his
-birth had been so unexpectedly revealed to him. He held
-himself pledged to act in the matter after the expiration of a
-year in accordance with what Mr. Effingham, acting as the
-guardian of his daughter’s happiness, might consider in the
-light of an honourable obligation. A bank draft drawn in
-favour of Thomas Stewart Glendinning was enclosed, with an
-intimation that an annual payment would be forwarded for
-his use henceforth during the writer’s life.</p>
-
-<hr class='c013' />
-
-<p class='c001'>The first cloud which the Effinghams had descried since
-their arrival in Australia had appeared in the undimmed
-horizon. The breath of evil, which knows no bound nor
-space beneath the sun, had rested on them. Habitually
-taking deeper interest in the subjective issues of life than in
-its material transaction, they were proportionately depressed.
-All that maternal love and the most tender sisterly affection
-could give was lavished upon the sufferer. Her well-disciplined
-mind, strengthened by culture and purified by
-religion, gradually acquired equilibrium. But it was long ere
-the tranquil features of Beatrice Effingham recovered their
-wonted expression; and a close observer could have detected
-the trace of an inward woe in the depths of her erstwhile
-clear, untroubled eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In his answer to the letter which he had received, Mr.
-Effingham ‘fully agreed with the course which his friend
-had taken, and the determination which he had expressed.
-Looking at the situation, which he deplored with his whole
-heart, he was unable to see any other mode of action open
-to him as a man of honour. Deeply prejudicial as had been
-the issue to the happiness of his beloved daughter, he could
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>not ask him (Major Glendinning) to swerve by one hair’s-breadth
-from the path which he had laid down for himself.
-His wishes would be attended to with respect to the bank
-draft forwarded for the use of the person named, but he
-would suggest that Mr. Sternworth should be chosen as the
-recipient of future remittances. He would, in conclusion,
-wish him the fullest measure of success and distinction which
-his profession offered, with, if not happiness, the inward
-satisfaction known to those who marched ever in the vanguard
-of honourable duty. In this wish he was warmly seconded
-by every member of the family.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Old Tom, after notice of his intention to leave the employment,
-presented himself before his master, dressed and
-accoutred as for a journey, leading Boney and followed by
-the uncompromising Crab. His effects were fastened in a
-roll in front of his saddle, his coiled stockwhip was pendent
-from the side-buckle. All things, even to the fixed look
-upon the weather-beaten features, betokened a settled
-resolution.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I’m going to lave the ould place, Captain,’ he said; ‘and
-it’s sorry I am this day to quit the family and the lake and
-the hounds, where I laid it out to lave the ould bones of me.
-I’m wishin’ the divil betther divarshion than to bother with
-the family saycrets of the likes o’ me. Sure he has lashins
-of work in this counthry, without disturbin’ the last days of
-poor ould Tom Glendinning—and he sure of me, anyhow.
-My heart’s bruk, so it is.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Hush, Tom,’ said his employer. ‘We can understand
-Major Glendinning’s feelings. But, after all, it is his duty
-to acknowledge the ties of nature. I have no doubt that
-after a time he will become—er—used to the relationship.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘D——n the relationship!’ burst out the old man
-menacingly. ‘Ah, an’ sure I ax yer pardon, yer honour,
-for the word; but ’tis wild I am that the Major, a soldier
-and a rale gintleman every inch of him, that’s fought for the
-Queen and skivered them infernal blackamoors in the Injies,
-should be given out as the son of a blasted ould rapparee
-like me. It was asy knowing when I seen that look on him
-when he heard the name, but how could I drame that <em>my son</em>
-could have turned into a king’s officer—all as one as the
-best of the land? If I <em>had</em> known it for sartain, before he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>axed me, I’d have lived beside him as a common stock-rider
-for years, if he’d come here, and he’s niver have known no
-more than the dead. It’s a burning shame and a sin, that’s
-what it is!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It may have been unfortunate,’ said Mr. Effingham; ‘but
-I can never regard it as wrong that a father and a son should
-come to know of the tie which binds them to each other.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And why not, I ask ye?’ demanded the old man
-savagely. ‘What good has it done aither of us? It’s sent
-<em>him</em> back, with a sore heart, to live among them black divils
-and snakes and tigers, a murdtherin’ hot counthry it is by all
-accounts, when he might have bought a place handy here
-and bred horses and cattle—sure he’s an iligant rider and
-shoots beautiful, don’t he now? I wonder did he take them
-gifts after me?’ said the old man, with the first softened
-expression and a half sigh. ‘Sure, if I could have plazed
-myself <em>with lookin’ at him</em> and he not to know, I wouldn’t
-say but that I might have listened to Parson Sternworth and—and—repinted,—yes,
-repinted,—after all that’s come and
-gone! And now I’m on the ould thrack agin, with tin
-divils tearin’ at me, and who knows what will happen.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There’s no need for you to lead a wandering life, or
-indeed, to work at all, even if you leave the district,’ said
-Mr. Effingham. ‘I have a sum in my hands, forwarded by
-the Major, sufficient for all your wants.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I’ll not touch a pinny of it!’ cried out the old man; ‘sure
-it’s blood money, no less, his <em>life</em>, anyway, that will pay for
-this! Didn’t I see his eye, when he shook hands with me,
-and begged my pardon for his pride, and asked me to bless
-him—<em>me</em>!’—and here the old man laughed derisively, a
-sound not pleasant to hear. ‘If there’s fighting where he’s
-going, and he lives out the year, it will be because lead and
-cowld steel has no power to harm a man that wants to die.
-Mr. Effingham, I’ll never touch it; and why would I?
-Sure the drink’ll kill me, fast enough, without help.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But why go away? I am so grieved that, after your
-faithful service, you should leave in such a state of mind.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Maybe I’ll do ye more sarvice before I die, but I must
-get into the far-out runs, or I’ll go mad thinking of <em>him</em>. It
-was my hellish timper that let the words out so quick, or he’d
-never have known till his dying day. Maybe the rheumatiz
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>was to blame, that keeps burning in the bones of me like red-hot
-iron, till I couldn’t spake a civil word to the blessed
-Saviour Himself. Anyhow, it’s done now; but of all I ever
-did—and there’s what would hang me on the list—I repint
-over <em>that</em>, the worst, and will till I die. Good-bye, sir. God
-bless the house, and thim that’s in it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The old man remounted his wayworn steed with more
-agility than his appearance promised, and taking the track
-which led southward, went slowly along the road without
-turning his head or making further speech. The dog rose to
-his feet and trotted after him. In a few moments the
-characteristic trio passed from sight.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Mysterious indeed are the ways of Providence!’ thought
-Effingham, as he turned towards the house. ‘Who would
-ever have thought that the fortunes of this strange old man
-would ever have been associated with me or mine. I feel an
-unaccountable presentiment, as if this incident, inexplicable
-as it is, were but the forerunner of evil!’</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XIX <br /> BLACK THURSDAY</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>Autumn and winter passed in the ordinary succession of
-regular duties and peaceful employments, now become easy
-and habitual. These the expatriated family had learned to
-love. The departure of the old stock-rider was felt as a
-temporary inconvenience, but the brothers with Dick Evans’s
-aid and counsel felt themselves qualified to supply his place,
-and decided not to employ a successor.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Guy, indeed, had grown into a stalwart youngster, taller
-and broader than his elder brother; so much had the pure
-air, the healthful bush life, the regular exercise and occasional
-labour demanded by the station exigencies done for his
-development. He was apt at all the minor rural accomplishments—could
-ride the unbroken colts, which their own
-stud now produced, and was well acquainted with the ways
-and wanderings of outlying cattle. The lore of the Waste,
-in which old Dick was so able an instructor, was now his.
-He could plait a hide-rope, make bullock-yokes, noose and
-throw the unbranded cattle, drive a team, split and put up
-‘fencing stuff’; in many ways do a man’s work, when needed,
-as efficiently as his preceptor. Dick prophesied that he
-would become ‘a great bushman’ in years to come. Indeed,
-by tales of ‘taking up new country’ and of the adventurous
-branches of station life, he had fostered a thirst for more
-extended and responsible action which gave his parents some
-uneasiness.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He had begun to acquire the Australian boy’s contempt
-for the narrow bounds involved by a residence on ‘purchased
-land.’ He impatiently awaited the day when he should be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>able to sally forth, with a herd of his own and the necessary
-equipment, to seek his fortune amid romantic, unexplored wilds.
-He began to lose interest in the daily round of home duties;
-and though from long habit and an affectionate nature, as
-yet dutifully obedient to his parents’ bidding, he more than
-once confessed that he longed for independent action.</p>
-
-<hr class='c013' />
-
-<p class='c001'>The season was ‘setting in dry.’ There had been no rain
-for months. Around Lake William and near that wide
-expanse of water an appearance of verdure was preserved
-by the more marshy portion of the great flats. Amid these
-the cattle daily revelled and fed. They might have been
-seen grouped in large droves far out on the promontories, or
-wading amid the shallowing reed-beds which fringed the
-shore, long after the sun had set, and the breathless night,
-boding of storms which came not, had closed in.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Among the neighbours this state of matters by no means
-passed without observation and remark. Nought save
-desultory discussion ensued. Except O’Desmond, no one
-had been long enough in the colony to have had experience
-of abnormal seasons. Curiously, he was the one who took the
-more despondent view of matters, from which men augured ill.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I hope to heaven that we are not going to have a
-repetition of 1827,’ he said; ‘one experience of that sort is
-enough to last a man for his lifetime.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Was it so very awful?’ said Hamilton, the conversation
-taking place at Benmohr, at which convenient rendezvous
-Wilfred and Churbett had encountered that gentleman. ‘One
-fancies that the ancient colonists were not fertile in expedients.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘No doubt we have much to learn from the accomplished
-gentlemen who have done us the honour to invest in our
-colony of late years,’ said O’Desmond grandly, with a bow of
-the regency; ‘but if you had seen what I have, you would
-not undervalue the danger. I don’t care to talk about it.
-Only if this year ends badly, I shall leave Badajos to my old
-couple and the overseer, muster my stock, and start into the
-wilderness without waiting for another.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What direction shall you take?’ said Hamilton.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Due south, until I strike the head waters of the Sturt
-and the Warburton. These I shall follow down, and make
-my depôt wherever I discover a sufficiently tempting base.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>‘It has quite the heroic ring about it,’ said Wilfred. ‘But
-for certain reasons, I would like to follow you. How about
-provisions?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I take a year’s supply of rations and clothing. We drive
-our meat before us.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And the blacks?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I know all that can be known about them,’ said O’Desmond.
-‘They recognise chiefs among the white men. If
-one does not fear them, they are to be dealt with like children.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You will find it hard to quit your pleasant life at Badajos
-for the desert,’ said Wilfred.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Not at all; the sharper the contrast, the more easily is
-the change made. Besides, on such occasions mine is a
-well-organised expedition. I take my cook, my groom, my
-four-in-hand. What do you say? Come with me for the
-first week or two. I can promise you a chop broiled to perfection.
-I must show you my “reversible griller,” of which I
-am the proud inventor.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Here the door was loudly knocked at, and being opened
-without further ceremony, disclosed the serious countenance
-of Wullie Teviot, apparently out of breath.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Maister Hamilton and gentlemen a’,’ he said, ‘I’m no in
-a poseetion to do my errand respectfully the noo, but hae
-just breath to warn ye that there’s a muckle bush-fire comin’
-fast frae the direction o’ Maister Effingham’s. I trust we’ll
-no be the waur o’t.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This ended migratory speculations abruptly. Each man
-started to his feet. Hamilton left the room to secure a horse
-and order out his retainers, Wilfred to try and make out
-whether the heavy spreading cloud on the horizon was across
-his boundary.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I and my man will go with Hamilton,’ quoth O’Desmond.
-‘Effingham had better make for home, and see how it is
-likely to affect him.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Hamilton was dashing down the paddock on a bare-backed
-horse by this time, to run up the hacks, and also one for the
-spring-cart, to be loaded with spare hands for the scene of
-action, besides that invaluable adjunct in a bush fire, a cask
-of water.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I hardly like leaving,’ said Wilfred; ‘it looks selfish.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Don’t mind about the sentiment,’ said O’Desmond. ‘If
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>your run is afire you will need to help Dick Evans and his
-party. I’ll be bound the old fellow is half-way there already.
-He is not often caught napping.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Then Wilfred mounted too, and sped away, galloping
-madly towards the great masses of ever-increasing smoke-cloud.
-It proved to be farther off than he expected. He
-had ridden far and fast, when he reached the border where
-he could hear the crackling of the tender leaflets, and
-watched the red line which licked up so cleanly all dry sticks
-and bush, with every stalk and plant and modest tuft of
-grass. He then found that the chief duty, not so much of
-meeting the enemy, as of guiding and persuading him to turn
-his fiery footsteps in a different direction, was being satisfactorily
-performed by Richard Evans and his assistants.
-Guy, in wild delight at being made lieutenant of the party,
-was dashing ever and anon into the centre of the smoke and
-flame, and dealing blows with his bough like a Berserker.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Head it off, lads,’ Dick was saying when Wilfred rode up.
-‘It’s no use trying to stop it in the long grass; edge it off
-towards the ranges. There it may burn till all’s blue.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Why, Dick,’ said he to his trustworthy veteran, ‘how did
-you manage to get here so quickly? They’ve only just seen
-it at Benmohr.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘They’ll find it out pretty quick, sir, if there’s a shift of
-wind to-night. It don’t need much coaxing our way, but it
-means Benmohr, with a southerly puff or two. If it gets into
-that grassy bit by the old stock-yard, it will burn at the rate of
-fifty mile an hour.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Hour after hour did they work by the line of fire, ere
-Dick’s vigilance could permit any kind of halt or relaxation.
-It was exciting, not unpleasant work, Wilfred thought, walking
-up and down the red-gleaming line of tongues of fire which
-licked up so remorselessly the tangled herbage, the lower
-shrubs, the dead flower-stalks, and all scattered branches of
-the fallen trees.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The night was dark, sultry, and still. As ever and anon
-the fire caught some tall, dead tree, and running up it, seized
-the hollow trunk, holding out red signals from each limb
-and cavity, high up among the branches, the effect against
-the sombre sky, the dull, massed gloom of the mountain,
-was grandly effective. In the lurid scene the moving figures
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>upon whose faces the fierce light occasionally beat, seemed
-weird and phantasmal. Patiently did the wary leader watch
-the line of fire, which had been extinguished on the side
-next to the lower lands, now casting back a half-burned log
-far within the blackened area, and anon beating out insidious
-tussocks of dried grass, ignited by a smouldering ember.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When once the defensive line had been subdued, it was
-easily kept under by sweeping the half-burned grass and
-sticks back from the still inflammable herbage into the bared
-space now devoid of fuel. But care was still needed, as
-ever and again a half-burned tree would crash down across
-the line, throwing forth sparks and embers, or perhaps lighting
-up a temporary conflagration.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>All the night through, the men kept watch and ward beside
-the boundary. The strangeness of the scene compensated
-Wilfred and Guy for the loss of their natural rest as well as
-for the severity of the exertion. As they watched the flame-path
-hewing its way unchecked up the rugged mountain-side,
-lighting up from time to time with wondrous clearness every
-crag, bush, and tree, to the smallest twig—a nature picture,
-clear, brilliant, unearthly, framed in the unutterable blackness
-of the night, it seemed as if they were assisting at some
-Walpurgis revel; as if in the lone woods, at that mystic hour,
-the forms of the dead, the spectres of the past, might at any
-moment arise and mingle with them.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As they lay stretched on the dry sward, in the intervals
-of rest, they watched the gradual progress of the flame
-through the rugged, chasm-rifted, forest-clothed mountain.
-With every ascent gained, the flame appeared to hoist a
-signal of triumph over the dumb, dark, illimitable forest
-which surrounded them. Finally, when like a crafty foe it
-had climbed to the highest peak, the fire, there discovering
-upon a plateau a mass of brushwood and dry herbage, burst
-out in one far-seen, wide-flaming beacon, at once a Pharos
-and a Wonder-sign to the dwellers at a lower elevation.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The bush fire had been fought and conquered. It only
-remained for Dick and a few to go back on the following
-day and make sure that the frontier was safe; that no
-smouldering logs were ready to light up the land again as
-soon as the breeze should have fanned them sufficiently.
-The main body of the fire had gone up the mountain range,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>where no harm could be done; where, as Dick said, as soon
-as the first rain came, the grass would be all up again, and
-make nice, sweet picking for the stock in winter.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Benmohr people had not been quite so lucky; the
-wind setting in that direction, the flames had come roaring
-up to the very homestead, burning valuable pasture and nearly
-consuming the establishment. As it was, the garden gate
-caught fire. The farm and station buildings were only preserved
-by the desperate efforts of the whole force of the
-place, led on by Argyll and Hamilton, who worked like
-the leaders of a forlorn hope. After the fight was over and
-the place saved, Charlie Hamilton, utterly exhausted with
-the heat and exertion, dropped down in a faint, and had
-to be carried in and laid on a bed, to the consternation
-of Mrs. Teviot, who thought he was dead.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It was now the last week of March, and all things looked
-as bad as they could be. Not a drop of rain worth mentioning
-had fallen since the spring. The small rivers which ran
-into Lake William had ceased to flow, and were reduced each
-to its own chain of ponds. That great sheet of water was
-daily receding from its shores, shallowing visibly, and leaving
-islands of mud in different parts of its surface, unpleasantly
-suggestive of total evaporation. Strange wild-fowl, hitherto
-unknown in the locality—notably the ibis, the pelican, and
-the spoonbill—had appeared in great flocks, disputing possession
-with the former inhabitants. The flats bordering
-upon the lake, once so luxuriantly covered with herbage,
-were bare and dusty as a highroad. The constant marching
-in and out of the cattle to water had caused them to be fed
-down to the last stalk. Apparently there was no chance of
-their renewal. The herd, though still healthy and vigorous,
-was beginning to lose condition; if this were the case now,
-what tale would the winter have to tell? The yield of milk
-had so fallen off that merely sufficient was taken for the use
-of the house. The ground was so hard that it was impossible
-to plough for the wheat crop, even if there had been likelihood
-of the plant growing after the seed was sown.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Andrew was clearly of the opinion that Australia much
-resembled Judea, and that for some good reason the Lord
-had seen fit to pour down His wrath upon the land, which
-was now stricken with various plagues and grievous trials.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>‘I’m no sayin’,’ he said, ‘that the sin o’ the people has
-been a’thegither unpardonable and forbye ordinair’. There’s
-nae doot a wheen swearin’ and drinkin’ amang thae puir
-ignorant stock-riders and splitter bodies. Still, they’re for
-the maist pairt a hard delvin’, ceevil people, that canna be
-said to eat the bread o’ idleness, and that’s no wilfu’
-in disobeyin’ the Word, siccan sma’ hearin’ as they hae
-o’t. I’m lyin’ in deep thocht on my bed nicht after nicht,
-wearyin’ to find ae comfortin’ gleam o’ licht in this darkness
-o’ Egypt.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It’s a bad look-out, Andrew,’ said Guy, to whom Andrew
-was confiding his feelings, as he often did to the lad when
-he was troubled about the well-doing of the community.
-‘And it will be worse if the cattle die after next winter.
-Whatever shall we do? We shall never get such a lot of
-nice, well-bred ones together again. What used the Jews to
-do in a season like this, I wonder, for they got it pretty bad
-sometimes, you know, when Jacob sent all his sons into
-Egypt?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I mind weel, Maister Guy,’ said the old man solemnly.
-‘And ye see he had faith that the Lord would provide for
-him and his sons and dochters. And though they were sair
-afflicted before the time of deliverance came, they were a’
-helped and saved in the end. He that brocht ye a’ here
-nae doot will provide. Pray and trust in Him, Maister Guy,
-and dinna forget what ye learned at your mither’s knee,
-hinny, the God-fearin’ lady that she ever was. We must
-suffer tribulation, doubtless; but dinna fear—oh, dinna lose
-faith, my bairn, and we shall sing joyful songs i’ the ootcome!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As the season wore on, and the rainless winter was succeeded
-by the hopeless spring, with drying winds and cloudless
-days, it seemed as if the tribulation spoken of by Andrew was
-indeed to be sharp, to the verge of extermination.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Not only were great losses threatened by the destruction
-of the stock, but the money question was commencing to
-become urgent. For the past year no sales of stock had
-been possible. Few had the means of keeping the stock they
-were possessed of. They were not likely to add to their
-responsibility by buying others, at however tempting a price.
-As there was no milk, there was naturally no butter, cheese,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>or the wherewithal to fatten the hogs for bacon. These
-sources of income were obliterated. Having no produce to
-sell, it became apparent that the articles necessary to be
-bought were suddenly enhanced in value. Flour rose from
-twelve and fifteen to fifty, seventy, finally, <em>one hundred pounds
-per ton</em>. Not foreseeing this abnormal rise, Wilfred had sold
-their preceding year’s crop, as usual, as soon as it reached a
-better price than ordinary, merely retaining a year’s supply of
-flour. That being exhausted, he was compelled, sorely
-against the grain, to purchase at these famine rates. Rice,
-which could be imported cheaply, was largely mingled with
-the flour, as a matter of economy. The bread was scarcely
-so palatable, but by the help of Jeanie’s admirable baking,
-little difference was felt.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Rockley confided that he felt deeply reluctant to
-charge him and other friends such high prices for the
-necessaries of life. The difficulties of carriage, however, were
-now amazing. Numbers of the draught cattle had perished,
-and fodder was obliged to be carried by the teams on their
-journeys, enhancing the cost indefinitely.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The fact is,’ said that unreserved merchant, ‘I am losing
-on all sides. The smaller farmers in my debt have no more
-chance of paying me, before the rain comes, than if they were
-in gaol. Everybody purchases the smallest quantity of goods
-that they can do with, and I have great difficulty in buying
-in Sydney at prices which will leave any margin of profit.
-But you come in and dine with us this evening. I’ve got a
-bottle of claret left, in spite of the hard times. And keep up
-your spirits, my boy! We shall come out of this trouble as
-we’ve done through others. This country wasn’t meant for
-faint-hearted people, was it? If all comes right, we shall be
-proud of having stuck to the ship manfully, eh? If not, it’s
-better to give three cheers when she goes down, than to
-whine and snivel. Come along in. I’ve done with business
-for the day.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>And so Wilfred, who had ridden to Yass in a state of
-despondency, went in and was comforted, as happened to him
-many a time and often, under that hospitable roof. The
-dinner was good though the times were bad, while Rockley’s
-claret was unimpeachable, as of old. Mrs. Rockley and
-Christabel were more than usually warm and sympathetic of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>manner. As he sat in the moonlight with Rockley and the
-ladies (who had joined them), and heard from his host tales
-of previous hard seasons and how they had been surmounted,
-he felt his heart stir with unwonted hope and a resolve to
-fight this fight to the end.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I’ve seen these seasons before,’ said the energetic optimist,
-‘and I’ve always remarked that they were followed by a period
-of prosperity. Think of the last drought we had, and what
-splendid seasons followed it! This looks as bad as anything
-<em>can</em> look, but if I could get long odds, I wouldn’t mind betting
-that before 1840 we’re crowded with buyers, and that stock,
-land, and city property touch prices never reached before.
-Look forward, Wilfred, my boy, look forward! There’s
-nothing to be done without it, in a new country, take my
-word.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You must admit that it’s hard to see anything cheering
-just at present.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Not at all, not at all,’ said his host, lighting another
-cigar. ‘Christabel, go in and sing something. It’s all a
-matter of calculation. Say that half your cattle die—mind
-you, you’ve no business to let ’em die, if you can help it—hang
-on by your eyelids, that’s the idea—but say half of ’em
-<em>do</em> die, why, the moment the rain comes the remainder are
-twice as valuable as they were before, perhaps more than that,
-if a new district is discovered. By the way, there <em>is</em> a report
-of a new settlement down south; if it comes to anything, see
-what a rush there’ll be for stock, to take over on speculation.
-That’s the great advantage of a new country; if one venture
-goes wrong, there are a dozen spring up for you to choose
-from.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Do you think it would be a good idea to take away part
-of the stock, and try and find a new station?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I really believe it would; and if I were a young man
-to-morrow it’s the very thing that I would go in for. We
-have not explored a tenth part of the boundless—I say boundless—pasture
-lands of this continent. No doubt there are
-millions of acres untouched, as good as we have ever
-occupied.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But are they not so far off as to be valueless?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘No land that will carry sheep or cattle, or grow grain, can
-be valueless in Australia for the next century to come. And
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>with the increase of population, all outer territories will
-assume a positive value as soon as the present depression is
-over.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>While in Yass, Wilfred consulted their good friend and
-adviser, Mr. Sternworth, who had indeed, by letter, when not
-able to visit them personally, not ceased to cheer and console
-during the disheartening season.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘This is a time of trial, my dear Wilfred,’ he said, ‘that
-calls out the best qualities of a man, in the shape of courage,
-faith, and self-denial. It is the day of adversity, when we are
-warned not to faint. I can fully enter into your distress and
-anxiety, while seeing the daily loss and failure of all upon
-which you depended for support. It is doubly hard for you,
-after a term of success and progress. But we must have faith—unwavering
-faith—in the Supreme Ruler of events, and
-doubt not—doubt not for one moment, my boy—but that we
-shall issue unharmed and rejoicing out of this tribulation.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Among their neighbours, unusual preparations were made
-to lighten the impending calamity. Unnecessary labourers
-were discharged. The daily work of the stations was, in great
-measure, done by the proprietors. The Teviots were the only
-domestic retainers at Benmohr; they, of course, and Dick
-Evans were a part of the very composition of the establishments,
-and not to be dispensed with. The D’Oyleys discharged
-their cook and stock-rider, performing these necessary
-duties by turns, week alternate.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Fred Churbett retained his married couple and stock-rider,
-declaring that he would die like a gentleman; that he could
-pay his way for two years more; after which, if times did not
-mend, he would burn the place down, commit suicide decently,
-and leave the onus on destiny. He could not cook, neither
-would he wash clothes. He would be as obstinate as the
-weather.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>O’Desmond made full preparations for a migration in
-spring, if the weather continued dry and no rain fell in
-September. There would be a slight spring of grass then,
-rain or no rain. He would take advantage of it, to depart,
-like a patriarch of old, not exactly with his camels and she-asses,
-but with his cattle and brood mares, his sheep and his
-oxen, his men-servants and his maid-servants—well perhaps
-not the latter, but everything necessary to give a flavour of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>true colonisation to the movement. And he travelled in good
-style, with such observances and ceremony as surrounded
-Harry O’Desmond in all that he did, and made him the
-wonder and admiration of less favoured individuals.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He had his waggonette and four-in-hand, the horses of
-which, corn-fed at the commencement, would, after they got
-on to the grasses of the great interior levels, fare well and
-indeed fatten on the journey. A roomy tent, as also a smaller
-one for his body-servant, cook, and kitchen utensils, shielded
-him and his necessaries from the weather. Portable bath and
-dining-table, couch, and toilette requisites were available at
-shortest notice; while a groom led his favourite hackney, upon
-which he mounted whenever he desired to explore a mountain
-peak or an unknown valley. The cottage was handed over to
-the charge of the gardener and his wife, old servants of the
-establishment. And finally, the long-expected rain not appearing
-in September, he departed, like a Spanish conquistador
-of old, to return with tales of wondrous regions, of dusky
-slaves, of gold, of feather-crowned Caciques, and palm-fanned
-isles, or to leave his whitening bones upon mountain
-summit or lonely beach.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It was believed among his old friends that Harry O’Desmond
-would either return successful, with hardly-won territory
-attached to his name, or that he would journey on over the
-great desert, which was supposed then to form the interior of
-the continent, until return was hopeless.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>His servants would be faithful unto death. None would
-ever question his order of march. And if he were not successful
-in founding a kingdom, to be worked as a relief province
-for Badajos, he would never come back at all. Some day
-there would be found the traces of a white man’s encampment,
-amid tribes of natives as yet unknown—the shreds of
-tents, the waggonette wheels, the scattered articles of plate,
-and the more ordinary utensils of the white man. From
-beneath a spreading tree would be exhumed the bones of the
-leader of the party. Such would be the memorials of a
-pioneer and explorer, who was never known to turn back or
-confess himself unsuccessful.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As to the labour question, Dick Evans and his wife were
-indispensable now, more than ever, as the brothers had resolved
-not to remain <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>in statu quo</em></span>. Wilfred had determined
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>to organise an expedition, and to take the greater part of the
-herd with him. In such a case it would have been suicidal
-to deprive themselves of Dick’s services, as, of course, he
-would be only too eager to make one of the party. He
-cheerfully submitted to a diminution of wages, stating that as
-long as he and the old woman had a crust of bread and a
-rag to their backs they would stand by the captain and the
-family.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘If we could only get through the winter,’ he said, ‘I
-shouldn’t have no fear but we’d box about down south with
-the cattle till we dropped on a run for them. There’s a lot
-of fine country beyond the Snowy, if we’d only got a road
-over the mountains to it. But it’s awful rough, and the
-blacks would eat up a small party like ours. I don’t hardly
-like the thoughts of tacklin’ it. But what I’m afraid on is,
-that if the winter comes on dry we’ll have <em>no cattle to take</em>.
-They’re a-gettin’ desprit low now, and the lake’s as good as
-dried up.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The outlook was gloomy indeed when even the sanguine
-Dick Evans could make no better forecast. But Wilfred
-was the sailing-master, and it did not become him to show
-hesitation.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We must do our best, and trust in God, Dick,’ he said.
-‘This is a wonderful country for changes; one may come in
-the right direction yet.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As for Andrew and Jeanie, they would not hear of taking
-any wages until times improved. They had cast in their lot
-with the family, and Jeanie would stay with her mistress and
-the girls, who were dear to her as her own children, as long
-as there was a roof to shelter them.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Andrew fully recognised it as a ‘season of rebuke and
-blasphemy.’ He who ordered the round world had, for inscrutable
-reasons, brought this famine upon them. Like
-the children of Israel, he doubted but they would have to
-follow the advice given in 1 Kings xviii. 5: ‘And Ahab
-said to Obadiah, Go into the land, unto all fountains of
-water, and unto all brooks; peradventure we may find grass
-to save the horses and mules alive, that we lose not all the
-beasts.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And did they?’ asked Guy.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Nae doot; as maist like we shall do gin we use the same
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>means as gracious Elijah. No that I’m free to testify that I
-conseeder the slayin’ o’ the prophets o’ Baal a’thegither a
-needcessity. It wad have been mair wiselike on the pairt o’
-Elijah to have disestablished their kirk and garred them
-lippen a’ their days to the voluntary principle. But let that
-flee stick to the wa’; dinna doot, laddie, that ae day the
-heavens will be black wi’ clouds, and there will be a great
-rain.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Perhaps the one of the whole party most to be pitied was
-Howard Effingham. With the eagerness of a sanguine
-nature, he had become fixed in the idea that the prosperity
-with which they had commenced was to be continuous. Inspired
-with that belief he had, as we have seen, commenced
-to indulge himself with the reproduction, on a small scale, of
-the pleasant surroundings of the old country. He had
-fancied that the production of cattle, cheese, butter, bacon,
-and cereals would go on almost automatically henceforth, with
-a moderate amount of exertion on Wilfred’s part and of
-supervision on his own. It was not in his nature to be
-absorbed in the money-making part of their life; but in the
-acclimatisation of birds, beasts, and fishes, in the organisation
-of the Hunt Club, in the greyhound kennel, and in the stable
-his interest was unfailing, and his energy wonderful.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Now, unfortunately, to his deep regret and mortification,
-he saw his beloved projects rendered nugatory, worthless, and
-in a manner contemptible, owing to this woeful season.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>What was likely to become of the fish if the lake dried up,
-as it showed every disposition to do? How was one to go
-forth fowling and coursing when every spare moment was
-utilised for some purpose of necessity?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As for the hounds, some arrangement would have to be
-made about feeding and exercising these valuable animals.
-The horseflesh was wanting, the time was not to be spared,
-the meat and meal were not always forthcoming. Terrible to
-imagine, the kennel was commencing to be an incubus and an
-oppression!</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In the midst of this doubt and uncertainty a letter came
-from a well-known sportsman, Mr. Robert Malahyde, keenest
-of the keen, offering to take charge of the hounds until the
-season became more tolerable. His district was not so
-unfavourably situated as the neighbourhood of Yass, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>from his larger herds and pastures he would be able to
-arrange the ‘boiler’ part of the management more easily than
-Mr. Effingham.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A meeting of the subscribers was quickly called, when it
-was agreed that the hounds be sent to Mummumberil till the
-seasons changed.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As for the pheasants and partridges, which had flourished
-so encouragingly during the first season, the curse of the time
-had fallen even on them. The native cat (dasyurus) had increased
-wonderfully of late. Berries and grass seeds were
-scanty in this time of famine. In consequence, the survival
-of the fittest, coupled with acts of highly natural selection,
-ensued. The native cats selected the young of the exotic
-birds, but few of the adult game seemed likely to survive this
-drought.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XX <br /> AN UNEXPECTED DEVELOPMENT</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>An expedition was to be organised in spring, and the stock
-removed, no matter where. It would be the only chance for
-their lives. As it was, the winter was fast coming upon them.
-Every blade of the ordinary herbage had disappeared. The
-nights commenced to lengthen. Frosts of unusual severity
-had set in. Even now it seemed as if their last hope might
-be destroyed and their raft dashed on the rocks ere it was
-floated.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But one morning Dick Evans came up to Wilfred, sadly
-contemplating the attenuated cows which now represented
-the once crowded milking-yard. He was riding his old mare,
-barebacked, with his folded coat for a saddle, and spoke with
-unusual animation.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I believe we’re right for the winter after all, sir. I never
-thought to see this, though old Tom told me he’d know’d it
-happen once afore.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What do you mean?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, I took a big walk this morning to see if I could
-find tracks of this old varmint. I thought she might be dead,
-but I warn’t satisfied, so I took a regular good cruise. I
-found some tracks by the lake, where I hadn’t been for some
-time, and there sure enough I finds my lady, as snug as a
-wallaby in a wheat patch. Look how she’s filled herself, sir.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred replied that the old mare appeared to have found
-good quarters.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘When I got to the lake, sir, I was reg’lar stunned. It was
-as dry as a bone, but through the mud there was a crop of
-“fat hen” comin’ up all over, miles and miles of it, as thick
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>as a lucerne field on the Hunter. The old mare was planted
-in a patch where it was pretty forrard. But it’s growin’ so’s you
-can see it, and there’ll be feed enough in a week or two for all
-our cattle and every hoof within twenty miles of the lake.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Wonderful news, Dick; and this “fat hen,” as you call
-it, is good and wholesome food for stock?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Can’t beat it, sir; first-chop fattening stuff; besides,
-there’s rushes and weeds growin’ among it. You may pound
-it, we’ll have no more trouble with the cattle for the winter,
-and they’ll be in good fettle to start south in the spring.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This was glorious news. It was duly related at the breakfast-table,
-and after that meal Wilfred and Guy betook themselves
-to the lake. There they beheld one of Nature’s
-wondrous transformations.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The great lake lay before them, dry to its farthermost
-shore. The headlands stood out, frowning in gloomy protest
-against the conversion of their shining sea into a tame
-green meadow. Such, in good sooth, had it actually become.
-Through the moist but rapidly hardening mud of the lake-surface
-millions of plants were pushing themselves with vigour
-and luxuriance, caused by the richness of the ooze from which
-they sprang. Far as the eye could see, a green carpet was
-spread over the lately sombre-coloured expanse. The leaves
-of the most forward plants were rounded and succulent, while
-nothing could be more grateful to the long-famished cattle
-than the full and satisfying mouthfuls which were in parts of
-the little bays already procurable.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Even now, guided by the mysterious instinct which sways
-the hosts of the brute creation so unerringly, small lots had
-established themselves in secluded spots, showing by their
-improved appearance how unusual had been the supply of
-provender.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What a wonderful thing,’ said Guy; ‘who would ever
-have thought of the old lake turning into a cabbage-garden
-like this? Dick says this stuff makes very good greens if
-you boil it. Why, we can let Churbett and the Benmohr
-people send their cattle over if it keeps growing—as Dick
-says—till it’s as high as your head. But how in the world
-did this seed get here? That’s what I want to know. The
-lake hasn’t been dry for ten years, that’s certain, I believe.
-Well, now, did this seed—tons of it—lie in the mud all that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>time; and if not, how was it to be sowed, broadcast, after the
-water dried up?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Who can tell?’ said Wilfred. ‘Nature holds her secrets
-close. I am inclined to think this seed must have been in
-the earth, and is now vivified by the half-dry mud. However
-it may be, it is a crop we shall have good cause to
-remember.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I hope it will pull us through the winter and that’s all,’ said
-Guy. ‘I mustn’t be done out of my trip down south. I want
-to find a new country, and make all our fortunes in a large
-gentlemanlike way, like Mr. St. Maur told us of. You don’t
-suppose he goes milking cows and selling cheese and bacon.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You mustn’t despise homely profits, Guy,’ said the elder.
-‘Some of the largest proprietors began that way, and you
-know that <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">“Laborare est orare,”</span> as the old monks said.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh yes, I know that,’ said the boy; ‘but there’s all
-the difference between Columbus discovering America, or
-Cortez when he climbed the tree in Panama and saw two
-oceans, and being the mate of a collier. I must have a try
-at this exploring before I’m much older. There’s such a lot
-of country no one knows about yet.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You will have your chance, old fellow, and your triumph,
-like others, I hope. But remember that obedience goes
-before command, and that Captain Cook was a boy in a
-collier before he became a finder of continents.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred found it necessary to ride over to Benmohr to
-arrange definitely about the time of departure. He had
-nearly reached the well-known gate when a horseman rode
-forward from the opposite direction. He was well mounted,
-and led a second horse, upon which was a pack-saddle.
-Both animals were in better condition than was usual in this
-time of tribulation.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Effingham was about to pass the stranger, whose bronzed
-features, half concealed by a black beard, he did not recall,
-when he reined his horses suddenly.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You don’t remember me, Mr. Effingham. I am on my
-way to the old place. I’ve got something to tell you.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It took more than another glance to enable him to
-recognise the speaker, and then it was a half-instinctive guess
-that prompted him to connect the bold black eyes and
-swarthy countenance with Hubert Warleigh.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>‘The same,’ said the horseman. ‘I saw you did not
-know me; most likely took me for a station overseer or a
-gentleman. I was a swagman when you saw me last, so I’m
-getting on, you see.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I beg you a thousand pardons,’ said Wilfred, shaking
-his hand cordially. ‘I did not know you at first sight; the
-beard alters your appearance, you must admit. I hope you
-are coming to stay with us. My father will be delighted to
-see you. He often speaks of you.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I thank him, and you too. If <em>my</em> father had been like
-him, I should have been a different man. But I had better
-tell you my business before we go farther. They say you
-are going to shift the cattle; is that true?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We start almost at once. But we haven’t settled the
-route.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘That’s just as well. I’ve found a grand country-side
-away to the south, and came to show you the way—that is,
-if you believe my story.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Look here,’ cried Wilfred excitedly, ‘come with me to
-Benmohr to-night, and we’ll talk it over with Argyll and
-Hamilton. We must hold a council over it. It’s near sundown,
-and I intended to stay there.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Hubert Warleigh drew back. ‘I don’t know either
-of them to speak to. The fact is, I have lived so much
-more in the men’s huts than the masters’ until the last
-few months, that I don’t fancy going anywhere unless I’m
-asked.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Come as my friend,’ said Wilfred impetuously. ‘It is
-time you took your proper position. Besides, you are the
-bearer of good tidings—of news which may be the saving of
-us all.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He allowed himself to be persuaded. So the two young
-men rode up to the garden gate, at which portal they were
-met by Argyll. Ardmillan and Neil Barrington were playing
-quoits on the brown lawn. Fred Churbett (of course) was
-reading in the verandah.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Let me introduce my friend, Mr. Hubert Warleigh,’ said
-Wilfred. ‘He has just come in from a journey, and I have
-prevailed on him to accompany me.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Most happy to see you, Mr. Warleigh,’ said Argyll, with
-cordial gravity. (He knew all about ‘Gyp’ Warleigh, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>had probably said contemptuous things, but accepted Wilfred’s
-lead, and followed suit.) ‘The man will take your horses.
-Effingham, you know your way to the barracks.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Hubert Warleigh followed his newly-acquired comrade
-into the building, where the appearance of matters indicated
-that some of the other habitués had been recently adorning
-themselves. Mrs. Teviot, however, promptly appeared on
-the scene with half-a-dozen towels, and supplies of warm
-water.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Weel, Maister Effingham, this is a sair time and a
-sorrowfu’. To think o’ a’ the gentlemen gangin’ clean awa’,
-and a’ the milch kye, puir things, into thae waste places o’
-the yearth, and maybe deein’ o’ drouth or hunger, and
-naebody to hae a crack wi’ but thae fearsome saavages
-‘It’s very hard upon all of us, Mrs. Teviot, but if it won’t
-rain, what are we to do? We can’t stay at home and let
-the cattle die. You know the Israelites used to take away
-their beasts in time of famine, and they seem to have had
-them pretty often.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘How do you do, Mrs. Teviot?’ said Warleigh. ‘How’s
-Wullie this dry weather? I suppose you forget me staying
-a night in the hut with old Tom Glendinning, three or four
-years ago.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Gude sake, laddie!’ said the old woman in a tone of
-deep surprise, ‘and is that you, clothed and in your right
-mind, like the puir body in the Book? And has some one
-casten oot your deevil? Oh, hinnie! but I’m a prood woman
-the day to see your father’s son tak’ his place amang gentlefolk
-ance mair. The Lord guide ye and strengthen ye in the
-richt path! Man, ye lookit sae douce and wiselike, hoo was
-I to ken ye, the rantin’ dare-deevil that ye were syne?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I have been living among the blacks, Mrs. Teviot,’ said
-the prodigal, with a transient glance of humour in his deep
-eye; ‘perhaps that may have improved me. But I am
-going to try to be a gentleman again, if I don’t find it too
-dull.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Aweel! The denner is dishen’ up the noo; dinna wait
-to preen yersels ower muckle,’ added the good old dame as
-she vanished.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In despite of her warning, her old acquaintance produced
-several articles of raiment from the large valise, which had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>been unstrapped from his led horse, and proceeded to change
-his dress. When they walked into the house Wilfred thought
-he had rarely seen a handsomer man.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>His clear, bronzed complexion, his classically cut features,
-his large dark eyes, with, what was then more uncommon
-than is the case now, a bushy, coal-black beard, made the
-effect of his countenance picturesque and striking in no
-ordinary degree.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>His tall and powerful frame, developed by toil and exercise
-into the highest degree of muscular strength, was perfect in
-its symmetry as that of a gladiator. His very walk showed
-the effect of years of woodcraft, with the hunter’s lightness of
-footstep, and firm, elastic tread. As he entered the dining-room
-there was a look of surprise, even admiration, visible on
-every face.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Mr. Warleigh,’ said Argyll, ‘allow me to make my friends
-known to you. Hamilton, my partner—Ardmillan—Forbes—Neil
-Barrington—Fred Churbett. Now, you are all
-acquainted. Dinner and Mrs. Teviot won’t admit of further
-formalities.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In despite of his former preferences for humble companionship,
-and his depreciation of his own manners and habitudes,
-Wilfred was pleased and interested by the unaffected bearing
-of his protégé during the dinner ceremony. He well knew
-all the men present by reputation, though they had no
-previous acquaintance with him, except, perhaps, as a stock-rider
-on a cattle-camp.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Without attempting to assume equality of language or
-mingle in discussion, for which his lack of education unfitted
-him, he yet bore himself in such self-possessed if unpretending
-fashion as impressed both guests and entertainers.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When the dinner was cleared away, and pipes were lit,
-in accordance with the custom of bachelor households
-(O’Desmond’s always honourably excepted), Wilfred Effingham
-thought the time favourable for opening the serious
-business of the evening.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I take it for granted,’ he said, ‘that we are all agreed
-to start for “fresh fields and pastures new” in a few days.
-Equally certain that we have not settled the route. Is that
-not so? Then let me take this occasion of stating that Mr.
-Warleigh has arrived from the farthest out station on the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>south, and that he is in possession of valuable information as
-to new country.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘By Jove!’ said Argyll, ‘that is the very thing we were
-discussing when you rode up, and are as far from a decision
-as ever. If Mr. Warleigh can give us directions, we ought to
-be able to keep a course moderately well—I mean with the
-aid of an azimuth compass.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Argyll would undertake to find the road to Heaven with
-that compass of his,’ said Ardmillan.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When the laugh had subsided, which arose from this
-allusion to a well-known habit of Argyll’s, who always carried
-a compass with him—even to church, it was asserted—and
-was wont to state that no one but an idiot could possibly
-lose his way in Australia who had sense enough to comprehend
-the points of that invaluable instrument—Hubert
-Warleigh said quietly, ‘I’m afraid the road to my country is
-a good deal like the road to h—ll, that is, in the way of
-being the most infernal bad line for scrub, mountain, and
-deep rivers I ever tackled, and that’s saying a good deal.
-But I promised Captain Effingham to do him a good turn
-when I got the chance, and when I heard of this dry season
-I came prepared to show the way, if he liked to send his
-stock over, and go myself. As you all seem to be in the
-same box, equally hard up, I don’t mind acting as guide.
-We’ll be all the better for going as a strong party, as the
-blacks are treacherous beggars and the tribes strong.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The road, you say, is as bad as bad can be,’ said Hamilton.
-‘I suppose the good country makes up for it when you get
-there?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I’ve seen all the best part of New South Wales,’ said the
-explorer. ‘I never saw anything that was a patch on it before.
-Open forest country, rivers running from the Snowy Mountains
-to the sea, splendid lakes, and a regular rainfall.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The last is better than all,’ said Hamilton. ‘One feels
-tired of working up to a decent thing, and then having it
-knocked down by a change of season. I, for one, will take
-the plunge. I am ready to start at once for this interesting
-country, where the rivers don’t dry up, the grass grows at
-least once a year, and rain is not a triennial phenomenon.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The same here!—and—I, and I,’ came from the other
-proprietors.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>‘I suppose there’s room enough for all of us; we needn’t
-tread on each other’s toes when we reach the land of
-promise?’ said Ardmillan.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Enough for the whole district of Yass and something to
-spare,’ said their guest. ‘I was only over a portion of it,
-but I could see no end of open country from the hill-tops.
-It’s a place that will bear heavy stocking—thickly grassed
-and no waste country to speak of. After you leave the
-mountains, which are barren and rough enough, you drop
-down all of a sudden upon thinly-timbered downs—marshy
-in places, but grass up to your eyes everywhere.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I like that notion of marshes,’ said Fred Churbett
-pensively. ‘I feel as I should enjoy the melody of the
-cheerful frog again. His voice has been so long silent in
-the land that I should hail him as a species of nightingale,
-always supposing that he was girt by his proper surroundings
-of the “sword-grass and the oat-grass and the bulrush by
-the pool.”’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘How was it you managed to drop across this delightful
-province, Warleigh?’ said Wilfred. ‘I should like to hear,
-if you don’t mind telling us, how you crossed the mountains
-towards the south. Old Tom and Dick Evans said they
-were inaccessible; that there was no good country between
-them and the coast.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Old Tom knew better,’ said their guest quietly. ‘We
-had a long talk the last time I was at Warbrok; he said
-then if any one could find a road for cattle the other side of
-the Snowy River, after you pass Wahgulmerang, he was dead
-certain there was any amount of fine country beyond, between
-it and the coast.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘How did he get to know?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It seems he was stock-keeping once on one of the
-farthest out runs, and a mate of his, who was “wanted” for
-some cross work or other, came along and asked him to put
-him away for a bit, till the police got tired of hunting him.
-The old man gave him some rations, and told him of a track
-through the gullies, which took him to the leading spur, by
-which, of course, he could get on to the table land. Only
-an odd white man or so had ever been there. After a week
-he got “tired of looking at forty thousand blooming mountains”
-(as he told Tom afterwards), and being a resolute
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>chap, with gun and ammunition, he thought he would make
-in towards the coast. Anyhow he was away all the winter.
-When he came back he told Tom that he had dropped in
-with a small tribe of blacks, who had taken to him. They
-spent the winter by the side of a great lake, fishing and
-hunting. There was plenty of fine grass country in all
-directions when you got over the main range.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And why did he come away from Arcadia?’ asked
-Argyll.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘From where?’ asked the unclassical narrator. ‘No;
-that wasn’t the name. It was Omeo. A grand sheet of
-water on a kind of hill-plain, with ranges all round, and one
-tremendous snow-peak you could see from anywhere. Well,
-he got tired of the whole thing—didn’t know when he was
-well off, like most men of his sort—so he made tracks back
-again. Old Tom didn’t believe all the story. But he
-thought afterwards that there must be something in it, and
-that it would be worth while some day to have a throw in
-and find the lake at any rate.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Then we are to suppose that you made the attempt and
-succeeded?’ said Ardmillan. ‘I confess that I envy you.
-But how did you manage by yourself?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You remember the day I left your place?’ said Gyp
-Warleigh, nodding to Wilfred. ‘I felt so savage and ashamed
-of myself that I determined to do something, or get rubbed
-out in the attempt. So I made through Monaro, crossed
-the Snowy River near Buckley’s crossing, and made straight
-for the foot of the big range. I was well armed, and had as
-much rations as I could carry. I knew the blacks were bad,
-but I had lived with more than one tribe, and thought I
-could manage them. I set myself to track the man old
-Tom spoke of. Of course, I’m a fair bushman,’ he added
-gravely. ‘I’ve never done anything else much all my life,
-so there’s no great credit in it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Had you no compass with you?’ inquired Argyll. ‘No?
-Then I differ from you in thinking there was nothing extraordinary
-in the adventure. Not one man in ten thousand
-would have risked it, or come out with his life.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What does a man want with a compass who can see the
-sun now and then?’ asked the Australian. ‘He can steer by
-the lie of the country, the course of the water, if he has
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>the bushman’s eye. I tracked up the old man’s mate, and
-found his first camp on the table land. It was easy after
-that. He couldn’t help but follow the leading range. It
-wasn’t such rough country after the first day. Game was
-plenty, so I lived well.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘How about the niggers?’ asked Churbett. ‘I should
-have felt too nervous to sketch or make any use of my
-opportunities. Fancy going to sleep at night and thinking
-you mightn’t want any breakfast!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I had a better chance than most men. I’m half a blackfellow
-myself in the way of knowing their language and
-most of their ways. I did one of their old men a service,
-and he taught me a secret that saved my life more than once.
-Still, I didn’t want to run across them if I could help it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I should have thought you couldn’t avoid them,’ said
-Hamilton. ‘They are great trackers, and have eyes like
-hawks.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I know that, but I could see their smokes a long way.
-I lay by during the day and travelled late and early. One
-day I climbed a tree on the top of a range, when I saw a
-cluster of snowy mountains, and on the far side of them the
-waters of a lake. I had found Omeo.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You must have felt like Columbus or Cortez gazing
-upon the two oceans,’ said Ardmillan. ‘What a grand
-sensation.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Columbus discovered America, didn’t he? The other
-chap I don’t remember hearing about. Well, I partly discovered
-Omeo, I suppose, and a bitter cold morning it was.
-I crawled down to the shore, and before I got there could
-see miles and miles of splendid open country, stretching
-away to the west. There were no more mountains; and as
-I pulled up next day, on the bank of a big river, I found
-myself surrounded by a tribe of blacks.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘They slew you, of course,’ said Fred Churbett. ‘Lights
-half turn, and slow music from the orchestra. What a
-dramatic situation! If they didn’t do that, Warleigh, what
-did they do?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It was a close shave, I tell you,’ said the hero of the
-adventure. ‘But they had just lost a fellow of about my
-age; so they adopted me, as luck would have it. I could
-patter their lingo a bit, for they talked a sort of Kamilaroi, in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span>which I could make myself understood. Anyhow I lived
-three or four months with them, and wandered nearer the
-coast. The country kept getting better, and the grass was
-something to see after this brickfield of a place. Towards
-spring my friends drew back to the Monaro side again,
-and one fine day I gave them the slip, and here I am now,
-good for the return trip. All I can do for any of you in the
-way of showing new country, you’re welcome to. I’m bound
-to Mr. Effingham and his father first of all. I’m their man
-till the exploring racket’s finished.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Gentlemen,’ said Argyll, rising to his feet oratorically,
-‘friends, countrymen, and fellow-pastoralists, I feel assured
-that you are all grateful for the unexpected turn our plans
-have taken, owing to the valuable information conveyed to
-us this night by my gallant and honourable friend, Mr.
-Hubert Warleigh. If he carries out his promise of acting
-as guide to us as far as this fair unknown land, I know you
-too well to think for one moment that he will be suffered
-to confer this benefit upon us gratuitously, the power to do
-which he has acquired at peril of his life. (Hear, hear.) I
-beg to move that every man present at this meeting pledges
-himself to contribute in kind, say at the rate of ten per cent
-of his number, with the object of forming a herd with which
-Mr. Warleigh may begin squatting life in the fine district he
-has been fortunate enough to discover.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The proposition was carried by acclamation. Further
-suggested by Neil Barrington, ‘that this meeting do drink Mr.
-Warleigh’s health,’ and Mrs. Teviot appearing with the
-‘materials,’ which included a bottle of Glenlivet, the suggestion
-was forthwith carried out.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Warleigh quietly declined the cheering beverage, and
-after a mild request that he would change his mind, no notice
-was taken of the eccentric proceeding. When at a tolerably
-late hour Wilfred and Hubert retired to the barracks, the
-greatest unanimity prevailed. They were provided with a
-goal and a guide. Nothing could be more satisfactory.
-From the first they would have a course, and when the
-difficulties of the road arose, they could, as a strong and
-united band, overcome ordinary obstacles, and protect themselves
-from known dangers.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On the following morning Wilfred returned to The Chase,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>having persuaded his newly-acquired friend to accompany
-him, not, however, without some difficulty.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You have no notion,’ he said, ‘how queer and strange
-I felt at Benmohr last night. I am the equal of any man
-there by birth, yet I could see that they were helping me
-not to feel out of place, knowing what they did. I couldn’t
-help thinking that I was like a stock-rider that comes in and
-stands twisting his cabbage-tree hat before the master and
-his friends, when he’s asked if everything will be ready for
-the muster next day, and if he’ll have a glass of grog.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But, my dear fellow, you could never look like that;
-your appearance—excuse me for alluding to it—gives you a
-great pull in society. After all, how many men are there
-who have had every advantage that education can give
-them, who chiefly hold their tongues, or say nothing worth
-listening to when they do speak.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Ah, but they understand things if they don’t talk; a
-poor ignorant devil like me, when he hears matters touched
-on, as happened last night, without any of them intending
-it, for they tried not to talk above me, knows no more than
-the dead what they are at. I feel as if I could cut my
-throat when it comes across me that, by other people’s
-neglect and my own folly, I have lost the best part of my
-birthright.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There’s time yet,’ said Wilfred, deeply touched by the
-sadness of the tone, in which this grand stalwart cadet of a
-good house bewailed the fate which had reduced him, mentally,
-to the condition of a bullock-driver.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You are young enough yet for anything; there is time
-enough and to spare for you to improve yourself. So don’t
-be downhearted. As I said before, your looks and your
-family name will carry you through anything.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘If I thought so,’ said the younger son, ‘I might do something,
-even now, to mend matters. And you really think that
-a man of my age could make himself as good at books as
-some of the men we have just met, for instance?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I <em>have</em> known men beginning late in life,’ said Wilfred,
-‘who passed stiff examinations, and when they commenced
-they could do little but read and write. Now you are steady
-and have full control over yourself, have you not?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘God knows!’ said his companion drearily. ‘I won’t go
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>so far as that; but I haven’t touched a drop of anything since
-your father shook hands with me at Warbrok, and I don’t
-intend, for seven years at any rate. I knelt down as soon as
-I was out of sight, and swore a solemn oath against anything
-stronger than tea. And so far I’ve kept it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Much surprised were all at The Chase when Wilfred and
-his companion rode up, and after a hurried introduction,
-passed on together to the former’s bedroom.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The young ladies endeavoured as much as possible to
-prevent themselves from gazing too uninterruptedly at the
-interesting quasi-stranger; but found it to be a difficult task.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In despite of the educational defects and social disabilities
-of Hubert Warleigh, there was about him a grandly unconscious,
-imperturbable expression, like that of an Indian chief,
-which suited well his splendid figure and bronzed features.
-He quietly addressed his host and answered a few questions
-with but little change of countenance, and it was only after
-an unusually playful sally on the part of Annabel that he
-relaxed into a frank smile, which showed an unblemished set
-of teeth, under his drooping moustache.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I feel as if he had been taken in battle, and we were
-holding him in captivity,’ said that sportive maiden, after the
-girls had retired to Mrs. Effingham’s room for their final
-talk.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘All stern of look and strong of limb</div>
- <div class='line in2'>The chieftain gazed around;</div>
- <div class='line'>And silently they looked on him</div>
- <div class='line in2'>As on a lion bound.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>He has just that sort of air—very picturesque, of course—for
-he is the handsomest man I ever saw; don’t you think
-so, Rosamond? I suppose he can read and write? What
-a cruel shame to have brought him up like that? Fancy
-Selden reared in such a way, mamma?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I can hardly fancy such a thing, my dear imaginative
-child,’ said the mother. ‘But how thankful we ought to be
-that we have been able to keep dear Selden at school, even
-in this trying time.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Effingham, who attributed the change which had
-taken place in Hubert Warleigh’s habits in some measure to
-his own exhortation, was very pleased and proud. He
-welcomed the young man into his family circle with warmth,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span>and in every way endeavoured to neutralise the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>gêne</em></span> of the
-position by drawing him out upon topics in which his personal
-experience told to advantage.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He constrained him to repeat the tale of his exploration,
-and dwelt with great interest upon his sojourn with the
-blacks, which, he said, deserved a place in one of Fenimore
-Cooper’s novels.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Annabel wanted to know whether there were any young
-men in the tribe who at all resembled Uncas. But Hubert
-had never heard of Chingachgook or of his heroic son.
-Magua and Hawkeye were as unknown to his unfurnished
-mind as the personages of the Nibelungen-Lied. So they
-were compelled to avoid quotations in their conversation, and
-only to use the cheapest form of English which is made. It
-was a matter of regret to these kind-hearted people when
-they made any allusion which they perceived to be as the
-word of an unknown tongue to the stranger within their
-gates. His half-puzzled, half-pained look was piteous to see.
-It was like that of some dumb creature struggling for speech,
-or blindly feeling for a half-familiar object.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To the artless benevolence of youth it would have been
-interesting to remedy the deficiencies of a nature originally
-rich and receptive, but void and barren from lack of ordinary
-culture. Mrs. Effingham, however, compelled to regard
-things from a matron’s point of view, was not sorry to think
-that this picturesque, neglected orphan would in a few days
-quit their abode for a long journey.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As the time drew near, and preparations were proceeded
-with, a great sadness commenced to overspread The Chase.
-Wilfred had never been absent for any lengthened period
-before, nor Guy for more than a week under any pretence whatever.
-He was frantic with delight at the change of plan.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I’m so glad that “Gyp” Warleigh is going with us, even
-if he hadn’t found this new district. Dick says he’s the best
-bushman in the country, and can go straight through a scrub
-and come out right the other side, without sun or compass
-or anything, just like a blackfellow. You see what a place
-I’ll have across the mountains after a year or two.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I wish it was not so far and so dangerous, my child, as
-I am sure it must be,’ said Mrs. Effingham, stroking the
-boy’s fair brow, as she looked sadly at the eager face, bright
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span>with the unquestioning hopes of youth. ‘You will enjoy the
-travel and adventure and even the risk, but think how
-anxious your poor mother and sisters will be!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, I’ll write by every chance,’ said Guy, anxious as a
-page who sees the knights buckle on armour for the first
-skirmish, not to be deprived of his share of the fray. ‘There
-will be lots of opportunities by people coming back.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What! from a place just discovered?’ said his mother,
-with a gentle incredulity.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Ah, but Dick says if it’s half as fine as Hubert Warleigh
-calls it—not that he’s a man to say a word more than it
-deserves—that it will be rushed like all new settlements with
-hundreds of people, and there will be a town and a post-office
-and all kinds of humbug in no time. People move
-faster in Australia than in that slow old Surrey.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You mustn’t say a word against our dear old home, my
-boy,’ said his mother, playfully threatening him, ‘or I shall
-fear your being turned into a backwoodsman, or at any rate
-something different from an English gentleman, and that
-would break my heart. But I hope plenty of tradespeople
-and farmers, and persons of all kinds, will come to your
-Eldorado. It will make it all the safer, and more comfortable
-for you all.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Farmers, mother!’ said the boy indignantly. ‘What are
-you thinking of? We don’t want any poking farmers there,
-taking up the best of the flats and the waterholes after we
-have found the country and fought the blacks for them. We
-can keep it well enough with our rifles. All I want is a good
-large run, and not to see a soul near it except my own stock-riders
-for years to come.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You are going to be quite a mediæval baron, Guy,’ said
-Annabel, who had stolen up and taken his hand in hers, the
-three hearts beating closely in unison. ‘I suppose you will
-set up a dungeon for refractory vassals.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I am sure he will be a good boy, and remember his
-mother’s teachings when she is far away,’ said the fond
-parent, as the tears filled her eyes, looking at the fair, bright-eyed
-face which she might never see more after the last wave
-of her hand—the last fond, lingering farewell, which was so
-soon to be.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Well it is for the young and strong, who go laughing and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span>shouting into the battle of life, as if there were no ambuscades,
-defeats, weary retreats, or hopeless resistance. Well for the
-sailor boy, who leaps on to the deck as if there were no wreck
-or tempest, fatal mermaid or dead men’s bones, beneath the
-smiling, inconstant wave! They have at least their hour of
-hot-blooded fight and stubborn resistance to relentless
-Destiny. But, ah me! how fares it with those who are left
-behind, condemned to dreary watchings, for tidings that
-come not—to sickening fears, that all too soon resolve themselves
-into the reality of doom? These are the earth’s true
-martyrs—the fond mother—the devoted wife—the loving
-sisters—the saddened father. Theirs the torture and the
-stake, sacrificed to which they are in some form or other, while
-life lasts.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XXI <br /> A GREEN HAND</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>Matters were well advanced for the road. The thousand-and-one
-trifles that are so easily forgotten before the commencement
-of a long journey, and so sorely missed afterwards,
-were nearly completed under the tireless tendance of
-Dick Evans. The three young men were chatting in the
-verandah, after a long day’s drafting, when a strange horseman
-came ‘up from the under world.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I wonder who it is,’ said Guy. ‘Not any of the Benmohr
-people, for they have no time to spare until they come
-to say good-bye. I should say all the other fellows were too
-hard at work. It’s a chance if Churbett and the D’Oyleys
-will be ready for a fortnight. He looks like a gentleman. It
-must be a stranger.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It is a gentleman, as you say,’ replied Hubert Warleigh,
-‘and not long from home, by the cut of his jib.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘How can you tell?’ asked Wilfred. ‘He is a tall man
-and has a gun, certainly, which last favours your theory.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I see,’ said Hubert, ‘a valise strapped to the back of
-his saddle; holsters for pistols, and top-boots. He is a “new
-chum,” safe enough; besides, when he got to the slip-rails, he
-took the top one down first.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You must be right,’ said Wilfred, smiling. ‘I used to
-disgrace myself with the slip-rail business. Who in the
-world can it be? He has come at the wrong time for being
-shown round, unless he wants an exploring tour.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The horseman rode up in a leisurely and deliberate
-fashion; a tall, fresh-complexioned man, whose blue eyes
-and dark hair reminded Wilfred of many things, and a half-forgotten
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_313'>313</span>clime. The lower part of the stranger’s face was
-concealed by a thick but not fully-grown beard; and as he
-advanced, with a look of great solemnity, and inquired
-whether he had the honour to see Mr. Wilfred Effingham,
-that gentleman, for the life of him, could not remember
-where he had set eyes upon him before.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘That is my name,’ said Wilfred. ‘Will you allow us to
-take your horse, and to say that we are very glad to see you?
-Guy, take this gentleman’s horse to the stable.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I thank you kindly. I believe that I have a letter of
-introduction somewhere to you, sir, from an acquaintance
-of mine in Ireland—a dissipated, good-for-nothing fellow,
-one Gerald O’More. I thought it might be as useful in
-Australia as the writing of a better man.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Gerald O’More was a friend of mine,’ said Wilfred
-coldly, with a frown unseen by the stranger, busily engaged in
-unfastening his multifarious straps and buckles. ‘There
-must be some mistake about the reputation.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It’s little matter,’ said the stranger coolly. ‘There’s
-hundreds in Ireland it would suit to the letter, and proud of
-it they’d be. Maybe it was Tom Ffrench I was thinking of—but
-it’s all as one. It’s thinking he was of coming out here
-himself, the same squireen.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I wish to Heaven he had,’ said Wilfred, with so hearty an
-accentuation that the stranger raised his head, apparently struck
-by the sudden emotion of his tone. ‘There is no man living
-I would as soon see this moment.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘So this wild counthry hasn’t knocked all the heart out of
-ye, Wilfred, me boy,’ said the stranger, holding out his hand,
-while such a smile rippled over his face as only a son of mirth-loving
-Erin can produce. ‘And so ye didn’t know your old
-chum because he had a trifle of hair on his face, and he
-coming ten thousand miles to make an afternoon call. I
-trust the ladies are well this fine weather, and haven’t had
-their bonnets spoiled by the rain lately.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred gazed for one moment at the now well-known
-features, the bright fun-loving eyes, the humorous curves of
-the lips, and then grasping both hands, shook them till his
-stalwart visitor rocked again.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Gerald, old man!’ he exclaimed in tones of the wildest
-astonishment, ‘is it you in the flesh? and how in the name
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_314'>314</span>of everything magical did you ever manage to leave green
-Rathdown and come out to this burned-up land of ours?
-But you are as welcome as a week’s rain—I can’t say more
-than <em>that</em>. To think that a beard should have altered your
-face so! But I had no more thought of seeing you here
-than our old host of Castle Blake.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘True for you! What a brick he was! God be with
-the days we spent there together, Will. Maybe we’ll see
-them again, who knows? Didn’t I find my way here like an
-Indian of the woods? ’Tis a great bushman I’ll make, entirely.
-And, in truth, there’s no life would suit me better. An Irishman’s
-a born colonist, half made before he leaves old Ireland.
-Was that your young brother that I used to make popguns
-for? What a fine boy he has grown!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Yes, that was Guy; he’s anxious, like you, to be a bold
-bushman. Let me introduce my friend Mr. Warleigh, the
-leader of an expedition we are all bound upon next week.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Very glad to meet Mr. Warleigh, I’m sure, and I hope
-he’ll be kind enough to accept me as a supernumerary—cook’s
-mate, or anything in the rough-and-ready line. I’m ready to
-ship in any kind of craft.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You don’t mean to say you would like to go with us,
-Gerald? We are bound for “a dissolute region, inhabited
-by Turks,” as your illustrious countryman expressed it. For
-Turks read blacks,—in their way just as bad.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Pardon me, my dear fellow, for the apparent disrespect;
-but you don’t fancy people come out to this unfurnished
-territory of yours to amuse themselves? What else did I
-come for but to work and make money, do you suppose?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Now I won’t have any explanations till I’ve shown you
-to my mother and the girls. How astonished they will
-be!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>They were certainly astonished. So much so, indeed, that
-Mr. O’More began to ask why it should be so much more
-surprising that he came than themselves.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But we were ruined,’ said Annabel, ‘and would not have
-had anything to eat soon, or should have had to go to Boulogne—fancy
-what horror!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And am I, Gerald O’More, such a degenerate Irish
-gentleman that I can’t be ruined as nately and complately
-as any ancestor that ever frightened a sub-sheriff?’ (Here
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_315'>315</span>they all laughed at his serio-comic visage.) ‘In sober
-earnest, I <em>was</em> ruined, not entirely by my own fault, but so
-handily that when the old place was sold there was nothing
-left over but the lodge at Luggie-law, where you and I used to
-fish and shoot and drink potheen, Wilfred, in cold evenings.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Why not live there, then? I’m sure we were snug
-enough.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Why not?’ said O’More—and as he spoke his features
-assumed a sterner, more elevated expression—‘because I
-wouldn’t turn myself into a poor gentleman, with a few hangers-on,
-and a career contemptibly limited either for good or evil.
-No! I’d seen many a good fellow, once the genial sportsman
-and boon companion, change into the lounger and sot. So
-I packed my gun and personal possessions, put the lodge in
-my pocket, and here I am, with all the world of Australia
-before me.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘A manly resolve,’ said Mr. Effingham, ‘and I honour
-you for it, my dear boy. You find us in the midst of a
-disastrous season, but those who know the land say that the
-next change must be for the better. You will like all our
-friends, and enjoy the free life of the bush before you are a
-month at it. Australia is said, also—though we have not
-found such to be the case lately—to be an easy country to
-make money in.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘So I have found already,’ said O’More.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘How?’ said everybody in a breath. ‘You can’t have had
-any experience in money-making as yet.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Indeed have I,’ said the newly-arrived one. ‘Why, the
-first day I came to Sydney I bought a half-broke, well-bred
-colt for a trifle, and as I came through Yass I exchanged him
-for the horse I am now riding and a ten-pound note.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What a wonderful new chum you must be!’ said Guy
-impulsively. ‘I’ve heard of lots that lost nearly all the cash
-they had the first month, but never of one who made any.
-You will be as rich as Mr. Rockley soon.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Amateur horse-dealing doesn’t always turn out so well.
-But I always buy a good horse when I see him. I shall get
-infatuated about this country; it suits me down to the
-ground.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The evening was passed in universal hilarity. Mr. O’More’s
-spirits appeared to rise in the inverse proportion to the distance
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_316'>316</span>which separated him from the Green Isle. Every one was delighted
-with his <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>naïveté</em></span> and resolves to do great things in the
-way of exploration. The expedition he regarded as an
-entertainment for his special benefit, declaring that if it had
-not been finally settled he would have got one up on his own
-account.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As good luck would have it, the Benmohr cattle escaped
-from the mustering paddock after they had been collected,
-and having ‘made back’ to fastnesses, which they had been
-permitted to occupy in consideration of the season, took some
-days in recapturing. So that yet another week of respite, to
-everybody’s expressed disgust but secret relief, was granted.
-Besides, Fred Churbett was not quite ready—he seldom was—and
-the D’Oyleys were just as well pleased to scrape up a
-few more of their outliers. There remained then ‘a little
-season of love and laughter’ for Mr. Gerald O’More to utilise
-in improving the acquaintance.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>And he was just the man to do this. He won old Dick’s
-good-will by the hearty energy with which he threw himself
-into the small labours which, of course—for who ever knew
-an overland journey quite provided for, or a ship’s cargo
-stowed away, on the appointed day of its departure?—remained
-to be got through. He had devoted himself <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>en amateur</em></span> to the
-duties of third mate on the voyage out, and, being a yachtsman
-of experience, entitled himself to the possession of a certificate,
-should he ever require, as he thought seriously was on the
-cards, to work his way home. In matters connected with
-ropes and fastenings he showed an easy superiority. Sailors
-are proverbially the most valued hands in Australia, from
-their aptitude to make the best kind of bushmen. Their
-adaptiveness to every kind of labour, grounded on the need
-for putting out their strength at the orders of a despotic
-superior, is a fine training for bush life. Having nautical
-tendencies superadded to recent experiences, Gerald O’More
-fulfilled these conditions, and was rated accordingly.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘He’s the makings of a fust-rate settler, that young gentleman
-is,’ said Dick Evans. ‘He’s a man all over, and can
-ketch hold anywhere. He’s got that pluck and bottom as he
-don’t know his own strength.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>His exuberant spirits by no means exhausted themselves
-during the labour of the day, when in check shirt and A.B.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_317'>317</span>rig he was in the forefront of the drafting, branding, loading,
-or packing which still went on. In the evening, after a careful
-toilette, he was equally tireless in his society duties, and
-kept all the lady part of the family entertained by his varied
-conversation, his songs, jokes, and tales of many lands. He
-struck up a great alliance with Annabel, who declared that he
-was a delightful creature, specially sent by Providence to raise
-their spirits in this trying hour.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It was well enough to talk lightly of the Great Expedition,
-but as the day approached for the actual setting out of the
-Crusade, deep gloom settled upon the inmates of The Chase.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred Effingham had never before quitted home upon
-any more danger-seeming journey than a continental trip or a
-run over to Ireland. He was passionately devoted to his
-mother and sisters, whom at that period of his life he regarded
-as the chief repositories, not only of all the virtues, but of all
-the ‘fine shades’ of the higher feminine character. By no
-means deficient of natural admiration for the unrelated
-daughters of Eve, he regarded his sisters with a love such as
-only that relation can furnish. With them he was ever
-thoughtful, fond, and chivalrous. For their comfort and
-advantage he was capable of any sacrifice. Rosamond,
-nearest to him in age, had been from childhood his close
-companion, and for her he would have laid down his life.
-These feelings were reciprocated to the fullest extent.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>And now he was going away—the dutiful son, the fond
-brother, the kindly, cheerful companion—away on a hazardous
-journey into an unknown, barbarous region, exposed to the
-dangers of Australian forest wayfaring. Guy, too, was on the
-march—the frank, fearless boy, idolised, as is the younger son
-ofttimes, with the boundless love with which the mother
-strains the babe to her bosom.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>He was the last of all, yet none</div>
- <div class='line in2'>O’er his lone grave may weep.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>He was not the <em>very</em> last, Selden and Blanche coming after,
-as was pointed out to Mrs. Effingham, when her tears flowed
-at Selden’s accidental quotation from ‘The Graves of a Household,’
-for these lines referred to one beneath the lone, lone
-sea, and even in the recesses of the bushland mourning over
-his grave would be possible.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_318'>318</span>‘Oh, my darling,’ said the tender mother, ‘do not jest on
-such a subject. How could I live were either of you to die
-in the wilderness? Why did this terrible season come to rob
-me of my sons? But promise me, promise me, both of you,
-as you love your mother, not to run unnecessary risks.
-Danger, ah me! I know there must be, but you will think of
-your poor mother, and of your father and sisters, and not
-needlessly court danger. Guy, you <em>will</em> promise me?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Don’t be so frightened, mother,’ said the younger son.
-‘I won’t go running after risks and dangers. Why, it’s ten
-to one nobody gets hurt. There are only blacks; and there’s
-no water to drown us, that’s one consolation.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When did generous youth perceive the possibility of
-danger until forced upon him by sudden stroke of fate?
-‘Whom the gods love die young’ is true in one sense, inasmuch
-as they escape the melancholy anticipations which
-cloud the joys of maturer life. For them trains never collide,
-nor coaches upset; sword-strokes are parried, and bullets go
-wide; ships founder not; disease is only for the feeble; they
-are but the old who die!</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred more truly understood the matron’s tender dread,
-and her reasons.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Don’t fret, my darling mother,’ he said as he clasped her
-hand, ‘I’ll look after Guy. You know he obeys me cheerfully,
-so far; and you know I am pretty careful. I will see
-he does nothing rash, and he will be always under my eye.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Remember, dear, I trust him to you,’ said Mrs. Effingham,
-returning her son’s fond clasp, but not wholly reassured,
-being of the opinion that what Wilfred considered careful
-avoidance of danger other people characterised as unflinching
-though not impetuous determination to get through or
-over any given obstacle.</p>
-
-<hr class='c013' />
-
-<p class='c001'>Off at last! The tearful breakfast is over. The long
-string of cattle has poured out of the mustering paddock
-gates, followed by Hubert Warleigh, with Duncan Cargill and
-Selden, who were permitted to help drive during the first
-stage; Mr. O’More, in cords and top-boots, with a hunting-crop
-in his hand, wisely declining a stock-whip for the present.
-His horse bears a cavalry headstall bridle, with a sliding
-bridoon rein—‘handy for feeding purposes,’ he says. He
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_319'>319</span>has yet to learn that, after a week’s cattle-driving, most horses
-may be trusted to graze with the reins beneath their feet,
-which they will by no means tread upon or run off with.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A couple of brown-faced youngsters, natives of Yass, have
-been hired, as road hands and to be generally useful, for the
-term of one year. These young persons are grave and silent
-of demeanour; have been ‘among cattle’ all their lives, and
-no exception can be taken to their horsemanship. They
-afford an endless fund of amusement to O’More, who forces
-them into conversation on various topics, and tries to imitate
-their soft-voiced, drawling monotone.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Dick Evans drives the horse-dray, destined to go no
-farther than the Snowy River, after which the camp equipment
-will be carried on pack-horses, the road being closed
-to wheels. They are now being driven with the cattle,
-accoutred with their pack-saddles and light loads to accustom
-them to the exercise.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Dick has had a characteristic parting with Mrs. Evans,
-who saw him prepare to depart without outward show of
-emotion.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Now mind you behave yourself, Evans, while you’re
-away, and don’t be running off to New Zealand, or the
-Islands, or anywheres.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘All right, old woman,’ said Dick, cracking his whip.
-‘You’ll be so precious fond of me when I come back that we
-shan’t have a row for a year afterwards.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘No fear; not if you was to stop away five year!’ retorted
-his spouse, with decision. ‘Take care as I don’t marry again
-afore you come back, if you hang it out too long.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Marry away and don’t mind me, old woman,’ returned
-the philosophical Dick; ‘<em>I</em> shan’t interfere with the pore
-feller. Leave us the old mare, that’s all. A good ’oss, that
-you can’t put wrong in saddle or harness, ain’t met with every
-day.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Here Mrs. Evans, seeing a smile on the faces of the
-listeners, began to think she was occupying an undignified
-position. Putting her apron to her eyes, with a feeble effort
-at wiping a few tears away, she solemnly told her incorrigible
-mate that she hoped God would change the wicked old heart
-of him, as wasn’t thankful for a good wife, as had cooked and
-worked for him, and been dragged about the country all these
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_320'>320</span>years, and now to be told she was worse than a brute beast!
-Here <em>real</em> tears came.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The mare can hold her tongue, at any rate,’ quoth Dick;
-‘and where’s the woman you can say as much of, barrin’ Mrs.
-Wilson of Ours, as was born deaf and dumb? But come, I
-didn’t mean to fret ye, and me on the march. Give us a buss,
-old woman! Now we part all reg’lar and military like. You
-know women’s not allowed with the rigiment in war time.
-Mind you take care of the missus and the young ladies, and
-keep a civil tongue in your head.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>With this farewell exhortation and reconciliation Dick
-shook off his spouse, and walked briskly away by the side of
-the team. The cattle, glad to feel themselves unchecked,
-struck briskly along the track. Wilfred and Guy came up at
-a hand-gallop, and took their places behind the drove. The
-first act of the migratory drama was commenced, with all the
-actors in their places.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The first day’s stage was arranged to reach only to a stock-yard
-near Benmohr. It was a longish day’s drive, but, being
-the first day from home, all the more likely to steady the
-cattle. Having got so far, and secured them inside the rails,
-with Dick and his team camped by the dam, Wilfred left Guy
-in charge and rode over, with O’More and Hubert Warleigh,
-to spend a last civilised evening at Benmohr. It was necessary
-for the latter, now recognised as the responsible leader of
-the expedition, to give Argyll, Hamilton, and the others instructions
-as to the route.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A fair-sized party was assembled around that hospitable
-board. All the men present had been actuated by the same
-feelings, apparently, as themselves, viz. with a trustworthy
-person in charge of the camp, they might as well enjoy themselves
-once more at dear, jolly, old Benmohr.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Hech! sae ye’re here to look at a body ance mair, Maister
-Effingham; and whatten garred you to list Maister O’More,
-and him juist frae hame, puir laddie, to gang awa’ and be
-killed by thae wild blacks?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I suppose you wouldn’t mind <em>my</em> being rubbed out, Mrs.
-Teviot,’ said Hubert. ‘It’s only gentlemen from England
-that are valuable. Imported stock, eh?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Noo, Maister Hubert, ye ken weel I wad be wae
-eneugh if onything happened to yer ain sell, though ye hae
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_321'>321</span>nae mither to greet for ye, mair’s the peety, puir lady! But
-your hands can aye keep your heed; and they say ye can
-haud ane o’ thae narrow shields and throw a spear as
-weel’s ony o’ the blacks. They’ll no catch <em>you</em> napping;
-but this young gentleman will maybe rin into ambushes and
-sic-like, like a bird into the net o’ the fowler.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Then we must pull him out again,’ said Hubert gravely.
-‘I hope you are not going to be rash, Mr. O’More. See how
-you will be missed.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I am aware, as I have not had the good fortune to
-live much in Australia,’ said Gerald, ‘that I must be made
-of sugar or salt, warranted to melt at the first wetting.
-But my hands have kept my head in an Irish fair, before
-now; and I think half-a-dozen shillelahs at once must be
-nearly as bad as a blackfellow’s club.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘They are deuced quick with the boomerang and nullah,’
-said Hubert; ‘you can hardly see the cursed things before
-they are on to you.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And a barbed spear is worse than all the blackthorns in
-Tipperary,’ said Wilfred; ‘so look out and don’t cast a gloom
-over the party by your early death. Mrs. Teviot, give me a
-parting kiss and your blessing, for that <em>is</em> the dinner-bell.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Maister Effingham!’ said the old dame, in accents of
-such unfeigned surprise and disapproval that all three men
-burst out laughing. ‘Eh, ye’re jist laughin’ at the auld
-woman, ye bad laddie; but ye ken weel that ye hae my blessing;
-and may the mercy and guidance o’ the Lord God of
-Israel bring ye a’ safe hame to your freends and relations—my
-gentlemen and a’, as I’m prayin’ for’t—and a bonnie day
-it will be when we see ye a’ back again—no forgetten that
-daft Neil Barrington, that gies me as muckle trouble as the
-hail o’ ye pitten thegither.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At the conclusion of this farewell ceremony with Mrs.
-Teviot, who indeed took a most maternal interest in the whole
-company, they hied themselves at once to the dining-room.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘So you are to join our party, Mr. O’More?’ said Hamilton.
-‘You could not have come at a better time to understand
-our bush life.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Awfully glad of the chance, I assure you,’ said that gentleman.
-‘It was the hope of something of the sort that brought
-me out. If this affair had not been on, I should have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_322'>322</span>fancied I had been induced to come to a new country under
-false pretences.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Why so?’ asked Forbes.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Because you are all so unpardonably civilised. I expected
-to sit upon wooden stools and eat biscuits and beef,
-to sleep in the open air, and to be returning fire with my
-pistols as I came up from the wharf. Instead of which (I
-will take turkey, if you please) I find myself here, at The
-Chase, and half-a-dozen other houses in the lap of luxury.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, come!’ said Forbes deprecatingly, ‘are you not
-flavouring the compliment a little too strongly?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I think Mr. O’More comes from the Emerald Isle,’ said
-Ardmillan. ‘May I ask if you have ever kissed the Blarney
-stone?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Of course; all Irishmen make a point of it. It abates
-their naturally severe tendencies. But joking apart, all you
-people live as well as most of us in the old country. Wilfred
-here can bear me out. If claret was a little more fashionable,
-I don’t see a pin to choose.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There will be a change of fare when we’re on the road,’
-said Fred Churbett. ‘Who knows when we shall see pale ale
-again? The thought is anguish; and those confounded
-pack-horses carry so little.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But think of the way we shall enjoy club breakfasts,
-clean shirts, evening parties, and all that, when we <em>do</em> get
-back,’ said Neil Barrington. ‘We shall be like sailors after a
-three years’ cruise. I must say I always envied <em>them</em>.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I think, if the company is unanimous,’ said Hamilton,
-‘that we might as well have a serious talk about the route.
-Captain Warleigh, as we must now call him, will be off early
-to-morrow, so the greater reason for proceeding to business.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I was going to remind you all,’ said Hubert, ‘that we
-ought to agree about our plans. It’s plain sailing across
-Monaro, though the feed is bad until we come to the Snowy
-River. Of course, we all go on to-morrow.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Which way?’ asked Hamilton.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Past Bungendore, Queanbeyan, and Micalago. We cross
-the Bredbo and the Eumeralla higher up, and go by the
-Jew’s flat, and Coolamatong.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We shall follow in a couple of days,’ said Argyll.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And I in three,’ said Forbes.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_323'>323</span>‘You needn’t follow in a string, unless you like,’ said their
-guide; ‘the feed will be cut up if one mob after the other
-goes over it. All the stock-riders hereabouts know the Monaro
-country, so you can travel either right or left of me, as long
-as you fetch up at Buckley’s Crossing, of the Snowy River.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What sort of a ford is it?’ inquired one of the D’Oyleys.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It’s always a swim with the Snowy,’ said the captain,
-‘summer and winter, and a cold one too, as I can witness.
-But the grass is better, though rough, after you cross, and we
-have an old acquaintance waiting there to join the party.
-He knows the country well.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Who the deuce is he?’ said Argyll. ‘We shall be well
-off for guides.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Not more than you will want, perhaps,’ said the leader.
-‘We’re not over Wahgulmerang yet. But the man is old
-Tom Glendinning—and a better bushman never saddled a
-horse. He has been living for some time at one of the
-farthest out stations, Ingebyra, and wants to join us. He asked
-me not to mention his name till we had actually started.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘So,’ said Wilfred reflectively, ‘the old fellow is determined
-to make his latter days adventurous. I see no
-objection, do you, Argyll? He and his history will be
-probably buried among the forests of this new country we
-are going to explore.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It cannot matter in any way,’ answered Argyll. ‘He
-will, as you say, most likely never return to this locality.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Many of the old hands have histories, if it comes to
-that,’ said Hubert, ‘and very queer ones too. But they
-have paid the price for their sins, and old Tom won’t have
-time to commit many more—if shooting an odd blackfellow
-or two doesn’t count.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Have we any more general instructions to receive?’ inquired
-Hamilton, who was, perhaps, the most practical-minded
-of the party.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Only these: we must all be well armed. Pistols are
-handy, and a rifle or a double barrel is necessary for every
-man of the party. We <em>may</em> have no fighting to do; but
-blacks are plentiful, big fellows, and fierce too. We must be
-able to defend ourselves and more, or not a man will come
-back alive. After we cross the Snowy River, I shall halt till
-you all come up; then we can join the smaller mobs of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_324'>324</span>cattle, so as to be close together in case of trouble. Everything
-will have to be packed from the Snowy; so it will be
-as well not to take more than is required.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You are fully prepared for all the privations of the road,
-Mr. O’More?’ asked Argyll. ‘They may strike you as severe
-after your late life at headquarters.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘That is the very reason, my dear fellow. You surely
-haven’t forgotten that when you were at home you fancied all
-Australian life to be transacted in the wilderness. I expected
-the wilderness; I demand the desert. With anything short
-of the wildest waste I shall be disappointed.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘That’s the way to take it,’ said Fred Churbett. ‘I had all
-those feelings myself when I arrived, but I was betrayed into
-comfort when I bought The She-oaks, and have hardly gone
-nearer to roughing it than a trip to the Tumut for store
-cattle.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There was a laugh at this, Fred’s tendency to comfort
-being proverbial; though, to do him justice, he was capable
-of considerable exertion when roused and set going.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Is this Eldorado of yours near the coast, Warleigh?’
-inquired Forbes. ‘If so, there will be sure to be good agricultural
-land, and some kind of a township will spring up.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I believe there’s a passage from the lakes to the sea,
-near which would be a grand site for a township. I hadn’t
-time to look it out. It gave me all I knew to get back.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What does any one want a town for?’ growled Argyll.
-‘Next thing, people will be talking about <em>farms</em>. Enough to
-make one ill. Are we going to risk our lives and shed our
-blood, possibly, for the benefit of storekeepers and farmers,
-to spoil the runs after we have won them?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Don’t be so insanely conservative, Argyll,’ said Forbes.
-‘Even a farmer is a man and a brother. We shall want
-some one to buy our raw products and import stores. We
-might as well give Rockley the office if we found a settlement.
-<em>He</em> would do us no harm.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Here there was a chorus of approbation.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Of course I except Rockley—as good a fellow as ever
-lived. But he holds peculiar views upon the land question,
-and might induce others to come over on that confounded
-farming pretence, which is the ruin of Australia.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The country I can show you, if we reach it, is large
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_325'>325</span>enough to hold all your stock and their increase for the
-next twenty years, with half-a-dozen towns as big as Yass.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘If this be the case, the sooner we get there the better,’
-said Hamilton. ‘You start in earnest to-morrow, and we
-shall follow the day after. I shall keep nearly parallel with
-you. Ardmillan comes next, then Churbett, lastly the
-D’Oyleys. We shall be the largest party, as to stock, men,
-and horses, that has gone out for many a day.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘All the more reason why we should make our mark,’
-said O’More. ‘I wouldn’t have missed it for five hundred
-pounds. I might have stayed in Ireland for a century
-without anything of the kind happening. I feel like Raymond
-of Antioch, or Godfrey of Bouillon. I suppose we
-shan’t meet to drink success to the undertaking every night.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘This is the last night we shall have <em>that</em> opportunity,’
-said Argyll. ‘Here come the toddy tumblers. The night
-is chilly, but it will be more so next week, when we are on
-watch or lying under canvas in a teetotal camp.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We can always manage a good fire, unless we are in
-blacks’ country,’ said Hubert; ‘that is one comfort; there’s
-any amount of timber; and you can keep yourselves jolly in
-a long night by carrying firewood.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Long before daylight Hubert Warleigh arose and awakened
-Wilfred. Their horses had been placed so as to be easily
-procurable, and no delay took place. The stars were in
-the sky. A faint, clear line in the east yet told of the
-coming dawn, as the friends rode forth from Benmohr gate
-and took the track to the scene of the last night’s camp.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When they reached the spot the sun had risen, and no
-one was on the ground but Dick Evans, who was in a
-leisurely way packing up the camp equipage, including the
-tent and cooking utensils.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Here’s the breakfast, Mr. Wilfred,’ he said cheerily; ‘the
-cattle’s on ahead. I kept back the corned beef, and here’s
-bread and a billy of tea. You can go to work, while I finish
-packing. I’ll catch up easy by dinner-time, though the
-cattle’s sure to rip along the first few days.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘This is a grand institution,’ said Gerald. ‘I wouldn’t
-say a toothful of whisky would be out of place, and the air
-so fresh; but sure “I feel as if I could lape over a house this
-minute,” as I heard a Connemara parlour-maid say once.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_326'>326</span>‘Nothing is more appetising,’ said Wilfred, ‘than a genuine
-Australian bush meal. A slice or two of meat, a slice of
-fresh damper, and a pot of tea. You may travel on it from
-one end of the continent to another.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘He was a great man that invented that same,’ said
-O’More. ‘Would there be a little more tay in the canteen?
-Beef and bread his unaided intellect might have compassed;
-but the tay, even to think of that same in the middle of the
-meal, required inspiration. When ye think of the portableness
-of it too. It was a great idea entirely!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Bushmen take it morning, noon, and night,’ said Warleigh.
-‘The doctors say it’s not good for us—gives us heartburn,
-and so on. But if any one will go bail for a man who drinks
-brandy and water, I’d stand the risk on tea.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘So I suspect. Even whisky, they do say, gets into the
-head sometimes. I suppose you never knew a man to kill
-his wife, or burn his house, or lame his child for life, <em>under
-the influence of tay</em>?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>An hour’s riding brought them to the cattle, which had
-just been permitted ‘to spread out on a bit of rough feed,’
-as the young man at the side next them expressed it. A
-marshy creek flat had still remaining an array of ragged
-tussocks and rushy growths, uninviting in ordinary seasons,
-but now welcome to the hungry cattle. They found Guy
-sitting on his horse in a leisurely manner, and keeping a
-sharp look-out on the cattle.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What sort of a night had you?’ said Wilfred. ‘Were
-they contented?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, pretty fair. They roared and walked round at first;
-then they all lay down and took it easy. Old Dick roused
-us out and gave us our breakfast before dawn. We had the
-horses hobbled short, and were on the road with the first
-streak of light. This is the first stop we have made.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘That’s the way,’ said Hubert. ‘Nothing like an early
-start; it gives the cattle all the better chance. Some of
-these are very low in condition. When we get over the
-Snowy, they’ll do better.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Shall we have a regular camp to-night,’ asked Guy, ‘and
-watch the cattle?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Of course,’ said Hubert; ‘no more yarding. It is the
-right thing after the first day from home.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_327'>327</span>‘And how long will the watches be?’ asked Guy, with
-some interest. ‘If I sleep as soundly as I did last night, I
-shan’t be much good.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, you’ll soon come to your work. Boys always sleep
-sound at first, but you’ll be able to do your four hours without
-winking before we’ve been a week on the road.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The ordinary cattle-droving life and times ensued from
-this stage forward. They passed by degrees through the
-wooded, hilly country which lies between Yass and Queanbeyan,
-all of which was so entirely denuded of grass as to be
-tolerably uninteresting.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>By day the work was tedious and monotonous, as the
-hungry cattle were difficult to drive, and the scanty pasture
-rendered it necessary to take advantage of every possible
-excuse for saving them fatigue.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At night matters were more cheerful. After dark, when
-the cattle were hemmed in—they were tired enough to rest
-peacefully—Guy had many a pleasant talk by the glowing
-watch-fires. This entertainment came, after enjoying the
-evening meal, with a zest which only youth and open-air
-journeying combined can furnish.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As for Gerald O’More, he examined and praised and
-enjoyed everything. He liked the long, slow, apparently
-aimless day’s travel, the bivouac of the night, the humours
-of the drovers. He ‘foregathered’ with all kinds of queer
-people who visited the camp, and learned their histories. He
-felt much disappointed that there were no wild beasts except
-the native dog and native bear (koala), neither of which had
-sufficient confidence in themselves to assume the offensive.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The next week was one of sufficient activity to satisfy all
-the ardent spirits of the party. In the first place, the cattle
-had to be driven across the river, the which they resisted with
-great vehemence, never before having seen a stream of the
-same magnitude. However, by the aid of an unlimited
-quantity of whip-cracking, dogging, yelling, and shouting, the
-stronger division of the herd was forced and hustled into the
-deep, swift current. Here they bravely struck out for the
-opposite side, and in a swaying, serpentine line, followed by
-the weaker cattle, struggled with the current until they
-reached and safely ascended the farther bank.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_328'>328</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XXII <br /> INJUN SIGN</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>Having crossed their Rubicon, and being fairly committed to
-the task of exploration, a provisional halt was called, and
-arrangement for further progress made. One by one the
-other drovers arrived, and having successively swum the
-river, guarded or ‘tailed’ their cattle until the plan of
-campaign was fully matured.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Duncan Cargill was sent back with the team. The
-contents of the waggon, which, in view of this stage, had been
-economised as to weight, were distributed among the pack-saddles.
-Such apportionment also took place among the
-other encampments. Dick Evans as usual distinguished
-himself by the neat and complete manner in which he arranged
-his packs.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wheeled carriages being impossible because of the
-nature of the country, it is obvious that nothing but the
-barest necessaries can be conveyed—flour, tea, sugar,
-camp-kettles large enough to boil beef, billy-cans, frying-pans,
-quart-pots, axes, and the ruder tools, with the blankets of the
-party, are all that can be permitted. Meat—indifferent as to
-quality, but wholesome and edible—they had with them.
-Each man carried his gun, on the chance of a sudden attack
-by blacks. It would be obviously unreasonable to ask the
-enemy to wait until the pack-horses came up, even supposing
-that guns could be safely carried in that fashion. So each
-man rode with his piece slung carbine-fashion, and if he had
-such weapon, his pistols in the holsters of the period.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Reasonable-sized, but by no means luxurious, tents were
-carried, in which those who were off watch could repose, also
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_329'>329</span>as shelter against rain, if such a natural phenomenon should
-ever again occur in Australia.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A few days sufficed to make all necessary arrangements,
-during which Hubert Warleigh’s prompt decisions extorted
-universal respect.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The country is partly open, as you see, for another
-hundred miles,’ said he, ‘but after that, turns very thick and
-mountainous. The Myalls will soon be on our tracks, and
-may go for us any time. What we have to do, is to be
-ready to show fight with all the men we can spare. The
-feed’s mending as we go on.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Certainly it is,’ said Hamilton. ‘Our cattle are fresher
-than they were a week since.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘My idea is to box the cattle into larger mobs, which will
-give us more men to handle if we fight. We can draft them
-by their brands when we get to the open country. The driving
-will be much the same and the men less scattered about.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘A good proposal,’ said Argyll. ‘It will be more sociable,
-and, as you say, safer in case of a surprise. But are you
-certain of an attack? Will all these precautions be necessary?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I know more of the Myall blacks of this country than
-most men,’ said Warleigh gravely. ‘You see, we are going
-among strong tribes, with any amount of fighting men. Big,
-well-fed fellows too, and fiercer the farther you go south.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘How do you account for that?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The cold climate does it and the living. Fish and game
-no end. It’s a rich country and no mistake. When you see
-it, you won’t wonder at their standing a brush to keep it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What infernal nonsense!’ said Argyll. ‘Just as if the
-brutes wouldn’t be benefited by our occupation.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘They won’t look at it in that light, I’m afraid,’ said Fred
-Churbett. ‘History tells us that all hill-tribes have exhibited
-a want of amiability to the civilised lowland races. In
-Scotland, I believe, to this day, the descendants of a rude
-sub-variety of man pride themselves upon dissimilarity of
-dress and manners.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What!’ shouted Argyll, ‘do you compare my noble
-Highland ancestors with these savages, or the lowland
-plebeians who usurped our rights? As well compare the
-Norman noble with the grocer of Cheapside. Why——’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_330'>330</span>‘May not we leave the settlement of this question till we
-are more settled ourselves?’ said Wilfred. ‘Our present
-duty is to be prepared for our Australian Highlanders, who,
-as Warleigh knows, have a pretty taste for ambuscades and
-surprises.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It was decided that Wilfred and the Benmohr men should
-mix their cattle and take the lead, followed by Churbett and
-the D’Oyleys, which, with Ardmillan’s and Neil’s, would
-make three large but not unwieldy droves. It must be borne
-in mind that five hundred head of cattle was considered a
-large number in those primitive times, and that, although the
-road was rough and the country mountainous, the added
-number of stock-riders which the co-operative system permitted
-gave great advantages in droving.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Fred Churbett and Gerald O’More struck up a great
-intimacy, dissimilar as they were in temperament and constitutional
-bias. The unflagging spirits and ever-bubbling
-mirth of the Milesian were a constant source of amusement
-to the observant humorist, while Fred’s tales of Australian
-life were eagerly listened to by the enthusiastic novice.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>For days they kept the track which led from one border
-station to another, finding no alteration from their previous
-experience of wayfaring. But one evening they reached a spot
-where a dense and apparently interminable forest met, like a
-wall, the open down which they had been traversing. ‘Here’s
-Wargungo-berrimul,’ said Hubert Warleigh, ‘the last settled
-place for many a day. We strike due south now, towards
-that mountain peak far in the distance. A hundred miles
-beyond that lies the country that is to make all our fortunes.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Wasn’t it here old Tom Glendinning was to join us?’
-said Wilfred.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Yes; it was here I picked up the old fellow as I came
-back, with my clothes torn off my back, and very little in
-my belly either. He swore he would be ready, and he is
-not the man to fail in a thing of this sort. By Jove! here
-the old fellow comes.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A man on a grey horse came down the track which led
-from the station huts to the deep, sluggish-looking creek.
-Such a watercourse often follows the windings of the outer
-edge of a forest, defining the geological formations with
-curious fidelity.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_331'>331</span>A few minutes brought the withered features of the ancient
-stock-rider into full view. He looked years older, and his
-eyes seemed unnaturally bright. His figure was bowed and
-shrunken since they had seen him last, but he still reined
-the indomitable Boney with a firm bridle-hand; and not
-only did Crab follow him, but two large kangaroo dogs, red
-and brindled as to colour, followed at his horse’s heels.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘My sarvice to ye, Mr. Wilfred,’ he said, touching his hat
-with a gesture of old days. ‘So ye were bet out of Lake
-William and the Yass country at last. Well, ’tis a grand
-place ye’re bound for now. To thim that gits there, it’s a
-fortune—divil a less!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Very glad to have you again, Tom. I hope the country
-will bear out its character. What a fine pair of dogs you
-have there!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘’Tis thrue for ye, Master Wilfred; they’re fast and savage
-divils—never choked a dingo. ’Tis little they care what
-they go at, from a bull to a bandicoot, and they’d tear the
-throat out of a blackfellow, all the same as an old-man
-kangaroo.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Formidable animals, indeed,’ said Wilfred. ‘Gerald,
-here are a couple of dogs warranted to fight like the bloodhounds
-of Ponce de Leon.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The situation is becoming dramatic,’ said O’More. ‘I
-shouldn’t mind seeing the wild man of the woods coursed
-by these fellows, if we could be up in time to stave off the
-kill. But what splendid dogs they are! taller and more
-muscular than the home greyhounds, with tremendous chests
-and shoulders—very fine drawn too. They must have a cross
-that I don’t know of.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Thrue for you, sir. I heard tell that their mother—a
-great slut entirely—came from a strain of Indian dogs that
-was brought to Ingebyra by the ould say-captain that took it
-up. He said it was tigers they hunted in India.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Polygar dogs, probably,’ said Wilfred. ‘There is a fierce
-breed of that name used by the Indian princes; the packs,
-in their wild state, worry a tiger now and then. However
-that may be, they are fine fellows. How did you get them,
-Tom?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The old man attempted a humorous chuckle as he replied:</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Sure, didn’t they nearly ate the super himself last week,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_332'>332</span>and him comin’ in on foot after dark, by raison that his
-horse knocked up at the four-mile creek. “Tom,” he says,
-“as you’re goin’ out to this new country, you can take them
-two infernal savages with you. I’d a good mind to shoot
-the pair of them. But the blacks will likely kill the lot of
-you, so it will save me the trouble.” “All right,” says I, “my
-sarvice to ye, sir. Maybe we’ll show the warrigals a taste of
-sport before they have the atin’ of us.” So here we are—ould
-Tom Glendinning, Boney and Crab, Smoker and
-Spanker—horse, fut, and dthragoons. ’Tis my last bit of
-overlanding, I’m thinkin’. But I’d like to help ye to a good
-run before I go, Mr. Wilfred, and lay me bones where ye’d
-have a kind word and a look now and agen at the grave of
-ould hunstman Tom.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The camp was always early astir. The later watchers
-took good care to arouse the rest of the party at the first
-streak of dawn. Dick Evans and Tom were by that time
-enjoying an early smoke. Hubert Warleigh, tireless and
-indefatigable, needed no arousing. In virtue of his high
-office, he was absolved from a special watch, as more advantageously
-employed in general supervision of the party.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Argyll, wonderful to relate—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Whose soul could scantly brook,</div>
- <div class='line'>E’en from his King a haughty look,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>was so impressed by the woodcraft of this grand-looking, sad-voiced
-bushman, that to the wild astonishment of his friends
-he actually submitted to hear his opinions confuted.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As they plunged into the sombre trackless forest, where
-the tall iron-bark trees, with fire-blackened stems, stood
-ranked in endless colonnades, they seemed to be entirely at
-the mercy of their lately-gained acquaintance. He it was
-who rode ever in the forefront, so that the horsemen on the
-right and left ‘lead’ could with ease direct their droves in
-his track. He it was who decided which of two apparently
-similar precipices would prove to be the ‘leading range,’
-eventually landing the party upon a grassy plateau, and not
-in a horrible craggy defile. He it was who gauged to a
-quarter of an hour the time for grazing, and so reaching a
-favourable corner in time to camp. He saw the pack-saddles
-properly loaded, apportioned the spare horses, and commanded
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_333'>333</span>saddle-stuffing. Did a tired youngster feel
-overcome by the desire of sleep, so strong in the lightly-laden
-brain of youth, allowing his side of the drove to
-‘draw out,’ he was often surprised on waking to see them
-returning with a dark form pacing silently behind them.
-Did a tricky stock-rider—for they were not all models of
-Spartan virtue—essay to shirk his just share of work, he
-found a watchful eye upon him, and perhaps heard a reminder,
-couched in the easily comprehended language of ‘the droving
-days.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Before they had been a week on the new division of their
-journey, every one was fain to remark these qualities in their
-leader.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I say, Argyll,’ said Fred Churbett, who, with Ardmillan
-and Neil Barrington, had ridden forward from the rearguard,
-leaving it to the easy task of following the broad trail of the
-leading herd, ‘how about going anywhere with that compass
-of yours? Could you steer us as Warleigh does through
-this iron-bark wilderness?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I am free to confess, Fred, that it does good occasionally
-to have the conceit taken out of one. You must admit,
-however, that he has been over the ground before. Still, he
-seems to have a kind of instinct about the true course when
-neither sun nor landmarks are available, which travellers
-assert only savages possess. You remember that dull, foggy
-day? He had been away only an hour when he said we
-were making a half-circle, and so it proved.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And the confounded scrub was so thick,’ said Ardmillan,
-‘that I tore the clothes off my back hunting up a pack-horse.
-But for the tracks, I knew no more than the dead where I
-was.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘This half-savage life he has lived has developed those
-instincts,’ said Churbett. ‘He could do a little scalping
-when his blood was up, I believe. I saw him look at that
-cheeky ruffian Jonathan as if he had a good mind to break
-his neck. Pity he missed the education of a gentleman.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘He is ignorant, of course, poor chap, from no fault of
-his own,’ said Argyll; ‘but he is not to be called vulgar
-either. Blood is a great, a tremendous thing; though he
-doesn’t know enough for a sergeant of dragoons, yet there is
-a grand unconsciousness in his bearing and a natural air of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_334'>334</span>authority now that he is our commanding officer, which he
-derives from his family descent.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>That night they reached the base of a vast range, which,
-on the morrow, they were forced to ascend; afterwards, still
-more difficult, to descend. This meant flogging the reluctant
-cattle every step of the downward, dangerous track. Above
-them towered the mountain; below them the precipice, stark
-and sheer, three hundred feet to the granite boulders over
-which the foaming Snowy rolled its turbulent course to the
-iron-bound coast of a lonely sea.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Churbett and others of the party had a grievance
-against Destiny, as having forced them from their pleasant
-homes to roam this trackless wild, but no such accusation
-was heard from the lips of Gerald O’More. His spirits
-were at the highest possible pitch. Everything was new,
-rare, and delightful. The early rising was splendid,
-the droving full of enjoyment, the scenery enthralling,
-the watching romantic, the shooting splendid, the society
-characteristic. He made friends with all the men of
-the party, but the chosen of his heart was old Tom,
-who discovered that O’More had known of his old patron
-in Mayo. He thereupon conceived a strong liking and
-admiration for him, as a ‘rale gintleman from the ould
-counthry.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Daily the old man recounted legends of the early days of
-colonial life, and instructed him in the lore of the sportsmen
-of the land. So when the cattle were ‘drawing along’
-quietly, or feeding under strict guardianship, Tom and he
-would slip off with the dogs, which generally resulted in a
-kangaroo tail baked in the ashes for the evening meal, a brush
-turkey, or a savoury dish of ‘wallaby steamer’ for the
-morning’s breakfast.</p>
-
-<hr class='c013' />
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred’s watch was ended. He was anxious enough to
-find his couch in the tent, where he could throw himself
-down and pass instantly into the dreamless sleep which comes
-so swiftly to the watcher. But he saw their leader move off
-on his round, with his usual stately stride, as if sleep and
-rest were superfluous luxuries.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The morn arose, tranquil, balm-breathing, glorious. As
-the cattle followed the course of a stream through the still,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_335'>335</span>trackless forest, a feeling of relief, amounting to exhilaration,
-pervaded the whole party. It was generally known that the
-outskirts of the wilderness would be reached that evening—that
-ere another day closed they might have a glimpse of
-the long-sought land of promise.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Every one’s wardrobe was in a dilapidated and unsatisfactory
-condition. The horses were jaded, the cattle leg-weary, the
-men tired out, with the dismal monotony of the wilderness.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The stage of this day was unusually short; indeed, not
-above half of the usual distance. The leader, Hubert,
-wished the rearguard to close up, in case of accidents. In
-the event of a surprise, they must have their whole available
-force within call.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As is customary, there were dissentients. ‘Why lose half
-a stage?’ ‘Why not send a scout forward? The wild men
-of the woods might, after all, be peaceably inclined.’ This
-last suggestion was Argyll’s, who, always impatient, could
-with difficulty brook the slow, daily advance of the leading
-drove. The impetuous Highlander, who had not hitherto
-had experience of hand-to-hand fighting with the wild tribes
-of the land, was inclined to undervalue the danger of an
-attack upon a well-armed party.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But Hubert Warleigh, in this juncture, showed that he
-was not disposed to surrender his rights as a duly appointed
-leader. ‘I am sorry we don’t agree,’ he said; ‘but I take
-my own way until we reach the open country. As to the
-blacks, no man can say I was ever afraid of them (or of anything
-else, for that matter), only I know their ways. You
-don’t, of course, and I think it the right thing to be well
-prepared. Old Tom saw a heavy lot of tracks yesterday—all
-of fighting men too, not a gin or a picaninny among
-them. He didn’t like the look of it. We must camp as
-close as we can to-night, and keep a bright look-out, or
-Faithfull’s men won’t be all they’ll have to brag about.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Argyll thought these were groundless fears; that they were
-losing time by remaining in this hopeless wilderness longer
-than was necessary. But he was outvoted by the others.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Meanwhile the first drove, after having been fed until
-sundown, was camped in a bend of the sedgy creek, and the
-usual watch-fires lighted. This spot was peculiarly suitable,
-inasmuch as the long line of an outcrop of volcanic trap,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_336'>336</span>which ran transversely to the little watercourse, closed one
-side of the half-circle. This was not, of course, an actual
-fence, but being composed of stone slabs and enormous
-boulders, did not invite clambering on by the footsore cattle.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The other contingent was camped a short distance in the
-rear, in an angle of the lava country, also thickly timbered.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>With the lighting of the watch-fires and the routine
-attention to the ordinary duties of the camp, a more tranquil
-spirit pervaded the party. Argyll’s impatience had subsided,
-and, with his usual generosity, he had taken upon himself the
-task of making the round of the camps, and seeing that the
-order as to each man having his firearms ready, with a supply
-of cartridges, was carried out. Fred Churbett grumbled a
-good deal at having to take all this trouble for invisible or
-problematical savages.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘By me sowl, thin, Mr. Churbett,’ said old Tom, ‘if ye
-had one of their reed spears stickin’ into ye for half a day, as
-I had wanst, you’ld never need twice tellin’ to have yer gun
-ready, like me, night and day. ’Tis the likes of me knows
-them, and if it wasn’t for Gyp Warleigh, it’s little chance some
-of yees ’ud have to see yer friends agin.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Don’t you think he’s frightening us all?’ said Gerald
-O’More, with a careless laugh. ‘They must be wonderful
-fellows, by all accounts. They have no bows and arrows, not
-even wooden swords, like Robinson Crusoe’s savages. Surely
-they don’t hit often with these clumsy spears of theirs.
-Warleigh’s anxiety is telling upon his nerves.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Old Tom glared wrathfully into the speaker’s eyes for a
-little space before he answered; when he did, there was an
-air of bitter disdain, rarely employed by the old man in his
-intercourse with gentlemen.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Sure ye don’t know the man, nor the craytures yer
-spakin’ about, half as well as ould Crab there. Why would ye,
-indade, and ye jist out of the ship and with the cry of the
-Castle Blake hounds still in yer ears. It’s yerself that will
-make the fine bushman and tip-top settler in time, but yer
-spoilin’ yerself, sir, talkin’ that way about the best bushman
-between this and Swan River, I don’t care where the other is.
-Take care of <em>yerself</em> then, Mr. O’More, when the spears
-begin flyin’, and don’t get separated from the party, by no
-manner of manes.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_337'>337</span>‘You may depend upon me, Tom,’ said O’More, with a
-good-humour that nothing was apparently able to shake.
-‘My hands were taught to keep my head. I have been in
-worse places than this.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Bedad, if ye seen a blackfellow steadyin’ his womrah to
-let ye have a spear at fifty yards, or comin’ like a flash of
-lightning at ye wid only his nullah-nullah, ye’d begin to doubt
-if ye iver <em>wor</em> in a worse place.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There’s something in this country that alters the heart of
-an Irishman,’ said O’More, ‘or I’d never hear one talk of a
-scrimmage with naked niggers as if it was a bayonet charge
-at a breach.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There’s Irishmen that’s rogues. I’m never the man to
-deny there’s fools among them,’ said the old man sardonically.
-‘Maybe we’ll know who’s right and who’s wrong by this time
-to-morrow. My dogs has had their bristles up all day, and
-there’s blacks within scent of us this blessed minit, if I know
-a musk-duck from a teal.’</p>
-
-<hr class='c013' />
-
-<p class='c001'>How fades the turmoil and distraction of daily thought
-beneath the cool, sweet, starry midnight! As each man
-paced between the watch-fires, gazing from time to time
-towards the recumbent drove, the silent, dark, mysterious
-forest, the blue space-eternities of the firmament, a feeling of
-calm, approaching to awe, fell on the party. High over the
-dark line of the illimitable forest rose towering snow-clad
-pinnacles, ghostly in their pallid grandeur. The rivulet
-murmured and rippled through the night-hush, plainly
-audible in the oppressive silence.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘One would think,’ said Argyll to O’More, as they met on
-one of their rounds by a watch-fire, ‘that this night would
-never come to an end. What possesses me I can’t think, but
-I have an uncanny feeling, as Mrs. Teviot would say, that I
-cannot account for. If there was a ghost possible in a land
-without previous occupation, I should swear that one was
-near us this minute.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Do you believe in ghosts then?’ asked O’More.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Most certainly,’ said Argyll, with cheerful affirmation;
-‘all Highlanders do. We have our family Appearance—a
-spectre I should recommend no man to laugh at. But that
-something is going to happen I will swear.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_338'>338</span>‘What on earth <em>can</em> happen?’ said O’More. ‘If it be
-only these skulking niggers, I wish to Heaven they would
-show out. It would be quite a relief after all this humbug
-of Warleigh’s and that old fool of a stock-rider.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The old man’s no fool,’ said Argyll gravely; ‘and though
-I felt annoyed with Warleigh to-day, I never have heard
-a word against his courage and bushmanship. Here he
-comes. By Jove! he treads as silently as the “Bodach Glas”
-himself. What cheer, General?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Hubert held up a warning hand. ‘Don’t speak so loud,’
-he said; ‘and will you mind my asking you to stand apart
-and to keep a bright look-out till daylight? Old Tom and
-I and the dogs are agreed that the blacks are not far off. I
-only hope the beggars will keep off till then. I intend to
-get out of this tribe’s “tauri” to-morrow. In the meantime
-have your guns handy, for you never can tell when a blackfellow
-will make his dart.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I shouldn’t mind going into half-a-dozen with a good
-blackthorn,’ said O’More. ‘It’s almost cowardly to pull
-a trigger at naked men armed with sharp sticks.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Hubert Warleigh looked straight at O’More’s careless,
-wayward countenance for a few seconds before he answered;
-then he said, without sign of irritation:</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You will find them better at single-stick than you have
-any idea of. You are pretty good all round, but you can’t
-allow for their wild-cat quickness. As for the sharpened
-sticks, as you call them, if you get one through you, you
-won’t have the chance of saying where you would like
-another. Don’t go too near the rocks; and if they make a
-rush, we must stand them off on that she-oak hill.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And what about the cattle?’ asked Argyll.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Let them rip. Blacks can’t hurt them much. They
-may spear a few, but we can muster every hoof again inside
-of ten days. There are no other herds for them to mix with,
-and they won’t leave the water far. I must move round
-now, and see that the men are ready.’</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_339'>339</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XXIII <br /> THE BATTLE OF ROCKY CREEK</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>‘By Jove!’ said Argyll, ‘this looks serious. I must get away
-to my fire. We <em>must</em> stick to his directions. I’m in good
-rifle practice; they’ll remember me in days to come!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As O’More shrugged his shoulders and moved off, a
-shower of spears whistled through the air, while a chorus of
-cries and yells, as though from a liberated Inferno, rang
-through the woods along the line of the broken, stony
-country, though no human form could be seen.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The commotion created by this sudden onslaught, in
-spite of Hubert Warleigh’s precautions, was terrific. The
-startled, frantic cattle dashed through the watch-fires, scattering
-the brands and almost trampling their guardians underfoot.
-Then the heavy-footed droves rolled away, madly
-crashing through the timber, until the echo of their hoofs
-died away in the distance. Several head, however, had
-been mortally wounded, well-nigh transfixed in some cases.
-They staggered and fell.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At the first surprise of the onset, guns were fired with an
-instinctive desire of reprisal, but no settled plan of defence
-seemed to be organised. Then amid the tumult was heard
-the trumpet-like voice of Hubert Warleigh.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Every man to his tree; don’t fire till you are sure; look
-out for the rocks! Keep cool. We have only to stand
-them off for an hour. It’s near daylight.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>His words reassured all. And a shot which came from
-his double-barrelled rifle apparently told, as a smothered yell
-was heard from the cover.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Take that, ye murdtherin’ divils!’ said old Tom, who
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_340'>340</span>had crawled behind a fallen log, and now raising himself,
-poured three shots from a gun and a brace of horse-pistols
-into the enemy. ‘I seen one of ye go down thin, and it’s
-not the only one we’ll have this blessed night.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There’s number two,’ said Gerald O’More, as he rolled
-over a tall man with stripes of white and red pigment, who
-had dashed out for an instant.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well done, O’More!’ cried Hubert, with a cheery ring
-in his voice. ‘Make as much noise as you like now, but
-don’t give away a chance. Look out!’—as three spears
-hissed dangerously close—‘you’ll be hit if you don’t mind,
-and——’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Hang the brutes!’ shouted O’More. ‘We could charge
-if we could only see them. What do you think of it,
-Hamilton?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We shall come out straight,’ said that gentleman, with
-his customary coolness, ‘if we behave like disciplined troops
-and not like recruits. Pardon me, O’More, but this impetuosity
-is out of place. If one of us get hurt it may
-demoralise the men and give the blacks confidence.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Never fear,’ said the excited young man. ‘It’s not the
-front rankers that drop the fastest. By George!’ This
-half-ejaculation was elicited by a spear-point which, passing
-between the arm and body, grazed his side.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I told you so,’ said Hamilton. ‘Why the deuce can’t
-you behave reasonably! These imps of darkness can see
-us better than we see them. How they are yelling in the
-rear!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘That’s to draw us off,’ said Gerald. ‘I won’t go behind
-a tree now, if I was to be here for seven years. But that
-spear didn’t come far. It’s one they throw with the hand—old
-Tom taught me that much; I’ll have the scoundrel if I
-see the night out.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A sustained volley along the line from the main body of
-stock-riders at the rear, headed by Ardmillan, Neil Barrington,
-and Argyll, appeared to have told upon the enemy.
-More than one dying yell was heard. The spears were less
-constant, and though several blows and bruises had been
-inflicted by thrown boomerangs and nullahs, no serious
-casualty had occurred among the white men.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On the right wing of the advanced guard old Tom had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_341'>341</span>ensconced himself behind a huge fallen tree, which hid both
-himself and his dogs. These last growled ominously, but
-took no further part, as yet, in the fray.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>From behind his entrenchment the old man fired rapidly,
-from time to time loudly exulting, as a death-cry rang out on
-the night air or a spear buried itself in the fallen tree.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Throw away, ye infernal black divils!’ shouted the old
-man; and after the cautious stillness it was strange to hear
-the reckless tones echoing through the forest shades. ‘I’ll
-back the old single-barrel here against a scrubful of yees—always
-belavin’ in a little cover.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Tek it cool, full-private Glendinning,’ said Dick Evans,
-who had advanced in light-infantry skirmishing order from
-the rear. ‘Not so much talking in the ranks, and mark
-time when ye’re charging the inimy; it looks more detarmined
-and collected-like—as old Hughie Gough used to
-say. Please God, it’ll soon be daylight; perhaps they’d
-gather thick enough then to let us go at ’em with the
-bayonet like.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Maybe ye won’t be so full of yer pipeclay if ye gets one
-of thim reed spears into ye—my heavy curse on them! Mr.
-Hubert says he catched a sight of that divil’s-joynt of a
-Donderah; the thribe says he was niver known to lave a
-fight without a dead man’s hair.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘He don’t know white men yet,’ said Dick, ‘’ceptin’ he’s
-sneaked on to a hut-keeper. He’ll be taken down to-night if
-he don’t look out! Well done, Master Guy!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This exclamation was due to the result of a snapshot
-from Guy, who had drawn trigger upon a savage, who,
-bounding forward, had thrown two spears with wonderful
-rapidity, and bolted for his cover, his whole frame quivering
-with such intensity of muscular action, that the limbs were
-scarcely visible in the dim light. However, the keen eyes and
-ready aim of youth were upon him; he reached the scrub
-but to spring upward and fall heavily back, a dead man.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Although none of the whites had as yet been wounded,
-while several of their savage enemies had been disabled or
-killed outright, still the contest was unsatisfactory.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>They were uncertain as to the number of their enemies,
-who, concealed in the scrub, sent forth volleys of spears.
-Occasionally an outburst of cries and yells arose, so fiendishly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_342'>342</span>replete with hatred, that the listeners in that sombre forest
-involuntarily felt their blood curdle. For aught they knew,
-the tribe might be gradually surrounding them. Indeed,
-an attempt of this kind was made. But it was frustrated by
-their watchful leader, who charged into the darkness with a
-few picked men, and drove the wily savages back to the
-main body.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On this occasion he had caught a glimpse of the giant
-Donderah, whose cruelty had been a chronicle of the tribe.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I can’t make out where the big brute got to,’ he said to
-old Tom, ‘or I should be easier in my mind. He’s a crafty
-devil, though he’s so big and strong, and he has some superstition,
-they told me, about never going out of a fight without
-a death to his credit. He knows about me, too, though
-we never met. It wasn’t his fault that I got back alive. A
-black girl told me that. They named him after the mountain.
-There’s not a blackfellow from here to the coast that can
-stand before him, they say. If O’More doesn’t take care,
-he’ll have him as sure as a gun. I have half a mind to see
-if he has dropped flat in that stone gunya.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It happened just then that one of the lulls, common in
-savage warfare, took place. Hubert Warleigh flitted, noiseless
-and shadow-like, to another part of the camp, lest a
-diversion should be effected in a weaker spot.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Before changing position he gave instructions to old Tom,
-whose practised eye and ear could be depended upon, and
-whose distrust of the savage he knew to be proof against
-apparent security.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I’ll be back soon,’ he said, ‘for if Donderah did not fall
-back with the others, we are none of us too safe. I’ve known
-him drag a man out, with half a tribe close to his heels.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Old Tom was much of the same opinion, for at the
-border stations tales of the Myall blacks were told by the
-aboriginals employed about the place. The exploits of the
-Titanic Donderah, ‘cobaun big fellow and plenty boomalli
-white fellow,’ had attained Homeric distinction.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The old man peered keenly through the dim glades, and
-listened as he bent forward, still sheltered by his tree, and
-resting one hand upon the neck of the dog Smoker, whose
-low growling he strove to repress.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Bad scran to ye,’ he said, ‘do ye want every murdtherin’
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_343'>343</span>thief of the tribe to know the tree I’m under? Maybe <em>he’s</em>
-not far off, and ye’re winding him. I never knew yer tongue
-to be false, or I’d dhrive in the ribs of ye. Ha, ye big divil!’
-he screamed, ‘ye’re there afther all; ’twas a bould trick of ye
-to hide in that stone gunya. Ye nearly skivered that gay
-boy from the ould country. Holy saints! sure he’s a dead
-man now! Was there ever such a gommoch!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This uncomplimentary exclamation was called forth by
-the apparition of a herculean savage, who leaped out of the
-lava blocks of the rude, circular miami—a long-abandoned
-dwelling-place, probably a century old, and but slightly raised
-above the basaltic rocks of the promontory. Starting up, as
-if out of the night, he flung two spears at the only white man
-unsheltered. Like a diving seal he cast himself downwards,
-and was again invisibly safe.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>One of the javelins nearly made an end of Gerald O’More.
-It was from such weapons, hurled with a sinewy arm, that the
-half-dozen cattle in the camp had fallen. They found,
-next morning, that a spear, piercing the flank, had gone <em>clean
-through</em> an unlucky heifer, and passed out at the other side.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>However that may have been, Gerald the Dauntless was
-not the man to remain to be made a target of. Rushing
-forward, with a shout that told of West of Ireland associations,
-he charged the miniature citadel, determined to kill or
-capture his enemy. Before he reached the apparently
-deserted gunya, a dark form might have been observed by
-eyes more keen for signs of woodcraft, to worm itself, serpentlike,
-along the path which O’More trod heedlessly.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As if raised by magic from the earth, suddenly the huge
-Donderah stood erect in his path, and with the bound of a
-famished tiger, sprang within Gerald’s guard. The barrel of
-his fowling-piece was knocked up, and with one tremendous
-blow the Caucasian lay prone upon the earth. His foe
-commenced to drag him within the circle of the (possibly)
-sacrificial stones.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But before he could effect his purpose, a hoarse cry caused
-the savage to pause and falter. Hubert Warleigh, with his
-gun clubbed, was bounding frantically towards the triumphant
-champion.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But the distance was against the white man, though his
-panther-like bounds reduced the race to a question of seconds.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_344'>344</span>‘Hould on, Mr. Hubert!’ yelled old Tom, who had
-quitted his coign of vantage, followed by the excited dogs, no
-longer to be restrained. ‘Sure, we’ll have him, the murdtherin’
-thafe. The others is fell back, since thim two dropped to
-Mr. Hamilton’s pay-rifle—more power to him. Here, boys!
-hould him! hould him! Smoker! Spanker! soole him!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The old man yelled like a fiend; and as the startled
-savage saw the grim hounds stretching to the earth in full
-pursuit of him, he dropped his prey in terror of the unaccustomed
-foe.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘At him, Spanker! hould him, Smoker!’ screamed the
-old man, ‘tear the throat of him. Marciful Saver! did any
-one ever see the like of that! But I’ll have the heart’s blood
-of ye, if ye were the Diaoul out of h—l, this—night.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This mixture of religious adjuration and profanity from
-the lips of the excited old stock-rider was elicited by another
-cast of the fatal dice.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As the brawny savage glanced at the dogs, which were
-rapidly nearing him, and upon the powerful form of Hubert
-Warleigh, who bade fair to challenge him before he could
-reach his covert, loaded as he was, he unwillingly relinquished
-his victim. With a couple of bounds he reached
-the gunya, where, crouching behind the largest boulder, he
-awaited the attack. But it was not like Hubert Warleigh to
-leave the wounded man. Stooping for a moment, he raised
-O’More in his arms, with a violent effort threw him across
-his shoulder, and marched towards the encampment.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As he half turned in the effort, the savage raised himself
-to his full height, and, poising a spear, stood for a moment as
-if uncertain whether he should expend its force upon the old
-stock-rider and his dogs or against his white antagonist.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At that moment a yell from the main body of blacks
-showed that they had been forced to retreat. He was
-therefore separated from his companions, towards whom the
-wary stock-rider was advancing with a view of cutting him
-off.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Look out!’ shouted the old man to Hubert, as he marked
-the savage take sudden aim. ‘By——! he’ll nail you!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At the warning cry Hubert swung half round, turning his
-broad breast to the foe and shielding his unconscious burden
-as best he might. The wild warrior drew himself back for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_345'>345</span>an instant, and then—like a cloth-yard shaft from a strong
-yew bow—the thin, dark, wavering missile sped only too
-truly. Deeply, venomously it pierced the mighty chest, beneath
-which throbbed the true and fearless heart of Hubert
-Warleigh. Freeing one hand, he broke the spear-shaft across
-like a reed-stalk, and without stay or stagger strode forward
-with his burden.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As the last battle scene was enacted, the dawn light struggled
-through a misty cloud-rack, and permitted clearer view of
-the tragedy to the rank and file of the expedition.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When the deadly missile struck their leader, a wild shout
-broke from the whites, and a charge in line was made
-towards the stone gunya, immediately in the rear of which the
-main body of the natives had collected for a desperate stand.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As if in answer, a strange, unnatural cry, half human
-only, burst upon their ears. They turned to behold a singular
-spectacle. Carried away by his exultation at the triumph of
-his aim and his revenge upon the foeman who had baulked
-him of his prey, the champion of a primeval race lingered
-ere he turned to flight in the direction of his companions.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He was too late. The bandogs of destiny were upon
-him, grim, merciless, with red glaring eyes and gleaming
-fangs. In his attention to his spear he had forgotten to pick
-up his nullah-nullah (or club), with which he would have
-been a match for any canine foe. A few frantic bounds
-were made by the doomed quarry as the eager dogs looked
-wolfishly up into his terror-stricken countenance. Another
-step, and the red dog, springing suddenly, seized his throat
-with unrelaxing grip, while Spanker’s sharp tusks sank into
-his flank, tearing at the quivering flesh as he fell heavily upon
-the earth.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Whoo-whoop, boys! Whoop!’ screamed old Tom,
-breathless and excited to the blood-madness of the Berserker.
-‘That’s the talk. Worry, worry, worry! good dogs,
-good dogs! At him Spanker, boy, ye’re blood up to the
-eyes. Stick to him, Smoker, throttle him like a dingo. How
-the eyes of him rolls. Mercy be hanged!’ he replied in
-answer to the protest of one of the men. ‘What mercy did
-he show to Mr. Hubert, and him helpless, with that gossoon
-in his arms? Maybe ye didn’t think of the harm ye were
-doing, ye black snake that ye are,’ he continued, apostrophising
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_346'>346</span>the writhing form, which the ruthless hounds dragged
-to and fro with the ferocity of their kind; the brindle dog
-revelling in the dreadful banquet, wherein his head was ever
-and anon plunged to the glaring eyes, while the red hound
-held his fell grip upon the lacerated throat.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Maybe it’s kind father to ye to dhrive yer spear through
-any mortial craychur that belongs to a strange thribe, white
-or black. There’s more like ye, that’s had betther tachin’, so
-I’ll give ye a riddance out of yer misery. And it’s more than
-ye’d do for me av ye had me lyin’ there under the fut of ye.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>With this closing sentiment, nearer to recognition of a
-sable brother than he had ever been known to exhibit, the
-old stock-rider raised his gun. ‘Come off, ye divils! d’ye hear
-me, now?’ he said, striking the brindle dog heavily with his
-gun, who then only drew off, licking his gory lips and looking
-greedily at the bleeding form; while the red dog, more
-obedient or less fell of nature, relinquished his hold at the
-first summons.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Ye’ve had yer punishment, I’ll go bail, in this world,
-whatever happens in the next,’ said the old man grimly, as
-he pulled the trigger of his piece in a matter-of-fact manner.
-The charge passed through the skull of the mangled wretch,
-who, leaping from the earth and throwing out his arms in the
-death agony, fell on his face with a crash.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There’s an ind of ye,’ said the ruthless elder. ‘The
-blood of a betther man will be cowld enough before the
-day’s out. Come away, dogs, ye’ve had divarshion enough
-for one huntin’. Sure, they’re far away—the black imps of
-Satan,’ he said, as he listened intently to a distant chorus of
-wailing cries. ‘It’s time to get the camp in order. I
-wonder when we’ll git thim bullocks agin?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It was indeed time to comply with the old man’s
-suggestion. Leaving the quivering corpse, the men turned
-away with a sense of relief, to commence their less tragic
-duties. At the camp much was to be arranged; all disorder
-was rife since the attack.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Huddled together were heaps of flour-bags, camp-kettles,
-and pannikins. The tents were overthrown, torn, and bedraggled.
-The frantic cattle had stampeded over the spot
-chosen with circumspection by the cook, as the strewn débris
-of beef and damper witnessed.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_347'>347</span>The horses were nearly all absent—some hobbled, some
-loose. Not a hoof of the horned herd was to be seen. Everything
-in the well-ordered camp, so lately presenting a disciplined
-appearance, seemed to have been the sport of evil genii.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Worse a hundredfold than all, beneath a hastily pitched
-tent, tended with anxious faces by his comrades, was stretched
-a wounded man, whose labouring breath came ever thickly
-and more blood-laden as the sun rose upon the battlefield,
-which secured for the white man one of the richest provinces
-of Australia. Yes! the stark limbs were feeble, the
-keen eye was dim, the stout heart was throbbing wildly, or
-feebly pulsating with life’s waning flame. Hubert Warleigh
-lay a-dying! His hour was come. The hunter of the hills,
-the fearless wood-ranger, was helpless as a sick child. The
-weapon of his heathen foe had sped home.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Argyll, Hamilton, Ardmillan, and the others stood around
-his rude pallet with saddened hearts. Each voice was
-hushed as they watched the spirit painfully quitting the
-stalwart form of him whom they had all learned to know
-and to trust.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We have bought our country dearly,’ said Wilfred, as a
-spasm distorted the features of the dying man and caused
-his strong limbs to quiver and writhe. Over his chest was
-thrown a rug, redly splashed, which told of the death-wound,
-from which the life-blood welled in spite of every attempt to
-staunch it. Beside him sat Gerald O’More, buried in deepest
-grief.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Better take the lie of the country from me,’ said the
-wounded man feebly. ‘One of you might write it down, with
-the bearings of the rivers, while my head keeps right. How
-hard it seems! Just made a start for a new country and a
-new life. And now to be finished off like this! The Warleigh
-luck all over. I might have known nothing could
-come of it, but——’ Here his voice grew choked and indistinct,
-while from the saturated wrappings the blood
-dripped slowly and with a dreadful distinctness upon the
-earthen floor. A long pause. Again he held up his hand.
-‘It will take every man that can be spared to get the
-cattle and horses together again. A week ought to do it;
-it’s easy tracking with no others about. You can knock up a
-“break” to count through. Make sure you’ve got the lot
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_348'>348</span>before you start away. Leave Effingham and Argyll with
-me. I’ll tell them about the course; you’re near the open
-country. I little thought when I saw it next I should be
-—should be—like this.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>They obeyed the dying leader to the last. All left the
-tent except Wilfred and Argyll. The success of the expedition
-depended on the cattle being recovered without loss of
-time. Though a monarch dies, the work of this world must
-go on. Few indeed are they for whom the wheels of the
-mighty machine can be stopped. Hubert Warleigh was the
-last man to desire it.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It’s no good stopping to “corroboree” over me,’ he
-said, with a touch of humour lighting up the glazing eye.
-‘It’s lucky you haven’t O’More to wake as well as me. You
-won’t laugh at blacks’ weapons any more, eh, Gerald?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Small laughing will do me for many a day, my dear boy.
-You have forgiven the rash fool that nearly lost his own life
-and wasted that of a better man? I deserve all I’ve got.
-But for you—cut off in the prime of your days, how shall
-I ever forget it? Forgive me, Hubert Warleigh, as you hope
-to be forgiven.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Here the warm-hearted passionate Milesian cast himself
-on his knees beside the dying man, and burying his face in
-his hands, sobbed aloud in an agony of grief and humiliation.
-‘Don’t fret over it, O’More,’ said the measured tones of the
-dying man. ‘It’s all in the day’s work. People always said
-I’d be hanged, you know; but I’m going off the hooks
-honourably, anyhow. <em>You</em> couldn’t help it; and, indeed, I
-was away when you charged that poor devil Donderah. I’m
-afraid old Tom’s dogs mauled him badly. But look here,’—turning
-to Wilfred,—‘you get a pencil and I’ll show you
-how the rivers run. There’s the Bogong Range—and
-the three rivers with the best country in Australia between
-them. When you come to the lower lakes, you can follow
-them to the sea. There’s an outlet, but it’s choked up with
-sand-bars. Somewhere near the mouth there’s a decent
-harbour and a good spot for a township. It will be a big
-one some day. Now you’re all right and can shift for yourselves.
-Effingham, I want to say a word to you before I go.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred bent over him and O’More and Argyll left the
-tent. ‘Come near me,’ he whispered, in tones which,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_349'>349</span>losing strength with the decay of life’s force, sounded hollow
-and dull. ‘I feel it so hard and bitter to die. I should
-have had a chance—my only chance—here, and as head
-explorer I might have risen to a decent position. Such a
-simple way to go under too. If that rash beggar hadn’t
-mulled it with Donderah I should have been right. Some
-men would have left him there. But I couldn’t do it—I
-<em>couldn’t</em> do it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Old Tom and his dogs avenged you,’ said Wilfred.
-‘They ate Donderah alive almost, before the old man shot
-him.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Poor devil!’ said the dying man; ‘so he came off worse
-than I did. Old Tom wouldn’t show him much mercy. I
-shan’t be long after him. Hang it! what a puff of smoke a
-fellow’s life is when he dies young. It seems the other day
-I was learning to ride at Warbrok, and Clem and Randal
-coming home from the King’s School for the holidays. Well,
-the three Warleighs are done for now. The wild Warleighs!
-wild enough, and not a paying game either. But I’m running
-on too fast about all these things, and my heart’s going,
-I feel. Are you sure you’ve got the chart all right, with the
-rivers and the lakes all correct—and the harbour——’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I think so. We can make our way to the coast now.
-But why trouble yourself about such matters? Surely they
-are trifles compared with the thoughts which should occupy
-your last moments?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I don’t know much about that,’ said the stricken bushman,
-raising himself for an instant and looking wistfully in his
-companion’s face. ‘If a man dies doing his duty he may as
-well back it right out. What gave me the only real help I
-ever had? Your father’s kind words and your family’s kind
-acts. They made a man of me. It’s on that road that I’m
-dying now, respected as a friend by all of you, instead of like
-a dog in a ditch or a “dead-house.” Now I have two
-things to say before I go. I want you to have the best run.
-It’s all good, but the best’s the best, and you may as well have
-it. I was to have my pick.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred made a gesture of deprecation, but the other continued,
-with slow persistence:</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You see where the second river runs into the third one?
-The lake’s marked near it on the south. There’s an angle of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_350'>350</span>flat country there, the grandest cattle-run you ever set eyes
-on. Dry, sheltered rises for winter; rich flats and marshes
-for summer. Naturally fenced too. I christened it “The
-Heart” in my own mind. It’s that shape. So you sit down
-there, and leave Guy on it when you go home. He’ll do
-something yet, that boy. He’s a youngster after my own
-heart. And there’s one more thing—the last—the very
-last.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Rest yourself, my dear fellow,’ said Wilfred, raising his
-head and wiping the death-damp from his forehead, as his
-eyes closed in a death-like faint. But the dying man raised
-himself unsteadily to a sitting position. An unearthly lustre
-gleamed in the dim eyes, the white lips moved mechanically,
-as the words, like the murmur of the breeze-touched shell,
-issued from them.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I told you I loved your sister Annabel. When I looked
-at her I thought I had never seen a woman before. Tell her
-she was never out of my head for one moment since the day
-I first saw her. Every step I made since was towards a life
-that should have been worthy of her. I would have been
-rich for her, proud for her, even book-taught for her sake. I
-was learning in spare moments what I should have known as
-a boy. She might never have taken to me—most likely not;
-but she would have known that she had helped to save a
-man’s life—a man’s soul. Tell her that this man went to his
-death, grieving most for one thing, that he should see her face
-no more. And now, give me your hand, Wilfred, for Gyp
-Warleigh’s time is up.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He grasped the hand held out to him with a firm and
-nervous clasp; then relinquishing it gradually, an expression
-of peace and repose overspread his face, the laboured breathing
-ceased. His respiration became more natural and easy,
-but the ashen hue of his face showed yet more colourless and
-grey. The tired eyes closed; the massive head fell back on
-the pillow of rugs; the lower portion of the features relaxed;
-a slight shiver passed over the frame. Wilfred bent closely,
-tenderly, over the still face. The faithful spirit of the last
-male heir of the house of Warleigh had passed away.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When the stock-riders returned that evening after the long
-day’s tracking and heard of their leader’s death, many a wild
-heart was deeply stirred. At day-dawn they dug him a deep
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_351'>351</span>grave beneath a mighty spreading mountain ash, and piled
-such a cairn above him that no careless hand could disturb
-the dead. As they removed his clothes for the last sad
-robing process, two small volumes fell from an inner pocket.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Ha!’ said Neil Barrington, ‘one of them is the book I
-saw him poring over that day. I wonder whether it’s a
-novel? By Jove, though, who’d have thought that? Why,
-it’s an old History of England. The poor old chap was
-getting up his education by degrees. It makes the tears
-come into one’s eyes.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Here the good-hearted fellow drew his handkerchief across
-his face.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_352'>352</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XXIV <br /> GYP’S LAND</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>The cattle were tracked down and regathered without difficulty.
-In the virgin forest no slot but their own could possibly
-exist. When they quitted the scene of their encounter,
-the explorers passed into a region of grand savannahs and
-endless forest parks, waving with luxuriant grasses. Each
-day awakened fresh raptures of admiration. But the rudest
-stock-rider never alluded to the ease with which they now
-followed the well-fed herd, without a curse (in the nature of
-an epitaph) upon those who had robbed them of a comrade
-and a commander.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘A magnificent country,’ said Argyll, as on the third day
-they camped the foremost drove on the bank of a broad river
-in the marshy meadows, on which the cattle spread out,
-luxuriating in the wild abundance of pasture; ‘and how
-picturesque those snow-peaks; the groves of timber, sending
-their promontories into the plains; the fantastic rocks! It
-is a pastoral paradise. And to think that the only man of
-our party who fell a victim should be poor Warleigh, the discoverer
-of this land of promise!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The way of the world, my dear fellow,’ said Ardmillan.
-‘The moment a man gets his foot on the threshold of success,
-Nemesis is aroused. Poor Gyp had been fighting against his
-demon for years, and had reached the region of respectability.
-He would soon have been rich enough to conciliate
-Mrs. Grundy. She would have enlarged upon his ancient
-birth, his handsome face and figure, with the mildest admission
-that he had been, years ago, a little wild. Of course he
-is slain within sight of his promised land.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_353'>353</span>‘We had all got very fond of him, and that’s the truth,’
-said Hamilton. ‘He was the gentlest creature, considering
-his tremendous strength—self-denying in every way, and so
-modest about his own endowments. It was very touching to
-listen to his regrets for the ignorance in which he had been
-suffered to grow up. I had planned, indeed, to supply some
-of his deficiencies after we were settled.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I should think so,’ said Fred Churbett. ‘I wouldn’t have
-minded doing a little myself. I don’t go in for “moral
-pocket-ankercher” business, but a man of his calibre was
-better worth saving than a province of savages. Amongst us
-we should have coached him up, in a year or so, fit to run for
-the society little-go; and now to think that one of these
-wretched anthropoids should have slain our Bayard!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What made it such a beastly shame,’ said Neil Barrington,
-‘is that we shall all get “disgustingly rich,” as Hotson said,
-and be known as the pioneers of Gyp’s Land (as the men
-have christened the district), while the real hero lies in a half-forgotten
-grave.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Time may make us as unthankful as the rest of the
-world,’ said Wilfred. ‘We can only console ourselves with
-the thought that we sincerely mourned our poor friend, and
-that Hubert Warleigh’s memory will remain green, long after
-recognition of his services has faded away. It has had a lasting
-effect upon O’More. The poor fellow believes himself to
-blame for the disaster. I have scarcely seen him smile
-since.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘He’s a good, kind-hearted fellow,’ said Fred Churbett,
-‘and I honour him for it. He told me that he never regretted
-anything so much in his life as disregarding Warleigh’s advice
-about the blacks. He said the poor chap made no answer
-to some stupid remarks about being afraid of naked savages,
-but smiled gravely, and walked away without another word.
-Yet, to save O’More’s life, he gave his own!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Whom the gods love die young,’ said Hamilton. ‘Some of
-us may yet have cause to envy him. And now, about the
-choice of runs. How are we to arrange that?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We are now in the good country,’ said Argyll. ‘Towards
-the coast, we shall all meet with more first-class grazing land
-than we know what to do with. I think no one should be
-nearer than seven miles or more than ten miles from any
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_354'>354</span>other member of the Association. I for one will go nearer
-to the coast.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And I,’ said Fred Churbett, ‘will stay just where I am.
-This is good enough for me, as long as I can defend myself
-against the lords of the soil.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>There was no difficulty in locating the herds of the
-association upon their ‘pastures new.’ In every direction
-waved the giant herbage of a virgin wilderness. There were
-full-fed, eager-running rivers, for which the melting snow at
-their sources furnished abundant supplies. There were deep
-fresh-water lakes, on the shores of which were meadows and
-headlands rich with matted herbage.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wild-fowl swarmed in the pools and shallows. Kangaroos
-were so plentiful that old Tom’s dogs ‘were weary at eve
-when they ceased to slay,’ and commenced to look with
-indifference upon the scarcely-thinned droves. Timber for
-huts and stock-yards was plentiful; so that axes, mauls, and
-wedges were soon in full and cheerful employment. Each
-squatter selected an area large enough for his stock for the
-next dozen years, keeping sufficiently close to his friends for
-visiting, but not near enough for complications. In truth,
-the rivers and creeks were of such volume that they easily
-supplied natural boundaries.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As for Wilfred and Guy, they carefully followed out the
-instructions of their lost friend, until they verified the exact
-site of the ‘run’ he had recommended to them. This they
-discovered to be a peninsula. On one side stretched the
-shore of a lake, and on the other a deep and rapid river flowed,
-forming a natural enclosure many miles in extent, into which,
-when they had turned their herd, they had little trouble in
-keeping them safely.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘My word!’ said Guy, ‘this is something like a country.
-Why, we have run for five or six thousand head, and not a
-patch of scrub or a range on the whole lot of it. Splendid
-open forest, just enough for shelter; great marshes and flats,
-where the stock are up to their eyes in grass and reeds. When
-the summer comes, it will be like a garden. It rains here
-<em>every year</em> and no mistake.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We are pretty far south,’ said Wilfred; ‘in somewhere
-about latitude 37—no great distance from the sea. That
-accounts for the climate. You can see by the blacks’ miamis,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_355'>355</span>which are substantial and covered with thatch, that a different
-kind of dwelling-place is necessary, even for the aboriginals.
-You will have to build good warm huts, I fancy, or the winter
-gales and sleet-storms will perish you.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You let me alone for that!’ said the ardent youngster.
-‘We shall have lots of time to work, as soon as the cattle are
-broken in and the working bullocks get strong. Our drays
-must come by sea; but sledges are all right for drawing split
-stuff. I shall build on that bluff above the lake. We can
-keep a good look-out there for the blacks, that they don’t
-come sneaking up by day or night. Oh, how jolly it all is!
-If I could forget about dear old Hubert, I should be perfectly
-happy.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I suppose we shall have to choose a site for the township.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Township!’ said Guy. ‘What do we want with a beastly
-township? Two public-houses and a blacksmith’s shop to
-begin with! The next thing will be that they will petition
-the Government to survey some land and cut it up in farms.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, that’s true,’ assented Wilfred, smiling at his impetuosity;
-‘but we must not be altogether selfish. Remember,
-there is a good landlocked harbour and a deep anchorage.
-A township is morally certain to be formed, and we may as
-well take the initiative. Besides, we promised Rockley to let
-him know if there was any opening for a mercantile
-speculation.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘That alters the matter,’ said Guy. ‘I would black old
-Billy’s boots if he was short of a valet—not to mention kind
-Mrs. Rockley, whom all the fellows would walk barefoot to
-serve. I may be mistaken, but you’re rather sweet upon
-Christabel, ain’t you? I’m not in the marrying line myself,
-but I don’t know a prettier girl anywhere.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Pooh! don’t talk nonsense, there’s a good fellow,’ said
-Wilfred with a dignified air. ‘There are miles of matters to
-be thought about before anybody—dark or fair. But you are
-right in your feelings about Rockley and his dear, kind wife,
-which makes me proud of my junior partner. We shall want
-somebody to buy and sell for us, to order our stores, etc.;
-and as nothing can come from Sydney on wheels, we shall
-have to get them from that new settlement they call Port
-Phillip, that we heard at the “Snowy” they were making such
-a talk about. We can’t escape a town; and as there is bound
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_356'>356</span>to be a chief merchant, we had better elect our own King
-William to that high office and dignity.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘With all my heart,’ said Guy; ‘only you frightened me at
-first, talking about a town. We haven’t come all this way—through
-those hungry forests and terrible cold rivers, not to
-mention the blacks—to be crowded out of our runs, for
-farmers.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You needn’t be alarmed, Guy. Remember, this district
-is a very large one. You will have twenty years’ squatting
-tenure, you may be sure, before an acre of your land is sold.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Guy was correct in his anticipations of the probability of
-there being water-carriage before long. The surplus hands,
-who were paid off and sent back to New South Wales, talked
-largely, as is their wont, about the wonderful new district.
-Port Phillip, just settled, had a staff of adventurers on hand,
-ready for any kind of enterprise. Within a few weeks a brig,
-with a reasonable supply of passengers, did actually arrive at
-the little roadstead, which had already been dignified with
-the title of The Port. There was the usual assortment of
-alert individuals that invariably turn up at the last new and
-promising settlement in Australia,—land speculators, storekeepers,
-gentlemen of no particular calling, waifs and strays,
-artisans and contractors. But among the babel of strange
-tongues resounded one familiar voice, the resonant cheery
-tones of which soon made themselves heard, to the great
-astonishment and equal joy of such of the wayfarers as had
-assembled at the disembarkation. Their old and tried friend,
-Mr. William Rockley, once more greeted them in the flesh.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, here you all are, safe and sound, except poor Gyp
-Warleigh!’ said that gentleman, after the ceremony of greeting
-and hand-shaking had been most cordially performed. ‘Most
-melancholy occurrence—terrible, in fact—heard of it at Port
-Phillip—all the news there, of course—very rising place. Ran
-down in the <em>Rebecca</em>, brig—nearly ran on shore too. Thought
-I’d come on and see you all; find out if anything was to be
-done. Nothing like first chance, at a new settlement, eh?
-Queer fellow, our captain; too much brandy and water.
-Catch me sailing with him after we get back.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Rockley added new life and vigour to the infant
-settlement. His practical eye fixed upon a spot more suitable
-for a township than The Port, which he disparaged as a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_357'>357</span>‘one-horse’ place, which would never come to much. Indifferent
-anchorage, with no protection against south-east
-gales. Might be made decent with a breakwater; but take
-time—time. A few miles up the river—fine stream, deep
-water, and good wharfage. He should run up a store, and
-send down a cargo of odds and ends at once. Fine district—good
-soil, splendid climate, and so on. Must progress—<em>must</em>
-progress. Never seen finer grass, splendidly watered
-too. You’ve fallen on your feet, I can tell you. All through
-Gyp Warleigh too. Poor fellow!—awful pity!</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Rockley borrowed a horse, rode inland and visited
-the stations, being equally encouraging and sanguine about
-their prospects. ‘<em>Can’t</em> go wrong; lots of fat cattle in a year
-or two; make all your fortunes; can’t help it; only look out
-for the rascally blacks; don’t allow yourselves to be lulled
-into security; have a slap at you again some day, take my
-word for it. Know them well; never trust a blackfellow;
-always make him walk in front of you—can’t help using a
-tomahawk if he sees a chance; keep ’em at arm’s length—no
-cruelty—but make ’em keep their distance. Glorious
-rains at Yass and all over New South Wales. Season changed
-with a vengeance! Stock rising like mad; ewes two guineas
-a head and not to be got. Cattle, horses, snapped up the
-moment they’re offered. Everybody wild to bring stock
-overland to Port Phillip. By Jove! that <em>is</em> a wonderful place
-if you like; fine harbour—make half-a-dozen of Sydney—thirty
-miles from the Heads to the town. Not so picturesque
-of course; but splendid open country, plains, forests, and
-fertile land right up to the town. Great place by and by.
-Nothing but speculation, champagne, and kite-flying at
-present. Bought town allotments; buy some more as we
-go back. You’d better pick up two or three corner lots,
-Wilfred, my boy. Money? Never mind <em>that</em>! I’ll find the
-cash. Your security’s first-rate now, I can tell you.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>And so their guest rattled on, brimful of great ideas, large
-investments, and goodwill to all men, as of yore.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred, who had indeed now no particular reason for
-remaining, but on the contrary many motives to draw him
-towards The Chase, was only too glad to avail himself of a
-passage in the <cite>Rebecca</cite>, the truculent captain notwithstanding.
-That worthy, who appeared to be a compound of sailor and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_358'>358</span>smuggler, with a dash of pirate, swaggered about the beach
-for a few days, and after a comprehensive carouse with such
-of his late passengers as he could induce to join him,
-announced his intention of sailing next day—and did so.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Arrived at Melbourne, as the infant city had just been
-christened, Wilfred was astonished at the life and excitement
-everywhere discernible. On the flats bordering the river
-Yarra Yarra had been hastily erected a medley of huts,
-cottages, and tents, in which resided a miscellaneous rout
-of settlers, storekeepers, speculators, auctioneers, publicans,
-Government officials, artisans, and labourers.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He witnessed for the first time the initial stage of urban
-colonisation. What he chiefly wondered at was the restless
-energy, the sanguine spirits, the dauntless courage of the
-miscellaneous host employed in founding the southern
-metropolis.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The situation had been well chosen. The river which
-bisected the baby city, though not broad, was yet clear, deep,
-and, as its aboriginal name implied, ‘ever flowing.’ Large
-vessels were compelled to remain in the bay, but coasters
-came up the river and discharged on the banks of the natural
-basin, which had decided the site of the town.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Around—afar—stretching even to the distant horizon, were
-broad plains, park-like forests, hill and dale. The soil was
-rich for the most part; while a far blue range to the north-east
-pointed to an untried region, beyond which might lie
-(ay, and <em>did</em> lie) treasures yet undreamed of.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘All truly wonderful,’ said Wilfred. ‘The world is a large
-place, as the little bird said. We have got outside of our
-garden wall with a vengeance. How slow it seems of us to
-have been sitting still at Lake William, ignorant of this grand
-country, only five hundred miles off—not to mention “Gyp’s
-Land.” I wonder if this will ever be much of a town. It
-is a long way from Sydney, which must always be the seat of
-Government.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Will it be much of a place?’ echoed Rockley in a half-amused,
-meditative way. ‘I am inclined to think it will.
-Let us ask this gentleman. How do you do, Mr. Fawkner?’
-he said, shaking hands with a brisk, energetic personage,
-who came bustling along the river-bank. ‘Fine weather.
-Thriving settlement this of yours. My friend is doubting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_359'>359</span>whether it will ever come to much. Thinks it too far from
-Sydney.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What!’ said the little man, who, dressed in corduroy
-trousers, with a buff waistcoat and long-skirted coat, looked
-like an Australian edition of Cobbett. ‘Will it prosper?
-Why, sir, it will be the metropolis of the South—the London
-of this New Britain, sir! Nothing can stay its progress.
-Tasmania, where I came from, possesses a glorious climate
-and fine soil, but no extent, sir, no scope. New South Wales
-has fine soil, boundless territory, but eccentric climate. In
-Port Phillip, sir, below 35 south latitude, you have climate,
-soil, and extent of territory combined.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Here the little man struck his stick into the damp, black
-soil with such energy that he could hardly pull it out again.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I agree with you,’ said Rockley good-humouredly, smiling
-at Fawkner’s vehemence as if he, personally, were the most
-imperturbable of men. ‘But you won’t get the Sydney
-officials to do much for you for years to come. Five hundred
-miles is a long way from the seat of Government.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Cut the painter, sir, if they neglect us,’ said the pioneer
-democrat. ‘We shall soon be big enough to govern ourselves.
-Seen the first number of the <cite>Port Phillip Patriot</cite>?
-Here it is—printed with my own hands yesterday.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Fawkner put his hand into a pocket of the long-skirted
-coat, and produced a very small, neatly printed broadsheet,
-in which the editorials and local news struggled amid
-a crowd of advertisements of auctions, notices of land sales,
-and other financial assignations.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And now, gentlemen, I must bid you good-bye,’ said the
-little man. ‘Canvassing for subscriptions to build a wooden
-bridge across the Yarra. Cost a lot of money, but must be
-done—must be done. Large trade with South Yarra—lime,
-timber, firewood—shortest way to the bay too.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Put us down for five pounds,’ said Rockley. ‘It will
-improve the value of the corner allotments we intend to buy—won’t
-it, Wilfred? Good-bye.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Wonderful man that,’ said Rockley; ‘shrewd, energetic,
-rather too fond of politics. Came over in the first vessel
-from Van Diemen’s Land. He and Batman thought they
-were going to divide all this country between them. You
-see that clear hill over there? They say that’s where Batman
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_360'>360</span>stood when he said, “All that I see is mine, and all that I
-don’t see.”’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Very good,’ said Wilfred. ‘Grand conception of the true
-adventurer. And were his aspirations fulfilled?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, he bought all the land hereabouts—a few millions
-of acres—from blackfellows who called themselves chiefs.
-The other colonists disputed his royalty. The Government
-backed them up, and sent a superintendent to reign over
-them. However, he will do very well. Who’s this tall man
-coming along? St. Maur, as I’m a living sinner!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>And that gentleman it turned out to be, extremely well-dressed,
-and sauntering about as if in Bond Street. His
-greeting, however, was most cordial, and smacked more of
-the wilderness than of the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>pavé</em></span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘By Jove!’ he said, ‘you here, Rockley? I was just
-thinking of you and Effingham. Can’t say how glad I am.
-Come into my miami. What a pity you couldn’t have a
-throw in! Lots of money to be made. Made some myself
-already.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Daresay,’ said Rockley. ‘You’re pretty quick when
-there’s a spec. on hand. What have you been about?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Mixed herd of cattle. Turned overlander, as they call
-it here; brought over one on my own account, and another
-that I picked up on the road. Just going over to see Howie’s
-horses sold. I want a hack. You come and lunch with me
-and Dutton and Tom Carne. We’re over at “The Lamb”—some
-fellows from Adelaide there.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Certainly,’ said Rockley, always ready for anything in
-the way of speculation or enterprise. ‘Nothing better to do;
-and, by the way, Effingham, <em>we</em> shall want horses for riding
-home; for, as for going back with that atrocious, reckless,
-buccaneering ruffian, I’ll see him d——d first!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Here the sentence, ending with more force than elegance,
-merged in the loud ringing of an auctioneer’s bell in close
-proximity to a large stock-yard at the corner of Bourke and
-Swanston Streets, near where a seductive soft-goods establishment
-now stands.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The yard contained over a hundred head of horses, which
-were permitted to run out one at a time, when, being completely
-encircled by the crowd, they remained confused, if
-not quieted, until their fate was decided.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_361'>361</span>An upstanding, unbroken grey filly happened to be
-separated just as they arrived—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>And struggling fiercely, but in vain,</div>
- <div class='line'>And snorting with erected mane.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>The desert-born was on the point of being knocked down for
-fifty pounds, when Wilfred, infected by the extravagance of
-the day, bid another pound. She finally became his at the
-low price of sixty guineas.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘She’s very green,’ said St. Maur; ‘just haltered, I should
-say. However, she has plenty of condition, and if you are
-going a journey, will be quiet enough in a week.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I like her looks,’ said Wilfred. ‘It’s an awful price; but
-stock have risen so, that we shall reap the advantage in another
-shape. But for Rockley I should have gone back by sea.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I never consider a few pounds,’ said that gentleman,
-‘where my life’s concerned. I can just tell you, sir, that, in
-my opinion, the <cite>Rebecca</cite> is more than likely never to see
-Sydney at all if bad weather comes on. I shall buy that
-brown cob.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>After the cob had been bought, and a handsome chestnut
-by St. Maur, the friends strolled up to the famous Lamb
-Inn, long disestablished, like the cafés of the Quartier Latin,
-and there met with certain choice spirits, also rejoicing in
-the designation of ‘overlanders.’ They seemed on terms
-of intimacy with St. Maur, and cordially greeted his two
-friends. One and all had been lately concerned in large
-stock transactions—had been equally fortunate in their sales.
-Apparently they were minded to indemnify themselves for
-the perils of the waste by a full measure of such luxuries
-as the infant city afforded.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Great place this Melbourne, St. Maur,’ said a tall man
-with bushy whiskers. ‘Decomposed basaltic formation, with
-an outcrop of empty champagne bottles. I saw a heap
-opposite Northcott’s office yesterday like a glass-blower’s
-débris. As fast as they emptied them they threw them out
-of the window. Accumulation in time—you know.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Northcott does a great business in allotments and house
-property,’ said St. Maur; ‘but it can’t last for ever. Too
-much of that champagne element. But what’s become of
-Warden—he was to have been here?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_362'>362</span>‘Forgot about the hour, I daresay,’ said the man with the
-whiskers. ‘Most absent fellow I know. Remember what
-he said to the Governor’s wife at Adelaide? She asked him
-at dinner what he would take. Joe looked up from a dream
-(not of fair women, but of drovers and dealers), and thinking
-of the cattle he had just brought over, replied, “Six pounds
-a head all round, and the calves given in!”’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Joe Warden, blue-eyed and fair-haired as Cedric
-the Saxon, long afterwards famed as the most daring and
-successful of the explorers of that historic period, shortly
-joined them, apologising for his unpunctuality by declaring
-that he had bought two corner allotments and a flock of ewes
-within the last ten minutes.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘This is the kingdom of unlimited loo as applied to real
-estate—the region of golden opportunity, you see, Rockley,’
-said St. Maur. ‘We are all hard at it buying and selling
-from morning to night. Must go the pace or be left behind.
-Half-acre allotments in Collins Street have brought as much
-as seventy pounds this very morning. Try that claret.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Quite right too. A very fair wine,’ quoth Mr. Rockley,
-slowly savouring the ruby fluid. ‘My dear St. Maur, you are
-right to buy everything that you can, as long as your credit
-lasts. I can see—and I stake my business reputation on the
-fact—a tremendous future in store for this town. It is not
-much in itself. The river’s a mere ditch; the harbour a
-great ugly bay; the site of the town too flat; but the
-country!—the country around is grand and extensive.
-Nothing can take that away. It is not so rich as the spot
-my friend and I have just left; but it’s fine—very fine. I’m
-not so young as I was, but I shall pitch my tent here and
-never go back to Sydney.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I hope to see Sydney again,’ said St. Maur; ‘but in the
-meantime I shall stay and watch the markets. I quite agree
-with you that there is money to be made.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Of course there is,’ said Rockley; ‘but how long will
-it last? People can’t live upon buying and selling to each
-other for ever. Some fine day there will be an awful smash,
-in which some of you brisk young people will be caught.
-But the settlement is so first-class in soil and situation that
-it <em>must</em> pull through. I shall buy a few allotments, just to
-give me an interest, as the racing men say.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_363'>363</span>‘We can accommodate you,’ said Mr. Raymond. ‘But why
-don’t you stay and set up in business here? You’d make a
-fortune a month, with your name and connections. Never
-mind Mrs. R. for the present; we’re all bachelors here.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I see that—and a very jolly set you are. I wouldn’t mind
-a month or two here at all. But my friend Effingham and I
-are tied to time to get home, and as we’re going overland we
-haven’t much time to spare.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, look us up whenever you come back. The door
-of the Lamb Inn is always open—night or day, for that matter.
-St. Maur and I are thinking of buying it, aren’t we, Bertram,
-and turning it into a Club? We offered Jones a thousand
-for it, but he wouldn’t take less than twelve hundred.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘That would have been only a hundred apiece for a dozen
-of us,’ said the man with the large whiskers, whose name was
-Macleod. ‘Almost concluded it, but Morton died of D.T.,
-Southey got married, and Ingoldsby went home. Nice idea,
-you know, being our own landlords.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Not bad at all,’ said Rockley, who approved of everything
-when he was in a good-humour. ‘A <em>very</em> original, business-like
-idea. Well, I must say good-bye to you all, gentlemen.
-I really wish I could stay longer.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Stay till next week,’ pleaded Raymond. ‘We are going
-to give a ball. No end of an entertainment. Two real
-carriages just landed, and the families pledged to bring
-them.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I notice a good many stumps in Collins Street,’ said
-Wilfred. ‘Won’t that be a little dangerous for returning?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Not with decent horses,’ said a young fellow with a dark
-moustache and one arm. ‘I drove tandem through it about
-two o’clock this morning.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But you do everything so well, Blakesley,’ said St. Maur.
-‘Speaking as an ordinary person, I must say I should funk
-the “Rue Bourke” or Collins after dark. But that is not our
-affair. Providence <em>couldn’t</em> injure a lady when there are only
-ten in the community.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What about that brig, the <cite>Rebecca</cite>, that’s sailing to-morrow
-for Sydney?’ said a fresh-coloured, middle-aged personage who
-had spoken little, and, indeed, seemed oppressed with thought.
-‘You came down in her, Rockley, didn’t you?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Like nothing about her,’ said that gentleman with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_364'>364</span>decision. ‘Badly found, badly manned, and the worst thing
-about her is the skipper. You don’t catch me in her again,
-I can tell you. Effingham and I are going overland.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Indeed!’ said the speaker, much surprised. ‘I thought
-we should have been fellow-passengers. I never dreamed of
-any one riding all the way to Sydney, five or six hundred miles,
-when they could go by sea! If I’d known, I’d have changed
-my mind and started with you. It’s too late now; I’ve paid
-my passage.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Look here, Bowerdale,’ said Mr. Rockley with earnestness,
-‘I’ve paid my passage, and I forfeit it cheerfully rather
-than run the risk. If you knew Captain Jackson, you’d do it
-too. He’ll lose the ship and all hands some day, as sure as
-my name’s Rockley.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There’s a good deal of luck in these things, I believe,’
-said the other. ‘I must risk it anyhow. I can’t afford to
-lose the money, and I want to get back to my wife and chicks
-as soon as I can. We officials haven’t unlimited leave either,
-you know.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘D——n the leave!’ said Mr. Rockley volcanically, ‘and
-the money too. I’ll settle the last for you, and you can pay
-when you sell that suburban land you bought in Collingwood.
-There’s a fortune in <em>that</em>. Your chief’s a good fellow; he’ll
-arrange the leave. Half the Civil Servants in Sydney have
-had a shot at Melbourne land, you know. Say the word,
-and come with us. There’s a spare horse, isn’t there,
-Effingham?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Lots of horse-flesh,’ said Wilfred, following his friend’s
-cue. ‘Mr. Bowerdale will just complete our party—make it
-pleasanter for all.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You <em>are</em> a good fellow, Rockley,’ said Mr. Bowerdale,
-smiling; ‘and I thank you, Mr. Effingham; but I can’t alter
-my arrangements, though I feel strangely tempted to do so.
-I have had a fit of the blues all the morning. Liver, I
-suppose—too much excitement. But I make a point of
-always carrying a thing through.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Take your own way,’ grumbled Rockley. ‘Well, I must
-be off, St. Maur. Effingham, did you forget about the pack-saddle?
-It’s a strange thing nobody can remember anything
-but myself. St. Maur, I beg to thank you and these
-gentlemen for their most pleasant entertainment. Come
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_365'>365</span>and see me at Yass, all of you, when you stop land-buying,
-or it stops you. Good-bye, Bowerdale; I can’t help thinking
-you’re a d——d fool.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>So the worthy and choleric gentleman departed, with his
-surplus steam not wholly blown off. All the way back he
-kept exploding at intervals, with remarks uncomplimentary
-to his unconvinced friend, who left by the <cite>Rebecca</cite>, which,
-with crew, captain, and passengers, was <em>never more heard of</em>.</p>
-
-<hr class='c013' />
-
-<p class='c001'>On the following morning Mr. Rockley and Wilfred rode
-forth along the Sydney road, then far from macadamised,
-and chiefly marked out by dray-ruts and a mile-wide trail
-made by the overlanders. Mr. Rockley rode one stout cob
-and led another. Wilfred bestrode an ambling black horse
-of uncertain pedigree, and led the grey filly, upon whose
-reluctant back he had managed to place a pack-saddle with
-their joint necessaries.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_366'>366</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XXV <br /> BOB CLARKE ONCE MORE WINS ON THE POST</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>The homeward-bound horsemen had no difficulty about the
-road, well marked as it was by the travelling stock. There
-was also, as now, a mail service from Sydney. They met
-the mailman about half-way. He was riding one horse and
-leading another; he had often to camp out without fire, for
-fear of blacks. In due time they reached the site of the
-border town of Albury, on the broad waters of the Murray,
-all unknowing of the great wine-cellars its grapes were yet
-to fill, with reisling, muscat, and hermitage in mammoth
-butts, rivalling that of Heidelberg. Much less did they forecast
-the iron horse one day to rush forward, breathing woe
-and disquiet to the shy dryad of the river oaks, by the
-gleaming stream and the still depths of the reed-fringed
-lagoons.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Rude were the ways by which they travelled from the
-Murray to the Murrumbidgee River, by way of Gundagai,
-the great meadows of which were then undevastated by
-flood. Thence to Bowning, and so on to Yass, in which city
-the travellers were greeted with enthusiasm. The next
-morning saw the younger far on his way to The Chase.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>What a change had taken place since the exodus—that
-memorable departure! But one little year had passed away,
-and what a transformation!</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>With the season everything had changed; all Australia
-was altered. Life itself was so different from that day when,
-half-despairingly, they rode behind their famished cattle, and
-turned their faces to the wilderness.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Now it had been crossed; the promised land won—a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_367'>367</span>land of milk and honey as far as they were concerned—of
-olives and vineyards—all the biblical treasures—no doubt
-looming in the future.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>For this prosperity the discovery of Port Phillip was
-accountable, conjointly with the lavish, exuberant season.
-The glorious land of mountain and stream, valley and
-meadow, laden with pastoral wealth and bursting with
-vegetation, had been in a manner gifted to them by the
-gallant, ill-fated Hubert Warleigh. They were all revelling
-in the intensity of life, forming stations, buying and selling,
-speculating and calculating, and where was he? Lying at
-rest beneath the sombre shade of the forest giant, far from
-even the tread of the men of his race. Left to moulder
-away, with the fallen denizens of the primeval forest; to
-fade from men’s minds even as the echo of the surges, as the
-spring songs of the joyous birds!</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It seemed increasingly hard to realise. As he approached
-the well-known track that led from the main road to Warbrok
-he could see the very tree near which he had waved a
-farewell at their first meeting. There was the gate through
-which they had ridden on the occasion of his second visit,
-when he had been received on terms of equality by the
-whole family.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘How glad I am now that we did that!’ Wilfred told himself.
-‘We tried our best to raise him from the slough into
-which he had fallen, and from no selfish motive; how little
-we thought to be so richly repaid! One often intends a
-kindness to some one who dies before it is fulfilled. Then
-there is unavailing, perhaps lifelong regret. Here it was not
-so, thank God! And now, home at last——’</p>
-
-<hr class='c013' />
-
-<p class='c001'>Of that happy first evening what description can be given
-that faintly shall suggest the atmosphere of love and gratitude
-that enveloped the family, as once more Wilfred sat among
-them in the well-remembered room? Speech even died
-away, in that all might revel in an uninterrupted view of the
-returned wanderer. How improved, though bronzed and
-weather-beaten, he was after his wayfaring!</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And to think that Wilfred has returned safe from those
-dreadful blacks! And oh, poor dear Hubert Warleigh!
-That fine young man, so lately in this room with us, full of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_368'>368</span>health and strength, and now to know that he is dead—killed
-by savages—it is too dreadful!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Mamma! mamma!’ said Annabel, sobbing aloud, ‘don’t
-speak of it. I can’t bear it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Here she arose and left the room.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘She is very sensitive, dear child,’ said Mrs. Effingham. ‘I
-do not wonder at her feeling the poor fellow’s death. I
-can’t help thinking about him, as if he were in some way
-more than an acquaintance.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You have come back to a land of plenty, my son,’ said
-Mr. Effingham, ‘as you have doubtless observed. If you had
-known that such rain was to fall, it might have saved you all
-the journey.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘My dear sir,’ answered Wilfred, ‘don’t flatter yourself
-that, myself excepted, one of our old society will be contented
-to live here again. The land we have reached opens out
-such an extensive field that no sane man would think of
-staying away from it. Rockley will follow, and half Yass, I
-believe. No one will be left but you and I and the Parson.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What an exodus! It amounts to a misfortune,’ said
-Rosamond. ‘It seems as if the foundations of society were
-loosened. We shall never be so happy and contented
-again.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We never may,’ said Wilfred; ‘but we shall be ever so
-much richer, if that is any compensation. Stock of all kinds
-are fetching fabulous prices in Port Phillip. By the bye, how
-is Dr. Fane? His store cattle are now worth more than the
-Benmohr fat cattle used to be.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We had Vera here for a whole month,’ said Rosamond.
-‘She is the dearest and best girl in the whole world, I believe,
-and so handsome we all think her. She said her father had
-sold a lot of cattle at a fine price, and if he didn’t spend all
-the money in books, they would be placed in easy circumstances.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As Wilfred paced the verandah, smoking the ante-slumber
-pipe—a habit he had rather confirmed during his journeyings
-and campings—he could not but contrast the delicious sense
-of peaceful stillness with much of the life he had lately led.
-All was calm repose—amid the peaceful landscape. No
-possibility here of the wild shout—the midnight onset—as
-little, perhaps, of lawless deeds as in their half-forgotten
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_369'>369</span>English home. A truly luxurious relief, after the rude
-habitudes and painful anxieties of their pioneer life.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The night’s sound sleep seemed to have concentrated the
-repose of a week, when Wilfred awoke to discover that all
-outer life was painted in rose tints. That portion of the herd
-which had been left behind had profited by the unshared
-pasturage to such an extent that they resembled a fresh
-variety. Daisy and her progeny looked nearly as large as
-shorthorns, and extreme prices had been offered for them,
-old Andrew averred, by the cattle-dealers that now overspread
-the land.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A field of wheat, by miraculous means ploughed and
-harrowed, since the Hegira, promised an abundant crop.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Weel, aweel!’ said Andrew, who now appeared bearing
-two overflowing buckets of milk, ‘ye have been graciously
-spared to return from yon fearsome wilderness, like Ca-aleb
-and Joshua. And to think o’ that puir laddie, juist fa’en a
-prey to thae Amalekites, stricken through wi’ a spear, like
-A-absolom! Maist unco-omon—ane shall be taen and the
-t’ither left. It’s a gra-and country, I’m hearin’.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The finest country you ever set eyes on, Andrew. The
-Chase seems a mere farm after it. If it was not for the
-family, I should soon pack up and go back there.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I wadna doot. Rovin’ and rampa-agin’ aboot the waste
-places o’ the yearth is aye easy to learn. But ye’ll ken yer
-duty to yer forebears and the young leddies, Maister Wilfred,
-no’ to tak’ them frae this douce-like hame.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh yes, I know,’ said Wilfred. ‘Of course I shall stay
-here, and shall be very happy and make lots of money again.
-All the same, it’s a wonderful new country. Half the people
-here will be wanting to get away when they hear about
-it. But how did you get this fine crop of wheat put in without
-working bullocks? I’m afraid, Andrew, you must have
-been taking a leaf out of Dick Evans’s book, and using other
-people’s cattle.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Weel, aweel!’ said Andrew, looking doubtful, ‘I winna
-deny that there micht be some makin’ free wi’ ither folks’
-beasties. But they were juist fair savin’ their lives wi’ oor
-grass parks, and when the rain fell, it was a case o’ needcessity
-to till the land, noo that the famine was past.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>With regard to the ‘fatal maid,’ Wilfred Effingham had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_370'>370</span>much difficulty in reaching a determination worthy of a man
-who prided himself upon acting on logically defensible
-grounds. He was by no means too certain, either, that he
-could lay claim to Miss Christabel’s undivided affections.
-So much of her heart as she had to give, he suspected was
-bestowed upon Bob Clarke. If that were so, she would cling
-to him with the headlong hero-worship with which a woman
-invests the lover of her girlhood, more particularly if he
-happens to be ill-provided with this world’s goods.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The result of all this introspection was that Wilfred, like
-many other men, sought refuge in delay. There was no need
-of forcing on the decision. He had work to do at home for
-months to come. And the marriage question might be advantageously
-postponed.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Unpacking his valise after breakfast, he produced a
-number of newspapers, the which, as being better employed,
-he had not opened. Now, in the leisure of the home circle,
-the important journals were disclosed. Each one, provincially
-hungry for news, seized upon one of the messengers from
-the outer world. ‘Ha!’ said Wilfred suddenly, ‘what is
-this? Colonel Glendinning, of the Irregular Horse, desperately
-wounded. Wonderful gallantry displayed by him.
-Chivalrous sortie from cantonments. Why, this must be our
-Major, poor fellow!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He was interrupted by a faint cry from Beatrice, and
-looking round he saw that she had grown deadly pale. He
-had just time to catch her fainting form in his arms. But
-she was not a girl who easily surrendered herself to her
-emotions. Rousing herself, she looked around with a piteous
-yet resolved expression, and with an effort collected her
-mental forces.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Mother,’ she said, ‘I must go where <em>he</em> is. Tell my
-father that I have always deferred to his wishes, but that now
-I <em>must</em> join him—I feel responsible for his life. Had I but
-conquered my pride, a word from me would have kept him
-here. And now he is dying—after deeds of reckless daring.
-But I must go; I will die with him, if I cannot save him.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Dearest Beatrice, there is no need to excite yourself,’ said
-the fond yet prudent mother. ‘You have only to go to
-your father. He will consent to all that is reasonable. I
-myself think it is your duty to go. Major Glendinning is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_371'>371</span>severely wounded, but good nursing may bring him round.
-I wish you had a companion.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Where could you have a better one than Mrs. Snowden?’
-cried Annabel hastily. ‘She said she half thought of going
-home by India, and I know she does not care which route
-she takes. She has been there before, and knows all about
-the route. If papa would only make up his mind to go, half
-the trouble would be off his mind, and he would enjoy the
-voyage.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There could not be a more favourable time, my dear
-sir,’ said Wilfred in the family council at a later hour. ‘I
-shall be here now. It is a matter of life and death to poor
-Beatrice as well as to the Colonel. You had better arrange
-to start by the first vessel, and to bring back some Arab
-horses on your return.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It is the only thing to be done,’ said Rosamond, who
-had just returned from her sister’s room. ‘I wouldn’t answer
-for Beatrice’s reason if she is compelled to wait here. She
-has repressed her feelings until now, and the reaction is
-terrible. It is most fortunate that Mrs. Snowden is ready to
-leave Australia.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Subjected to the family pressure, aided by the promptings
-of his own heart, Mr. Effingham was powerless to resist. The
-acclimatisation question was artfully brought up. He at once
-yielded, and before the evening was over, a letter was in the
-mail-bag, requesting their Sydney agent to take passages by
-the first outward-bound boat for India, and to advise by post,
-or special messenger, if necessary.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Beatrice, informed of this determination, gradually recovered
-that calmness allied to despair which simulates resignation.
-She busied herself unweariedly in preparation for
-the voyage, cherishing the hope of soothing the last hours of
-her lover, if indeed it was denied her, to watch over his
-return to the world of love and hope.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mrs. Snowden arrived on the following day, and cordially
-acceded to the proposition made to her, to share the
-adventures of the voyage and of Indian travel.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘If you knew,’ she said, ‘how grateful I feel for the
-opportunity of changing the scene of my sorrows and being
-of use to my friends after this lonely life of mine, you would
-not thank me. I would go many a mile by sea or land to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_372'>372</span>nurse the Major myself. Between me and Beatrice he will
-be well looked after.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>All circumstances seemed favourably shaped for the
-errand of mercy. A ship was about to sail for China, whence
-the opium clippers might be trusted for a swift run to the
-historic land. Almost before the news of the intended
-journey had reached Yass, so that the parson could drive
-over and express his entire concurrence with the arrangement,
-the little party had set out for Sydney.</p>
-
-<hr class='c013' />
-
-<p class='c001'>In the fulness of time the very last evening, before the
-Rockley family left Yass, arrived. All the party from The
-Chase had been in to say good-bye, and had returned. Some
-mysterious business kept Wilfred in town, and that special
-evening he of course spent at Rockley Lodge.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>For it was not to be supposed that, on that momentous
-evening, the family declined to see their friends. In the
-‘Maison Rockley’ the head of the house was so absorbed in
-his business pursuits that, except at dinner-time, and for an
-hour after, he could hardly be said to possess any family life
-whatever. He was grateful, therefore, for the presence of
-such friends who would take the burden of domesticity, in
-part, off his hands, and made no scruple of expressing, in the
-family circle, his thanks for such services.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It so turned out that, on this particular morning, he had
-found time, for once in a way, to give his daughter an earnest
-lecture about her ridiculous fancy, as he termed it, for Bob
-Clarke; a young fellow who, without any harm in him, would
-never come to much, or make any money worth speaking of,
-seeing that he was far too fond of those confounded horses,
-out of which no man had ever extracted anything but ruin,
-in Australia. That they had never heard a word from him
-for ever so long; most probably he was flirting away in
-Tasmania, and did not cast a thought upon her. And here
-was Wilfred Effingham, than whom he did not know a finer
-fellow anywhere—steady, clever, a man of family, and in
-every way desirable. If he liked her, Christabel—he couldn’t
-say whether he did or not, he had no time to trouble about such
-rubbish—why didn’t she take him, and have done with it, and
-settle down creditably for the rest of her life, instead of wasting
-her time and vexing her friends?—and so on—and so on.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_373'>373</span>Christabel wept piteously during this paternal admonition,
-delivered, as usual, with a loud voice and a fierce expression
-of countenance, but had gone away reflecting that although
-she was, so to speak, badly treated in this instance, yet, as
-she had succeeded in getting her own way all her life, she
-probably might enjoy a reasonable portion of it in the
-future.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Meanwhile, being fairly malleable and of the texture which
-is bent by circumstances, she began to consider, when alone
-in her room, whether there was not something of reason in
-her father’s arguments. Here she was placed in the position
-of only having to accept. Of the true nature of Wilfred’s
-feelings she herself had little doubt. There is something, too,
-not wholly without temptation to the female heart in the
-unconditional surrender of the lover, then and there urging his
-suit. There may be also a wild impulse to accept the inevitable,
-and thus for ever extinguish the uneasiness of anxiety
-and suspended judgment.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Then, Wilfred Effingham was very good-looking—fair
-perhaps in complexion, and she did not admire fair men, but
-brown-bearded, well-featured, manly. All the girls voted him
-‘so nice-looking,’ and the men invariably spoke of him as a
-good fellow. He was well off; he would have The Chase
-some day, and she would be the great lady of the Yass district,
-with her carriage and her servants; could entertain
-<em>really</em> well. She would also, beyond doubt, be envied by all
-her schoolfellows and girl friends.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The prospect was tempting. She thought of Bob’s dark
-eyes, and their passionate look when he last said good-bye.
-She thought of the happy days when he rode at her bridle-rein,
-and would lean over to whisper the cheery nonsense that
-amused her. She thought of the thrill at her heart, the
-strange deadness in every pulse, when The Outlaw went
-down, and they lifted Bob up, pale and motionless; of her
-joy when he appeared next day on the course, with his arm
-in a sling, but with eyes as bright and smile as pleasant as
-ever. These were dangerous memories. But they were boy
-and girl then. Now she was a woman, who must think of
-prudence and the wishes of her parents.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Then Bob would be poor for many a day, if, indeed, he ever
-rose to fortune. Through her heart passed the uneasy dread,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_374'>374</span>which gently-nurtured women have, of the unlovely side of
-poverty, of shifts and struggles, of work and privation—of a
-small house and bad servants, of indifferent dresses, and few
-thereof. Such thoughts came circling up, like birds of evil
-aspect and omen, ready to cluster round the corse of the
-slain Eros.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>Les absens sont toujours torts</em></span>, says the worldly adage. In
-his absence, the advocacy for Bob Clarke was perhaps less
-brave and persistent than it would otherwise have been. The
-girl strove to harden her heart, by clinging to the prudent side
-of the case, and recalling her father’s angry denunciations of
-any other course than an affirmative reply to Wilfred Effingham,
-should he this night tell her the real purport of his constant
-visits.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He himself had resolved to risk his fate on this last throw
-of the dice, and so far everything assisted his plans. Mr.
-Rockley was in an unusually genial frame of mind at dinner—cordial,
-of course, as ever, but unnaturally patient under contradiction
-and the delays consequent upon the cook’s
-unsettled condition. Mrs. Rockley excused herself after that
-meal as having household matters to arrange. But Christabel,
-whose domestic responsibilities had always been of the faintest,
-was at liberty to remain and entertain Mr. Effingham and her
-father, indeed she was better out of the way at the present
-crisis. Wilfred had no thought of leaving early in order to
-accommodate his friends in their presumed state of bustle and
-derangement, for it was one of those rare households where
-visitors never seem to be in the way. None of the feminine
-heads of departments were fussy, anxious, ‘put out,’ or had
-such pressing cares that visitors came short of consideration.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mrs. Rockley’s talent for organisation was such that no one
-seemed in a hurry, yet nothing was left undone. The house
-was nearly always full of inmates and visitors, male and
-female, with or without children. Still, wonder of wonders,
-there was never any awkwardness or failure of successful
-entertainment. Rockley, personally, scoffed at the idea of
-being responsible for the slightest share of household management.
-He merely exacted the most complete punctuality,
-cookery, house-room and attendance for the ceaseless flow of
-guests, the cost of which he furnished, to do him justice,
-ungrudgingly. Whatever might need to be done next day
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_375'>375</span>(if the whole family, indeed, had been ordered for execution,
-as Horace Bower said), William Rockley would have dined
-and conversed cheerfully over his wine, suggested a little
-music (for the benefit of others), smoked his cigar in the
-verandah, and mocked at the idea of any guest being incommoded
-by the probably abrupt translation of the family, or
-going away a moment before the regulation midnight hour.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Therefore, when Rockley told him that he hoped he was
-not going to run away a moment before the usual time for
-any nonsensical idea of being in the way because they were
-starting for Port Phillip on the next day (what the deuce had
-that got to do with it, he should like to know?), Wilfred
-fully comprehended the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>bona fides</em></span> of the request, and prepared
-himself to make the most of a <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>tête-à-tête</em></span> with Miss C.
-Rockley, if such should be on the cards.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>So it came to pass that while Mr. Rockley and Wilfred
-were lounging in the Cingalese arm-chairs, which still adorned
-the verandah, Christabel betook herself to the piano,
-whence she evoked a succession of dreamy nocturnes and
-melancholy reveries which sighed through the hushed night
-air as though they were the wailings of the Lares and Penates
-mourning for their dispossession.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Bowerdale hasn’t turned up,’ said Rockley abruptly.
-‘The <cite>Rebecca</cite> has never been heard of. She sailed the day
-we left Melbourne. Queer things presentiments. You remember
-his saying he felt hypped, don’t you?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Yes, quite well. What an awful pity that he should have
-persisted in going by her—after your warning, too!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Didn’t like to lose his passage-money, poor fellow!’ continued
-the sympathising Rockley. ‘I’d have settled that for
-him quick enough, but he wasn’t the sort of man to let any
-one pay for him. Leaves a wife and children too. Well,
-we must see what can be done. Fortune of war might have
-been our case if I hadn’t taken Jackson’s measure so closely.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Happy to think you did,’ said Wilfred, with natural gratitude.
-‘If you had not been so determined about the matter,
-I should have risked the sea-voyage. I was tired of land-travelling.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We should all have been with “Davy Jones” now. No
-cigars, eh? This claret’s better than salt water? I suppose
-we all have our work to do in this world; mine is not half
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_376'>376</span>done yet; yours scarcely begun. By Jove! I forgot to leave
-word at the office about my Sydney address—where to send all
-the confounded packages, about a thousand of them. I’ll run
-down and see that put straight. Don’t you go till I come back.
-Tell Mrs. Rockley she must have a little supper ready for us.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Rockley lighted a fresh cigar and plunged into the night,
-while Wilfred lost no time in repairing to the piano, which he
-managed to persuade the fair performer to quit for the
-verandah, under the assumption that the room was warm, and
-the night air balmy in comparison.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>For a while they walked to and fro on the cool freestone
-pavement, talking on indifferent subjects, while Wilfred gazed
-steadfastly into the girl’s marvellous eyes, ever and anon
-flashing under the soft moon-rays, as if he could read her
-very soul. She was dressed that evening in a pale-hued
-Indian muslin, which but partly veiled the exquisite graces of
-her form. How well he remembered it in after-days! There
-was a languor in her movements, a soft cadence in the tone
-of her voice, a quicker sympathy in her replies to his low-toned
-speech, which in some indefinable manner encouraged
-him to hope. He drew the lounges together, and telling her
-she needed rest, sat by her side.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You are really going away,’ he said; ‘no more last farewells,
-and Heaven knows when we shall meet again. I feel
-unutterably mournful at the idea of parting from your mother,
-Mr. Rockley—and—yourself. My sisters were in the depths
-of despair yesterday. I don’t think it affects <em>you</em> in the least.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Why should you think I am hard hearted?’ asked the girl
-as she raised herself slightly, and leaning her face on her
-hand, curving the while her lovely rounded arm, looked up in
-his face with the pleading look of a spoiled child. ‘Do you
-suppose it is so pleasant to me to leave our home, where I have
-lived all my life, and travel to a new place where we know
-nobody—that is, hardly any one?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘How we all—how I,’ said Wilfred, ‘shall miss these
-pleasant evenings! How many a one have I spent in your
-father’s house since we first met! I can safely say that I
-have never been so kindly treated under any roof in the
-whole world. As to your father, my dear old governor has
-always been too good, but I scarcely think he could do more
-for me than Mr. Rockley has done.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_377'>377</span>‘Papa is always kind, that is, to people whom he likes,’
-said Christabel with an absent indifference, as if Mr. Rockley’s
-philanthropy and irritability, his energy and his hospitality,
-were qualities of much the same social value.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At that moment the moonbeam was darkened by a passing
-cloud, and Wilfred drew nearer to the girl until he could
-almost feel her breath upon his hair, and hear her heart
-palpitate beneath the delicate fabric of her dress.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Christabel,’ he said, ‘ask your heart this night whether I
-am right in hoping that you will not accompany your parents
-to this rude settlement. Here you are known, honoured—yes,
-loved! Why leave one who would cherish you while
-life lasted?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Christabel Rockley spoke not nor moved, but she cast her
-eyes down, till in the clear light the long dark lashes could
-be seen fringing her cheek. Her bosom heaved—she made
-no sign.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Christabel,’ he murmured, ‘darling Christabel, I have
-long loved you, fondly, passionately. One word will make
-me the happiest of living men. Bow but your head in token
-that you grant my prayer, and I will take it as a sign from
-Heaven. Stay with my mother till she embraces you as a
-loved daughter. Only say the word. Will you try to return,
-in your own good time, my deep, my unalterable love?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>She raised her head and looked fixedly at him as he
-stood there, the embodiment of love’s last appeal, in the
-direct path of the moon’s rays. His face and form, instinct
-with strong emotion, seemed glorified by the flood of light in
-which it was encircled.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I can hardly tell,’ she said. ‘I have been trying to
-think—asking myself if I can give you my heart, and this
-pale face of mine, that you set so much value on—foolish
-boy! I think I may, in a little while, if you will bear with
-me, but I would rather not say, for good and all, just at this
-moment. You <em>will</em> give me more time, won’t you? Ah!
-what is that?’ she suddenly broke off, with almost a shriek,
-as the roll of horse-hoofs smote clearly through the still night
-air upon the senses, almost upon the overwrought hearts of
-the listeners. ‘Who can it be? Surely it isn’t papa riding
-back on the warehouse-keeper’s cob?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Not so. The hoofs of no mortal cob ever rang upon turf
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_378'>378</span>or roadway with the long, regular strokes of the steed of the
-coming horseman.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘A thoroughbred horse!’ said Wilfred. ‘Tired, too, by
-his rolling stride. Whoever can it be at this time of night?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Then he saw Christabel’s pale cheek faintly flush. How
-lovely was the warmer tint as it stole from cheek to brow,
-while her eye sparkled afresh like a lamp relumed. ‘Only
-one person is likely to come here to-night to say good-bye to
-us,’ she almost whispered. ‘I did not think he would take
-the trouble. Oh, it can’t be——’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As she spoke, the clattering hoofs ceased abruptly at the
-garden gate. A hasty step was heard on the gravel, and
-Bob Clarke, pale as death and haggard with fatigue, stood
-before them.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I swore I would say good-bye,’ he said. ‘So I am here,
-you see. I have ridden a hundred miles to do it. Ha!
-Effingham! Back from Port Phillip? Christabel Rockley,
-answer me—am I too late?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, Bob!’ she cried, and as she spoke she rose and
-stood by his side, taking one hand in both of hers. ‘You
-are not too late. But you will have to forgive me, and you,
-too, Wilfred Effingham, for being a silly girl that did not
-know her own mind. It would have served you right, Master
-Bob, and it will be a lesson to you not to put off important
-business. If Desborough had gone lame—I suppose it is
-he, poor fellow, that you have nearly ridden to death—you
-would have lost Christabel Rockley for good and all, whatever
-she may be worth. I was not sure, and papa was angry.
-But I am now—<em>I am now</em>. Oh, Bob, my dear old Bob, I
-will wait for you till I am a hundred if you don’t make a
-fortune before!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Bob Clarke looked doubtfully from one face to the other,
-scrutinising Wilfred’s with a fierce, questioning glance. But
-as their eyes met he saw that which quenched all jealous
-fears.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘My dear fellow,’ said Wilfred, coming forward and holding
-out his hand, ‘you have had your usual luck and “won on
-the post.” I congratulate you heartily, on my honour, as a
-man and a gentleman. Christabel has freely told you that
-but for your opportune arrival her hand might have been
-disposed of differently. You won’t wonder that any man
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_379'>379</span>should do his best to win her. But from my soul I can now
-rejoice that it was not so; that I have been spared the discovery,
-when too late, that her heart was yours—yours alone.
-Look upon me now as your lifelong friend. Let us keep our
-own counsel, and all will go well.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Wilfred Effingham has spoken like himself,’ said
-Christabel, whose features were now illuminated with the
-pure light of love that knows neither doubt nor diffidence in
-the presence of the beloved one. ‘You see, I should have
-had some excuse, Bob, if I had thrown you over, you procrastinating
-old stupid. Why did you leave me doubting and
-wondering all this time? However, I shall have plenty of
-time to scold you. Here comes papa at last.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>At this simple announcement the three faces changed as
-the well-known step of Mr. Rockley was heard—firm, rapid,
-aggressive. But the girl’s features, at first troubled, gradually
-assumed a steadfast look. Bob Clarke raised his head, and
-drew himself up as if scanning the line of country. Wilfred
-Effingham’s countenance wore the abstracted look of one
-raised by unselfish aims above ordinary considerations.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I thought I should never get away from that confounded
-old idiot,’ Mr. Rockley commenced. ‘Why, Bob Clarke!
-where have you sprung from? We heard you had gone to
-Port Phillip, or Adelaide, or somewhere; very glad to see
-you, wherever you came from. Better stay to-night; we can
-give you a bed. Why the deuce didn’t you take your horse
-round to the stable instead of letting the poor devil stand
-tied up at the gate after the ride he seems to have had?
-Christabel, perhaps you’ll tell them to bring in supper. I
-feel both hungry and thirsty—giving directions, directions,
-till I’m hoarse.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Christabel glided away, whereupon Bob Clarke faced round
-squarely and confronted his host.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Mr. Rockley, I came here to-night to tell you two things.
-I apologise for being so late, but I only heard you were
-leaving yesterday. I have ridden a hundred miles to-day.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Just like you,’ said Rockley; ‘and why the deuce didn’t
-you make them send you in supper all this time? You look
-as if you hadn’t saved yourself any more than your horse.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Truth to tell, Master Bob <em>was</em> rather pale, and his eyes
-looked unnaturally bright as he bent them upon the speaker.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_380'>380</span>‘Plenty of time afterwards, sir,’ he said; ‘the business
-was important. First of all, Mr. Hampden has given me
-a partnership, and I am going to take up country in Port
-Phillip under the firm of Hampden and Clarke. The cattle
-are drafted and started—five hundred head of picked Herefords—Joe
-Curle is with them, and young Warner. I’m going
-by sea to be ready for them when they come over.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I’m sincerely glad to hear it, my dear Bob,’ said Rockley
-in his most cordial manner—one peculiar to him when he
-had become aware of something to another man’s advantage.
-‘Why, you had better come down with us this week in the
-<cite>Mary Anne</cite>. I’ve chartered her, and she is crammed full,
-but, of course, I can give any one a passage. I can’t tell
-you how glad I am. Mrs. Rockley!’ he cried out as that
-well-beloved matron appeared and held out her hand with a
-smile of good omen to the not fully reassured Bob, ‘are we
-never to have anything to eat to-night? Here’s Bob Clarke
-has ridden a hundred and fifty miles, and dying of hunger
-before your eyes; but, of course, of course’—here he changed
-into a tragic tone of injury—‘if I’m not to be master in my
-own house——’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mrs. Rockley, with her placid countenance, only relieved
-by a glance at Wilfred, swiftly withdrew, and Rockley, to
-whom it had suddenly occurred as he looked at Wilfred
-that complications might arise from his subjecting his
-daughter to the perilous companionship of a sea-voyage
-with so noted a detrimental as Bob Clarke, looked like a
-hound that had outrun the scent, desirous of trying back,
-but not quite certain of his line.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, Bob, I am sure you will do well in Port Phillip;
-you have had lots of experience, and no man can work
-harder when he likes, I will say that for you; but it’s a fast
-place, a very fast place, I tell you, sir; and if you give
-yourself up to that confounded racing and steeplechasing, I
-know what will come of it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Mr. Rockley,’ said Bob again, with the air of a man
-who steadies his horse at a rasper, ‘I came to ask you for
-your daughter. I know I’ve not done much so far, but she
-likes me, and I feel I shall be successful in life or go to the
-devil—according to your answer this night.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Rockley looked first at one and then at the other
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_381'>381</span>of his young friends in much astonishment. This surprise
-was so great that for once he was unable to give vent to his
-ideas.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Before he could gather self-possession, Wilfred Effingham
-spoke. ‘My dear Rockley, from circumstances which have
-come to my knowledge, but which I am in honour bound not
-to reveal, I can assure you that your daughter’s happiness
-is deeply concerned in my friend Clarke’s proposal. As a
-friend of the family—who takes the deepest interest in her
-future welfare—let me beg of you to give the matter your
-most favourable consideration.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Rockley’s face passed through the phases of wild
-astonishment and strong disapproval before he replied. It
-had then relaxed into one of humorous enlightenment.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I see how it is. That monkey, Christabel, has enlisted
-you on her side. Well, I tell you both that I should have
-preferred Wilfred Effingham as my son-in-law. I am not
-going to hide my opinion on that or any other subject. But
-as she has made her choice, I will not—I say I will not—make
-her life miserable. Not that I have any objection to
-you, Bob, my boy, except on the score of that confounded
-horse-racing. It’s very well in its way. No man enjoys a
-race more than I do; but it’s not the thing for a young
-fellow who has his way to make in the world.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I’ll never own another race-horse,’ quoth Bob, with
-desperate self-renunciation, ‘as long as I live, if——’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh yes, you will,’ said Mr. Rockley, with superior forecast;
-‘but what I want you to do is to promise not to go
-head and shoulders into it for the next few years, when
-you’ll have all your work cut out for you, if you want to be
-a man and make a home for your wife and family. Well,
-it’s done now, and here’s my hand, my boy; you’ve got a
-good little girl, if she is a pretty one. But take my advice,
-don’t give her too much of her own way at the beginning.
-Show that you intend to be master from the start, <em>put her
-down</em> if she shows temper; when she gives in, you can be
-as kind to her as you like afterwards. Better that than for
-her to have the whip-hand. Women don’t understand
-moderation. That was always my way, wasn’t it, Bessie?’
-he inquired, appealing to Mrs. Rockley, who having entered
-the room had come in for this piece of practical advice,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_382'>382</span>delivered in a loud tone of voice. ‘I’ve been giving your
-future son-in-law—there he is; I know he is a favourite of
-yours; you needn’t say he isn’t—a useful piece of advice,
-which I hope he’ll have the sense to act up to. Supper
-ready in the next room? I fancy we’re all in want of a
-little refreshment; what do you think, Bob?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>That gentleman had private ideas upon the subject, but
-did not disclose them further than by looking over at Mrs.
-Rockley, and giving practical effect to the suggestion.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>partie carré</em></span> enjoyed a cheerful but not very conversational
-repast. Wilfred and Bob Clarke felt more disposed
-to drink than to eat. Neither had much to say, so Rockley
-had it all his own way with Port Phillip speculations, advice
-to Bob Clarke of where to go for first-class cattle country,
-and how to manage economically for the first few years.
-Mrs. Rockley was tired, but found a few reassuring words
-for the anxious Bob, explaining that Christabel had a
-headache, but would be sure to be quite well in the morning.
-She also indicated her sympathy with Wilfred, and her
-approval of his generosity in backing up his rival’s claim.
-This, she assured him, she nor Christabel would ever forget.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Finally, Mr. Rockley looked at his watch in the midst of
-a suggestion to buy more cattle on Hampden’s account and
-take up two or three runs, inasmuch as it was all one trouble
-and not much more expense; when, discovering that it was
-past midnight, he broke up the parliament. Wilfred made his
-final adieus, and at daylight was fast leaving the town behind
-him, on his way to The Chase, accompanied by divers
-‘companions of Sintram,’ in the guise of vain regret and
-dull despair, with also (though not unalloyed) a curious sense
-of relief.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Taking the most philosophical view of the subject, the
-after-taste of refusal by a woman is rarely exceeded in this
-life for corroding bitterness. The non-preference of oneself,
-to the average suitor, fills the individual, unless he be free
-from every tinge of vanity, with wrath and disgust. In vain
-the proverbial salve is applied by superficial comforters. The
-foiled fisherman will not be consoled. He will throw away
-his flies and burn his rod. Henceforth he and angling have
-parted for ever. Such in effect for a while is the lament of
-most men who have the evil hap to pin so much of their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_383'>383</span>present and prospective happiness upon one cast—and lose
-it. The proud man suffers deeply, in secret. The selfish
-man mourns for the loss of personal gain. The true and
-manly lover is shaken to the centre of his being. The vain
-man is wroth exceedingly with childish anger; furious that
-any woman should disdain him—<em>him</em>! The susceptible,
-fickle suitor, who promptly bears his incense to another
-shrine, is to be envied, if not commended. But</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>To each his sufferings, all are men,</div>
- <div class='line'>Condemned alike to groan.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>Who loves vainly is stricken with a poisoned arrow. The
-wound rankles in the flesh of every son of Adam, oft producing
-anguish, even unto death, long after the apparent
-hurt is healed.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred Effingham was not more than ordinarily vain.
-He had not been, in so many words, rejected. Indeed, he
-had been nearly accepted. But he could not disguise from
-himself that it amounted to much the same thing. Yet he
-reflected that he had cause to be thankful that the girl had
-not been permitted to complete the measure of her self-deception—to
-promise her hand where she could not truly
-have given her heart. Better far, a thousand times, that
-this should have happened beforehand, he thought, ‘than
-that I should have seen after marriage the look that came
-into her eyes when they rested on Bob Clarke.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He did not admit that permanent injury to his health
-would result from this defeat. It was not a crushing disaster,
-from which he could never rally. Rather was it a sharp
-repulse, useful in teaching caution. Brave men, great men,
-had profited by blows like this ere now. He would retire
-within his entrenchments—would perhaps be the better
-fitted to take the field in a future campaign.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A necessity lay upon him of acquainting his family with a
-portion, at any rate, of such momentous events. He did
-not go too deeply into his feelings for Christabel Rockley,
-yet permitted his mother and sisters to perceive that all
-probability of her appearing at The Chase as Mrs. Effingham,
-junior, was swept away by arrangement with Bob Clarke—duly
-ratified by the irrevocable if reluctant consent of Mr.
-Rockley.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_384'>384</span>His condition of mind was, doubtless, closely gauged by
-his relatives. With instinctive delicacy they ministered
-indirectly to his hurt spirit. While not displeased that the
-lovely Christabel had not appropriated the beloved, their
-Wilfred, they never permitted him to perceive how widely
-their estimate differed from his own. They counselled steady
-occupation, and led him to take pleasure once more in
-intellectual pursuits.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A diversion, happily, was effected in due time. He
-commenced to discover that his mental appetite had returned—that
-he could read once more and even <em>laugh</em> occasionally
-at the conceits of authors, much indeed as if his heart had
-not been broken. Then letters with good news from
-Beatrice and her father arrived. The voyage had been safe
-and speedy. On their arrival they had found the Colonel—such
-was his present rank—better than their fears had led
-them to expect. Ghastly and numerous, in all truth, were
-his still unhealed wounds; his state of weakness pitiable to
-see. But the fever from which he had suffered had left him.
-And when the eyes of the sick soldier met those of Beatrice
-Effingham, beaming upon him with a world of love and
-tenderness, all felt that a stage on the way to recovery had
-been reached. Such, too, came to be the opinion of the
-doctor and nurse, a portion of whose duties the two ladies
-had assumed.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Then letters came from the new country, <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>via</em></span> Port
-Phillip:—‘The climate was more moist than that of New
-South Wales, but the water never failed, and the grass was
-beyond all description. Immigrants from all the world
-were pouring in fast; the place bade fair to be another
-Britain. Money was being made rapidly. Stock were any
-price you chose to ask. A cattle trade was springing up
-with Tasmania. Argyll thought he would go home for a
-couple of years, leaving Hamilton in charge. Fred Churbett
-was in great form, fully convinced that he was intended
-for a dweller in the waste places of the earth. He felt so
-happy and contented that he didn’t think he would take a
-free passage to England, with a season box at the Royal
-Opera, if it were offered to him.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As for Guy, all written symbols were inadequate to
-express the length, breadth, and depth of his happiness under
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_385'>385</span>the new and romantic conditions. The cattle were doing
-splendidly—no one would know them. And no wonder—the
-feed was unparalleled. He had got up two good slab huts,
-a stock-yard, and a calf-pen. They were now splitting rails for
-a horse paddock.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Port Phillip news (from Guy) became presently more
-sensational. The Benmohr people, with Ardmillan, Churbett,
-and the rest, had arranged to leave their stations for a while,
-and come to Yass for Christmas. A better time to get
-away might never come. There was no chance of bush-fires.
-The blacks were quiet. The cattle were thoroughly
-broken in; you couldn’t drive them off the runs if you tried.
-There was nothing to do this year but brand calves. So
-they would turn up before Christmas Day.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He didn’t think he would have been able to get away, but
-Jack Donnelly had offered to look after the run in his
-absence, and with old Tom there, no harm could come to
-the cattle. A couple of months would see them back, and
-he really thought they deserved a holiday.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Such intelligence had power to renovate the morale of the
-whole household, from Mrs. Effingham—who, in good sooth,
-had with difficulty kept up a reasonably cheerful appearance,
-in default of her absent husband and daughter—down to
-Mrs. Evans, expectant of the errant Dick.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Jeanie and Andrew were overjoyed at the tidings, and
-Duncan was at once despatched to Benmohr to acquaint
-Mrs. Teviot and Wullie with the glorious news, in case they
-had not as yet received a letter. But they had; and Mrs.
-Teviot threatened Duncan with the broom for daring to think
-‘her gentlemen wadna acquent her the vara meenute they
-kenned they could win hame to Benmohr.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Comes then a letter from Sternworth. News had been
-received from O’Desmond, who had discovered a splendid
-tract of country beyond the lower Oxley marshes, hitherto
-considered impassable, and after remaining upon it during
-the winter and spring, was coming back to Badajos. <em>He</em> too
-hoped to arrive before Christmas. The long-vacant homes
-of the district would be again filled up, thank God!</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Won’t it be delightful to see dear Guy again,’ said
-Annabel, ‘and to have the old house full once more, with
-friends and neighbours. I <em>must</em> kiss one of them. Mr.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_386'>386</span>Churbett, I think. You would not object to that, mamma,
-would you?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘<em>He</em> would not,’ said Wilfred. ‘I don’t wonder that you
-and Rosamond are delighted at the chance of seeing their
-faces again. It seems hard that fate should have decided to
-separate us. Either they should have remained here, or we
-should have pulled up stakes, like Rockley, and migrated
-there.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘There is another friend coming that I shall be charmed
-to welcome—whom, like Annabel, I shall be ready to embrace,
-and indeed <em>shall</em> kiss on the spot.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Is my last belief in womanhood to be uprooted?’ exclaimed
-Wilfred languidly. ‘Is my immaculate sister Rosamond
-actually going to join the “fast” division?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You need not be alarmed,’ she replied. ‘It is only
-Vera Fane; and I did not speak of her visit before, because I
-was not sure she would be able to come.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Vera Fane!’ said Wilfred. ‘How does she happen to
-come our way? I thought she was in Sydney. Didn’t
-some one say she was going to be married?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, to that handsome cousin, Reginald, that came from
-England, <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>via</em></span> Melbourne, the other day. You heard that, did
-you? So did we, and were agonised at the thought of losing
-her for good. But she is coming up here at mamma’s
-invitation, given long ago, to stay with us over January.
-Her father won’t be at Black Mountain till then; he can’t
-leave Norman, who has had a bad time with scarlet fever.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Well, you will have another lady in the house to fill
-Beatrice’s place, and help to amuse your guests. She is
-quite equal to a pair of ordinary young ladies in the matter
-of rational conversation, perhaps more.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘So Mr. Argyll thinks, evidently,’ said Annabel; ‘he paid
-her the <em>greatest</em> attention once he met her over here. I
-know she thinks him very clever and distinguished-looking.
-They would suit one another famously.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I don’t think so at all,’ said Wilfred shortly. ‘But I
-must get away to my work.’</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_387'>387</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XXVI <br /> THE RETURN FROM PALESTINE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>Matters had been pleasant enough in the early days at Lake
-William, and the Benmohr men considered that nothing could
-be more perfect than their old life there. But this new region
-was so much more extensive, with a half-unknown grandeur,
-rendering existence more picturesque and exciting in every
-way. There were possibilities of fortunes being made, of
-cities being built, of a great Dominion in the future—vast
-though formless visions, which dwarfed the restricted aims of
-the elder colony. Such aspirations tended to dissuade them
-from residing permanently in their former homesteads.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But they were coming back for a last visit—a long farewell.
-There were friends to see, adventures to relate, transactions
-to arrange. A pleasant change from their wild-wood life, an
-intoxicating novelty; but once experienced, they must depart
-to return no more.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The absentees did not await Christmas proper, but arrived
-beforehand, having tempted the main in the yacht <cite>Favourite</cite>,
-sailing master Commodore Kirsopp, R.N., from Melbourne.
-Such passengers as Ned White, Jack Fletcher, Tom Carne,
-and Alick Gambier offered such an irresistible combination.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Once more the homesteads around Lake William appeared
-to awaken and put on their former hospitable expression.
-Mrs. Teviot had scrubbed and burnished away at Benmohr,
-until when ‘her gentlemen’ arrived, welcomed with tears of
-joy, they declared themselves afraid to take possession of
-their own house, so magnificently furnished and spotlessly
-clean did it appear to them after their backwoods experience.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Churbett stood gazing at his books in speechless
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_388'>388</span>admiration (he averred) for half an hour; afterwards inspecting
-his stable and Grey Surrey’s loose-box with feelings of
-wonder and appreciation. Neil Barrington declared that he
-was again a schoolboy at home for the holidays, not a day
-older than fourteen, and thereupon indulged himself in so
-many pranks and privileges proper to his assumed age that
-Mrs. Teviot scolded him for a graceless laddie, and threatened
-to box his ears, particularly when he kissed her assistant, an
-apple-cheeked damsel lured from one of the neighbouring
-farms in order to help in her work at this tremendous
-crisis.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Guy Effingham was hardly recognisable, so his sisters
-declared, in the stalwart youngster who galloped up to The
-Chase in company with Gerald O’More, whom he had invited
-to spend Christmas in his father’s house. There was the old
-mischievous, merry expression of the eyes, the frank smile for
-those he loved; but all save his forehead was burned several
-shades darker, and a thick-coming growth of whisker and
-moustache had changed the boyish lineaments and placed in
-their stead the sterner regard of manhood.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Gerald O’More had also sustained a change. His manner
-was more subdued, and his spirits, though ready as of old to
-respond to the call of mirth, did not seem to be so irrepressible.
-He had altered somewhat in figure and face, having
-lost the fulness which marks the newly-arrived colonist, and
-along with the British fairness of complexion, sacrificed to
-the Australian sun, had put away the half-inquiring, half-critical
-tone of manner that characterises the immigrant
-Briton for his first year in Australia. He now ranked as the
-soldier who had shared in the toil, the bivouac, the marches
-of the campaign; no longer a recruit or supernumerary.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘He has never been so jolly since poor Hubert’s death,’
-whispered Guy to Rosamond in their first confidential talk.
-‘He thought it was his fault that the poor chap wasn’t able
-to defend himself. But he’ll get over it in time. A better-hearted
-fellow couldn’t be. He’s a stunning bushman now,
-and a tiger to work.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What’s “a tiger to work”?’ asked Rosamond, laughing.
-‘I must make you pay a forfeit for inelegant expressions, as
-I used to do in old school-days.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I should never have known half as much,’ said the boy,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_389'>389</span>as he turned to his sister with a look of deepest love and
-admiring respect, ‘if it hadn’t been for you, Rosamond.
-How early you used to get up on those winter mornings,
-and how Blanche and I and Selden hated the sound of that
-bell! But there’s nothing like it,’ he added with a tone of
-manly decision. ‘I polished off a fellow about the date of
-the battle of Crecy in great style the other day. You would
-have been quite proud of me.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You keep up your reading, then, dear Guy, and don’t
-forget your classics, though you are in the bush? When
-you go to England, some day, you must show our friends that
-we do more than gallop after cattle and chop down trees in
-Australia.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, we have great reading at night, I can tell you; only
-those tallow candles are such a nuisance. I’ve got a new
-friend, a Cambridge fellow, just out from home, on the other
-side of me, and he’s a regular encyclopædia. So, between
-him and the Benmohr people, I shan’t rust much.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I am delighted to hear it. I hope you will have an
-Oxford man on your other side, as you call it. A literary
-atmosphere is everything for young people. Who is your
-other neighbour?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Jack Donnelly, and not half a bad fellow either. Though
-his father can’t read or write, he knows Latin, but not
-Greek, and he’s awfully fond of reading. You should hear
-the arguments he and Cavendish have—the Cambridge man,
-I mean.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What do they argue about?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Oh, everything—England and Ireland, Conservative and
-Democratic government, native Australians and Britishers.
-They’re always at it. Jack’s a clever fellow, and very quick;
-awfully good-looking too. You should see him ride. Cavendish
-says he’ll make his mark some day—he’s full of
-ambition.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘It is very creditable of him to try. If his father had not
-cared for his children in that way, he might never have risen
-above his own grade. Young gentlemen, too, should maintain
-the position which they have inherited. Don’t lose sight of
-that.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘That’s what Hamilton’s always saying; he’s a wonderful
-fellow himself. See him in town, you’d think he never had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_390'>390</span>his hands out of kid gloves, and yet he can keep time with
-the best working man we have, at any rough work.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You cannot have a better model, my dear Guy. Mamma
-and I are so thankful that you are among men who would do
-honour to any country.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Great was the joy expressed and many were the congratulations
-which passed on both sides when the explorers returned.
-They had so much to tell about the new home, so much to
-admire in the old one. It was a suburb of Paradise in their
-eyes, with its cultured aspect and gracious inhabitants, after
-the untamed wilderness.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>They were never tired of praising their former homes and
-neighbours. If, by some Arabian Nights arrangement, they
-could transport them bodily to the new colony, complete
-happiness, for once in this imperfect world, would be
-attained.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Benmohrs found their apartments in apparently the
-same state of faultless order in which they had quitted them.
-No smallest article had been moved or changed. A velveteen
-shooting-jacket, which Argyll remembered hanging up just as
-he started, was the very object which greeted his eyes when
-he awakened after the first night in his own bed.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The worst of it was that the breaking up of all this comfort
-and domesticity would be so painful. The climate had
-changed permanently (people always jump to this conclusion
-in Australia directly they begin to forget the last drought),
-and was simply Elysian. The lake was full; once more they
-listened to the music of its tiny surges. But for choice, the
-new country was about ten times more valuable. The
-pleasant old station homesteads must go. However, they
-were here now for a spell of pure enjoyment, not to bother
-their heads with the future.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Money was plentiful, the gods be praised! Everything
-was <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>couleur de rose</em></span>; they would revel in ease and enjoyment
-with a free spirit until Christmas was over. The cares of
-this world might then have their innings, but by no means
-till the New Year chimes called them to new duties. There
-was nothing now but such pleasant rides and drives; lingering
-rambles, after the heat of the day; expeditions into Yass,
-where they were fêted as if they had included the South Pole
-in their discoveries. Mr. Sternworth alluded to their return
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_391'>391</span>in his sermon, drawing tears from his congregation when he
-spoke of the strong, brave man they would never see more,
-whom many there present had known from childhood. But
-he had died as a Warleigh should die, doing his duty
-gallantly, and giving his life to save that of a comrade.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Before the third week of December had passed, another
-sensational arrival was chronicled. O’Desmond drove
-through the town on his way to Badajos in his four-in-hand,
-looking as if he had encountered no discomforts to speak of.
-His horses were in high condition; the bits and brasses were
-faultlessly polished; the drag hardly looked as if it had been
-a thousand miles from a coach-builder, much less covered up
-with boughs during the deadly summer of the waste.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But observers noted that Harry O’Desmond, upright and
-well set up as ever, was thinner and older-looking; that,
-although he received their greetings with his old stately cordiality,
-there was an expression upon his worn and darkened
-countenance rarely imprinted save by dread wayfaring through
-the Valley of the Shadow——</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>So had it been with him, in truth. Passing the farthest
-known explorations, his party came into a waste and torrid
-region, indescribably dread and hopeless. There, apparently,
-no rain had fallen for years. The largest trees had perished
-from desiccation of the soil; even the wild animals had died
-or migrated. The few they encountered were too weak to
-flee or resist. For weeks they had undergone fearful privations;
-had tasted the tortures of thirst and hunger, well-nigh
-unto death.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>With men weakened and disheartened, O’Desmond knew
-that to linger was death. With a picked party of his long-tried
-followers he pushed on, leaving just sufficient to support
-life with the depôt. On the <em>very last</em> day which exhausted
-nature could have granted them they passed the barriers of
-the Land of Despair. They saw before them—such are the
-wondrous contrasts of the Australian waste—a land of water-pools
-and pastures, of food and fruit.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But simultaneously with their glimpse of the haven of
-relief came the view of a numerous, athletic party of blacks,
-clustered near the river-bank. For war or hunting, this
-section of the tribe had surely been detailed. There were no
-women or children visible—a bad sign, as the sinking hearts
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_392'>392</span>of the emaciated wayfarers well knew. They were brave
-enough under ordinary circumstances of fight or famine.
-But this bore <em>too</em> hardly upon human nature, coming, as it
-did, after the toils and privations of the terrible desert.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But there was one heart among the fainting crew which
-neither hunger, thirst, nor the shadow of coming death had
-power to daunt. Aware that with savages a bold yet friendly
-bearing is the acme of diplomacy, O’Desmond decided upon
-his course.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The chief stood before his leading braves, doubtful if not
-hostile.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Suddenly recollecting that among his private stores, faithfully
-distributed, upon which alone they had been subsisting
-of late, was a package of loaf sugar, the idea flashed across
-his mind of tempting the palate of the savage.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Raising a handful of lumps of the rare and precious commodity,
-he advanced cheerfully and presented them to the
-leader, who regarded them distrustfully. His retinue stared
-with pitiless eyes at the wasted white weaklings. It was the
-supreme moment. Life and death swayed in the scales.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Harry O’Desmond so recognised it, under his forced smile,
-as he lifted one of the smaller fragments to his lips, and with
-great appearance of relish began to masticate. Slowly and
-heedfully did the chief likewise. The charm worked. The
-flavour of the far-borne product, for which so many of the
-men of his colour had died in slavery, subjugated the
-heathen’s palate. He smiled, and motioned the others to
-advance. O’Desmond followed up his advantage. Every
-remaining grain was distributed. In a few minutes each
-warrior was licking his lips appreciatively. A treaty of
-alliance, offensive and defensive, was as good as signed.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>That day the starving wanderers feasted on fish and flesh,
-brought in profusion by their new comrades. They had
-never seen a white man before, and were, like many of the
-first-met tribes, not indisposed to be peaceful.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When shown the encampment, the clothes, the equipment,
-the strange beasts, they pointed to the sky, snapping their
-fingers in wonder as they marked the leader’s height and
-stalwart frame, but made no attempt to raid the treasures of
-the white ‘medicine man.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>So the expedition was made free of a waste kingdom,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_393'>393</span>bisected by the deep-flowing stream of the Moora-warra, with
-its plains and forests, its lagoons and reed-brakes. And for
-long years after, until O’Desmond sold out the full-stocked
-runs for the high prices of the day, never was shot fired
-or spear lifted in anger between the dwellers on the Big
-River.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Wilfred had called at Badajos to congratulate their old
-friend. Upon his return he found that the household had
-received an important addition. Dr. Fane had ridden over
-with his daughter from Yass, and was with difficulty persuaded
-to rest for a few days at The Chase before returning
-to Black Mountain. Like most people who lead uneventful
-lives, he was in a hurry to get home, though compelled to
-admit that he had nothing particular to do when he got
-there.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Parson had stolen a day, he said, and driven over
-with them, proud of the honour, he further stated, of taking
-charge of Miss Fane’s impedimenta, which, though the most
-reasonable of damsels in that respect, could not be carried
-upon Emigrant. That accomplished palfrey she had brought
-over chiefly for the pleasure of having him to ride while at
-The Chase. Besides, his presence saved her a world of
-anxiety, as when they were separated she was always imagining
-that he had got out of his paddock, been stolen, or fallen
-lame, such accidents being proper to valuable horses in
-Australia.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>So when Wilfred arrived he found every one in most
-cheerful and animated vein. Argyll was describing the
-features of the new country to Dr. Fane, who was deeply
-interested in its geological aspect; his daughter, apparently,
-had found the narrative, interspersed as it was with ‘moving
-incidents by flood and field,’ equally entertaining.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Sternworth, with Rosamond beside him, was questioning
-Hamilton about the spiritual welfare of the infant settlement
-of Melbourne; promising, moreover, a handsome subscription
-to St. James’s, the new Church of England, at
-that time in course of erection. Gerald O’More, with Fred
-Churbett and Neil Barrington, was having an animated, not
-to say noisy, conversation with Annabel. Peals of laughter,
-of which a large proportion was contributed by the young
-lady, were the first sounds that met his ear upon entering
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_394'>394</span>the room. All seemed so capable of mutual entertainment,
-without his aid, countenance, or company, that he was
-sensible of a <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>soupçon</em></span> of pique as he surveyed the festive
-scene.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>However, he cordially welcomed Miss Fane and her
-father to The Chase, mentally remarking that he had never
-seen that young lady look so well before, or had thought
-her half so handsome. Her response did much to clear
-his brow and banish from his heart all unworthy feelings.
-The steadfast gaze was frank and kindly as of yore. She
-appeared unaffectedly pleased to see him again.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You know you belong to the band of heroes whom we
-have felt so proud to honour upon their return,’ she said.
-‘Papa has a famous classical parallel, I know, for your
-exploits and safe arrival at Lake William. He did explain
-it to me, but I have forgotten. Mr. Sternworth, what is it?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Never mind, Vera,’ replied the old gentleman, ‘I never
-talk Latin in the presence of young ladies. I can always
-find something more amusing to say. You must sing us
-those new songs you brought from Sydney. That would be
-more appropriate, wouldn’t it, Mrs. Effingham?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I don’t know much Latin, you unkind old godfather, but
-what I do know I am not in the least ashamed of.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Argyll’s making the pace pretty good, isn’t he, Fred,’
-remarked Neil Barrington, ‘with that nice Miss Fane? She’s
-the only “model girl” I ever took to. I’m her humble
-slave and adorer. But I never expected to have the great
-MacCallum More for my rival. Did you ever see him hard
-hit before, Fred?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Never, on the word of a gentleman-pioneer,’ rejoined Mr.
-Churbett. ‘It’s this exploration, new country, perils-of-the-wilderness
-business that has done it. “None but the brave
-deserve the fair.” <em>We</em> are the brave, sir, in this fortunate
-instance. We have solved the mystery of the unconquered
-Bogongs. We have gazed at the ocean outlets of the Great
-Lakes. We have proved ourselves to be the manner of
-men that found empires. Under the circumstances heroes
-always hastened to contract matrimonial alliances. Cortez
-did it. Dunois did it. William of Argyll is perilously near
-the Great Hazard. And I, Frederick de Churbett, am
-hugely minded to do likewise, if that confounded Irishman
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_395'>395</span>would only leave off his nonsense and let a fellow get a word
-in edgeways.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Churbett had reason for complaint, inasmuch as
-Gerald O’More, when his national gallantry was kindled to
-action, appeared determined to permit ‘no rival near the
-throne,’ as he successively devoted himself to Annabel, Rosamond,
-and Miss Fane, or indeed occasionally kept all
-engaged in conversation and entertainment at the self-same
-time. It became difficult to discover, for a while, so rapid
-as well as brilliant were his evolutions, whom he intended to
-honour with his exclusive admiration. At length, however,
-those who were in the position of calm spectators had no
-doubt but that Annabel, with whom he kept up a ceaseless
-flow of badinage and raillery, was the real attraction. If so,
-he was likely to find a rival in the sarcastic Ardmillan, with
-whom he had more than once bade fair to pass from jest to
-earnest. For the cooler Scot was in the habit of waiting
-until he saw his antagonist upon the horns of a dilemma, or
-luring him on to the confines of a manifest absurdity. This
-he would explode, blowing his rival’s argument into the air,
-and graciously explaining his triumph to the surrounding fair.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Such was the satisfaction which filled the heart of Mrs.
-Effingham, that but for the absence of her husband and
-daughter she would certainly have gone the daring length
-of giving a party. But the absence of her husband was, to
-the conscience of the matron, an insuperable objection. No
-amount of specious argument or passionate appeal could
-alter her determination.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘My dears, it would be wrong,’ she quietly replied, in
-answer to Annabel’s entreaty and Rosamond’s sober statement
-that there could not be any objection on the point of etiquette.
-‘Suppose anything should happen to your father or Beatrice
-about the time—travelling is so very uncertain—we should
-never have another happy moment.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>So the project, much to Annabel’s openly expressed and
-Rosamond’s inwardly felt disappointment, was given up.
-However, Mrs. Effingham relented so far as to say that,
-although her principles forbade her to give a party, there
-could be nothing indecorous in asking their friends to dine
-with them on Christmas Day, when the time for dear Guy’s
-departure for the station would, alas! be drawing nigh.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_396'>396</span>This was a grand concession, and all kinds of preparations
-were made for the celebration of the festival. In the meanwhile,
-as there was next to nothing doing on any of the
-stations, what between riding-parties, chance visits, special
-arrivals for the purpose of bringing over new books or new
-music, it seemed as if The Chase had been changed into the
-caravanserai of the district. It would have been difficult to
-tell whether the neighbours lived more of their time with the
-Effinghams or at their own stations.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>During this exciting season Wilfred Effingham was commencing
-to experience the elaborated torture of seeing the
-woman he <em>now</em> discovered to be his chief exemplar made
-love to by another man, apparently with prospects of success.
-When he set himself to work seriously to please, William
-Argyll was rarely known to fail. The restless spirit was
-stilled. The uncontrollable temper was lulled, like the wave
-of a summer sea. All the powers of a rare intellect, the
-stores of a cultivated mind, were displayed. Brave, athletic,
-of a striking personal appearance, if not regularly handsome,
-he was a man to whom few women could refuse interest,
-whom none could scorn. Besides all this, he was the heir
-to a fine estate in his native land.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When, therefore, day by day, he devoted himself in
-almost exclusive attendance to the appropriation of Miss
-Fane, keeping close to her bridle-rein in all excursions,
-monopolising her in the evenings, and holding æsthetic talks,
-in which she apparently took equal interest, the general conclusion
-arrived at was that Miss Fane was only awaiting a
-decorous interval to capitulate in due form.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Yet Wilfred was constrained to confess that however
-much he may have deserved such punishment, there was no
-change in her manner towards him. When he touched upon
-any of their old subjects of debate, he found she had not
-forgotten the points on which they had agreed or differed,
-and was ready, as of old, to maintain her opinions.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>She seemed pleased to linger over reminiscences of those
-days and the confidences then made.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Nobody would know Black Mountain now,’ she said.
-‘Since we have grown rich, comparatively speaking, from
-“the providential rise in the price of store cattle” (as one
-auctioneer called it), papa has indulged me by making all
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_397'>397</span>kinds of additions, and I suppose we must say improvements—new
-fences, new furniture, new stables, plants in the
-garden, books in the library. Money is the latter-day
-magician certainly.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘And you are proportionately happier, of course,’ said
-Wilfred.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Frankly,’ said Miss Fane, ‘I am, just at present. I feel like
-one of Napoleon’s generals, who were ennobled and enriched
-after having risen from the ranks. No doubt they enjoyed
-their new dignities immensely. If they didn’t, their wives
-did. I won’t say we were <em>roturiers</em>, but we were very, <em>very</em>
-poor. And it is so nice now to think we can dress as well
-as other people, and have the ordinary small luxuries of
-our position, without troubling about the everlasting ways
-and means.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘We are much alike in our experiences,’ answered Wilfred.
-‘We should soon have been absolutely ruined—the ways and
-means would have simply been obliterated.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I suppose so; but I never could believe in the poverty
-of any of you Lake William people. You seemed to have
-everything you could possibly want. The best part of our
-present good fortune is, that the boys are at a good school,
-while papa can buy as many new books as he can coax me,
-in mercy to his eyesight, to let him read. So I can say that
-we are quite happy.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I wonder you don’t think of going to Europe. Dr. Fane
-could easily sell at a high price now; and then, fancy “the
-kingdoms of the earth and the glory of them.”’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘You are quoting the Tempter, which is not quite respectful
-to me—for once; but there is a reason why papa cannot
-bear the thought of leaving our dear, lonely old home. My
-poor mother was buried there, and his heart with her. For
-me, I have from childhood imbibed his feelings for the place
-of her grave.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Rosamond here approached, and carried off her friend
-upon some mission of feminine importance. Wilfred, feeling
-that the conversation had taken a direction of melancholy
-which he could not fathom or adequately respond to, rejoined
-his other guests. But he could not help dwelling upon the
-fact that his conversations with Miss Fane seemed so utterly
-different from those with any other woman. Before the first
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_398'>398</span>sentences were well exchanged, one or other apparently struck
-the keynote, which awakened sympathetic chords, again vibrating
-amid harmonious echoes and semi-tones.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>To complete the universal jubilation, Mr. O’Desmond, in
-acknowledgment of the interest which the inhabitants of the
-district had shown in his safe return, announced his intention
-of giving an entertainment at Badajos on New Year’s Day,
-at which amusements would be provided for his humbler
-neighbours as well as for the gentry of the district. He had
-ridden over to The Chase, and entreated Mrs. Effingham’s
-advice as to decorations and dispositions. It was to be a
-<em>very</em> grand affair. No one who knew O’Desmond doubted
-but that, having undertaken such a project, he would carry
-it out with elaborate completeness. So that, among the young
-people and general population of the district, the Badajos
-Revels were looked forward to with intense expectation.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What will the general plan of arrangement be?’ said
-Fred Churbett to Hamilton. ‘Something in the Elizabethan
-style, with giants, salvage-men, and dwarfs, speeches and
-poetical addresses to the Queen of the land, whoever she
-may be? Anyhow, he is going to spend a lot of money
-about it. I hear the preparations are tremendous.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘In that case it will form a telling relief to the general
-lack of variety in these affairs,’ said Hamilton. ‘Every one
-has made such a heap of money now, that it hardly matters
-what is spent, in reason. We shall have to turn to hard
-work again in January. I wonder whether the old boy
-has fallen in love, like everybody else, and is going to
-make his proposals with what he considers to be “befitting
-accessories.”’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Shouldn’t wonder at all,’ said Fred. ‘It appears to me
-that we are beginning to enter upon a phase of existence
-worthy of Boccaccio, without the plague—and the—perhaps
-unreserved narratives. It certainly is the realm of Faerye at
-present. The turning out into the world of fact will come
-rather hard upon some of us.’</p>
-
-<hr class='c013' />
-
-<p class='c001'>So matters passed on, materially unchanged, until the
-actual arrival of Christmas Day, on which sacred commemoration
-Mr. Sternworth, who had been temporarily relieved by
-the Dean of Goulburn, stayed with them at The Chase for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_399'>399</span>a week, and performed services to a reasonable-sized congregation
-in the dining-room, which was completely filled by
-the family, with friends and humble neighbours. On the
-evening before, too, which invested the service with additional
-feelings of hope and thankfulness, most satisfactory letters had
-been received from India. Mr. Effingham told how—</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The Colonel was recovering rapidly. His medical
-attendant advised a visit of at least two years to Europe.
-As the cold weather season had set in, he might take his
-passage. Beatrice and he were to be married before he left.
-He (Mr. Effingham) would sail for Australia directly the
-ceremony was over. Indeed, he was tired of India, and now
-that the Colonel, poor fellow, was recovering, would have
-been bored to death had it not been for his menagerie.
-Then followed a list of profitable and unprofitable beasts,
-birds, and even fishes, which, if he could transport successfully
-to The Chase, would make him a happy man for the
-rest of his life. People might say he was amusing himself,
-but the profits of some of his ventures would in days to come
-be <em>enormous</em>. For instance, take the Cashmere goats, of
-which he had succeeded in getting a small flock. The fine
-hair or “pushta,” combed from near the skin, in contrast to
-the coarse outer fleece, was worth a guinea a pound. A
-shawl manufactured from it sold for a fabulous sum. These
-animals would thrive (he felt certain) in Australia; and then
-what would be the consequence? Why, the merino industry
-would be dwarfed by it—positively dwarfed!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The family of this sanguine gentleman did not go the
-whole length of his conclusions, having found that some
-unexpected factor commonly interfered with the arithmetical
-working out of his projects. But they were delighted to
-think they should shortly see his face again. And Beatrice
-was to receive the reward of her unchanged love and devotion!
-She would have, dear girl, a lifelong claim to care for the
-health and happiness of him whom she had, as the Surgeon-General
-averred, ‘raised up from the dead.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Files of Indian papers showed that on every side honours
-and decorations had been heaped upon the gallant and now
-fortunate soldier. Here was one of the mildest extracts—</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Colonel Glendinning, V.C., has been made a Companion
-of the Bath. He will probably be knighted. But will the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_400'>400</span>country tolerate this tardy and barren honour? Of his
-stamp are the men who have more than once saved India.
-If the present Government, instead of making promotions at
-the bidding of parliamentary interest, would appoint a <em>proved
-leader</em> as Commander-in-Chief, Hindostan might be tranquil
-once more and Russia overawed.’</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_401'>401</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XXVII <br /> THE DUEL IN THE SNOW</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c009'>Just before the commencement of the stupendous festivities
-of Badajos, a letter arrived, by which the parson was informed
-that Mr. Rockley, having business at Yass, had resolved to
-run up from Port Phillip and see them all. Mr. St. Maur,
-who had an equally good excuse, would accompany him.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This was looked upon as either a wondrous coincidence
-or a piece of pure, unadulterated good luck. When the hearty
-and sympathetic accents of William Rockley were once more
-heard among them, everybody was as pleased as if he, personally,
-had been asked to welcome a rich uncle from India.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I never dreamed of seeing St. Maur in these parts,’ said
-Neil Barrington. ‘He’s such a tremendous swell in Melbourne
-that I doubted his recognising us again. What business can
-he possibly have up here?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Perhaps he is unwilling to risk a disappointment at the
-game which will be lost or won before January, “for want of a
-heart to play,”’ said Ardmillan. ‘He may follow suit, like
-others of this worshipful company. Hearts are trumps this
-deal, unless I mistake greatly.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Didn’t we hear that he had been left money, or made a
-fortune by town allotments down there? Anyhow he’s going
-home, I believe; so this will be his last visit to Yass for some
-time.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘If we make money at the pace which we have been going
-for the last year, we shall all be able to go home,’ pronounced
-Ardmillan. ‘Yet, after all the pleasant days that we have
-seen here and at Benmohr, the thought is painful. This
-influx of capital will break up our jolly society more completely
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_402'>402</span>than the drought. In that case we should have had
-to cling to a sinking ship, or take to the boats; now, the
-vessel is being paid off, and the crew scattered to the four
-winds.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">‘Sic transit,’</span> echoed Neil lugubriously. ‘I forget the rest;
-but wherever we go, and however well lined our pockets
-may be, it is a chance if we are half as happy again in our
-lives as we have been in this jolly old district.’</p>
-
-<hr class='c013' />
-
-<p class='c001'>Christmas had come and gone. The Badajos Revels
-were imminent. Rockley and St. Maur had declared for
-remaining until they were over, in despite of presumably
-pressing engagements.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I believe old Harry O’Desmond would have made a
-personal matter of it if we had left him in the lurch,’ said Mr.
-Rockley. ‘He spoke rather stiffly, St. Maur, when you said
-all Melbourne was waiting to know the result of our deputation
-to the Governor-General, and that they would be loth to
-take the excuse of a country picnic.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The old boy’s face was grim,’ said St. Maur; ‘but I had
-made up my mind to remain. I like to poke him up—he is
-so serious and stately. But we should not have quarrelled
-about such a trifle.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In the meantime, terrific preparations were made for the
-fête; one to be long remembered in the neighbourhood.
-O’Desmond’s magnificence of idea had only been held down,
-like most men of his race and nature, by the compulsion of
-circumstances. Now, he had resolved to give a free rein to
-his taste and imagination. It was outlined, in his mind, as
-a recognition of the enthusiasm which had greeted his return
-to the district in which he had lived so long. This had
-touched him to the heart. Habitually repressive of emotion,
-he would show them, in this form, how he demonstrated the
-feelings to which he denied utterance.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In his carefully considered programme, he had by no
-means restricted himself to a single day or to the stereotyped
-gaieties of music and the dance. On this sole and exemplary
-occasion, the traditional glories of Castle Desmond would be
-faintly recalled, the profuse, imperial hospitalities of which
-had lent their share to his present sojourn near the plains of
-Yass. Several days were to be devoted to the reception of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_403'>403</span>all comers. Each was to have its special recreation; to
-include picnics and private theatricals, with dresses and
-costumes from a metropolitan establishment. A dinner to
-the gentry, tradespeople, and yeomen of the district; to be
-followed by a grand costume ball in a building constructed
-for the purpose, to which all ‘the county’ would be invited.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What a truly magnificent idea!’ said Rosamond Effingham,
-a short time before the opening day, as they all sat in
-the verandah at The Chase, after lunch and a hard morning’s
-work at preparations. ‘But will not our good friend and
-neighbour ruin himself?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Bred in the bone,’ said Gerald O’More. ‘Godfrey
-O’Desmond, this man’s great-grandfather, gave an entertainment
-which put a mortgage on the property from that day to
-this. Had a real lake of claret, I believe. Regular marble
-basin, you know. Gold and silver cups of the Renaissance,
-held in the hands of fauns, nymphs, and satyrs—that kind of
-thing—hogsheads emptied in every morning. Everything
-wonderful, rich, and more extravagant than a dream. Nobody
-went to bed for a fortnight, they say. Hounds met as usual.
-A score of duels—half-a-dozen men left on the sod. County
-asleep for a year afterwards.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘The estate never raised its head again, anyhow,’ said Mr.
-Rockley, ‘and no wonder. An extravagant, dissolute,
-murdering old scoundrel, as they say old Godfrey was, that
-deserved seven years in the county gaol for ruining his
-descendants and debauching the whole country-side. And
-do you believe me, when I mentioned as much to old Harry
-one day, he was deuced stiff about it; said we could not
-understand the duties of a man of position in those days. I
-believe now, on my solemn word, that he’d be just as bad,
-this day, if he got the chance. I daren’t say another word
-to him, and I’ve known him these twenty years.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Let us hope there won’t be so much claret consumed,’
-said Miss Fane. ‘I believe deep drinking is no longer
-fashionable. I should be grieved if Mr. O’Desmond did
-anything to injure his fortune. It may be only a temporary
-aberration (to which all Irishmen are subject, Mr. O’More),
-and then our small world will go on much as before.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘If we could induce a sufficient number of Australian
-ladies to colonise Ireland,’ said O’More, bowing, ‘as prudent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_404'>404</span>and as fascinating as Miss Fane,’ he continued, with a look
-at Annabel, ‘we might hope to change the national character.
-It only wants a dash of moderation to make it perfect. But
-we may trust to O’Desmond’s colonial experience to save
-him from ruin.’</p>
-
-<hr class='c013' />
-
-<p class='c001'>Thus the last hours of the fortunate, still-remembered
-year of 1840 passed away. A veritable jubilee, when the
-land rejoiced, and but few of the inhabitants of Australia
-found cause for woe. Great were the anxious speculations,
-however, as to weather. In a <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>fête champêtre</em></span>, everything
-depends upon that capricious department. And this being
-‘a first-class season,’ unvarying cloudlessness could by no
-means be predicted.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The malign divinities must have been appeased by the
-sacrifices of the drought. A calm and beauteous summer
-morn, warm, but tempered by the south sea-breeze, bid the
-children of the Great South Land greeting.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The New Year opened radiantly as a season of joy and
-consolation. The whole district was astir from earliest hours;
-the preparations for the momentous experiences of the day
-were utterly indescribable, save by a Homeric Company of
-Bards (limited).</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As the sun rose higher,</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>From Highland, Lowland, Border, Isle,</div>
- <div class='line'>How shall I name their separate style,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Each chief of rank and fame,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>with his ‘following,’ appeared before the outer gates of
-Badajos, where such a number were gathered as would
-almost have sufficed to storm the historic citadel, in the
-breach of which Captain O’Desmond had fallen, and from
-which the estate had been named.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The first day had been allotted to a liberally rendered
-lawn party, which was to include almost the whole available
-population of town and district, invited by public proclamation
-as well as by special invitation. Indeed, it had been
-notified through the press that, on New Year’s Day, Mr.
-O’Desmond would be ‘at home’ prepared to receive <em>all</em> his
-friends who desired to personally congratulate him upon his
-return from the interior.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_405'>405</span>Never was there such a muster before, since the first
-gum-tree was felled, within sight of Yass Plains. An
-uninterrupted procession wound its way steadily on from the
-town, from all the country roads, down gullies, and across
-flats and marshes. Every farm sent its representative. So
-did every shop in the town, every station in the district.
-Not a woman in the land had apparently remained at home.
-Who minded the infant children on the 1st of January 1840
-will always remain an unsolved mystery.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The arrangements had been carefully considered by a
-past-master of organisation; and they did not break down
-under the unprecedented strain. As the horsemen and
-horsewomen, tax-carts, dog-carts, carriages, tandems, waggons
-and bullock-drays even, arrived at the outer gate, they were
-met by ready servitors, who directed them, through a
-cunningly devised system of separate lanes, to temporarily
-constructed enclosures, where they were enabled to unharness
-and otherwise dispose of their draught animals and vehicles.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Sheds covered with that invaluable material the bark of
-the eucalyptus had been erected, and hay provided, as for
-the stabling of a regiment of cavalry; while small paddocks,
-well watered and with grass ‘up to their eyes’ (as the stock-riders
-expressed it), suited admirably those not over-particular
-rovers, who, having turned loose their nags, placed their
-saddles and bridles in a place of security, and thus disembarrassed
-themselves of anxiety for the day.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When these arrangements had been satisfactorily made,
-they were guided towards the river-meadow, on a slope
-overlooking which the homestead and outbuildings were
-situated. Here was clustered an encampment of tents and
-booths, of every size and shape, and apparently devoted to as
-many various classes of amusement and recreation.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The short grass of the river flat, as it was generally called,
-was admirably adapted for the present purposes and intentions.
-The propitious season, with its frequent showers, had
-furnished a fair imitation of English turf, both in verdure and
-in thickness of sward, the latter quality much assisted by the
-stud flock of the famed Badajos merinoes.</p>
-
-<hr class='c013' />
-
-<p class='c001'>The concluding day of the memorable Badajos Revels,
-the unrivalled and immortal performance, had arrived. The
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_406'>406</span>last act was about to be called on. All the arrangements had
-been more than successful. The sports and pastimes had
-gone through without hitch or contention. The populace
-was enthusiastic in praise of the liberality which had ministered
-so lavishly to their amusement. The aristocracy were
-no less unanimous in their approbation. That battues, the
-picnics, the costume ball, had been, beyond all description,
-delightful, fascinating, well carried out, in such perfect taste—extraordinary
-good form—intoxicating—heavenly—utterly,
-indescribably delicious; the adjectives and superlatives
-varying with the age, position, sex, or character of the
-speaker.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>And now the modern miracle-play was to finish with a
-presentment, unique and marvellous beyond belief. The
-main body of guests and revellers had departed soon after
-daylight. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la">‘Conclamatum est, Poculatum est,’</span> said a young
-Irish priest. ‘I shall have to go into “retreat” if Father
-Mahony gets word of me at the ball. Wasn’t I Lord
-Edward Fitzgerald to the life? But I durstn’t stay away an
-hour longer from my flock.’ Many were the half-repentant,
-homeward-bound wayfarers who held similar opinions. And
-the continuous passage of the fords of the Yass River might
-have suggested to the Scots, by birth or extraction, King
-James’ army after Flodden—</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Tweed’s echoes heard the ceaseless plash,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>While many a broken band,</div>
- <div class='line'>Disordered through her currents dash,</div>
- <div class='line in2'>To gain the Scottish land.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>There was not, it is true, such need for haste, but the pace at
-which the shallower fords were taken might have suggested it.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>However, a considerable proportion of the house parties
-and guests of the neighbouring families, with such of the
-townspeople and others whose time was not specially
-valuable, remained for the closing spectacle. Much curiosity
-was aroused as to the nature of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Perhaps you can unfold the mystery of this duel which
-we are all taking about,’ said Annabel to St. Maur, with
-whom she had been discussing the costumes of the ball.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I happen to be in O’Desmond’s confidence,’ he replied;
-‘so we may exchange secrets. Many years ago, in Paris, he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_407'>407</span>fell across an old picture representing a fatal duel between
-Masks, after a ball. So he pitched upon it for representation,
-as a striking if rather weird interlude.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What a strange idea! How unreal and horrible. Fancy any
-of the people here going out to fight a duel. Is any one killed?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Of course, or there wouldn’t be half the interest. He
-proposes to dress the characters exactly like those in the
-picture, and, indeed, brought up the costumes from town with
-him. Your brother, by a coincidence, adopted one—that of
-a Red Indian. It will do for his second.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Thoroughly French, at any rate, and only for the perfect
-safety of the thing would be horrible to look at. However,
-we must do whatever Mr. O’Desmond tells us, for <em>years</em> to
-come. I shall be too sleepy to be much shocked, that’s one
-thing. But what are they to fight with? Rapiers?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘With foils, which, of course you know, are the same in
-appearance, only with a button on the end which prevents
-danger from a thrust.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Wilfred, my boy!’ had said O’Desmond, making a progress
-through the ball-room on the preceding night, ‘you
-look in that Huron dress as if you had neglected to scalp an
-enemy, and were grieving over the omission. Do the ladies
-know those odd-looking pieces of brown leather on the breast
-fringe are <em>real scalps</em>? I see they are. You will get no
-one to dance with you. But my errand is a selfish one.
-You will make a principal man in that “Duel after the
-Masquerade” which I have set my heart upon getting up
-to-morrow.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘But in this dress?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘My dear fellow, that is the very thing. Curiously, one
-of the actors in that weird duel scene is dressed as a Huron
-or Cherokee. You know Indian arms and legends, even
-names, were fashionable in Paris when Chateaubriand made
-every one weep with his Atala and Chactas? You could not
-have been more accurately dressed, and you will lay me
-under lasting obligation by taking the foils with Argyll, and
-investing your second with this dress.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘With Argyll!’ echoed Wilfred with an accent of surprise.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I know he is called the surest fencer in our small world,
-but I always thought you more than his match. He never,
-to my mind, liked your thrust in tierce.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_408'>408</span>‘You are right,’ said Wilfred. ‘Grisier thought me perfect
-in that. I shall meet him with pleasure. If only to show
-him—— Bah! I am getting so infected with the spirit of
-your Masquerade that one would think it a real duel. Command
-me, however.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘A thousand thanks. Not later than three to-morrow
-afternoon. The ladies will not forgive us if we are not
-punctual.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>From Wilfred Effingham’s expression of relief one might
-have thought that he had received good tidings. Yet, what
-was it after all—what could it lead to? A mock duel; a
-mere fencing match. What was there to clear his visage and
-lighten his heart in such a game as this?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A trifle, doubtless. But William Argyll was to be his
-antagonist. Towards him he had been unconsciously nurturing
-a causeless resentment, which threatened to drift into
-hatred. Argyll was sunning himself daily (he thought) in
-the smiles of Vera Fane, pleased with the position and
-confident of success. And though she, from time to time,
-regarded Wilfred with glances of such kindly regard that he
-was well-nigh tempted to confess his past sins and his present
-love, he had resolutely kept aloof.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Why should he court repulse, and only be more hopelessly
-humiliated? Did not all say—could he not see—that Miss
-Fane was merely waiting for Argyll’s challenge to the citadel
-of her heart to own its conquest and surrender?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Benmohr people, who knew something of everything
-and did not suffer their knowledge to decay for lack of
-practice, were devoted to fencing. Their lumber-room was
-half an armoury, holding a great array of foils, wire masks,
-single-sticks, and boxing-gloves. With these and a little
-pistol practice the dulness of many a wet afternoon had been
-enlivened. Perhaps in their trials of skill those with the foils
-were most popular.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This was Argyll’s favourite pastime. A leading performer
-with all other weapons, he had a passion for fencing, for
-which his mountain-born activity pre-eminently fitted him.
-Effingham, a pupil of the celebrated Grisier, was thought to
-be nearly, if not quite his match. And more than once
-Argyll’s hasty temper had blazed out as Wilfred had ‘touched
-him’ with a succession of rapid hits, or sent the foil from his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_409'>409</span>hand by one of the artifices of the fencing school. Now,
-however, a trial would be afforded, the issue of which would
-be final and decisive. To each the requisite notice had been
-given, and each had accepted the chances of the contest.
-No one in future would be able to assert that this or that
-man was the better swordsman.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>A larger gathering took place at luncheon than could
-have been expected. Many were the reasons assigned for
-the punctuality with which all the ladies showed up. Fred
-Churbett, indeed, openly declared that the gladiator element
-was becoming dangerously developed, and that it would be
-soon necessary to shed blood in good earnest, to enjoy a
-decent reputation with the ladies of the land.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I saw O’Desmond’s people making astounding changes
-in the anterior of the amphitheatre, Miss Annabel, from my
-bedroom window this morning. I should not be surprised
-at the arena being changed to an African forest, with a live
-giraffe and a Lion Ride, after Freiligrath. Do you remember
-the doomed giraffe? How</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c014'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>With a roar the lion springs</div>
- <div class='line in2'>On her back now. What a race-horse!’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I should not be surprised at anything,’ said Annabel.
-‘Badajos is becoming an Enchanted Castle. How we shall
-endure our daily lives again, I can’t think. Every one is
-going home to-morrow, so perhaps the spell will be broken.
-Heigh-ho! When are we to be allowed to take our seats? I
-shall fall asleep if they put it off too long.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘At three o’clock precisely the herald’s horn will be blown,
-and we shall see what we shall see. I hope Argyll will be in
-a good temper, or terrible things may happen.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What is this about Mr. Argyll’s temper?’ said Miss Fane.
-‘Is he so much more ferocious than all the rest of you? I
-am sure that <em>I</em> have seen nothing of it.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Only my nonsense, Miss Fane,’ said Fred, instantly retreating
-from his position. ‘The best-hearted, most generous
-fellow possible. Impetuous and high-spirited, you know.
-Highlanders and Irishmen—all the world, in fact, except that
-modern Roman, the Anglo-Saxon—are inclined to be choleric.
-Ha! there goes the bugle.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>All were ready, indeed impatient, for the commencement.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_410'>410</span>Many acquaintances had indeed ridden out from Yass, and
-reinforced the spectators. Mr. Rockley had appeared at
-lunch—scarcely in the best of tempers—and had given vent
-to his opinion that it was quite time for this foolery to be
-over. Not that he made this suggestion to O’Desmond
-personally.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>When the entrances were thrown open, and the spectators
-pressed into their seats with something of the impatience
-which in days of old seems to have characterised the frequenters
-of the amphitheatre, a cry of delighted surprise
-broke from the startled guests.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>In order to reproduce the accessories of the imaginary
-conflict with fidelity of detail, O’Desmond has spared no
-trouble. The Bois de Boulogne had been simulated by the
-artifice of transplanting whole trees, especially those which
-more closely resembled European evergreens. These had
-been mingled with others stripped of their foliage, by which
-deciduous deception the illusion of a northern winter was
-preserved. A coating of milk-white river sand had been
-strewn over the arena, imparting the appearance of the
-snow, in which the now historical masqueraders fought their
-celebrated duel. By filling up the openings left for windows,
-and excluding the sun from the roof as much as possible, an
-approach to the dim light proper to a Parisian December
-morning was produced. As hackney-coaches appeared, one
-at either end of the arena, and driving in, took their stations
-under trees, preparatory to permitting their sensational fares
-to alight, the burst of applause both from those familiar with
-the original picture, and others who were overcome by the
-realism of the scene, was tremendous. And when forth
-stepped from one of the carriages a Red Huron Indian, and
-with stately steps took up his position as second, to so great
-and painful a pitch rose the excitement among the ladies
-that ‘the boldest held’ her ‘breath for a time.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Pierrot now, with elastic springing gait, moved lightly
-forward towards his antagonist, a reckless Debardeur, who
-looked as if he had been dancing a veritable <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">‘Galop d’Enfer’</span>
-before he quitted the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">‘Bal d’Opera.’</span> Each performed an
-elaborate salute as they took their ground. The seconds
-measured their swords punctiliously.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>As the enthusiasm of the crowd broke forth in remark
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_411'>411</span>and exclamation, before the first passes were interchanged,
-Harry O’Desmond himself made his appearance among the
-ladies, and took his seat between Rosamond Effingham and
-Miss Fane, prepared to receive the shower of congratulations
-at once poured upon him.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Yes, I <em>have</em> taken a little trouble; but I am amply repaid,
-Miss Effingham, if I have succeeded in adding to the amusement
-of my lady friends. For those I have the honour to
-address’—and here the gallant <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>impresario</em></span> looked as if the
-lady beside him had but to ask for a Sultan’s circlet, to have
-it tossed in her lap—‘what sacrifices would I not make?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Our distinguished host is becoming desperate,’ thought
-Rosamond. ‘I wonder who <em>she</em> is? I am nearly certain it
-is Vera Fane. He and the Doctor are great friends. Now
-I think of it, he said the other day that she was, with one
-exception, the pearl of the district. Mamma, too, has been
-hinting at something. A nice lady neighbour at Badajos
-would be indeed a treasure.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘What an exciting piece of sword-play this will be, Mr.
-O’Desmond,’ she said. ‘One cannot help thinking that
-there is something real about it. And I have an uneasy
-feeling that I cannot account for, such as I should call a
-presentiment, if all were not so perfectly safe. What do you
-say, Vera?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I say it is a most astonishing picture of a real duel. I
-ought to enjoy it very much, only that, like you, I feel a
-depression such as I have never had before. Oh, now they
-are beginning! Really it is quite a relief.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘I must take a foil with the winner,’ said O’Desmond, ‘if
-you think it is so serious, just to see if I have forgotten my
-Parisian experiences. It reminds one of the Quartier Latin,
-and the students’ pipes—long hair and duels—daily matters
-of course. Ha! a wonderfully quick carte and counter-carte.
-There is something stirring in the clink of steel, all the world
-over, is there not, Miss Effingham?’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The pictured scene was accurately reproduced. Each
-man, with his second, fantastically arrayed. The nearer
-combatant, in his loose garb, had his sword-arm bared to the
-elbow, for the greater freedom required with the weapon.
-Four other men, picturesquely attired, were present. Of
-these, two stood near to him whose back was towards the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_412'>412</span>part of the theatre where the Effinghams and Miss Fane
-were sitting.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The contest proceeded with curious similitude to an actual
-encounter. Attack and defence, feint and challenge, carte,
-tierce, ripeste, staccato, all the subtle and delicate manœuvres
-of which the rapier combat is susceptible, had been employed,
-to the wonder and admiration of the spectators.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It was evident, before they had exchanged a dozen passes,
-that the men were most evenly matched. Much doubt was
-expressed as to who would prove the victor.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Latterly, Wilfred, who, with equal tenacity and vigilance,
-had the cooler head, commenced to show by small but sure
-signs that he was gaining an advantage. Step by step he
-drew his antagonist nearer to him, and employing his favourite
-thrust, after a brilliant parry, touched him several times in
-succession. At each palpable hit the spectators gave a cheer,
-which evidently disturbed Argyll’s fiery temperament. He
-bit his lip, his brow contracted, but no token, excepting
-these and a burning spot on his cheek, showed the inward
-conflict. Suddenly he sprang forward with panther-like
-activity, and for one second Wilfred’s eye and hand were at
-fault, as, with a lightning lunge, Argyll delivered full upon
-his adversary’s chest a thrust, so like the real thing that,
-though the foil (as the spectators imagined) passed outside,
-the hilt of the mimic weapon rapped sharply, as if he had
-been run through the body. At the same moment he sank
-down, and was scarcely saved from falling, while Argyll,
-impatiently drawing back his weapon, threw it down and
-turned as if to leave the scene—half urged by his second—as
-was the successful combatant in the weird picture.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Why—how wonderfully our brave combatants have
-imitated the originals, Mr. O’Desmond?’ said Rosamond,
-with unfeigned admiration. ‘The Debardeur sinks slowly
-from the arms of his second to the ground; his sword-point
-strikes the earth; his comrade and the Capuchin bend over
-him. They act the confusion of a death-scene well. His
-antagonist casts down his blood-stained sword—why, it <em>looks</em>
-red—and hurries from the spot.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Yes,’ O’Desmond continued, ‘everything is now concluded
-happily, successfully, triumphantly, may I say; it
-needs but, dearest Miss Effingham, that I should offer you——’
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_413'>413</span>What Mr. O’Desmond was minded to offer his fair neighbour
-can never be known, for at that moment a shriek, so wild
-and despairing, rent the air, that all conversation, ordinary
-and extraordinary, ceased.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>More astonishing still, Miss Fane sprang from her seat,
-and rushing into the arena with the speed of frenzy, knelt by
-the side of the defeated combatant, and with every endearing
-epithet supported his head, wringing her hands in agony as
-she gazed on the motionless form beside her.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>O’Desmond, leaping down without a thought of his late
-interesting employment, gave one glance at the fallen sword,
-another at the fallen man, and divined the situation.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘By ——!’ he said, ‘<em>the button has come off the foil</em>, and
-the poor boy is run through the body. He’ll be a dead man
-by sundown.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Not so sure of that; keep the people back while I
-examine him,’ said Mr. Sternworth, pushing suddenly to the
-front. ‘Stand back!’ he cried with the voice of authority.
-‘How can I tell you what’s wrong with him if you don’t give
-him air? Miss Fane, I entreat you to be calm.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He lowered his voice and spoke in softened tones, for he
-had seen a look in Vera Fane’s face which none had ever
-marked there before. As she knelt by the side of the wounded
-man, from whose hurt the blood was pouring fast, in a bright
-red stream; as with passionate anxiety she gazed into his
-face, while her arms supported him in his death-like faint, her
-whole countenance betrayed the unutterable tenderness with
-which a woman regards her lover.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The spectators stood assembled around the ill-fated combatant.
-Great and general was the consternation.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The nature of the mischance—the loss of the button
-which guards the fencer in all exercises with the foil—was
-patent enough to those acquainted with small-sword practice.
-But a large proportion of the crowd, with no previous experience
-of such affairs, could with difficulty be got to believe
-that Argyll had not used unjustifiable means to the injury of
-his antagonist. These worthy people were for his being
-arrested and held to bail. His personal friends resented the
-idea. Words ran high; until indeed, at one time, it appeared
-as if a form of civic broil, common in the middle ages, would
-be revived with undesirable accuracy.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_414'>414</span>Now, alas! the festive aspect of the scene was abruptly
-changed. O’Desmond’s grief at this most untoward ending
-to his entertainments was painful to witness. Argyll’s
-generous nature plunged him into a state of deep contrition
-for his passionate action.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The women, one and all, were so shocked and excited by
-the sight of blood and the rumour, which quickly gained
-credence, that Wilfred Effingham was dying, that tearful
-lamentations and hysterical cries were heard in all directions.
-Nor indeed until it was authoritatively stated by the medical
-practitioner of the district, who was luckily present, that
-Mr. Effingham having been run through the body, had therefore
-received a dangerous but not necessarily fatal wound, was
-consolation possible.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>This gentleman, however, later on would by no means
-commit himself to a definite opinion. ‘Without doubt it
-was a critical case. Though the cœliac axis had been
-missed, by a miracle, the vasa-vasorum blood-vessel had
-suffered lesion. The left subclavian artery had been torn
-through, yet, from its known power of contraction, he trusted
-that the interior lining would be closed, when further loss of
-blood would cease. Of course, unfavourable symptoms
-might supervene at any moment—at any moment. At
-present the patient was free from pain. Quiet—that is,
-absolute rest—was indispensable. With no exciting visits,
-and—yes—with the closest attention and good nursing, a distinctly
-favourable termination might be—ahem—hoped for.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But an early doom, either alone or with all the aids that
-affection, friendship, ay or devoted love, could bring, was
-not written in the book of fate against Wilfred Effingham’s
-name. In the course of a week the popular practitioner
-alluded to had the pleasure of informing the anxious inhabitants
-of the Yass district ‘that the injury having, as he had
-the honour to diagnose, providentially not occurred to the
-trunk artery, the middle coat of the smaller blood-vessel had,
-from its elastic and contractile nature, after being torn by the
-partially blunted end of the foil, caused a closure. In point
-of fact, the injury had yielded to treatment. He would
-definitely pledge himself, in fact, that the patient was bordering
-upon convalescence. In a week or two he would be
-ready to support a removal to The Chase, where doubtless his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_415'>415</span>youth, temperate habit, and excellent constitution would combine
-to produce a complete recovery.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>These agreeable predictions were fulfilled to the letter.
-Yet was there another element involved in the case, which
-was thought to have exercised a powerful influence, if, indeed,
-it was not the chief factor in his recovery. The vision of
-sudden death which had passed before the eyes of the guests
-at Badajos had surprised the secret of Vera Fane’s heart.
-Of timid, almost imperceptible growth, the faint budding
-commencement of a girl’s fancy had, all in silence and
-secrecy, ripened into the fragrant blossom of a woman’s love.
-Pure, devoted, imperishable, such a sentiment is proof against
-the anguish of non-requital, the attacks of rivalry, even the
-ruder shocks of falsehood or infidelity. Let him, then, to
-whom, all unworthy, such a prize is allotted by a too indulgent
-destiny, sacrifice to the kind deities, and be thankful.
-It may have been—was doubtless—urged by Miss Fane’s admirers,
-that ‘that fellow Effingham was not half good enough
-for her, more especially after his idiotic affair with Christabel
-Rockley’; but, pray, which of us, to whom the blindly swaying
-Eros has been gracious, is not manifestly overrated, nay,
-made to blush for shortcomings from his early ideal?</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>So must it ever be in the history of the race—were the
-secrets of all hearts known. Let us be consoled that we are
-not conspicuously inferior to our neighbours, and chiefly
-strive, in spite of that mysterious Disappointment—poor
-human nature—to gain some modest eminence. Let Wilfred
-Effingham, then, enjoy his undeserved good fortune, <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>comme
-nous autres</em></span>, assured that with such companionship he will be
-stronger to battle for the right while life lasts.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘How could you forgive me?’ he said, at the close of
-one of the happy confidences which his returning strength
-rendered possible. ‘I should never have dared to ask you
-after my folly.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>‘Women love but once—that is, those who are worthy of
-the name,’ she said softly. ‘I had unwisely, it would seem,
-permitted my heart to stray. It passed into the possession
-of one who—well, scarce valued sufficiently the simple offering.
-But you do <em>now</em>, dearest, do you not? I will never
-forgive you, or rather, on second thoughts, I <em>will</em> forgive you,
-if hereafter you love any other woman but me.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='pageno' id='Page_416'>416</span>‘You are an angel. Did I say so before? Never mind.
-Truth will bear repetition.’</p>
-
-<hr class='c013' />
-
-<p class='c001'>Old Tom Glendinning commenced to fail in health soon
-after the permanent settlement of the district; his detractors
-averred, because the blacks left off spearing the cattle and
-took to station work. He lived long enough to hear of
-General Glendinning’s marriage, at which he expressed great
-satisfaction, coupled with the hope that the Major (as he
-always called him) would return to India, ‘av it was only to
-have another turn at thim murdtherin’ nay-gurs, my heavy
-curse on thim, from Bingal to Galantapee.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>He was carefully nursed by Mrs. Evans, who had at length
-followed her husband to the new country, after repeated
-assurances that it was impossible for him to return to Lake
-William, but that she might please herself.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>They buried the old stock-rider, in accordance with his last
-wishes, on an island in the lake, within sight of Guy’s homestead,
-near his ancient steed Boney, who had preceded him
-in decease. The dog Crab survived him but a few weeks,
-and was carefully interred at his feet. It was noticed that
-no black of any description whatever, young or old, male or
-female, wild or tame, would ever set foot on the green, wave-washed
-islet afterwards.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Andrew and Jeanie, after a few years, retired to a snug
-farm within easy distance of The Chase, at which place, for
-one reason or other, they spent nearly as much time as at
-home. Andrew’s aid was continually invoked in agricultural
-emergencies, more particularly when business called Wilfred
-away; while Jeanie’s invaluable counsel and reassuring
-presence, when the inmates of Mrs. Wilfred’s nursery developed
-alarming symptoms, was so largely in request that Andrew
-more than once remarked that ‘he didna ken but what he
-saw far mair o’ his auld dame before he had a hame o’ his
-ain. But she had aye ta’en a’ her pleasure in life at ither
-folk’s bedsides. Maist unco-omon!’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Duncan, having once enjoyed an independent life in the
-new country, could not be induced to return to The Chase.
-He saved his money, and with national forecast commenced
-business in the rising township of Warleigh. Of this settlement
-he became in time the leading alderman (the burgesses
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_417'>417</span>obtained a municipality in the after-time), and rose finally to
-be mayor.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The <cite>Melbourne Argus</cite> printed <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>in extenso</em></span> Mr. Cargill’s
-address to the electors of West Palmerston when a candidate
-for a vacancy in the Legislative Council. It was certain he
-would be returned at the head of the poll, doubtless to represent
-a Liberal Ministry before long. May there never be invited
-a less worthy personage to the councils of the land than
-the Hon. Duncan Cargill, M.L.C.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Mr. Rockley, after his return to Port Phillip, hurled himself
-with his accustomed energy at every kind of investment.
-Not satisfied with extensive mercantile transactions, he
-bought agricultural lands, the nucleus of a fine estate. In
-Parliament he made such vigorous, idiomatic onslaughts upon
-the Government of the day as led the Speaker occasionally
-to suggest modification. He developed Warleigh, the town
-to which he had originally attached himself, wonderfully, and
-besides aiding all struggling settlers in the bad times, which
-arrived, as he had prophesied, close on the heels of inflation
-and over-trading. In a general way he benefited by good
-advice, friendly intercourse, and substantial assistance, everybody
-with whom he came into contact. As a magistrate, a
-perfect Draco (in theory), he was never known to remit a fine
-for certain offences. It was whispered, nevertheless, that he
-had many a time been known to pay such out of his own
-pocket.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It is comforting to those who honour liberality and unselfishness
-to know that he amassed a large fortune. He continued
-to invest from time to time in land, the management
-of which chiefly served to occupy his mind in declining years.
-When the grave closed over the warm heart and eager spirit
-of William Rockley, men said that he left no fellow behind
-him. There are still those who believe him to have been
-unsurpassed for energy of mind and body, with a clear-headed
-forecast in affairs, joined to the warm sympathy which
-rendered it impossible to omit a kindness or forgo a benefit.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The larger portion of the estate was willed to Christabel
-and her husband, but from the number of junior Clarkes of
-all sorts and sizes who fill the commodious family drag, a considerable
-subdivision of landed property will probably take
-place in another generation. Bob Clarke adopted easily the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_418'>418</span>position of country gentleman. He no longer rides steeple-chases,
-but his four-in-hand team is certainly superior in
-blood, bone, matching, and appointments to anything south
-of the line.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But little remains to tell. Our small community reached
-that stage when, as with nations, the less history needed the
-better for their happiness. As to this last apocryphal commodity
-(as some have deemed), Wilfred Effingham avers that
-Vera and he have such a large supply on hand that he is
-troubled in spirit only by the thought that something in the
-nature of evil <em>must</em> happen, were it only in accordance with
-the law of averages.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Port Phillip investments paid so well that, upon the
-sale of Benmohr by Argyll and Hamilton, he purchased that
-ever-memorable historic station. Mrs. Teviot and Wullie
-remained in possession almost as long as they lived, but
-never could be brought to regard Mr. Effingham in any other
-light than that of a neighbour and a visitor of ‘their gentlemen.’
-He was often reminded of the muddy winter evening
-when he first arrived.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Dean Sternworth—thus promoted—lives on, growing still
-more wonderful roses, and experiencing an access of purest
-pleasure when a Marie Van Houte or Souvenir de Malmaison
-excites the envy of the district.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Marrying, christening, and, indeed, burying the inhabitants
-of Yass—for death also is in Arcadia—his unobtrusive path
-is daily trodden, ‘and, sure the Eternal Master found, his
-single talent well employed.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Among his chief and enduring pleasures are his monthly
-visits to Lake William to perform service in the freestone
-church, which has been erected by the Effingham family and
-their neighbours on a spot easy of general access. On such
-occasions Dr. Fane is generally found at The Chase, where
-the friends argue by the hour together. Such a period of
-continuous mutual entertainment must it have been that, on
-one occasion, was familiarly referred to by Master Hubert
-Warleigh Effingham as lasting ‘till all was blue.’</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Howard Effingham has once more been placed by circumstances
-in the enviable position of a man who has nothing
-in this world to attend to but his favourite hobby, to which
-he is sufficiently attached to devote every moment of his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_419'>419</span>spare time to it. That fortunate ex-militaire has now few
-other foes to consider than the native cat (dasyura), the
-black cormorant, and the dingo.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>It must be confessed that they give him more trouble
-than ever—in his youth—did the Queen’s enemies. The
-cormorants eat his young fish, and when the captain extracted
-from the dead body of one of them no less than six
-infantine trout, the tears (so his grandson averred) came into
-his eyes. The partridges, even the gold and silver pheasants
-were not sacred from the native cat. An occasional dingo
-makes his appearance, wandering from Black Mountain (the
-doctor was always an indifferent ‘poisoner,’ says the parson),
-and a brace of gazelle fawns have never been sufficiently
-accounted for. But the exhibition of strychnine crystals provides
-a solution, and the land has peace.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On the whole, progress has been made. The furred,
-feathered, or finned emigrants are steadily increasing; fair
-shooting can soon be allowed, and extermination will be
-impossible.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Between ourselves, a leash of foxes were turned loose in
-the gibba-gunyahs, near which the first dingo was killed, by
-the Lake William hounds, and Jack Barker swore (only he
-‘stretches’ so) that he saw the vixen feeding five cubs—one
-with a white tag to his brush (Jack is always circumstantial),
-with the biggest buck ’possum he ever saw.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>The Lake William hounds have long been back in their
-kennels. John Hampden makes a point of attending the
-first meet, and O’Desmond (whose heart was not broken, or
-was at least successfully repaired by his subsequent marriage)
-is a steady supporter, as of yore.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>But somehow the whole affair doesn’t feel so jolly as
-when Argyll and Hamilton, Ardmillan and Forbes, Fred
-Churbett and Neil, Malahyde and Edward Belfield—all the
-‘Benmohr mob’ in fact—were safe for every meet.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Perhaps, though with enthusiasts his steady march is disregarded,
-old Time may possibly have had something to do
-with the decrease of enthusiasm. Mrs. Wilfred does not
-approve of her husband riding so hard as in the brave days
-of old. She herself, from circumstances, is often absent, and
-scarcely enjoys lending Emigrant, still <em>nearly</em> as good as ever,
-to lady visitors. A heavy autumn shower, too, acted unfavourably
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_420'>420</span>upon the health of the M.F.H., and explained
-practically what lumbago most closely resembles.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Still Howard Effingham, nobly loyal to his ideal, presses
-gallantly forward to the realisation of his hopes. The
-coming year will see an opening meet of the Lake William
-hounds, such as, in <em>one</em> respect, at least, was never ridden to
-in Australia before.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>On some grey-hued, red-dawning May morn, freshly recalling,
-like the verse of an old song, how many a hunting
-day of yore, will he view a <em>fox</em> away from the upper corner of
-the ti-tree covert, on the rocky spur of the yellow-box range—a
-<em>real</em> fox—as red, as wiry, with as white a tag to his
-brush as ever a straight-goer that stretched across the
-pastures before the Pytchley or the Quorn. Nevertheless
-<em>Australian born and bred</em>.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Standing in his stirrups, he watches the leading hounds
-pour through the paddock fence, the remainder settling to
-the scent, or at silent speed sweeping over the forest parks
-that border the lake meadows. Rosamond St. Maur is far
-away, alas! and Fergus out at grass; but Major-General Sir
-Walter Glendinning, on leave from India, is trying the speed
-of the best Arab in the Mofussil. Mrs. O’Desmond is
-watching her husband anxiously, Guy is home from Port
-Phillip, with Bob Clarke and Ardmillan, each on a horse ‘fit
-to go for a man’s life,’ and wild with frolic spirits. Mrs.
-Vera Effingham is out, and, as luck would have it, ready and
-willing to remind Emigrant of old Black Mountain days. John
-Hampden, taking The Caliph by the head, now snow white,
-but still safe across timber, echoes back Wilfred’s ‘Forrard,
-forrard, away!’ as he sails off with the lead, and forgetting
-his wife and family, feels perfectly, ecstatically happy. Then,
-and then only, will Howard Effingham acknowledge that he
-has at length achieved the position of which he has so often
-dreamed—then will he hold himself to be in real, completest
-earnest—an Australian Squire.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>THE END</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='small'><em>Printed by</em> <span class='sc'>R. &amp; R. Clark, Limited</span>, <em>Edinburgh</em></span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_421'>421</span><span class='large'>BY ROLF BOLDREWOOD.</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'><em>Crown 8vo. 6s. each.</em></span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='large'><b>WAR TO THE KNIFE;</b></span> or, Tangata Maori.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>ACADEMY.</cite>—“A stirring romance.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>A ROMANCE OF CANVAS TOWN</b>, and other Stories.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>ATHENÆUM.</cite>—“The book is interesting for its obvious insight into life in the
-Australian bush.”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='small'><em>Crown 8vo. 3s. 6d. each.</em></span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>ROBBERY UNDER ARMS.</b></p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>A STORY OF LIFE AND ADVENTURE IN THE BUSH AND IN THE</div>
- <div>GOLD-FIELDS OF AUSTRALIA.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>GUARDIAN.</cite>—“A singularly spirited and stirring tale of Australian life, chiefly
-in the remoter settlements.... Altogether it is a capital story, full of wild adventure
-and startling incidents, and told with a genuine simplicity and quiet appearance of truth,
-as if the writer were really drawing upon his memory rather than his imagination.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>A MODERN BUCCANEER.</b></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>DAILY CHRONICLE.</cite>—“We do not forget <cite>Robbery under Arms</cite>, or any of its
-various successors, when we say that Rolf Boldrewood has never done anything so good as
-<cite>A Modern Buccaneer</cite>. It is good, too, in a manner which is for the author a new one.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>THE MINER’S RIGHT.</b></p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>A TALE OF THE AUSTRALIAN GOLD-FIELDS.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>WORLD.</cite>—“Full of good passages, passages abounding in vivacity, in the colour and
-play of life.... The pith of the book lies in its singularly fresh and vivid pictures of the
-humours of the gold-fields—tragic humours enough they are, too, here and again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>THE SQUATTER’S DREAM.</b></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>FIELD.</cite>—“The details are filled in by a hand evidently well conversant with his subject,
-and everything is <span lang="it" xml:lang="it"><em>ben trovato</em></span>, if not actually true. A perusal of these cheerfully-written
-pages will probably give a better idea of realities of Australian life than could be obtained
-from many more pretentious works.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>A SYDNEY-SIDE SAXON.</b></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>GLASGOW HERALD.</cite>—“The interest never flags, and altogether <cite>A Sydney-Side
-Saxon</cite> is a really refreshing book.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>A COLONIAL REFORMER.</b></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>ATHENÆUM.</cite>—“A series of natural and entertaining pictures of Australian life,
-which are, above all things, readable.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>NEVERMORE.</b></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>OBSERVER.</cite>—“An exciting story of Ballarat in the fifties. Its hero, Lance
-Trevanion, is a character which for force of delineation has no equal in Rolf Boldrewood’s
-previous novels.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>PLAIN LIVING.</b> A Bush Idyll.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>ACADEMY.</cite>—“A hearty story, deriving charm from the odours of the bush and the
-bleating of incalculable sheep.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>MY RUN HOME.</b></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>ATHENÆUM.</cite>—“Rolf Boldrewood’s last story is a racy volume. It has many of
-the best qualities of Whyte Melville, the breezy freshness and vigour of Frank Smedley,
-with the dash and something of the abandon of Lever.... His last volume is one of his
-best.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>THE SEALSKIN CLOAK.</b></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>TIMES.</cite>—“A well-written story.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>THE CROOKED STICK; or, Pollie’s Probation.</b></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>ACADEMY.</cite>—“A charming picture of Australian station life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>OLD MELBOURNE MEMORIES.</b></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>NATIONAL OBSERVER.</cite>—“His book deserves to be read in England with as
-much appreciation as it has already gained in the country of its birth.”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='small'><em>Fcap. 8vo. 2s.</em></span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>THE SPHINX OF EAGLEHAWK.</b></p>
-
-<p class='c015'>A TALE OF OLD BENDIGO.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;[<cite>Macmillan’s Pocket Novels.</cite></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>QUEEN.</cite>—“There is the usual mystery, the usual admirable gold-fields’ local colour,
-which we expect from our favourite Rolf Boldrewood.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_422'>422</span><span class='large'>BY RUDYARD KIPLING</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='small'><em>Uniform Edition. Red cloth, gilt tops. Extra crown 8vo. 6s. each.</em></span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='large'><b>STALKY &amp; CO.</b></span> Thirtieth Thousand.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='large'><b>THE DAY’S WORK.</b></span> Fifty-first Thousand.</p>
-<p class='c015'><cite>MORNING POST.</cite>—“The book is so varied, so full of colour and life from end to
-end, that few who read the first two or three stories will lay it down till they have read
-the last.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='large'><b>PLAIN TALES FROM THE HILLS.</b></span> Forty-third Thousand.</p>
-<p class='c015'><cite>SATURDAY REVIEW.</cite>—“Mr. Kipling knows and appreciates the English in
-India, and is a born story-teller and a man of humour into the bargain.... It would
-be hard to find better reading.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>LIFE’S HANDICAP.</b> Being Stories of Mine Own People. Thirty-first
-Thousand.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>BLACK AND WHITE.</cite>—“<cite>Life’s Handicap</cite> contains much of the best work
-hitherto accomplished by the author, and, taken as a whole, is a complete advance upon
-its predecessors.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='large'><b>MANY INVENTIONS.</b></span> Twenty-eighth Thousand.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>PALL MALL GAZETTE.</cite>—“The completest book that Mr. Kipling has yet
-given us in workmanship, the weightiest and most humane in breadth of view.... It
-can only be regarded as a fresh landmark in the progression of his genius.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='large'><b>THE LIGHT THAT FAILED.</b></span> Rewritten and considerably
-enlarged. Thirty-third Thousand.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>ACADEMY.</cite>—“Whatever else be true of Mr. Kipling, it is the first truth about him
-that he has power, real intrinsic power.... Mr. Kipling’s work has innumerable good
-qualities.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='large'><b>WEE WILLIE WINKIE</b></span>, and other Stories.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='large'><b>SOLDIERS THREE</b></span>, and other Stories.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>GLOBE.</cite>—“Containing some of the best of his highly vivid work.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='large'><b>THE JUNGLE BOOK.</b></span> With Illustrations by <span class='sc'>J.L. Kipling</span>, <span class='sc'>W.H.
-Drake</span>, and <span class='sc'>P. Frenzeny</span>. Forty-seventh Thousand. Crown 8vo. Cloth gilt. 6s.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>PUNCH.</cite>—“‘Æsop’s Fables and dear old Brer Fox and Co.,’ observes the Baron
-sagely, ‘may have suggested to the fanciful genius of Rudyard Kipling the delightful
-idea, carried out in the most fascinating style, of <cite>The Jungle Book</cite>.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='large'><b>THE SECOND JUNGLE BOOK.</b></span> With Illustrations by <span class='sc'>J.
-Lockwood Kipling</span>. Thirty-third Thousand.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>DAILY TELEGRAPH.</cite>—“The appearance of <cite>The Second Jungle Book</cite> is a literary
-event of which no one will mistake the importance. Unlike most sequels, the various
-stories comprised in the new volume are at least equal to their predecessors.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='large'>“<b>CAPTAINS COURAGEOUS.</b>”</span> <span class='sc'>A Story of the Grand Banks.</span>
-Illustrated by <span class='sc'>I.W. Taber</span>. Twenty-third Thousand.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>ATHENÆUM.</cite>—“Never in English prose has the sea in all its myriad aspects, with all
-its sounds and sights and odours, been reproduced with such subtle skill as in these pages.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='large'><b>FROM SEA TO SEA.</b></span> In Two Vols.</p>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<p class='c017'><span class='large'><b>SOLDIER TALES.</b></span> With Illustrations by <span class='sc'>A.S. Hartrick</span>. Tenth
-Thousand. Crown 8vo. 6s.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>ATHENÆUM.</cite>—“By issuing a reprint of some of the best of Mr. Kipling’s <cite>Soldier
-Tales</cite>, Messrs. Macmillan have laid us all under an obligation.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='large'><b>A FLEET IN BEING.</b></span> <span class='sc'>Notes of Two Trips with the
-Channel Squadron.</span> Fifty-third Thousand. Crown 8vo. Sewed, 1s. net.;
-Cloth, 1s. 6d. net.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>ARMY AND NAVY GAZETTE.</cite>—“A very admirable picture of the life of
-officers and men who go down to the sea in the ships of Her Majesty’s fleet.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='large'><b>THE KIPLING BIRTHDAY BOOK.</b></span> Compiled by <span class='sc'>Joseph Finn</span>.
-Authorised by the Author, with Illustrations by <span class='sc'>J. Lockwood Kipling</span>. 16mo. 2s. 6d.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_423'>423</span>THE CHEAP EDITIONS OF</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='large'>MRS. HENRY WOOD’S NOVELS</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='small'><em>Crown 8vo, in green cloth, price 2s.; or in red cloth, gilt lettered,</em></span></div>
- <div><span class='small'><em>price 2s. 6d. each.</em></span></div>
- <div class='c000'><b>Sale nearly Three Million Copies.</b></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c016' />
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>EAST LYNNE. Five Hundredth Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>THE CHANNINGS. Two Hundredth Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>MRS. HALLIBURTON’S TROUBLES. One Hundred and Fiftieth Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>THE SHADOW OF ASHLYDYAT. One Hundred and Tenth Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>LORD OAKBURN’S DAUGHTERS. One Hundred and Fifth Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>VERNER’S PRIDE. Eighty-fifth Thousand.</div>
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- <div class='line'>JOHNNY LUDLOW. First Series. Fifty-fifth Thousand.</div>
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- <div class='line'>GEORGE CANTERBURY’S WILL. Seventieth Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>THE RED COURT FARM. Eightieth Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>WITHIN THE MAZE. One Hundred and Twenty-fifth Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>ELSTER’S FOLLY. Sixtieth Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>LADY ADELAIDE. Sixtieth Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>OSWALD CRAY. Sixtieth Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>JOHNNY LUDLOW. Second Series. Thirty-fifth Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>ANNE HEREFORD. Fifty-fifth Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>DENE HOLLOW. Sixtieth Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>EDINA. Forty-fifth Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>A LIFE’S SECRET. Sixty-fifth Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>THE HOUSE OF HALLIWELL. Fifteenth Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>POMEROY ABBEY. Forty-eighth Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>COURT NETHERLEIGH. Forty-sixth Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>THE MASTER OF GREYLANDS. Fiftieth Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>THE STORY OF CHARLES STRANGE. Fifteenth Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>ASHLEY. Fifteenth Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>BESSY RANE. Forty-second Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>JOHNNY LUDLOW. Third Series. Twenty-third Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>ORVILLE COLLEGE. Thirty-eighth Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>LADY GRACE. Twenty-first Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>ADAM GRAINGER. Fifteenth Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>THE UNHOLY WISH. Fifteenth Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>JOHNNY LUDLOW. Fourth Series. Fifteenth Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>JOHNNY LUDLOW. Fifth Series. Fifteenth Thousand.</div>
- <div class='line'>JOHNNY LUDLOW. Sixth Series.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_424'>424</span><span class='large'>THE NOVELS OF ROSA NOUCHETTE CAREY.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='small'><em>Popular Edition.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Crown 8vo.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;3s. 6d. each.</em></span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>NELLIE’S MEMORIES.</b> 30th Thousand.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>STANDARD.</cite>—“Miss Carey has the gift of writing naturally and simply, her pathos is
-true and unforced, and her conversations are sprightly and sharp.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>WEE WIFIE.</b> 22nd Thousand.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>LADY.</cite>—“Miss Carey’s novels are always welcome; they are out of the common run,
-immaculately pure, and very high in tone.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>BARBARA HEATHCOTE’S TRIAL.</b> 20th Thousand.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>DAILY TELEGRAPH.</cite>—“A novel of a sort which it would be a real loss to miss.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>ROBERT ORD’S ATONEMENT.</b> 17th Thousand.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>STANDARD.</cite>—“A most delightful book.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>WOOED AND MARRIED.</b> 21st Thousand.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>STANDARD.</cite>—“There is plenty of romance in the heroine’s life. But it would not
-be fair to tell our readers wherein that romance consists or how it ends. Let them read
-the book for themselves. We will undertake to promise that they will like it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>HERIOT’S CHOICE.</b> 18th Thousand.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>MORNING POST.</cite>—“Deserves to be extensively known and read.... Will doubtless
-find as many admirers as readers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>QUEENIE’S WHIM.</b> 18th Thousand.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>GUARDIAN.</cite>—“A thoroughly good and wholesome story.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>MARY ST. JOHN.</b> 16th Thousand.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>JOHN BULL.</cite>—“The story is a simple one, but told with much grace and unaffected
-pathos.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>NOT LIKE OTHER GIRLS.</b> 19th Thousand.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><cite>NEW YORK HOME JOURNAL.</cite>—“One of the sweetest, daintiest, and most
-interesting of the season’s publications.“</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>FOR LILIAS.</b> 14th Thousand.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>VANITY FAIR.</cite>—“A simple, earnest, and withal very interesting story; well conceived,
-carefully worked out, and sympathetically told.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>UNCLE MAX.</b> 15th Thousand.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>LADY.</cite>—“So intrinsically good that the world of novel-readers ought to be genuinely
-grateful.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>ONLY THE GOVERNESS.</b> 15th Thousand.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>PALL MALL GAZETTE.</cite>—“This novel is for those who like stories with something
-of Jane Austen’s power, but with more intensity of feeling than Jane Austen displayed,
-who are not inclined to call pathos twaddle, and who care to see life and human
-nature in their most beautiful form.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>LOVER OR FRIEND?</b> 12th Thousand.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>GUARDIAN.</cite>—“The refinement of style and delicacy of thought will make <cite>Lover or
-Friend?</cite> popular with all readers who are not too deeply bitten with a desire for things
-improbable in their lighter literature.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>BASIL LYNDHURST.</b> 10th Thousand.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>PALL MALL GAZETTE.</cite>—“We doubt whether anything has been written of late
-years so fresh, so pretty, so thoroughly natural and bright.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>SIR GODFREY’S GRAND-DAUGHTERS.</b> 8th Thousand.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>OBSERVER.</cite>—“A capital story.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>THE OLD, OLD STORY.</b> 9th Thousand.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>DAILY NEWS.</cite>—“Miss Carey’s fluent pen has not lost its power of writing fresh
-and wholesome fiction.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>THE MISTRESS OF BRAE FARM.</b> 10th Thousand.</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>PALL MALL GAZETTE.</cite>—“Miss Carey’s untiring pen loses none of its power,
-and her latest work is as gracefully written, as full of quiet home charm, as fresh and
-wholesome, so to speak, as its many predecessors.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><b>MRS. ROMNEY and “BUT MEN MUST WORK.”</b></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>PALL MALL GAZETTE.</cite>—“By no means the least attractive of the works of this
-charming writer.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_425'>425</span>Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>STALKY AND CO.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>By RUDYARD KIPLING</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>THE</div>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>METTLE OF THE PASTURE</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>By JAMES LANE ALLEN</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_426'>426</span>Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>MIRANDA OF THE BALCONY</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>By A.E.W. MASON</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>YOUNG APRIL</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>By EGERTON CASTLE</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><em>WITH ILLUSTRATIONS</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_427'>427</span>Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>VALDA HÂNEM</span></div>
- <div>THE ROMANCE OF A TURKISH HARÎM</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>By DAISY HUGH PRYCE</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>THE ENCHANTER</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>By U.L. SILBERRAD</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_428'>428</span>Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>DONNA TERESA</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>By F.M. PEARD</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>VIA CRUCIS</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>By F. MARION CRAWFORD</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_429'>429</span>Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>RICHARD CARVEL</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>By WINSTON CHURCHILL</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='small'>AUTHOR OF “THE CELEBRITY,” ETC. ETC.</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='small'><em>WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY</em></span></div>
- <div class='c000'>CARLTON T. CHAPMAN <span class='fss'>AND</span> MALCOLM FRASER</div>
- <div class='c000'><em>Upwards of 130,000 Copies have been sold in America since</em></div>
- <div><em>publication.</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>BOOKMAN.</cite>—“A spirited tale of wandering and adventure, with
-a wholesome love story to keep it fresh and sweet and provide for it
-a happy ending.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>OBSERVER.</cite>—“A fine historical story of early American days; full
-of incident and ‘go,’ and admirably written.”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>Second Impression. Extra Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>ONE OF THE GRENVILLES</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>By SYDNEY ROYSE LYSAGHT</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='small'>AUTHOR OF “THE MARPLOT”</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>GUARDIAN.</cite>—“We shall tell no more of Mr. Lysaght’s clever and
-original tale, contenting ourselves with heartily recommending it to
-any on the look-out for a really good and absorbing story.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>SATURDAY REVIEW.</cite>—“Mr. Sydney Lysaght should have a
-future before him among writers of fiction. <cite>One of the Grenvilles</cite> is full
-of interest.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>BOOKMAN.</cite>—“Is so high above the average of novels that its
-readers will want to urge on the writer a more frequent exercise of his
-powers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>ACADEMY.</cite>—“There is freshness and distinction about <cite>One of the
-Grenvilles</cite>.... Both for its characters and setting, and for its author’s
-pleasant wit, this is a novel to read.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>DAILY TELEGRAPH.</cite>—“Since he wrote <cite>The Marplot</cite>, Mr. Lysaght
-has degenerated neither in freshness, originality, nor sense of humour.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_430'>430</span>Second Impression. Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>THE GAME AND THE CANDLE</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>By RHODA BROUGHTON</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>OBSERVER.</cite>—“The story is an excellent one.... Miss Rhoda
-Broughton well maintains her place among our novelists as one capable
-of telling a quiet yet deeply interesting story of human passions.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>SPECTATOR.</cite>—“The book is extremely clever.”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>Second Impression. Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>THE</div>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>TREASURY OFFICER’S WOOING</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c001'><span class='large'>By CECIL LOWIS</span></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>GUARDIAN.</cite>—“An exceedingly well-written, pleasant volume....
-Entirely enjoyable.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>LITERATURE.</cite>—“A capital picture of official life in Burma.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>DAILY TELEGRAPH.</cite>—“Emphatically of a nature to make us ask
-for more from the same source.... Those who appreciate a story
-without any sensational incidents, and written with keen observation
-and great distinction of style, will find it delightful reading.... Cannot
-fail to please its readers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>SPECTATOR.</cite>—“Mr. Lowis’s story is pleasant to read in more
-senses than one. It is not only clever and wholesome, but printed in
-a type so large and clear as to reconcile us to the thickness of the
-volume.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>ATHENÆUM.</cite>—“The author writes in a clear, attractive style, and
-succeeds in maintaining the reader’s interest from the first page to the
-last.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_431'>431</span>Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>OFF THE HIGH ROAD</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>By ELEANOR C. PRICE</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='small'>AUTHOR OF “YOUNG DENYS,” “IN THE LION’S MOUTH,“ ETC.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>ATHENÆUM.</cite>—“A pleasant tale.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>SPEAKER.</cite>—“A charming bit of social comedy, tinged with just
-a suspicion of melodrama.... The atmosphere of the story is so
-bright and genial that we part from it with regret.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>DAILY TELEGRAPH.</cite>—“At once ingenious, symmetrical, and
-entertaining.... Miss Price’s fascinating romance.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>LITERATURE.</cite>—“A simple, but very pleasant story.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>SPECTATOR.</cite>—“The notion of an orphan heiress, the daughter of
-an Earl, and the cynosure of two London seasons, flying precipitately
-from her guardians, who are endeavouring to force her into a match
-with a man she detests, and hiding herself under an assumed name in
-a remote rural district of the Midlands, is an excellent motive in itself,
-and gains greatly from the charm and delicacy of Miss Price’s handling.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>ACADEMY.</cite>—“A quiet country book in the main, with more
-emotion than action, and continuous interest.”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>Second Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>THE PRIDE OF JENNICO</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><em>BEING A MEMOIR OF</em></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='large'>CAPTAIN BASIL JENNICO</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>By EGERTON CASTLE</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>ACADEMY.</cite>—“A capital romance.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>COUNTRY LIFE.</cite>—“This story of the later years of the eighteenth
-century will rank high in literature. It is a fine and spirited romance
-set in a slight but elegant and accurate frame of history. The book
-itself has a peculiar and individual charm by virtue of the stately
-language in which it is written.... It is stately, polished, and full of
-imaginative force.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>LIVERPOOL DAILY MERCURY.</cite>—“The book is written in a
-strong and terse style of diction with a swift and vivid descriptive touch.
-In its grasp of character and the dramatic nature of its plot it is one of
-the best novels of its kind since Stevenson’s <cite>Prince Otto</cite>.”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_432'>432</span>Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='large'>STORIES FROM AMERICAN HISTORY</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='xlarge'>BUCCANEERS AND PIRATES</span></div>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>OF OUR COASTS</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>By FRANK R. STOCKTON</div>
- <div>AUTHOR OF “RUDDER GRANGE”</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='small'><em>WITH ILLUSTRATIONS BY</em></span></div>
- <div>GEORGE VARIAN <span class='fss'>AND</span> B. WEST CLINEDINST</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>PALL MALL GAZETTE.</cite>—“A fine book.... They are exciting
-reading.... Eminently informing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>ACADEMY.</cite>—“Mr. Frank R. Stockton is always interesting, whether
-he writes for young or old.”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>HER MEMORY</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>By MAARTEN MAARTENS</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='small'>AUTHOR OF “MY LADY NOBODY,” ETC.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>DAILY TELEGRAPH.</cite>—“Full of the quiet grace and literary
-excellence which we have now learnt to associate with the author.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>DAILY NEWS.</cite>—“An interesting and characteristic example of
-this writer’s manner. It possesses his sobriety of tone and treatment,
-his limpidity and minuteness of touch, his keenness of observation....
-The book abounds in clever character sketches.... It is very
-good.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>ST. JAMES’S GAZETTE.</cite>—“There is something peculiarly fascinating
-in Mr. Maarten Maartens’s new story. It is one of those
-exquisitely told tales, not unhappy, nor tragic, yet not exactly ‘happy,’
-but full of the pain—as a philosopher has put it—that one prefers, which
-are read, when the reader is in the right mood, with, at least, a subdued
-sense of tears, tears of pleasure.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>ATHENÆUM.</cite>—“Maarten Maartens has never written a brighter
-social story, and it has higher qualities than brightness.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_433'>433</span>Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>THE</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='xlarge'>ADVENTURES OF FRANCOIS</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><em>Foundling, Thief, Juggler, and Fencing Master</em></div>
- <div><em>during the French Revolution</em></div>
- <div class='c000'>By S. WEIR MITCHELL, M.D.</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='small'>AUTHOR OF “HUGH WYNNE,” ETC.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>DAILY TELEGRAPH.</cite>—“It is delightfully entertaining throughout,
-and throws much instructive light upon certain subordinate phases of
-the great popular upheaval that convulsed France between 1788 and
-1794.... Recounted with unflagging vivacity and inexhaustible good
-humour.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>DAILY MAIL.</cite>—“This lively piece of imagination is animated
-throughout by strong human interest and novel incident.”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>Sixth Edition. Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>CHARACTERISTICS</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>By S. WEIR MITCHELL, M.D. LL.D. (Harvard)</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='small'>AUTHOR OF “THE ADVENTURES OF FRANCOIS”</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>SPECTATOR.</cite>—“Very well worth reading.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>ST. JAMES’S GAZETTE.</cite>—“This charming book.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_434'>434</span>Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>“WAR TO THE KNIFE”</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='large'><span class='sc'>Or</span> TANGATA MAORI</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>By ROLF BOLDREWOOD</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>SPEAKER.</cite>—“A stirring tale.... We are inclined to think that
-<cite>War to the Knife</cite> is the best story we have had from Mr. Boldrewood
-since he gave us the inimitable <cite>Robbery under Arms</cite>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>ACADEMY.</cite>—“A stirring romance.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>OUTLOOK.</cite>—“Anyone who likes a good story, combined with any
-amount of information on strange lands, should get this book.”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>A</div>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>ROMANCE OF CANVAS TOWN</span></div>
- <div><em>AND OTHER STORIES</em></div>
- <div class='c000'>By ROLF BOLDREWOOD</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>CONTENTS</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c018'><span class='sc'>A Romance of Canvas Town—The Fencing of Wandaroona:
-A Riverina Reminiscence—The Governess of the
-Poets—Our New Cook: A Tale of the Times—Angels
-Unawares</span></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>DAILY TELEGRAPH.</cite>—“Eminently readable, being written in the
-breezy, happy-go-lucky style which characterizes the more recent fictional
-works of the author of that singularly earnest and impressive
-romance, <cite>Robbery under Arms</cite>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>DAILY MAIL.</cite>—“As pleasant as ever.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>GLASGOW HERALD.</cite>—“They will repay perusal.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_435'>435</span>Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>THE FOREST LOVERS</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>A ROMANCE</div>
- <div class='c000'>By MAURICE HEWLETT</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>SPECTATOR.</cite>—“<cite>The Forest Lovers</cite> is no mere literary <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>tour de force</em></span>,
-but an uncommonly attractive romance, the charm of which is greatly
-enhanced by the author’s excellent style.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>DAILY TELEGRAPH.</cite>—“Mr. Maurice Hewlett’s <cite>Forest Lovers</cite>
-stands out with conspicuous success.... He has compassed a very
-remarkable achievement.... For nearly four hundred pages he carries
-us along with him with unfailing resource and artistic skill, while he
-unrolls for us the course of thrilling adventures, ending, after many
-tribulations, in that ideal happiness towards which every romancer
-ought to wend his tortuous way.... There are few books of this
-season which achieve their aim so simply and whole-heartedly as
-Mr. Hewlett’s ingenious and enthralling romance.”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>THE</div>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>GOSPEL OF FREEDOM</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>By ROBERT HERRICK</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='small'>AUTHOR OF “THE MAN WHO WINS,” “LITERARY LOVE LETTERS, AND</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>OTHER STORIES”</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>DAILY MAIL.</cite>—“Distinctly enjoyable and suggestive of much
-profitable thought.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>SCOTSMAN.</cite>—“The book has a deal of literary merit, and is well
-furnished with clever phrases.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>ATHENÆUM.</cite>—“Remarkably clever.... The writing throughout
-is clear, and the story is well constructed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><span class='sc'>W.D. Howells</span> in <cite>LITERATURE</cite>.—“A very clever new novel.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>GUARDIAN.</cite>—“The novel is well written, and full of complex
-interests and personalities. It touches on many questions and problems
-clearly and skilfully.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>DAILY CHRONICLE.</cite>—“A book which entirely interested us for
-the whole of a blazing afternoon. He writes uncommonly well.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_436'>436</span>Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='small'><em>100,000 copies of this work have been sold</em></span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='xlarge'>THE CHOIR INVISIBLE</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>By JAMES LANE ALLEN</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='small'>AUTHOR OF “SUMMER IN ARCADY,” “A KENTUCKY CARDINAL,” ETC.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>ACADEMY.</cite>—“A book to read, and a book to keep after reading.
-Mr. Allen’s gifts are many—a style pellucid and picturesque, a vivid and
-disciplined power of characterization, and an intimate knowledge of a
-striking epoch and an alluring country.... So magical is the wilderness
-environment, so fresh the characters, so buoyant the life they lead,
-so companionable, so well balanced, and so touched with humanity, the
-author’s personality, that I hereby send him greeting and thanks for
-a brave book.... <cite>The Choir Invisible</cite> is a fine achievement.”</p>
-
-<p class='c001'><cite>PALL MALL GAZETTE.</cite>—“Mr. Allen’s power of character drawing
-invests the old, old story with renewed and absorbing interest....
-The fascination of the story lies in great part in Mr. Allen’s graceful
-and vivid style.”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>A DRAMA IN SUNSHINE</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>By HORACE ANNESLEY VACHELL</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>CONTENTS</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c018'><span class='sc'>The Prologue</span></p>
-
-<p class='c018'><span class='sc'>Chapter I. Sausages and Palaver—II. Illumination—III.
-William Chillingworth—IV. Calamity Cañon—V.
-Speculations—VI. Which contains a Moral—VII.
-Of Blood and Water—VIII. Which ends in Flames—IX.
-“Is Writ in Moods and Frowns and Wrinkles
-Strange”—X. The Daughters of Themis</span></p>
-
-<p class='c019'><cite>LITERATURE.</cite>—“It has the joy of life in it, sparkle, humour,
-charm.... All the characters, in their contrasts and developments,
-are drawn with fine delicacy; and the book is one of those few which one
-reads again with increased pleasure.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><cite>DAILY TELEGRAPH.</cite>—“A story of extraordinary interest.... Mr.
-Vachell’s enthralling story, the dénouement of which worthily crowns
-a literary achievement of no little merit.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c020'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_437'>437</span>Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c020'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>HUGH GWYETH</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='large'>A ROUNDHEAD CAVALIER</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>By BEULAH MARIE DIX</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'><cite>PALL MALL GAZETTE.</cite>—“A thoroughly interesting story....
-We hope it will not be the last of its kind from the author.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><cite>SATURDAY REVIEW.</cite>—“We found it difficult to tear ourselves
-away from the fascinating narrative.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><cite>SPECTATOR.</cite>—“There is no gainsaying the spirit and fluency of
-the narrative.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><cite>LEEDS MERCURY.</cite>—“The boy hero is admirably drawn, and his
-stirring adventures are told with uncommon vivacity.”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c021'>
- <div>Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c020'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>BISMILLAH</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>By A.J. DAWSON</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='small'>AUTHOR OF “MERE SENTIMENT,” “GOD’S FOUNDLING,” ETC.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c022'>A romantic story of Moorish life in the Riff Country and in Tangier
-by Mr. A.J. Dawson, whose last novel, <cite>God’s Foundling</cite>, was well
-received in the beginning of the year, and whose West African and
-Australian Bush stories will be familiar to most readers of fiction.
-<cite>Bismillah</cite> is the title chosen for Mr. Dawson’s new book, which may
-be regarded as the outcome of his somewhat adventurous experiences
-in Morocco last year.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><cite>ACADEMY.</cite>—“Romantic and dramatic, and full of colour.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><cite>GUARDIAN.</cite>—“Decidedly clever and original.... Its excellent
-local colouring, and its story, as a whole interesting and often dramatic,
-make it a book more worth reading and enjoyable than is at all
-common.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><cite>SPEAKER.</cite>—“A stirring tale of love and adventure.... There is
-enough of exciting incident, of fighting, intrigue, and love-making in
-<cite>Bismillah</cite> to satisfy the most exacting reader.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><cite>MANCHESTER GUARDIAN.</cite>—“An interesting and pleasing tale.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c020'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_438'>438</span>Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c020'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'><span class='sc'>RUPERT, by the GRACE of GOD</span>—</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='large'>By DORA GREENWELL McCHESNEY</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'><cite>DAILY TELEGRAPH.</cite>—“Miss McChesney shows that she
-possesses both graphic powers and imagination in the course of her
-story, and those parts of it which are historical are told with a due
-regard for truth as well as picturesqueness.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><cite>ATHENÆUM.</cite>—“A singular successful specimen of the ‘historical’
-fiction of the day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><cite>WORLD.</cite>—“The reader will rapidly find his attention absorbed by
-a really stirring picture of stirring times.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><cite>OBSERVER.</cite>—“Miss McChesney has mastered her period
-thoroughly, and tells an attractive story in a very winning fashion.”</p>
-
-<p class='c019'><cite>GUARDIAN.</cite>—“The description of the flight from Naseby is one of
-real eloquence, and profoundly moving. There is brilliancy, insight,
-and feeling in the story.”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c021'>
- <div>Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c020'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>THE DAY’S WORK</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>By RUDYARD KIPLING</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c020'>
- <div class='c023'>CONTENTS</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c018'><span class='sc'>The Bridgebuilders—A Walking Delegate—The Ship
-that Found Herself—The Tomb of his Ancestors—The
-Devil and the Deep Sea—William the Conqueror—·007—The
-Maltese Cat—Bread upon the Waters—An
-Error of the Fourth Dimension—My Sunday at
-Home—The Brushwood Boy</span></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>ST. JAMES’S GAZETTE.</cite>—“This new batch of Mr. Kipling’s short
-stories is splendid work. Among the thirteen there are included at least
-five of his very finest.... Speaking for ourselves, we have read
-<cite>The Day’s Work</cite> with more pleasure than we have derived from anything
-of Mr. Kipling’s since <cite>The Jungle Book</cite>.... It is in the Findlaysons,
-and the Scotts, and the Cottars, and the ‘Williams,’ that Mr. Kipling’s
-true greatness lies. These are creations that make one feel pleased and
-proud that we are also English. What greater honour could there be
-to an English writer?”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_439'>439</span>Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>MEN’S TRAGEDIES</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>By R.V. RISLEY</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c018'><span class='sc'>Containing:—The Man who Loved, The Man who Hated,
-The Man who Bore, The Man who Cared, The Man
-who Fell, The Man who Sneered, The Man who
-Killed, The Man who Died, The Man who was Himself.</span></p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>OUTLOOK.</cite>—“Mr. R.V. Risley may be congratulated on having
-produced a set of really moving studies.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>SCOTSMAN.</cite>—“The stories are powerful studies of human nature,
-which show considerable art in presenting the stronger passions.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>GLASGOW HERALD.</cite>—“Clever, striking, and impressionist sort
-of stories.”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>Globe 8vo. Gilt top. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>THE SHORT-LINE WAR</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>By MERWIN-WEBSTER</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>LITERATURE.</cite>—“The story is well written, and full of exciting
-intrigue.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>SPECTATOR.</cite>—“The story is well put together, well told, and
-exciting.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>SPEAKER.</cite>—“Short, exciting, well composed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>ACADEMY.</cite>—“Told with much spirit.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>PALL MALL GAZETTE.</cite>—“The book is briskly written by a man
-who is interested in his subject.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>SCOTSMAN.</cite>—“The story is told with capital spirit, and the reader
-is not given time to feel dull.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>GLASGOW HERALD.</cite>—“Vivid and interesting.”</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='pageno' id='Page_440'>440</span>Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>THE</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='xlarge'>TRAIL OF THE GOLDSEEKERS</span></div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='large'>A RECORD OF TRAVEL IN PROSE</span></div>
- <div><span class='large'>AND VERSE</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>By HAMLIN GARLAND</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>SPEAKER.</cite>—“It consists of vivid prose pictures of adventure in the
-wild North West, interspersed with unconventional and often extremely
-beautiful snatches of verse. The book reflects better than anything
-else we have seen the pitiless majesty of the scenery and the tragic
-conditions of the quest.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>OBSERVER.</cite>—“Racy, invigorating, and informing.... Interspersed
-with some admirable verses.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>BOOKMAN.</cite>—“To read the volume is to make the overland journey
-to the Yukon River. We have enjoyed the book most thoroughly.”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>Crown 8vo. 6s.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>THE LOVES</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>OF THE</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='xlarge'>LADY ARABELLA</span></div>
- <div class='c000'>By M.E. SEAWELL</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>SPEAKER.</cite>—“A story told with so much spirit that the reader
-tingles with suspense until the end is reached.... A very pleasant tale
-of more than common merit.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>PALL MALL GAZETTE.</cite>—“It is short and excellent reading....
-Old Peter Hawkshaw, the Admiral, is a valuable creation, sometimes
-quite ‘My Uncle Toby’.... The scene, when the narrator dines with
-him in the cabin for the first time, is one of the most humorous in the
-language, and stamps Lady Hawkshaw—albeit, she is not there—as one
-of the wives of fiction in the category of Mrs. Proudie herself.... The
-interest is thoroughly sustained to the end.... Thoroughly healthy
-and amusing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c015'><cite>WORLD.</cite>—“Brisk and amusing throughout.”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>MACMILLAN AND CO., <span class='sc'>Ltd.</span>, LONDON</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p class='c001'><a id='endnote'></a></p>
-<div class='tnotes'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='large'>Transcriber’s Note</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-<p class='c001'>Minor errors, attributable to the printer, have been corrected.</p>
-<p class='c001'>The following issues should be noted. There were a number of co
-nfusions
-about nested quotation marks, which have been addressed to ease the reading
-experience. Where the author’s intent is unclear, the text is retained.</p>
-
-<p class='c001'>Errors of punctuation in the advertisement section at the end of the
-text were corrected, silently, in the interest of consistency.</p>
-
-<table class='table1' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='15%' />
-<col width='61%' />
-<col width='23%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>p. 5</td>
- <td class='c007'>intercour[es/se]</td>
- <td class='c024'>Transposed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>p. 41</td>
- <td class='c007'>[‘]Well, I don’t deny</td>
- <td class='c024'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>p. 74</td>
- <td class='c007'>[‘]Quite right, Dick;</td>
- <td class='c024'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>p. 94</td>
- <td class='c007'>and considerable[./,] Mick and his sons</td>
- <td class='c024'>Corrected.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>p. 99</td>
- <td class='c007'>‘Ladies and gentlemen!’ he shouted[.]</td>
- <td class='c024'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>p. 109</td>
- <td class='c007'>the English thoroughbred.[’]</td>
- <td class='c024'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>p. 116</td>
- <td class='c007'>labouring up and [and] glanced</td>
- <td class='c024'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>p. 118</td>
- <td class='c007'>Dick [road/rode] up straight</td>
- <td class='c024'>Corrected.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>p. 147</td>
- <td class='c007'>about one another,[’]</td>
- <td class='c024'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>p. 178</td>
- <td class='c007'>licks [’]im</td>
- <td class='c024'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>p. 206</td>
- <td class='c007'>Fred Churbett out of [of] his bed</td>
- <td class='c024'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>p. 224</td>
- <td class='c007'>villians</td>
- <td class='c024'><em>sic.</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>p. 225</td>
- <td class='c007'>[“]if we meet any</td>
- <td class='c024'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'></td>
- <td class='c007'>back you go to the barracks[’/”]</td>
- <td class='c024'>Corrected.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'></td>
- <td class='c007'>[‘]They’d take me ... and free from trouble,”[’]</td>
- <td class='c024'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>p. 227</td>
- <td class='c007'>'What a tragedy![']</td>
- <td class='c024'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>p. 232</td>
- <td class='c007'>any other[ other] part</td>
- <td class='c024'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>p. 252</td>
- <td class='c007'>[‘]I like forest</td>
- <td class='c024'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>p. 269</td>
- <td class='c007'>compressd</td>
- <td class='c024'><em>sic.</em></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>p. 275</td>
- <td class='c007'>I see it in your face[.]</td>
- <td class='c024'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>p. 287</td>
- <td class='c007'>wild-f[l]owl</td>
- <td class='c024'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>p. 298</td>
- <td class='c007'>he became a finder of continents.[’]</td>
- <td class='c024'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>p. 310</td>
- <td class='c007'>[‘]You will enjoy</td>
- <td class='c024'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'></td>
- <td class='c007'>Hu[r]bert</td>
- <td class='c024'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>p. 313</td>
- <td class='c007'>Gera[r/l]d</td>
- <td class='c024'>Corrected.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>p. 315</td>
- <td class='c007'>my dear boy[,/.]</td>
- <td class='c024'>Corrected.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>p. 318</td>
- <td class='c007'>but the old who die![’]</td>
- <td class='c024'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>p. 367</td>
- <td class='c007'>home at last——[”/’]</td>
- <td class='c024'>Corrected.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'></td>
- <td class='c007'>Hu[r]bert</td>
- <td class='c024'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>p. 373</td>
- <td class='c007'>well-featured, manly[.]</td>
- <td class='c024'>Added.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c007'>p. 419</td>
- <td class='c007'>But some[w]how</td>
- <td class='c024'>Removed.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
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