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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.
+
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+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #54366 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/54366)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Colonial Reformer, Vol. III (of 3), 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: A Colonial Reformer, Vol. III (of 3)
-
-
-Author: Rolf Boldrewood
-
-
-
-Release Date: March 15, 2017 [eBook #54366]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A COLONIAL REFORMER, VOL. III (OF
-3)***
-
-
-E-text prepared by MWS, Les Galloway, and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made
-available by Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
-
-
-
-Note: Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/colonialreformer03bold
-
- Project Gutenberg has the other two volumes of this work.
- Volume I: see http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/54067
- Volume II: see http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/55652
-
-
-Transcriber's note:
-
- Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
-
- In the expression “the [Ǝ]NE brand” [Ǝ] represent the
- reverse E character depressed by half a line.
-
- In the expression "the M[Ḋ] brand" [Ḋ] represents a
- reversed D depressed by half a line.
-
-
-
-
-
-A COLONIAL REFORMER
-
-
-[Illustration: Colophon]
-
-
-A COLONIAL REFORMER
-
-by
-
-ROLF BOLDREWOOD
-
-Author of ‘Robbery Under Arms,’ ‘The Squatter’S Dream,’
-‘The Miner’S Right,’ etc.
-
-In Three Volumes
-
-VOL. III
-
-
-
-
-
-
-London
-Macmillan and Co.
-and New York
-1890
-
-All rights reserved
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
-
-In the strange exceptional condition of nervous tension up to which
-that marvellous instrument, the human ‘harp of a thousand strings,’ is
-capable of being wound, under the pressure of dread and perplexity,
-there is a type of visitor whose face is always hailed with pleasure.
-This is a fact as unquestionable as the converse proposition. For
-the _bien-venu_ under such delicate and peculiar circumstances,
-helpfulness, sympathy, and decision are indispensable. Of no avail
-are weakly condolences or mild assenting pity. The power to dispense
-substantial aid may or may not be wanting. But the friend in need
-must have the moral power and clearness of mental vision which render
-decisiveness possible and just. His fiat, favourable or unfavourable,
-lets in the light, separates real danger from undefined terror, offers
-security for well-grounded hope, or persuades to the calmness of
-resignation.
-
-A man so endowed, in a very unusual degree, was Mr. Levison. Deriving
-his leading characteristics from Nature’s gift—very scantily
-supplemented by education—he yet possessed the rare qualities of
-apprehensive acuteness, intrepidity, and discrimination in such measure
-and proportion as a hundred prize-takers at competitive examinations
-might have vainly hoped to emulate. Like that Australian judge, of
-whom the American citizen, in an inland assize town, is reported to
-have said, ‘Wal, Judge Shortcharge may be right, or he may be wrong,
-but he _decides_. I go for the judge myself.’
-
-Abstinens Levison much resembled that brief but weighty legal luminary,
-in that, after due consideration of any case concerning which he was
-minded to give judgment, his verdict was clear and irrevocable.
-
-For this reason the soul of Ernest Neuchamp was glad within him at
-the prospect of hearing from the lips of the grave, undemonstrative,
-unwavering pastoralist words of comfort or of rebuke, which would be to
-him as the Oracles of the Gods.
-
-‘Jump off and come in,’ he said. ‘Delighted to see you—horse knocked
-up as usual? We’ll take the saddle off here, and let him pick at those
-reeds; they’re better than nothing. I was having a go-in at the garden
-here, just to take it out of myself a little, and forget my annoyances.
-But we must have some breakfast, though we are all going to be ruined,
-as you say—and it looks very like it.’
-
-As Mr. Neuchamp in his revulsion of feeling rattled off these
-greetings, partly in welcome and partly in explanation, his guest
-removed the saddle and several folds of blanket from the very prominent
-vertebræ of his gaunt courser, watching him roll and then attack the
-scantily furnished reed-bed, with much satisfaction.
-
-‘Where did you come from this morning?’ inquired Ernest of his
-guest, as, after a prolonged visit to the bathroom, they sat down to
-breakfast; ‘you must have made a very early start if you came from
-Mildool.’
-
-‘I camped on the river,’ said Mr. Levison, attacking the corned beef
-in a deliberate but determined manner; ‘in the bend, just below those
-free-selecting friends of yours; you don’t seem to have been getting on
-well with ’em lately, from what they say.’
-
-‘We are not on good terms, I must admit,’ replied Mr. Neuchamp, with a
-slight air of embarrassment, recollecting Levison’s prophecy of evil,
-which had been verified to the letter; ‘but it is entirely their own
-fault. I was much deceived in them.’
-
-‘Very like,’ answered that gentleman, with as near an approach to a
-smile as his grave features ever permitted. ‘It takes a smart man to be
-up to chaps of their sort.’
-
-‘Did you stay there?’ asked Ernest, anxious to lead the conversation
-into a less unsatisfactory channel; ‘they have not made themselves a
-very convenient dwelling.’
-
-‘No!’ replied Mr. Levison, preferring a request for another instalment
-of the cold round of beef. ‘I never stay at a place if I’m going to
-make a deal. It makes a difference in the bargain, I always think; and
-I wanted to make a little deal with those chaps, from what I heard as I
-came up the river.’
-
-‘A deal?’ said Ernest, with some surprise; ‘and how did you get on? I
-shouldn’t have thought they had much to sell.’
-
-‘Well, they’ve got a middling lot of quiet cattle for one thing;
-they’re regular crawlers, but none the worse for that if grass
-ever grows again. Then they’ve got, what with their selections and
-pre-emptives, a tidy slice, and of not the worst part, of Rainbar run.
-And as there was a friend of mine that a small place like that would
-suit, and the cattle and the few sheep, at a price—at a price,’ he
-continued, with slow earnestness—‘why—I’ll ask for another cup of
-tea—I had an hour’s mighty hard dealing, and bought the whole jimbang
-right out.’
-
-‘Indeed!’ said Ernest, gratified in one sense, but slightly alarmed
-at the idea of a second pastoral proprietor being introduced into the
-sacred demesne of Rainbar; ‘but they have to fulfil their residence
-condition, haven’t they, according to the Land Act?’
-
-‘Of course I made _that_ all right,’ affirmed the senior colonist.
-‘They’re bound down to reside till their time is up, and they don’t get
-the balance of their money till they can convey, all square and legal.
-They didn’t know me, as luck would have it, and I dropped to their
-being very eager to sell out. These kind of chaps never look ahead
-beyond their noses, whereby I had ’em pretty well at my own price, for
-cash—cash, you know. A fine thing is cash, when you take care of it,
-and bring it out like an ace. It takes all before it.’
-
-‘What did you give for the cattle?’ asked Ernest, with melancholy
-interest.
-
-‘Well, these small holders always believe the end of the world’s come
-when they find themselves landed in a real crusher of a dry season.
-They think the weather is bound to keep set fair for a lifetime. I
-showed ’em how their cattle was falling off, and at last they offered
-the lot all round at eight and sixpence—no calves given in, except
-regular staggering Bobs. And so my friend has the run, and the stock,
-and the pre-empts all in his own hands. He’ll do well out of ’em, or
-I’m much mistaken.’
-
-‘And does your friend propose to come and live here?’
-
-‘Well, he might, and he might not. I think I’ll take another egg—fine
-things eggs in a dry season. I expect your fowls live on grasshoppers
-pretty much. You see, if he could get two or three fellows as he could
-depend on to take up some more of the best bits of the bends, leaving a
-slice here and a slice there—so as it’s not worth any one else’s while
-to come in, because they’d have no pre-emptive worth talking of—he’d be
-able to keep all that angle pretty well to himself, and I believe it
-will keep well on it a thousand head of cattle some day.’
-
-‘I’m afraid it will spoil the sale of the run,’ said Ernest, with some
-diffidence; ‘not that it will matter to me much, as I shall have to
-sell out whether or no, and at present prices there will be little if
-anything left. You will have to take your cattle back if they’re not
-paid for.’
-
-‘Well, I don’t say but what it _might_ spoil the sale of the run,
-especially if my friend was to be wide awake and take up his fresh
-selections with judgment. And don’t you think, now,’ Mr. Levison
-interrogated, fixing his clear gray eyes full upon Ernest’s
-countenance, ‘as it was a blind trick of yours to go and bring these
-chaps here, like a lot of catarrhed sheep, all among your own stock,
-just to make it hot for yourself and crab the sale of the run,
-supposing you wanted to sell?’
-
-Mr. Neuchamp had in his hours of remorse and repentance sufficiently
-gone over the ground of his errors and miscalculations, so as to
-be very fully convinced of the folly of this his most indefensible
-proceeding. He had been thirsting for the words of the oracle. Now that
-the hollow sounds came from Dodona’s oak, he liked not their purport.
-The spirit of his ancestors, temporarily oppressed by misfortune,
-awoke in his breast, and he thus made answer: ‘My dear sir, I am most
-willing to own that I have in this matter acted unwisely. And the
-more I see of this great but perplexing country, the more ready I am
-to admit that extreme caution is necessary in many transactions where
-such need does not appear on the surface. But I have acted in this,
-and in all other stages of my Australian career, upon the principle
-of attempting to do good to my fellow-creatures, and of raising the
-standard of human happiness and culture. Such motives I hold to be the
-true foundation of every instructed, christianised, and, therefore,
-permanent community. Want of success may have attended my efforts to
-carry out these ideas; but of such efforts and endeavours, whatever may
-be the result, I trust I shall never feel ashamed!’
-
-As Mr. Neuchamp uttered the concluding words of this vindication of his
-faith with a kindling eye and slightly raised tone, he held his head
-erect and looked with a fixed and rather stern regard at Mr. Levison,
-as if defying all the Paynim hosts of selfishness and monopoly.
-
-Mr. Levison met his gaze with a moment’s searching glance, and then,
-with a relapse into his ordinary expression of judicial calculation,
-thus answered—
-
-‘I ain’t going to say that you are acting altogether wrong in trying
-to right things in a general way in life. There’s more than you has
-noticed a lot of wrong turns and breakdowns for want of a finger-post
-or two. And I like to see a man back his opinion right through, whether
-it’s right or wrong. But if you lose your team, and break your pole,
-and spoil your loading when you’re on a long overland trip, how are you
-to help your mates or any other chap that’s bogged when they want you
-to double-bank? That’s what I look at. You’ve got to stand and look on,
-just like a broke loafer or a coach passenger. What I say, and what I
-stick to, is that a man should make sure, and double sure, of his own
-footing, and _then_ he can wire in and haul out any man, woman, or
-child as he takes a fancy to put on firm ground. But, if you go too
-fast, and your agent drops you, and you want to help a fellow, why,
-you’re bust, and he’s bust, and what can either of ye do but sit on
-your stern fixings and look at each other?’
-
-Mr. Levison’s illustrations were homely, but they had a force and
-application which Ernest fully recognised.
-
-‘You have the truth on your side,’ he said, after a pause. ‘I see it
-now—very plainly, too. I wonder why I could not see it before.’
-
-‘There’s a deal of studying required, it seems to me,’ propounded his
-eccentric mentor, ‘and a deal of experience, and knocking about, and
-loss of time and money, too, before a man comes to see the _right thing
-at the right time_. That’s where the hardship all lies. If the thing’s
-right and the time’s wrong, _that’s_ no good. And the right time and
-the wrong thing is worse again. What you’ve been a-doin’ of ain’t so
-much wrong in itself—only the time’s wrong, that’s where your mistake
-is,—except things take a great start soon; and I don’t say they won’t,
-mind you.‘
-
-Here Mr. Levison looked at Ernest with an expression half humorous,
-half prophetic, so extremely unusual that the latter began to wonder
-whether there was any case on record of half a dozen cups of tea having
-produced temporary insanity. But the unaccustomed gleam departed
-suddenly from the dark, steadfast gray eyes, and the countenance
-resumed its wonted cast of calm investigation and unalterable decision.
-
-‘Does old Frankston ever give you a dressing down in the advice line?’
-inquired Mr. Levison, without continuing the development of the idea
-he had last started. ‘Because if he does, you’d have a bad time of
-it between us. But I’ve done all the preaching part of the story for
-this time, and I’m a-going on to the second chapter. Do you know the
-friend’s name as I bought these Freeman chaps out for?’
-
-‘No,’ said Ernest. ‘I shall be happy to afford him all the assistance I
-can—that is, if I’m here, you know,’ he added, with sudden reflection.
-
-‘That’s all right; but he’s a youngish chap, and easy had. Will you
-promise to advise him to live economically, mind his business till
-times improve, and not waste his money, above all things? Tell him I
-said so.’
-
-‘I don’t think I am the best adviser you could pick in that way,’ said
-Ernest. ‘I am too sensible of my own defects; but I will deliver your
-message and add my feeble weight to the influence of your name.’
-
-‘That’s all right, and handsomely said. Now, my friend’s name is Ernest
-Neuchamp! I’ve bought the land and the cattle for him. They’re cheap
-enough if he never pays me for them, but I believe he will, and that
-those Freeman chaps will be biting their fingers at letting theirselves
-go so cheap this time next year. But, mind you tell him not to waste
-his money. Tell him Levison said so. Ha, ha! I must start now.’
-
-Mr. Levison laughed for the first time since Ernest had made his
-acquaintance. It must have been the sight of Ernest’s wonder-stricken
-face which caused this unprecedented though brief incongruity.
-
-‘I can never sufficiently thank you,’ he said; ‘but where’s the money
-to come from? The station will never pay it.’
-
-‘That’s more than you can know,’ answered the Changer of Destinies;
-‘It’s more than I know, too. I don’t mind telling you—as I said
-before—you’re not likely to interfere much with any man’s profits. But
-cattle are _going to rise_, and that to no foolish price. You mark my
-words. Before this time twelve months fat cattle will be worth five
-pounds a head, as sure as my name’s Ab. Levison. And if rain comes—and
-I’ve seen some signs that I have great dependence on—store cattle will
-be two and three pounds a head, and hard to buy at that.’
-
-These last words he uttered with great solemnity, and Mr. Neuchamp
-perceived that he was fully imbued with faith in his own vaticinations.
-
-‘I hope it may be so,’ Ernest replied. ‘Good heavens! what a wonderful
-change it would make in everything. But why should stock rise so?’
-
-‘Because the _yield of gold_ is increasing every day and every hour in
-these colonies. Don’t you see the papers? I thought you was sure to
-have read everything. Why, you are not half posted up. Look here!’
-
-Here he produced from one of his capacious pockets a much worn and
-closely printed Melbourne _Argus_, in which mention was made of ‘the
-astonishing discovery of gold near Bunninyong at Mr. Yuille’s station,
-commonly known as Ballarat, in such quantity and richness as bade fair
-to rival the hitherto exhaustless yields of Turonia and California.
-Great excitement had taken place. Melbourne was deserted. You could
-not get your hair cut. The barristers were gone, leaving the judges
-lamenting. The doctors had followed their patients. The clergymen had
-followed their flocks. The shepherds had deserted theirs. All society
-existed in a state of dislocation!’
-
-‘Now,’ he continued, receiving the journal from Ernest, and carefully
-refolding and returning it to its place of safety, ‘do you see what
-all this gold breaking out here and there and all about means?’
-
-‘For the present the Melbourne people seem to think it means loss, if
-not ruin, to them. The shepherds have nearly all run away, it seems,
-as also labourers of every description. The writer anticipates a great
-fall in the value of property. Indeed, houses and town allotments are
-considered to be hardly worth holding. I should have thought otherwise
-myself, but’ (here Ernest looked at his companion) ‘I begin to doubt
-the correctness of my own opinions.’
-
-‘Well, that writer’s an ass, whoever he is; and you’re a deal nearer
-the mark than he is. He’s a donkey, that, because their ain’t a thistle
-right against his nose, thinks there ain’t no more thistles in the
-world—let alone corn. Now I’ve been thinkin’ and thinkin’ the whole
-matter over since a friend of mine in Port Phillip sent me this paper,
-and I cipher it out this way. They’ve sent down five thousand ounces
-this week from this place, Ballarat. Then they’ve struck it at Forest
-Creek, fifty miles off. Well, that tells me that there’s plenty of it,
-and more than years will see out, judging from California and Turonia,
-as we know of. Now what do you suppose all Europe—all the world—will do
-when they hear of this, that you can dig up gold like potatoes? Why,
-they won’t be able to find ships fast enough to bring ‘em here. When
-they do come they’ll want to be fed. The tea and sugar and tents and
-spades and shovels old Paul Frankston and the other merchants will find
-’em somehow; the flour the farmers will find them, or if they can’t,
-old Paul and his friends will get it from Chili. _But they can’t import
-beef and mutton._ No; not if meat rose to a shilling a pound. Live
-stock is the worst freight in the world, and there’s nowhere within
-boating distance where it grows plentiful as it does here. So when my
-sum’s worked out it means this, that more gold means double and treble
-the population, and double and treble the price of everything that we
-have here and want to sell.’
-
-As Mr. Levison paused,—not for breath, for he did not exceed his
-ordinary slow monotonal enunciation, as he propounded these original
-and startling ideas much as though he were reading from a book,—Mr.
-Neuchamp looked fixedly at his guest, as if to discover whether or
-no some subtle local influence peculiar to Rainbar had infected with
-speculative mania the shrewd, calm-judging stockholder.
-
-But the _genius loci_, however seductive, would have fared ill in
-a mental encounter with the slow, sure inferences and iron logic
-of Abstinens Levison. He displayed no trace of more than ordinary
-interest. And from all that was apparent, the onward march of a
-revolution fated to flood the land with wealth and to change a handful
-of pioneer communities into a nation, was accepted by him with the same
-faint unnoted surprise as would have been the announcement of a glut in
-the cattle market or the ‘sticking up’ of the downriver mail coach.
-
-‘That’s how it is in my mind,’ he slowly continued, as if pursuing his
-ordinary train of thoughts, ‘and before we meet again you’ll know all
-about it. I’m off to Melbourne as soon as I can get on to the mail
-line. I shall buy stock right and left, and pick up as many cottages
-and town allotments as I can find with good titles. They’ll be like
-these Freeman store cattle; cent per cent will be a trifle to what
-profits are to be had out of them. But all this yarning won’t buy the
-child a frock. Where’s that young man of yours? I want to leave my
-horse and saddle in his charge.’
-
-‘Where are you going now?’ asked Ernest. ‘How can you get over to
-the mail station without a horse? It’s a hundred and eighty miles to
-Wargan, where the coach line comes in.’
-
-‘It’s only thirty miles to Wood-duck Lagoon, where the horse mail
-passes,’ said his determined guest. ‘I left word for them down at
-Mingadee to send a led horse by the mailman for me to-morrow. Johnny
-Daly’s an old stockman of mine, and one of those chaps that when he
-says he’ll do a thing he always does it. I’m as sure of finding a horse
-there at ten o’clock to-morrow as if I saw him now.’
-
-‘But suppose he loses him on the way, or don’t find your horse ready at
-Mingadee, what then? Hadn’t you better take a man and horse from here?’
-
-‘Well, I don’t say Johnny would _steal_ a horse, out and out, if he
-knew I expected one at a certain hour; he’s a good boy, though he does
-come from the Weddin Mountains. But he’d _have_ one for me, some road
-or other, if there wasn’t one nearer than Bargo Brush. As for your
-horses, I’m obliged, and know I’m welcome, but it would knock up one
-going and one coming back, for they’re all as poor as crows, and that
-don’t pay, besides a man’s time for nothing. I’ve plenty of time, and
-the night’s the best travelling weather now. If you’ll call this native
-chap I’ll be off.’
-
-Ernest, though extremely loath to let his friend and benefactor depart
-on foot—of which, as a mode of progression, he was beginning to
-acquire the Australian opinion, viz. that it wore a poverty-stricken
-appearance—could not decently oppose Mr. Levison’s fixed desire to
-take the road. He therefore called up Jack Windsor, to whose care Mr.
-Levison solemnly confided his emaciated quadruped, a much worn and
-sunburned saddle and bridle, together with a considerable portion of
-gray blanket, which, in many folds, did duty as saddle-cloth.
-
-‘Now, young man,’ he said solemnly, walking aside with Mr. Windsor,
-‘you take care of these and my old horse. Give them to nobody without
-he brings Mr. Cottonbush’s written order; do you hear? That’s as good a
-stock horse and journey hack as ever you crossed, though he’s low now.’
-
-‘He is _very_ low!’ averred Jack, looking at the bare-ribbed spectral
-but well-formed animal that was grazing within a few yards of the spot,
-‘but he may get over it. I’ll take a look at him night and morning, and
-see that he’s lifted regular if he gets down.’
-
-‘All right,’ said his master. ‘I had to lift him myself this morning,
-and very hard work I had to get him up. But if it rains within the next
-two months you’ll have him kicking up his heels like a colt.’
-
-‘Are you going to walk to Wood-duck Lagoon, sir?’ inquired Jack
-respectfully.
-
-‘Yes, I am, and no great matter either,’ returned the exceptionally
-wiry capitalist. ‘_I’m_ right enough; don’t you trouble about me. What
-you and young Banks have to look out for is, to keep all these Circle
-Dot cattle well within bounds till the weather breaks, and then you
-can’t go wrong, and I look upon Mr. Neuchamp’s pile as made. I’ve taken
-to him, more than a bit. Besides, he’s got another good back, though he
-don’t know it. I’ve bought out the Freeman’s, stock, lock, and barrel,
-so their cattle won’t bother you any more.’
-
-Here Mr. Windsor gave a leap off the ground, and cast his cabbage-tree
-hat violently from his curly brown locks in another direction.
-
-‘Yes, I’ve bought ’em pretty right; they didn’t know me, or they’d have
-stuck it on—bought ’em _for a friend_! So they’ll have the pleasure of
-seeing you and Banks branding the increase next year, just as they are
-giving up possession; and the calves will be worth more then than I
-paid for the cows yesterday. But I might be mistaken, you know.’
-
-‘It would be for the first time; so they all used to say at
-Boocalthra,’ answered Jack.
-
-‘_You_ were there, then?’ said Mr. Levison, bending his extremely
-discriminating gaze upon the bronzed, resolute face. ‘_Now_ I remember
-your brand; you were the curly-headed boy that used to ride the colts
-for the horse-breaker. Glad you turned out steady. I didn’t expect it.
-Stick to Rainbar; now you’re in a good place, and you’ll do well. But
-whatever you do, if you walk your feet off, don’t let these Circle Dot
-cows and heifers get out of bounds till the rain comes. If you are
-regularly beat, go down to Mingadee; there’s a hundred and fifty stock
-horses there, spelling for next winter’s work, and Cottonbush will
-have my orders to let you have half a dozen. I know what fresh cattle
-are in a season like this. Well, good-bye, Jack the Devil; I remember
-all about you now.’ Mr. Windsor grinned, yet preserved an air of
-diffidence. ‘Take care of the old horse, and don’t you lend that saddle
-to no one!’
-
-With these parting words tending to thrift, in curious
-contradistinction to the tenor of his action at Rainbar, Mr. Levison
-proceeded to take a hurried leave of his entertainer.
-
-‘I’ve just been talking to that native chap of yours,’ he said, ‘about
-my old horse. He wants a bit of looking after now, but you’d be
-surprised to see what style he has when he’s in good fettle. Wonderful
-horse on a camp. Best cutting-out horse, this day, on the river. Pulls
-rather hard, that’s the worst of him.’
-
-Mr. Neuchamp, who, having as yet not gone through the terrible
-trials of a prolonged drought, had never witnessed the incredible
-emaciation to which stock may be reduced, and their rapid and magical
-transformation at the wand of the enchanter ‘Rain,’ looked as if he
-really _would_ be surprised at the tottering, hollow-eyed, fleshless
-spectre, in appearance something between an expiring poley cow and an
-anatomical preparation, ‘pulling hard’ again, or doing any deed of
-valour as a charger.
-
-‘Ah! you’ll be all in the fashion, then,’ said Mr. Levison, with his
-customary affirmative expression, which apparently meant that having
-asserted his opinion it was waste of time to attempt to prove it.
-‘When old BI (that’s what the men call him, his name’s written on him
-pretty big) kicks up his heels, it’ll mean that Rainbar’s _worth twenty
-thousand pounds_! That’s why I want you to be careful, and not waste
-your money and get sold up just before the tide turns. How’s that Arab
-horse-breeding notion turned out? They’d fetch about three pound a head
-all round just now.’
-
-‘Very well, so far; they’re a little poor, but nothing could look more
-promising than the yearlings—plenty of bone, and as handsome as you
-could make them. I should grieve more about their forced sale than
-anything.’
-
-‘Well, you’re not sold up yet, and won’t be if you’ll be careful and
-take my advice and Paul Frankston’s. You mark me, horses will be
-horses in a year or two. They’re hardly worth owning now; but their
-turn’s coming, with everything else that any man will have to sell in
-Australia for the next ten years.’
-
-Mr. Levison placed the few necessary articles which he had abstracted
-from his valise, in the moiety of the gray blanket which he had
-apparently not required as a saddle-cloth. He requested leave to cut
-off and to take with him a fair-sized section of damper, sternly
-refusing any other description of edible. Then, turning his face to the
-broad plain, he held out his hand to Ernest, and finally exhorting him
-not to waste his money, addressed himself to the far-stretching trail
-after such a fashion as convinced Ernest that he was no inexperienced
-pedestrian.
-
-Mr. Neuchamp returned to his cottage in a very different frame of
-mind from that which characterised his pre-matutinal discipline in
-the garden. How short a time, how trifling an incident, occasionally
-suffices to turn the scale from anxiety to repose, from despair to
-glowing hope. This last cheering mental condition was indispensably
-necessary to Mr. Neuchamp’s acceptation of burdens, even to his very
-life. He had gone forth in the clear dawnlight a miserable man,
-racked by presentiments of scorn unalterable to come, gazing on
-‘Ruin’s red letters writ in flame,’ and associated with the hitherto
-untarnished fame and sufficing fortune of Ernest Neuchamp; he had heard
-in imagination the laugh of scorn, the half-contemptuous, pitying
-condolence. Now, though much remained uncertain and unsafe, the blessed
-flower of Hope had recommenced to bloom. Its fragrance was once more
-shed over the soul of the fainting pilgrim through life’s desert, and
-the wayfarer arose refreshed and invigorated, free once more to turn
-his brow erect and undaunted towards the Mecca of his dreams.
-
-This particular morning happened to be that of the bi-weekly
-post-day, a day to which Mr. Neuchamp had looked forward of late
-with considerably more apprehension than interest. How wonderfully
-different, as the years roll on, are the feelings with which that
-humble messenger of fate, the postman, is greeted! In life’s careless
-spring he is the custodian of friendship’s offering, the distributor of
-the small sweet joys of childhood, the dawning intellectual pleasures
-of youth, the rose-hued, enchanting flower-tokens of love. As the days
-of the years of our pilgrimage roll on, ‘the air is full of farewells
-to the dying and mournings for the dead.’ How altered is the character
-of the missives which lie motionless, but charged with subtle, terrible
-forces!—electric agents they!—thrilling or rending the vital frame from
-that overcharged battery, the heart!
-
-To this undesirable tenor and complexion had much of Mr. Neuchamp’s
-correspondence, drought-leavened and gloomy, arrived. Many of his
-smaller accounts were of necessity left unpaid. The cruel season,
-unchanged in the more vital characteristic of periodic moisture, seemed
-to be culminating in an apparently fixed and fatal determination on the
-part of Messrs. Oldstile and Crampton to let him have no more money on
-account.
-
-But several minor matters, on this particular day, besides the visit
-of Mr. Levison, seemed to point to Fortune’s more indulgent mood.
-The pile of letters and papers was pleasantly, if not hopefully,
-variegated by those periodicals and peculiarly stamped envelopes which
-denote the delivery of the European mail. Upon these Ernest dashed
-with unconcealed eagerness, and tearing open a letter in his brother
-Courtenay’s delicate Italian handwriting, utterly devoid of linear
-emphasis, read as follows:
-
- NEUCHAMPSTEAD, _6th March 18—_.
-
- DEAR ERNEST—I cannot acknowledge surprise at the contents of your
- last letter, having always looked for some such ending to your
- colonial adventure. The day of success for such enterprises has gone
- by—if indeed _any one_ ever was really successful at any time in
- such wanderings and Quixotisms. You quote the greater examples. Yet
- a little temporary notoriety, chiefly ending in imprisonment or the
- block, was the guerdon of Columbus and one Raleigh, instances which
- occur to me. As I have said before, I have no doubt that our family
- would have substantially benefited by remaining on their paternal
- fiords and leaving Normandy and England to the robbers and hangers-on
- who followed the popular pirate of the day. Being in England, I
- suppose we shall have to stay, though the climate daily recommends
- itself less to any one whose epidermis does not resemble a suit of
- armour. The crops have been bad this year. The tenants are slow and
- deficient. No one seems to have any money except certain Liverpool
- or Manchester persons, born with an aptitude for swindling in ‘gray
- shirtings,’ cotton twist, racehorses, or other equally plausible
- instrument for gambling. I spend little and risk nothing. So I may
- hope to survive in my insignificance, unless the grand Radical
- earthquake, which will surely swallow England’s aristocracy of birth
- and culture in a coming day, be antedated. All men of family who
- dabble in agriculture, commerce, or colonisation, are earthen pots
- which must inevitably be shattered by the aggressive flotilla of
- brazen vessels which encumbers every tide nowadays. You will admit I
- had no expectation of other result than your ruin when you embarked.
- In announcing that fact spare me the details. You will find your old
- rooms ready at Neuchampstead, and refurnished. I have been extravagant
- in some curious antique furniture.
-
- I enclose a draft for three thousand pounds. Such a sum is of no use
- to a gentleman in England. Fling it after the rest. It may console
- you, years hence, when you are adding Australian pollen masses to
- the famous collection of orchids for which _alone_ Neuchampstead
- is celebrated, that your experiment had full justice. It is only
- the bourgeois who leaves the table before his ‘system’ is fairly
- tried.—Good-bye, my dear brother. Yours sincerely,
-
- COURTENAY NEUCHAMP.
-
- _P.S._—I forgot to add that I gave Augusta your message. How could
- you be so incautious? I would have suppressed it, but had, of course,
- no option. She starts for Sydney by the mail steamer. Are the women
- in Australia so obstinate? But they are much the same everywhere, I
- apprehend.—C. N.
-
-The first emotion which Mr. Neuchamp experienced after reading this
-characteristic letter was one of unqualified delight. The sight of
-the draft for the three thousand pounds, so slightingly alluded to
-by Courtenay, was as the vision of the palm-trees at the well to the
-fainting desert pilgrim, of the distant sail to the gaunt, perishing
-seaman on the drifting raft—the symbol of blessed hope, of assured
-deliverance. The capital sum, or the trifling annual income derivable
-from it, in gold-flooded England, might be of little utility there,
-as Courtenay had averred with the humorous indifferentism which he
-professed. But _here_, in this rich unwatered level, metaphorically and
-otherwise, it was like the river-born trickling tunnels with which,
-since forgotten Pharaoh days, the toiling fellaheen saturate the black
-gaping Nile gardens, sure precursor of profound vegetation and the
-hundred-fold increase.
-
-No use to a gentleman in England! A company of guardian angels must
-surely have wafted to him the precious, delicate document across the
-seas, across the desert here. What use would it not be to him, Ernest?
-It would pay in full for the Circle Dot store cattle, also for those
-purchased from Freeman Brothers, leaving a balance to the credit of his
-account with those treasure-guarding griffins, Oldstile and Crampton.
-Besides, the bills due to Levison for the store cattle were not due
-for several months yet. In the meantime rain or other wonders might
-happen. The young horses, too, children of Omar, fleet son of the
-desert, with delicately-formed aristocratic heads, deerlike limbs,
-which had been dear to him almost as their ancestors had been to some
-lonely subdivision of the wandering Shammar or Aneezah!—they were saved
-from ruin and disgrace—saved from the indignity of passing for the
-merest trifle into the possession of unheeding vulgar purchasers, who
-would probably stigmatise them as weeds, wanting in bone, or by any
-other cheap form of ignorant depreciation.
-
-Saved! saved! saved! All was saved. Once more secure. Once more his
-own. Once more the land and the grazing herd, the humble abode, the
-garden, the paddock, even the long-neglected but not despaired-of
-canal, all the acted resolves and outcome of a sincere but perhaps
-over-sanguine mind, dearer than ever were they to him, their author
-and projector. They were his own again. How like Courtenay, too!
-Ever better than his word; incredulous as to improved benefits and
-successes; deprecating haste, risk, imprudence; doubtful of all but
-the garnered grain, the assayed gold, the concrete and the absolute in
-life,—but, in the hour of need, sparing of that counsel which is but
-another name for reproach, stanch in aid, generous alike in the mode
-and measure of his gift.
-
-Having recovered from this natural exaltation and relief at the
-unexpected succour, Mr. Neuchamp turned to the consideration of the
-very important postscript of his brother’s letter with apprehension.
-
-Had his cousin, Miss Augusta Neuchamp, really sailed and arrived in
-Sydney, as would appear? If so, where was she to go? What was he to
-do? She could hardly come to Rainbar to take up her abode in this
-small cottage, which, though possessing several rooms, was, like many
-dwellings in the bush proper, practically undivided as to sound; the
-conversation of any one, in any given room, being equally beneficial
-and entertaining to the occupant of any other. Then there was not a
-woman upon the whole establishment. The wives and daughters of the
-Freemans, even if the latter were eligible for ladies’ maids, were
-little less than hostile.
-
-A residence in Sydney seemed the only possible plan; but he knew his
-cousin too well to think that there would be no drawback to that
-arrangement. Energetic, well-intentioned, possessing a clear available
-intelligence, and considerable mental force, when exercised within
-certain well-defined, but it must be confessed narrow limits, Augusta
-Neuchamp was a benevolent despot in her own way. She ardently desired
-to arrange the destinies of the classes or individuals who came within
-the sphere of her action in accordance with what _she_ considered
-to be the plain intentions of Providence with regard to them. Of
-the tremendous issues involved in such a translation, she had no
-conception. Plain to bluntness in her speech, she rarely evaded the
-awkwardness of expressing disappointment. Unquestionably refined by
-habit and education, she possessed little imagination and less tact.
-Thus she rarely failed to provide herself, in any locality which she
-honoured with her presence, with a large and increasing supply of
-opponents, if not of enemies. A moderate private income enabled her
-to indulge her tastes for improving herself or others. Possessing no
-very near relatives, she was uncontrolled as to her movements and mode
-of life. She had reached the age of twenty-five, though by no means
-unprepossessing in appearance, without finding any suitor sufficiently
-valorous to adopt or oppose, in the character of a husband, her very
-clearly expressed views of life. Had she consented to reserve a
-modification in these important respects, her friends averred that she
-might have been ‘settled’ ere now. But such palterings with principle
-were alien and abhorrent to the nature of Augusta Neuchamp. And Augusta
-Neuchamp she had accordingly remained.
-
-The appearance of Miss Neuchamp was generally described as commanding,
-although she was slightly, if at all, over the medium height of woman.
-But there was an expression about her high-bridged aquiline nose and
-compressed lips which left no one in doubt as to the fact that, in
-controversy or contending action, the first to yield would _not_ be
-the possessor of those features. Her clear blue eyes would have been
-handsome had there been a shade of doubt or softness at any time
-visible. Such a moment of feminine weakness never came. They looked at
-you and through you and over you, but never fell in maiden doubt or
-fear beneath your gaze. Two courses were open to the individual of the
-conflicting sex in her presence—unconditional surrender or flight.
-
-It was hard, Ernest thought, that just as he was relieved from one
-anxiety he should be provided by unkind Fate with another. He revolved
-the imminent question of the disposition of Miss Augusta Neuchamp in
-his mind until prevented by mutual apprehension from pursuing the
-terribly perplexing subject. Of all people in the wide world, he
-thought his cousin was the most impracticable, the most unyielding to
-argument, the most certain to expose herself to dislike and ridicule in
-Australia. She knew everything. She believed nothing, unless indeed it
-related to herself or proceeded directly from that source. Everything
-which differed from her stereotyped system was wrong, ruinous,
-degenerate, or provincial. How she would criticise the place, the
-people, the climate, the railways, the houses, the fences, the workmen,
-the men and the women, the grass, and the gum-trees!
-
-If he could only persuade her to take lodgings in Sydney, until he
-could go down and argue the point with her, much might be gained.
-Antonia Frankston would visit her, and harder than adamant must she
-be if that gentle voice and natural manner did not convert her to a
-favourable opinion of Australian life.
-
-No such preparatory process was possible. A letter arrived from the
-fair emigrant which left no doubt of her immediate intentions. It ran
-thus:
-
- DEAR COUSIN ERNEST—I have dared the perils of the deep, not the least
- for your sake, but _me voici_. I made a short stay in Sydney, but
- being extremely tired of the dust and mosquitoes, I decided upon the
- course of travelling by rail and coach to your far-away estate at
- once. [Here Ernest groaned, a suspicious sound which might have been
- in sympathy for the trials of a lonely if not distressed damsel, or
- an expression of despondency at the idea of his own inevitable cares
- and anxieties, such as must attend the entertainment of the first
- lady-guest ever seen at Rainbar. He continued the reading of the
- epistle.] If Sydney had been a more interesting place I might have
- lingered for a week or two so as to exchange letters with you. Had
- it possessed that foreign air which one finds so pleasant in many
- continental spots, otherwise dull enough, I could have amused myself.
- But being, as it is, a second-hand copy of a provincial British town—I
- grant you the botanical element is lovely, though neglected—I could
- not endure another week. I seemed to long for the desert, in all its
- vastness and grandeur, where your abode is placed. It was like staying
- in an Algerian town, a dwarfed and dirty Paris, full of _cafés_ and
- shabby Frenchmen playing at dominoes. I had no lady acquaintances.
- There _are_ a few, I suppose. So I grew desperate, and took my passage
- through the agency company; Cobb, I think, is the name. If you have
- no phaeton or dogcart available, you might bring a saddle-horse for
- me.—Your affectionate cousin,
-
- AUGUSTA NEUCHAMP.
-
-Just after the perusal of this letter, which showed that Miss
-Neuchamp’s angles still stood out as sharply as those of a Theban
-obelisk—the voyage and change of sky notwithstanding—Mr. Neuchamp was
-startled by the sudden appearance of Piambook, who rushed into his
-presence with an air of sincere discomposure very different from that
-of his usual unimpressible demeanour. His rolling dark eyes gleamed—his
-features worked—his mouth, slightly open, could only articulate the
-borrowed phrase of his conquerors, ‘My word! my word!’ It was for some
-moments the only sound that could be extracted from him by Ernest’s
-inquiries.
-
-‘What is it, Piambook?’ at length demanded Ernest, so decidedly, almost
-fiercely, that his sable retainer capitulated.
-
-‘Me look out longa wheelbarrow,’ he explained at length. He had been
-despatched to a distant point of the run at a very early hour of the
-morning.
-
-‘Well, what did you see?’ pursued his master. ‘You can yabber fast
-enough when you like.’
-
-‘That one wheelbarrow plenty broket,’ explained the observing
-pre-Adamite. ‘Mine see um longa plain—plenty sit down—liket three
-fellow wheel. Billy Robinson, he go longa township.’
-
-‘Well, what then? the coach broke down; that’s not wonderful—passengers
-walked, I suppose.’
-
-‘Me seeum that one white-fellow gin,’ quoth Piambook, in a low,
-mysterious voice. Then, bursting into an immoderate fit of laughter,
-he continued, ‘That one carry liket spyglass.’ Here he placed his thumb
-and forefinger, circularly contracted, to his eye, and, gazing at Mr.
-Neuchamp, again laughed till his dusky orbs were dim.
-
-Mr. Neuchamp at once comprehended by this pantomime the gold eyeglass
-which Miss Augusta, partially short-sighted, habitually wore; and
-becoming uneasy as to her state and condition under the circumstances
-of a presumed breakdown, asked eagerly of his follower what she was
-doing.
-
-‘That one sit along a wheelbarrow, liket this one;’ here he took up a
-book from Ernest’s table and pretended to look into it with great and
-absorbed interest.
-
-‘Anybody in the coach, Piambook?’
-
-‘One fellow Chinaman,’ returned the messenger, with cool indifference.
-
-After this information Mr. Neuchamp at once perceived that no time must
-be lost. Augusta could not be left a moment longer than was necessary,
-sitting in a disabled coach in the midst of a boundless plain, with a
-Chinaman for her _vis-à-vis_. What a situation for a young lady to whom
-Baden was as familiar as Brompton, Paris as Piccadilly, Rome, Florence,
-Venice, as the stations on the Eastern Counties Railway! He did not
-believe she was afraid. She was afraid of nothing. But the situation
-was embarrassing.
-
-The hawk-eyed Piambook had descried the stranded coach—the wheelbarrow,
-as his comrades called it—on the mail track, about a mile off his path
-of duty. It was full twelve miles from Rainbar. In a quarter of an hour
-the express waggon with two cheerful but enfeebled steeds stumbled and
-blundered along at a very different pace from that of Mr. Parklands,
-when he rattled up Ernest to the Rainbar door, on the occasion of their
-first memorable drive.
-
-However, the distance from home was luckily short, and in about two
-hours Mr. Neuchamp arrived at the spot where, in the disabled coach,
-sat Miss Augusta Neuchamp, possessing her soul in _impatience_, and
-gradually coming to the conclusion that Ah Ling—who sat stolidly
-staring at her and regretting the loss of time which might have been
-spent in watering his garden or smoking opium, the only two occupations
-he ever indulged in—was about to rob and perhaps murder her. As she
-always carried a small revolver, and was by no means ignorant of its
-use, it is possible that Ah Ling was in greater danger than he was
-aware of. His fair neighbour would infallibly have shot him had he made
-any hasty or incautious motion.
-
-When Mr. Neuchamp rumbled up in his useful but not imposing vehicle, a
-slight shade of satisfaction overspread her features.
-
-‘Oh, Ernest, I am delighted to see you; however did you find out my
-position? Don’t you think it was inexcusable of the coach company to
-send us all this way in a damaged vehicle? I thought all your coaching
-arrangements were so perfect.’
-
-‘Accidents will happen, my dear Augusta,’ said Ernest, ‘in all
-companies and communities, you know. Cobb and Co. are the best of
-fellows in the main. But _whatever_ induced you to come up into this
-wild place without writing to me first? Have you not suffered all kinds
-of hardship and disagreeables?’
-
-‘Well, perhaps a few; but I knew all about the country from some
-books I read on the voyage out. I studied the directory till I found
-out the coach lines, and I should not have complained but for this
-last blunder. But what a barren wilderness this all seems. I thought
-Australia was a land of rich pastures.’
-
-‘So it is—but this is a drought. “And the famine was sore in the land.”
-You remember that in the Bible, don’t you? We are a good deal like
-Palestine in our periodical lean years, except that they didn’t import
-their flour from beyond sea, and we do.‘
-
-‘But this looks so very bad!’ said she, putting up her eyeglass and
-staring earnestly at the waste lands of the crown, which certainly
-presented a striking contrast to the Buckinghamshire meadows or uplands
-either. ‘Why, it seems all sand and these scrubby-looking bushes;
-are you sure you haven’t made a mistake and bought inferior land? A
-gentleman who came out with me said inexperienced persons often did.’
-
-‘My dear Augusta,’ said Ernest, quelling a well-remembered feeling of
-violent antagonism, ‘you must surely have forgotten that I have been
-more than two years in Australia, and may be supposed to know the
-difference between good country and bad by this time.’
-
-‘Do you?’ said his fair cousin indifferently. ‘Well, you must have
-improved. Courtenay says you are the most credulous person he knows;
-and as for Aunt Ermengarde, she says that, of all the failures the
-family has produced——’
-
-‘Please to spare me the old lady’s review of my life and times,’ said
-Ernest, waking up his bounding steeds. ‘We never did agree, and it can
-serve no good purpose to further embitter my remembrance of her.’
-
-‘Oh, but she did not wish to say anything really disparaging of you,
-only that you were not of sufficiently coarse material to win success
-in farming, or trade, or politics.’
-
-‘Or colonisation, my dear Augusta. Perhaps she was not so far wrong,
-after all; but somehow one doesn’t like to be told these things, and
-I must ask you and Aunt Ermengarde to suspend your judgment until the
-last scene of the third act. Then you will be able to applaud, or
-otherwise, on correct grounds. I think you will find the country and
-its ways by no means too easy to comprehend.’
-
-‘I expect nothing, simply, so I cannot be disappointed. It seems to me
-a sort of provincial England jumbled up with one’s ideas of Mexico.’
-
-‘And the people?’
-
-‘I haven’t noticed them much yet. I thought many of the women
-ridiculously overdressed in Sydney, copying our English fashions in a
-semi-tropical climate. I left everything behind except a few tourist
-suits.’
-
-‘And most extraordinary you look,’ thought Ernest to himself, though
-he dared not say so, mentally contrasting the stern Augusta’s
-dust-coloured tusser wrap, broad-leafed hat with green lining, rather
-stout boots, short dress, and flattened down hair, with Antonia, cool,
-glistening, delicately robed, and rose-fresh amid the bright-hued
-shrubberies of Morahmee, or even the Misses Middleton, perfectly _comme
-il faut_, on shipboard, in George Street, or at the station, as
-everybody ought to be, thought Ernest—unless she is an eccentric
-reformer, he was just about to say, but refrained. Was any one else of
-his acquaintance going to do wonders in the alleviation and reformation
-of the Australian world? and if so, what had _he_ accomplished? Had he
-not been in scores of instances self-convicted of the most egregious
-mistakes and miscalculations? After all his experience, was he not now
-indebted almost for his financial existence to certain of these very
-colonists whose intelligence he had formerly held so cheap?
-
-These reflections were not suffered to proceed to an inconvenient
-length, being routed by the clear and not particularly musical tones of
-Miss Augusta’s voice.
-
-‘I can’t say much for Australian horses, so far, Ernest. I expected to
-see the fleet courser of the desert, and all that kind of thing. These
-seem wretched underbred creatures, and miserably poor.’
-
-‘Lives there the man, with soul so dead,’ who doesn’t mind hearing his
-horses run down?
-
-‘They are not bad horses, by any means, though low in condition, owing
-to this dreadful season,’ answered Ernest, rather quickly. ‘This one,’
-touching the off-side steed, ‘is as good and fast and high-couraged a
-horse as ever was saddled or harnessed, but they have had nothing to
-eat for six months, to speak of. So they quite surpass the experience
-of the cabman’s horse in _Pickwick_; and I can’t afford to buy corn at
-a pound a bushel.’
-
-‘I forgot about the horse in _Pickwick_,’ said Augusta, who, a steady
-reader in her own line, which she denominated ‘useful,’ had little
-appreciation of humour, and never could be got to know the difference
-between _Pickwick_ and _Nicholas Nickleby_, _Charles O’Malley_ and _The
-Knight of Gwynne_. ‘But surely more neatness in harness and turn-out
-might be managed,’ and she looked at the dusty American harness and
-rusty bits.
-
-‘You must remember, my dear Augusta, that you are not only in the
-provinces, but in the far far Bush, now—akin to the Desert—in more ways
-than one. I don’t suppose the Sheik Abdallah turns out with very bright
-bits; but, if he does, he has the advantage of us in the labour supply.
-We are compelled to economise rigidly in that way.’
-
-‘You seem compelled to economise in every way that makes life worth
-having,’ said his downright kinswoman. ‘Does any one ever make any
-money at all here to compensate for the savage life you seem to lead?’
-
-‘Well, a few people do,’ replied Ernest, half amused, half annoyed. ‘If
-we had time to visit a little, not perhaps in this neighbourhood, I
-could show you places well kept and pretty enough, and people who would
-be voted fairly provided for even in England.’
-
-‘I have seen none as yet,’ said Miss Neuchamp; ‘but I believe much of
-the prosperity in the large towns is unreal. I met a very pleasant,
-gentlemanlike man in Sydney, in fact one of the few gentlemen I did see
-there—a Mr. Croker, I think, was his name—who said it was all outside
-show, and that nobody had made any money in this colony, or ever would.’
-
-‘Oh, Jermyn Croker,’ said Ernest, laughing; ‘you must not take him
-literally; he is a profound cynic, and must have been sent into the
-world expressly to counterbalance an equally pronounced optimist,
-myself for instance. That’s his line of humour, and very amusing it
-is—in its way.’
-
-‘But does he not speak the truth?’ inquired the literal Augusta; ‘or is
-it not considered necessary in a colony?’
-
-‘Of course he _intends_ to do so, but like all men whose opinions are
-very strongly coloured by their individualism, which again is dominated
-by purely physical occurrences, such as bile, indigestion, and so
-on, he unconsciously takes a gloomy, depreciatory view of matters in
-general, which I, and perhaps others, think untrue and misleading.’
-
-‘I believe in a right and a wrong about everything myself,’ said the
-young lady, ‘but I must say I feel inclined to agree with him so far.’
-
-Ernest was on the point of asking her how she could possibly know,
-when the turrets of Rainbar appearing in sight, the conversation was
-diverted to that ‘hold’ and its surroundings, the danger of arriving in
-the midst of an altercation being thereby averted.
-
-‘Allow me to welcome you to my poor home,’ said Mr. Neuchamp, driving
-up to the door of the cottage, and assisting her to alight. ‘I wish I
-had had notice of the honour of your visit, that we might have been
-suitably prepared.’
-
-‘Stuff!’ said Miss Augusta. ‘Then you would have written to prevent me
-coming at all. I was determined to see how you were _really_ getting
-on, and I never allow trifling discomforts to stand in the way of my
-resolves.’
-
-‘I am aware of _that_, my dear Augusta,’ replied Mr. Neuchamp, with a
-slight mental shrug, in which he decided that the trifling discomforts
-alluded to occasionally involved others besides the heroine herself.
-‘But can you do without a maid? I am afraid there is not a woman on the
-place.’
-
-‘That’s a little awkward,’ confessed Miss Neuchamp. ‘I did not quite
-anticipate such a barrack-room state of matters. But is there none at
-the village, or whatever it is called, in the neighbourhood?’
-
-‘I have a village on the run, I am sorry to say; but though we are at
-feud with the villagers, I did attempt to procure you a handmaid, and I
-will see what has been done.’
-
-It was yet early in the day. Miss Neuchamp, being put into possession
-of the best bedroom, hastily arranged for her use and benefit, was
-told to consider herself as the sole occupant of the cottage for the
-present. Mr. Neuchamp in the meanwhile having ordered lunch, went over
-to the barracks to see if Mr. Banks had returned. He had been sent
-upon an embassy of great importance and diplomatic delicacy: no less,
-indeed, than to prevail upon Mrs. Abraham Freeman to permit her eldest
-daughter, Tottie, a girl of seventeen, to come to Rainbar during the
-period of Miss Neuchamp’s stay, to attend upon that lady as housemaid,
-lady’s maid, and general attendant. He was empowered to make any
-reasonable promises to provide the girl with everything she might want,
-short of a husband, but to bring her up if it could possibly be done.
-For, of course, Ernest was duly sensible of the extreme awkwardness
-that would result from the presence of Miss Neuchamp—albeit a near
-relative—as the sole representative of womanhood at such an essentially
-bachelor settlement as Rainbar.
-
-Tottie Freeman, who had commenced to bloom in the comparatively desert
-air of Rainbar, was a damsel not altogether devoid of youthful charms.
-True, the unfriendly sun, the scorching blasts, together with the
-culpable disuse of veil or bonnet, had combined to embrown what ought
-to have been her complexion, and, worse again, to implant such a crop
-of freckles upon her face, neck, and arms, that she looked as if a
-bran-bag had been shaken over her naturally fair skin.
-
-Now that we have said the worst of her, it must be admitted that her
-figure was very good, well developed, upright, and elastic. She could
-run as fast as any of her brothers, carrying a tolerable weight,
-and (when no one was looking) vault on her ambling mare, which she
-could ride with or without a saddle over range or river, logs, scrub,
-or reed-beds, just as well as they could. She could intimidate a
-half-wild cow with a roping pole, and milk her afterwards; drive a
-team on a pinch, and work all day in the hot sun. With all this there
-was nothing unfeminine or unpleasing to the eye in the bush maiden.
-Quite the contrary, indeed. She was a handsome young woman as regards
-features, form, and carriage. Cool and self-possessed, she was by no
-means as reckless of speech as many better educated persons of her
-sex; and though she liked a little flirtation—‘which most every girl
-expex’—there was not a word to be said to her detriment ‘up or down the
-river,’ which comprehended the whole of her social system.
-
-Such was the damsel whom Charley Banks had been despatched to capture
-by force, fraud, or persuasion for the use and benefit of Miss Augusta
-Neuchamp. A less suitable ambassador might have been selected.
-Charley Banks was a very good-looking young fellow, and had always
-risked a little badinage when brought into contact with Miss Tottie
-and her family. War had been formally declared between the houses of
-Neuchamp and Freeman, yet Ernest, as was his custom, had always been
-unaffectedly polite and kindly to the women of the tribe, young and old.
-
-Therefore Mrs. Freeman had no strong ill-feeling towards him, and Miss
-Tottie was extremely sorry that they never saw Mr. Neuchamp riding
-up to the door now, with a pleasant good-morrow, sometimes chatting
-for a quarter of an hour, when the old people were out of the way.
-When Charley Banks first asked Mrs. Freeman to let her daughter go
-as a great favour to Mr. Neuchamp, and afterwards inflamed Tottie’s
-curiosity by descriptions of the great wealth and high fashion of Miss
-Neuchamp (who had a dray-load of dresses, straight from London and
-Paris, coming up next week), he found the fort commencing to show signs
-of capitulation. At first Mrs. Freeman ‘couldn’t spare Tottie if it was
-ever so.’ Then Tottie ‘couldn’t think of going among a parcel of young
-fellows, and only one lady in the place.’ Then Mrs. Freeman ‘might be
-able to manage for a week or two, though what Abe would say when he
-came home and found his girl gone to Rainbar, she couldn’t say.’ Then
-Tottie ‘wouldn’t mind trying for a week or two.’ She supposed ‘nobody
-would run away with her, and it must be awfully lonely for the lady all
-by herself.’ Besides, ‘she hadn’t seen a soul lately, and was moped
-to death; perhaps a little change would do her good.’ So the ‘treaty
-of Rainbar,’ between the high contracting personages, resolved itself
-into this, that Tottie was to have ten shillings a week for a month’s
-service, if Miss Neuchamp stayed so long, was to obey all her lawful
-commands, and to make herself ‘generally useful.’
-
-‘So if you’ll be kind enough to run in the mare, Mr. Banks—she’s down
-on the flat there, and not very flash, you may be sure—I’ll get my
-habit on, and mother will send up my things with Billy in the evening.
-Here’s my bridle.’
-
-Having stated the case thus briefly, Miss Freeman retired into a
-remarkably small bedroom which she shared with two younger sisters
-and a baby-brother, to make the requisite change of raiment, while
-Charley Banks ran into the stockyard and caught the varmint, ambling
-black mare, which he knew very well by sight. As he led her up to the
-hut Miss Tottie came out, carrying her saddle in one hand and holding
-up her alpaca habit with the other. She promptly placed it upon the
-black mare’s back, buckled the girths, and touching the stirrup with
-her foot, gave a spring which seated her firmly in the saddle, and the
-black mare dashed off at an amble which was considerably faster than a
-medium trot.
-
-‘What a brute that mare of yours is to amble, Tottie,’ said Mr. Banks,
-slightly out of breath; ‘can’t you make her go a more Christian pace?
-Come, let’s have a spin.’
-
-‘All right,’ said the girl, going off at speed, and sitting down to her
-work, ‘but it must be a very short one; my mare is as weak as a cat,
-and I suppose your horse isn’t much better.’
-
-‘He’s as strong as nothing to eat three times a day can make him. So
-pull up as soon as you like. I say, Tottie, I’m awfully glad you’ve
-come up this time to help us with our lady. It was firstrate of your
-mother to let you come. Fancy Miss Neuchamp coming up in the coach by
-herself from Sydney!’
-
-‘Why shouldn’t she? I wish I had the chance of going down by
-myself—wouldn’t I take it—quick? But I say, Mr. Banks, what am I to do
-when I get there? I shall be so frightened of the lady. And I never was
-in service before.’
-
-‘Oh, you must take it easy, you know,’ commenced Mr. Banks, in a very
-clear explanation-to-a-child sort of way. ‘Do everything she tells you,
-always say “Yes, ma’am,” and “No, ma’am,” and be a good girl all round.
-I’ve seen you _look_ awfully good sometimes, Tottie, you know.‘
-
-‘Oh, nonsense, Mr. Banks,’ said the nut-brown maid, blushing through
-her southern-tinted skin in a very visible manner. ‘I’m no more than
-others, I expect. What shall I have to do, though?’
-
-‘Well, a good deal of nothing, I should say. You’ll sleep in the room
-I used to have, next to hers; for you’ll be in the cottage all by
-yourselves all night. You’ll have to sweep and dust, and wash for Miss
-Neuchamp, and wait at table. The rest of the time you’ll have to hang
-it out the best way you can. You mustn’t quarrel with old Johnnie, the
-cook, or else he’ll go away and leave us all in the bush. He’s a cross
-old ruffian, but he _can_ cook.’
-
-‘I wonder if it will be very dull—but it won’t be for long, will it,
-Mr. Banks?’
-
-‘Dull? don’t think of it. Won’t there be me and Jack Windsor, and an
-odd traveller to talk to. Besides, Jack’s a great admirer of yours,
-isn’t he, Tottie?’
-
-‘Not he,’ quoth the damsel, with decision; ‘there’s some girl down the
-country that he thinks no end of; besides, father and he don’t get on
-well,’ added Miss Tottie, with much demureness.
-
-‘Oh, that don’t signify,’ said Mr. Banks authoritatively. ‘Jack’s a
-good fellow, and will be overseer here some day; you go in and cut down
-the other girl. He said you were the best-looking girl on the river
-last Sunday.’
-
-‘Oh, you go on,’ said Tottie, playing with the bridle rein, and again
-making her mare run up to the top of her exceptional pace, so that
-further playful conversation by Mr. Banks was restricted by his lack of
-breath.
-
-As they approached the Rainbar homestead Tottie slackened this
-aggravating pace (which resembles what Americans call ‘racking or
-pacing’—it is natural to many Australian horses, though of course
-capable of development by education), and in a somewhat awe-stricken
-tone inquired, ‘Is she a _very_ grand lady, indeed, Mr. Banks?’
-
-‘Well, she’ll be dressed plainly, of course,’ said Charley. ‘The dust’s
-enough to spoil anything above a gunnybag after all this dry weather.
-Her things are coming up, as I told you, but you never saw any one with
-half the breeding before. You were a little girl when you came here,
-Tottie; did you ever see a real lady in your life, now?’
-
-‘I saw Mrs. Jones, of Yamboola, down the country,’ said Tottie
-doubtfully. ‘Father sent me up one day with some fresh butter.’
-
-‘I wish he’d send you up with some now,’ said Charley, who hadn’t
-heard of butter or milk for six months. ‘Mrs. Jones is pretty well,
-but think of Miss Neuchamp’s pedigree. Her great-grandmother’s
-_great-grandmother_ was a grand lady, and lived in a castle, and so on,
-for five hundred years back, and all the same for nearly a thousand. I
-saw it all in an old book of Mr. Neuchamp’s one day, about the history
-of their county.’
-
-‘Lor!’ said Tottie, ‘how nice! Why, she must be like the imported filly
-we saw at Wargan Races last year. Oh, wasn’t she a real beauty? such
-legs! and such a sweet head on her!—I never saw the like of it!’
-
-‘You’re a regular Currency lass, Tottie,’ laughed Mr. Banks; ‘always
-thinking about horses. Don’t you tell Miss Neuchamp that she’s very
-sweet about the head and has out-and-out legs: she mightn’t understand
-it. Here we are—jump down. I’ll put the mare in the paddock.’
-
-Miss Neuchamp, having had time to finish luncheon, had walked out into
-the verandah with her cousin, when she was attracted by the trampling
-of horses, and looked forth in time to see her proposed handmaid sail
-up to the door at a pace which would have excited observation in Rotten
-Row.
-
-Mr. Banks awaited her dismounting, knowing full well that she required
-no assistance. The active maiden swung herself sideways on the
-saddle and dropped to the ground as lightly as the ‘hounding beauty
-of Bessarabia,’ or any ordinary circus sawdust-treading celebrity.
-Lifting her habit, she advanced to the verandah with a curious mixture
-of shyness and self-possession. She successfully accomplished the
-traditional courtesy to Miss Neuchamp, and then shook hands cordially
-with Ernest, as she had been in the habit of doing. Miss Augusta put up
-her eyeglass at this, and regarded the ‘young person’ with a fixed and
-critical gaze.
-
-‘I’m very much obliged to your mother for letting you come, Tottie, and
-I am very glad to see you at Rainbar,’ said Mr. Neuchamp. ‘If you go
-into the dining-room, you will find the lunch on the table; I daresay
-you will have an appetite after your ride. You can clear it away by and
-by, and Miss Neuchamp will tell you anything she wishes you to do. You
-will live in the cottage, and you must help old Johnny as well as you
-can, without quarrelling with him—you know his temper—or letting him
-bully you.’
-
-Tottie was about to say, ‘I’m not afraid of the old tinker,’ but,
-remembering Mr. Banks’s advice, replied meekly, ‘Yes, sir; thank you,
-Mr. Neuchamp,’ and retired to her lunch and duties.
-
-‘I suppose that is a sample of your peasantry,’ said Miss Neuchamp,
-with cold preciseness of tone. ‘Do you generally shake hands with
-your housemaids in the colonies? I suppose it must be looked for in a
-democracy.’
-
-‘Well, Tottie Freeman isn’t exactly a peasant,’ explained Ernest
-mildly. ‘We haven’t any of the breed here. She is a farmer’s daughter,
-and her proud sire has or had an acreage that would make him a great
-man at fair and market in England. You will find her a good-tempered,
-honest girl, not afraid of work, as we say here, and as she is your
-only possible attendant, you must make the best of her.’
-
-‘Is she to join us at table?’ inquired Miss Neuchamp, with the same
-fixed air of indifference. ‘Of course I only ask for information.’
-
-‘She will fare as we do, but will take her refection after we have
-completed ours. She cannot very well be sent to the kitchen.’
-
-‘Why not?’ demanded Miss Augusta.
-
-‘For reasons which will be apparent to you, my dear Augusta, after your
-longer stay in Australia. But principally because there are only men
-there at present, and our old cook is not a suitable companion for a
-young girl.’
-
-‘Very peculiar household arrangements,’ said Miss Neuchamp, ‘but I
-suppose I shall comprehend in time.’
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV
-
-
-Having communicated this sentiment in a tone which did not conduce to
-the lighter graces of conversation, Miss Neuchamp resumed her reading.
-Silence, the ominous oppressive silence of those who do not wish to
-speak, reigned unbroken for a while.
-
-At length, lifting her head as if the thought had suddenly struck her,
-she said, ‘I cannot think why you did not buy a station nearer to town,
-where you might have lived in a comparatively civilised way.’
-
-‘For the very sufficient reasons that there is never so much money to
-be made at comfortable, highly improved stations, and the areas of land
-are invariably smaller.’
-
-‘Then you have come to regard money as everything? Is this the end of
-the burning philanthropy, and all that sort of thing?’
-
-‘You are too quick in your conclusions, my dear Augusta,’ replied
-Mr. Neuchamp, somewhat hurt. ‘It is necessary, I find, to make some
-money to ensure the needful independence of position without which
-philanthropical or other projects can scarcely be carried out.’
-
-‘I daresay you will end in becoming a mere colonist, and marrying a
-colonial girl, after all your fine ideas. I suppose there are some a
-shade more refined than this one.’
-
-Mr. Neuchamp stood aghast—words failed him. Augusta went on quietly
-reading her book. She failed to perceive the avalanche which was
-gathering above her head.
-
-‘My dear Augusta,’ he said at length, with studied calmness, ‘it is
-time that some of your misconceptions should be cleared away. Let me
-recall to you that you were only a few days in a hotel in Sydney before
-you started on your journey to this distant and comparatively rude
-district. If you had acted reasonably, and remained in Sydney to take
-advantage of introductions to my friends, you would have had some means
-of making comparisons after seeing Australian ladies. But with your
-present total ignorance of the premises, I wonder that a well-educated
-woman should be so illogical as to state a conclusion.’
-
-‘Well, perhaps I am a little premature,’ conceded Miss Augusta, whose
-temper was much under command. ‘I suppose there is a wonderful young
-lady at the back of all this indignation. Mr. Croker said as much. I
-must wait and make her acquaintance. I wish you all sorts of happiness,
-Ernest. Now I must go and look after the _other_ young lady.’
-
-When Miss Neuchamp returned to the dining-room she perceived that the
-damsel whose social status was so difficult to define had finished her
-mid-day meal, and had also completed the clearing off and washing up
-of the various articles of the service. She had discovered for herself
-the small room used as a pantry, had ferreted out the requisite cloths
-and towels, and procured hot water from the irascible Johnny. She had
-extemporised a table in the passage, and was just placing the last of
-the articles on their allotted shelves with much deftness and celerity,
-when Miss Neuchamp entered. Her riding-skirt lay on a chair, and she
-had donned a neat print frock, which she had brought strapped to the
-saddle.
-
-‘I was coming to give you instructions,’ said Miss Neuchamp, ‘but I see
-you have anticipated me by doing everything which I should have asked
-you to do, and very nicely too. What is your name?’
-
-‘Mary Anne Freeman,’ said Tottie demurely.
-
-‘I thought I heard Mr. Neuchamp address you by some other Christian
-name,’ said Miss Neuchamp, with slight severity of aspect.
-
-‘Oh, Tottie,’ said the girl carelessly; ‘every one calls me Tottie, or
-Tot; suppose it’s for shortness.’
-
-‘I shall call you Mary Anne,’ said Miss Neuchamp with quiet decision;
-‘and now, Mary Anne, are you accustomed to the use of the needle? do
-you like sewing?’
-
-‘Well, I don’t _like_ it,’ she replied ingenuously, ‘but of course I
-can sew a little; we have to make our own frocks and the children’s
-things at home.’
-
-‘Very proper and necessary,’ affirmed Augusta; ‘if we can get the
-material I will superintend your making a couple of dresses for
-yourself, which perhaps you will think an improvement in pattern on the
-one you wear.’
-
-‘Oh, I should _so_ like to have a new pattern,’ said Tottie, with
-feminine satisfaction. ‘There’s plenty of nice prints in the store;
-I’ll speak to Mr. Banks about it, mem.’
-
-‘I will arrange that part of it,’ said Miss Neuchamp. ‘In the
-meanwhile I’ll point out your bedroom, which you can put in order as
-well as mine for the night.’
-
-After the first day or two Miss Neuchamp, though occasionally shocked
-at the Australian girl’s ignorance of that portion of the Church
-Catechism which exhorts people to behave ‘lowly and reverently to
-all their betters,’ was pleased with the intelligence and artless
-good-humour of her attendant. She was sufficiently acute to
-discriminate between the genuine respect which the girl exhibited to
-her, ‘a real lady,’ and the mere lip service and servility too often
-yielded by the English poor, from direct compulsion of grinding poverty
-and sore need. She discovered that Tottie was quick and teachable
-in the matter of needlework, so that, having been stimulated by the
-alluring expectation of ‘patterns,’ she worked readily and creditably.
-
-For a few days Miss Neuchamp managed to employ and interest herself
-not altogether unpleasantly. Ernest, of course, betook himself off to
-some manner of station work immediately after breakfast, returning,
-if possible, to lunch. This interval Miss Neuchamp filled up in great
-measure by means of her correspondence, which was voluminous and
-various of direction, ranging from her Aunt Ermengarde, a conscientious
-but ruthless conservative, to philosophical acquaintances whom she had
-met in her travels, and who, like her, had much ado to fill up those
-leisure hours of which their lives were chiefly composed. This portion
-of the day also witnessed Tottie’s most arduous labours, to which she
-addressed herself with great zeal and got through her work, as she
-termed it, so as to attire herself becomingly and wait at table.
-
-In the afternoon Ernest went out for walking excursions to such points
-of interest, neither many nor picturesque, as the neighbourhood
-supplied. There was a certain ‘bend’ or curving reach of the river
-where, from a lofty bluff, the red walls of which the rushing tide had
-channelled for ages, a striking and uncommon view was obtained. The
-vast plain, here diversified by the giant eucalypti which fringed the
-winding watercourse, stretched limitless to the horizon. But all was
-apparently barren from Dan to Beersheba. The reed-beds were trampled
-and eaten down to the last cane. The soft rich alluvium in which they
-grew was cracked, yet hard as a brickfield. How different from the
-swaying emerald billows with feathered tasselled crests which other
-summers had seen there! Something of this sort had Ernest endeavoured
-to explain to Miss Neuchamp when she spoke disrespectfully of the
-trodden cloddy waste, contrasting it scornfully with the velvet meads
-which bordered English rivers. But Augusta, defective in imagination,
-never believed in anything she did not see. Therefore a reed-bed
-appeared to her mental vision till the day of her death always as a
-species of abnormal dismal swamp, lacking the traditional element of
-moisture.
-
-Other explorations were made in the cool hours of the evening, but
-gradually Miss Neuchamp tired of the monotonous aspect of matters. The
-dusty tracts were not pleasant to her feet. The mosquitoes assailed
-her with savage virulence, whether she walked at sunrise, mid-day,
-or darkening eve. If she sat down on the river bank and watched the
-shallow but still pure and gleaming waters, ants of every conceivable
-degree of curiosity or ferocity discomposed her. There was no rest,
-no variety, no beauty, no ‘proper’ wood, valley, mountain, or brook.
-She could not imagine human beings living constantly in such a hateful
-wilderness. If Ernest had not all his life, and now most of all,
-developed a talent for useless and incomprehensible self-sacrifice, he
-would abandon such a spot for ever.
-
-Mr. Neuchamp felt himself pressed to his last entrenchments to defend
-his position; Fate seemed to have arrived personally, masked, not for
-the first time in man’s strange story, in the guise of a woman. That
-woman, too, his persistent, inexorable cousin Augusta. ‘The stars in
-their courses fought against Sisera.’ The heavens,—dead to the dumb,
-imploring looks of the great armies of perishing brutes, to the prayers
-of ruined men; the earth, with withered herb and drying streamlet
-gasping and faint, breathless, under the burning noon and the pitiless
-dry moon rays,—alike conspired against him!
-
-And now his cousin, who, with all her faults and defects, was stanchly
-devoted to her kindred and what she believed to be their welfare, came
-here to madden him with recollections of the wonderland of his birth,
-and to fill him with ignoble longings to purchase present relief by the
-ruinous sacrifice of purpose and principle.
-
-‘I don’t know,’ he said, at the end of a closely contested argument,
-‘whether all women are incapable of comprehending the adherence to a
-fixed purpose, to the unquestioned end and climax. But you must forgive
-me, my dear Augusta, for saying that you appear to me to be in the
-position of a passenger who urges the captain of a vessel to alter
-his course because the gale is wild and the waves rough. Suppose you
-had made a suggestion to the captain of the _Rohilla_, in which noble
-steamer you made your memorable voyage to these hapless isles. The
-officers of the great company are polished gentlemen as well as seamen
-of the first order, but I am afraid Gordon Anderson would have been
-more curt than explanatory on _that_ occasion.’
-
-‘And you are like the man in Sinbad the Sailor, as you like marine
-similes,’ retorted Augusta; ‘you will see your vessel gradually drawn
-toward the loadstone island till all the nails and rivets fly out
-by attraction of ruin, and you will sink in the waters of oblivion,
-unhonoured and unsung.’
-
-‘But not “unloved,” I trust,‘ rejoined Ernest; ‘don’t think that
-matters, even in Australia, will be quite so bad as that. By the way,
-let me congratulate you upon your facility of quotation. Your memory
-must have improved amazingly of late.’
-
-This unfair taunt closed the conversation abruptly. But like some
-squabbles between very near and dear friends, there was a tacit
-agreement not to refer to it. Subsequently all went on as usual.
-
-Miss Neuchamp was a very fair horsewoman, having hunted without coming
-very signally to grief, by dint of a wonderfully broken hunter, who
-was first cousin to a rocking-horse—after this wise: he would on no
-account run away; he was easy, he was safe; you could not throw him
-down over any species of leap,—hedge, ditch, brook, or bulfinch. It
-was all alike to Negotiator. After a couple of seasons and the aid of
-this accomplished palfrey, Miss Neuchamp, with some reason, came to the
-conclusion that she could ride fairly well. So, having broached the
-idea at breakfast one morning, Ernest joyfully suggested Osmund as the
-type of ease and elegance, and of such a nerve that an organ and monkey
-might, were the consideration sufficient, be placed on his short back
-to-morrow without risk of casualty.
-
-Miss Neuchamp thought that she should like to ride down and visit the
-Freeman encampment, when Tottie, who would of course attend her, might
-have the opportunity of seeing her mother and other kinsfolk.
-
-The side-saddle was the next difficulty; but Tottie proffered hers at
-once, saying that she could ride in a man’s saddle, which she could
-borrow from Mr. Banks.
-
-‘But you cannot ride in a man’s saddle, Mary Anne; at any rate with
-me,’ said Miss Neuchamp decisively, while a maidenly blush overspread
-her features.
-
-‘Why not?’ inquired Tottie, with much surprise. ‘I can ride in one just
-as well as the other. You have only to throw the off-side stirrup over
-the pommel, sit square and straight, and there you are. You didn’t
-think I was going to ride boy-fashion, did you?’
-
-‘I was not sure,’ conceded Miss Neuchamp. However, your explanation has
-satisfied me. If you like, we will ride down to your father’s place
-this afternoon.‘
-
-So Osmund being brought round, and Tottie’s side-saddle upon him
-placed, that temperate charger walked off with Miss Neuchamp as if he
-had carried a ‘pretty horsebreaker’ up Rotten Row before the eyes of
-an envious aristocracy, while Tottie disposed herself upon a station
-saddle and ambled off so erect and free of seat that few could have
-known that she was crutchless and self-balanced. Mr. Windsor followed
-at a respectful distance, in case of any _contretemps_ requiring a
-groom’s assistance.
-
-Miss Neuchamp was perhaps never more favourably impressed with the
-South Land, in which she was sojourning, than when she felt herself
-borne along by Osmund, a hackney of rare excellence—free, elastic,
-safe, fast, easy! How many horses of whom so much can be said does one
-come across in a lifetime?
-
-‘This seems to be an exceedingly nice horse of my cousin’s,’ said she
-to Tottie. ‘I had no idea that such riding horses could be found in the
-interior. He must have been very carefully trained.’
-
-‘He’s a plum, that’s what he is!’ affirmed Tottie with decision. ‘He’s
-the best horse in these parts, by long chalks. Mr. Neuchamp let me have
-a spirt on him one day. My word! didn’t I put him along?’
-
-‘I am surprised that he should have let you ride him,’ replied Miss
-Neuchamp with dignity; ‘but my cousin is very eccentric, and does not,
-in my opinion, always keep his proper position.’
-
-‘I don’t know about his proper position,’ said Tottie with great
-spirit, ‘but before our people had the row with him—and that was Uncle
-Joe’s fault—there was no one within fifty mile of Rainbar that wouldn’t
-have gone on their knees to serve Mr. Neuchamp. _As a gentleman he
-can’t be beat_; and many a one besides me thinks that.’
-
-‘Oh well, if you have that sort of respectful feeling towards my
-cousin, Mary Anne, I have nothing to say,’ said Miss Augusta. ‘No one
-can possibly have better intentions, and I am glad to see them so well
-appreciated, even in the bush. Suppose we canter.’
-
-She drew the curb rein as she spoke, and Osmund sailed off at a long,
-bounding, deerlike canter over the smooth dusty track, which convinced
-Miss Neuchamp that she had not left all the good horses in England.
-The scant provender had impaired his personal appearance, but had
-not deprived him of that courage which he would retain as long as he
-possessed strength to stand on his legs.
-
-‘I have not enjoyed a ride like this for many a day,’ she said with
-unusual heartiness. ‘This is a very comfortable saddle of yours, though
-I miss the third pommel. How do you manage, Mary Anne, to ride so
-squarely and easily upon that uncomfortable saddle?’
-
-‘I’ve ridden many a mile without a saddle at all—that is, with nothing
-but an old gunny-bag to sit on,’ said Tottie, ‘and jumped over logs
-too. Of course I was a kid then.’
-
-‘A what?’ said Miss Neuchamp anxiously.
-
-‘Oh, a little child,’ explained Tottie. ‘I often used to go out at
-daylight to fetch in the cows and the working bullocks when we lived
-down the country. Bitter cold it was, too, in the winter; such hard
-frosts.’
-
-‘Frosts?’ asked Miss Augusta. ‘Do you ever have frosts? Why, I supposed
-they were unknown here.’
-
-‘You don’t suppose the whole country is like this, miss?’ said Tottie.
-‘Why, near the mountains there’s snow and ice, and it rains every
-winter, and the floods are enough to drownd you.’
-
-‘Are there floods too? It does not look as if they could ever come.’
-
-‘Do you see that hut, miss? That’s our place. I heard Piambook, the
-black boy, tell father it would be swep’ away some day. Father laughed
-at him.‘
-
-Here they arrived at the abode of Freeman _père_, at which Miss
-Neuchamp gazed with much curiosity.
-
-In the language of architecture, the construction had been but little
-decorated. A plain and roughly-built abode, composed of round saplings
-nailed vertically to the wall-plate, and plastered insufficiently with
-mud. The roof was thatched with reeds, put on in a very ineffectual
-and chance-medley manner. The hut or cottage contained two large and
-three small rooms. There was no garden whatever, or any attempt at the
-cultivation of the baked and hopelessly-looking clay soil. Close to
-the side of the house was a stockyard, comprising the ‘gallows’ of the
-colonists, a rough, rude contrivance, consisting of two uprights and a
-crosspiece, for elevating slaughtered cattle. Upon this structure was
-at present hanging the carcass of a fine six-months-old calf. No other
-enclosure was visible, the only attempt at the preservation of neatness
-being the sweeping of the earth immediately around the front and back
-doors.
-
-Tottie immediately clattered up to the hut door, the black mare putting
-her head so far in that she obstructed the egress of a middle-aged
-woman, who made haste to come forth and receive the guests.
-
-‘Mother,’ said the girl, ‘here’s Miss Neuchamp come to see you; bring a
-chair for her to get off by.’
-
-This article of furniture having been supplied, Augusta was fain to
-descend upon it with as much dignity as she could manage, not being
-confident of her ability to drop down, like the agile Tottie, from a
-tallish horse, as was Osmund. Tottie, having given the horses in charge
-of a small brown-faced brother, who spent his whole time in considering
-Osmund, and apparently learning him by heart, welcomed Miss Neuchamp
-into her home. That young lady found herself for the first time under
-the roof of an Australian free-selector, and felt that she had acquired
-a new experience.
-
-‘Come in, miss; I’m very glad to see you, I’m sure; please to sit
-down,’ was the salutation Augusta received, in tones that spoke a
-hearty welcome, in very pure unaccented English.
-
-Miss Neuchamp selected the most ‘reliable’ looking of the wooden-seated
-American chairs, and depositing herself thereon, looked around. The
-dwelling was, she thought, more prepossessing than the outside had
-led her to imagine. Though everything was plain to ugliness, there
-was yet nothing squalid or repulsive. All things were very clean. The
-room in which they sat was evidently only used as a parlour or ‘living
-room.’ It was fairly large and commodious. The earthen floor was hard,
-even, and well swept. A large table occupied the centre. The fireplace
-was wide and capacious, the mantelpiece so high that it was not easy
-to reach. There was a wooden sofa covered with faded chintz, and an
-American clock. Half a dozen cheap chairs, a shelf well filled with
-indifferently bound books, a few unframed woodcuts hung upon the walls,
-made up the furniture and ornamentation. Opening from this apartment
-laterally was evidently a bedroom. At the back a skilling, a lower
-roofed portion of the building, contained several smaller rooms. A
-detached two-roomed building, in what would have been the back-yard had
-any enclosure been made, was probably the kitchen and laundry.
-
-Mrs. Freeman insisted upon putting down the kettle to boil, in order
-that she might make a cup of tea for her distinguished visitor,
-evidently under the opinion that every one naturally desired to drink
-tea whenever they could get it.
-
-‘And how have you been behaving yourself, Tottie?’ said she, addressing
-her daughter, as a convenient mode of opening the conversation. ‘I hope
-and trust you’ve been a help to Miss Neuchamp. Has she, miss?’
-
-‘Oh, certainly,’ answered Augusta; ‘Mary Anne has been a very good
-girl indeed. I don’t know how I should get on without her. And I have
-borrowed her side-saddle too. How long will it be before Mr. Freeman
-comes home?’
-
-‘Oh, he won’t be home much before dark. He’s always out on the run all
-day long. He hates coming in before the day is done.’
-
-‘Why is that, Mrs. Freeman?’
-
-‘“Because,” he says, “what can a man do after his day’s work but sit
-down and twirl his thumbs.” He haven’t got any garden here to fiddle
-about in, and he can’t sit still and smoke, like some people.‘
-
-‘But why don’t you have a garden?’ promptly inquired Augusta. ‘I
-suppose there’s no reason why you shouldn’t have one?’
-
-‘You see, miss,’ said Mrs. Freeman, casting about for a mode of
-explaining to her young lady visitor that she didn’t know what she was
-talking about, ‘the ground ain’t very good just here; and though it’s
-so dry and baked just now, they say the floods come all over it; and
-perhaps we mightn’t be here altogether that long. And Freeman, he’s
-had a deal of trouble with the stock lately. I don’t say but what a
-garden would look pretty enough; but who’s to work in it? It ain’t like
-our place down the country. There we had a garden—lots of peaches and
-grapes, and more plums, apples, and quinces than we could use and give
-away, besides early potatoes and all kinds of vegetables.’
-
-‘I suppose you regretted leaving such a home,’ said Miss Neuchamp,
-rather impressed by the hothouse profusion of the fruits mentioned.
-
-‘Well, I’d rather live there on a pound a week,’ said Mrs. Freeman,
-‘than here on riches. Freeman thought the stock would make up for all,
-but I didn’t, and I’m always sorry for the day we ever left the old
-farm.’
-
-As the good woman spoke the tears stood in her eyes, and Miss Neuchamp
-much marvelled that any spot in the desolate region of Australia
-should have power to attract the affection even of hard-worked,
-unrelieved Mrs. Freeman.
-
-‘Mother’s always fretting about that old place at Bowning,’ said
-Tottie. ‘I don’t believe it was any great things either. It was a deal
-colder than this, and we had lots of milk and butter always; but bread
-and butter’s not worth caring about.’
-
-‘You don’t recollect it, Tottie,’ said her mother, ‘or you would not
-talk in that way. Don’t you remember going into the garden to pick the
-peaches? How cool and shady it was in the mornings, to be sure, without
-scores of mosquitoes to sting and eat us up! Then there was always
-grass enough for the cows, and we had plenty of milk and butter and
-cheese, except, perhaps, in the dead of winter. It was better for all
-of us in other ways too, and that’s more.’
-
-‘I don’t see that, mother,’ said Tottie.
-
-‘But I do,’ said Mrs. Freeman, ‘and more than me knows it. There’s your
-father isn’t the same man, without his regular work at the farm, and
-the carrying and the other jobs, that used to fill up his time from
-daylight to dark. Now he’s nothing but the cattle to look after; and
-such weather as this there’s nothing to do from month’s end to month’s
-end, unless to pull them out of the waterholes. And I _know_ he had a
-“burst” at that wretched _Stockman’s Arms_ the last time he was down
-the river. He that was that sober before you could not tell him from a
-Son of Temperance.‘
-
-‘I feel sorry that you should have so much reason to complain of your
-lot,’ said Miss Neuchamp. ‘The poor, I am aware, are never contented,
-at least none that I ever saw in England. Yet it seems a pity, indeed,
-that want of patience and trust in Providence should have led to your
-moving to this unsuitable and, I am afraid, ill-fated locality.’
-
-‘We’re not altogether so poor, miss,’ said the worthy matron,
-recovering herself. ‘Abe will have over five hundred pounds in the bank
-when he’s delivered up the land and the stock to this Mr. Levison,
-that’s bought us all out. But what’s a little money, one way or the
-other, if your life’s miserable, and your husband takes to idle ways
-and worse, and your children grow up duffers and planters, and perhaps
-end in sticking up people?’
-
-‘Oh, mother, shut up!’ ejaculated Tottie, with more kindliness in her
-tone than the words would have indicated. ‘Things won’t be as had as
-that. Don’t I teach Poll and Sally and Ned and Billy? Besides, what
-does Miss Neuchamp know about duffing and sticking up? We’ll be all
-right when we clear out next year, and you can go back to Bowning and
-buy Book’s farm, and set father splitting stringy-bark rails for the
-rest of his life, if that’s what keeps him good. I expect the tea is
-ready. Won’t you give Miss Neuchamp a cup?’
-
-Mrs. Freeman made haste to fill up a cup of tea, and a small jug of
-milk being produced, Miss Augusta found herself in possession of
-the best cup of tea she had tasted at Rainbar. She felt a sincere
-compassion for her hostess as a woman of properly submissive turn of
-mind, who had sense enough to regret her improper and irreligious
-departure from the lowly state in which Providence had placed her.
-
-Promising to call again, and comforting the low-spirited matron as
-far as in her lay, she remounted Osmund with some difficulty by means
-of the chair, and rode homewards, followed by Mr. Windsor, who had
-solaced his leisure by extracting from the younger girls, whom he had
-descried fishing, the latest news of the cattle operations of the
-family generally.
-
-‘Your mother seems to be very much of my opinion, Mary Anne,’ said Miss
-Augusta as soon as they were fairly on the sandy home-station track,
-‘that this is a most undesirable place to live in.’
-
-‘Mother’s as good a woman as ever was,’ said Tottie, ‘but she don’t
-“savey.” She’s always fretting about our old farm; and it certainly was
-cooler—that’s about all the pull there was in it. Father’s made more
-money here in two or three years than he’d have got together in twenty
-there. I should have been hoeing corn all day with a pair of thick
-boots on, and grown up as wild as a scrub filly. I don’t want to go
-back.‘
-
-‘Your mother seems a person of excellent sense, Mary Anne, and I must
-say that I _fully agree with her_,’ said Miss Neuchamp, with her most
-unbending expression, designed to modify her attendant’s lightness of
-tone. ‘Depend upon it, unhappiness and misfortune invariably follow the
-attempt to quit an allotted station in life.’
-
-‘Oh, that be hanged for a yarn! Oh, I beg your pardon, miss,’ said
-Tottie confusedly, for she was on the point of relapsing into the
-Rainbar vernacular. ‘But surely every one ain’t bound to stop where
-they’re planted, good soil or bad, water or no water, like a corn-seed
-in a cow track or a pumpkin in a tree stump! Men and women have it
-in ’em to forage about a bit, else how do some people get on so
-wonderfully. I’ve read about self-help, and all that, and heaps of
-people beginning with half-a-crown and making fortunes. Ought they to
-have thrown the half-crown away or the fortune after they had made it?’
-
-‘No doubt some people are apparently favoured,’ said Miss Augusta,
-regarding Tottie’s argument as another result of the over-education of
-‘these sort of persons.’ ‘In the end it is often the worst thing that
-can befall them. Now let us canter.‘
-
-When Augusta Neuchamp had remained for a fortnight at Rainbar she began
-to perceive that the monotonous existence likely to be unreasonably
-prolonged would serve no object either of pleasure or profit. No
-amount of residence would teach her an iota more of the nature of such
-an establishment as Rainbar than she knew already. What was there
-to learn? The plains within sight of the cottage needed but to be
-indefinitely multiplied; and what then? An area of country equally
-arid, barren, unspeakably desolate. Other droves and herds of cattle
-equally emaciated. Nothing possibly could be in her eyes more hopeless
-and horrible than these endless death-stricken, famine-haunted wastes.
-Why did Ernest stay here? She had tried her utmost to induce him to
-abandon the whole miserable delusion, quoting the arguments of Mr.
-Jermyn Croker until he spoke angrily about that gentleman and closed
-the debate.
-
-The obvious thing to do was to return to Sydney, but even this
-comparatively simple step was difficult to carry out. Miss Neuchamp did
-not desire again to tempt the perils of the road unattended. She had
-taken it for granted that Ernest, the most complying and good-natured
-of men ordinarily, would return to Sydney with her; and she had trusted
-to the influence of civilisation and her steady persuasion to prevail
-upon him to return to England to his friends, and to what she deemed to
-be his fixed and unalterable position in life.
-
-On this occasion she met with unexpected opposition. Ernest positively
-declined to quit his station at present.
-
-‘My dear Augusta,’ said he, ‘you do not know what you are asking. I
-have a number of very important duties to perform here. My financial
-state is an extremely critical one. I cannot with any decency appear in
-Sydney when everything points to the ruin of myself and my whole order.
-I am sincerely sorry that you should feel life here to be so extremely
-_ennuyant_, but I should never, if consulted, have advised you to come;
-and now I am afraid you must wait until a proper escort turns up or
-until I can accompany you.’
-
-‘And when will that be?’
-
-‘When the rain comes, certainly not before.’
-
-Miss Augusta said that this last contingency was as probable as the
-near advent of the millennium. She would wait a given time, and, that
-expired, would go down to Sydney as she had come up by herself.
-
-A fortnight, even three weeks, passed away. Augusta had mentioned a
-month as the outside limit of her forbearance. She read over and over
-‘Mariana in the Moated Grange’ and ‘Mariana in the South’ with quite a
-new appreciation of their peculiar accuracy as well as poetic sentiment.
-
-Daily she worked and read, and walked and rode, and alternately was
-hopeful or otherwise about the ultimate conversion of Tottie to the
-true faith of proper English village lowliness and reverence. Daily
-Ernest went forth ‘out on the run’ immediately after breakfast,
-reappearing only at or after sunset. Insensibly Miss Neuchamp became
-alarmed to find creeping over her a kind of provincial interest in the
-affairs of the ‘burghers of this desert city.’ She listened almost
-with excitement to the account of a lot of the new cattle having been
-followed twenty miles over the boundary and recovered by Charley Banks.
-She heard of a bushranger being captured about fifty miles off—this
-was Jack Windsor’s story; of the mail coming in twelve hours late in
-consequence of the horses being exhausted. Ernest gathered this from
-the overseer of the last lot of travelling sheep that passed through,
-having been locked up in Wargan Gaol for disobeying a summons. ‘Such a
-handsome young fellow, miss.’ This was Tottie’s contribution.
-
-What with the reading, the sewing, the teaching of Tottie, the
-daily cousinly walks and talks, the hitherto uncompromising Augusta
-became partially converted to station life, and finally admitted in
-conversation with Ernest that, other things being equal, she _could_
-imagine a woman enduring such privation for a few years, always
-assuming that she had the companionship of the one man to whom alone
-she could freely devote every waking thought, every pulsation of the
-heart.
-
-‘Do you think there’s any man born, miss,’ inquired Tottie, who was
-laying the cloth for dinner, but who stopped deliberately and listened
-with qualified approval to the sentence with which Miss Neuchamp
-concluded her statement—‘any man born—except in a book—like that? I
-don’t. They most of ’em seem to me to take it very easy, smoking and
-riding about, and drinking at odd times. It’s the women that all the
-real pull comes on.’
-
-‘I was not addressing myself to you, Mary Anne,’ replied Miss Augusta
-with dignity; ‘I was speaking to Mr. Neuchamp only. I should hardly
-think your experience entitled you to offer an opinion.’
-
-‘H—m,’ said Tottie, proceeding with the plates. ‘I’m young, and I
-suppose I don’t know much. But I hear what’s going on. Don’t you think
-I’d better go down to Sydney, to take care of you on the road, miss, in
-case there’s a Chinaman to knock over? I think I could do that, if I
-was drove to it.’
-
-On the next day an unusual occurrence took place in that land where
-events and novelties seemed to have perished like the grass, under the
-slow calcining of the deadly season—a dray arrived from town.
-
-Miss Neuchamp, in her sore need of change and occupation, could have
-cheerfully witnessed the unpacking of ordinary station stores, in
-which, as usual, a little drapery would be comprised. But here again
-disappointment. It was merely a load of flour.
-
-Depressed and discouraged, Miss Neuchamp had condescended to watch
-the unloading of the unromantic freight, deriving a faint interest in
-noting with what apparent ease Jack Windsor and Charley Banks placed
-the heavy bags upon their shoulders and deposited them in the store.
-
-Rarely was Miss Augusta so lowered in spirit as not to be able to
-talk. On this occasion she had informed Tottie, with some relish, that
-English country girls were much ruddier and more healthy looking, as
-well as, she doubted not, stronger and more capable of endurance, than
-those born in Australia could possibly be.
-
-‘Why so?’ inquired Tottie with animation.
-
-‘Why?’ said Miss Neuchamp with asperity; ‘because of the cool,
-beautiful climate they live in, the regular, wholesome labour they are
-born to, the superiority of the whole land and people to this dull,
-deceitful country, all sand and sun-glare.’
-
-‘Well, I can’t say, miss,’ replied Tottie, plotting a surprise, with
-characteristic coolness, ‘about English girls’ looks, because I’ve
-hardly ever seen any; but as for health, I’ve a middling appetite, I
-never was a day ill since I was born, and as to being strong—look here.‘
-
-Before the horrified Augusta could forbid her rapid motion, she bounded
-over to the dray, from which Mr. Windsor had just borne his two hundred
-pounds of farina. She placed her back beneath the lessening load, and
-stretching her arms upward in the way proper to grasp the tied corner
-of the bag, said imperiously, ‘Here, Mr. Carrier, just you lower that
-bag steady; I want to show the English lady what a Currency girl can
-walk away with.’
-
-The tall sunburned driver entered into the joke, and winking at Charley
-Banks, who stood by laughing, he placed the heavy bag fairly and square
-upon Tottie’s plump shoulders. Miss Neuchamp’s gaze was riveted upon
-the erratic ‘help’ as if she had been about to commit suicide.
-
-‘Oh! don’t—don’t,’ she gasped; ‘are you mad, Mary Anne? You will break
-your back, or cripple yourself for life. Mr. Banks, pray interfere! I
-am sure my cousin will be angry—pray stop her!’
-
-Charley Banks was not afraid that anything dreadful would happen. He
-had seen the bush girls perform feats of strength and activity ere now
-which proved to him that very little cause for apprehension existed in
-the present case.
-
-And there was not much time. For one moment the girl stood, with her
-arms raised above her head, her figure, in its natural and classic
-grace, proving the unspeakable advantage of the free, open-air life,
-with fullest liberty for varied exercise, which she had had from her
-birth. The next she had moved forward with firm, elastic tread, under
-a load which a city man out of training would have found no joke, and,
-walking into the store, permitted it to fall accurately beside the
-others which had been shot from the backs of Jack Windsor and Mr. Banks
-into their appointed corner.
-
-There was a slight cheer, and an exclamation of, ‘Well done, Tottie,’
-as she returned with a heightened colour and half-triumphant,
-half-confused air to Miss Neuchamp, who, relieved at her safe return
-from the dangerous feat, did not administer so severe a rebuke as might
-have been expected.
-
-‘You may be thankful, Mary Anne, if you do not hereafter discover that
-this day’s folly has laid the foundation of lifelong ill-health. But
-come into the house, child. You _have_ some colour for once. Let me see
-no more pranks of this sort again, while _I_ am here.’
-
-‘Lor, miss,’ said Tottie, ‘that’s not the first bag of flour I’ve
-carried. And father says there was a girl he knew at the Hawkesbury
-that took one—and _him a-top of it_—around her father’s barn. He was
-only a boy then.’
-
-‘I think you may lay the tea, Mary Anne,’ said Miss Neuchamp, not
-requiring any more Hawkesbury anecdotes. ‘I feel unusually fatigued
-to-day.’
-
-Fortunately for all parties, before the extreme limit of Miss
-Neuchamp’s patience and the resources of Rainbar had been reached, a
-welcome auxiliary arrived in the person of Mr. Middleton. That worthy
-paterfamilias had been compelled to visit his outlying stations, in
-order to ascertain the precise amount of death and destruction that
-was taking place, and was returning to his usual residence nearer the
-settled districts. He travelled in a light buggy with one horse, being
-thus enabled to carry a supply of forage, and even water, with him.
-This, the only known plan for crossing ‘dry country’ in a bad season,
-and at the same time maintaining a horse in tolerable condition, was
-not ornamental in detail. The buggy, with two bags of chaff secured
-behind, a bushel of maize in front, and a large water bag and bucket
-swung from the axle, had a striking and unusual effect. But the active,
-upstanding roadster was in better condition than any horse which had
-passed Rainbar for many a day, and Mr. Neuchamp at once saw his way to
-a transfer of responsibility, as far as Miss Augusta was concerned.
-
-‘Well, Neuchamp, what do you think of Australia now?’ said the old
-gentleman, in a jolly voice, as, sunburned and dusty, with a great
-straw hat, a curtain and a net veil, a canvas hood to his buggy, and
-the fodder previously referred to picturesquely disposed about his
-travelling carriage, he drove up to the verandah, causing Augusta to
-put up her eyeglass with amazement. ‘Made any striking alterations for
-our good? Wish you’d try your hand at the weather, if that’s in your
-line.’
-
-‘Come in, and we’ll talk it over,’ replied Ernest. ‘I’m charmed to see
-you in any kind of weather. Permit me to present you to my cousin, Miss
-Neuchamp, who doesn’t approve of your country at all. I must inform
-you, Augusta, this is Mr. Middleton, my fellow-passenger, whom you have
-heard me mention. I hope the ladies are all well.’
-
-‘Pretty well when they wrote last; but, like all ladies, I fancy, they
-are terribly tired of the present state of the season—and no wonder.
-I can only recollect one worse drought during the thirty years I have
-been out here.’
-
-‘Worse!’ ejaculated Augusta, ‘I should have thought that impossible.
-How did you contrive to exist?’
-
-‘We _did_ manage to keep alive, as I am here to testify,’ laughed the
-old gentleman, whose proportions were upon an ample and generous scale;
-‘but of course it was a serious matter in every aspect. However, we
-weathered that famine, and we shall get over this, with patience and
-God’s blessing.’
-
-That evening it was definitely arranged that Mr. Middleton should give
-Miss Neuchamp a seat in his encumbered but not overladen buggy as far
-as his own home station, which he trusted to reach in a week; after
-which he would undertake, when she was tired of Mrs. Middleton and the
-girls, to deposit her safely in Sydney.
-
-This was an unlooked-for piece of good fortune. Ernest was much
-relieved in mind at being freed from the dilemma of returning Augusta
-as a kind of captive princess of Rainbar, or undertaking an expensive
-and inopportune journey for the sole purpose of accompanying her to a
-place which she never should have quitted.
-
-Mr. Middleton, confident of securing provender, now that he had
-commenced to approach the confines of civilisation, was not sorry to be
-provided with a young lady companion, having had of late much of his
-own unrelieved society; and Augusta was more pleased than she cared
-to show at the prospect of escape from this Sahara existence, without
-the prestige of the desert or the novelty of Arabs. That night her
-portmanteau was packed, Tottie coming in for the reversion of as much
-raiment as constituted her an authority in fashions ‘on the river’
-ever after, and such a _douceur_ as confirmed her in Mr. Bank’s high
-estimate of Miss Neuchamp as a ‘real lady.’
-
-At six o’clock next morning Augusta Neuchamp bade farewell for ever to
-the abode of the Australian representative of her ancient house.
-
-‘When shall I see you in Sydney, Ernest?’ she said, as a last inquiry.
-‘I daresay they will wish to know at Morahmee.’
-
-‘When the rain comes,’ said Ernest resolutely. ‘Good-bye, Middleton;
-take great care of her. Remember me to the ladies.’ And they were off.
-
-It has been more than once remarked by those of our species who rely
-for their intellectual recreation less upon action than observation,
-that great events are apt to be produced by inconsiderable causes.
-The sighing summer breeze sets free the mountain avalanche. The spark
-creates the red ruin of a conflagration. The rat in Holland perforates
-a dam and floods a province.
-
-Mr. Neuchamp sat in his apartment at Rainbar contrasting, doubtfully,
-his regret at the departure of his cousin with his recovered sense
-of freedom and independence. True, she was the sole link which in
-Australia connected him with the thousand spells of home.
-
-But, ever angular in mind, she had proved herself to be so incapable
-of accommodation to the necessarily altered conditions of a new land,
-that he had despaired of her acclimatisation. She had even failed to
-comprehend them.
-
-‘This is the result,’ he would assert to himself, ‘of her deficiency in
-the faculty of imagination. It may be there are other reasons, but I
-trace her special failure in _camaraderie_ to this neglect of her fairy
-godmother.’
-
-A person with deficient ideality is necessarily imprisoned by the
-present. Unable to portray for themselves a presentment of unaccustomed
-conditions on the mental canvas, such as is traced by Fancy, coloured
-by Hope, yet corrected by Prudence, they are wholly precluded from
-the prevision, even in part, of the living wonders, the breathing
-enchantments, of the future. To them no city of rest, glorious and
-beautiful, arises from the dull vulgarities of life and endeavour;
-all with them is of the earth, earthy. A gospel of hard-eyed economy,
-grudging gain, unrelieved toil, for the poor; for the sordid aspirant,
-by endless thrift and striving, ‘property, property, property;’ for the
-rich, a message of selfish enjoyment, grasping monopoly, ungenial ease.
-
-‘Such would the world be were the human mind divested of the sublime
-attributes of Faith and Imagination!’ exclaimed Ernest, borne away from
-his present cares. ‘There may be perils for the glad mariner on the
-sun-bright, flashing wave; but he has the possible glory of descrying
-purple isles, undiscovered continents. Dying, he falls as a hero;
-living, he may survive to be hailed as the world’s benefactor.’
-
-Much comforted by these bright-hued imaginings and illuminings of the
-path in which he knew himself to be an ardent traveller, Mr. Neuchamp
-awaited his mail-bag with more than usual serenity.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI
-
-
-The untoward season had not been without its effect upon the thousand
-and one gardens that paint, in each vivid delicate hue, with flower
-tracery and plant glory, the rocky steeps and fairy nooks which
-engirdle Sydney. The undulating lawns were dimmer, the plant masses
-less profuse, the showery blooms less dazzling, the trailers less
-gorgeous, than in other years. Yet were not the shores of the fair,
-wondrous haven, beloved by Ocean for many a long-past æon of lonely
-joy, before the bold scion of a sea-roving race invaded its giant
-portals, without some tokens of his favour. In the long, throbbing,
-burning days, when the sun beat blistering upon the heated roof, the
-white pavement, the dusty streets, he summoned from beyond the misty
-blue horizon the rushing wind-sisters fresh from the ice-galleries,
-the snow-peaks, the frozen colonnades of that lone land where sits
-enthroned in dazzling splendour, during days that die not or nights
-that never end, the sorceress of the Southern Pole. From their wings,
-frost-jewelled, dripped gentlest showers, refreshing the shore, though
-they passed not the great mountain range which so long guarded the
-hidden treasure-lands of the central waste. Hot and parched, compared
-with former seasons, the autumn seemed endless, yet were the gardens
-and shrubberies of Morahmee so comparatively verdant and fresh, from
-their proximity to the sea, that Ernest would have hailed it as an Eden
-of greenest glory, in comparison with the ‘sun-scorched desert brown
-and bare’ which Rainbar had long resembled.
-
-Among the inhabitants of Sydney who made daily moan against the slow
-severity of the hopeless season (and who had in some cases good cause,
-in diminished incomes and receding trade, for such murmurings), Paul
-Frankston, to his great surprise, found his daughter to be enrolled.
-
-This occurrence, involving as he thought a radical change of
-disposition, if not of character, much alarmed the worthy merchant.
-Calm and resolute, if occasionally variant of mood, Antonia Frankston
-had hitherto been one of the least querulous of mortals. Sufficiently
-cultured to comprehend that the stupendous laws of the universe were
-not controlled by the fancied woe or weal of feeble man, she had never
-sympathised with the unmeaning deprecation of climatic occurrences.
-
-‘The wind and the weather are in God’s hands,’ she had once answered
-to some shallow complainer. ‘What are we that we should dare to blame
-or praise? Besides, I am a sailor’s daughter, and at sea they take the
-weather as it comes.’
-
-In other matters, which could be set right by personal supervision or
-self-denial, she held it to be most unworthy weakness to make bitter
-outcry or vain lamentation. ‘If the evil can be repaired, why not
-at once commence the task? If hopeless, then bear it with firmness.
-Provide against its recurrence, if you like; but, in any case, what
-possible good can talking or, more correctly, whining do? That is the
-reason why men so often despise women, so often suffer from them. Look
-at _them_ when anything goes wrong,—how hard they work, how little
-they talk! Perhaps they smoke the more. But even that has the virtue
-of silence, and therefore of wisdom. Talk is a very good thing in the
-right place, but when things go wrong, it is _not_ in its right place.’
-
-In former days of autumn, when the rains came not, when the
-flowers drooped, when bad news came from Paul Frankston’s pastoral
-constituents, and that worthy financier was troubled in mind, or smoked
-more than his proper allowance of cigars over the consideration of the
-state of trade, it was Antonia who invariably cheered and consoled him.
-She pointed out the triumphs of the past; she steadfastly counselled
-trust in the future; she soothed the night with her songs; she cheered
-the day with unfailing ministration to his comfort and habitudes.
-
-Now, curiously, the old man thought his darling was different from what
-he had ever recollected. She suffered repinings to escape her as to the
-weary rainless season. She did not deny or controvert his occasional
-grumbling assertions, after a hot day in the city, that the whole
-country was going to the bad. She was, wonder of wonders, occasionally
-irritable with the servants, and impatient of their shortcomings. She
-kept her books unchanged and apparently unread for a time unprecedented
-in Mr. Shaddock’s experience.
-
-Mr. Frankston could not by any means comprehend this deflection of
-his daughter’s equable mental constitution. After much consideration
-he came to the conclusion that she wanted change of air—that the
-depressing hot season was telling upon her health for the first time in
-his recollection; and he cast about for an eligible chance to send her
-to some friends in Tasmania, where the keener air, the somewhat more
-bracing island climate, might restore her to the animation which he
-feared she was losing day by day.
-
-He thought also, amid his loving plans and plottings for his daughter’s
-welfare, that possibly she needed the stimulus of additional society.
-They had been living quietly at Morahmee of late, and the season of
-comparative gaiety, which in Sydney generally dates from the birthnight
-of the Empress of Anglo-Saxondom, had not as yet arrived.
-
-‘We want a little rousing up,’ thought poor Paul; ‘we have had no
-little dinners lately, no one in the evenings. I have been thinking
-over this confounded season and these bothering bills till I have
-forgotten my own darling, but for whose sake the whole country might be
-swallowed up in Mauna Loa, for all old Paul cares. I shouldn’t say that
-either; but it seems hard that anything should ail the poor darling
-that care might have prevented. If her mother had lived—ah!’ and here
-Paul fell a-thinking, until the wheels of the dogcart grated against
-the pavement near the office door.
-
-Thus it so chanced that, towards the end of the week, occurred one of
-the little dinners for which Morahmee was famous, with a ‘whip’ of
-certain musical celebrities of the neighbourhood, and as many ordinary
-guests as made a successful compromise between all ‘music,’ which
-sometimes hath not ‘charms’ for the masculine breast, and a regulation
-evening party, which would have been an anachronism.
-
-Among the guests for whom Paul, in his anxiety for a healthful
-distraction for Antonia, had swept the clubs and the hotels, were Mr.
-Hardy Baldacre and Jermyn Croker. Squatters were scarce in Sydney
-beyond previous experience. They were all at home on their stations
-attending to their stock, except those who were in town attending to
-their bills. These last were chiefly indisposed to society. They dined
-at their clubs or hotels after half a day’s waiting in the manager’s
-ante-chamber, and felt more inclined for the repose of the smoking-room
-than for the excitement of the society.
-
-Mr. Hardy Baldacre had managed to come to town, however, without such
-anxieties of a pecuniary nature as interfered with his amusements. Of
-these he partook of as full measure of every kind and description as
-he could procure cheaply. He had early developed a taste for pleasure,
-controlled only by considerations of caution and economy. Those who
-knew him well disliked him thoroughly, and with cause. Those who met
-him occasionally, as did Mr. Neuchamp and Paul Frankston, saw in him a
-well-dressed, good-looking man, with an affectation of good-humour and
-liberality by no means without attraction. Paul _had_ heard assertions
-made to his disadvantage, but not having bestowed much thought upon the
-matter, had not gone the length of excluding him from his invitation
-list; on this occasion he had been rather glad to fill up his table.
-
-Mr. Jermyn Croker, as usual, had constituted himself an exception to
-ordinary humanity by remaining at his club during the terrible season
-which sent the most ardent lovers of the metropolis to their distant
-duties. In explanation he stated that either the whole country would
-be ruined or it would not. He frankly admitted that he inclined to the
-first belief. If the former state of matters prevailed, what was the
-use of living in the desert till the last camel died and the last well
-was choked? No human effort could avert the final simoom, which was
-evidently on its way to engulf pastoral Australia. Now, here at the
-club (though the wines were beastly, as usual, and the committee ought
-to be sacked) there would be a little claret and ice available to the
-last. He should remain and perish, where, at least, a club waiter could
-see to your interment.
-
-Such was Mr. Jermyn Croker’s faith, openly professed in club and
-counting-house. But those who knew him averred that he took good
-care to have one of the best overseers in the country at his head
-station, whose management he kept up to the mark by weekly letters of
-so consistently depreciatory a nature that nobody expected _he_ would
-survive the season, whatever the issue to others. ‘Died of a bad season
-and Jermyn Croker’ had, indeed, been an epitaph written in advance and
-forwarded to him by a provincial humorist.
-
-Hartley Selmore had also been found available. He, indeed, could not
-very well remain away from financial headquarters. So many of his
-unpaid orders and acceptances, with the ominous superscription ‘Refer
-to drawer,’ found their way to bank and office by every mail from the
-interior, that a residence in the metropolis was vitally necessary. In
-good sooth, his unflagging energy and great powers of resource, under
-the presence of constant emergency, were equal to the demand made upon
-them. With the aid of every device of discount and hypothecation known
-to the children of finance, he managed to keep afloat. His day’s work,
-neither light nor easy of grasp, once over, the philosophical Hartley
-enjoyed his dinner, his cigar, his whist or billiards, as genuinely as
-if he had not a debt in the world, and was always ready for a _petit
-dîner_ if he distrusted not the wine.
-
-This dinner was, as usual, perfect in its way. The cooking at Morahmee
-was proverbial; the wines were too good for even Jermyn Croker to
-grumble at—had he done so he would have imperilled his reputation
-as connoisseur, of which he was careful; the conversation of the
-guests, at first guarded and unsympathetic, rose into liveliness
-with the conclusion of the first course, and, simultaneously with
-the circulation of Paul’s unrivalled well-iced vintage, became more
-adventurous and brilliant.
-
-‘Where is our young friend Neuchamp?’ inquired Hartley Selmore. ‘I
-haven’t seen him for an age.’
-
-‘Gone to the bad long ago, hasn’t he?’ replied Croker, with an air of
-pleasing certainty.
-
-‘Heard he had bought a terribly overrated place on the Darling,’ said
-Selmore. ‘Very sharp practice of Parklands. Too bad of him—too bad,
-wasn’t it, now?’
-
-‘Was it as good a bargain as Gammon Downs, Mr. Selmore?’ inquired
-Antonia, with a faint resemblance to former archness that lit up her
-melancholy features. ‘I am afraid there is not much to choose between
-you hardened pioneers when there is a newly-landed purchaser signalled.’
-
-‘Really, Miss Frankston, really!’ replied Selmore, with a fine
-imitation of the chivalrous and disinterested; ‘you do some of us
-injustice. In all this dreadful season, I assure you, the creeks
-at Gammon Downs are running like English brooks, and the grass is
-green—absolutely green!’
-
-‘Why, what colour should it be, Mr. Selmore—blue or magenta? But you
-know that I am an Australian, and therefore must have learned in the
-many conversations which have passed in my hearing about station
-matters that “green grass country” is generally spoken disrespectfully
-of, and “permanent water” is not everything. But we will not continue
-the rather worn subject.‘
-
-‘I fancy Neuchamp can’t be doing so badly,’ cut in Hardy Baldacre, with
-his customary assurance, ‘for I hear he is going to be married.’
-
-‘Married!’ echoed Antonia, as she felt the tide of life arrested in
-her veins for one moment, and, with the next, course wildly back to
-her beating heart. ‘Married, Mr. Baldacre, and why not? But papa often
-hears from him, don’t you, pappy, and he never mentioned it.’
-
-‘Mentioned it! I should think not,’ growled Paul, with a leonine
-accent, as scenting danger. ‘I heard from him, let me see, a month or
-two back. I don’t believe a word of it. Who to?’
-
-‘Well, _I saw the young lady_,’ persisted Baldacre, wholly unabashed,
-while he noted Antonia’s pale and unmoved features. ‘I went up in the
-coach with her, half way to Rainbar. She’s a cousin of his own; same
-name. Just out from England, and ever so rich.’
-
-‘How the deuce should she go alone up to Rainbar?’ said Paul, full
-of doubt and dread. ‘Surely _we_ should have heard of her, when she
-landed.’
-
-‘She told me that she made up her mind suddenly to come out to him—did
-not let him know, and only stayed a week in Sydney, at Petty’s.’
-
-‘Most romantic!’ said Antonia, driving the unseen dagger more deeply
-into her heart, after the fashion of her sex, but smiling and forcing
-a piteous and unreal gaiety; ‘and was she fair to look upon—a blonde
-or brunette? Mr. Baldacre, you were evidently in her confidence; you
-cannot escape a description.’
-
-‘She was very good-looking indeed,’ said the ruthless Hardy, who had
-been struck with Augusta’s fresh complexion and insular manner. ‘She
-wore a gold eyeglass, which looked odd; but she was very clever, and
-all that kind of thing, as any one could see.’
-
-‘Even Mr. Baldacre,’ said Antonia, with a sarcastic acknowledgment.
-‘You must have had a delightful journey. You will tell me any other
-particulars that occur to you in the drawing-room. I feel quite
-interested.’
-
-Here the faint signal passed which proclaims the withdrawal of the lady
-_convives_ and the temporary separation of the sexes. What mysterious
-rites are celebrated above by the assembled maids and matrons, freed
-awhile from the disturbing influence of the male element? Does a wholly
-unaffected, perhaps unamused expression possess those lovely features,
-erst so full of every virtue showing forth in every look? Do they
-exchange confidences? Do they _trust_ each other? Do they doff their
-uniforms, and appear unarmed, save with truth, innocence, simplicity?
-_Quien sabe?_
-
-It may not have been apparent to the lady guests, to whose comfort and
-enlivenment Antonia was so assiduous, so delicately, yet so unfailingly
-attentive in her _rôle_ of hostess, that Miss Frankston’s heart was
-beating, her head aching, her temples throbbing, her pulse quickened,
-to a degree which rendered the severest mental effort necessary to
-avoid collapse. They heeded not the faint smile, the piteous quivering
-lip, the sad eyes, while words of mirth, of compliment, of entreaty,
-flowed rapidly forth, as she played her part in the game we call
-society. But when the small pageant was over and the last carriage
-rolled away she threw her arms round old Paul’s neck, and resting her
-head upon that breast which had cherished her, with all a woman’s love,
-and but little short of a woman’s tenderness, since her baby days of
-broken doll and lost toy, she lay in his clasp and sobbed as if her
-heart—poor overburdened, loving, despairing heart—was in verity, then
-and there, about to break.
-
-‘My darling, my darling! my own precious pet, Antonia!’ said the old
-man, kissing her forehead, and wiping the tears from her eyes, as he
-had done many a time and oft in the days of her childish grief. ‘I know
-your sorrow and its cause; but do not be too hasty. We do not know if
-this loose report be true. It is most unlikely and improbable to me;
-though, if it be true, Paul Frankston is not the man to suffer this
-wrong to lie a day without—without claiming his right. But do not take
-it for proved truth till further tidings come.’
-
-‘It _is_ true—it is true,’ moaned Antonia. ‘I had a foreboding. I have
-been so wretched of late—so unlike your daughter, my dearest father.
-How could Hardy Baldacre have invented such a story? Why did he not
-give his—his betrothed—our address, if he had no—no—reason to do
-otherwise?’ sobbed poor Antonia.
-
-‘I can’t say—I don’t know—hang her and her eyeglass—and the day I
-first saw him enter this house! But, no, I cannot hate the boy, whose
-pleasant face so often made a second youth for me. I hate taking things
-for granted; I must have proof before I—and then—Go to bed, my darling,
-go to bed; I will tell you what I think in the morning.’
-
-It was well for Miss Frankston, perhaps, that the intense pain towards
-which her headache had gradually culminated rendered her for a while
-unable to frame any mental processes. As she threw herself upon the
-couch she was conscious of a crushing feeling of utter darkness and
-blank despair, which simulated a swoon.
-
-She awoke to a state of mind to her previously unknown. In her breast
-conflicting emotions passionately contended. Chief among them was the
-bitter disappointment, the indignant sense of slight and betrayal,
-endured by every woman who, conscious that each inmost sacred feeling
-of her heart has been given to the hero of her choice, has been
-deliberately forsaken for another.
-
-True, no word of love, no promise, no seeking of favour on one side, no
-half denial, half granting of precious gifts, had passed between them.
-In one sense, the world would have held him harmless, while friends
-and companions of her own sex, prone always to decry and distrust all
-feminine victims, would most certainly hint at mistaken feelings,
-delusive hopes, on her part—would be ready to welcome and to tempt the
-successful purloiner of a sister’s heart, the unpunished wrecker of a
-sister’s happiness.
-
-But was there no tacit agreement, no unwritten bond, no fixed and
-changeless contract, slowly but imperceptibly traced in characters
-faint and pale, then clearer, fuller, deepening daily to indelible
-imprint on her heart—upon his, surely upon his? Were the outpourings of
-the hitherto sacred thoughts, feelings, emotions, from the innermost
-receptacles of an unworn, untempted nature, to be reckoned as the idle,
-meaningless badinage of society? Were the friendly counsels, the deep,
-unaffected interest, the frank brotherly intercourse, all to pass for
-nothing—to be translated into the careless courtesy affected by every
-formal visitor?
-
-And yet, again, did not such things happen every day? Her own
-experience was not so limited but that she had known more than one pale
-maiden, weary of life, sick unto death for a season, unable as a fever
-patient to simulate ordinary cheerfulness because of the acted, if not
-spoken, falsehood of man. Had she pitied these too confiding victims,
-these hopeless, uncomplaining invalids, maimed in the battle of life,
-hiding the mortal wound from human gaze, bearing up with trembling
-steps the burden of premature age and sorrow?
-
-Had not her pity savoured of contempt—her kindness of toleration?
-and now, lo! it was her own case. But could it be _herself_—Antonia
-Frankston, who from childhood had felt no want that wealth and
-opportunity could supply? who had never known a slight or felt an
-injury since childhood’s hour? to whom all sorrow and sufferings
-incidental to what books and fanciful persons called ‘love’ were as
-practically unknown as snow blindness to an inhabitant of the Sahara?
-Was she a wronged, insulted, deserted woman like those others? It was
-inconceivable! it was phantasmal! it was impossible! She would sleep,
-and with the dawn the ghastly fear would be fled. Perhaps this dull
-pain in her throbbing temples, this darksome mysterious heart-agony,
-would leave her. Who knows?
-
-It is wonderful how much is taken for granted every day in this world,
-more especially in the interest of evil devices.
-
-Mr. Hardy Baldacre would have been sorely puzzled by a
-cross-examination, but no one had presence of mind to put it to the
-proof. He was rapid in conceiving his plans, wonderfully accurate and
-thoughtful in carrying them through. His endowments were exceptional
-in their way. Bold, even to audacity, he never hesitated; cunning and
-unscrupulous, he pursued his schemes, whether for money-making or
-for personal aggrandisement of the lower sort, with a swift and sure
-directness worthy of more exalted aim. Undaunted by failure, he was
-careless of partial loss of reputation. He was known by the superficial
-crowd as a successful operator whenever there was a bargain to be had
-in stock or station property. He was shunned and disliked by those
-better informed and more scrupulous in their acknowledgment of friends,
-as a gambler, a niggard, and a crafty profligate.
-
-Such was the man who had succeeded, by a lying device, in working
-present evil—it may be, incalculable future misery—to two persons
-who had never injured him. In this deliberate fabrication he had two
-ends in view. He secretly envied and disliked Ernest Neuchamp for
-qualities and attainments which he could never hope to rival. He was
-one of a class of Australians who cherish an ignorant prejudice against
-Englishmen, regarding them as conceited and prone to be contemptuous
-of the provincial magnate. With characteristic cunning he had kept
-this feeling to himself, always treating Mr. Neuchamp with apparent
-friendliness. But he was none the less determined to deal him an
-effectual blow when an opportunity should offer. The time had come,
-and he had struck a felon blow, which had pierced deeply the pure,
-passionate heart of Antonia Frankston.
-
-He had for some time past honoured that young lady with his very
-questionable approbation. He admired her personally after his fashion;
-but he thoroughly appreciated and heartily desired to possess himself
-of what constituted in his eyes her crowning charm and attribute—the
-large fortune which Paul Frankston’s heiress must, in spite of all
-changes of season and fluctuation of securities, inevitably inherit.
-
-Not unskilled in the ways of women, with whom his undeniable good
-looks and his prestige of wealth gave him a certain popularity, he
-thought he saw his way during her period of anger and mortification
-to a dash at the lady and the money, which needed but promptness and
-resolution to ensure a strong chance of success.
-
-He saw by her change of countenance, by her forced gaiety, by her every
-look and tone, that the barbed arrow had sped far and been surely
-lodged.
-
-‘Neuchamp, like a fool as he was, had evidently not written lately. The
-cousin (and a deuced fine girl, too, with pots of money of her own)
-had been staying up at Rainbar—a queer thing to do. Old Middleton,
-when bringing her to his place, had told every one that she was his
-friend Neuchamp’s cousin. It would be some time before Frankston or his
-daughter would find out the untruth of the report. In the meantime he
-would butter up the old man, humbug him with regret for his occasional
-“wildness,” promise all kinds of amendment and square behaviour for
-the future; then go straight to the girl, who, of course, could know
-nothing of his life and time, and say, “Here am I, Hardy Baldacre, with
-a half share in Baredown, Gogeldra, and No-good-damper (hang it; I must
-change that)—anyway, three of the best cattle properties of the south;
-here am I, not the worst-looking fellow going, at your service. Take
-me, and we’re off to Melbourne or Tasmania for a wedding-trip, and that
-stuck-up beggar Neuchamp may marry his cousin, and go up King Street
-the next week for all we care.” I shan’t say the last bit. But it will
-occur to her. Women always think of everything, though they don’t say
-it. That might fetch her. Anyhow, the odds are right. I’m on!’
-
-This exceedingly practical soliloquy having been transacted at his
-hotel during the performance of his toilette, Mr. Baldacre partook
-of the matutinal soda-and-brandy generally necessary for the perfect
-restoration of his nerves, and breakfasted, with a settled resolution
-to call at Morahmee that afternoon.
-
-This intention he carried out. He found Antonia apparently not
-unwilling to receive him upon a more intimate conversational footing
-than he ever recollected having been accorded to him. She was in that
-state of anxiety, unhappiness, and nervous irritability which makes the
-patient only too willing to fly to the relief afforded by a certainty
-even of evil. The climber upon Alpine heights, with shuddering
-death-cry, ever and anon casts himself into the awful chasm on the
-verge of which his limbs trembled and his overwrought brain reeled.
-The overtaxed sufferer under the pangs of mortal disease chooses death
-rather than the continuance of the pitiless torment. So the agonised
-heart, poised on the dread pinnacle of doubt, flees to the Lethean
-peace of despair.
-
-Having not unskilfully brought the conversation round to the subject
-of Miss Neuchamp, Mr. Baldacre touched, with more or less humour, on
-certain unguarded remarks of that inexperienced but decided traveller.
-He enlarged, as if accidentally, upon her good looks and apparent
-cleverness, giving her the benefit of a tremendous reputation for
-learning of the abstrusest kind, and generally exaggerating all
-the circumstances which might render probable the admiration of an
-ultra-refined aristocrat.
-
-Much of this delicate finesse, as Mr. Baldacre considered it to be,
-was transparent and despicable in the eyes of his listener. But,
-difficult as it may be to account for, otherwise than by ignoring
-all known rules and maxims for the comprehension of that mysterious
-mechanism, the feminine heart, there was, nevertheless, something not
-wholly disagreeable in the outspoken admiration of the bold-eyed, eager
-admirer who now pressed his suit.
-
-With one of the sudden, tempestuously capricious changes of mind,
-common to the calmest as to the most impulsive individual of the
-irresponsible sex, a vague, morbid desire for finality at all hazards
-arose in her brain. She had listened and loved, and waited and dreamed,
-and dedicated her leisure, her mental power, her _life_, to the path
-of habit and culture which would render her every thought and speech
-and act more harmonious with his ideal. She had thought but of him. He
-had his plans, his projects, a man’s career, his return to England—a
-thousand things to distract him—all these might delay the declaration
-of his love. But she had never thought of _this_! She had never in
-wildest flight of conjecture conjured up a _fiancée_, a cousin loved
-from earliest child-betrothals, to whom he doubtless had written
-pages of minute description of all their well-intended kindness and
-provincial oddities at Morahmee.
-
-And was she to sigh and droop, and pale and wither, beneath the
-unexplained, unshared burden of betrayed love? Had she not seen the
-colour fade from the fair cheek, leaving a cold ashen-gray tint where
-once was bright-hued joy, eager mirth, and laughter? Had she not
-seen the light die out of the pleading, wistful eyes, once so deeply
-glowing, so tender bright, the step fall heavy, the voice lose its
-ring, the _woman_ quit the haunted dwelling where a dead heart lay
-buried and a still, gray-hued, hard-toned tenant sat therein, for
-evermore resignedly indifferent to all things beneath the sky? Was this
-her near inexorable fate?
-
-No! a thousand times, no! Had she not in her veins the bold blood of
-Paul Frankston, the fearless sea-rover, who had more than once awed a
-desperate crew by the promptness of his weapon and the terror of his
-name? And was she to sink into social insignificance, and tacitly sue
-for the pity of _him_ and others, because she had mistaken his feelings
-and he had with masculine cruelty omitted to consider hers?
-
-No! again, no! The rebellious blood rushed to her brow, as she vowed
-to forget, to despise, to trample under foot, the memory, false as a
-broken idol, to which she had been so long, so blindly faithful. And
-as all men save one—for even in that hour of her wrath and misery
-she could not find it in her heart to include her father among the
-reprobate or despicable of his sex—were alike unworthy of a maiden’s
-trust, a maiden’s prayers, why not confide herself and her blighted
-heart to the custody of this one, who, at least, was frank and
-unhesitating in proffering his love and demanding her own?
-
-Mr Hardy Baldacre had not thought it expedient to delay bringing
-matters to a climax, fearing that highly inconvenient truth, with
-respect to the fair Augusta, might arrive at any moment. With
-well-acted bluntness of sincerity he had adjured Miss Frankston to
-forgive his sudden, his unpremeditated avowal of affection.
-
-‘He was a rough bushman,’ he confessed, ‘not in the habit of hiding
-his feelings. On such a subject as this he could not bear the agony
-of anxiety or delay. He must know his fate, even if the doom of
-banishment, of just anger at his imprudence, went forth against him.
-He expected nothing else. But if, before condemning him to go back to
-his far-off home (little she knew of its peculiar characteristics)
-a lonely, despairing man, she would only give consideration to his
-claims, rashly but respectfully urged, she might deign to accept a
-manly heart, the devotion of a life that henceforth, in good or had
-fortune, was hers, and hers only.’
-
-Mr. Hardy Baldacre had an imposing, stalwart figure, by no means
-unfashionably attired, and Nature, while unsolicitous about his moral
-endowments, had gifted him with a handsome face. If not in the bloom
-of youth, he had not passed by a day the matured vigour of early
-manhood. As he bent his dark eyes upon Antonia and poured forth his not
-entirely original address, but which, heard in the tones of a pleading
-flesh-and-blood lover, sounded a deal better than it reads, Antonia
-felt a species of mesmeric attraction to the fatal and irrevocable
-‘yes,’ which should open a new phase of life to her and obliterate the
-maddening, hopeless, endless past. _For one moment_, for one only, the
-fate of Antonia Frankston wavered on the dread eternal balance. She
-fluttered, birdlike, under the fascination of his serpentine gaze. Her
-words of regret and courteous dismissal refused to find utterance. At
-length she said, ‘I must have time to consider your flattering but
-quite unexpected offer. You will, I am sure, not press for an immediate
-answer. I will see you again. Meanwhile let me tell you that I value
-your good opinion, and shall always recall with pleasure your very kind
-intention of to-day.’
-
-But, with that still hour of evening meditation in which Antonia
-was wont to indulge before retiring, came calmer, humbler, more
-tranquillising thoughts. As she sat at her chamber window, looking out
-over the wide waters of the bay, in which a crescent moon caused the
-endless bright expanse of tremulous silver, the frowning headlands,
-the garden slopes, to be all clearly, delicately visible,—as she heard
-the rhythmical, solemn cadence of the deep-toned eternal surge,—she
-recalled the moon-lighted eves, the soul-to-soul communing, of ‘that
-lost time.’
-
-A strong reactionary feeling occupied her heart. It seemed as if, like
-the rushing of the tide, the stormy sway of the ocean she loved so
-well, her heart had surged in rising tempest and with passion’s flow,
-to ebb with yet fuller retrogression. Surely such were the words of
-this murmuring sea-song on the white midnight strand, which calmed, as
-with a magic anodyne, her restless, rebellious mood.
-
-‘I have been wayward and wicked,’ she half sighed to herself, ‘false to
-my better self, to the teaching of a life, unmindful of my duty to my
-father, who loves me better than life, of my duty to One above, who has
-shielded and cherished me, all undeserving as I am, up to this hour. I
-will repent of my sin. I will abase myself, and by prayer and penitence
-seek strength where alone it can be found.’
-
-It was long ere Antonia Frankston sought her couch; but she slept for
-the first time that night, since a serpent trail had passed over the
-Eden flowers of her trusting love, with an untroubled slumber and a
-resolved purpose.
-
-Pale, but changed in voice and mien, was she when she joined her father
-at breakfast.
-
-‘I see my little girl’s own face again,’ said Paul, as he embraced
-her, with tenderest solicitude in every line of his weather-beaten
-countenance. ‘I thought I had lost her. She must not be hasty; she was
-never so before. All may come right in the end.’
-
-‘I have been a very naughty girl,’ said she, with a quiet sob,
-‘ungrateful, too, and wicked. I have come to my senses again. It must
-have been the dreadful drought, I think, which is going to be the ruin
-of us all, body and mind. Fancy losing one’s daughter, as well as one’s
-money, because of a dry season!’
-
-This small pleasantry did not excite Paul’s risible muscles much, but
-he was more pleased with it than with a volume of epigrams. It showed
-that experienced mariner, accustomed to slightest indications of wind
-and wave, that a change of weather had set in. His soul rejoiced as he
-took his daughter in his arms and exclaimed, ‘My darling, my darling,
-your mother is with the angels, but she watches over you still. Think
-of her when your old father is too far off or too dull to advise you.
-If she had lived——’ But here there were tears in the old man’s eyes,
-and the rugged features worked in such wise as to fashion a mask upon
-which no living man had ever gazed. There was a long confession. Once
-more every thought of Antonia Frankston’s heart lay unfolded before her
-parent.
-
-That morning, before driving, as usual, to the counting-house, Mr
-Frankston sought the Royal Hotel, and, upon business of importance,
-obtained an interview with Mr. Hardy Baldacre ere that ‘talented but
-unscrupulous’ aspirant had completed his breakfast.
-
-So decided was the assurance imparted by his visitor that, with
-all possible appreciation of the honour conferred, Miss Frankston
-felt herself compelled to decline his very flattering offer, that
-Mr. Baldacre knew instinctively that any further investment of the
-Morahmee fortress was vain, if not dangerous. He condoled with his
-early visitor about the state of the season, congratulating himself
-audibly that his runs were understocked, and that he had no bills to
-meet like some people; and finally accompanied Mr. Frankston to the
-door, with a friendly leave-taking, to be succeeded by a bitter oath as
-he lighted a cigar and paced the well-known balcony.
-
-‘She has told her father. I saw the old boy was down to every move I
-had made. Knowing old shot, too, in spite of his politeness and humbug.
-I’d have hacked myself, too, at a short price, if I had had only
-another week’s innings. They may have heard something, or that fool
-Neuchamp is coming down and leaving everything to go to the devil. I
-had a good show, too. I thought I held trumps. Never mind, there are
-lots of women everywhere. One more or less don’t make much difference.
-Of course, it was the “tin” that fetched me, but I don’t see that
-I need care so much about that. I think that I shall make tracks
-to-morrow.‘
-
-On the morning following that of Mr. Baldacre’s unlucky piece of
-information Paul Frankston lost no time in applying to headquarters
-for information. He, ‘with spirit proud and prompt to ire,’ would, a
-quarter of a century before, probably have smote first and inquired
-after. ‘But age had tamed the Douglas blood,’ and even if its current
-still coursed hotly on occasion, the experience of later manhood called
-loudly for plain proof and full evidence before he adopted the strange
-tale which had been told at his board.
-
-Suspending all thought of what he might chance if _any man_ were proved
-to have trifled with his darling’s heart, he simply wrote as follows:
-
- SYDNEY, _10th April 18—_.
-
- DEAR ERNEST—We have heard a report down here—brought to our table, in
- fact, by Hardy Baldacre, a man you know a little—that you are engaged
- and about to be married shortly to a young lady, a cousin of your own,
- just arrived from England. Also that Miss Neuchamp left Sydney for
- Rainbar, after a week’s stay, and was seen by him on the way there in
- a coach.
-
- For reasons which can be hereafter explained, I wish you to send me
- a specific admission or denial of this statement. I will write you
- again upon receipt of your reply to this letter. I am, always yours
- sincerely,
-
- PAUL FRANKSTON.
-
- E. NEUCHAMP, Esq.
-
-On the following evening, after sending this, the most laconic
-epistle which had ever passed between them, Paul no sooner beheld his
-daughter’s face than he saw shining in her eyes the light of recovered
-trust, of renewed hope, of restored belief in happiness.
-
-‘She must have received a letter,’ mused the sagacious parent. ‘Where
-is it, my darling?’ said he aloud.
-
-‘Where is what?’ she replied, with a sweet air of embarrassment, pride,
-and mystery commingled.
-
-‘Of course you have had a letter, or heard some news. I took the chance
-of the little bird’s whisper coming by post. I think I am right.’
-
-‘Here it is, you wicked magician. Antonia will never have another
-secret from her dear old father. What agonies I suffered for my
-hard-heartedness! And oh, what have I escaped!’
-
-Here was the letter, with a mere stamp thereon, which contained such a
-fortune in happiness as should have entitled the Government to a round
-sum on the principle of legacy duty:
-
- RAINBAR, _4th April 18—_.
-
- MY DEAR ANTONIA—This letter will probably reach Sydney some days, or
- weeks even, before a young lady, for whom I entreat your friendship
- and kind offices. [H—m.] When I say that she is Augusta Neuchamp, my
- cousin, and my only relation in Australia, I feel certain that I need
- not further recommend her to you and the best of fathers and friends.
- [H—m.]
-
- You will acknowledge her to be a refined and intelligent woman, that
- goes _sans phrase_, I should hope, and no truer heart, with more
- thoroughly conscientious acceptance of duty, ever dwelt in one of her
- sex. [H—m.]
-
- But, writing to you with the confidence of old and tender friendship,
- I may as well state, delicately but decidedly, that Augusta and I have
- been utterly unsympathetic from our childhood, and must so remain to
- the end of the chapter. [Oh dear! surely I can’t have read aright.]
-
- Even at Rainbar, to which rude retreat she posted with her usual
- impetuosity, without giving me the opportunity of forbidding her, we
- had our old difficulty about preserving the peace (conversationally),
- and once or twice I thought we should have come to blows, as in our
- childish days. [Thank Heaven! Oh, oh!]
-
- You know I am not given to dealing hardly with your sex, whatever may
- be their demerits, and of course I am not going to abuse my cousin in
- a strange land; but I am again trusting to your perfect comprehension
- of my real meaning, when I say that, companionably, Augusta appears to
- me to be the _only woman_ in the world I cannot get on with. [Blessed
- girl, dear, charming Augusta—I love you already!]
-
- Of course, as soon as she left Rainbar (we were on very short commons
- of politeness by that time) I resolved to write and ask you to take
- her in at Morahmee, and show her Sydney and our _monde_, in the
- existence of which she disbelieves. You must be prepared for her
- abusing everything and everybody. But I know no one who can more
- gently and effectually refute her prejudices than yourself, my dear
- Antonia. You even subjugated Jermyn Croker, I remember. By the bye,
- have him out to meet Augusta. She admires his file-firing style of
- attack. Perhaps they may neutralise each other’s ‘arms of precision.’
- [Do anything for her—ask the Duke to meet her, if she would like!]
-
- I feel that I am writing a most indefensibly long letter. But I am
- very lonely, and rather melancholy, with ruin taking the place of
- rain—only one letter of difference—and advancing daily. Were it not
- so, I would, as the Irishman said, bring this letter myself. Oh, for
- an hour again in the Morahmee verandah, with your father smoking, the
- stars, the sea, the soft tones of the music, of a voice always musical
- in my ear! Ah me! it will not bear thinking of. It is midnight now,
- yet I can see a cloud of dust rising, as my men bring an outlying lot
- of cattle to the yard. [‘Poor fellow! poor, poor Ernest!’ sighed the
- voice referred to.]
-
- I know you will be kind and _forbearing_ with Augusta. She will
- not remain long in Australia. I think you will appreciate the
- unquestionably strong points in her character. Of these she has
- many—too many, in fact. Apparently it is time to close this scrawl—the
- paper says so. ‘Pray for me, Gabrielle,’ your song says, and always
- trust me as your sincere friend,
-
- ERNEST NEUCHAMP.
-
-[Bless him, poor dear!‘]
-
-‘So we are to have the honour of entertaining Ernest’s cousin, and not
-his future wife, it seems?’ said Mr. Frankston, also cheered up.
-
-‘Never had the slightest thought of it, poor fellow,’ said Antonia,
-radiant with appreciation of the antipathetic Augusta. ‘How I could
-have been such a goose as to believe that wicked Hardy Baldacre, I
-can’t think. And, papa dear, I _might_ have found myself pledged to
-marry him, doomed to endless misery, in my folly and madness. I shall
-never condemn other foolish girls again, whatever they may do.’
-
-‘All’s well that ends well, darling,’ said the old man, with a grateful
-ring in his voice; ‘Paul Frankston and his own pet daughter are one in
-heart again. We don’t know what may happen when the rain comes.’
-
-How joyous the world seemed after the explanation which Mr. Neuchamp’s
-letter indirectly afforded! Life was not a mistake after all. There
-was still interest in new books, pleasure in new music. A halo of dim
-wondrous glory was ever present during her nightly contemplation of
-sea and sky, in the lovely, all-cloudless autumn nights. The moan of
-the restless surge-voices had again the friendly tone she had heard
-in them from childhood. The sea was again splendid with possible
-heroes and argosies; it was again the realm of danger, discovery,
-enchantment—not a storm-haunted, boding terror, with buried treasures
-and drowned seamen, with treacherous, fateful wastes into which the
-barque, freighted with Antonia Frankston’s hopes, had been wafted forth
-to return no more.
-
-It was during this enviably serene state of her mind that a note from
-the innocent cause of the first tragic scene which had invaded the idyl
-of Antonia Frankston’s life appeared on the breakfast-table at Morahmee.
-
- MIDDLEHAM, _20th April_.
-
- DEAR MISS FRANKSTON—My cousin Ernest, with whom I believe you are
- acquainted, made me promise to inform you of my proposed arrival in
- Sydney, on the conclusion of my visit to Mr. and Mrs. Middleton.
- That gentleman has kindly promised to accompany me to Sydney, which
- we shall reach (_D.V._) by the five o’clock train on Friday next. I
- purpose taking up my abode at Petty’s Hotel.—Permit me to remain, dear
- Miss Frankston, yours very truly,
-
- AUGUSTA NEUCHAMP.
-
-Of course nothing would content Antonia short of meeting at the station
-and carrying off to Morahmee, bag and baggage, this inestimable cousin,
-who had behaved so honourably, so perfectly.
-
-Any other woman, with the mildest average of good looks, shut up in
-such a raft of a place as Rainbar metaphorically was, would have
-carried off Ernest, or any man of his age, easily and triumphantly. All
-the pleasant freedom of a cousin, all the provocation of a possible,
-unforbidden bride, the magic of old memories, the bond of perfect
-social equality as to rank and habitudes,—what stupendous advantages!
-And yet she was so happily and delightfully constituted by nature that,
-in spite of dangerous proximity and all other advantages, she was, it
-was plain from his letter, the very last woman in the world whom he
-could have thought of marrying. O most excellent Augusta!
-
-Paul, of course, after a show of deep consideration, came to the
-conclusion that Antonia’s plan was the kindest, wisest, ‘onliest’
-thing, under the circumstances. ‘Take her home straight from the train.
-Bother Petty’s—what’s the use of her moping there, and spending her
-money? I don’t think another girl for you to have a few talks with, and
-drives, and shopping, and Botanical Gardens, and Dorcas work together,
-could do you any harm, pet. So have her home quietly to-night. We must
-have a little dinner for her.’
-
-Accordingly, when the punctual train arrived bearing Miss Neuchamp and
-her fortunes, she was astonished to hear Mr. Middleton exclaim, ‘Why,
-there is Miss Frankston come to meet us! How do you do, Antonia, my
-dear? Allow me to make known Miss Neuchamp; probably you are already
-acquainted with one another by description.’
-
-Miss Neuchamp’s expectations can only be a matter of conjecture,
-but she was unaffectedly surprised at the apparition of this
-distinguished-looking girl, perfectly dressed and appointed, who stood
-on the platform, flanked by a liveried servant of London solidity of
-form and severe respectability of manner.
-
-‘Very, _very_ happy to welcome you to Sydney, Miss Neuchamp,’ said
-Antonia. ‘Papa and I were so disappointed that we did not know of
-your address before you left for the bush. He won’t hear of your going
-anywhere but to our house for the present. And, Mr. Middleton, I am
-pledged to bring you, as papa says we young ladies will be wrapped up
-in each other and leave him in solitude. I can command you, I know.
-Pray say you’ll come, Miss Neuchamp.’
-
-‘If I may add my persuasion,’ said Mr. Middleton, ‘I could tell Miss
-Neuchamp that she could not act more discreetly for the present. I
-shall be delighted to wash all the dust out of my throat with some of
-your father’s claret, Antonia. I’m your humble admirer, you know, when
-I’m away from home.’
-
-‘I shall be very happy to accept your hospitality, so kindly offered,
-for the present,’ said Augusta, overpowered by briskness of attack and
-defection of allies.
-
-The grave servant immediately addressed himself to the luggage and,
-handing the strange lady’s nearest and dearest light weights into
-the carriage, remained behind to deposit one of Mr. Middleton’s
-portmanteaus at the club, and to convey the remaining impedimenta to
-Morahmee per cab. As Miss Neuchamp ensconced herself in the yielding,
-ample cushions of the Morahmee carriage beside Antonia, and was
-borne along at a rapid pace, the mere rattling of the wheels upon
-the macadamised road was grateful and refreshing to her soul, as a
-reminiscence of the unquestioned proper and utterly befitting, from
-which she had hitherto considered herself to be hopelessly sundered by
-the whole breadth of ocean.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII
-
-
-When Miss Neuchamp found herself installed in a large, cool upper
-chamber at Morahmee with a glorious view of the harbour, while on her
-table stood a great rapturous bouquet all freshly gathered, roses
-intermingled with delicate greenhouse buds, she commenced to wonder
-whether all her previously formed ideas of Australia were about to be
-seriously modified.
-
-A good sound reserve of prejudice reassured her, and she bided her
-time. She had tasted the fullest measure of comfort perceivable in
-Australian country life at the house of Mr. Middleton, where she had
-sojourned several weeks. Now she was about to experience whatever best
-and pleasantest the metropolis could afford.
-
-Mr. Frankston had brought home with him Count von Schätterheims and Mr.
-Jermyn Croker, so that he and Mr. Middleton, having endless semi-stock
-and station lore to interchange, each of the ladies was provided with a
-cavalier.
-
-The Count, who had been informed by Paul that Miss Neuchamp was an
-English heiress of vast wealth, travelling to indulge her eccentric
-insular taste, paid great attention to that young lady, cutting in
-from time to time, to the speechless wrath and exasperation of Jermyn
-Croker, who renewed his former acquaintance with great success.
-
-The fair Augusta was entertained, and not wholly displeased, with their
-manifest admiration.
-
-As the verandah was voted by far the pleasantest place after dinner,
-the whole party adjourned to this invaluable retreat, where Paul and
-his friend were permitted to light their cigars, and all joined in
-conversation with unaffected freedom impossible in a drawing-room.
-
-‘Sing something, my darling,’ said the old man, ‘and then, perhaps, the
-Count will give us that new song of his, which I hear all Sydney is
-raving about.’
-
-As the rich tones of the grand Erard came forth to them, luxuriously
-softened by the intervening distance, Miss Neuchamp tasted a pleasure
-from which she had for an age, it would seem, been debarred. She did
-not herself perform with more than the moderate degree of success which
-can be attained by those who, without natural talent, have received
-thoroughly good teaching. But her training, at least, enabled her to
-appreciate the delicacy of Miss Frankston’s touch, her finished and
-rare execution, and the true yet deep feeling with which she rendered
-the most simple melodies as well as the most complicated operatic
-triumphs.
-
-Somewhat to the discomposure of the Count, who had commenced to believe
-the opportunity favourable, she rose, and with an expression of delight
-passed on to Antonia’s side. Miss Neuchamp had seen too many counts
-to attach importance to that particular grade of continental rank;
-and this particular specimen of the order she held in fixed distrust,
-derived from the recollection of comments to which she had listened at
-Rainbar.
-
-‘_La belle Anglaise_ prefers music to your compliments, Count,’ said
-Mr. Croker.
-
-‘_Chacun à son tour_,’ replied the injured diplomatist. ‘Dey are both
-ver good in dere vay.’
-
-Whatever might be the Count’s shortcomings, a deficiency of
-self-control could hardly be reckoned among them. He twirled his
-enormous moustache, condoled with Paul and Mr. Middleton, and explained
-that his steward in Silesia had written him accounts of an unusually
-wet season.
-
-‘Ah, dat is de condrey! You should see him, my dear Monsieur Paul: such
-grops, such pasdures, such vool, so vine as de zilks.’
-
-‘How about labour?’ said Mr. Middleton. ‘I suppose you are not bothered
-as we are every now and then with a short supply, and half of that bad?’
-
-‘De bauer—vat you call “beasand” in my condrey—he vork for you all
-de yahres of his live, and pray Gott for your brosperity—it is his
-brivilech to be receive wid joys and danks. De bauer, oh, de bauer is
-goot man!‘
-
-‘I wish our fellows received their lot with joy and thanks; half of my
-Steam Plains shepherds have gone off to these confounded diggings. But
-don’t your men emigrate to America now and then? I thought half Germany
-went there.’
-
-‘I vill dell you one dale,’ said the Count earnestly. ‘I had one
-hauptman, overzeer, grand laboureur, ver goot man—he is of lofdy
-indelligence, he reat, he dinks mooch, he vill go to Amerika. I
-consoolt mit my stewart, he say Carl Steiger is ver goot, he is so goot
-as no oder mans what we have not got. I say, “Ingrease his vages, once,
-twyei, dree dime—he reach de vonderful som of _fivedeen bount_ per
-yahr. He go no more. De golten demdadion is doo crade; he abandon his
-shpirit-dask to leat mankint, he glass my vools now dill his lives is
-ofer.”‘
-
-‘Ha! he wanted a summer on the wallaby track to open his mind,’ said
-Mr. Middleton; ‘that would have been a “wanderyahr” with different
-results, I am afraid. But I really think many of our fellows would
-do better if they had more of the thrift and steady resolve of your
-countrymen, Count. I remember when wages were much lower than now
-in the colony, and when the men really saved something worth while,
-besides working more cheerfully. Don’t you, Croker?’ But Mr. Croker
-had departed in the midst of the Count’s story, and was charming Miss
-Neuchamp with such delightful depreciation of the Australias, and
-all that in them is, that she became rapidly confirmed in her first
-opinion, formed soon after her arrival, that he was the best style of
-man she had as yet met in the colony. Mr. Croker, on his side, declared
-himself to be encouraged and refreshed by thus meeting with a genuine
-English lady not afraid to speak out her mind with respect to this
-confounded country, and its ways, means, and inhabitants.
-
-The Count, fearing that the evening would be an unprofitable investment
-of his talents and graces, particularly in the matter of Miss Neuchamp,
-by whom he was treated with studied coldness, departed after having
-sung his song. This effort merely recalled to Augusta some occasion
-when she had heard it very much better performed in the Grand Opera at
-Paris. Jermyn Croker, who had never heard it before, openly depreciated
-the air, the words, the expression, and execution. With more than one
-household languishing for his presence, this was a state of matters
-not to be continued, so the Count, with graceful apologies and vows of
-pressing engagements, took his departure.
-
-‘You and I, Middleton, can go home to the club together, now that the
-_chevalier d’industrie_—beg your pardon, Frankston—I mean, of the
-Order of the Legion of Honour, Kaiser Fritz, and all his other orders,
-medals, and decorations—— But I daresay the first represents his truest
-claim.’
-
-‘You are always charitably well informed, we know that, Croker,’ said
-Mr. Middleton. ‘Mind, I don’t put my trust in princes or counts of
-_his_ sort. I wonder how he gets along. Still swimmingly?’
-
-‘Don’t think the fellow has a shilling in the world myself—never did,’
-replied Croker, with cheerful disbelief. ‘But from what I heard the
-other day, he will have to make his grand _coup_ soon, now that it’s
-known his chance of marrying Harriet Folleton is all up.’
-
-‘Is it finally unsettled, then, Mr. Croker?’ said Antonia. ‘Every one
-said she admired him so much.’
-
-‘She is quite equal to that or any other madness, I believe,’ said the
-well-informed Jermyn; ‘and, with her mother’s extraordinary folly to
-back her, there is no limit to the insanity she is capable of. But the
-old man _has_ a little sense—people who have made a pot of money often
-have—and he stopped the whole affair last week.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-Mr. Neuchamp was, perhaps, more disturbed in mind than he had ever been
-since his arrival in Australia when he received the unusually laconic
-letter referred to from Paul Frankston. Surprise, anger, uncertainty by
-turns took possession of his soul. A wholly new and strangely mingled
-sensation arose in his mind. Had he misinterpreted his own emotions as
-well as those of Antonia? That such was the case as to his own feeling
-was evidenced by his sudden and unreasonable rage when he thought of
-Hardy Baldacre in the character of an accepted suitor for the hand of
-the unconventional, innocent girl whose half-childish, half-womanly
-expressions of wonder, admiration, dislike, or approval, called forth
-by incidents in their daily studies, he could _now_ so clearly remember.
-
-Had he, then, won that priceless gem, the unbought love of a pure and
-loving heart—no fleeting fancy, born of vanity or caprice, but the
-deeply-rooted, sacred, lifelong devotion of an untarnished virgin-soul,
-of a cultured and lofty intellect?
-
-This heavenly jewel had been suspended by a crowned angel above his
-head, and had he not, with sordid indifference, bent earthward, all
-unheeding, save of hard and anxious travail? He had narrowed his mind
-to beeves and kine, dry seasons and wet, all the merest workaday
-vulgarities of short-sighted mortals, resolute only in the pursuit of
-dross.
-
-Had he, from neglect, heedlessness, absence, however indispensable,
-chilled the fond ardour of that lonely heart, cast the priceless
-treasure into careless or unworthy hands? Who was he, that a girl so
-much courted, so richly dowered in every way, as Antonia Frankston,
-should wait till youth was over for his deliberate approval? And yet,
-if she _had_ delayed but for a short while longer—till _the rain
-came_, in fact. Ah me! was not all the Australian world waiting with
-exhausted, upturned eyes for that crowning, long-delayed blessing?
-Fancy such a reason being proffered in England. Weddings, in that happy
-land, were occasionally postponed till a semblance of fine weather
-might be calculated upon, but surely only in this antipodean land of
-contrast and confusion did any one defer the great question of his life
-until the _departure_ of fine weather. Antonia was, doubtless, besieged
-by hosts of suitors, among them this infernal, lying scoundrel of a
-cad, Hardy Baldacre, besides Jermyn Croker, the Count, Hartley Selmore,
-and numberless others. Madness was in his thoughts—he would go down,
-rain or no rain, wet or dry, tempest or zephyr, hurricane or calm. He
-would hunt for the ruffian Baldacre, and slay him where they met.
-
-Nevertheless he must at once answer Paul’s letter, which he did to
-the effect that, ‘He wondered that his old friends should believe any
-mere fabrications, unsupported by testimony, to his prejudice. Not
-that there was anything discreditable about the report, if true; but
-this was _not_ true. His cousin, with misplaced heroism, had visited
-him in his solitude; a refined and highly educated woman, as would
-be apparent to all, she certainly was. But as a _wife_ he had never
-thought of her, nor could he, if their existence ran parallel for
-years.’ Having despatched the letter, Ernest felt easier in mind, more
-removed from that condition the most irritating and intolerable of all,
-the accusation of wrong without the power of justification. It was
-hard to resist an almost uncontrollable desire to rush down to Sydney
-then and there to set himself right with his friends. But, as he ran
-over the obstacles to such a course, it seemed, on cooler thought, to
-be unadvisable in every way. First, there was the extreme difficulty
-of performing the journey: he had not a horse at Rainbar capable of
-carrying him across to the mail station. When he got there it was
-problematical whether the contractor was running a wheel mail or not.
-It would be undesirable, even ridiculous, to find himself a couple of
-hundred miles from home, stranded on the endless, dry, hopeless plain.
-To make a lengthened stay in Sydney, should he get there, was not to be
-thought of under his present circumstances of debt and anxiety. ‘No,’
-he said, as he crushed the feeling back with a self-repression more
-nearly allied to heroism than mere ostentatious efforts of courage,
-‘no, my colours are nailed to the masthead, and there shall they hang
-till the cry of “victory” is once more heard, or till the fight is lost
-beyond mortal hope.‘
-
-So, sadly yet steadfastly, Ernest Neuchamp turned himself to the
-monotonous tasks which, like those of sailors on a desert island, or
-of the crew of a slowly-sailing ship, were yet carried on with daily,
-hopeless regularity. Still the ashen-gray pastures became more withered
-and deathlike. Still the sad, staggering lines of cattle paced in
-along the well-worn dusty trails to their watering-places, and paced
-back like bovine processions after witnessing the funeral obsequies of
-individuals of their race, which experience, in truth, was daily theirs.
-
-Then the diet, once not distasteful to the much-enduring palate of
-youth, became wellnigh intolerable: the flaccid unfed meat, the daily
-bread with never a condiment, the milkless tea, the utter absence of
-all fruit, vegetable, herb, or esculent. Truly, as in those ancient
-days when a pastoral people record their sorrowful chronicles of the
-dry and thirsty region where no water is, ‘the famine was sore in the
-land.’
-
-At this time, so dreary, so endless, so crushing in its isolated,
-unchanging, helpless misery, Ernest was unutterably thankful for the
-hope and consolation which his studious habits afforded him. His
-library, the day’s work done, filled up his lonely evening as could
-no other employment possible under the circumstances. He ransacked
-his moderate references for records of similar calamities in all lands
-which, unlike the ‘happy isles’ of Britain, are from time to time
-invaded with drought, the chief agent in all the recorded wholesale
-destruction of animal life. He noted with painstaking and laborious
-accuracy the duration, the signs, the consequences, the termination
-of such dread seasons. From old books of Australian exploration he
-learned, almost by heart, the sad experiences of the pioneers of the
-land when they stood face to face with what to them were new and
-terrible foes.
-
-‘It is hard,’ said he to himself, as he paced his room at midnight,
-after long hours of close application to such studies, ‘it is hard and
-depressing to me, and to many a wretched colonist who has worked longer
-and has more on the hazard than I, to see the fruit of our labours
-slowly, pitilessly absorbed by this remorseless season. But what,
-after all, is a calamity which can be measured, like this, by a money
-standard, compared to one which, like this latest famine in Hindostan,
-counts its _human_ victims by tens of thousands, by millions? See the
-dry record of a food failure, which comprehends the teeming human herds
-which cover the soil more thickly than even our poor starving flocks!
-
-‘Can we realise thousands of lowly homes where the mother sits
-enfeebled and spectral beside her perishing babes, whose eyes ask for
-the food which she cannot grant; where the frenzied peasant rushes, in
-the agony of despair, from his cabin that he may not hear the hunger
-cries, the death groans of his wife and babes; where the dead lie
-unburied; where the beast of prey alone roams satiated and lordly;
-where nature mourns like a maniac mother with tears of blood for her
-murdered offspring?
-
-‘Such is not, may never be, the fate of this wide, rich, peaceful land,
-vast and wondrous in its capabilities in spite of temporary disasters.
-Let us take heart. Our losses, our woes, are trifling in comparison
-with the world’s great miseries. We are, in comparison, but as children
-who lose their holiday gifts of coin or cakes. Our lives, our health
-and strength, are all untouched. We have hope still for our unbartered
-heritage, the stronger for past dangers of storm and tide. The world
-is yet before us. There are other seas, untried and slumbering oceans,
-where our bark may yet ride with joyous outspread sail. Let us still
-labour and endure, until Fate, compelled by our steadfastness, shall be
-once more propitious.
-
- ‘Si fractus illabitur orbis
- Impavidum ferient ruinæ.
-
-I hardly expected to be quoting Horace at Rainbar, but the old boy
-probably had some experience of untoward seasons, sunshiny desolation,
-like this of ours. I don’t know whether “Impavidum” applies strictly to
-any one but Levison. I am afraid that the “fractus orbis” pertains to
-our cosmos of credit, which, shattered to its core, will strike us all
-soon and put us to the proof of our philosophy.‘
-
-A trifling distraction was created about this time, much to Ernest’s
-relief, by the arrival of Mr. Cottonbush, who had received instructions
-from Mr. Levison to muster, brand, and take delivery of the small
-herd of cattle, the single flock of sheep, and the lot of horses
-which that far-seeing speculator had purchased from the brothers
-Freeman. This pastoral plenipotentiary, a wiry, reticent individual,
-utterly impervious to every wile and stratagem which the art of man in
-Australia had hitherto evolved from the very complicated industry of
-stock-raising, first informed the Freemans of his mission, producing a
-written authority with the awe-striking signature of Abstinens Levison,
-and then reported himself to Mr. Neuchamp.
-
-‘It _is_ a bad season, sir,’ he said, in answer to that gentleman’s
-greeting, which of course comprehended the disastrous state of the
-weather, ‘and many a one wouldn’t bother mustering these three or four
-hundred crawling cattle. They might be all dead in three months for all
-we can see. But Mr. Levison isn’t like any one else. He sends me a line
-to do this, or go there, and I always do it without troubling about the
-reasons. _He_ finds them for the lot of us, and pretty fair ones they
-generally are when time brings ’em out.’
-
-‘I think _I_ know why he made this bargain,’ said Ernest, ‘and I must
-say I wonder more about it every day. But I am so far of your opinion,
-now that I am becoming what you call an “old hand,” that I shall
-imitate your example in letting Mr. Levison’s reasons work themselves
-out in practice.‘
-
-‘That’s the best way, sir,’ assented the colonel of cavalry under this
-pastoral general of division. ‘I’ve never done anything but report and
-obey orders since I’ve been with Levison, this many a year. I used to
-talk and argue a bit with him at first. I never do now, though he’s a
-man that will always hear what you’ve got to say, in case he might pick
-something out of it. But I never knew him alter his mind after he’d got
-all the information he wanted. So it’s lost time talking to him.’
-
-‘And what do _you_ think about this terrible season?’ asked Ernest,
-anxiously looking at this iron man of the desert, whose experience
-was to his, he could _now_ in this hour of wreck and ruin realise, as
-immeasurably superior as the grizzled second mate’s to the cabin boy’s
-when the tempest cries aloud with voice of death and the hungry caverns
-of the eternal deep are disclosed.
-
-‘It’s bad enough,’ assented Mr. Cottonbush thoughtfully, ‘bad enough;
-and there’s many a one will remember it to his dying day. In some
-places they’ll lose most of their stock before the winter’s on for want
-of feed, and all the rest, when it _does_ come, from the cold. There
-were ten thousand fat sheep (or supposed to be fat) of Lateman’s caught
-in the Peechelbah mallee the other day as they were going a short cut.
-When I say “caught,” the water had dried up that they reckoned on, and
-was only found out when they was half way through. The sheep went mad
-and wouldn’t drive. So did the chap in charge, very nigh. When he got
-out he had only some four thousand three hundred odd left. That was a
-smash, wasn’t it?‘
-
-‘Sheep are not so bad as cattle in one way,’ said Mr. Neuchamp; ‘you
-can travel them and steal grass. A good many people seem unprincipled
-enough to resort to the meanness of filching from their neighbours and
-the country generally what no man can spare in this awful time.’
-
-‘Well,’ said Mr. Cottonbush, smiling and wincing slightly, ‘it ain’t
-quite the clean potato, of course; but if your sheep’s dying at home,
-what can you do? Every man for himself, you know; and you can’t let ’em
-stop on the run and die before your eyes. We’ve had to do a bit of it
-ourselves. But the old man, he bought two or three whacking big bits of
-country in the Snowy Mountains, Long Plains, the Gulf, Yarrangobilly,
-and two or three more, enough to feed all the sheep in the country,
-and started ours for it directly after shearing, while the roads were
-good. _He_ knew what was coming and provided in time, same as he always
-does. Blessed if he didn’t lease a lot of the country he could spare
-to people who were hard pushed and came late, so he got his own share
-cheap.’
-
-‘And was there abundance of grass and water?’
-
-‘Green grass two feet high, running creeks all the summer, enough to
-make your mouth water. If we get rain down before the snow comes next
-month our flocks will come back better than they went, and with half as
-much wool again as the plains sheep.’
-
-That day Mr. Cottonbush informed the Freeman family that, inasmuch as
-the Rainbar stockyard was a strong and secure enclosure, and as his
-employer, Mr. Levison, was a very particular man in having cattle that
-he bought properly branded up, he didn’t like any to be left over, and
-they must yard every mother’s son of ‘em.
-
-So, as Mr. Neuchamp had kindly given permission for his yard to be
-used, the entire Freeman clan, including a swarm of brown-faced,
-bare-legged urchins, arrived on the following day with the whole of
-their herd. It was a strange sight, and not without a proportion of
-dramatic interest. The cattle were so emaciated that they could hardly
-walk; many of them staggered and fell. In truth, as they moved up
-in a long woebegone procession, they looked like a ghostly protest
-against man’s lack of foresight and Heaven’s wrath. The horses were so
-weak from starvation that they could barely carry their riders. One
-youngster was fain to jump off his colt, that exhausted animal having
-come to a dead halt, and drive him forward with the cattle.
-
-Even the men and the boys had a wan and withered look. Not that they
-had been on short commons, but, dusty, sunburned, and nervously anxious
-to secure every animal that could walk to the yard, they harmonised
-very fittingly with their kine.
-
-When they arrived at the yard Mr. Cottonbush counted them carefully in,
-and then signified to the vendors that, in his opinion, it would be
-wise of them to go back and make a final ‘scrape,’ as he expressed it,
-of their pasture-ground, lest there might inadvertently have been any
-left behind.
-
-‘That sort of thing always leads to trouble, you know,’ said he;
-‘there’s a sort of doubt which were branded and which were not. Now,
-Mr. Levison bought every hoof you own, no milkers reserved and all
-that; he don’t believe in having any of the best cattle kept back. So
-you’d better scour up every beast you can raise before we begin to
-brand. We can tail this mob, now they’re here.’
-
-This supplementary proceeding resulted in the production of about
-thirty head of cattle, among which there curiously happened to be, by
-accident, half a dozen cows considerably above the average in point of
-breeding and value.
-
-This very trifling matter of a ‘cockatoo’s’ muster having been thus
-concluded, all the horses having been yarded, and the flock of sheep
-driven up—Mr. Levison having made it a _sine quâ non_ that he would
-have all or none—the fires were lighted and the brands put in.
-
-To the wild astonishment of the Freemans, Mr. Cottonbush, having
-put the [Ǝ]NE brand in the fire, commenced to place that conjoined
-hieroglyph upon every cow, calf, bullock, and steer, assisted by Mr.
-Windsor, Charley Banks, and the black boys.
-
-‘Why, “the cove” ain’t bought ‘em, surely?’ said Joe Freeman, with a
-look of much distrust and disapproval. ‘Where’s he to get the sugar, I
-want to know; or else it’s a “plant” between him and old Levison.‘
-
-‘When the stock’s counted and branded you’ll get your cheque,’ said
-the imperturbable manager; ‘that’s all you’ve got to bother your head
-about. It’s no business of yours, if you’re paid, whether Levison
-chooses to sell ’em, or boil ’em, or put ’em in a glass case.’
-
-‘Well, I’m blowed,’ said Bill Freeman, ‘if we ain’t regularly sold. If
-I’d a-known as they was a-comin’ here, I’d have seen Levison in the
-middle of a mallee scrub with his tongue out for water before I’d have
-sold him a hoof. One comfort: the cash is all right, and half of these
-crawlers will die before spring.‘
-
-‘Not if rain comes within a month,’ said Mr. Cottonbush cheerily.
-‘You’d be surprised what a fortnight will do for stock in these places,
-and the grass grows like a hotbed. These cattle are smallish and weak,
-but not so badly bred. They’ll fill out wonderfully when they get their
-fill. You’d better wait and see them counted, and then you can have
-your cheque.’
-
-Jack Windsor and Charley Banks worked with a will, so did the younger
-members of the yeomanry plantation. The grown cattle were of course
-pen-branded. By night-fall every one was marked very legibly and
-counted out. Four hundred and seventy head of cattle over six months
-old, eighty-four horses, and twelve hundred mixed sheep, principally
-weaners. These last were fire-branded on the side of the face,
-provided with a shepherd, and kept near home.
-
-The necessary preliminaries being concluded, Mr. Cottonbush handed a
-cheque, at the prices arranged, to Abraham Freeman, and turned the
-horses and cattle out of the yard.
-
-‘You haven’t a horn or a hoof on Rainbar now,’ said he composedly;
-‘perhaps you have ’em in a better place, in your breeches pockets; and
-remember I’ll be up here next November, or else Mr. Levison, to take up
-your selections as agreed. Then, I suppose, you’ll be fixing yourself
-down upon some other miserable squatter. You’re bound not to stop here,
-you know.’
-
-Having thus accomplished his mission clearly and unmistakably, Mr.
-Cottonbush, whose acquaintance Ernest had first made at Turonia when
-he took delivery of Mr. Drifter’s cattle, declared his intention of
-starting at daybreak. Waste of time was never laid to the charge of
-Mr. Levison’s subordinates. ‘Like master like man’ is a proverb of
-unquestionable antiquity. There is more in it than appears upon the
-surface. Whatever might have been the moulding power, it is certain
-that his managers, agents, and overseers attached great importance to
-those attributes of punctuality, foresight, temperance, and thrift
-which were dear to the soul of Abstinens Levison.
-
-‘I’m glad these crawlers of cattle are branded up and done with while
-it’s dry, likewise the horses. All this kind of work is so much easier
-and better done in dry weather,’ said the relaxing manager. ‘They’re
-not a very gay lot to look at now. But I shouldn’t wonder to see you
-knocking ten pounds a head out of some of those cats of steers before
-this day two years.’
-
-‘Ten pounds a head!’ echoed Ernest. ‘Why not say twenty, while you’re
-about it?’
-
-‘You don’t believe it,’ said Mr. Cottonbush calmly, rubbing his tobacco
-assiduously in his hands preparatory to lighting his pipe. ‘Levison
-writes that stock are going up in Victoria to astonishing prices, and
-that what they’ll reach, if the gold keeps up, no man can tell. So your
-cattle _might_ fetch twenty pounds after all.’
-
-‘What would you advise me to do with the Freemans’ stock, now that I
-have got them?‘ asked Ernest.
-
-‘If I was in your place,’ said Mr. Cottonbush judicially, ‘I should
-stick to the cattle, for every one of them, down to the smallest calf,
-will be good money when the rain comes. The sheep also you may as well
-keep: they’ll pay their own wages if you put ’em out on a bit of spare
-back country, and there’s plenty that your cattle never go near. You
-could bring ’em in to shear them, and they’ll increase and grow into
-money fast enough. You might have ten thousand sheep on Rainbar and
-never know it.’
-
-‘I don’t like sheep much,’ said Ernest; ‘but these are very cheap, if
-they live, and there is plenty of room, as you say. And the horses?’
-
-‘Sell every three-cornered wretch of ’em—a set of upright-shouldered,
-useless mongrels—directly you get a chance,’ said Mr. Cottonbush with
-unusual energy of speech. ‘And now you’re able to clear the run of
-’em, being your own, which you never could have done if they remained
-theirs. You’d have had young fellows coming for this colt or that filly
-till your head was gray.’
-
-‘I hope not,’ said Ernest, laughing; ‘but I am glad to have all the
-stock and land of Rainbar in my own hands once more.’
-
-Mr. Cottonbush departed at dawn, and once more Ernest was alone in the
-gray-stricken, accursed waste, wherein nor grass grew nor water ran,
-nor did any of these everyday miracles of Nature appear likely again to
-be witnessed by despairing man.
-
-Still passed by the hungry hordes of travelling sheep, still the bony
-skeletons of the passing cattle herds. No rain, no sign of rain! All
-pastoral nature, brute and human, appeared to have been struck with the
-same blight, and to be forlorn and moribund. The station cattle became
-weaker and less capable of exertion; ‘lower,’ as Charley Banks called
-it, as the cold autumn nights commenced to exhibit their keenness. The
-Freemans relinquished all control over their cattle, and chuckled over
-the weakly state of the Rainbar herd.
-
-The autumn had commenced, a peerless season in all respects save in the
-vitally indispensable condition of moisture. The mornings were crisp,
-with a suggestive tinge of frost, the nights absolutely cold, the days,
-as usual, cloudless, bright, and warm. If there was any variation it
-was in the direction of a lowering, overcast, cloudy interval, when the
-bleak winds moaned bodingly, but led to no other effect than to sweep
-the dead leaves and dry sticks, which had so long passed for earth’s
-usual covering, into heaps and eddying circular lines. The roughening
-coats on the feeble frames of the stock, now enduring the slow torture
-of the cold in the lengthening nights, told a tale of coming collapse,
-of consummated, unquestioned ruin. Daily did Ernest Neuchamp dread
-to rise, to pass hours of hopeless despondency among these perishing
-forms, dying creatures roaming over a dead earth during their brief
-term of survival! Daily did he almost come to loathe the sight of the
-unpitying sun, which, like a remorseless enemy, spared not one beam of
-his burning rays, veiled not one glare of his deadly glance. He had an
-occasional reminiscence of the steady, reassuring tones, the unwavering
-purpose of which abode with the very presence of Abstinens Levison.
-But for these he felt at times as though he could have distrusted the
-justice of an overruling Power, have cursed the hour of his birth, and
-delivered himself over to despair and reprobation.
-
-While Mr. Neuchamp was not far removed from this most unusual and
-decidedly unphilosophical state of mind, it so chanced on a certain
-afternoon (it was that of Wednesday, the eighteenth day of May, as was
-long after remembered) that he and Jack Windsor were out together,
-a few miles from home, upon the ironical but necessary mission of
-procuring a ‘fat beast.’ This form of speech may be thought to have
-savoured too much of the wildly improbable. The real quest was, of
-course, for an animal in such a state of comparative emaciation
-as should not preclude his carcass for being converted into human
-food. The meat was not palatable, but it supported life in the hardy
-Anglo-Saxon frame. It was all they had, and they were constrained to
-make the best of it.
-
-‘Look at these poor devils of cattle,’ said Jack, pointing to a number
-of hide-bearing anatomies moving their jaws mechanically over the
-imperceptible pasture. ‘They have water, but what the deuce they find
-to eat I can’t see. There’s that white steer, that red cow, and one or
-two more, with their jaws swelled up. There’s plenty of ’em like that.’
-
-‘From what cause?’ asked Mr. Neuchamp. ‘Cancer is not becoming
-epidemic, I hope.’
-
-‘It comes from the shortness of the feed, _I_ think,’ returned Jack;
-‘you see the poor creatures keep licking and picking every time they
-see a blade of grass, if it’s only a quarter of an inch long; half
-their time they miss their aim and rattle their jaws together with
-nothing between them. That’s what hurts ’em, I expect, and after a bit
-it makes their heads swell.’
-
-‘I wonder what they would think in England of such an injury, occurring
-in what we always believed to be a rich pastoral country.’
-
-‘So it is, sir, when the season’s right. I expect in England you have
-your bad seasons in another way, and get smothered and flooded out with
-rain; and the crops are half rotten; and the poor man (I suppose he is
-_really_ a poor man there, no coasting up one side of a river and down
-the other for six months, with free rations all the time) gets tucked
-up a bit.’
-
-‘As you say, Jack, there are bad seasons, which mean bad harvests,
-in England,’ answered Ernest, always inclined to the diversion of
-philosophical inquiry; ‘and the poor man there, as you say, properly so
-called, inasmuch as he requires more absolute shelter, more sufficient
-clothes in the terrible winter of the north, than our friends who
-pursue the ever-lengthening but not arduous track of the wallaby in
-Australia. They may in England, and do occasionally, I grieve to say,
-if unemployed and therefore unfed, actually _starve to death_. But what
-are those cattle just drawing in?’
-
-‘Those belong to a lot that keeps pretty well back,’ answered Jack,
-‘and they’re different in their way from these cripples we’ve been
-looking at, as they’ve had something to _eat_, but they’re pretty well
-choked for a drink. I don’t know when they’ve had one. That’s how it
-is, you see, sir; half the cattle’s afraid to go away for the water,
-and the rest won’t leave what little feed there is till they’re nearly
-mad with drouth. It’s cruel work either way. I’m blest if that wasn’t a
-drop of rain!’
-
-This sudden and rare phenomenon caused Ernest to take a cursory
-examination of the sky, which he had long forborne to regard with
-hope or fear. It was clouded over. But such had been the appearance
-of the firmament scores of times during the last six months. The
-air was still, sultry, and full of the boding calm which precedes
-a storm. Such signs had been successfully counterfeited, as Ernest
-bitterly termed it, once a month since the last half-forgotten showery
-spring. He had observed a halo round the moon on the previous night.
-There had been dozens of dim circular rings round that planet all the
-long summer through. The rain was certainly falling now. So had it
-commenced, on precisely such a day, with the same low banks of clouds,
-many a time and oft, and stopped abruptly in about twenty minutes, the
-clouds disappearing, and the old presentment reverting to a staring
-blue sky, a mocking, unveiled sun therein, with the suddenness of a
-transformation scene in a pantomime.
-
-‘I think that spotted cow looks as near meat as anything we’re likely
-to get, sir,’ said Jack Windsor, interrupting the train of distrustful
-reverie. ‘It begins to look as if it meant it. Lord send we may get
-well soaked before we get home!’
-
-Mr. Windsor’s pious aspiration was appropriate this time. They reaped
-the benefit of a genuine and complete saturation before they reached
-the yard with the small lot of cattle they were compelled to take in
-for companionship to their ‘fat beast.’ There was no appearance of
-haste about the rain, no tropical violence, no waterspout business. It
-trickled down in slow, monotonous, still, and settled drizzle, much as
-it might have done in North Britain. It only did not stop; that was
-all. It was hopefully continuous all the evening. And when Mr. Neuchamp
-opened his casement at midnight he thankfully listened to the soaking,
-ceaseless downpour, which seemed no nearer a sudden conclusion than
-during the first hour.
-
-Before dawn Mr. Neuchamp was pacing his verandah, having darted out
-from his couch the very moment that he awoke. The temperature had
-sensibly fallen; so had the clouds, which were low and black; and still
-the rain streamed down more heavily than at first. There was apparently
-no alteration likely to take place during the day. The water commenced
-to flow in the small channels. The minor watercourses, the gullies,
-and creeks were filling. Wonder of wonders—it was a settled, set-in,
-hopelessly wet day! What a blessed and wonderful change from last week!
-Ernest had a colloquy with Charley Banks about things in general, and
-then permitted himself a whole day’s rest—reading a little, ciphering a
-little, and looking up his correspondence, which had fallen much into
-arrear. As the day wore on the rain commenced to show determination,
-heavily, hour after hour, with steady fall, saturating the darkened
-earth, no longer dusty, desolate, hopelessly barren. The gaping
-fissures were filled. The long disused ruts and gutters ran full and
-foaming down to their ultimate destination, the river. That great
-stream refused to acknowledge any immediate change of level from so
-inconsiderable a cause as a rainfall so far from its source. But,
-doubtless, as Charley Banks pointed out, in a week or more it would
-‘come down’ in might and majesty, when the freshets at the head waters
-should have time to gather forces and swell the yellow tide. It was
-well if there was not then a regular flood, but that would do them no
-harm; might swamp out the Freemans, perhaps, but as long as Tottie
-wasn’t drowned, and the old woman, the rest of the family might be
-swept down to Adelaide for all he, Charley, cared. So let it rain till
-all was blue. There was no mistake this time. It was a general rain.
-We should have forty-eight hours of it before it stopped. Every hoof
-of stock was off the frontage now and away back, where there was good
-shelter and a trifle of feed. In a fortnight after this there would be
-good ‘bite’ all over Rainbar run. We should have a little comfort in
-our lives now. What a pull it was, that old Cottonbush had branded up
-those last stores before the rain came.
-
-Thus Mr. Charles Banks, jubilantly prophetic, with the elasticity of
-youth, having thrown off at one effort all the annoyance and privation
-of the famine year, was fully prepared for an epoch of marvels and
-general prosperity.
-
-The day ended as it had commenced. There was not a moment’s cessation
-from the soaking, pouring, saturating, dripping downpour of heaven’s
-precious rain. ‘As the shower upon the mown grass,’ saith the olden
-Scripture of the day of David the King. Doubtless the great City of
-Palaces was erst surrounded by shaven lawns, by irrigated fields and
-gardens. But on the skirts of the far-stretching yellow deserts,
-tenanted then as now by the wild tribes, to whom pasture for their
-camels and asses, and horses and sheep, was as the life-blood of their
-veins, doubtless there were thousands of leagues all barren, baked
-sterility, until the long-desired rain set in, when, as if by magic,
-herbs and waving grains and flowerets fair sprang up, and rejoiced the
-hearts of the tribe, from the silver-bearded sheik to the laughing
-child.
-
-So it would be at Rainbar. Ernest knew this from many a conversation
-which he had had upon the subject with Jack Windsor and Charley
-Banks. In this warm, dry-soiled country, the growth of pasture under
-favourable circumstances is well-nigh incredible. Nature adapts herself
-to the most widely differing conditions of existence with amazing
-fertility of resource. In more temperate zones the partial heat which
-withers the flower and the green herb when cut down, slays the plant
-and destroys germination in the seed for evermore. Here, in the wild
-waste, when the fierce and burning blast revels over scorched brown
-prairies, and the whirlwind and the sand column dance together over
-heated sands, the plant life is well and truly adapted to the strange
-soil, the stranger clime. The tall grasses grow hard and gray, or faint
-yellow, under the daily desiccation which spares no tender growth; but
-they remain nutritive and life-sustaining for an incredible period, if
-but the necessary cloud water can be supplied at long intervals. Then
-the hard-pushed pastoral colonist, when he found that his flocks had
-bared to famine pitch the pastures within reach of the watercourses,
-which were his sole dependence in the earlier days, was compelled to
-resort to the most ancient practice of well-digging, of which he might
-have gained the idea from the familiar records of a hard-set pastoral
-people in the sandy wastes of Judea. Receding to the wide plains and
-waterless forests of the vast region which lay cruelly distant from
-any known stream or fountain, which was in summer regularly abandoned
-by the aboriginal denizens of the land, he sank, at much expense, wells
-of great depth—at first with uncertain result; but, though much of the
-water thus painfully obtained—for from three to five hundred pounds for
-two to three hundred feet sinking was no uncommon expense in a single
-well—was brackish, much salt, still progress was made. The stock was
-enabled in the midst of summer heat or protracted autumn drought to
-feed upon these previously locked-up pastures, upon the saline herbs
-and plants, the nutritious, aromatic shrubs peculiar to this land,
-where no white man had ever before seen stock except in winter.
-
-By degrees it began to be asserted that ‘back country,’ _i.e._ the
-lands remote from all visible means of subsistence for flocks and
-herds, as far as water was concerned, paid the speculative pastoral
-occupier better than the ‘frontage,’ or land in the neighbourhood of
-permanent creeks, and of the few well-known rivers. _There_ roamed
-that unconscionable beast of prey, the all-devouring free selector. He
-could select the choicest bends, the richest flats, the deepest river
-reaches, even where the squatter had fenced or enclosed. For were
-not the waters free to all? He naturally appropriated the best and
-most tempting conjunctions of ‘land and water.’ These were precisely
-those which were most profitable, most necessary, occasionally most
-indispensable to the proprietor of the run.
-
-But it was not so with the back blocks. There capital yet retained much
-of its ancient supremacy. The wielder of that implement or weapon was
-enabled to cause his long-silent wilderness to blossom as the rose, by
-means of dams and wells. He was in a position also to drive off, keep
-out, and withstand the invading pseudo-grazier, with his sham purchases
-and his wrongful grass rights.
-
-Thus, by a wise provision of the Land Act, all improvements of a
-value exceeding forty pounds sterling, when placed by the pastoral
-tenant upon the Crown lands which he was facetiously supposed to rent,
-protect the lands upon which they stand, or which, in the case of a
-well, they underlie; that is to say, a five-hundred-guinea well or a
-hundred-pound dam cannot be free-selected or taken cool possession of
-as a conditional purchase by the land marauder of the period. Some
-people might see a slight flavour of fairness in this provision which
-has not always in other colonies, Victoria notably, been granted by the
-democratic wolf to the conservative lamb. However the Government of
-New South Wales may have erred in other respects, it has in the main
-so far ruled the outnumbered pastoralists with a courtesy, fairness,
-and freedom from small greed such as might be expected from one body of
-gentlemen in responsible dealing with a class of similar social rank.
-
-One successful well or dam, therefore, converted a block of country
-hitherto useless for nine months out of the twelve into a run capable
-of carrying ten thousand sheep all the year round. Of course, any
-portion of the Crown estate the conditional purchaser might ‘take up,’
-or, without notice, occupy. But where was he to procure his water from?
-He had not often five hundred pounds, or if so, did not ‘believe’
-in such solemn disbursement for ‘mere improvements.’ Therefore he
-still haunted, cormorant-like, the rivers and creeks—the ‘permanent
-water’ of the colonist. To the younger sons of ancient houses, scions
-of Howards, Somersets, and of the untitled nobility of Britain, he
-conceded the right to live like hermits in the Thebaid, upon their
-artificially and expensively watered back blocks.
-
-A special peculiarity of the ocean-like plains of inmost Australia is
-the miraculous growth of vegetation after the profuse irrigation which
-invariably succeeds a drought. In the warm dry earth, now converted
-into a bed of red or black mud, saturated to its lowest inch, and rich
-for procreation of every green thing, lies a hoard of seeds of wondrous
-number and variety of species. Broad and green, in a few days, as the
-vivid growth from the aged, still fruitful bosom of mysterious Nile,
-along with the ordinary pasture appear the seed leaves of unknown,
-half-forgotten grasses, reeds, plants, flowers, never noticed except
-in an abnormally wet season. In cycles of ordinary moisture, the true
-degree of saturation not having been reached, they lie death-like year
-after year, until, aroused by Nature’s unerring signal, they arise and
-burst forth into full vitality. In such a time an astonishing variety
-of herbs, plants, and flowers is to be seen mingling with gigantic
-grasses, such as Charley Banks described to Mr. Neuchamp when he
-prophesied, after forty-eight hours of steady rain had fallen, that
-on the Back Lake Plains this year he would be able to tie the grass
-tops together before him, _as he sat on horseback_. Mr. Neuchamp had
-never before discovered his lieutenant in a wilful exaggeration; but on
-this occasion he felt mortified that he should still be supposed a fit
-subject upon which to foist humorous fabrications.
-
-‘I see you don’t believe me,’ said Charley, rather put out in turn at
-not being credited. ‘Let’s call Jack. You ask him the height of the
-tallest grass he ever saw in this part of the country in a real wet
-season. There he goes. Here, Jack, Mr. Neuchamp wants to ask you a
-question.’
-
-‘I wish to know,’ said Ernest gravely, ‘to what height you have ever
-known the grass grow up here in a firstrate season?’
-
-‘Well, I don’t know about measurement,’ said Jack, ‘but I remember at
-Wardree one year we had to muster up all the old screws on the run to
-give the shepherds to ride.’
-
-‘Why was that?’
-
-‘Because they couldn’t _see_ their sheep in the long grass; and out on
-a plain where the grass was over their own heads, it was hard work not
-to lose themselves. Of course it was an out-and-out year; something
-like this is going to be, I expect. Why, I’ve tied the grass over my
-horse’s shoulder in the spring, as _I’ve been riding along_, many a
-time and often.’
-
-Charley Banks smiled.
-
-‘That will do, John,’ said Mr. Neuchamp.
-
-‘I apologise fully,’ said Ernest, as soon as they were alone. ‘I
-promise never to lack that confidence in your statements, my dear
-fellow, which I must say I have hitherto found in every way deserved.
-How are the cattle doing? You have been out all day, and must have been
-soaked through and through.’
-
-‘I didn’t put on anything that water could hurt,’ said Charley, ‘or
-very much in the way of quantity either. Jack and I only wanted to be
-sure of the line the cattle took, so as to get after them to-morrow. We
-could track them as if they had been walking in batter pudding. If they
-got off the run now we should have no horses to fetch them back with,
-and if we left them away till they got strong, they’d be broken in to
-some other man’s run, which would be so much time lost. Luckily they
-all made for the Back Lake, where there’s some sandy ridges and good
-bedding ground. Freeman’s cattle are mixed up with the “circle dots,”
-which is all the better, as they know the run well, and can’t be got
-off it. Lucky they’re branded.‘
-
-‘And how about the old herd?’
-
-‘We didn’t tire our horses going after them, but, by the main run of
-the tracks, the nearest of them will stop at the Outer Lake timber; and
-the head cattle will go slap back to the very outside boundary. We’ve
-no neighbours at the back, so the farther back they go the fresher the
-feed will be. _They’re_ right.’
-
-‘I suppose they will begin to improve in a few months?’
-
-‘Improve?’ echoed Mr. Banks; ‘if this weather is followed up, every
-beast on Rainbar run, down to a three-months-old calf, will be mud fat
-_in three months_, and you may begin to take away the first draft of
-a thousand head of fat cattle that we can send to market—and a rising
-market, too—before next winter.’
-
-Mr. Neuchamp did not shout aloud, nor cast any part of his clothing
-into the air, like Jack Windsor: his way of receiving sudden tidings of
-weal or woe was not demonstrative. But he grasped Charley Banks’s hand,
-and looked into the face of the pleased youngster with a gleam in his
-eye and a look of triumph such as the latter had rarely witnessed there.
-
-‘We have had to wait—“to suffer and be strong,”—Charley, my boy,‘ he
-said, ‘but I think the battle is won now. You shall have your share of
-the spoils.’
-
-When Mr. Neuchamp sallied forth on the second day after the rain, he
-could not but consider himself in a somewhat similar position to one
-of the Noachian family taking an excursion after the flood. True, his
-flood had been of a temporary and wholly beneficial nature, but not the
-less had it entirely altered the expression upon the face of Nature.
-Aqueous effects and results were prominently apparent everywhere. Mud
-and hardened sandy spaces, already flushed with green, had succeeded to
-the pale, dusty, monotoned landscape.
-
-Thus, once more, short as had been the time of change, the eye was
-relieved by the delicate but distinct shade of green which commenced
-to drape the long-sleeping, spellbound frame of the mighty Mother.
-Even in the driest seasons, except on river flats, there are minute
-green spikelets of grass at or just below the surface. Let but one
-shower of rain fall, softly cherishing, and on the morrow it is
-marvellous to perceive what an approach to verdure has been made. Then
-the family of clovers, long dead and buried, but having bequeathed
-myriads of burr-protected, oleaginous seed vessels to the kind keeping
-of the baked and powdered soil, reappear in countless hosts of minute
-leaflets, which grow with incredible rapidity. It is not too much to
-say that in little more than a week after the ‘drought broke up’ at
-Rainbar there was grass several inches high over the entire run. The
-salt bushes commenced to put forth tender and succulent leaves. All
-nature drew one great sigh of relief, every living creature—from the
-small fur-covered rodents and marsupials which pattered along their
-minute but well-beaten paths when the sun was low to the water, from
-the wild mare that galloped in snorting through the midnight, with
-her lean, tireless offspring, to sink her head to the very eyes in
-the river when she reached it, to the thirsty merino flock at the
-well-trough, or the impoverished herd that struggled in hungered and
-athirst to muddy creek or treacherous river bank—every living creature
-did sensibly rejoice and give thanks, audibly or otherwise, for this
-merciful termination to the long agony of the Great Drought.
-
-That morning of the 18th May was a fateful morn to many a struggling
-beginner like Ernest Neuchamp; to many a grizzled veteran of pioneer
-campaigns and long wars of exploration, of peril of body and anguish of
-mind; to many a burdened sire with boys at school to pay for, and the
-girls’ governess to consider, whom the next year’s losses, if _the rain
-held off_, would compel the family to dispense with.
-
-On the night which preceded that day of deliverance Ernest Neuchamp
-went to bed utterly ruined and hopelessly insolvent; he arose a rich
-man, able within six months to pay off double the amount of every debt
-he owed in the world, and possessed beside of a run and stock the
-market value of which exceeded at least four-fold what he had paid for
-it.
-
-This was a change, sudden as an earthquake, swift as a revolution,
-almost awe-striking in its shower of sudden benefits, dazzling in its
-abrupt change from the dim light of poverty, self-denial, and anxiety,
-to an unquestioned position of wealth, reputation, and undreamed-of
-success.
-
-How differently passed the days now! What variety, what hope, what
-renewed pleasure in the superintendence of details ever leading upward
-to profit and satisfaction in a hundred different directions!
-
-Day by day the grass grew and bourgeoned and clothed the flats with a
-meadow-like growth akin to that of his native country. None of this
-amazing crop, however, was used except by the flocks of travelling
-sheep returning strong and well-doing to their long-abandoned homes.
-These passing hosts made so little impression upon the wonderfully
-rapid growth that, as Mr. Banks averred, ‘you could not see where they
-had been.’ The station cattle, and even the small flock of sheep were
-‘well out back,’ and, presumably, were content to leave the ‘frontage’
-as a reserve for summer needs.
-
-Concurrently with this plenty and profusion, in which every head of the
-Rainbar stock revelled, from Mr. Levison’s ‘BI,’ whose skin now shone
-with recovered condition, and who snorted and kicked up his heels as he
-galloped into the yard with the working horses, to the most dejected
-weaner of the Freeman ‘crawlers,’ came strangely exciting news of the
-wondrous discovery of gold in Victoria, and the rapid rise in the price
-of meat.
-
-Fat stock were higher and higher in each succeeding market, until
-the previously unknown and, as the democratic newspapers said,
-unjustifiable and improper price of ten pounds per head for fat cattle
-was reached, with a corresponding advance for sheep. As this astounding
-but by no means dismaying intelligence was conveyed to Mr. Neuchamp in
-the hastily-torn-open newspaper which he was glancing at outside, just
-as Jack Windsor had directed his attention to the gambols of ‘BI,’ who,
-with arched neck and perfect outline, fully justified Mr. Levison’s
-encomium upon his shape, that gentleman’s prophecy as to the enhanced
-value of Rainbar reaching twenty thousand pounds when ‘BI’ kicked up
-his heels seemed likely to be fulfilled to the letter.
-
-Mr. Windsor, in his enthusiasm concerning the condition of the horse
-left in his charge, and that of the stud generally, had for the moment
-omitted to open an unpretending missive delivered by the same post
-which lay in his hand. As Ernest turned to walk towards the house he
-was stopped by the sound of a deep and bitter curse, most infrequent
-now upon the lips of his much altered follower.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII
-
-
-As Mr. Neuchamp turned, he saw an expression so fell and deadly upon
-Jack’s changed face that he instinctively recalled the day when he
-first stood before him with levelled weapon and the same stern brow.
-
-‘What is the matter, John?’ said Ernest kindly. ‘Any had news?’
-
-‘Bad enough,’ said the man gloomily. ‘Never mind me, sir, for a minute
-or two. I’ll come to the house, and tell you all about it directly I’ve
-saddled Ben Bolt.’
-
-Then, repressing with an effort all trace of previous emotion, and
-permitting his features to regain their usual expression, he proceeded
-to catch and lead to the stable that determined animal, whose spirit
-had by no means been permanently softened by adversity, as was
-exhibited by his snorting and trembling as usual when the rein was
-passed over his neck and the bridle put on. Having done this, Mr.
-Windsor carefully saddled up, and shortly afterwards appearing in his
-best suit of clothes, strapped a small roll to the saddle, and rode
-quietly up to the verandah of the cottage.
-
-‘I see that something unusual has happened,’ said Mr. Neuchamp, with
-sympathy in his voice. ‘Tell me all about it.’
-
-‘You’ll see it here,’ said his retainer, handing over a short and
-simple letter from Carrie Walton, in which the impending tragedy of
-a woman’s life-drama was briefly told. In a few sorrowful words the
-girl told how that worked upon by the continuous persuasions and
-reproaches of her parents, she had consented to marry Mr. Homminey on
-the following Friday week. She had not heard from him, John Windsor,
-for a long time—perhaps he had forgotten her. In a few days it would be
-too late, etc. But she was always his sincere friend and well-wisher,
-Caroline Walton.
-
-‘You see, sir,’ began Mr. Windsor, with something of his old confidence
-and cool calculation of difficulties in an emergency which required
-instant bodily exertion, ‘it’s been this way. I’ve been so taken up
-with these new cattle, and the way everything’s been changed lately,
-since the weather broke, that I’ve forgot to write to the poor thing. I
-was expecting to go down with the first lot of fat cattle next month,
-and I laid it out to square the whole matter, and bring her back with
-me, if you’ll give us the hut by the river bank to live in. I’ve been a
-little late—or it looks like it—and they’ve persuaded her into marrying
-that pumpkin-headed, corn-eating Hawkesbury hog, just because he’s got
-a good farm and some money in the bank. But if I can get down before
-the time, if it’s only half an hour, she’ll come to me, and I think I
-can win the heat if Ben Bolt doesn’t crack up.’
-
-‘What time have you to spare between this and the day of the wedding?’
-inquired Ernest.
-
-‘It’s to be on Friday week,’ said Jack.
-
-‘You can never be there in time—it is impossible!’ cried Ernest in a
-tone of voice which showed his sympathy with his faithful servant. ‘I
-pity you sincerely, John!’
-
-‘Pity be hanged, sir. You’ll excuse my way of talking. I’m a little off
-my head, I know; what I mean to say is, I ain’t one of those chaps that
-can grub upon pity, and the likes of it. But I _can_ do it, if the old
-horse holds out, and luckily Joe’s been riding him regular since the
-feed came, and he’s fit to race a mile, or travel a hundred, any day.’
-
-‘Why, it is a hundred and eighty miles to the mail-coach station, and
-unless you get there by to-morrow night, you can’t get down for another
-week.’
-
-‘I _shall_ get there,’ replied Jack slowly and with settled
-determination. ‘Ben can do a hundred miles a day, for two days at a
-pinch, and I have a good bit of the second night thrown in. The mail
-don’t start until midnight. If we’re not there, I’ll turn shepherd
-again, and sell Ben to a thrashing machine; we won’t have any call
-to be thought horse or man again. I shall get to Mindai some time
-to-night—that’s eighty miles—and save the old horse all I can; then
-start about three in the morning, and polish off the hundred miles, if
-he’s the horse I take him to be. He’ll have easy times after, if he
-does it, for I’ll never sell him. Good-bye, sir.’
-
-‘Good-bye, John; I wish you good fortune, as I really believe my young
-friend Carry’s happiness is at stake. Here are some notes to take with
-you—money is always handy in elopements, I am informed.’
-
-‘You have my real thanks, sir,’ said Jack, pocketing the symbols of
-power; ‘I’ve been a good servant to you, sir, though I say it. I
-shan’t be any the worse if I’ve a good wife to keep me straight—that is
-if I get her.’
-
-Here Mr. Windsor gave a short groan, followed by an equally brief
-imprecation, as he pictured the shining-faced giant, in a wondrous suit
-of colonial tweed, leading Carry away captive to his Flemish farm,
-evermore to languish, or grow unromantically plump, in a wilderness of
-maize-field varied by mountains of pumpkins.
-
-Ernest watched him as he mounted Ben Bolt, whose ears lay back, whose
-white-cornered eyes stared, whose uneasy tail waved in the old feline
-fashion, sufficient to scare any stranger about to mount. He saw him
-take the long trail across the plain at a bounding canter, which was
-not changed until horse and rider travelled out of the small Rainbar
-world of vision, and were lost amid the mysteries of the far sky-line.
-Much he marvelled at this Australian edition of ‘Young Lochinvar,’ only
-convinced that if that enterprising gallant had been riding Ben Bolt,
-when
-
- On to his croupe the fair ladye he swung,
-
-the layers of the odds might have confidently wagered on a very
-different ending to the ballad. He did not anticipate that the reckless
-bushman would attempt to ‘cut out’ his sweetheart from the assembled
-company of friends and kinsfolk. Yet he could not clearly see how he
-proposed, so close was the margin left, to possess himself of the fair
-Carry. But that, if Ben Bolt did not break down, Jack Windsor would,
-in some shape or form, effect his purpose, and defeat the intended
-disposal of the Maid of the Inn, he was as certain as if he had
-witnessed their arrival at Rainbar.
-
-It is not placed beyond the reach of doubt whether or not this
-matrimonial adventure in any way led Mr. Neuchamp to considerations
-involving similar possibilities. It may, however, be looked upon as an
-authenticated legend that although several letters of a congratulatory
-nature had passed between Paul Frankston and Mr. Neuchamp, ‘since the
-weather broke,’ the latter thought it necessary to write once more and
-acquaint him with the fact that early next month he should commence to
-send off fat cattle, and that he would come down himself in charge of
-the first drove.
-
-In the austere boreal regions of the Old World all nature, dormant
-or pulsating, dumb or informed with speech, waits and hopes, prays
-and fears, until the unseen relaxation of the grasp of the winter
-god. Then the ice-fetters break, the river becomes once more a joyous
-highway, echoing with boat and song, and gay with ensigns. Once more
-the unlocked earth receives the plough; once more the leaf buds, the
-flower all blushing steals forth in woodland and meadow; once more
-the carol of bird, the whistle of the ploughman, the song of sturdy
-raftsmen, proclaim that the war of Nature with man is ended. So beneath
-the Southern Cross the unkind strife which Nature ever and anon wages
-with her children is accented not by wintry blast and iron frost-chain,
-but by burning heat and the long-protracted water famine. The windows
-of heaven are locked fast. The thirsty earth looks anguished and
-sorrow-stricken, daily, hourly, witnessing the torture, the death of
-her perishing children.
-
-Then, wafted by unseen, unheard messengers, as in the frozen North, the
-fiat goes forth in the burning South. The soft touch of the Daughter of
-the Mist is felt upon plant and soil, pool and streamlet. They listen
-to the sound of softly-falling tear-drops from the sky, and, lo! they
-arise, rejoicing, to regain life and vigour, as the sick from the
-physician, as the babe from the mother’s tendance.
-
-Once more was there joy in the broad Australian steppes and pastures,
-from the apple orchards of the south to the boundless ocean-plains of
-the far north-west, where the saltbush grows, and the myall and the
-mulgah, where the willowy coubah weeps over the dying streamlet, where
-the wild horse snorts at dawn on the lonely sandhill, where the emu
-stalks stately through the golden clear moonlight.
-
-Now had arisen in good sooth for Ernest Neuchamp a day of prosperity
-and triumph. By every post came news of that uprising of prices
-which Mr. Levison had foretold, in stock and stations, in horses and
-in cattle, in land and in houses, in corn and in labour. This last
-consideration, though serious enough to the owners of sheep, in the
-comparatively unenlightened days which preceded the grand economy of
-fencing runs, was not of much weight with Ernest. His adherents were
-tried and trusty, and neither Charley Banks nor Jack Windsor would
-have abandoned him for all the gold in Ballarat and all the silver in
-Nevada. Piambook and Boinmaroo, incurious and taking no thought for the
-morrow, with the characteristic childishness of their race, dreamed
-of no adequate motive which should sever them from the light work and
-regularly-dispensed tobacco of Misser Noochum. With his own assistance
-they were amply sufficient for all the work of the establishment,
-now that the ‘circle dot’ cattle, thoroughly broken to the run, had
-taken up regular beats, and divided themselves by consent into mobs or
-subdivisions, each with its own leader.
-
-Many a pleasant ride had Ernest now that all things ‘had suffered,’
-not ‘a sea-change,’ but none the less an astounding metamorphosis, into
-‘something rich and strange.’
-
-Daily he made long-disused excursions into the mysterious, half-unknown
-land of ‘the Back,’ only to find, after each fresh day’s exploring,
-richer pasture, fuller watercourses, stronger, more frolicsome cattle.
-These last had grown and thriven on the over-abundant pasture, ‘out
-of knowledge,’ as Charley Banks averred. Again were the old triumphs
-and glories of a cattle-station re-enacted. Again he saw the heavy
-rolling droves of bullocks come panting and teeming into camp. Again he
-witnessed the reckless speed and practised wheel of the trained stock
-horses. All things, indeed, were changed.
-
-Charley Banks was never tired of sounding the praises of the glorious
-season, and of the splendid fattening qualities of Rainbar, with its
-extraordinary variety of plant-wealth, herbs, grasses, saltbushes,
-clovers, every green thing, from wild carrots to crowsfoot, which the
-heart of man, devoted to the welfare of his herd, could desire.
-
-‘I never saw anything like those “circle dot” cattle for laying it on,‘
-he would say. ‘They’re as big again as they were. And those crawlers of
-Freemans’—they’ll pay out and out. We’ve branded as many calves from
-’em as will come to half the purchase money, at present prices. It will
-soon be time to move the fat cattle; in another month or two Rainbar
-will be full of ’em.’
-
-The only persons to whom the rain had not brought joy and gladness were
-Freeman Brothers. These worthy yeomen began to consider that after
-all this hard work, as they expressed it, they had been shamefully
-outwitted and deceived. The travel-worn cattle-dealer, who had driven
-so hard a bargain with them, had turned out to be the great Abstinens
-Levison, no less. Their stock had been handed over to Mr. Neuchamp,
-with whom, doubtless, he had been in league. Now they were growing and
-fattening fast, prices rising faster, and not a shilling for _them_,
-out of it all. Then they had to wait idle on their land till November,
-or less lose the cash agreed on.
-
-‘Then to hand everything over—most likely for the benefit of a young
-fellow who knew nothing about the country—a —— blessed “new chum”—hang
-him. The country was getting too full of the likes of him. It was
-enough to make a man turn digger.‘
-
-Abraham Freeman and his wife were the only contented individuals of
-the once peaceful co-operative community. They would have secured
-sufficient capital upon the payment of the coming instalments to
-purchase a well-improved farm in their old neighbourhood, to which they
-proposed immediately to return, and there spend the remainder of an
-unambitious existence.
-
-‘They had seen quite enough of this far-out life,’ they said.
-‘Free-selecting here might be very well for some people; it didn’t suit
-them. They liked a quiet place in a cool climate, where the crops grew,
-and the cows gave them milk all the year round—not a feast or a famine.
-If they had the chance, please God, they would know _next time_ when
-they were well off.’
-
-One afternoon Charley Banks came tearing in, displaying in triumph
-a provincial journal, the _Parramatta Postboy_, directed to him
-in unknown handwriting. Pointing to a column, headed ‘Elopement
-extraordinary,’ he commenced with great difficulty, owing to the
-frequency of his ejaculations and bursts of laughter, to read aloud to
-Mr. Neuchamp the following extract, from which it may be gathered that
-Mr. Windsor ‘was on time,’ in spite of all apparent obstacles:
-
- It is seldom that we have to chronicle so dramatic an incident as
- that which has just occurred in our midst, and which was fraught with
- deep interest to one of our most respected residents of old standing
- in the neighbourhood. We refer to the sudden and wholly unexpected
- matrimonial arrangement made by Miss C—y W—n, the daughter of mine
- host of the old-established well-known family hotel, the ‘Cheshire
- Cheese.’ It would appear that Mr. Henry Homminey, the successful
- Hawkesbury agriculturist, was about to lead the blushing fair one,
- with the full consent of the family, to the hymeneal altar, on Friday
- last. ‘All went merry as a marriage bell,’ till on Thursday evening
- Mr. John Windsor, cattle manager at Rainbar for Ernest Neuchamp, Esq.,
- appeared at the ‘Cheshire Cheese,’ and joined the family party. He had
- been formerly acquainted with the bride-elect, but stated that he had
- merely come to offer his congratulations, and pass a pleasant hour.
- He was warmly welcomed, and the evening passed off successfully. At
- the appointed hour next morning the happy bridegroom appeared with his
- friends, who had mustered strongly for the occasion, but, to their
- dismay and disappointment, they were informed by Mr. W—n that the
- bride’s chamber was empty, and that she had not attended the family
- matutinal repast. Mr. Homminey’s feelings may be imagined but cannot
- be described. He at once started in pursuit of the fugitives, but
- after riding a few miles at a furious pace, his horse showed signs of
- distress, and he was persuaded by his personal friends to wend his
- steps in the direction of Richmond. Much sympathy is felt for his loss
- and disappointment. But, since the days of earliest classic records,
- the man of solid worth has occasionally been eclipsed, in the eyes of
- the fair, by the possessor of the more ornamental qualities with which
- Mr. Windsor is credited.
-
-‘Well done, Jack!’ shouted Mr. Banks, as he finished the concluding
-editorial reflection; ‘and well done, Ben Bolt! He must have polished
-off that hundred and eighty miles, or else Jack would never have been
-up to time. It’s a good deal to depend on a horse’s legs. Well, Carry
-Walton’s a stunning girl, and it will be the making of Jack. He’ll go
-as straight as a die now.’
-
-‘I must say I feel much gratified also,’ assented Ernest. ‘I should
-have been afraid of some of the old reckless spirit prevailing over
-him, if he had lost our friend Carry. How I feel assured of his future
-prosperity. He is a fine, manly, intelligent fellow, and wants nothing
-but a sufficient object in life to make him put out his best energies.’
-
-‘Jack’s as smart an all-round man as ever stepped,’ said Mr. Banks,
-‘and with a real good headpiece too, though there’s not much
-book-learning in it. He’d fight for you to the last drop of his blood,
-too. I know that.’
-
-‘It is well to have a faithful retainer at times,’ said Mr. Neuchamp
-thoughtfully. ‘It carries a mutual benefit, often lost sight of in
-these days of selfish realism.
-
-‘How shall we manage with the cattle without him?’ queried Mr. Banks.
-
-‘I must take the two black boys,’ said Mr. Neuchamp, ‘and you must
-do the best you can on the run by yourself; for business renders it
-absolutely necessary that I should visit Sydney.’
-
-‘I daresay I’ll manage, somehow,’ said Mr. Banks. ‘I must get Tottie
-Freeman to help me, if I’m hard pushed. She’s the smartest hand with
-cattle of the lot.’
-
-‘I do not think that arrangement would quite answer,’ quoth Mr.
-Neuchamp gravely.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Within a fortnight after this conversation Mr. Neuchamp and his sable
-retainers might have been observed making the usual stages with a
-most satisfactory drove of fat cattle in front of them. They were
-not, perhaps, equal to the first lot he recollected despatching from
-Rainbar; but ‘cattle were cattle’ now, in the language of the butchers.
-There were plenty more coming on, and it was not thought advisable to
-wait longer for the ultimate ‘topping up’ of the beeves. They were good
-enough. The demand was prodigious; and purchasers did not make half the
-critical objections that were used in the old days, when cattle were
-not half the price.
-
-In the appointed time the important draft reached Sydney, and before
-Mr. Neuchamp could look round, it seemed to him, they were snapped up
-at eight-pounds-ten a head, no allusions made to ‘rough cattle,’ or
-‘very plain on the back,’ ‘old cows,‘ ‘light weights,’ or any of the
-usual strong depreciations customary on former occasions. No; a new era
-seemed to have set in. All was right as long as the count was accurate.
-So satisfactory was the settling that Mr. Neuchamp at once wrote to
-Charley Banks to muster and send down another draft, even if he _had_
-to put Tottie Freeman in charge of Rainbar while he was on the road.
-
-Then came the immediate rush to the office of Frankston and Co., and a
-meeting with old Paul, that made up for much of enforced privation and
-protracted self-denial.
-
-‘My dear boy! most glad to see you, at last; thought that we should
-never see your face again. Knew you couldn’t come before the rain did.
-Can’t leave the ship until tide serves and the wind’s fair. But _now_
-the voyage is over, first mate’s in charge of the ship, and the skipper
-can put on his long-shore toggery and cruise for a spell. Of course
-you’re on your way out to dine with us?’
-
-Ernest mentioned that, presuming upon old acquaintance, such had been
-his intention.
-
-‘Antonia will be ever so glad to see you; but she must tell you all the
-news herself. You will find your cousin at Morahmee. She and Antonia
-are wonderful friends—that is——’
-
-‘That is,’ said Ernest, completing Paul’s sentence, over which the
-worthy merchant appeared to hesitate somewhat—‘that is, as close as two
-people very widely dissimilar in taste and temperament can ever be.’
-
-‘Perhaps there _may_ be a slightly different way of looking at things,
-and so on,’ said his old friend cautiously; ‘but all crafts are not
-built out of the same sort of timber, or on the same lines. Some are
-oak, some of American pine, some of teak, some of white gum; some with
-a smart shear, some with a good allowance of beam; and they can’t be
-altered over much. As the keel’s laid down, so the boat’s bound to
-float.’
-
-‘H—m!’ replied Ernest thoughtfully, ‘that involves a large
-question—several large questions, in fact. Good-bye for the present.’
-
-How many memories crowded upon the brain of Ernest Neuchamp as he
-once more trod the massive sandstone flags underneath the portico of
-the verandah at Morahmee! The freshly raked gravel walks, the boscage
-of glowing green which formed the living walls of the renovated
-shrubberies, the well-remembered murmur of the low-toned restless
-surge, the odour of the unchanged deep, all these sharply contrasted
-sights and sounds after his weary sojourn in the desert composed for
-him a page of Boccaccio, framed a panel of Watteau-painting. He was a
-knight in an enchanted Armida garden. And as Antonia, freshly attired
-in evening dress, radiant with unmistakable welcome, appeared to greet
-him on the threshold of the open door, he felt as if the knight who
-had done his devoir was about to receive the traditional guerdon, so
-necessary to the perfect equilibrium of the world of chivalry and
-romance.
-
-‘Welcome from Palestine!’ she said, unconsciously following out his
-train of thought, as she ran forward and clasped him by the hand. ‘I
-don’t know whether one can call any part of the bush the Holy Land; but
-you have been away quite long enough to have gone there. Had you vowed
-a vow never to come back till rain fell? People may stay away too long
-sometimes.’ Here she gazed at Ernest with a long, searching, humbled
-gaze, which suddenly brightened as when the summer cloud catches the
-partially obscured sun-ray. ‘But here is Augusta, coming to ask you if
-Rainbar won’t be swallowed up in a second deluge now that the drought
-has broken up, as she is credibly informed is always the case in
-Australia!’ A mischievous twinkle in her mirthful eye informed Ernest
-that his cousin’s peculiarities had been accurately measured by the
-prepossessing reviewer before him.
-
-As Miss Neuchamp, also attired in full evening costume, approached,
-while not far behind, with the air of a confirmed _habitué_, sauntered
-Mr. Jermyn Croker, Ernest thought he had never seen that young lady
-look to greater advantage. Something had evidently occurred with
-power to revive an attention to the details of dress which had been
-suffered of late to lie in abeyance. There was also a novel expression
-of not unbecoming doubt upon her resolute features which Ernest had
-never observed before. It soon appeared, however, that her essential
-characteristics were unchanged.
-
-‘I am truly glad to see you, my dear Ernest,’ she said, offering him
-her cheek with proper cousinly coolness. ‘I hear that a beneficial
-change has taken place in your shocking climate. Mr. Croker says that
-prices have risen to their outside limit, and cannot possibly last. Of
-course you will sell out at once and go home?’
-
-‘Of course I shall do no such thing,’ returned Ernest, with such
-unusual animation that Antonia could not help smiling. ‘I should
-consider it most ungrateful, as well as impolitic, to quit the land
-which has already done much for me, and may possibly do more.’
-
-‘Well done, Ernest, my boy!’ said Mr. Frankston, who had just joined
-the party. ‘Never quit the ship that has weathered the storm with you
-while a plank is left in her. Now that we have our country filled with
-the sweepings of every port under the sun, we want the captain and
-first officer to act like men, and show the stuff they’re made of.’
-
-‘I take quite a different view of my duty to Jermyn Croker, about whom
-I have felt much anxiety of late,’ drawled out that gentleman. ‘I see
-before me a chance of selling out at an absurdly high price, and taking
-my passage by next mail for one of the few countries that is worth
-living in. A madman might neglect such an opportunity for the sake of a
-few thousand roughs scrambling for gold at California, or Ballarat, but
-not Jermyn Croker, if I know him.’
-
-‘And suppose stock rise higher still?’ queried Mr. Frankston, smiling
-at the magnificent dogmatism of his unsentimental friend.
-
-‘My dear Frankston, how a man of your age and experience can so blind
-himself to the real state of affairs is a marvel to me. Cattle _can’t_
-rise. Five pounds all round for young and old on the station is a price
-never before reached in Australia. You _must_ see the crash that is
-coming. Really, now, without humbug, don’t you know that there will be
-a change before Christmas?’
-
-‘So there will,’ answered Paul, ‘but it will be for the better. We have
-not half the stock in the country to feed the great multitude that are,
-even now, on the sea. But if you _will_ sell, you might give me the
-offer.’
-
-‘Sold out of every hoof to Parklands this morning!’ answered Mr.
-Croker, looking round with a triumphant air. ‘I was standing on the
-club steps before breakfast when he came in from the northern steamer,
-and made me an offer before he got out of his hansom.’
-
-‘And you took it?’
-
-‘Took it? of course. We went into the library, where he wrote me out a
-cheque then and there for twenty thousand pounds, and I gave him the
-delivery note. Booroo-booroo and Chatsworth, with four thousand head
-of cattle, taken, without muster, by the book, everything given in.
-Something like a sale, wasn’t it?’
-
-‘First-rate for some one—I don’t say who. But I’ll take three to one
-that Parklands knocks five thousand pounds profit out of it before the
-year is over.’
-
-‘I take you, provided he doesn’t sell to Neuchamp,’ answered Croker. ‘I
-must say I think one bargain with him ought to satisfy any man, except
-Selmore.’
-
-‘I’ll bet you a level hundred,’ said Paul, a little quickly, ‘that in
-five years Ernest here will be able to buy you up—horse, foot, and
-dragoons—without feeling the amount.’
-
-‘Particularly if he has the invaluable aid and counsel of Paul
-Frankston,’ sneered Mr. Jermyn Croker. However, I shan’t be here to
-see, as I never intend to cross the Nepean again, or to see Sydney
-Heads except in an engraving.‘
-
-‘We’ll all go and see you off,’ said Antonia, who with Ernest suddenly
-appeared as if they had not been listening to the conversation, which
-indeed they had not, but had taken a quiet walk down ‘an alley Titanic’
-with glorious araucarias. ‘But whoever goes or stays, we must have
-dinner. I really _do_ believe that it’s past seven o’clock.’
-
-At this terrible announcement Paul’s ever robust punctuality asserted
-itself with a rebound. Seizing upon the fair Augusta he hurried her to
-the dining-room, where all conversation bordering upon business was
-banished for the present.
-
-After the ladies had retired, the fascinating topic of the changed
-social aspect of the country since the gold crop had alternated with
-those of wheat, maize, wool, and tallow, which formerly absorbed so
-large a share of interest, again came uppermost. Upon this point Mr.
-Croker was grandly didactic.
-
-‘Mark my words, Frankston,’ said he, throwing himself back in his
-chair, ‘in two years you will see this country a perfect hell upon
-earth! What’s to hinder it? Even now there’s hardly a shepherd to be
-got; people are talking of turning their sheep loose—that, of course,
-means ruin to wool-growing. Cattle will soon overtake the temporary
-demand; all the new buyers—nothing personal intended, Neuchamp—will
-be ruined. Tallow will fall directly the Russians have settled their
-difficulty. I know this from private sources. Flour will be a hundred
-pounds a ton again; of course there will be no ploughing for want of
-hands. These digger fellows will take to cutting their own throats
-first, and when in good practice those of the propertied classes for a
-change; and lastly, you’ll have universal suffrage. The scum will be
-uppermost, and you’ll end suitably with an unparalleled Jacquerie.’
-
-Mr. Croker, having completed this pleasing patriotic sketch, filled his
-glass and looked round with the air of a man who had just demonstrated
-to inquiring youth that two and two make four.
-
-‘Australia was always a beastly hole,’ he continued; ‘but really, I
-think, when—even before—it comes to what I have outlined, it will cease
-to be fit for a gentleman to live in.’
-
-‘You must pardon me for expressing a directly contrary opinion,’
-replied Ernest, who had been gradually girding himself up to answer
-Mr. Croker according to his humour. ‘I hold that this is precisely the
-time, and these are the exact circumstances, which render it a point of
-honour for every gentleman who has past or present interest in the land
-to live in it, to stand by his colours and lead his regiment in the
-battle which is so imminent. Now is the time for those who have felt
-or asserted an interest in this glorious last-discovered Eldorado, far
-down in the list of English provinces which have a way of changing into
-nations, to uphold with all the manhood that is in them her righteous
-laws, her goodly customs, her pure yet untrammelled liberty. In my
-mind, he who takes advantage of the rise in prices to quit Australia
-for ever at this hour of her social need, deserts his duty, abandons
-his post, and confesses himself to be less a true colonist than a
-sordid huckster!’
-
-As Mr. Neuchamp delivered himself of this perhaps slightly coloured
-estimate of the duty of a pastoral tenant, unheeding of the implied
-rebuke to the last speaker, he raised his head and confronted the
-company with the air of the captain of a sinking ship who has vowed to
-stand by her while a plank floats.
-
-Jermyn Croker coloured, but did not immediately reply, while the host
-took occasion to interfere, as became his position of mediator between
-over-hasty disputants.
-
-‘I think you are both a little beyond the mark,’ he said; ‘if you will
-allow me, who have lived here since Sydney was a small seaside village,
-to give you my ideas. No doubt, as Croker says, we shall have a queer
-crew, with every kind of lubber and every known sort of blackguard to
-deal with. But what of that? Discipline has always been kept up in old
-New South Wales,—in times, too, when matters looked black enough. The
-same men, or their sons, are here now who showed themselves equal to
-the occasion before. We have Old England at our backs; and though she
-doesn’t bother us with much advice or short leading strings, she has a
-ship or two and a regiment left which are at the service of any of her
-colonies when need is.’
-
-‘Every country where gold has been discovered up to this time has
-gradually degenerated and come to grief,’ asserted Croker, recovering
-from his dissatisfied silence; ‘not that much degeneration is possible
-here.’
-
-‘You are thinking of the Spaniards, the Mexicans, and so on,’ said
-Paul. ‘I’ve been among them, and know all about their ways. They are
-not so much worse than other people. But even so: English people have
-always managed to govern themselves under all circumstances, and will
-again, I venture to bet.’
-
-‘I came out here thinking Australia a good place to make money. I
-always knew England was a good place to spend it in,’ averred Mr.
-Croker. ‘I’m a man of few ideas, I confess. But I have stuck to these
-few, and I think I see my way.’
-
-‘I suppose we all do,’ said Mr. Frankston; ‘but some have more luck or
-better eyesight than others. Our friend Levison wouldn’t make a bad man
-at the “look-out” in dirty weather, eh, Ernest? What do you think of
-him, Croker?‘
-
-‘Think? why, that he’s an immensely overrated man; he has made a few
-hits by straightforward blundering and kept what he has got. I give him
-credit for that. But who’s to know whether all this station property
-that stands in his name is _really_ his? The banks may have the lion’s
-share for all anybody knows.’
-
-‘Highly probable,’ assented Ernest, with fierce sarcasm; ‘and Levison’s
-steady prophecy that the season was going to break just before it did
-was an accidental guess! His purchasing stock, stations, and town
-property for the rise, which no one else believed in, was a chance hit!
-His uniformly good sales when every one else was holding! His large
-purchases when all the world was selling! His unostentatious gifts,
-at the rate of two to a thousand pounds, to church buildings were
-unredeemed parsimony! His advice to me to buy and his actual purchases
-of stock for my benefit, every pound invested in which has furnished
-a profit of ten, were selfish mistakes! You must excuse me, Croker,
-for saying that I think you have reared a larger crop of prejudices in
-Australia than any man I have seen here.’
-
-‘It’s a fine climate!’ quoth Paul; ‘everything grows and develops;
-even experience, like Madeira in the voyage round the Cape, ripens
-twice as fast here as anywhere else. A whitewasher, Croker? I really
-believe this is a bottle of the Manzanares you prefer, and we’ll join
-the ladies, which means adjourn to the verandah.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-If happiness, at any period or season, did dwell upon the earth, she
-must have sojourned, about the month of September 185—, so near to
-the New Holland Club, so near to the person of Ernest Neuchamp, as
-to have been occasionally visible to the naked eye. Had a company
-of _savans_ been told off to view the goddess, as in the far less
-important matter of the transit of Venus, success had been certain. But
-society never recognises its real wonders—its absolute and imperious
-miracles. Therefore for a little space that earthly maid glorified
-the dwelling and precincts of the untrammelled, rejoicing, successful
-proprietor. She sat by Mr. Neuchamp at the daintily prepared refections
-of the club, and gave an added flavour to his moderate but intense
-enjoyment of viand and vintage, so wondrous in variety, so miraculous
-of aroma, after his long endurance of the unpalatable monotony of the
-Rainbar cuisine. She whispered in the mystic tones of the many-voiced
-sea-breezes, as they murmured around his steps when, with Antonia at
-his side, he roamed through the mimic woods of Morahmee, or gazed with
-never-ending contemplative joy on the pale moon’s silver tracery o’er
-wave and strand. She rose with him in the joyous morn, telling him the
-ever-welcome tale that all cause for anxiety had fled, that a new ukase
-had gone forth, bringing unmixed joy to every man of his order, always
-excepting the sheepholders and Jermyn Croker. She sat behind him, on
-Osmund, displacing ‘the sad companion ghastly pale’ even ‘atra Cura,’
-who had been the occupant of a croup seat on that gallant steed for
-many a day. Once more the rattle of flying hoofs was heard upon the
-sandy downs and red hill-roads which, near Bondi’s ceaseless surge,
-overlook the city’s mingled mass, the ocean’s fresh eternal glory. In
-this season of joy and pride—the natural and becoming pride of him who
-has suffered and struggled, waited and warred for no mean reward, which
-at length he has been permitted to grasp—the bright goddess smiled on
-every act, thought, and hope of Ernest Neuchamp. In that fair brief
-bygone day of unalloyed triumph, of unclouded hope, it is a truth most
-absolute and indisputable that she stood by his side in serene and
-awful beauty; but, like her austere sister of old who cried aloud in
-the streets to a heedless generation, ‘no man regarded her.’
-
-Through all this halcyon time no definite pledge or vow had passed
-between him and the woman whom he had slowly, but with all the force
-of an inflexibly tenacious nature, come to consider as the embodied
-essence of that mysterious complement to man’s nature, at once the
-vital necessity, the crowning glory, of this mortal state, the vision
-of female perfection! Proud, fastidious, a searcher after ideals,
-prone to postpone the irrevocable decision by which man’s fate here
-below is for ever sealed, he was now face to face with Destiny. Even
-now he felt so utterly fascinated, so supremely content, with the
-graduated intimacies of which the daily process which draws two human
-hearts together into indescribable union is composed, so charmed with
-the undreamed-of treasures of mind and heart which each fresh casket
-unlocked displayed to his gaze, that he felt no desire to change the
-mode of bliss. Why hurry to an end this sojourn in the land of Faerye,
-while the bridle-reins of the Queen of Elf-land and her troop were
-ringing still through the haunted woods, while feast and tournament
-still went merrily on, while stream and emerald turf and bosky glade
-were still touched with the glory of successful love, while the glamour
-still held sea and sky and far-enpurpled mounts, upon which, let but
-once the knell of disenchantment sound, no mortal may again gaze _while
-life endures_?
-
-During all this time of joy and consolation Mr. Neuchamp had regular
-advices from his lieutenant, Charley Banks. That young gentleman
-complained piteously of his lonely state and solitary lodging in
-the wilderness, for which nothing compensated, it would appear, but
-the increasing beauty of the season (pastorally considered) and an
-occasional gossip with Tottie Freeman.
-
-Now that the rain had found out the way to saltbush land, there seemed
-to be but little variety of weather. It rained every other day,
-sometimes for nearly a week, incredible to relate, without stopping.
-The creeks were full, the flats were soaked, spongy, and knee-deep in
-clover. The river was high, had come down ‘a banker,’ and any further
-rainfall at the head waters, or even the melting of the snow, might
-bring down a flood such as the dwellers in those parts had not seen for
-many a day. The Freemans were uncomfortable enough. They had found that
-their huts and fencing had been placed on land too low for comfort in
-a wet season, and even for safety if the threatened floods rose higher
-than usual.
-
-In November, the third spring month of the Australians, another
-despatch of greater weight and importance reached Mr. Neuchamp, who
-apparently was not hasting to quit the land of French cooks and Italian
-singers, of pleasant day saunterings, of cheerful lunch parties, and
-moonlight rambles by the murmuring sea. Mr. Banks had the distinguished
-honour of entertaining Mr. Levison, but lately returned from Melbourne,
-and engaged in starting two or three thousand head of fat cattle for
-that market. He had come round by Rainbar, he said, on purpose to take
-delivery of the Freemans‘land, but he, Charley Banks, thought it more
-likely that he wanted to see old ‘BI’ (who looked splendid, with a
-crest like a lion), and whom he rode away in triumph. He handed over
-the deeds of all the Freemans‘conditional purchases to him to give to
-Mr. Neuchamp, saying that he hoped he wouldn’t do that sort of thing
-again, as he might not come out of it right another time.
-
-Mr. Banks further related that he had volunteered as his deliberate
-opinion, from what he had noticed about the Victorian gold mines,
-that the yield of gold would last many years, during which time stock
-would continue to be high in price, although there might be temporary
-depressions. As a consequence of which state of things, the sooner
-every one bought all the store stock they could lay hands on the
-better. ‘“My word,” he said, “it was a lucky drop-in—not for them
-though—that I picked you up those Freeman cattle, not to speak of the
-‘circle dots.’ There will be no more eight-and-sixpenny store cattle,
-or fifteen-bob ones either—two pounds for cows, and fifty shillings
-and three pounds for good steers and bullocks will be more like it,
-and they will pay at that price too. But what I want you to tell Mr.
-Neuchamp is this. I’d write to him, but I’m in a hurry off, and you can
-do it quite as well, if you’re careful and attend to what I tell you.
-
-‘“I’ve just had information that the Sydney people who have got the
-agency of the Mildool run, that joins you, are going to sell. They’ve
-got it into their wise heads that cattle have seen their top, because
-they’re worth five pounds all round, that is, with stations; and
-because they’re old-fashioned Sydney-siders that never heard of such a
-price since the days when they used to bring buffaloes from India.
-
-‘“They believe that Victoria is choke-full of Yankees and diggers,
-stowaways and emigrants, and that the whole thing will ‘bust up’
-directly, and let down prices everywhere to what they were before the
-gold.
-
-‘“People that travel, and keep their eyes open, know what foolishness
-all this sort of thing is. A regular Sydney man thinks all Victorians
-are blowers and speculators. A regular Victorian thinks all Sydney
-men are old-fashioned, slow prigs who wouldn’t spend a guinea to save
-five pounds. The truth is pretty near the middle. Don’t you stick at
-home all your life, like a mallee scrubber, that has only one dart, on
-the plain and back to his scrub, and then you won’t run away with the
-notion that because a man is born on one side of a river and not on the
-other, he ain’t as clever, or as sensible, or as good a hand at making
-money or saving it, as you are. It’s only country-bred, country-reared
-folks that think that way.
-
-‘“What I want you to tell the boss is this. He’d better set old Paul
-Frankston to get a quiet offer of this Mildool with four thousand
-odd head—it will carry about seven or eight—and if they’ll take
-four-fifteen or five pound all round, ram ’em with it at once. Tell
-Neuchamp he can send that native chap to manage it, and it will be the
-best day’s work he’s done for some time. Tell him Ab. Levison said
-so. Good-bye. You take a run down to Melbourne next chance you get
-of a holiday, and don’t stay out here till you get the Darling rot.
-Good-bye.”
-
-‘And so he cantered off on old “BI.” Levison don’t go in for much talk
-in a general way, but when he once begins he don’t leave off so easy.
-I thought he was going to talk all night, and so lose a day. But catch
-him at that. I think I’ve told you every word he said, for I went and
-wrote it down as soon as he went away.‘
-
-So far Mr. Banks. Upon the receipt of his artless missive, Ernest went
-at once to Paul Frankston, and communicated to him the substance of the
-message of Mr. Levison.
-
-‘This is putting on the pot, my dear boy,’ said he. ‘If anything
-happens to shake stock, Rainbar and Mildool will tumble down like a
-house of cards. But now the wind is dead fair, and we may venture on
-studding-sails—crowd on below and aloft. I back Levison’s opinion that
-it is the right time to buy before Sticker and Pugsley’s notion that it
-is the right time to sell.’
-
-‘What sort of terms do you think they will require?’ asked Ernest, who
-was fired with the idea of consolidating into one magnificent property
-the two crack cattle runs of Rainbar and Mildool, the latter a grandly
-watered, splendidly grassed station, but wofully mismanaged according
-to old custom.
-
-‘Half cash at least, and not very long dated bills either,’ said Paul,
-‘but we can manage the cash on your security, as your name now stands
-high in the money market. As to the bills, tell them that I will
-endorse them. They won’t make any objection then.’
-
-‘How much heavier is the load of my obligations to you to become?’
-asked Ernest. ‘I feel as if I should never live to free myself from
-the debt I owe you already.’
-
-‘Don’t trouble yourself, my dear boy,’ said the liberal endorser. ‘If
-things go well, nothing’s easier for you than to clear off every stiver
-of debt. See how you have been able to pay off Levison, principal
-and interest, out of that last lot of cattle, without a shade of
-difficulty. If the rise takes place which Levison and I and some more
-of us anticipate, why you, I, and he stand to win something very
-respectable. You can then give us all a cheque for the amount advanced,
-and the whole thing is over and finished. Until the drought broke up, I
-don’t deny that we all had to be very close-hauled, and lay-to a good
-deal from time to time; but now, with bullocks eight pounds a head, and
-fat sheep ten shillings—wool up too, and real property rising,—not to
-mention the shipping trade doubling every month,—why, if we can’t clap
-on sail, my boy, we never can, and what the ship can’t carry she may
-drag.’
-
-The old man looked so thoroughly convinced of the truth of his
-convictions as he spoke, with the kindling eye and elevated visage of
-one resolved upon a hazardous but honourable enterprise, that Ernest
-Neuchamp, always prone to be influenced by contagious exaltation of
-sentiment, caught fire from his ardent mien and tone.
-
-‘Well, so be it,’ he said; ‘I am content to sink or swim in the same
-boat with you and yours. We have Ab. Levison for a pilot, and he knows
-all the rocks and soundings of the pastoral deep sea from Penrith to
-Carpentaria, I should say. As you say there’s a time for all things, I
-think this is the time to back one’s opinion in reason and moderation.
-I will go and confront the agents for Mildool.’
-
-Messrs. Sticker and Pugsley were steady-going, precise men of business
-of the old school. As stock and station agents they had always steadily
-set their faces against all outlay except for the merest necessaries
-of life. Bred to their business in the old times when stock were
-plentiful, labour cheap, and cash extremely hard to lay hold of in any
-shape or form, they struggled desperately against these new-fangled
-notions of ‘throwing away money uselessly,’ as they termed the
-comparatively large outlay which they occasionally heard of upon dams,
-wells, fencing, woolsheds, and washpens. Large profits had been made in
-the good old times, when such speculations would have gone nigh to have
-furnished a warrant _de lunatico inquirendo_. They did not see how it
-was all to be repaid. They doubted the management which comprehended
-such sinful extravagance; and they proposed to continue their
-time-honoured system, which made it imperative upon all stockholders
-who were unlucky enough to be in debt to them, to spend nothing, to
-live upon shepherds‘wages, and not to think of coming to town until
-times improved.
-
-One wonders if it ever occurred to these snug-comfort loving cits, as
-daily they drove home to pleasant villas and luxurious surroundings—did
-it ever occur to them, after the second glass of old port, to what a
-life of wretchedness, solitude, and sordid surroundings their griping
-parsimony was condemning the unlucky exile from civilisation, who
-was hopelessly chained to their ledger? For him no beeswing port, no
-claret of Bordeaux. He drank his ‘Jack the Painter’ tea milkless, most
-probably, and flavoured with blackest sugar, occasionally stimulating
-his ideality with ration rum or villainous dark brandy. Though his the
-brain that planned, the hand that carried out long desert wayfarings
-of exploration—long, toilsome drudgeries of stock travelling to lone
-untrodden wilds; his the frame that withered, the eye that dimmed,
-the health that failed, the blood that flowed, ere the process of
-colonising, progression, and commercial extension was complete.
-Thus land was occupied, villages sprang up, inter-communication was
-established, and the wilderness subdued. All the magnificent results of
-civilisation were brought about over territories of incredible area by
-the intelligence, enterprise, and energy of one individual. And he, too
-often, when the battle was won, the standard hoisted, and the multitude
-pouring over the breach, found himself a beggared and a broken man.
-
-Mr. Neuchamp, after due preliminaries, entered the office of Messrs.
-Sticker and Pugsley, with whom he had an interview by no means of a
-disagreeable character. The senior partner, an elderly, gray-haired
-personage, showed much of the formal politeness which is commonly
-thought to distinguish the gentleman of ‘the old school.’ He received
-Ernest courteously, begged that he would take a chair, alluded to the
-weather, deplored the arrival of the mosquitoes, to which the rain
-and the spring in conjunction had been jointly favourable, requested
-to know whom he had the honour of receiving, and finally desired
-information as to the particular mode in which he could be of service
-to him.
-
-‘I have been informed,’ said Ernest, ‘that your firm are agents for the
-Mildool station, and that it is in the market. I have come to request
-that you will put it under offer to me, as I have some intention of
-purchasing a property of that sort.’
-
-‘We have not as yet advertised it,’ replied Mr. Sticker; ‘still, you
-have been rightly informed that the station and stock are for sale. But
-we do not think of offering it upon the usual terms; our own opinion
-is, I do not disguise it from you, that present prices will not last. I
-have been many years in the colony, and such is my belief. Mr. Pugsley,
-whose opinion of the permanence of present high rates is better than
-mine, also believes that, with the properties entrusted to us, it is as
-well to be safe, and to take advantage of an opportunity that may never
-occur again. Our terms for Mildool are briefly these: We offer four
-thousand head of mixed cattle, above six months old, with, of course,
-the M[Ḋ] brand, at five pounds per head, everything given in. I am
-informed that the improvements are scanty and in bad repair; there are
-twenty stock horses, and a team of bullocks and dray, two huts, and a
-stockyard. But, perhaps, you know the property, and the appearance of
-the buildings.’
-
-‘The huts _are_ old and bad,’ said Ernest, smiling; ‘and as for the
-stockyard, the Mildool stockmen have for the last few years brought
-their cattle to our yard for safety, as you could kick down the Mildool
-yard anywhere. But what is your idea of terms?’
-
-‘Half cash, and the balance in approved bills, at one and two years,
-secured upon the stock and station.’
-
-‘Rather stiff,’ said Ernest; ‘but will you put the offer in writing,
-and leave it open for a week? I will before that time give you a
-decided answer.’
-
-Mr. Sticker would have much pleasure in doing so. As Ernest preferred
-to wait for the important document, it was soon prepared, and he
-finally marched away with a fortune, as it turned out (fate and
-opportunity are queer things), in his waistcoat pocket. He was not too
-quick in his conditional annexation of this desirable territory. Ten
-minutes afterwards Mr. Hardy Baldacre dashed into the office on the
-same errand, quitting it with a curse which shocked Mr. Sticker, and
-provoked Mr. Pugsley, who was young and athletic, to inform him that
-he must not suppose that his money provided him the permission to be
-rude, though it did procure him consideration far beyond his deserts.
-Altogether, Mr. Baldacre felt as if his brandy-and-soda had been
-scarcely so efficacious as usual that morning.
-
-When Mr. Neuchamp produced this small but important document to Paul
-Frankston, that commercial mentor rubbed his hands with unconcealed
-satisfaction.
-
-‘You’ve got ’em, Ernest, my boy, hard and fast. I believe you might
-make a pound a head, say four thousand pounds out of it, in a month.
-Sticker is a good man, according to his light, and Pug’s a sharp
-fellow. But they don’t see, and won’t see, the signs of the times.
-They’re always remembering the old boiling-down days, and they fancy
-that the least change in markets will send us back to it. You did right
-to get the offer in writing, and for a deferred time. We’ll keep it a
-day or two, and then you shall go and accept the terms like a man.’
-
-‘But how about the money?’ inquired Mr. Neuchamp with a shade of
-natural anxiety. ‘Twenty thousand pounds are no nutshells, however
-little it may sound in these extravagant days.’
-
-‘Look here,’ said Paul, ‘find this ten thousand down; any agent will
-give you five thousand on the security of your year’s draft of fat
-stock from the two runs; it will come to more, I daresay, but we must
-be as careful as we can. I think that you will have to give a mortgage
-over Rainbar and Mildool—a second one—and then you may draw a cheque
-for the ten thousand as soon as you like.’
-
-‘And what about the “approved” bills?‘
-
-‘Well, the day after to-morrow you can go to old Sticker and pay him
-the half cash. I’ll put the cash part of it through; ask him to make
-out the bills, with interest added at 8 per cent; bring them to me,
-and I will put a name on the back which will render them legal tender,
-whatever may come of them after.’
-
-‘The old story since I came to Australia,’ said Ernest. ‘It seems that
-I can do nothing without your advice; and that your help follows me as
-a natural consequence—whatever I do, and whatever I buy.’
-
-‘Well, if this shot turns out badly,’ said Paul, ‘I’ll promise not
-to _back your bills any more_. Will that satisfy you? But Levison
-seems quite determined, “just this once,” as the children say, and I
-generally take his tip if I see a chance. I think our money is on the
-right horse.‘
-
-‘I hope so,’ said Ernest, thinking, respectfully, of the lovely
-condition of Rainbar at the moment, and fearing lest, by any financial
-legerdemain, it might be taken away from him in time to come.
-
-Before the week was ended, during which the offer of Mildool was open
-for his acceptance, Mr. Neuchamp had the satisfaction of handing Mr.
-Sticker a cheque for ten thousand pounds, which he had been obligingly
-permitted by his banker to draw against certain securities, and also
-two bills, with interest added at the rate of 8 per cent, for the
-balance. Upon which somewhat important documents being well scanned
-and examined, and further submitted to Mr. Pugsley, who was on that
-occasion introduced, Ernest received an order to obtain delivery of
-the Mildool station, having twenty-four miles frontage to the river,
-and going thirty miles back, with four thousand head of cattle, more or
-less, depasturing thereon, the same to be mustered and counted over in
-six weeks; any cattle deficient to be paid for by Sticker and Pugsley,
-at the rate of two-pounds-ten per head, and all cattle in excess to
-be taken by the purchaser at that price. When this transaction was
-concluded—on paper, Mr. Neuchamp began to realise that he was having
-pastoral greatness thrust upon him.
-
-Speculation is a grandly exciting occupation, when all goes well.
-When the bark is launched, mayhap with tremulous hope, perchance
-with the reckless pride of youth, there is a wondrously intoxicating
-triumph in noting the gradual, ever-deep, engine-flowing tide, the
-steady, favourable gale before which the galley which carried Cæsar
-and his fortunes ‘walks the waters like a thing of life,’ and finally
-conveys the illustrious freight to one of the fair havens of the
-gracious goddess Success. A triumph is decreed to Cæsar. Immediately
-Cæsar’s critics become bland, his enemies fangless, his friends are
-pacified—_they_ are always the most difficult personages to assuage;
-his detractors go and detract from others; his creditors burn incense
-before him; his feminine acquaintances dress at him, talk at him, sing
-at him, and _look_ at him—oh! so differently.
-
-Cæsar needs all of his unusually powerful mental attributes if he does
-not become abominably conceited, and straightway refer the kindness of
-circumstance to his own inherent talent for calculation and brilliant
-combination. Let him haste to place yet higher stakes upon the tables,
-and after the usual fluctuation and flattery of the Fiend, he arises
-one day ruined, undone, and despised by himself, neglected by others.
-
-The fate of Ernest Neuchamp could never thus be told. Naturally too
-prudent in pecuniary matters to go much further than he had good
-warrant for, he was even alarmed at his present comparatively risky
-position. But he had adopted the advice of his best friend, whose
-former counsels had been accurately borne out in successful practice.
-He had taken time to consider. Wiser heads than his own were committed
-to the same results; and he was according to his custom, prepared to
-dismiss anxiety, and to await the issue.
-
-Nor was he minded on this account to cut short his stay in Sydney.
-He determined, in accordance with his own feelings and Mr. Levison’s
-suggestion, to give the management of the new station to his faithful
-henchman Jack Windsor, who, now that he was married and settled, would
-be all the better fitted to undertake a position of responsibility. As
-for Charley Banks, he should retain him as general manager of Rainbar.
-He ought not even to live there always himself. If it kept on raining
-and elevating the fat cattle market _ad infinitum_, the place could be
-managed with a ‘long arm.’ No reason to bury himself there for ever. He
-might even run home to England for a year or so.
-
-Meanwhile it was not unpleasant to be congratulated at the club upon
-his improved prospects, and his spirited purchase of so extensive and
-well-known a property as Mildool. He commenced to divide the honour of
-rapid operation with Mr. Parklands, and found from day to day offers
-awaiting him of desirable properties situated north, south, east, and
-west, with any quantity and variety of stock, and of every sort and
-description of climate and ‘country.’ Mr. Parklands, to the ineffable
-disgust of Jermyn Croker, had already sold Booroo-booroo and Chatsworth
-at a profit of six thousand pounds, which Mr. Croker said he regarded
-as being taken out of his pocket, so to speak. Parklands had, moreover,
-the coolness to say that, if it had been worth his while to keep two
-such small stations on hand for a longer time, he could have made ten
-thousand as easily as the six. Mr. Croker objected to the claret and
-cookery more pointedly than usual that day, and the committee and the
-house steward had an evil time of it; that is, as far as contemptuous
-reference may have affected them.
-
-Mr. Parklands, now truly in his element, indulged his fancy for
-unlimited speculation and locomotion to the fullest extent. He filled
-the Melbourne markets with store stock and fat stock, horses and
-sheep, working bullocks and milch cows, every possible variety of
-animal, except goats and swine. It was asserted that he _did_ consider
-the nanny question, and calculated roughly whether a steamer-load
-of those miniature milchers would not pay decently. He ransacked
-Tasmania for oats, palings, and jam, and, no doubt, would have largely
-imported that other interesting product, of which the sister island
-has always yielded so bounteous a supply, could he have seen his way
-to a clearing-off sale when he landed the cargo. Finally, he dashed
-off to Adelaide for a slap at copper, and having taken a contract for
-‘ship cattle’ for New Zealand, paused, like another Alexander, awaiting
-the discovery of fresh colonies in which he might revel in still more
-colossal operations.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX
-
-
-A letter had been despatched to Mr. Windsor’s address, of which
-his master had knowledge, requesting him to proceed to Sydney upon
-important business. Accordingly, at an early hour next day he presented
-himself at the club steps and greeted his employer with a subdued air
-of satisfaction, as if doubtful how far his recent decided action had
-met with approval.
-
-‘I am very glad to see you, John,’ said Mr. Neuchamp; ‘I hope Mrs.
-Windsor is well. I congratulate you both heartily. Yours was a spirited
-plan, and your success in the carrying out, or rather the carrying
-off, of my old friend Carry most enviable. I was afraid there might be
-obstacles. How did you arrange it all? Suppose you walk over to the
-Domain with me, and tell me all about it.’
-
-Mr. Windsor, much doubting if this were the important business upon
-which he had been summoned to town, but not unwilling to relate the
-tale of his victory to so sympathising an auditor as he knew his master
-to be, thus commenced—
-
-‘You know, sir, I had a tightish ride to get over before I caught the
-mail. I felt very queer, I tell you, as if I didn’t meet that identical
-coach I should never get down in time. I was horrid frightened every
-time I thought about it, there’s no mistake. I saved Ben Bolt as much
-as I could the first day and bandaged his legs when I got to the stable
-late at night. I did eighty miles that day, and dursn’t go farther for
-fear I might crack him at the first burst. I was up with the stars and
-fed him. I didn’t sleep much, you’re sure, and at three in the morning
-I was off for a hundred mile ride! and that heat, _a man’s life_! Mine
-wouldn’t have mattered much afterwards, if I’d lost. I didn’t feel gay
-just then, and I thought Ben Bolt walked out rather stiff. However,
-he put his ears back, and switched his tail sideways, as I mounted.
-That was a good sign. It was all plains, of course, soft, sandy
-road—couldn’t be beat for smoothness, and firm, too. I kept him going
-in a steady hand-gallop, pulling him up only now and again during the
-forenoon. In the middle of the day I stopped for three good hours, gave
-him a middling feed—not too much, and got a little water; but he got
-a real good strapping. I stood over the feller doing it, and gave him
-half-a-crown.
-
-‘I’d done fifty miles between three and eleven—I wasn’t going fast, you
-see—but of course the second fifty makes all the difference. I began
-to be afraid he was too big. The feed at Rainbar was awfully good, you
-know, sir; but as luck would have it, I’d given him some stiffish days
-after the farthest out cattle, and that had hardened him a bit.
-
-‘About two o’clock I cleared out again; saddled him myself; saw that
-his back was all right, and felt his legs, which were as cool and clean
-as if he hadn’t gone a yard. I had the second fifty to do before twelve
-at night. That was the time the coach passed, and hardly waited a
-moment, either.
-
-‘Off again, and I kept on steady at first, trusting to six miles an
-hour to do it in, and something to spare; but every now and again
-I kept thinking, thinking, suppose he goes lame all of a sudden!
-suppose he jacks up! suppose he falls, put his foot into a hole, or
-anything—rolls over me and gallops off, all the men in the world
-wouldn’t catch him! suppose I’m stopped by bushrangers—Red Cap’s out,
-you know;—why don’t they hang every scoundrel that turns out the moment
-he hoists his flag?’
-
-‘Because they might reform, John,’ mildly interposed Mr. Neuchamp.
-
-‘No fear—that is, mostly, sir,’ continued Jack apologetically; ‘but
-they wouldn’t have had the heart to stop me; and besides, I expect I
-could have dusted any of ’em with Ben.
-
-‘Well, bushrangers or not, I got within twenty miles of Boree; and then
-my head got so full of fancies, that I settled to make a call on Ben
-Bolt, and do it in two hours. Suppose the coach was earlier than usual!
-No passengers, or only some young squatter, who wanted to go faster
-and to stop nowhere—and tipped the driver! I’ve seen these things done
-before now.
-
-‘So I took the old horse by the head, gave him a hustle and a pull,
-and, by George, if you’ll believe me, sir, he went away with his mouth
-open, as if he hadn’t only been out to the Back Lake. The sun was down
-then, and the night air was coolish. But I knew the track well, and as
-we sailed along, Ben Bolt giving a kind of snort every now and then,
-same as he used to do when he didn’t know the place he was going to, I
-felt that I had the field beat, and the race as good as won. I thought
-I could see Carry a-beckonin’ to me at the winning-post. I hardly
-think I pulled up three times, I felt that eager, and bound to win or
-die, before I saw the light of the Boree Inn, and the coach stables
-across the plain.
-
-‘“Has the coach from down the river come in yet, Joe?” says I to the
-ostler, trembling all over.
-
-‘“No, nor won’t be this hours yet; you needn’t have rode so fast.”
-
-‘“I couldn’t afford to be late,” says I. “Lend us a rug while I cool
-my old horse a bit. He’s carried me well this day, if he never does
-another.”
-
-‘Ben didn’t look beat—nor yet half beat. My belief is he could have
-done another twenty or thirty miles without cracking up. But a hundred
-miles is a hundred miles, and no foolish ride, even in this country
-where horses are as plenty as wallabies, such as they are, so I did
-my best for him. I let him rinse his mouth, and then I walked him up
-and down, with the rug on, for a solid hour. Of course he broke out
-at first, but he gradually dried and come all right. Before the coach
-started with me on board, he was doing nicely for the night, littered
-down (for we foraged some straw out of the bottled ale casks) and
-eating his feed just as he would after a longish day’s muster out back
-at Rainbar.’
-
-‘I am very glad he carried you so well, John,’ said Mr. Neuchamp, at
-the conclusion of this antipodean Turpin’s ride; ‘but how did you speed
-in the last and most momentous stage?’
-
-‘Oh, _that_ was easy drafting enough,’ replied Mr. Windsor, who
-apparently had considered that portion of his matrimonial adventure
-which depended upon horseflesh as the really important and exciting
-part of the transaction. ‘I was safe and sound in Parramatta on the
-Thursday afternoon. I heard enough about the grand wedding for next
-day—but I never let on. Said I was off by sea to Queensland to look at
-some store cattle, and hired a trap, with a fairish horse, and a boy to
-mind it, which I drove down to the cross-roads, just about a mile from
-the “Cheshire Cheese.” There was an old woodcutter’s hut just inside
-the fence at the corner. So I left the boy there, and told him to hold
-the horse among the trees, and not to go away till I came—if it wasn’t
-till dinner-time to-morrow. Of course, I squared him right. He was
-sharp enough; them Parramatta boys mostly are.
-
-‘Down I goes to the old house, and marched in quite free and pleasant
-like, to spend the evening for the sake of old times. There was Carry
-looking half dull, half desperate, like a mountain filly three days in
-the pound—as I told her afterwards—though she was among her own people,
-in a manner of speaking.
-
-‘There was Homminey, and some other Hawkesbury chaps, full of their
-jokes and fun—my word! if I could only have gone in at him and his
-best man, a great, slab-sided, six-foot-three fellow, just about as
-scraggy as he was tallowy, I think I could have spoilt both their
-figure-heads—one up and the other down.
-
-‘However, there wouldn’t have been any sense in charging the whole
-family, like a knocked-up bullock meeting a picnic party—as I once saw,
-and didn’t he scatter ’em!—so I put on all the side I could, and laid
-by for a chance.
-
-‘First of all, I shook hands with ’em all round, and came the
-warm-hearted fakement. Said “I’d come to say good-bye; they mustn’t
-think I bore any ill-will—just on my way to the north for store cattle,
-passage taken and all—happened to hear of the wedding to-morrow, and
-thought I’d look in and wish ’em joy.”
-
-‘Then, of course, I threw my money about—must have a round of drinks
-for luck. I never saw a publican yet that could refuse to serve a
-“shout.” Then, of course, _they_ must treat me, seeing I was behaving
-so handsome. Then I must have another round for all hands; and last
-of all, I gammoned to be a bit “sprung,” and must propose the bride’s
-health. So I made ’em fill up. Homminey’s little round eyes was
-beginning to twinkle a bit, and old Walton was getting affectionate,
-but Carry’s mother watched us both like a cat. I said, “I knowed the
-bride these two years or more, and I proposed her health, and that of
-the good-hearted, honest, straightforward chap as was going to marry
-her to-morrow morning.” This fetched ’em about a bit. I said, “I’d
-knowed him a goodish while, and heard tell of him, too, and a better
-feller couldn’t be. After he was married he’d be still better,—a deal
-better, _that_ I could safely go bail for. He couldn’t help it, with
-such a wife. I therefore gave the health of Miss Carry Walton and her
-husband that was to be, to-morrow, and no heel-taps.” I never proposed
-my own health before.
-
-‘Well, Homminey, after this, came over and squeezed my hand in his
-great mutton fist, and looked at me, as if he wasn’t quite sure; then
-he bust out and said I was a real good-natured chap, as didn’t bear
-malice, and I’d always be welcome at Richmond Point.
-
-‘“Right you are, old corn-cob,” says I; “I’ll come and see you the
-very first time you ask me. And now let’s have a bit of a dance to
-finish up with, for my time’s short, and I must be off. The steamer
-leaves at daylight.”
-
-‘Well, between the grog, and being that glad to get rid of me, that
-they’d have done anything to see my back, they all agreed to it. There
-were three or four other girls there; one of ’em, his cousin, was
-fourteen stone if she was a pound. I gave her a few turns when the
-music struck up, and then turned to Carry, quite promiskus, directly
-the tune was altered.
-
-‘“Oh dear, oh dear, why did you come?” she said in a low tone; “wasn’t
-I miserable enough before?”
-
-‘“You know the cross-roads?” I says, knocking against the tall chap’s
-partner to drown the words. “There’s no time for talking. If you’re as
-true to me as I am to you, will you do as I tell you?”
-
-‘“You know I will,” she said; “what can I do?”
-
-‘“Can you get out of your bedroom?” I says.
-
-‘“No. I don’t know. Yes—perhaps. I think I can,” she said in a strange
-voice, not a bit like her own.
-
-‘“Then get away the moment you get to bed—don’t stop to take anything
-with you, but make straight for the cross-roads. Inside the trees
-you’ll see a buggy with a boy. Stay with him till I come. It will be
-there till daylight and long afterwards. Will you come, Carry?”
-
-‘“If I don’t come I shall be mad, or locked up, or dead,” she said,
-with such a miserable look on her face that I could hardly help kissing
-her and comforting her before them all.
-
-‘Now, the old woman helped us, without wanting to, for she says,
-“Carry, you’re looking like a washed-out print frock; do, for gracious
-sake, go to bed, and sleep away your headache. She’s not been well
-lately, Mr. Windsor, and she’s flustered like at seeing strangers, not
-but what you’ve behaved most gentlemanly.”
-
-‘“I’m afraid she’s thinkin‘about her wedding-dress or her veil,
-or something,” says I. “I wish I could stay and see how she looks
-to-morrow, but I can’t, and business is business.”
-
-‘Poor Carry was off before this, with just “Good-night all,” which made
-Homminey look rather glum. I ordered another round, saying I must be
-off; but when it was drunk and paid for, I stayed half an hour before I
-shook hands, most hearty, and walked out.
-
-‘The moment I turned the corner of the garden-fence I started off, and
-ran that mile up to the cross-roads as if all the blacks on Cooper’s
-Creek was after me. Just as I got to the trap I overtook a woman, with
-a large bundle, labouring along. It never could be—yes _it was_—Carry!
-
-‘I first kissed her and then scolded her. “Never a woman born,” I said,
-“that could do without a bundle. Why didn’t you leave all that rubbish?
-ain’t you good enough for me as you are?”
-
-‘“Oh, John,” says she, “would you have me come to you in my—in my one
-frock? Nonsense! every woman must have a little dress.”
-
-‘“Suppose you had been caught?”
-
-‘“But I’m not caught, except by a bushranger, or some wild character,”
-says she, smiling for the first time. “I’m afraid poor Harry will not
-enjoy his dinner to-morrow.”
-
-‘“Hang him and his dinner!” said I. “He’s all dinner. I’ve half a mind
-to go back and murder him now.”
-
-‘But instead of that, we made haste for Appin, after giving the boy a
-pound. And, to make a long story short, were married there _that day_,
-for it was past twelve o’clock. And Carry’s there with my old mother
-now, and very proud she is of her.’
-
-‘I see, John,’ said Mr. Neuchamp, ‘that you have carried out one
-enterprise with your usual success. The other one I want you for, now,
-is to start at once for Rainbar, and to take delivery of Mildool run
-and stock, which I bought last week. They agree to muster in six weeks.
-And you can tell Carry—Mrs. Windsor, I beg her pardon—that she is the
-overseer’s wife at Mildool. I have decided to give you the management
-of that run, and I look for wonderful profits from it all this season.’
-
-‘And you’ll get ’em, sir,’ said Mr. Windsor, ‘if there’s any faith in a
-fust chop season, and right-down hard work. God Almighty’s given us the
-fust, and if Jake Windsor don’t find the second, he wishes his right
-arm may rot off to the shoulder.’
-
-‘I have no doubt that you will do your best, John,’ answered Mr.
-Neuchamp, much gratified by the warm gratitude exhibited by one whose
-fate at one time lay in his hand; whose after-career had done so much
-to justify his anxiety for the welfare of his fellow-man. ‘I have no
-doubt that Mildool will be the best-managed station on the river—after
-Rainbar, of course; and that there will be a splendid increase this
-year,—always providing that no calf bears my brand—and never mistake
-me on that score—that cannot be honestly provided with a mother of the
-same ownership.’
-
-Mr. Windsor made a slight gesture of compulsory resignation, as of
-one who feels himself bound down to superhuman purity; but he said,
-‘You shall be obeyed in that, sir; and in every other thing you choose
-to order; though it will come queer to the old hands at Mildool, if
-all tales are true, to kill their own beef, let alone mothering their
-calves. But _your word’s my law_! And I see now that going straight
-is the best in the end, whether in big things or little. We’ll be off
-to-morrow, Carry and I, and she can hang it out at Rainbar and have
-Tot Freeman to talk to—those chaps ain’t left yet, I believe—while I’m
-taking over the cattle at Mildool.’
-
-‘That will do very well, John. Meanwhile you can let a contract for a
-neat six-roomed cottage at Mildool, as there isn’t a place there fit
-for Piambook and his gin to live in. You must consult your wife about
-the site of it, though, as she will have to live in it and spend many a
-day by herself there. Don’t let her regret the snug parlour and the old
-orchard at the “Cheshire Cheese,” eh, John?‘
-
-‘Well, it _is_ a great change, now I come to think of it,’ said Mr.
-Windsor, the first expression of distrust coming over his bold features
-that had been there exhibited since his successful raid upon the
-lowlanders. ‘I daresay she _would_ feel struck all of a heap if she
-was to come upon Mildool old station sudden-like, with the dog-holes
-of huts, and every tree cut down on the sandhill because the men were
-too lazy to go out for firewood, or for fear the blacks might sneak on
-them, and the pile of bones, like a boiling down round the gallows.
-But, thank God! there’s grass now, and there’s fat cattle enough in
-Mildool by this time—for they’ve never sent away a beast this season, I
-hear—to build an Exhibition, if it’s wanted. Carry’s got me, and I’ve
-got her, that’s the main thing; and I think we shall make shift to jog
-along. We’ve got to do it, and no two ways about it. So, good-bye, sir.
-When shall we see you at Rainbar?’
-
-‘I am afraid that business will detain me in Sydney for some weeks
-longer,’ said Mr. Neuchamp thoughtfully, as if mentally calculating
-the exact day on which he might quit the metropolis. ‘But you and Mr.
-Banks will be able to manage the muster easy enough.’
-
-‘Not a bit of bother there need be about it, that I can see, sir. We
-shall have lots of help; every stockman within a hundred miles will be
-there. There’ll be an awful big mob of strangers; and the Drewarrina
-poundkeeper hasn’t had such a lift for many a day as he’ll get. We must
-square the tails of every beast that’s counted, that’s one thing, so as
-not to have ’em played on to us twice over. I think Mr. Banks is down
-to most moves about cattle work, and what he don’t know I can tell him.
-Good-bye, sir.’
-
-‘By the way, John,’ said Mr. Neuchamp, ‘I shall want you to stay in
-town this evening, if you can spare so much time away from Carry. I
-have to see about the draft copy of the sale agreement, which you
-will take up with you and give to Mr. Banks. Mr. Frankston informs me
-that these agreements need to be very strictly carried out, and that
-advantageous purchases _have_ been evaded from neglect in doing so.
-So come out to Morahmee this afternoon, when you can have my final
-instructions.’
-
-Mr. Neuchamp spent the morning in tolerably close attendance upon
-lawyers and persons addicted to the drawing up of those paper and
-parchment promises which, if honour were binding, need never to have
-troubled penman or engrosser. Nathless, human nature being what it is,
-and retaining simian tendencies to steal, hide, falsely chatter and
-closely clutch, the sheepskin may not be safely relinquished. Before
-Mr. Neuchamp bethought himself of the mid-day solace of lunch he was
-possessed of a legal document, wherein the exact time granted for
-mustering and several other leading conditions were set forth with
-such clearness that evasion or misunderstanding seemed impossible.
-
-A copy of this all-important document was posted to Charley Banks; he
-brought with him another for the use of Mr. Windsor, who might employ
-his leisure time on the journey up in learning it by heart, and so
-render himself able to meet all comers respecting its provisions.
-
-Antonia had expressed a wish to see Jack Windsor, and to send a message
-to his wife before he left town. For this reason chiefly Ernest had
-appointed Morahmee as the rendezvous on this particular afternoon. As
-the shadows lengthened, Mr. Neuchamp betook himself in that direction,
-as indeed he had done daily for weeks past.
-
-It so chanced that, on the evening before, Antonia had received a pink
-triangular note from Miss Harriet Folleton, who was more or less a
-friend of hers, to say that she intended to come and lunch with her
-next day at Morahmee, and would be there, unless her dear Antonia wrote
-to say she couldn’t have her. There was not any great similitude of
-taste or disposition between the two girls—one indeed much disapproved
-of the other. But those who have noted the ways of their _monde_ will
-not decide from this statement that Antonia Frankston and Harriet
-Folleton did any the less greet one another with kisses and effusion
-when meeting, or say farewell with lavish use of endearing epithets.
-
-Such being the state of matters, it was by no means surprising that
-Harriet Folleton, a girl of great beauty and soft, enthralling manner,
-but of so moderate a development of intellect that she might have been
-called, if any one had been so rudely uncompromising as to speak the
-unvarnished truth about so pretty a creature, ‘a fool proper,’ should
-arrive in the paternal brougham before mid-day, and therefore share
-luncheon with her dear Antonia in much innocence and peace.
-
-It would have been even less surprising to any one who had possessed
-the requisite leisure and opportunity to study that fair girl’s ways,
-that, as the two friends were strolling near the strand, where a giant
-fig-tree shadowed half the little bay, a boat should pull round the
-adjoining headland, manned by four man-of-war-looking yachtsmen, with
-the _White Falcon_ on their breasts and hat-ribbons, while from the
-boat, as she ran up to the jetty, stepped the gracious form of Count
-von Schätterheims.
-
-‘Why, you naughty girl,’ said Antonia, instantly divining the ruse, ‘I
-do believe you planned to meet the Count here, and disobey your father.
-So this coming to see me was all deception! How dare you treat me like
-this? I have a great mind to tell your father, and never speak to you
-again.’
-
-‘Oh, pray don’t, Antonia dearest,’ whimpered the softly insincere one,
-‘I only said I _might_ be here this afternoon; and he said he was
-going off to Batavia, or Russia, or India, or somewhere. And papa was
-so dreadful, that I thought there was no harm in it. I shall never
-see him again—oh!’ Here the despairingly undecided damsel commenced
-to weep, and so interfere with the natural charms of her fine and
-uncommon complexion, that Antonia, inwardly resolving to restrict the
-acquaintance to conventional limits in future, was constrained to
-soothe and console her. Meanwhile the Count, who had been engaged in an
-earnest colloquy with his crew, advanced with his customary gallantry
-to meet them.
-
- ‘My boad is on de zhore
- And my barg is on de zea;
-
-is not dat the voord of your boet? I come to make farevell to you, Miss
-Frankstein; to you, Miss Folledon, to lay at your veet dis hertz—mein
-hertz—vich is efer for dee so vondly beating.’
-
-‘And are you really going to leave us, Count?’ asked Antonia, without
-any particular interest or otherwise in the noble foreigner, of whom
-she was becoming wearied and increasingly distrustful. Then happening
-to look at Harriet Folleton’s face, she saw that she was deathly pale,
-and trembled as if about to fall. The Count, too, though complimentary
-as usual, seemed annoyed and uneasy at her presence.
-
-The Count, in answer to the question, pointed to his yacht, a beautiful
-schooner, more fair than honest of aspect, and of marvellous sailing
-powers, which had, perhaps, more than any of his reported possessions,
-tended to sustain his prestige since his arrival in Sydney.
-
-Antonia’s practised eye at once discerned that she was fully equipped
-for sea. With sails ready to be unfurled at a moment’s notice, she
-could sweep out unchallenged and trackless as the falcon on her ensign,
-before the freshening south wind which was even now curling the waves
-with playful but increasing power.
-
-With lightning rapidity she divined the full extent of the girl’s
-imprudence and the Count’s villainy. In the same sudden mental
-effort she resolved, at all hazards, to save her companion from the
-consequences of her inconceivable folly.
-
-‘I did vorm de resolution dat I shall bezeegh you and Miss Folledon
-to honour me by paying me von last leetle visit on board de
-_Valgon_, dis afdernoon. Mine goot friend Paul, he was goming, but
-de business—dat pete noir—he brevent him. He ask me to peg Miss
-Frankstein if she vill, zo also Miss Folledon, vizout her fader, to my
-so-poor-yet-highly-to-be-honoured graft go. Dere is izes, one small
-collation, a few friend. Surely you will join dem?’
-
-Here the Count beamed the irresistible smile which had through life
-served him well, and advancing, held out both hands to the young ladies.
-
-‘Oh, do let us go!’ said the reassured weakling. ‘It would be so
-pleasant. It is such a delightful afternoon. I should like it of all
-things.’
-
-But Antonia more than ever distrusted the Count, _et dona ferentes_.
-She disliked his eye, his wily words, the appearance of his swarthy
-crew, the evidently sea-fitted appearance of the yacht. She felt more
-than ever convinced that he had matured a deliberate plot to carry off
-an unsuspecting girl.
-
-Such in truth was the unpardonable sin with which the Herr von
-Schätterheims had resolved to conclude his Australian career. Unable to
-meet the many pressing claims upon his finances, the holders of which,
-he had reason to know, were meditating an advance in line; having
-failed in the daring speculations in which, by means of humble foreign
-agents, he had invested the small capital with which he had arrived,
-and the incredibly large loans which his assurance and reputation for
-wealth had enabled him to procure,—he had conceived the desperate plan
-which Antonia’s quick intuition had discovered. He had determined,
-by force or fraud, to carry off Harriet Folleton, trusting that the
-irrevocable _coup_ once made, time and other considerations would tend
-to the ultimate wresting of her immense fortune from her father’s hands.
-
-Hunted by his creditors and threatened with imprisonment, the Count
-was now desperate. In such a position he had, more than once during
-his career, showed no disposition to stick at trifles. His yacht lay
-within hail—a seabird with her great wings plumed for instant flight, a
-Norway falcon looking on ocean from a low-placed rocky ridge. His crew
-of mixed nationality, who had followed him through many a clime, were
-lawless and devoted. The hour had come when Albert von Schätterheims
-would stand forth with front unveiled, and show these simple dwellers
-by the shore of the southern main what manner of man they had dared to
-drive to bay.
-
-Therefore, when Antonia Frankston stepped forward, and with head erect
-and flashing eye interposed between the Count and his sacrifice, she
-confronted a different man from the silky, graceful _serviteur des
-dames_ with whom she had often wished, for some instinctive reason, to
-quarrel.
-
-‘I cannot go with you now, nor shall Miss Folleton, Count
-Schätterheims; it would not be right, in my father’s absence. Permit us
-to return to the house.’
-
-‘Beholt me desoladed if Miss Frankstein will not honour my poor boad,’
-said the Count, as he barred the progress of the two young ladies
-on the somewhat narrow green-walled alley which led to the house;
-‘but’—fixing his eye steadily upon Harriet Folleton—‘I go not forth
-alone; Miss Harriet Folledon, you bromised me. I haf your vord. You
-vill come with me now; is it not so, belofet one? Ja! you vill follow
-de fortunes of Albert von Schätterheims, for efer.’
-
-He strode forward a pace, and seizing the wrist of the frightened girl,
-spoke rapidly in Spanish, while two of his sailors ran up from the
-boat, to whom he committed the half-insensible form of the fainting
-girl.
-
-Antonia Frankston did not faint or swoon. With sudden movement she
-confronted the Count, with so fierce an air and so unblenching a brow
-that he involuntarily stepped back a pace, and made as though to
-protect himself from the onset of a foe.
-
-‘Coward and robber that you are, release her this instant,’ she cried.
-
-The Count smiled sardonically. ‘You will parton me, mademoiselle, if I
-redurn you with my complimend for your goot opinion. My engachemends is
-more pressing, as you gan pelief.’
-
-On the girl’s face, as she stood with threatening aspect—a young
-Bellona, as yet unversed in battles—burned a deeper glow; in her eye
-flashed a fiercer light as she marked the smile on the calm features of
-the Count, which, in her heated fancy, seemed the mocking regard of a
-fiend.
-
-‘She shall _not_ go!’ cried she, springing forward and throwing her
-arms round the neck of the helpless maid. ‘Oh that my father were
-here—or Ernest —— Robbers, villains, assassins that you are, release
-her—don’t dare to touch _me_!’
-
-But at this moment, at a signal from their chief, the dark-browed,
-swarthy seamen laid their rude hands upon the sacred form of the
-deliverer herself, and rapidly hurried both damsels towards the gig.
-With one wild look to heaven, one frantic gesture of wrath, despair,
-and abandonment, Antonia Frankston betook herself to one of the best
-weapons in her sex’s armoury, and shrieked till every rock and tree
-within a mile of Morahmee echoed again.
-
-‘_Carambo!_’ said one of the men, ‘we shall have half Sydney here
-before we are clear with these shrieking senoritas; have you no muffler
-for her cursed mouth?’
-
-‘_Paciencia_, Diego!’ said the Count, ‘harm her not. A few minutes will
-suffice—and then——’
-
-But before further infraction of the liberty of the subject could be
-carried out, Miss Frankston had exhibited for some moments the full
-force of a very vigorous pair of lungs. The party had nearly reached
-the little pier, whence so many joyous bands had taken the water, when
-a man came crashing through the shrubbery, and rushed furiously at Von
-Schätterheims.
-
-‘Stand back, Neuchamp!’ shouted the Count, levelling a revolver, ‘or
-you die.’
-
-‘Scoundrel and pirate that you are,’ said Ernest, facing him with
-steady eye, ‘fire! do your worst. By heaven, I will tear you limb from
-limb if you do not instantly order your ruffians to desist.’
-
-This rather melodramatic threat was used by Mr. Neuchamp, who was cool
-enough to take in the precise aspect of the fray at a glance, more with
-the intention of gaining time than of intimidating five armed men.
-
-He was eminently at a disadvantage as matters stood. He was, so to
-speak, at the Count’s mercy, being at the wrong end of his revolver,
-and that experienced soldier, sailor, tinker, tailor, or whatever,
-indeed, in time past might have been his true designation, was far too
-wary to permit him a chance of closing.
-
-The sailors in whose grasp were Antonia and her guest had drawn their
-knives, and were prepared for an affray _à l’outrance_. The two seamen
-in the boat carried sheath-knives at least. He could not but admit
-to himself, grinding his teeth the while, that he had the hazard of
-beholding his love torn from her home by the rude hands of lawless men,
-or of dying vainly in her defence.
-
-To this latter alternative, could it but avert her peril, he was
-willing, nay anxious, to yield himself. But if—if only a short respite
-could be gained—even now—the issue was uncertain. His resolution was
-taken.
-
-‘Stop your men, Count, while we parley,’ he said, ‘or, by the God above
-us, you shall shoot me down the next second, and I tear the false heart
-out of your breast, if you miss. Choose!’ And he stepped forward in the
-face of the levelled weapon.
-
-‘You are mat, like every dummer Englander, I pelief,’ said the
-nineteenth-century buccaneer. ‘Why should I not kill you for your
-insults to my honour? But I revrain. I would not meddle with the
-Fräulein Frankstein—she dell you herselve, but she try to rop me of my
-shpirit-star—my schatz—bromised prite—I presend her to you. I know your
-sendimend for her. I make you my complimend. Her dempers is angelig.’
-
-Here the Count wreathed his face into such a smile as the companion of
-Faust may have worn when Marguerite implores the Mater Dolorosa, and
-spoke rapidly with commanding gesture to his myrmidons, who released
-their hold upon Miss Frankston. But Antonia still clung with desperate
-tenacity to the cold hands, the corpse-like form of Harriet Folleton.
-
-‘You see she is obstinade—to the death,’ said the Count, whose
-moustache seemed to curl with wrath. ‘It is not her affair, or yours;
-go in beace, gross not my path more furder.’
-
-‘I cannot abandon Miss Folleton, nor will Antonia,’ said Mr. Neuchamp,
-raising his voice so as to drown a peculiar crackling noise in the
-shrubbery which his ear had caught. ‘Do _you_ go in peace, Von
-Schätterheims? Wrong not further the kind hearts that have trusted
-you; betray not hospitality free and open as ever man received. I will
-return with both, or not at all.’
-
-‘Then die, fool!’ hissed the Count, as he raised his weapon and fired
-full at the head of Ernest Neuchamp, who at the same moment rushed in
-and closed, while his blood flowed freely from a wound in the forehead,
-and ensanguined his adversary as they grappled in deadly conflict.
-
-The accuracy of the Count’s aim, faultless and unerring in gallery
-practice, or at the _poupée_, of which he could drill heart, head, or
-limb, five times out of six, may or may not have been shaken by the
-sudden apparition of Jack Windsor, or by the portentous yell which that
-gentleman emitted, worthy of Piambook or Boinmaroo, as he observed the
-Count in the act of firing at the sacred head of his benefactor.
-
-Too late to interpose with effect as he stood on a block of sandstone
-overlooking the scene of conflict, he raised his voice in one of the
-half-Indian cries with which the horsemen of the Central Desert are
-wont to intimidate the unwilling herd at the stockyard-gates. The
-sailors started and gazed with astonishment as Mr. Windsor sprang
-recklessly from his elevated post, and cleared the rough declivity with
-a succession of bounds, emulating, not unworthily, the hard-pressed
-‘flyer’ of his country’s forests when the grim gazehounds are close on
-haunch and flank.
-
-Straight as a line for the men that held the captive maids went the
-henchman, and as they hurriedly released their prey and stood on
-guard, Mr. Neuchamp could have offered a votary’s prayer to the patron
-saint of old England’s weaponless gladiators, as he marked the unarmed
-Anglo-Saxon’s rapid unswerving onset.
-
- Though there, the western mountaineer
- Rushed with bare bosom on the spear,
- And flung the feeble targe aside,
- And with both hands the broadsword plied.
-
-Mr. Windsor so far resembled Donald at Flodden Field, that he trusted
-chiefly to natural strength and courage. But none the less did he
-display an amount of coolness and cunning of fence characteristically
-Australian.
-
-Charging the nearest Frenchman, as he took him to be, and indeed in
-all future relation so described him, with the velocity of a mallee
-three-year-old, he feinted with his right hand at the forehead of his
-foe, and as the Mexican-Spaniard, for such he was, raised his arm for
-a deadly stab, he suddenly gripped his wrist, catching him full in the
-face with the ‘terrible left,’ and stretched him senseless and bleeding
-at his feet. Snatching up the knife, he had but time to parry a stroke
-which shrewdly scored his right arm, when his other antagonist was upon
-him. Both men glared at one another with uplifted knives—for a moment;
-in the next Mr. Windsor swept his antagonist’s outstretched foot from
-under him with a Cornish wrestler’s trick—a lift—a dull thud, and he
-lay on his back, with Jack’s knee on his chest and the dangerous knife
-in the bushman’s belt.
-
-In the meanwhile Miss Frankston, perceiving that the men who had charge
-of the boat showed no disposition to quit their station, half dragged,
-half raised Miss Folleton along the path to the verandah steps, halting
-just within sight of the combatants.
-
-‘Now, do you prefer being dragged up to the house, Von
-Schätterheims?—by Jove! I shoot you where you stand if you resist,’
-inquired Ernest of that nobleman, whom he had mastered after a severe
-struggle, and whose revolver he now pointed at those classical
-features, ‘or will you depart in God’s name, and rid us of your
-presence for ever?’
-
-‘It is Fade,’ said the Count gloomily. ‘He is too strong. My shtar is
-under an efil influence. I will quid dese accurset lants. Let your
-man—teufel dat he is with his boxanglais—release my grew, and I go; but
-stay—I am guildy by your laws; why should you release me?’
-
-‘You deserve death for your outrage,’ replied Ernest sternly. ‘You
-could hardly escape lifelong imprisonment. But I would not willingly
-see the man, at whose board I have sat, in the felon’s cell. Go, and
-repent. Also—and this is my chief reason—I would willingly evade the
-_esclandre_ which your public trial for this day’s proceedings would
-cause.’
-
-‘Ha! not the deet. But the fama—what you call “scandall,”’ said the
-Count wonderingly. ‘But you English, you are as efer, a strange—a so
-wunderlich beoples. Still, I go. It is all that is left to Albert von
-Schätterheims in this hemis-vahr—to steal away, like the hund, beaden,
-disgraced, dishonoured. Fahrwohl. Dell to the Fräulein my regret, my
-despair, my shames. Under another schtar Albert von Schätterheims mighd
-haf geliebt und gelebt—but all dings is now ofer.’
-
-Ernest stepped back and motioned him to arise, still keeping guard.
-The Count called aloud to his men, one of whom still lay beneath Mr.
-Windsor’s thrall, and the other sitting up, all blood-stained, swayed
-backward and forward, as only half recovered from a swoon.
-
-‘Let your men go, John,’ said Mr. Neuchamp. ‘The treaty of Morahmee is
-arranged between the high contracting powers. They will not renew the
-war,’ he continued, as the Count and Jack’s last antagonist between
-them raised the fainting man and led him down to the gig, which in the
-briefest period was seen heading for the yacht as fast as oars could
-drive her.
-
-‘My word, sir,’ said Mr. Windsor, ‘it looked very crooked when I come
-on the ground. I saw that frog-eating mounseer potting you with his
-squirt like a tree’d ’possum—both the young ladies, too, being run off
-to sea with, clean and clear against their wills. I don’t hold with
-that sea business at all—it’s dangerous—let alone with a boss like
-the Count, who’s wanted in his own country, like as not. However, we
-euchred ’em this time, whoever plays next game.’
-
-‘You behaved like a trump, Jack. You were my genuine “right bower,”’
-said Mr. Neuchamp with unwonted humour and heartiness. ‘Without you we
-should never have won the odd trick. I knew that you were just behind
-me at Woolloomooloo; but I was terribly afraid that you could not be up
-in time.’
-
-‘If one John Windsor’s anyways handy when you’re in trouble, sir,
-you’ll mostly find him there or thereabouts, as long as he’s alive,
-that is. I can’t say afterwards. What do you think, sir, about what
-comes after all this rough-and-tumble that we coves call life?’
-demanded Jack with sudden interest.
-
-‘I don’t think too much about it, which is perhaps the best wisdom. But
-of this we may be sure, John, that no man will fare worse in the other
-world for doing his duty as a man and a Christian in this.’
-
-When the house was reached, it appeared that Miss Folleton had
-been handed over to the good offices of her friend’s maid, and was
-recovering her nervous system in the seclusion of a guest-chamber.
-Antonia, having smoothed her hair, and rearranged herself generally,
-awaited the victor in the verandah. She stood gazing seawards with a
-haughty air of defiance, which still savoured of the fray. The light of
-battle had not faded from her eye; a bright flush embellished with rare
-and wondrous beauty the untinted marble of her delicate features.
-
-As she stood, unconsciously statuesque, and gazed half unheeding in her
-rapt regard of the flying bark, the long-loved, fast-thronging, magical
-glories of the evening ocean-pageant,
-
- ... the day was dying:
- Sudden the sun shone forth; its beams were lying
- Like boiling gold on ocean, strange to see;
- And on the shattered vapours, which defying
- The power of light in vain, tossed restlessly
- In the red heaven like wrecks in a tempestuous sea.
-
-‘It is you,’ she said, suddenly turning towards Ernest with a look of
-praise and gratitude almost childlike in its absence of reserve. ‘How
-can I, how will my father, ever thank you for this day’s deeds? I had
-given up all for lost; that is, as far as that foolish Harriet was
-concerned. They should have torn me limb from limb before they should
-have placed us in their boat. Then I determined to fight for Harriet,
-to—yes! I believe that is the word, for I really felt the real fighting
-spirit all over—it is not such a very unpleasant sensation as one would
-think. I was quite _exaltée_, and if I had had a revolver, I think the
-Count would have paid forfeit with his life, whatever might have come
-after. Papa would kill him now if they met.’
-
-‘Is there no fear of such a meeting?’
-
-‘None, thank Heaven!’ said Antonia, ‘though he deserves the worst in
-the shape of punishment. Sydney has seen the last of him. Look!’ she
-cried, as every sail on the long, low, beautiful schooner filled as
-if by magic, and the graceful craft, leaning to the full force of the
-strong south wind, swept forth towards the sea-way.
-
-‘He is safe from pursuit,’ she continued, ‘even if tidings could have
-been sent at the instant. With this breeze behind him, there is nothing
-in Sydney which would not be hull down behind the _White Falcon_
-before day broke. Of course he will steer for one of the northern
-ports, or else for the Islands. They must have had every sail tied
-with spun-yarn, so as to be ready to unfurl at a moment’s notice. To
-you alone, and to that brave Jack Windsor, it is due that we are not
-miserable captives in yonder flying bark. I shudder to think of it.’
-
-‘I should have done little without John,’ said Mr. Neuchamp. ‘He came
-up like Blücher at Waterloo, and I was as impatiently awaiting his
-arrival as the Duke. Here—receive Miss Frankston’s thanks, John; then,
-with her permission, you can go and ask the butler for some beer. I
-daresay you feel equal to it.’
-
-‘You have behaved this day, John Windsor, like a brave man and a true
-Australian,’ said Antonia, giving her hand to Jack, which he shook
-carefully and with much caution, relinquishing the dainty palm with
-evident relief. ‘My father will know how to thank the rescuer of his
-daughter; and she will remember you as a gallant fellow and a friend in
-need all the days of her life.’
-
-‘Thank you, miss,’ said Mr. Windsor, with a respectful yet puzzled air.
-‘I’ve had many a worse shindy than this in my time, and got no thanks
-either—’tother way on, ‘ndeed. But of course I couldn’t help rolling
-in, seeing the master double-banked, and you young ladies being made
-to join a water-party against your wills. Don’t you have no more truck
-with them boats, miss; they’re too uncertain altogether. Nothing like
-dry land to my taste; even if the season’s bad, there’s a something to
-hang on by. My respects, miss, and I’ll try that beer; my throat’s like
-a bark chimney with the soot afire.’
-
-‘And now I must order you, Mr. Neuchamp, to betake yourself to your
-room. Look in the glass and see if your complexion hasn’t suffered.
-Was it the Count’s blood which flowed, or did you scratch your face
-with the prickly pear hedge? Let me look! Merciful heaven!’ exclaimed
-the girl, with a half scream, as she narrowly scanned her deliverer’s
-face; ‘why, there is the deep trace of a bullet on your temple. How
-providential that it was the least bit wide—a slight turn of your
-head—a shade nearer the temple, and you would have been lying there
-dead—dead! How awful to think of!’
-
-Here she covered her face with her hands. Tears trickled through the
-slender palms as her overwrought feelings found relief in a sudden
-burst of weeping.
-
-Mr. Neuchamp’s attempts at consolation would appear not to have been
-wholly ineffectual, if one may judge from the concluding sentences
-of rather a long-whispered conversation, all carried on prior to the
-lavation of his gory countenance.
-
-‘I always thought,’ said Antonia, smiling through her tears, with as
-much satirical emphasis as could coexist with so sudden an access of
-happiness, ‘that you wanted some one to take care of you in Australia.
-I fear I have been led into undertaking a very serious responsibility.’
-
-‘May it not be the other way?’ very naturally inquired Ernest. ‘If I
-had not been, as Jack would say, “there or thereabouts” to-day, some
-one might have been a pirate’s bride, after all. Miss Folleton, of
-course, had prior claims, but——‘
-
-‘But—please to go and render yourself presentable, this instant. We
-shall have such an amount of talking to do before we can put poor dear
-old pappy in possession of all the news. Good gracious, how can we ever
-tell him? How furious he will be!’
-
-‘Will he?’ inquired Ernest, with affected apprehension; ‘perhaps we had
-better defer our——’
-
-‘I don’t mean _that_—and you know it, sir; but, unless you wish to be
-taken for a pirate yourself, or an escaped I-don’t-know-what, you will
-do as I tell you.’
-
-So Ernest was fain to do as he was bid, commencing, unconsciously
-indeed, that period of servitude to which every son of Adam, all
-unheeding, is pledged who rivets on himself the flower-wreathed
-adamantine fetters of matrimony. He sought Mr. Frankston’s extremely
-comfortable dressing-room, at the behest of his beloved _châtelaine_;
-and very glad he was to find himself there.
-
-His sense of relief and general congratulation was, however, slightly
-alloyed by the thought of the stupendous amount of explanation and
-narrative due to Paul Frankston, when this now fast-approaching hour of
-dinner should arrive.
-
-‘I would it were bedtime, and all well,’ groaned he, in old Falstaff’s
-words, as he addressed himself to the rather serious duties of the
-toilette.
-
-Mr. Frankston arrived from town but a few minutes before the
-dinner-hour, and, like a wise man, made at once for his room.
-
-‘Only just time to dress, darling,’ said he to his daughter. ‘Got such
-a budget of news; met Croker just as I was coming out, tell Ernest. No
-end of news—quite unparalleled. You will be surprised, and so will he.’
-
-‘And so will you,’ thought Mr. Neuchamp, who just came into the hall in
-time to hear the concluding sentence. But he darkly bided his time.
-
-As the dinner-bell rang, forth issued Mr. Frankston, radiant with snowy
-waistcoat and renovated _personnel_, having the air at once of a man in
-good hope and expectation of dinner, also conscious of the possession
-of news which, however sensationally disastrous, does not prejudicially
-affect himself.
-
-‘Now then,’ he said, the soup having been disposed of, and the mildly
-stimulating Amontillado imbibed, ‘what do you think has become of our
-friend—or, rather, your friend, Antonia, for you never would let me
-abuse him—the Count von Schätterheims?’
-
-‘What indeed?’ replied Antonia, looking at her plate.
-
-‘Well, he has bolted, levanted, cleared out, on board his famous yacht,
-the _White Falcon_, for some northern port—Batavia, the Islands, New
-Guinea—no one knows.’
-
-‘How about money matters?’ inquired Ernest.
-
-‘Well, you both take it coolly, I must say,’ said Paul, hurt at the
-small effect of his great piece of ordnance. ‘As to money, all Sydney,
-in the legitimate credit way, is left lamenting. He had been operating
-very largely of late, and his losses and defalcations are immense.
-Yorick and Co.’s bill for wines and liqueurs is something awful.’
-
-‘Alas, poor Yorick!’ said Ernest, with so pathetic an emphasis that
-Antonia could not help laughing.
-
-‘You two seem very facetious to-night,’ quoth Paul with dignity. ‘It
-is no laughing matter, I can tell you. But you won’t laugh at _this_,
-I fancy. Croker told me that it was everywhere believed that he had
-persuaded that unhappy, infatuated girl Harriet Folleton to accompany
-him in his flight.’
-
-Mr. Frankston uttered these last words with a deep solemnity, imparted
-to his voice by the heartfelt pity which, at any time, he could have
-felt for the victim in such a case.
-
-His daughter and Ernest were sufficiently ill-bred to laugh.
-
-‘Hang me if I understand this!’ he commenced, in tones of righteous
-indignation; and then, softening, ‘Why Antonia, dearest, surely you
-must pity——’
-
-‘Papa, she is upstairs and in bed at this very moment, so she can’t
-have run away with the Count. There must be a mistake somewhere.’
-
-‘So there must, so there must,’ said Paul, instantly mollified, and
-addressing himself to his dinner. ‘I’m a hot-tempered old idiot, I
-know. But there’s no mistake about the Count’s debts, or the Count’s
-flight. He was sighted by No. 4 pilot cutter that brought in the
-English liner, the _Cumberland_, this evening, steering nor’-nor’-east,
-and before such a breeze as will see him clear of anything from this
-port before daylight.’
-
-‘He has gone, safe enough,’ said Ernest; ‘indeed, we watched him go
-through the Heads from the verandah—a most fortunate migration, in
-my opinion. He has conferred an immense benefit upon the country by
-leaving it, which I trust he will confirm by never returning.’
-
-‘Then you saw him go from here?’ inquired Mr. Frankston. ‘Was he close
-enough for you to see him?’
-
-‘Well,’ admitted Ernest, ‘he certainly _was_ close enough to see, and,
-indeed, to feel; but it’s rather a long story, and if you’re going to
-smoke this evening, we can have it all out on the verandah.’
-
-‘I think I must go and see how my visitor is getting on,’ said Antonia;
-‘and as I feel tired, I will make my farewell for the evening.’
-
-Was there in the outwardly formal handshaking a sudden instinctive
-pressure? Was there in the hasty glance a lighting up of hitherto
-lambent fires in the clear depths of Antonia’s deep-hued eyes—an added,
-half-remorseful, half-clinging tenderness in the never-omitted caress
-which marked her evening parting with her father? If so, that father
-was all unconscious, and the outward tokens were so faint as to have
-been invisible to all but one deeply interested, near-sighted observer.
-
-‘I am much relieved to find that poor girl Harriet Folleton has not
-been carried off, after all, by that scoundrel, who has taken us all in
-so splendidly,’ growled Paul. ‘Of course, now the mischief is done,
-all kinds of reports are going about the city as to his real character.
-People say he was a valet, or a courier; others, a supercargo, who ran
-away with that pretty boat he brought here. He certainly had a very
-good notion of handling a yacht.’
-
-‘Let me tell you, then, that it is chiefly owing to your daughter’s
-courage and unselfish determination to save her friend at all hazards,
-that Harriet Folleton is not now a captive in yonder yacht, hopelessly
-lost and disgraced,’ announced Mr. Neuchamp, commencing his broadside.
-
-‘Why, you don’t tell me that the scoundrel came _here_ and attempted
-any violence?’ said the old man, rising excitedly and performing the
-regulation quarter-deck walk up and down the verandah, while he dashed
-his ignited cigar excitedly out over the lawn. ‘If I knew—if I had
-known this day that he dared to set his foot upon these grounds with a
-lawless purpose towards any guest of Antonia’s, I’d have followed him
-to the Line and hanged him at his own yardarm.’
-
-As the old man uttered these very decided sentiments, somewhat at
-variance with the Navigation Act and international usage, his brow
-darkened, his eye gleamed with pitiless light, and his arm was raised
-with a gesture which indicated familiarity with the cutlass and the
-boarding-pike.
-
-‘You must not excite yourself,’ said Ernest, laying his hand kindly on
-the old man’s arm. ‘Remember, first of all, that the offender is beyond
-pursuit; that he was baulked in his evil purpose, and that he suffered
-ignominious defeat, chiefly through the timely help of Jack Windsor,
-who assisted me to rout the attacking force.’
-
-‘Good God!’ exclaimed the old man. ‘Attack—defeat; what has happened?
-and I sat gossiping at the club, while you were defending my home and
-my honour!’
-
-‘Could I do less? However, you had better hear the whole story straight
-out. No harm has been done, and the enemy was routed with loss.’
-
-The story was told. Full justice was done to Antonia’s heroism. Jack
-Windsor’s prowess received its meed of praise. His own fortunate
-overthrow of the Count by good luck and a little more practice in
-wrestling than continental usages render familiar, was slightly alluded
-to. Finally, he explained his reasons for assisting the escape of Von
-Schätterheims, and thereby confining the scandal of his attempted
-abduction to the narrow limit of the actual participators in the affray.
-
-Mr. Frankston walked the deck of a long-departed imaginary vessel so
-long without speaking that Ernest feared some rending typhoon of wrath
-after the enforced calm. But the event justified his best surmises.
-Placing his hand upon his guest’s arm, Paul said, in a voice vibrating
-with emotion—
-
-‘I see in you, Ernest Neuchamp, a man who this day has saved my honour
-and my life—hers, to whom this poor remnant of existence is but as
-this worthless weed.’ (Here he cast from him the half-consumed cigar.)
-‘From this day forth you are my son—take everything that I can give.
-Paul Frankston holds nothing back from the man who has done what you
-have done this day. I am but your steward—your manager, my dear boy,
-henceforward.’
-
-‘There is _one_ of your possessions—the most precious, the most
-priceless among them,’ answered Ernest, holding up his head with a
-do-or-die sort of air, ‘and that one I now ask of you. We are past
-phrases with each other. But you will understand that I at least do not
-undervalue the worth of Antonia Frankston’s heart, of your daughter’s
-hand!’
-
-Mr. Frankston once more paced the long-faded deck and communed with
-the broad and heaving deep. Then he turned. His eyes, from which the
-strange fire had faded wholly out, had a softened, perhaps somewhat
-clouded light.
-
-‘Ernest Neuchamp,’ he said, ‘if this day has witnessed, perhaps, the
-most bitter insult, the deepest humiliation to which Paul Frankston
-has ever been subjected, it has also witnessed his greatest joy. Take
-her—with her old father’s blessing. You have, what he considers,
-earth’s greatest treasure; and it is no flattery, but honest liking,
-when he swears that you are worthy of her. As far as human look-out can
-see over life’s course, Paul Frankston’s troubles and anxieties are
-over. Now I can take my cigar again.’
-
-More than one cigar was needed to allay the old man’s overstrained
-nervous system. Long they sat and talked, and saw the moon rise higher
-in the star-gemmed sky, casting a broader silver flame across the
-tremulous illumined deep; while between Ernest Neuchamp and the old man
-again stood a shadowy, diaphanous, divinely-moulded form, turning into
-an elysian aroma the scent of Paul’s cigars, and echoing the secret
-gladness of each thought, which in that hour of supernal loveliness and
-unutterable joy flowed from the bared heart of Ernest Neuchamp.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On the next morning Aurora in person must have attended to the proper
-arrangement of the dawn, the breakfast-hour, and other small matters
-which, apparently trivial, tend unquestionably to that due equilibrium
-of the nervous system, without which comfort is impossible and
-exhilaration hopeless.
-
-Thus, Miss Folleton, having slept well, appeared renovated and just
-becomingly repentant. Antonia was severely happy, Mr. Neuchamp calmly
-superior to fate, and Mr. Frankston so hilarious that his daughter had
-to interpose more than once.
-
-That ambrosial repast concluded, Antonia departed for town in the
-carriage, and straightway delivered up Miss Folleton to her rejoicing
-relatives, who had suffered anxiety in her absence. Hers was an
-impressionable, shallow nature, recovering easily from moral risks and
-disasters—even from physical ills. Her appetite reasserted itself; her
-love of life’s frivolities, temporarily obscured, brightened afresh;
-and long before the legend of the debts, the daring, the disappearance
-of the Count von Schätterheims had been supplanted by newer scandal,
-her cheek had recovered its wonted bloom, her step its lightness in the
-dance, and her mien its touchingly dependent grace.
-
-In due time she had her reward; for she captured, after a short but
-brilliant campaign, consisting of an oratorio, a lawn party, and three
-dances, an immensely opulent northern squatter. She looks fair and pure
-as the blue sky above her, as she rolls by, dressed _à merveille_, in
-the best-appointed carriage in Sydney. But for happiness—who shall say?
-
-In the meanwhile, unlimited pleasure-seeking and universal admiration
-supply a reasonable substitute.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXX
-
-
-Mr. Neuchamp, having now occasional leisure to reflect, discovered
-that he was provided with an extensive and valuable property which he
-_had_ partly come to Australia to seek, and with an affianced bride,
-whom he had not at all included among his probable possessions. As
-for the great project of Colonial Reform, which had stood out grandly
-dominating the landscape in the future of his dreams, with the solitary
-exception of the conversion of Jack Windsor, he could not aver that he
-had accomplished anything.
-
-His co-operative community had notably failed in practice. But for
-the aid and counsel of Mr. Levison, it might have overthrown his own
-fortune, without particularly benefiting the individuals of this
-society.
-
-Whenever he had acted upon his own discretion, and in furtherance of
-advanced views, he had been conspicuously wrong. Where he had followed
-the ideas of others, or been forced into them by circumstances, he
-had been invariably right. Where he had been generous, he had been
-deceived; where he had been cautious, he had found himself extravagant
-in loss; where he had been rash, riches had rolled in upon him with
-flowing tide. His most elaborate estimates of character had been
-ludicrously erroneous. His advice had been inapplicable, his theories
-unsound. Practice—mostly blindfold—had alone given him a glimmering
-knowledge of the relatively component parts of this most contradictory,
-unintelligible antipodean world.
-
-Mr. Neuchamp, having reached the very visible landmark of an engagement
-in his pilgrimage of love, was much minded to press for an immediate
-union, believing, now that the rain had come, there existed no rational
-impediments in the way of this last supreme success. Well-informed
-persons will know that no such outrage upon _les convenances_ could for
-a moment be tolerated. Baffled but not despondent, he returned to the
-charge with such determination that the event was fixed to take place
-in about two months, as being the earliest hour anything so dreadful
-could be thought of.
-
-So much being gained, Ernest became speedily aware that being at all
-hours and seasons subject to the raids of milliners‘attendants and
-others was a state of existence out of harmony with a poet’s soul.
-Thus, after divers unsatisfactory and interrupted interviews with
-Antonia, he took his passage by the mail, and heroically started for
-Rainbar.
-
-This brilliant combination of business with necessity would, he
-thought, serve to while away the weary hours between the scorned
-present and the beautiful future. Rainbar and Mildool had to be visited
-at some time or other. Although the luxurious life of the metropolis
-had gained upon him, Ernest Neuchamp always arose, Antæus-like, fresh
-to the call of duty.
-
-When he quitted the railway terminus and entered the mail-coach which
-was to convey him to his destination, the full magnitude of the mighty
-change of season burst upon him. During his stay in Sydney the short,
-bright southern spring-time had been born and was ripening into summer,
-with what effect upon plant life it was now a marvel of marvels to see.
-
-Mr. Neuchamp’s novitiate had been served during the latter years of a
-‘dry cycle.’ He had seen fair growth of pasture towards Christmas time,
-but of the amazing crop of grass and herbage uncared for, wasted, or
-burned, in what Mr. Windsor called ‘an out-and-out wet season,’ he had
-no previous experience.
-
-From the moment that the coach cleared the forest parks which skirted
-the plains, Ernest found himself embarked upon a ‘measureless prairie,’
-where the tall green grass waved far as eye could see in the summer
-breeze. A millennium of peace and plenty had apparently arrived for
-all manner of graminivorous creatures. How different was the aspect of
-these ‘happy hunting grounds,’ velvet-green of hue, flower-bespangled,
-brook-traversed, with the forgotten sound of falling waters ever and
-anon breaking on the ear, with hum of bee and carol blithe of bird,
-as the sleek-coated, high-conditioned coach-horses rattled the light
-drag merrily over the long long road! What a wondrous transformation!
-Would Augusta, _la belle cousine_, have believed that all this glorious
-natural beauty had been born, grown, and developed ‘since the rain
-came’?
-
-When at length the journey was over, and the proprietor of Rainbar and
-Mildool was deposited, with his portmanteau, at the garden gate of
-the former station, Mr. Neuchamp was constrained to confess that he
-hardly knew his own place. There had been much growth and greenery when
-he left with the fat cattle; but the riotous extravagance of nature
-in that direction could not have been credited by him without actual
-eye-witness.
-
-Around the buildings, the garden fence, the stockyard, the cowshed,
-was a growth of giant herbage, composed of wild oats, wild barley,
-marsh-mallows, clover, and fodder plants unnamed, that almost smothered
-these humble buildings and enclosures. A few milch cows fed lazily,
-looking as if they had been employed in testing the comparative merits
-of oilcake and Thorley’s cattle-food, for an agricultural experiment.
-The river-flats below the house were knee-deep in clover and meadow
-grasses, causing Mr. Neuchamp to wonder whether or no it would be worth
-while to go in for a mowing-machine and a few horse-rakes, for the easy
-conversion of a fraction of it into a few hundred tons of meadow hay,
-to be stored against the next, ‘dry year.’ The mixed grasses, as he had
-tested in a small way, made excellent hay. But how far off looked such
-a calamity! Thus ever with ‘youth at the prow and pleasure at the helm’
-do we lightly measure the future, recking neither of stormy sky nor of
-the ravening deep.
-
-After Mr. Neuchamp had sufficiently admired the grassy wilderness,
-thoughts arose respecting dinner, and also a feeling of wonder where
-everybody was. The station appeared to be minding itself. The cook was
-absent, though recent indications of his presence were visible in the
-kitchen. Charley Banks was away and Jack Windsor, probably at Mildool;
-also Piambook, whose open countenance and dazzling teeth would have
-been better than nothing. Where was Mrs. Windsor, _née_ Walton? He had
-rather looked forward to having a talk with her under new conditions
-of life. She could not be at Mildool, as there was no shelter for a
-decent woman there. What in the name of wonder had become of them
-all? There were no Indians in this country, or he might have turned
-his thoughts in the direction of Blackfeet or Comanches, the ‘wolf
-Apaché and the cannibal Navajo.’ Not even a Mormon settlement handy
-enough to organise a ‘mountain-meadows massacre’! He never thought
-Rainbar so lonely before. He went into the cottage, and in a leisurely
-way unpacked his portmanteau in the snug bedroom which he had so long
-inhabited—where he had so often, before the rain came, lain down in
-sorrow and arisen in despair. What a tiny wooden box it seemed! Yet he
-had thought it comfortable, even luxurious. Like those of many other
-distinguished travellers and heroes long absent from the scene of early
-conflict or youthful habitation, the eyes of Mr. Neuchamp had altered
-their focus.
-
-After three months’ familiarity with the lodging of clubs and villas,
-the neat but necessarily contracted apartments of his bush cottage
-appeared like cupboards, or even akin to a watch-box which he had once
-dwelt in at Garrandilla.
-
-However, he knew by former experience that a week or two of station
-life would restore his vision, his appetite, and his contentment with
-the district. Further than that he did not go. At the present price
-of cattle, it was not likely that he would need ever again to spend
-as many months consecutively at Rainbar as he had devoted to that
-desirable but isolated abode before the ‘drought broke up.’
-
-Having had ample time for comparison and appropriate reflections, he
-was at length set free from the apprehension that he was the sole
-inhabitant of Rainbar by the appearance of old Johnny, the cook,
-who expressed great delight and satisfaction at seeing him, and,
-explaining his absence by the statement that he had taken a walk of
-five miles down the river in order to buy a bag of potatoes from a dray
-loaded with those rare esculents, proceeded to place him in possession
-of facts.
-
-‘Every one about the place was away mustering at Mildool,’ he said,
-‘including Mr. Banks, both the blackfellows, Jack Windsor, and even
-Mrs. Windsor, who, finding that there was an unoccupied hut formerly
-belonging to a dairyman at Mildool, had joined the mustering party. He
-(Johnny) hadn’t had a soul to talk to for three weeks since the muster
-began, and was as miserable as a bandicoot.’
-
-The old man bustled about, laid the cloth neatly, and cooked and
-served an inviting meal, which Ernest, after the reckless preparations
-supplied to coach passengers, really enjoyed. It was far into the night
-when the sound of horses‘hoofs was heard, and Mr. Banks, carrying
-his saddle and bridle, which he placed upon the verandah, let go his
-courser to graze at ease, entered the spare bedroom, undressed, and was
-in bed and asleep all in the space of about two minutes and a half, as
-it seemed to Mr. Neuchamp, from the first sound of his arrival. He did
-not care to make himself known to the wearied youngster, and reserved
-that sensation, very wisely, as might be many other pieces of news and
-matters of business, until morning light.
-
-With the new day arising, the active youth was much astonished, and
-even more gratified, to find his employer again under the same roof. At
-the daylight breakfast of the bush—_de rigueur_ when unusual work of
-any kind is going forward—he favoured Ernest with a full recital of all
-the exciting news.
-
-‘Everything was well as could possibly be. All the cattle at Rainbar
-were fat as pigs—all the “circle dot” cattle, all Freemans‘lot, which
-had really turned out a famous bargain. A dealer from Ballarat had been
-up a week since, and to him he had sold the whole of the Freeman horses
-at fifteen pounds a head, cash, young and old. He didn’t think, when
-old Cottonbush put the brand on them, that they’d ever see a ten-pound
-note for the whole boiling. He had the dealer’s cheque—a good one too,
-or he wouldn’t have taken it—for twelve hundred and fifteen pounds!
-There were just eighty-one head.
-
-‘As for the back country, it looked lovely. Grass and water everywhere.
-The Back Lake was full; the river was bank high, and if there was a
-flood—a regular big one—he wouldn’t say but what the water might flow
-into the canal after all and fill the Outer Lake. By the way, there
-were some back blocks for sale at the back of Rainbar and Mildool, and
-if he had his way they should be bought, as it would give them the
-command of all the back country as far as Barra Creek, and keep other
-people from coming in by and by, and perhaps giving trouble; nothing
-like securing all your back country while it is cheap.
-
-‘With regard to Mildool, it was the best bargain he (Charley Banks) had
-ever seen. All unbranded stock were to be given in, and there would be
-calves and yearlings enough to brand to pay two years’ wages to every
-man employed on both runs. They had pretty well got through the count;
-there would be a two or three hundred head over the muster number,
-which would be no harm, and it was only ordinary store price for half
-fat cattle broken in to the run. As to fat stock, you might go on to
-any camp and cut out with your eyes shut; you couldn’t go wrong; they
-were all fat together, young and old. Mooney, the dealer, stayed a
-night last week, and said he would give seven pounds all round for a
-thousand head, half cows, to be taken in three months. He thought it
-was a fair offer. It saved all the bother of sending men on the roads,
-and when you let the mob out of your yard you get your cheque, or
-draft, as the case might be. He was always for selling on the run, as
-long as the buyers were known men.‘
-
-‘How was Mrs. Windsor?’
-
-‘Oh, she was a brick—a regular trump—something like a woman! When she
-found Jack would only come back from Mildool once a week, she inquired
-whether there was any sort of a hut that could hold a small family
-at Mildool; was told there was the old dairyman’s hut at Green Bend,
-about a mile from the station. So she said she would rather live in a
-packing-case than be separated from her husband; and as Mildool was to
-be their home, they might as well go there at once. The end of it was
-that she made Jack take her traps over, and she has got the old place
-so neat and comfortable that any one might live there, small as it is,
-and enjoy life. She was a downright sensible woman, as well as a deuced
-good-looking one, and she would make Jack a rich man before he died.’
-
-‘Was there anything else to tell?’
-
-‘Well, not much. He was going to let Jack have Boinmaroo at Mildool,
-and keep Piambook here; when they mustered at either place they could
-join forces. Oh! the Freemans. Well, they had all gone a month back.
-Joe and Bill had gone to take up more land in the Albury district. Wish
-them joy wherever they go. We’re quit of them, that’s one comfort.
-Abraham Freeman and his lot cleared out for his old place at Bowning.
-They’ll do well there in a quiet way. Poor Tottie was sorry to leave
-Rainbar, and cried like fun. Had to comfort her a bit when the old
-woman wasn’t looking. It’s a beastly nuisance having other people’s
-stock on your run, and other people’s boys galloping about all over the
-country, whether you like it or not. Was deuced glad to see their teams
-yoked and their furniture on, I can tell you. Suppose you’d like to
-ride over to Mildool, now you are here?’
-
-Mr. Neuchamp thought he might as well, although fully satisfied that
-the muster would have been satisfactorily completed without him. So the
-two men rode over that day and had a look at the humours of a delivery
-muster.
-
-There was, as usual, great skirmishing about the ownership of calves
-temporarily separated from their maternal parents, one stockman
-averring that he remembered every spot on a certain calf’s hide since
-its early infancy, others corroborating his assertion that it ‘belonged
-to,’ or was the progeny of, his old black ‘triangle-bar’ cow; Mr.
-Windsor, as counsel for the Crown, declaring, on the other hand, that
-no calf should leave the Mildool run unless provided with a manifest
-mother, then and there substantiating her claim to maternity by such
-personal attentions or privileges as could not be fabricated or
-misunderstood. To him the adverse stockman would remark that, if he was
-going to talk like that, he might stick to every blessed clear-skin on
-the river. Mr. Windsor retorting that he doesn’t say for that, but if
-people think they can collar calves for the asking, they’ve come to the
-wrong shop when they ride to Mildool muster. And so on, and so on.
-
-Nathless, in course of time all things are arranged, in some shape,
-with or without a proportionate allowance of growling, as the men
-say. It being apparent that Mr. Windsor, now full-fledged overseer
-of Mildool, knows a thing or two, and will stand up stoutly for his
-master’s rights, fewer encroachments are, let us suppose, attempted.
-
-The cattle are counted and finally gathered, and are discovered to
-exceed, by three hundred odd, the station number. The former manager
-feels complimented that he has been able to muster beyond his books.
-The purchaser is satisfied, as the additional cattle are merely charged
-to him at store cattle price, and, being ‘to the manor born,’ will
-swiftly ‘grow into money.’ The strange stockmen depart, carrying with
-them a large mixed drove of strayed cattle. The ex-overseer pays his
-men and then leaves for down the country, there to wait on the agents,
-and receive his _congé_ or further employment, as the case may be.
-Charley Banks and the black boys, Jack Windsor, and Mr. Neuchamp are
-left in undisputed possession of the new kingdom.
-
-With such a season, with such prices ruling, the management is the
-merest routine work, a few hundred calves to brand, arrangements to
-make for an early muster to show the herd to the great cattle-dealer,
-who wants to buy a thousand head fat to be taken away in three months,
-and paid for by his acceptance at that date. Mr. Mooney happens to come
-before Ernest leaves for Sydney, and the negotiation being successful,
-the new proprietor of Mildool sets out for the metropolis with a
-negotiable bill in his pocket for seven thousand pounds—more than a
-third of the purchase-money of the run.
-
-While Mr. Neuchamp was possessing his soul in tranquillity at Rainbar,
-he was surprised at receiving a letter from his erstwhile Turonia
-comrade, Mr. Bright. That cheerful financier wrote as follows:
-
- TURONIA, _10th December 18—_.
-
- MY DEAR NEUCHAMP—I hear you are to be married to the nicest girl in
- Sydney. I thought it only reasonable, considering our two or three
- larks here, to offer my congratulations; and, by the bye, talking of
- things happening, that fellow Greffham, whom you remember my helping
- to arrest, was hanged last Wednesday at Medhurst.
-
- The evidence, joined to his paying away the numbered notes, known to
- be in the escort parcel, was awfully strong against him. He made no
- confession, and was as cool and unconcerned to the very last, as you
- and I ever saw him at the billiard-table. What a wonderful uphill
- game he could play! It is just possible he might have got off; but
- Merlin fished up additional evidence which fixed him, in the eyes of
- the jury, I think—-the groom at the inn, who swore he saw a small
- parcel covered with a gray rug on his saddle, as he returned from the
- direction of Running Creek, which he had not when he passed up. You
- ought to have seen him and Merlin look at each other when Merlin asked
- the Crown prosecutor to have Carl Anderson called. It was a ‘duel with
- eyes.’ But, even without that, I don’t see how he could have accounted
- for the notes.
-
- I happened to be in Medhurst the day he was to be turned off. I
- received a message that he wanted to see me, so I went to the gaol. I
- knew the sheriff well. They showed me into his cell at once.
-
- When I got in, Greffham nearly had finished dressing, and had only to
- put on his frock-coat to be better turned out, if possible, than he
- was for the lawn party Branksome gave when the Governor came up. He
- happened to be cleaning his teeth—you remember how white and even they
- were—as I came through the door.
-
- ‘Sit down, old man,’ he said, just as usual, shying his toothbrush
- into the corner of the cell. ‘I daresay they’ll do; and I suppose I
- shan’t want _that_ any more. What should you say? ’Pon my soul, there
- isn’t a chair to offer you; devilish close about furniture, aren’t
- they now? But it’s very kind of you, Bright, to come and see a fellow,
- when he’s—well—peculiarly situated, eh?’
-
- Here he laughed quite naturally, I give you my word—not forced at
- all. He certainly _was_ the coolest hand I ever saw; and he died as he
- lived.
-
- ‘What I wanted to see you for, Bright, was this’—here his voice shook
- and he _did_ appear to show a little feeling—‘you’ll take these two
- letters for me, like a good fellow; one I want you to send to —— after
- I am gone; the other you can open _then_. Make what use you like
- of the contents. I shan’t care then; say nothing _now_ to gratify
- curiosity. As to what I may have done, or not done, I hold myself the
- best judge of my reasons. You know what my life has been. Open and
- straightforward, if somewhat reckless. My cards have always been on
- the table. I have risked all that man holds dear on a throw before.
- This time I have lost. I pay the stakes; there is no more to be said.
- Lionel Greffham is not the man to say “I repent.” He is what he is,
- and will die as he has lived. My time on earth has not been spun out
- much, but, measured by enjoyment, with a front seat mostly at life’s
- opera, it adds up fairly. Give me a Havannah from your case. You
- will see me pretty “fit” for the stage when they ring in the leading
- performer. By the way, I told them to give you my revolver; and while
- I think of it, just remember this, if you want to make _very close
- shooting_ at any time, only put in three parts of the powder in the
- cartridge.‘
-
- I really believe these were his last words, except to the —— hang-man.
-
- He finished his cigar, and lounged up to the gallows, where he died in
- the face of a tremendous crowd, calmly and scornfully, just as he was
- accustomed to bear himself to them in life. Jack Ketch was a new hand,
- and nervous. I heard Greffham say, just as if he was rowing a fellow
- for awkwardness in saddling his horse, ‘You clumsy idiot, what are
- you trembling for? Hang me, if I can see what there is to make a fuss
- about! I’ll bet you a pound I tuck you up in ten minutes without any
- baggling. _Now_, you’re right. Am _I_ standing quite square?’
-
- ‘You’re all right, sir,’ the man said respectfully. The drop fell,
- and poor Greffham (I can’t help saying it, although he was a precious
- scoundrel) died without the least contrition. Showed perfectly good
- taste to the last. Deuced rum people one meets on a goldfield, don’t
- you, now?
-
- I suppose you’re not likely to come this way again. We’re not quite so
- jolly as we were. The Colonel has gone back to India. Old De Bracy has
- got a good Government appointment, for which he looks more suited than
- market-gardening, though he was hard to beat at that, or anything
- he tackled. I hear you’ve made pots of money. Parklands was here the
- other day, and told me. I have a deuced good mind to turn squatter
- myself. My regards to old Frankston, and ask him if he remembers the
- last story I told him. Ha, ha!—Yours sincerely,
-
- JOHN WILDER BRIGHT.
-
-Now the great muster and delivery at Mildool was over and everyday
-life at Rainbar had again to be faced, Ernest began to feel like one
-Alexander, sometimes called Great, who had conquered his way into the
-kingdom of Ennui. He was the possessor of a fortune and of a bride,
-both above his utmost hopes, his loftiest aspirations; but he began
-to fear that he had lost that which leaves life very destitute of
-savour—he feared with a new and terrible dread that he had lost his
-Occupation!
-
-For life seemed so much more easy, so much less necessary to take
-thought about, now that he had two stations than when he had but
-one—one likely to be wrested from him. So is it that Difficulty is
-oft our friend in disguise, Success but the veiled foe which smiles
-at our faltering footsteps and watches to destroy. He saw now, that
-with Jack Windsor at Mildool, and Charley Banks, alert, energetic,
-fully experienced, at Rainbar, his life henceforth would be that of
-a visitor, a supernumerary—unless indeed he employed his mind in the
-construction and organisation of ‘improvements’! Ha, ha! ’_Vade retro_,
-Sathanas!‘ The Genie was safe immured in his brazen sealed-up vessel.
-There should he remain.
-
-Still was there one ‘improvement’ in which he had never altogether lost
-faith, long and dispiriting as had been the divorce between formation
-and utility. This was the cutting the connecting channel between the
-Back Lake and the ‘Outer Lake.’ Long had the ‘master’s ditch’ been as
-useless as a fish-pond in the bosom of the Sahara, as a rose-garden in
-a glacier, as an oyster-bed in a steppe. Cattle had walked over it;
-grass had grown in it; stockmen and thoughtless souls had jeered at it,
-and at the English stranger who had thrown away upon its construction
-the money of which he possessed a quantity so greatly in excess of his
-apparent intelligence. As long as he remained the proprietor of the
-run, it would be hardly in keeping with the manner of the bush to call
-it ‘Neuchamp’s Folly.’ But had failure or absence chanced to occur in
-his case, the satirical nomenclature would not have been deferred for a
-week. In the solitary rides and musings to which, in default of daily
-work and labour, Mr. Neuchamp was fain to betake himself, it chanced
-that he had repeatedly examined that portion of this great sheet of
-water, which rang with the whistling wings of wild fowl, and on breezy
-days surged with long rippling waves against its bank.
-
-While in Sydney a number of back blocks, at no greater distance from
-this outer lake than it was from the former ‘frontage,’ had been put
-under offer to him. What if he should accept the terms—the price was
-low—and trust to the chance of the next great flood in the full-fed
-chafing river sending the water leaping down his tiny canal, and thus
-giving a value never before dreamed of to this splendidly grand but
-unnatural region. In spite of his half-settled determination to accept
-no other speculative risks, but, like a wise man, to rest contented
-with proved success, the next post conveyed instructions to Messrs.
-Paul Frankston and Co. to close for all the blocks, each five miles
-square, from A to M, comprising all the unoccupied country at the back
-of Rainbar and Mildool, at the price named.
-
-On the following morning the weather was misty and unusually cloudy,
-with an apparent tendency to rain. No rain fell, however; but the raw
-air, the unusual bleakness of the atmosphere, seemed abnormal to Ernest
-Neuchamp.
-
-‘I should not wonder,’ said Mr. Banks, in explanation, ‘that it was
-raining cats and dogs somewhere else, snowing, or something of that
-sort. Perhaps at the head of the river. If that’s the case, we shall
-have a flood and no mistake. Such a one as none of us has seen yet.
-However, we’ve neither hoof nor horn nor fleece on the frontage. It
-can’t hurt us, that’s one comfort.’
-
-Mr. Banks’s prognostications were correct. Within three days—
-
- ... like a horse unbroken,
- When first he feels the rein,
- The furious river struggled hard,
- And tossed his tawny mane,
- And burst the curb and bounded,
- Rejoicing to be free,
- And whirling down in fierce career
- Battlement and plank and pier,
- Rushed headlong to the sea.
-
-Battlement and plank and pier were in this case represented by hut
-slabs and rafters, haystacks and pumpkins, from the arable lands and
-meadows through which the great river held its upper course; while
-drowned stock and the posts and rails of many a mile of submerged
-fencing represented the latter floating trifles. There was much that
-was grand in the steadily deepening, broadening tide which slowly and
-remorselessly crawled over the wide green flats, which undermined
-the great waterworn precipices of the red-clayed bluffs, bringing
-down enormous fragments and masses, many tons in weight, which fell,
-foamed, and disappeared in the turbid, hurrying wave. Who could have
-recognised in this fierce, swollen, tyrant river, yellow as the Tiber,
-broad as the Danube, resistless as Ocean, the shallow, pellucid
-streamlet, rippling over its sandy shallows, of the dead, bygone famine
-year?
-
-On the larger flats it was miles wide. The white, straight tree-trunks
-stood like colonnades with arches framed in foliage, disappearing in
-endless perspective above a limitless plain of gliding waters.
-
-By night, as Mr. Neuchamp awoke in his cottage, which was built upon
-an elevation said by tradition to be above the reach of floods, the
-‘remorseless dash of billows’ sounded distinctly, unpleasantly close in
-the darkness.
-
-On the following day, the flood still continuing to rise, Piambook was
-despatched to the Back Lake to report, and upon his return stated that
-‘water yan along that one picaninny blind creek like it Murray, make
-haste longer Outer Lake.’ Full of hope and expectant of triumph, Mr.
-Neuchamp started out for ‘Lake country,’ accompanied by Mr. Banks.
-
-When they arrived at the first lake the unusual fulness and volume of
-the water in that reservoir showed that the main stream must have been
-forced outwards along the course of the ancient, natural channel, by
-which in years of exceptional high floods—and in those years only—the
-lake had been filled.
-
-Now, thought Mr. Neuchamp, the hour, long delayed, long doubted, has
-surely come. Who could have dreamed but a few short months since, when
-our very souls were adust and athirst with perennial famine, that our
-eyes should behold the sight which I see now? How should it teach us
-to hoard the garnered gold of truth, the ‘eternal verity’ in our heart
-of hearts! ‘My lord delayeth his coming.’ Was that held to be a reason,
-an excuse for the unfaithful, self-indulgent? Truly this would seem to
-some as great a miracle as the leaping water which followed the stroke
-of the prophet’s staff in that other desert of which we read of old.
-
-And now his eyes did actually behold the first trickling, wondrous
-motion of the brimming reservoir to advance, gravitation-led, along
-the narrow path to its far-distant sister lake. Slowly the full waters
-rose to the very lip of the vast natural cup or vase, and then, first
-saturating the entrance, poured down the narrow outlet which the
-forecasting mind of man had prepared for it. It trickled, it flowed, it
-ran, it coursed, foaming and rushing, along the cutting, of which the
-fall at first exceeded that of the general passage. It was done! It was
-over! A proud success!
-
-Charley Banks threw up his hat. Together they rode recklessly onward
-to the Outer Lake, and there Ernest Neuchamp enjoyed silently the deep
-satisfaction—then known but to the projector and inventor—of witnessing
-the waters of the Inner Lake, for the first time since the sea had
-ceased to murmur over these boundless levels, flow fast and flashing
-forward, driven by the pressure of the immense body behind, into the
-vast, deep, grass-clothed basin of the Outer Lake.
-
-This was a triumph truly. For this alone it was worth while to have
-journeyed across the long long ocean tide, to have toiled and suffered,
-waited and watched, to have eaten his heart with fear and sickening
-dread of the gaunt destroyer ‘Ruin,’ ever stalking nearer and nearer.
-This was true life—real adventure—the hazard and the triumph which
-alone constitute true manhood.
-
-In the ecstasy of the moment Ernest Neuchamp forgot the fortune he had
-gained, the bride whom he had won, the home of his youth, the grand and
-glorious future, the not uneventful past. All things seemed as dreams
-and visions by the side of this grand and living Reality.
-
-As he sat on his horse and gazed, still flowed the glorious wave into
-the century-dry basin by the channel which he, Ernest Neuchamp, had,
-in defiance of Nature, opinion, and society, conceived, formed, and
-successfully completed. Seasons might come and go; another dry time
-might come; the water might periodically evaporate and disappear,—but
-nothing could evade the great fact henceforth in the history of the
-land, that he had established the connection between the river and this
-distant, long-dry, unthought-of reservoir. There would be no more hint
-or menace of Neuchamp’s Folly—more likely, Neuchamp’s River.
-
-Lake Neuchamp! Pshaw! it was an inland sea. Why not name it now? Why
-not render immortal, not his own perhaps ancient patronymic, but the
-lovely and beloved name of his soul’s divinity? Now was the hour, the
-minute, when the virgin waters were falling for the first time in
-creation into the flower-besprinkled lap of the green earth before
-their eyes!
-
-‘Charley, my boy,’ he said to Mr. Banks, ‘take off your hat. Piambook,
-do liket me,’ he said, removing his own. ‘I name this water, now
-about to be filled for the first time within the memory of man,
-“Lake Antonia.” So mote it be. Hip, hip, hurrah!‘ and the echoes of
-the waste rang to the unfamiliar sounds of the great British shout
-of welcome, of salutation, of battle-joy, of deathdefiance, which
-England’s friends and England’s foes have had ere now just cause to
-know.
-
-‘Hurrah!’ joined in Charley Banks with genuine feeling. ‘By George! I
-never thought to see this sight—last year particularly; but, of course,
-we might have known it wasn’t going to be dry always, as Levison said.
-We don’t see far beyond our noses, most of us. But it _was_ hard to
-conjure up any notion of a regular out-and-out waterfall like this with
-a twelvemonth’s dust, and last year’s burnt feed keeping as black as
-the day it took fire. I believe there will be thirty feet of water in
-this when it’s full up, and it soon will be at this rate.’
-
-‘Budgeree tumble down water that one,’ said Piambook. ‘Old man
-blackfellow yabber, debil-debil, make a light here when he yan long
-that one scrub.’
-
-Another occasion of congratulation awaited Mr. Neuchamp, the pleasure
-and pride accompanying which were perhaps only second in degree to
-the feelings inspired by the engineering triumph of Lake Antonia.
-His stud of Austral-Arabian horses had shared in the general advance
-and development of the property; they were now a perfect marvel of
-successful rearing.
-
-He had them brought in daily from the sandhills near the plain where
-they ordinarily grazed, and passed hours in reviewing the colts and
-fillies, the yearlings, the mares and the foals. Every grade and stage,
-from the equine baby which gambolled and frisked by the side of its
-dam, to the well-furnished three-year-old filly—‘Velut in latis equa
-trima campis ludit exsultim, metuitque tangi,’—all were satin-coated,
-sleek and round, fuller-fleshed, stronger, swifter; more riotously
-healthy could they not have been had they been fed with golden oats in
-an emperor’s stable. Daintily now they picked the half-ripened tops
-from the fields of wild oats or barley which spread for leagues around.
-They drank of the pure clear waters of every pool and brooklet. They
-lay at night in the thickly-carpeted sandy knolls, and snuffed up the
-free desert breeze, fresh wafted from inmost sands or farthest seas.
-Partaking on one side of their parentage of the stately height and
-generous scope of their southern dams, culled from the noble race of
-island steeds which bear up the large frames of the modern Anglo-Saxon,
-they inherited a strong, perhaps overpowering infusion of the priceless
-blood of the courser of the desert. Their delicate heads, their wide
-nostrils, their adamantine legs, their perfect symmetry, all told
-of the ancient lineage of Omar the Keheilan, whose dam was Najima
-Sabeh or the Morning Star, of the strain Seglawee Dzedran, which, as
-every camel-driver of the Anezeh knows, dates back to El Kamsch, that
-glorious equine constellation, the five mares of Mahomet!
-
-Here, again, was another instance of what Ernest could not but
-acknowledge gratefully as the generosity of Fate. Had but the season
-continued obdurate, his utter irrevocable ruin could not have been
-stayed. As a consequence, this stud, so precious, so profitable, so
-distinguished as it was apparently destined to be (for Mr. Banks told
-him that numbers of offers had already been received for all available
-surplus stock, while the agent of a large dealer had implored him to
-put a price upon the whole stud), would doubtless have passed under the
-hammer as most unconsidered trifles, to be sneered at, scattered, for
-ever wasted and lost, as had been many a good fellow’s pet stud ere now.
-
-At length the day arrived when, having witnessed the satisfactory
-conclusion of every conceivable business duty and task which could be
-transacted at Rainbar or Mildool, Mr. Neuchamp took his place in the
-mail for Sydney, which city he had calculated to reach within a week of
-the dread ceremonial which was to seal his destiny. The coach did _not_
-break down or capsize, fracturing Mr. Neuchamp’s leg in two places. The
-train fulfilled its appointed task, and the stern steam-giant did not
-select that opportunity for running off the rails or equalising angles.
-Something of the sort might have been reasonably expected to happen to
-a hero so near the rapturous denouement of the third volume, in which,
-indeed, every hero of average respectability is killed, mysteriously
-imprisoned, or married.
-
-Mr. Neuchamp had undergone trials and troubles, risks and anxieties,
-losses and crosses; but the season of tribulation was for ever past
-for him. He had henceforth but to submit to the compulsory laurel
-crown, to the caresses of Fortune’s favourite delegates, to listen to
-the plaudits of the crowd, to withstand the whispers and glances of
-beauty. He was now wise, beautiful, strong, and brave, a conqueror, an
-Adonis—in a word, he was _rich_!
-
-He stood successful, and the world’s praises, grudgingly bestowed upon
-struggling fortitude, were showered upon the obviously victorious
-speculator. All kinds of rumours went forth about him. His possessions
-were multiplied, so that Rainbar and Mildool stood sponsors for a tract
-of country about as large as from Kashgar to Khiva.
-
-The canal was magnified into the dimensions of its namesake of Suez,
-and a trade was prophesied which would overshadow Melbourne and
-revolutionise Adelaide. He had contracted for the remount service for
-the whole Madras Presidency, such a matter being quite within the scope
-of his immense and high-bred studs. His herds of cattle were to supply
-Ballarat and Sandhurst with fat stock, and Melbourne buyers were on
-their way to secure everything he could deliver for the next two years!
-Ernest Neuchamp of Rainbar was the man of the day; the popular idol.
-Squatter though he might be, some of Jack Windsor’s grateful utterances
-had been circulated, and a democratic but strongly appreciative and
-generous populace adored him. Portraits of Mr. Neuchamp and his
-faithful retainer, Jack Windsor, contending victoriously with a swarthy
-piratical crowd, led on by the Count with a cutlass and a belt full
-of revolvers, appeared in the windows of the print-shops. Heroism and
-unselfish generosity, like murder, ‘will out.’
-
-Whether accidentally or otherwise, the Morahmee conflict had
-transpired. I make no reflections upon the well-known inviolable
-secrecy which shrouds all postnuptial communications. I content myself
-with stating a fact. Mr. Windsor was now a married man.
-
-Ernest was at first annoyed, then surprised, lastly, unaffectedly
-amused, when a highly popular dramatic version of the incident appeared
-at the Victoria Theatre, wherein he was represented as defying the
-Count, and assuring him that ‘berlood should flow from Morahmee Jetty
-to the South Head Lighthouse ere he relinquished the two maidens
-to his lawless grasp,’ while Jack Windsor’s representative, with a
-cabbage-tree hat and a hanging velvet band broad enough to make a sash
-for Carry, placed himself in an exaggerated, pugilistic attitude,
-and implored the foreign seamen to ‘come on and confront on his own
-ground, by the shore of that harbour which was his country’s pride, a
-true-born Sydney native!’ This brought down the house, and occasioned
-Mr. Neuchamp such anguish of mind that he began to think Jermyn Croker
-not such a bad fellow after all, and to feel unkindly towards the great
-land and the warm-hearted people of his adoption.
-
-Incapable of being stimulated by flattery into a false estimate of
-himself, these exaggerated symptoms of appreciation but pained him
-acutely; they disturbed his philosophical mind, ever craving for the
-performance of justice and intolerant of all lower standards of right.
-
-As for Antonia Frankston, like most women, she was gratified by these
-tokens of the distinction which had been so profusely accorded to her
-hero. He was a hero who, in her eyes, though worthy of triumphs and
-processions, evaded his claims to such distinctions. He was too prone,
-she thought, to be over Scriptural in his social habitudes, and unless
-roused and incited, to take the lower rather than the higher seat at
-the board. Now that the people, wavering and impulsive, but still a
-mighty and tangible power, had endorsed and adopted him, Antonia’s
-expansive mind recognised the brevet rank bestowed upon him. After all,
-had he not done much and dared greatly? Was it not well for the world
-to know it? If he was to be decorated, few deserved it more. So Antonia
-accepted serenely and in good faith the plaudits and universal flattery
-which now commenced to be showered upon the hero of her choice, the
-idol of her heart, the image of all written manhood.
-
-The days which Mr. Neuchamp spent in Sydney after his return from
-Mildool and Rainbar were certainly more tedious than any which he had
-ever known in the pleasant city; but at length they passed away and
-were no more—strange thought! those atoms from the mighty mass of
-Time—drops from his flowing river—draughts, alas! quaffed or spilled
-from life’s golden chalice. They were past, faded, dead, irrevocably
-gone, as the days of the years before Pharaoh, before the shepherd
-kings, before the dawn of human life, Eden, or the first gleam of light
-which flashed upon a darkened, formless world!
-
-Sad, pathetic even, is the death of a day! Its circling hours have
-known peace, joy, loving regard, social glee, charity, justice, mercy,
-repose. The allotted task has been done. The parent’s smile, the
-wife’s love, the babe’s prattle, have all glorified earth during its
-short season. And now the day is done! its tiny term is over, lost in
-the shoreless sea of past immensities! The brightly inconstant orb
-shines tenderly on the new-born stranger, full of joyous hope or dread
-expectancy. Who can tell what this, the new and garish day, may bring
-forth? Let us weep for the loved, fast-fading Child of Time, in whose
-golden tresses, at least, twined no cypress wreath.
-
-Then, heralded by calm and cloudless hours, did the wondrous unit, the
-Day of Days, dawn for Ernest Neuchamp. Rarely—even in that matchless
-clime, where the too ardent sun alone may be blamed by the husbandman,
-rarely by the citizen or the tourist—did a more perfect, unrivalled,
-wondrous day steal rosy through the ocean mists, the folded vapours, to
-change into fretted gold and Tyrian dyes the tender tints of flushed
-dawn. All nature visibly, audibly rejoiced. The tiny wavelets murmured
-on the milk-white sands of the Morahmee beach, that their darling—she
-who loved them and talked with them in many a hushed eve, in many a
-solemn starry midnight—was this day to be wed. The strange foreign
-pines and flower trees of the Morahmee plantation, brought from many
-a distant land to please the lady of the mansion, echoed the sound
-as they waved to and fro with oriental languor and tropical mystery.
-The flowerets she daily tended turned imperceptibly their delicately
-various sheen of petals to each other and sighed the tender secret.
-With how many secrets are not the flowers entrusted? Have they not been
-sworn to silence since those days of the great dead empires, when the
-vows and pleadings, songs and laughter, beneath the rose-chaplets were
-sacred evermore?
-
-Her gems, of which Antonia had great store—for there was more
-difficulty in preventing Paul from overlading her caskets than of
-replenishing them—even they knew it. They flashed and glittered, and
-reddened, and sent out green and purple light, for they are envious,
-hard, and remorseless of nature, as they noted the arrival of a
-bediamonded necklace, and a brooch outshining in splendour any of their
-rich and rare and very exclusive ‘set.’
-
-The pensioners, her dependants, of the house, among the humble, and
-the very poor, knew it and raised for her welfare the brief unstudied
-prayer which comes from a thankful heart. The poor, in ordinary
-acceptation, are, and have always been, in Australia, difficult
-to discover and to distinguish. But to the earnest quest of the
-unaffectedly charitable, anxious to do good to soul or body, to succour
-the tempted, to help the needy, to save him that is ready to perish,
-worthy occasions of ministration have never been absent from the
-outskirts of every large city.
-
-The forlorn spinster, friendless and forsaken, the overworked
-matron,—the shabby genteel sufferers too secure to starve, too poor to
-enjoy, too proud to complain, and, occasionally, what seemed to be an
-example of unmerciful disaster,—among these were the rich maiden’s
-unobtrusive but unremittingly performed good works, of which none
-heard, none knew, but the recipients, and perhaps the discreetest of
-co-workers.
-
- * * * * *
-
-And thus, with the day just dawned, had the maiden life of Antonia
-Frankston come to an end. From this day forth her being was to merge in
-that of one who, falling with the suddenness of a shipwrecked mariner
-into their society, had been, as would have been such a waif, treated
-with every friendly office, with the ample up-springing kindness of
-a princely heart, by her fond father. That father, no mean judge of
-his fellow-man, had seen in his early career but the noble errors of
-a lofty nature and an elevated ideal. Such disproportions between
-judgment and experience but prove the natural dignity of the mind as
-fully as the precocious wisdom of the gutter-bred urchin waif, his base
-descent and companionship.
-
-Paul Frankston had long foreseen that, when the lessons of life should
-have cleared the encrustation from the character of his _protégé_, it
-would shine forth bright and burnished as Toledo steel—all-sufficient
-for defence, nay, equal to spirited attack, should such need arise. He
-saw that the future possessor and guardian of his soul’s treasure was
-a ‘man’ as well as a ‘gentleman.’ On both of these essentials he laid
-great weight. For the rest, his principles were high and unfaltering,
-his habits unimpeachable. Whatever trifling defects there might be in
-his character were merely such as were incident to mortality. They must
-be left to the influence of time, experience, and of Antonia.
-
-‘If she doesn’t turn him out a perfect article,’ said Paul,
-unconsciously quitting the mental for the actual soliloquy, ‘why,
-nothing and no one can. If I had been any one else, and she had
-commenced early enough at me, I really believe that she’d have changed
-old Paul Frankston into a bishop, or, at any rate, a rural dean at
-least; even Charley Carryall——’
-
-But whether Captain Carryall’s utterances and anecdotes were scarcely
-of a nature calculated to harmonise with bishops and deans, or whether
-Mr. Frankston’s many engagements at this important crisis suddenly
-engaged his attention, can never be known with that precision which
-this chronicler is always anxious to supply. One thing only is certain,
-that he looked at his watch, and hastily arising from his arm-chair,
-departed into the city.
-
-For the information of a section of readers for whom we feel much
-respect and gratitude, it may be mentioned that the wedding took place
-at St. James’s, a venerable but architecturally imperfect pile in the
-vicinity of Hyde Park. There be churches near Morahmee more replete
-with ‘miserable sinners’ in robes of Worth and garments of Poole, but
-Mr. Frankston would none of them. In the old church had he stood beside
-his mother, a schoolboy, wondering and wearied, but acquiescent, after
-the manner of British children; in the old church had he plighted his
-troth to Antonia’s sainted mother; in the old church should his darling
-utter her vows, and in no other. Are there any words which can fitly
-interpret the deep joy and endless thankfulness which fill the heart
-and humble the mind of him who, all unworthy, knows that the chalice
-of life’s deepest joy is even then past all risk and danger, steadily
-uplifted to his reverent lips?
-
-Doubts there have been, delays that fretted, fears that shook the soul,
-clouds that dimmed, darkness that hid the sky of love. All these have
-sped. Here is naught but the glad and gracious Present, that blue and
-golden day which, pardoning and giving amnesty to the Past, beseeches,
-well-nigh assures, the stern veiled form of the Future.
-
-Some of these reflections would doubtless have mingled with the
-contemplations of Ernest Neuchamp at Aurora’s summons on that glad morn
-but for an unimportant fact—that he was at that well-known poetical
-period most soundly asleep.
-
-Restlessly wakeful during the earlier night-watches, he slept heavily
-at length, and only awoke, terrible to relate, with barely time for a
-careful toilet. Hastily disposing of a cup of coffee and a roll, he
-betook himself, in company with Mr. Parklands, who, I grieve to relate,
-had been playing loo all night, and was equally late and guilty, to the
-ancient church, where they were, by the good fortune of Parklands‘watch
-being rather fast—like all his movements—exactly, accurately the
-canonical five minutes before the time. Both of the important
-personages, being secretly troubled, looked slightly, becomingly pale.
-But the pallor of Parklands, entirely due to an unprosperous week,
-involving heavier disbursements and later sittings than ordinary, told
-much in his favour with the bridesmaids, so much so, that he always
-averred, in his customary irreverent speech, that ‘his flint was fixed’
-on the occasion.
-
-Probably owing to the calmly superior aspect of Mr. Hartley Selmore,
-or the tonic supplied by Jermyn Croker’s patent disapprobation and
-contempt of the whole proceedings, the protagonist and his acolouthos
-went through the ordeal with that exact proportion of courage,
-reverence, deftness, and satisfaction, the full rendering of which
-is often hard upon him who makes necessarily ‘a first appearance.’
-As for Antonia’s loveliness on that day, when, radiant, white-robed,
-and serene, she placed her hand in that of her lover, and greeted
-him with the trustful smile in which the virgin-soul shines out o’er
-the maiden-bride’s countenance, Ernest Neuchamp may be pardoned for
-thinking that the angel of his dreams had been permitted to visit the
-earth, to rehearse for his especial joy a premature beatific vision.
-
-Mr. Parklands effected a sensation by dropping the bridal-ring,
-but as he displayed much quickness of eye and manual dexterity in
-regaining it, the incident had rather a beneficial effect than
-otherwise. Everything was happily concluded, even to the kissing of
-the bridesmaids, Mr. Parklands, with his usual energy and daring,
-having insisted on carrying out personally that pleasing portion of the
-programme, supposed to appertain of right to the holder of the ancient
-and honourable office of groomsman. This compelled the chasing of two
-unwilling damsels half-way down the aisle, after which the slightly
-scandalised spectators quitted the church, while the wedding-guests
-betook themselves to Morahmee.
-
-There, as they arrived, Mr. Frankston, sweeping the bay mechanically
-with long-practised eye, exclaimed, ‘What boat is that heading for our
-jetty at such a pace?—a whaleboat, too, with a Kanaka crew. There’s a
-tall man with the steer oar in his fist; by Jove! it’s Charley Carryall
-for a thousand.’
-
-And that cheerful mariner and successful narrator it proved to be when
-the weather-beaten boat came foaming up to the little pier, drawn half
-out of the water by her wild-looking, long-haired crew, encouraged by
-their captain, who was backing up the stroke as if an eighty-barrel
-whale depended upon their speed.
-
-‘Frantically glad to see you, Charley, my boy,’ shouted Paul; ‘never
-hoped for such luck; the only man necessary to make the affair
-perfect—absolutely perfect. Isn’t he, Antonia? But how did you guess
-what we were about, and get here in time? I see the old _Banksia_ is
-only creeping up the harbour now.’
-
-‘_That_ guided me,’ said the Captain, pointing to the profusely
-decorated Morahmee flagstaff—an invariable adjunct to a marine villa.
-‘I was sure all that bunting wasn’t up for anything short of Antonia’s
-wedding. So I dressed and came away. The operculums I was bringing our
-little girl here will just come in appropriately. They’re the first any
-of you have seen, I daresay.’
-
-The faintly subdued tone which is usual and natural in the pre-banquet
-stage could not be reasonably protracted after the first fusilade of
-Paul’s wonderful Pommery and Veuve Clicquot, Steinberger and Roederer.
-
-The guests were many and joyous, the day brilliant, the occasion
-fortunate and mirth-inspiring, the entertainment unparalleled, and
-henceforth proverbial in a city of sumptuous and lavish hospitality.
-
-Small wonder, then, that the merriment was as free and unconstrained as
-the welcome was cordial, and the banquet regal in its costly profusion.
-How the jests circulated! how the silvery laughter rang! how the
-bright eyes sparkled! how the fair cheeks glowed! how the soft breeze
-whispered love! how the blue wave murmured joy!
-
-Did not Mr. Selmore propose the health of the bride and bridegroom with
-such pathetic eloquence that the uninstructed were doubtful as to
-whether he was Antonia’s uncle or Mr. Neuchamp’s father? He referred to
-the mingled energy, foresight, acuteness, and originality displayed by
-his valued, and, he might add, distinguished friend Ernest Neuchamp.
-By utilising qualities of the highest order, joined with information
-always yielded, he was proud to say, by himself and other pioneers, he
-had achieved an unequalled, but, he must add, a most deserved success,
-which placed him in the front rank of the pastoral proprietors of New
-South Wales.
-
-Any one would have imagined from Mr. Hartley Selmore’s benevolent flow
-of eulogy that he had carefully nursed the infancy of Mr. Neuchamp’s
-fortunes instead of ruthlessly endeavouring to strangle the tender
-nursling. He himself, by means of luck and much discount, had managed
-to hang on, ostensible proprietor of his numerous stations, until the
-tide turned. Now he was a wealthy man, and needed not to call the
-governor of the Bank of England his cousin.
-
-With prosperity his character and estimation had much improved.
-There were those yet who said he was an unprincipled remorseless old
-humbug, and would none of him. But in a general way he was acceptable;
-popular, in private and in public. His natural talents were great; his
-acquirements above the average; his manner irresistible; it was no
-one’s particular interest or business to bring him to book,—so he dined
-and played billiards at the clubs, buttonholed officials, and greeted
-illustrious strangers, as if the greater portion of the pastoral
-interior of Australia belonged to him, or as though he were one of the
-Conscript Fathers, distinguished for an excess of Roman virtues, of
-this rising nation.
-
-Mr. Parklands indeed desired to throw some missile at him for his
-‘cheek,’ as he confided to a young lady with sensational blue eyes,
-but desisted from that practical criticism upon being implored by his
-fair neighbour not to think of it, for her sake, and that of the ladies
-generally. The speaker was pretty enough to speak with authority, and
-so Hartley, like other fortunate conspirators and oppressors, departed
-in triumph, with the plaudits and congratulations of the unthinking
-public. For the rest, the affair went off much as such society
-fireworks do. Augusta Neuchamp, in a Paris dress, looked so extremely
-well that Jermyn Croker congratulated himself warmly, and mingled such
-vitriolic scintillations with his pleasantries, that every one was awed
-into admiration. The mail steamer was to sail in a few days, and he
-flattered himself that he had contrived a surprise for all his friends,
-which should contain an element of ignoring contempt so complete in
-conception and execution, that his departure from the colony should
-faithfully reflect the opinions and convictions formed during his
-residence in it.
-
-Having, after considerable hesitation, finally determined to enter
-upon the frightfully uncertain adventure of matrimony, he had offered
-himself and heart, such as it was, in marriage to Miss Augusta, with
-many apologies for the apparent necessity of the ceremony being
-performed in a colony. That young lady had endeared herself to Mr.
-Croker by her unsparing criticisms, by her ceaseless discontent
-with all things Australian, by her unmistakable air of _ton_ and
-distinction. He did not entirely overlook her possession of a moderate
-but assured income.
-
-With his customary disregard for the feelings of others, he had
-insisted upon being married, without the usual time-honoured ceremonies
-and concomitants, on the morning upon which the mail steamer started
-for Europe. By going on board directly afterwards, the Sydney people
-would be precluded from hearing of the event until after their
-departure; while their fellow-passengers, most of them strangers, would
-be ignorant as to whether the newly-married couple were of a week’s
-date or of six months.
-
-This arrangement, in which he had no great difficulty in persuading
-Miss Augusta to acquiesce, would have excellently answered Mr. Croker’s
-unselfish expectations but for one circumstance, which he doubtless
-noted to the debit of colonial wrongs and shortcomings—he had neglected
-to procure the co-operation of the elements.
-
-No sooner had the ceremony, unwitnessed save by Paul Frankston and Mr.
-and Mrs. Neuchamp, taken place, and the happy pair been transferred
-to the _Nubia_, their luggage having been safely deposited in that
-magnificent ocean steamer days before,—no sooner had the great steamer
-neared the limit of the harbour, when a southerly gale, an absolute
-hurricane, broke upon the coast with such almost unprecedented fury
-that till it abated no sane commander of the Peninsular and Oriental
-Company’s service would have dreamed of quitting safe anchorage.
-
-For three days the ‘tempest howled and wailed,’ and most uncomfortably
-the _Nubia_ lay at anchor, safe but most uneasy, and, as she was rather
-crank, rolling and pitching nearly as wildly as she could have done in
-the open sea.
-
-It so chanced that one of Mr. Croker’s few weak points was an
-extraordinarily extreme susceptibility to _mal de mer_. On all
-occasions upon which he had cleared the Heads, for years past, he had
-suffered terribly. But never since his first outward-bound experience
-in early life had he suffered torments, prostration, akin to this. He
-lay in his cabin death-like, despairing, well-nigh in collapse.
-
-Miss Neuchamp, in spite of her much travelling, was always a martyr
-during the first week of a voyage, if the weather chanced to be bad.
-Now it certainly was bad, very bad; and in consequence Miss Augusta
-lay, under the charge of a stewardess, in a stern cabin, well-nigh
-sick unto death, heedless of life and its chequered presentments, and
-as oblivious, not to say indifferent, to the fate of Jermyn Croker as
-if she had yesterday sworn to love and obey the chief officer of the
-_Nubia_.
-
-This was temporary anguish, mordant and keen, doubtless. But Time, the
-healer, would certainly in a few days have set it straight. The fact
-of an unknown lady and gentleman being indisposed at the commencement
-of the voyage afflicts nobody. But here was apparently the finger of
-the fiend. A ruffianly pilot, coming off in his hardy yawl, brought on
-board a copy of the _Sydney Morning Herald_ of the day following their
-attempted departure, in which it was duly set forth how, at St. James’s
-Church, by Canon Druid, Jermyn, second son of Crusty Croker, Esq., of
-Crankleye Hall, Cornwall, was then and there married to Augusta, only
-daughter of the Rev. Cyril Neuchamp, incumbent of Neuchamp-Barton,
-Buckinghamshire, England. Now the joke was out. Even under such
-unpromising circumstances it told. Here were two mortals, passionately
-devoted of course, and in that state of matrimonial experience when
-all things tend to the wildest overrating, so cast down, so utterly
-prostrated by the foul Sea Demon, that they positively did not care
-a rush for each other. The great Jermyn lay, faintly ejaculating
-‘Steward, Ste-w-a-ar-d,’ at intervals, and making neither lament nor
-inquiry about his similarly suffering bride. As for Augusta, she had
-scarce more strength of body or mind than permitted her to moan out,
-‘I shall die, I shall die’; and apparently, for all she cared, in that
-unreal, phantasmal, pseudo-existence, which only was not death, though
-more dreadful, Jermyn Croker might have fallen overboard, or have been
-changed into a Seedee stoker. Then for this to happen to Jermyn Croker,
-of all people! The humour of the situation was inexhaustible!
-
-And though the fierce south wind departed and the _Nubia_ drove
-swiftly majestic across the long seas that part Cape Otway from the
-stormy Leuwin, though in due time the spice-laden gales blew ‘soft
-from Ceylon’s isle,’ and the savage peaks of Aden, the lofty summit of
-the Djebel Moussa rose to view in the grand succession of historical
-landscapes; yet to the last day of the voyage a stray question in
-reference to the precise effects of very bad cases of sea-sickness
-would be directed, as to persons of proved knowledge and experience, to
-Mr. and Mrs. Jermyn Croker, by their fellow-passengers.
-
-It is due to Mr. Croker, as a person of importance, to touch lightly
-upon his after-career. His wife discovered too late that in reaching
-England he had only changed the theme upon which his universal
-depreciations were composed. ‘Non animam sed cœlum mutant qui trans
-mare currunt.’ He abused the climate and the people of England with a
-savage freedom only paralleled by his Australian practice. Becoming
-tired of receiving 3 or 4 per cent for his money, he one day, in a fit
-of wrath, embarked one-half of his capital in a somewhat uncertain
-South American loan. His cash was absorbed, to reappear spasmodically
-in the shape of interest, of which there was little, while of principal
-it soon became apparent that there would be none.
-
-Reduced to the practice of marked though not distressing economy,
-Mr. Croker enjoyed the peculiar pleasure which is yielded to men of
-his disposition, of witnessing the possession of luxuries by others
-and a style of living which they are debarred from emulating. He was
-gladdened, too, by the occasional vision of an Australian with more
-money than he could spend, who rallied him upon his grave air, and
-bluntly asked why he was such a confounded fool as to sell out just as
-prices were really rising. Finally, to aggravate his sufferings, long
-unendurable by his own account, Mr. Parklands had the effrontery to
-come home, and, in the very neighbourhood where he, Croker, was living
-for economy, to buy a large estate which happened to be for sale.
-
-The unfailing flow of the new proprietor’s high spirits, his liberal
-ways, and frank manners, combined with exceptional straight going in
-the hunting-field, rendered him immensely popular, as indeed he had
-always contrived to be wherever fate and speculation led his roving
-steps. But it may be questioned whether his brother-colonist ever saw
-his old friend spinning by behind a blood team, or heard of his being
-among the select few in a ‘quick thing,’ without fulminating one of his
-choicest anathemas, comprehending at once the order to which he and
-Parklands had belonged, the country they had quitted, and the one in
-which they now sojourned.
-
-Mr. Banks remained in the employment of Mr. Neuchamp at Rainbar until,
-having saved and acquired by guarded investment a moderate capital, he
-had a tempting offer of joining, as junior partner, in the purchase of
-a large station in new country. Always a good-looking, manly fellow,
-he managed to secure the affections of a niece of Mr. Middleton, whom
-he met on one of his rare trips to Sydney, and, before he left for the
-Tadmor Downs, Lower Barcoo, they were married.
-
-Mr. Joe Freeman had employed some of the compulsory leisure time
-rendered necessary during his fulfilment of the residence clause for
-Mr. Levison, in an exhaustive study of the Crown Lands Alienation Act.
-From that important statute (20 Vic. No. 7, sec. 13) he discovered
-that, provided a man had children enough, there is but little limit to
-the quantity of the country’s soil that he can secure and occupy at a
-rate of expenditure singularly small and favourable to the speculative
-‘landist’ of the period.
-
-Thus Joe Freeman, after considerable ciphering, made out that he could
-‘take up’ for himself and his three younger children a total of twelve
-hundred and eighty acres of first-class land! He had determined that
-as long as there was an alluvial flat in the colony his choice should
-not consist of _bad_ land. Added to this would be a pre-emptive grazing
-right of three times the extent. This would come to three thousand
-eight hundred and forty acres, which, added to the freehold of twelve
-hundred and eighty acres, gave a total of five thousand one hundred and
-twenty acres. The entire use of this territory he could secure by a
-payment of five shillings per acre for the _freehold portion_ only—say,
-three hundred and twenty pounds.
-
-‘Of course his three children were compelled, by law, to reside on
-their selections. As two of these were under five years old, some
-difficulty in the carrying out of the apparently stringent section No.
-18 might be anticipated.
-
-This difficulty was utterly obliterated by building his cottage
-_exactly_ upon the intersecting lines of the four half-sections, thus:
-
-[Illustration: Diagram]
-
-By this clever contrivance Mary Ellen, the baby, as well as Bob, aged
-three years, were ‘residing upon their selections’ when they were in
-bed at night, inasmuch as that haven of rest (for the other members of
-the family) was carefully placed across the south line which divided
-the estates.
-
-Nor was this all. Bill Freeman took up a similar quantity of land in
-precisely the same way, locating it about a mile from his brother’s
-selection, so that as it was clearly not worth any other selector’s
-while to come between them, they would probably have the use of another
-section or two of land for nothing. The squatter on whose run this
-little sum was worked out was a struggling, burdened man, unable to
-buy out or borrow. He was ruined. But the individual, in all ages, has
-suffered for the State.
-
-Mr. Neuchamp’s Australian career had now reached a point when life,
-however heroic, is generally conceded to be less adventurous. His end,
-in a literary sense, is near. We feel bound in honour, however, to add
-the information, that upon the assurance of Mr. Frankston that they
-could not leave New South Wales temporarily at a more prosperous time,
-Ernest Neuchamp resolved once more to tempt the main, and to taste the
-joy of revisiting, with his Australian bride, his ancestral home.
-
-Having taken the precaution to call a council of the most eminent
-floriculturists of flower-loving Sydney to his aid, he procured and
-shipped a case of orchidaceous plants, second to none that had ever
-left the land, for the delectation of his brother Courtenay. He had
-long since paid the timely remittance which had so lightened his load
-of anxiety in the ‘dry season’ at Rainbar, with such an addition of
-‘colonial interest’ as temporarily altered the views of the highly
-conservative senior as to the soundness of Australian securities.
-
-Upon the genuine delight which Antonia experienced when the full glory
-of British luxury, the garnered wealth of a thousand years, burst
-upon her, it is not necessary here to dilate, nor, after a year’s
-continental travel, upon the rejoicings which followed the birth of
-Mr. Courtenay Frankston Neuchamp at the hall of his sires. His uncle
-immediately foresaw a full and pleasing occupation provided for
-his remaining years, in securing whatever lands in the vicinity of
-Neuchampstead might chance to be purchasable. They would be needed for
-the due territorial dignity of a gentleman, who, upon his accession
-to the estate, would probably have thirty or forty thousand a year
-additional to the present rental, to spend on one of the oldest
-properties in the kingdom.
-
-‘He himself,’ he said, ‘was unhappily a bachelor. He humbly trusted
-so to remain, but he was proud and pleased to think that the old House
-would once more be worthily represented. He had never seen the remotest
-possibility of such a state of matters taking place in his own time,
-and had never dreamed, therefore, of the smallest self-assertion.
-
-‘The case was now widely different. The cadet of the House, against,
-he would frankly own, his counsel and opinion, had chosen to seek his
-fortune on distant shores, as had many younger sons unavailingly. He
-had not only found it, but had returned, moreover, with the traditional
-Princess, proper to the King’s younger son, in all legends and
-romances. In his charming sister he recognised a princess in her own
-right, and an undeniable confirmation of his firmly-held though not
-expressed opinion, that his brother Ernest’s enthusiasm had always been
-tempered by a foundation of prudence and unerring taste.’
-
-Again in his native land, in his own county, Antonia had to submit
-to the lionisation of her husband, who came to be looked upon as a
-sort of compromise between Columbus and Sir Walter Raleigh, with a
-dash of Francis Drake. The very handsome income which the flourishing
-property of Rainbar and Mildool, _cum_ Back-blocks A to M, and the
-unwearied rainy seasons and high markets, permitted him to draw, was
-magnified tenfold. His liberal expenditure gratified the taste of the
-lower class, among whom legends involving romantic discoveries and
-annexations of goldfields received ready credence.
-
-Mr. Ernest Neuchamp was courteously distinguished by the county
-magnates, popular among the country gentlemen who had been his friends
-and those of his family from his youth, and the idol of the peasantry,
-who instinctively discerned, as do children and pet animals, that he
-viewed them with a sympathetic and considerate regard.
-
-When Mrs. Ernest Neuchamp, of Neuchampstead, was presented to her
-Gracious Sovereign by ‘the Duchess,’ that exalted lady deigned to
-express high approval of her very delicately beautiful and exquisitely
-apparelled subject from the far southern land, and to inquire if all
-Australian ladies were so lovely and so sweet of aspect and manner as
-the very lovely young creature she saw before her. The Court Circular
-was unprecedentedly enthusiastic; and in very high places was Ernest
-assured that he was looked upon as having conferred lustre upon
-his order and benefits upon his younger countrymen, to whom he had
-exhibited so good and worthy an example.
-
-All this panegyrical demonstration Ernest Neuchamp received not
-unsuitably, but with much of his old philosophical calmness of critical
-attitude. What he really had ‘gone out into the wilderness’ to see,
-and to do, he reflected he had neither seen nor done. What he found
-himself elevated to high places for doing, was the presumable amassing
-of a large fortune, a proceeding popular and always favourably looked
-upon. But this was only a secondary feature in his programme, and one
-in which he had taken comparatively little interest. He could not
-help smiling to himself with humorous appreciation of the satiric
-pleasantry of the position, conscious also that his depreciation of
-great commercial shrewdness and boldness in speculation was held to
-be but the proverbial modesty of a master mind; while the interest
-which he could not restrain himself from taking in plans for the weal
-and progress of his old friend and client, Demos, was considered to
-be the dilettante distraction with which, as great statesmen take to
-wood-chopping or poultry-rearing, the mighty hunter, the great operator
-of the trackless waste, like Garibaldi at Caprera, occupied himself. It
-was hardly worth while doing battle with the complimentary critics,
-who would insist upon crediting him with all the sterner virtues of
-their ideal colonist—a great and glorious personage who combined the
-autocracy of a Russian with the _savoir faire_ of a Parisian, the
-energy of an Englishman with the instinct of a Parsee and the rapidity
-of an American; after a while, no doubt, they would find out their
-god to have feet of clay. He would care little for that. But, in the
-meanwhile, no misgivings mingled with their enthusiastic admiration.
-The younger son of an ancient house, which possessed historic claims
-to the consideration of the county, had returned laden with gold,
-which he scattered with free and loving hand. That august magnate
-‘the Duke’ had (vicariously, of course—he had long lost the habit of
-personal action save in a few restricted modes) to look to his laurels.
-There was danger, else, that his old-world star would pale before this
-newly-arisen constellation, bright with the fresher lustre of the
-Southern Cross.
-
-All these admitted luxuries and triumphs notwithstanding, a day came
-when both Ernest Neuchamp, and Antonia his wife, began to approach,
-with increasing eagerness and decision, the question of return. In
-the three years which they had spent ‘at home’ they had, they could
-not conceal from themselves, exhausted the resources of Britain—of
-Europe—in their present state of sensation.
-
-Natural as was such a feeling in the heart of Antonia, with whom a
-yearning for her birthland, her childhood’s home, for but once again
-to hear the sigh of the summer wave from the verandah at Morahmee, was
-gradually gaining intensity, one wonders that Ernest Neuchamp should
-have fully shared her desire to return. Yet such was undoubtedly the
-fact.
-
-Briton as he was to the core, he had, during the third year of their
-furlough, been often impatient, often aweary, of an aimless life—that
-of a gazer, a spectator, a dilettante. Truth to tell, the strong free
-life of the new world had unfitted him for an existence of a mere
-recipiency.
-
-A fox-hunter, a fisherman, a fair shot, and a lover of coursing,
-he yet realised the curious fact that he was unable to satisfy his
-personal needs by devoting the greater portion of his leisure to these
-recreations, perfect in accessories and appointments, unrivalled in
-social concomitants, as are these kingly sports when enjoyed in Britain.
-
-Passionately fond of art, a connoisseur, and erstwhile an amateur of
-fair attainment, a haunter of libraries, a discriminating judge of old
-editions and rare imprints, he yet commenced to become impatient of
-days and weeks so spent. Such a life appeared to him now to be a waste
-of time. In vain his brother Courtenay remonstrated.
-
-‘I feel, my dear Courtenay, and it is no use disguising the truth to
-you or to myself, that I can no longer rest content in this little
-England of yours. It is a snug nest, but the bird has flown over the
-orchard wall, his wings have swept the waste and beat the foam; he can
-never again, I fear, dwell there, as of old; never again, I fear.’
-
-‘But why, in the name of all that is exasperating and eccentric, can
-you not be quiet, and let well alone?’ asked Courtenay, not without
-a flavour of just resentment. ‘You have money; an obedient, utterly
-devoted father-in-law, of a species unknown in Britain; a charming
-wife, who might lead me like a bear, were I so fortunate as to have
-been appropriated by her; troops of friends, I might almost say
-admirers—for you must own you are awfully overrated in the county. What
-in the wide world can urge you to tempt fortune by re-embarkation and
-this superfluous buccaneering?’
-
-‘I suppose it is vain to try and knock it out of your old head,
-Courtenay, that there is no more buccaneering in New South Wales than
-in old South Wales. But, talking of buccaneers, I suppose I _am_ like
-one of old Morgan’s men who had swung in a West Indian hammock, and
-seen the sack of Panama; thereafter unable to content himself in his
-native Devon.
-
-‘You might as well have asked of old Raoul de Neuchamp to go back
-and make cider in Normandy, after he had fought shoulder to shoulder
-with Taillefer and Rollo at Hastings, and tasted the stern delight
-of harrying Saxon Franklins and burning monasteries. I have found a
-land where deeds are to be done, and where conquest, though but of
-the forces of Nature, is still possible. Here in this happy isle your
-lances are only used in the tilt-yard and tournament, your swords hang
-on the wall, your armour is rusty, your knights fight but over the
-wine-cup, your ladye-loves are ever in the bowers. With us, across the
-main, still the warhorse carries mail, the lances are not headless, and
-many a shrewd blow on shield and helmet rings still.
-
-‘I am in the condition of “The Imprisoned Huntsman”—
-
- ‘My hawk is tired of perch and hood,
- My idle greyhound loathes his food,
- My steed is weary of his stall,
- And I am sick of captive thrall;
- I would I were, as I have been,
- Hunting the roe in forest green,
- With bended bow and bloodhound free,
- For that is the life that is meet for me.’
-
-‘I know from experience that it is as probable that a star should come
-down from the sky and do duty in the kitchen grate,’ said Courtenay
-Neuchamp sardonically, ‘as that you should listen to any one’s opinion
-but your own, or I would suggest that the falcon, and greyhound,
-and steed business is better if not exclusively performed in this
-hemisphere. I never doubted you would go your own road. But what
-does Antonia say to leaving the land of court circulars and Queen’s
-drawing-rooms and Paris bonnets fresh once a week?’
-
-‘She says’—and here Mrs. Neuchamp crept up to her husband’s side and
-placed her hand in his—‘that she is tired of Paradise—tired of perfect
-houses, unsurpassable servants and dinners, drives and drawing-rooms,
-lawn parties and archery meetings, the Academy and the Park, Belgravia
-and South Kensington—in fact, of everything and everybody except
-Neuchampstead and dear old Courtenay. She wants, like some one else, to
-go out into the world again, a real world, and not a sham one like the
-one in which rich people live in England. She is _living_, not life.
-Perhaps I am “_un peu_ Zingara”—who knows? It’s a mercy I’m not very
-dark, like some other Australians I have seen. But it is now the time
-to say, my dear Courtenay, that Ernest and I have grown tired of play,
-and want to go back to that end of the world where work grows.‘
-
-‘Please don’t smother me with wisdom and virtue,’ pleaded Courtenay,
-with a look of pathetic entreaty. ‘I know we are very ignorant and
-selfish, and so on, in this old-fashioned England of ours. I really
-think I might have become a convert and a colonist myself, if taken up
-early by a sufficiently zealous and prepossessing missionaress. I feel
-now that it is too late. Club-worship is with me too strongly ingrained
-in my nature. Clubs and idols are closely connected, you know. But are
-we never to meet again?’ and here the rarely changed countenance of
-Courtenay Neuchamp softened visibly.
-
-‘We will have another look at you in late years,’ said Antonia softly;
-‘perhaps we may come altogether when—when—we are old.’
-
-‘I think I may promise that,’ said Mr. Neuchamp. ‘When Frank is old
-enough to set up for himself at Morahmee, with an occasional trip to
-Rainbar and Mildool, to keep himself from forgetting how to ride,
-then I think we may possibly make our last voyage to the old home, in
-preparation for that journey on which I trust we three may set forth at
-periods not very distantly divided.’
-
-The brothers shook hands silently. Antonia bestowed a sister’s kiss
-upon the calm brow of the elder brother, and quitted the room. No
-more was said. But all needful preparations were made, and ere the
-autumn leaves had commenced to fall from the aged woods which girdled
-Neuchampstead, the _Massilia_ was steaming through the Straits of
-Bonifacio with Ernest Neuchamp watching the snowy mountain-tops of
-Corsica, while Antonia alternately enlivened the baby Frank or dipped
-into _The Crescent and the Cross,_ which she had long intended to read
-over again in a leisurely and considerate manner.
-
- * * * * *
-
-But little remains to tell of the after-life of Ernest Neuchamp.
-Settled once more in ‘the sunny land,’ he found his time fully and not
-unworthily occupied in the superintendence of his extensive properties
-and investments. There was much necessary journeying between Rainbar
-and Morahmee, at which latter place Paul Frankston had insisted upon
-their taking up their permanent abode. ‘I am going down hill,’ he
-said; ‘the old house will be yours when I am gone; why should I sit
-here lonely in my age while my darling and her children are so near
-me? Don’t be afraid of the nursery-racket bothering me. Every note
-of their young voices is music in my ears, being what they are.’ So
-in Ernest’s absence in the bush, or during the sitting of the House
-of Assembly—having from a stern sense of duty permitted himself to
-be elected as the representative of the electoral district of Lower
-Oxley—Antonia had a guardian and a companion. She resolved upon
-making the journey to Rainbar, indeed, in order that she might fully
-comprehend the nature of the life which her husband had formerly led.
-During her stay she formed a tolerably fair estimate of the value of
-the property, being a lady of an observing turn of mind, and possessing
-by inheritance a hitherto latent tendency towards the management of
-affairs not generally granted to the sex. She visited Lake Antonia,
-and warmly congratulated Mr. Neuchamp upon that grand achievement.
-She patted Osmund and Ben Bolt, now bordering on the dignity of
-pensioners. She drove over to Mrs. Windsor’s cottage at Mildool, where
-she found Carry established as rather a _grande dame_, with the general
-approbation of the district and of all the tourists and travellers who
-shared the proverbial hospitality of Mildool. She caused the stud to be
-driven in for inspection, when she had sufficient presence of mind to
-choose a pair of phaeton horses for herself out of them. But she told
-her husband that she could not perceive any advantage to be derived
-from living at Rainbar as long as their income maintained its present
-average, and that he could manage the interesting but exceedingly warm
-and isolated territory equally well by proxy.
-
-Jack Windsor, upon Mr. Banks’s promotion and marriage, became manager
-of the whole consolidated establishment, with a proportionate advance
-in salary. He developed his leading qualities of shrewdness and energy
-to their fullest capacity under the influence of prosperity. Being
-perfectly satisfied with his position and duties, having a good home, a
-contented wife, the means of educating his large family, the respect of
-the whole country-side, and the habit of saving a large portion of his
-liberal salary, besides an abundance of the exact species of occupation
-and exercise which suited him, it is not probable that he will make
-any attempt to ‘better himself.’ It is not certain that Mrs. Windsor
-would not favour the investment of their savings in property ‘down the
-country’ for the sake of the children, etc.; but Jack will not hear of
-it. ‘I should feel first-rate,’ he says scornfully, ‘shouldn’t I, in
-a place of my own, with a man and a boy, and forty or fifty head of
-crawling cattle to stare at while they were getting fit for market?
-That’s not my style. It wouldn’t suit any of us—not you either, old
-woman, to be poking about, helping at the wash-tub or something, or
-peelin’ potatoes for dinner. We couldn’t stand it after the life we’ve
-had here. I couldn’t do without half-a-dozen stabled hacks and a lot
-of smart men to keep up to the mark. Give me something _big_ to work
-at, done well, and paying for good keep and good spending all round.
-Five hundred and forty head of fat cattle cut out in two days like the
-last Mildool lot, and all the country-side at the muster—that’s John
-Windsor’s style—none of your Hawkesbury corn-shelling, butter-and-eggs
-racket. You ought to have married old Homminey, Carry, if that’s what
-you wanted. Besides, after thinking and saving and driving up to high
-pressure for the master so long, it would feel unnatural-like to be
-only working for myself.‘ So the argument was settled. Mr. Windsor
-had, it seems, tasted too fully of the luxury of power and command to
-relinquish it for humble independence.
-
-The undisputed sway over a large staff of working hands, the
-unquestioned control of money and credit, within certain limits, had
-become with him more and more an indispensable habitude. Accustomed
-to the tone of the leader and the centurion, he could not endure the
-thought of changing his wide eventful life into the decorous dulness of
-the small landed proprietor. Mrs. Windsor, too, who dressed exceedingly
-well, and was admitted on equal terms to the society of the district,
-a position which, from her tact, good sense, and extremely agreeable
-appearance, she suitably filled and fully deserved, would probably, as
-her husband forcibly explained, have felt the change almost as much as
-himself. So Mr. Neuchamp was spared the annoyance of looking out for a
-new manager.
-
-Hardy Baldacre accumulated a very large fortune, but was prevented,
-in middle life, from proving the exact amount of coin and property
-which may be amassed by the consistent practice of grinding parsimony,
-combined with an elimination of all the literary, artistic, social, and
-sympathetic tendencies. He habitually condemned the entire section,
-under the fatal _affiche_ of ‘don’t pay.’ To the surprise—we cannot
-with accuracy affirm, to the regret—of the general public, this very
-extensive proprietor fell a victim to a fit of _delirium tremens_,
-supervening upon the practice of irregular and excessive alcoholism.
-Into this vice of barren minds, the pitiless economist, guilty of so
-few other recreations, was gradually but irresistibly drawn.
-
-The _White Falcon_ fled far and fast with the fugitive noble, whose
-debts added the keenest edge among his late friends and creditors to
-the memory of his treasons. He escaped, with his usual good fortune,
-the civil and criminal tentacula in which the dread octopus of the law
-would speedily have enveloped him. He laughed at British and Australian
-warrants. But passing into one of the Dutch Indian settlements, he was
-sufficiently imprudent to pursue there also the same career of reckless
-expenditure. By an accident his character was disclosed, and his arrest
-effected at the moment of premeditated flight. A severe logic, learned
-in the strict commercial schools of Holland, where debt meets with no
-favour, guards the commerce of her intertropical colonies. The _White
-Falcon_ was promptly seized and sold to satisfy a small portion of the
-princely liabilities of the owner, while for long years, in a dreary
-dungeon, like another and a better sea-rover, Albert von Schätterheims
-was doomed to eat his heart in the darksome solitude of an ignoble and
-hopeless captivity.
-
-The Freeman family prospered in a general sense. Abraham Freeman
-settled down upon a comfortable but not over-fertile farm in the
-neighbourhood of Bowning. The thickness of the timber, and the
-conversion of much of it into fencing-rails, served to provide him
-with occupation, and therefore with good principles, as Tottie saucily
-observed, to his life’s end. That high-spirited damsel grieved much
-at first over the slowness and general fuss about trifles, which,
-after her extended experience, seemed to her to characterise the whole
-district, but was eventually persuaded by a thriving young miller
-that there were worse places to reside in. He was resolute, however,
-in forbidding the carrying of bags of flour, and as she was provided
-with a smart buggy and unlimited bonnets, her taste for adventurous
-excitement became modified in time, and the black ambling mare was
-handed over to the boys.
-
-William and Joe Freeman made much money by nomadic agrarianism. After
-years passed in arduously constructing sham improvements and ‘carrying
-out the residence clause,’ with no intention of residing, they found
-themselves able to purchase a station.
-
-Having paid down a large sum in cash, they entered into possession
-of their property with feelings of much self-gratulation, as being
-now truly squatters, just as much so, indeed, as Mr. Neuchamp, who
-had thought himself so well able to patronise them. But, unluckily
-for them, and in direct contravention of the saying, ‘Hawks winna
-pike oot hawks’ een,‘ the ex-owner of the station, formerly indeed an
-old acquaintance who had risen in life, displayed the most nefarious
-keenness in plotting an unscrupled treachery. He settled down, under
-the conditional purchase clause, section 13, upon the very best part
-of the run, the goodwill of which he had the day before been paid for.
-Having a large family, and the land laws having been recently altered
-so that a double area could be selected by each ‘person,’ he, with
-the Messrs. Freemans‘own cash, actually annexed, irrevocably, an area
-which reduced the value of the grazing property by about one-third.
-Shrewd and unscrupulous as themselves, he calmly informed the frantic
-Freemans ‘that he had only complied with the law.’ He laughed at their
-accusations of bad faith. ‘Every man for himself,’ he retorted, adding
-that ‘if all stories were true, they hadn’t been very particular
-themselves, but had sat down on the cove’s run that first helped ’em
-when they was bull-punchers without credit for a bag of flour.’
-
-Rendered furious by this very original application of their own
-practice to the detriment of their own property, they wasted much of
-their—well—we must say, legally acquired gains in endless suits and
-actions for trespass against this most unprincipled free selector,
-and others who shortly followed his example. The lawyers came to know
-Freeman _versus_ Downey as a _cause célèbre_. It is just possible that
-these brothers may come to comprehend, by individual suffering, the
-harassed feeling which their action had, many a time and oft, tended to
-produce in others.
-
-The later years of Mr. Neuchamp’s life have been stated by himself to
-be only too well filled with prosperity and happiness as compared with
-his deserts. Those who know him are aware that he could not become an
-idler—either aimless or bored. He lives principally in Sydney. But if
-ever he finds a course of unmitigated town-life commencing to assail
-his nervous system, he runs off to a grazing station within easy rail,
-where he has long superintended the production of the prize shorthorns,
-Herefords, and Devons necessary for the keeping up the supply of pure
-blood for his immense and distant herds. Here he revels in fresh
-air—the priceless sense of pure country life—and that absolute leisure
-and absolute freedom from interruption which the happiest paterfamilias
-rarely experiences in the home proper. Here Ernest Neuchamp builds up
-fresh stores of health, new reserves of animal spirits. Here Ernest
-probably thinks out those theories of perfected representative
-government in which, however, he fails at present to persuade an
-impatient, perhaps illogical, democracy to concur. His children are
-numerous, and all give promise, as, after a protracted and impartial
-consideration of their character, he is led to believe, of worthily
-carrying forward the temporarily modified but rarely relinquished
-hereditary tenets of his ancient House.
-
-Time rolls on. The great city expanding beautifies the terraced slopes
-and gardened promontories of the glorious haven. Old Paul Frankston
-lies buried in no crowded cemetery, but in a rock-hewn family vault
-under giant araucarias, within sound of the wave he loved so well.
-Yet is Morahmee still celebrated for that unselfish, unrestricted
-hospitality to the stranger-guest which made Paul Frankston’s name a
-synonym for general sympathy and readiest aid.
-
-Assuredly Ernest Neuchamp, now one of the largest proprietors in
-Australia, both of pastoral and urban property, has not suffered the
-reputation to decline. He remembers too well the hearty open visage,
-the kindly voice, the ready cheer of him who was so true at need, so
-delicate in feeling, so stanch in deed. Succoured himself at the crisis
-of fortune and happiness, he has vowed to help all whose inexperience
-arouses a sympathetic memory. The opinion of a social leader and
-eminent pastoralist may be considered to have exceptional weight and
-value. However that may be, much of his time is taken up in honouring
-the numberless letters of introduction showered upon him from Britain.
-Young gentlemen arrive in scores who have been obligingly provided with
-these valuable documents by sanguine ex-colonists. By the bearers they
-were regarded as passports to an assured independence. Some of these
-youthful squires, with spurs unwon, need restraining from imprudence,
-others a gentle course of urging towards effort and self-denial. But
-it has been noticed that the only occasions on which their respective
-guide, philosopher, and friend speaks with decision bordering on
-asperity, is when he exposes the fallacy of the reasoning upon which
-any ardent neophyte aspires to the position of A Colonial Reformer.
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-_Printed by_ R. & R. CLARK, _Edinburgh_.
-
-
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's note:
-
-Obvious typographical errors have been silently corrected. Variations
-in hyphenation and all other spelling and punctuation remain unchanged.
-
-Italics are represented thus _italic_.
-
-In “the [Ǝ]NE brand” on page 106 [Ǝ] represent the character depressed
-by half a line and in “the M[D] brand” on page 154 [D] represents a
-reversed D depressed by half a line.
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A COLONIAL REFORMER, VOL. III (OF
-3)***
-
-
-******* This file should be named 54366-0.txt or 54366-0.zip *******
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-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
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-<p>Title: A Colonial Reformer, Vol. III (of 3)</p>
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-<p>Language: English</p>
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-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A COLONIAL REFORMER, VOL. III (OF 3)***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4>E-text prepared by MWS, Les Galloway,<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<br />
- (<a href="https://archive.org">https://archive.org</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. See
- <a href="https://archive.org/details/colonialreformer03bold">
- https://archive.org/details/colonialreformer03bold</a><br />
- <br />
- Project Gutenberg has the other two volumes of this work.<br />
- <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/54067/54067-h/54067-h.htm">Volume I</a>: see http://www.gutenberg.org/files/54067/54067-h/54067-h.htm<br />
- <a href="http://www.gutenberg.org/files/55652/55652-h/55652-h.htm">Volume II</a>: see http://www.gutenberg.org/files/55652/55652-h/55652-h.htm
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<p>Note: The table of contents has been added by the transcriber.</p>
-</div>
-<p class="toc">
-
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV</a><br />
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV</a><br />
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI</a><br />
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII</a><br />
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII">CHAPTER XXVIII</a><br />
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XXIX">CHAPTER XXIX</a><br />
-<a href="#CHAPTER_XXX">CHAPTER XXX</a><br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-<p class="half-title spaced">A COLONIAL REFORMER</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" >
-<img src="images/i_002.jpg" alt="colophon" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-
-
-
-<h1><small>A</small><br />
-
-COLONIAL REFORMER</h1></div>
-
-<p class="center"><small>BY</small><br />
-
-ROLF BOLDREWOOD<br />
-
-<span class="xs">AUTHOR OF ‘ROBBERY UNDER ARMS,’ ‘THE SQUATTER’S DREAM,’<br />
-‘THE MINER’S RIGHT,’ ETC.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center space-above"><i><small>IN THREE VOLUMES</small></i></p>
-
-<p class="center space-below"><small>VOL. III</small></p>
-
-<p class="center">London<br />
-MACMILLAN AND CO.<br />
-<small>AND NEW YORK</small><br />
-1890</p>
-
-<p class="center xs"><i>All rights reserved</i>
-</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">1</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><a name="CHAPTER_XXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV</a></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>In the strange exceptional condition of nervous tension up
-to which that marvellous instrument, the human ‘harp of
-a thousand strings,’ is capable of being wound, under the
-pressure of dread and perplexity, there is a type of visitor
-whose face is always hailed with pleasure. This is a fact
-as unquestionable as the converse proposition. For the
-<i>bien-venu</i> under such delicate and peculiar circumstances,
-helpfulness, sympathy, and decision are indispensable.
-Of no avail are weakly condolences or mild assenting
-pity. The power to dispense substantial aid may or may
-not be wanting. But the friend in need must have the
-moral power and clearness of mental vision which render
-decisiveness possible and just. His fiat, favourable or
-unfavourable, lets in the light, separates real danger from
-undefined terror, offers security for well-grounded hope,
-or persuades to the calmness of resignation.</p>
-
-<p>A man so endowed, in a very unusual degree, was
-Mr. Levison. Deriving his leading characteristics from
-Nature’s gift—very scantily supplemented by education—he
-yet possessed the rare qualities of apprehensive
-acuteness, intrepidity, and discrimination in such measure
-and proportion as a hundred prize-takers at competitive
-examinations might have vainly hoped to emulate. Like<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">2</span>
-that Australian judge, of whom the American citizen, in
-an inland assize town, is reported to have said, ‘Wal,
-Judge Shortcharge may be right, or he may be wrong, but
-he <i>decides</i>. I go for the judge myself.’</p>
-
-<p>Abstinens Levison much resembled that brief but
-weighty legal luminary, in that, after due consideration
-of any case concerning which he was minded to give judgment,
-his verdict was clear and irrevocable.</p>
-
-<p>For this reason the soul of Ernest Neuchamp was glad
-within him at the prospect of hearing from the lips of
-the grave, undemonstrative, unwavering pastoralist words
-of comfort or of rebuke, which would be to him as the
-Oracles of the Gods.</p>
-
-<p>‘Jump off and come in,’ he said. ‘Delighted to see
-you—horse knocked up as usual? We’ll take the saddle
-off here, and let him pick at those reeds; they’re better
-than nothing. I was having a go-in at the garden here,
-just to take it out of myself a little, and forget my
-annoyances. But we must have some breakfast, though
-we are all going to be ruined, as you say—and it looks
-very like it.’</p>
-
-<p>As Mr. Neuchamp in his revulsion of feeling rattled
-off these greetings, partly in welcome and partly in
-explanation, his guest removed the saddle and several
-folds of blanket from the very prominent vertebræ of his
-gaunt courser, watching him roll and then attack the
-scantily furnished reed-bed, with much satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>‘Where did you come from this morning?’ inquired
-Ernest of his guest, as, after a prolonged visit to the bathroom,
-they sat down to breakfast; ‘you must have made
-a very early start if you came from Mildool.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I camped on the river,’ said Mr. Levison, attacking
-the corned beef in a deliberate but determined manner;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">3</span>
-‘in the bend, just below those free-selecting friends of
-yours; you don’t seem to have been getting on well with
-’em lately, from what they say.’</p>
-
-<p>‘We are not on good terms, I must admit,’ replied Mr.
-Neuchamp, with a slight air of embarrassment, recollecting
-Levison’s prophecy of evil, which had been verified to
-the letter; ‘but it is entirely their own fault. I was
-much deceived in them.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Very like,’ answered that gentleman, with as near an
-approach to a smile as his grave features ever permitted.
-‘It takes a smart man to be up to chaps of their sort.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Did you stay there?’ asked Ernest, anxious to lead
-the conversation into a less unsatisfactory channel; ‘they
-have not made themselves a very convenient dwelling.’</p>
-
-<p>‘No!’ replied Mr. Levison, preferring a request for
-another instalment of the cold round of beef. ‘I never
-stay at a place if I’m going to make a deal. It makes a
-difference in the bargain, I always think; and I wanted
-to make a little deal with those chaps, from what I heard
-as I came up the river.’</p>
-
-<p>‘A deal?’ said Ernest, with some surprise; ‘and how
-did you get on? I shouldn’t have thought they had much
-to sell.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, they’ve got a middling lot of quiet cattle for
-one thing; they’re regular crawlers, but none the worse
-for that if grass ever grows again. Then they’ve got,
-what with their selections and pre-emptives, a tidy slice,
-and of not the worst part, of Rainbar run. And as there
-was a friend of mine that a small place like that would
-suit, and the cattle and the few sheep, at a price—at a
-price,’ he continued, with slow earnestness—‘why—I’ll
-ask for another cup of tea—I had an hour’s mighty hard
-dealing, and bought the whole jimbang right out.’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">4</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Indeed!’ said Ernest, gratified in one sense, but
-slightly alarmed at the idea of a second pastoral proprietor
-being introduced into the sacred demesne of
-Rainbar; ‘but they have to fulfil their residence condition,
-haven’t they, according to the Land Act?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Of course I made <i>that</i> all right,’ affirmed the senior
-colonist. ‘They’re bound down to reside till their time
-is up, and they don’t get the balance of their money till
-they can convey, all square and legal. They didn’t know
-me, as luck would have it, and I dropped to their being
-very eager to sell out. These kind of chaps never look
-ahead beyond their noses, whereby I had ’em pretty well
-at my own price, for cash—cash, you know. A fine
-thing is cash, when you take care of it, and bring it out
-like an ace. It takes all before it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘What did you give for the cattle?’ asked Ernest,
-with melancholy interest.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, these small holders always believe the end of
-the world’s come when they find themselves landed in a
-real crusher of a dry season. They think the weather is
-bound to keep set fair for a lifetime. I showed ’em how
-their cattle was falling off, and at last they offered the
-lot all round at eight and sixpence—no calves given in,
-except regular staggering Bobs. And so my friend has
-the run, and the stock, and the pre-empts all in his own
-hands. He’ll do well out of ’em, or I’m much mistaken.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And does your friend propose to come and live here?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, he might, and he might not. I think I’ll take
-another egg—fine things eggs in a dry season. I expect
-your fowls live on grasshoppers pretty much. You see,
-if he could get two or three fellows as he could depend
-on to take up some more of the best bits of the bends,
-leaving a slice here and a slice there—so as it’s not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">5</span>
-worth any one else’s while to come in, because they’d
-have no pre-emptive worth talking of—he’d be able to
-keep all that angle pretty well to himself, and I believe
-it will keep well on it a thousand head of cattle some
-day.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I’m afraid it will spoil the sale of the run,’ said
-Ernest, with some diffidence; ‘not that it will matter to
-me much, as I shall have to sell out whether or no, and
-at present prices there will be little if anything left.
-You will have to take your cattle back if they’re not
-paid for.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, I don’t say but what it <i>might</i> spoil the sale of
-the run, especially if my friend was to be wide awake and
-take up his fresh selections with judgment. And don’t
-you think, now,’ Mr. Levison interrogated, fixing his clear
-gray eyes full upon Ernest’s countenance, ‘as it was a
-blind trick of yours to go and bring these chaps here,
-like a lot of catarrhed sheep, all among your own stock,
-just to make it hot for yourself and crab the sale of the
-run, supposing you wanted to sell?’</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Neuchamp had in his hours of remorse and repentance
-sufficiently gone over the ground of his errors
-and miscalculations, so as to be very fully convinced of
-the folly of this his most indefensible proceeding. He
-had been thirsting for the words of the oracle. Now that
-the hollow sounds came from Dodona’s oak, he liked not
-their purport. The spirit of his ancestors, temporarily
-oppressed by misfortune, awoke in his breast, and he
-thus made answer: ‘My dear sir, I am most willing to
-own that I have in this matter acted unwisely. And the
-more I see of this great but perplexing country, the more
-ready I am to admit that extreme caution is necessary in
-many transactions where such need does not appear on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">6</span>
-the surface. But I have acted in this, and in all other
-stages of my Australian career, upon the principle of
-attempting to do good to my fellow-creatures, and of
-raising the standard of human happiness and culture.
-Such motives I hold to be the true foundation of every
-instructed, christianised, and, therefore, permanent community.
-Want of success may have attended my efforts
-to carry out these ideas; but of such efforts and endeavours,
-whatever may be the result, I trust I shall
-never feel ashamed!’</p>
-
-<p>As Mr. Neuchamp uttered the concluding words of
-this vindication of his faith with a kindling eye and
-slightly raised tone, he held his head erect and looked
-with a fixed and rather stern regard at Mr. Levison, as
-if defying all the Paynim hosts of selfishness and
-monopoly.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Levison met his gaze with a moment’s searching
-glance, and then, with a relapse into his ordinary
-expression of judicial calculation, thus answered—</p>
-
-<p>‘I ain’t going to say that you are acting altogether
-wrong in trying to right things in a general way in life.
-There’s more than you has noticed a lot of wrong turns
-and breakdowns for want of a finger-post or two. And
-I like to see a man back his opinion right through,
-whether it’s right or wrong. But if you lose your team,
-and break your pole, and spoil your loading when you’re
-on a long overland trip, how are you to help your mates
-or any other chap that’s bogged when they want you to
-double-bank? That’s what I look at. You’ve got to
-stand and look on, just like a broke loafer or a coach
-passenger. What I say, and what I stick to, is that a
-man should make sure, and double sure, of his own
-footing, and <i>then</i> he can wire in and haul out any man,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">7</span>
-woman, or child as he takes a fancy to put on firm
-ground. But, if you go too fast, and your agent drops
-you, and you want to help a fellow, why, you’re bust,
-and he’s bust, and what can either of ye do but sit on
-your stern fixings and look at each other?’</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Levison’s illustrations were homely, but they had
-a force and application which Ernest fully recognised.</p>
-
-<p>‘You have the truth on your side,’ he said, after a
-pause. ‘I see it now—very plainly, too. I wonder
-why I could not see it before.’</p>
-
-<p>‘There’s a deal of studying required, it seems to
-me,’ propounded his eccentric mentor, ‘and a deal of
-experience, and knocking about, and loss of time and
-money, too, before a man comes to see the <i>right thing at
-the right time</i>. That’s where the hardship all lies. If
-the thing’s right and the time’s wrong, <i>that’s</i> no good.
-And the right time and the wrong thing is worse again.
-What you’ve been a-doin’ of ain’t so much wrong in
-itself—only the time’s wrong, that’s where your mistake
-is,—except things take a great start soon; and I don’t
-say they won’t, mind you.‘</p>
-
-<p>Here Mr. Levison looked at Ernest with an expression
-half humorous, half prophetic, so extremely
-unusual that the latter began to wonder whether there
-was any case on record of half a dozen cups of tea
-having produced temporary insanity. But the unaccustomed
-gleam departed suddenly from the dark,
-steadfast gray eyes, and the countenance resumed its
-wonted cast of calm investigation and unalterable
-decision.</p>
-
-<p>‘Does old Frankston ever give you a dressing down
-in the advice line?’ inquired Mr. Levison, without
-continuing the development of the idea he had last<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">8</span>
-started. ‘Because if he does, you’d have a bad time of
-it between us. But I’ve done all the preaching part of
-the story for this time, and I’m a-going on to the second
-chapter. Do you know the friend’s name as I bought
-these Freeman chaps out for?’</p>
-
-<p>‘No,’ said Ernest. ‘I shall be happy to afford him
-all the assistance I can—that is, if I’m here, you know,’
-he added, with sudden reflection.</p>
-
-<p>‘That’s all right; but he’s a youngish chap, and easy
-had. Will you promise to advise him to live economically,
-mind his business till times improve, and not
-waste his money, above all things? Tell him I said so.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I don’t think I am the best adviser you could pick
-in that way,’ said Ernest. ‘I am too sensible of my own
-defects; but I will deliver your message and add my
-feeble weight to the influence of your name.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That’s all right, and handsomely said. Now, my
-friend’s name is Ernest Neuchamp! I’ve bought the
-land and the cattle for him. They’re cheap enough if
-he never pays me for them, but I believe he will, and
-that those Freeman chaps will be biting their fingers at
-letting theirselves go so cheap this time next year. But,
-mind you tell him not to waste his money. Tell him
-Levison said so. Ha, ha! I must start now.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Levison laughed for the first time since Ernest had
-made his acquaintance. It must have been the sight of
-Ernest’s wonder-stricken face which caused this unprecedented
-though brief incongruity.</p>
-
-<p>‘I can never sufficiently thank you,’ he said; ‘but
-where’s the money to come from? The station will
-never pay it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That’s more than you can know,’ answered the
-Changer of Destinies; ‘It’s more than I know, too. I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">9</span>
-don’t mind telling you—as I said before—you’re not
-likely to interfere much with any man’s profits. But
-cattle are <i>going to rise</i>, and that to no foolish price.
-You mark my words. Before this time twelve months
-fat cattle will be worth five pounds a head, as sure as
-my name’s Ab. Levison. And if rain comes—and I’ve
-seen some signs that I have great dependence on—store
-cattle will be two and three pounds a head, and hard to
-buy at that.’</p>
-
-<p>These last words he uttered with great solemnity, and
-Mr. Neuchamp perceived that he was fully imbued with
-faith in his own vaticinations.</p>
-
-<p>‘I hope it may be so,’ Ernest replied. ‘Good
-heavens! what a wonderful change it would make in
-everything. But why should stock rise so?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Because the <i>yield of gold</i> is increasing every day and
-every hour in these colonies. Don’t you see the papers?
-I thought you was sure to have read everything. Why,
-you are not half posted up. Look here!’</p>
-
-<p>Here he produced from one of his capacious pockets a
-much worn and closely printed Melbourne <i>Argus</i>, in which
-mention was made of ‘the astonishing discovery of gold
-near Bunninyong at Mr. Yuille’s station, commonly known
-as Ballarat, in such quantity and richness as bade fair to
-rival the hitherto exhaustless yields of Turonia and California.
-Great excitement had taken place. Melbourne
-was deserted. You could not get your hair cut. The
-barristers were gone, leaving the judges lamenting.
-The doctors had followed their patients. The clergymen
-had followed their flocks. The shepherds had deserted
-theirs. All society existed in a state of dislocation!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Now,’ he continued, receiving the journal from
-Ernest, and carefully refolding and returning it to its<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">10</span>
-place of safety, ‘do you see what all this gold breaking
-out here and there and all about means?’</p>
-
-<p>‘For the present the Melbourne people seem to think
-it means loss, if not ruin, to them. The shepherds have
-nearly all run away, it seems, as also labourers of every
-description. The writer anticipates a great fall in the
-value of property. Indeed, houses and town allotments
-are considered to be hardly worth holding. I should
-have thought otherwise myself, but’ (here Ernest looked
-at his companion) ‘I begin to doubt the correctness of
-my own opinions.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, that writer’s an ass, whoever he is; and
-you’re a deal nearer the mark than he is. He’s a
-donkey, that, because their ain’t a thistle right against
-his nose, thinks there ain’t no more thistles in the world—let
-alone corn. Now I’ve been thinkin’ and thinkin’
-the whole matter over since a friend of mine in Port
-Phillip sent me this paper, and I cipher it out this way.
-They’ve sent down five thousand ounces this week from
-this place, Ballarat. Then they’ve struck it at Forest
-Creek, fifty miles off. Well, that tells me that there’s
-plenty of it, and more than years will see out, judging
-from California and Turonia, as we know of. Now what
-do you suppose all Europe—all the world—will do
-when they hear of this, that you can dig up gold like
-potatoes? Why, they won’t be able to find ships fast
-enough to bring ‘em here. When they do come they’ll
-want to be fed. The tea and sugar and tents and spades
-and shovels old Paul Frankston and the other merchants
-will find ’em somehow; the flour the farmers will find
-them, or if they can’t, old Paul and his friends will get
-it from Chili. <i>But they can’t import beef and mutton.</i>
-No; not if meat rose to a shilling a pound. Live stock<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">11</span>
-is the worst freight in the world, and there’s nowhere
-within boating distance where it grows plentiful as it
-does here. So when my sum’s worked out it means this,
-that more gold means double and treble the population,
-and double and treble the price of everything that we
-have here and want to sell.’</p>
-
-<p>As Mr. Levison paused,—not for breath, for he did not
-exceed his ordinary slow monotonal enunciation, as he
-propounded these original and startling ideas much as
-though he were reading from a book,—Mr. Neuchamp
-looked fixedly at his guest, as if to discover whether or
-no some subtle local influence peculiar to Rainbar had
-infected with speculative mania the shrewd, calm-judging
-stockholder.</p>
-
-<p>But the <i>genius loci</i>, however seductive, would have
-fared ill in a mental encounter with the slow, sure
-inferences and iron logic of Abstinens Levison. He
-displayed no trace of more than ordinary interest. And
-from all that was apparent, the onward march of a
-revolution fated to flood the land with wealth and to
-change a handful of pioneer communities into a nation,
-was accepted by him with the same faint unnoted
-surprise as would have been the announcement of a glut
-in the cattle market or the ‘sticking up’ of the downriver
-mail coach.</p>
-
-<p>‘That’s how it is in my mind,’ he slowly continued,
-as if pursuing his ordinary train of thoughts, ‘and before
-we meet again you’ll know all about it. I’m off to
-Melbourne as soon as I can get on to the mail line. I
-shall buy stock right and left, and pick up as many
-cottages and town allotments as I can find with good
-titles. They’ll be like these Freeman store cattle; cent
-per cent will be a trifle to what profits are to be had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">12</span>
-out of them. But all this yarning won’t buy the child
-a frock. Where’s that young man of yours? I want
-to leave my horse and saddle in his charge.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Where are you going now?’ asked Ernest. ‘How
-can you get over to the mail station without a horse?
-It’s a hundred and eighty miles to Wargan, where the
-coach line comes in.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It’s only thirty miles to Wood-duck Lagoon, where
-the horse mail passes,’ said his determined guest. ‘I
-left word for them down at Mingadee to send a led horse
-by the mailman for me to-morrow. Johnny Daly’s an
-old stockman of mine, and one of those chaps that when
-he says he’ll do a thing he always does it. I’m as sure
-of finding a horse there at ten o’clock to-morrow as if I
-saw him now.’</p>
-
-<p>‘But suppose he loses him on the way, or don’t find
-your horse ready at Mingadee, what then? Hadn’t you
-better take a man and horse from here?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, I don’t say Johnny would <i>steal</i> a horse, out
-and out, if he knew I expected one at a certain hour;
-he’s a good boy, though he does come from the Weddin
-Mountains. But he’d <i>have</i> one for me, some road or
-other, if there wasn’t one nearer than Bargo Brush. As
-for your horses, I’m obliged, and know I’m welcome, but
-it would knock up one going and one coming back, for
-they’re all as poor as crows, and that don’t pay, besides
-a man’s time for nothing. I’ve plenty of time, and the
-night’s the best travelling weather now. If you’ll call
-this native chap I’ll be off.’</p>
-
-<p>Ernest, though extremely loath to let his friend and
-benefactor depart on foot—of which, as a mode of progression,
-he was beginning to acquire the Australian
-opinion, viz. that it wore a poverty-stricken<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">13</span>
-appearance—could not decently oppose Mr. Levison’s fixed desire
-to take the road. He therefore called up Jack Windsor,
-to whose care Mr. Levison solemnly confided his emaciated
-quadruped, a much worn and sunburned saddle and bridle,
-together with a considerable portion of gray blanket, which,
-in many folds, did duty as saddle-cloth.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now, young man,’ he said solemnly, walking aside
-with Mr. Windsor, ‘you take care of these and my old
-horse. Give them to nobody without he brings Mr.
-Cottonbush’s written order; do you hear? That’s as
-good a stock horse and journey hack as ever you crossed,
-though he’s low now.’</p>
-
-<p>‘He is <i>very</i> low!’ averred Jack, looking at the bare-ribbed
-spectral but well-formed animal that was grazing
-within a few yards of the spot, ‘but he may get over it.
-I’ll take a look at him night and morning, and see that
-he’s lifted regular if he gets down.’</p>
-
-<p>‘All right,’ said his master. ‘I had to lift him myself
-this morning, and very hard work I had to get him up.
-But if it rains within the next two months you’ll have
-him kicking up his heels like a colt.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Are you going to walk to Wood-duck Lagoon, sir?’
-inquired Jack respectfully.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, I am, and no great matter either,’ returned the
-exceptionally wiry capitalist. ‘<i>I’m</i> right enough; don’t
-you trouble about me. What you and young Banks have
-to look out for is, to keep all these Circle Dot cattle well
-within bounds till the weather breaks, and then you can’t
-go wrong, and I look upon Mr. Neuchamp’s pile as made.
-I’ve taken to him, more than a bit. Besides, he’s got
-another good back, though he don’t know it. I’ve bought
-out the Freeman’s, stock, lock, and barrel, so their cattle
-won’t bother you any more.’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">14</span></p>
-
-<p>Here Mr. Windsor gave a leap off the ground, and cast
-his cabbage-tree hat violently from his curly brown locks
-in another direction.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, I’ve bought ’em pretty right; they didn’t know
-me, or they’d have stuck it on—bought ’em <i>for a friend</i>!
-So they’ll have the pleasure of seeing you and Banks
-branding the increase next year, just as they are giving
-up possession; and the calves will be worth more then
-than I paid for the cows yesterday. But I might be
-mistaken, you know.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It would be for the first time; so they all used to
-say at Boocalthra,’ answered Jack.</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>You</i> were there, then?’ said Mr. Levison, bending
-his extremely discriminating gaze upon the bronzed,
-resolute face. ‘<i>Now</i> I remember your brand; you were
-the curly-headed boy that used to ride the colts for the
-horse-breaker. Glad you turned out steady. I didn’t
-expect it. Stick to Rainbar; now you’re in a good place,
-and you’ll do well. But whatever you do, if you walk
-your feet off, don’t let these Circle Dot cows and heifers
-get out of bounds till the rain comes. If you are
-regularly beat, go down to Mingadee; there’s a hundred
-and fifty stock horses there, spelling for next winter’s
-work, and Cottonbush will have my orders to let you
-have half a dozen. I know what fresh cattle are in
-a season like this. Well, good-bye, Jack the Devil; I
-remember all about you now.’ Mr. Windsor grinned,
-yet preserved an air of diffidence. ‘Take care of the old
-horse, and don’t you lend that saddle to no one!’</p>
-
-<p>With these parting words tending to thrift, in curious
-contradistinction to the tenor of his action at Rainbar,
-Mr. Levison proceeded to take a hurried leave of his
-entertainer.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">15</span></p>
-
-<p>‘I’ve just been talking to that native chap of yours,’
-he said, ‘about my old horse. He wants a bit of looking
-after now, but you’d be surprised to see what style he
-has when he’s in good fettle. Wonderful horse on a
-camp. Best cutting-out horse, this day, on the river.
-Pulls rather hard, that’s the worst of him.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Neuchamp, who, having as yet not gone through
-the terrible trials of a prolonged drought, had never witnessed
-the incredible emaciation to which stock may be
-reduced, and their rapid and magical transformation at
-the wand of the enchanter ‘Rain,’ looked as if he really
-<i>would</i> be surprised at the tottering, hollow-eyed, fleshless
-spectre, in appearance something between an expiring
-poley cow and an anatomical preparation, ‘pulling hard’
-again, or doing any deed of valour as a charger.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ah! you’ll be all in the fashion, then,’ said Mr.
-Levison, with his customary affirmative expression, which
-apparently meant that having asserted his opinion it
-was waste of time to attempt to prove it. ‘When old
-BI (that’s what the men call him, his name’s written on
-him pretty big) kicks up his heels, it’ll mean that Rainbar’s
-<i>worth twenty thousand pounds</i>! That’s why I want
-you to be careful, and not waste your money and get sold
-up just before the tide turns. How’s that Arab horse-breeding
-notion turned out? They’d fetch about three
-pound a head all round just now.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Very well, so far; they’re a little poor, but nothing
-could look more promising than the yearlings—plenty of
-bone, and as handsome as you could make them. I
-should grieve more about their forced sale than anything.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, you’re not sold up yet, and won’t be if you’ll
-be careful and take my advice and Paul Frankston’s.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">16</span>
-You mark me, horses will be horses in a year or two.
-They’re hardly worth owning now; but their turn’s
-coming, with everything else that any man will have to
-sell in Australia for the next ten years.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Levison placed the few necessary articles which
-he had abstracted from his valise, in the moiety of the
-gray blanket which he had apparently not required as a
-saddle-cloth. He requested leave to cut off and to take
-with him a fair-sized section of damper, sternly refusing
-any other description of edible. Then, turning his face
-to the broad plain, he held out his hand to Ernest, and
-finally exhorting him not to waste his money, addressed
-himself to the far-stretching trail after such a fashion as
-convinced Ernest that he was no inexperienced pedestrian.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Neuchamp returned to his cottage in a very
-different frame of mind from that which characterised
-his pre-matutinal discipline in the garden. How short a
-time, how trifling an incident, occasionally suffices to turn
-the scale from anxiety to repose, from despair to glowing
-hope. This last cheering mental condition was indispensably
-necessary to Mr. Neuchamp’s acceptation of
-burdens, even to his very life. He had gone forth in
-the clear dawnlight a miserable man, racked by presentiments
-of scorn unalterable to come, gazing on ‘Ruin’s
-red letters writ in flame,’ and associated with the hitherto
-untarnished fame and sufficing fortune of Ernest Neuchamp;
-he had heard in imagination the laugh of scorn,
-the half-contemptuous, pitying condolence. Now, though
-much remained uncertain and unsafe, the blessed flower
-of Hope had recommenced to bloom. Its fragrance
-was once more shed over the soul of the fainting
-pilgrim through life’s desert, and the wayfarer arose<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">17</span>
-refreshed and invigorated, free once more to turn his
-brow erect and undaunted towards the Mecca of his
-dreams.</p>
-
-<p>This particular morning happened to be that of the
-bi-weekly post-day, a day to which Mr. Neuchamp had
-looked forward of late with considerably more apprehension
-than interest. How wonderfully different, as
-the years roll on, are the feelings with which that
-humble messenger of fate, the postman, is greeted! In
-life’s careless spring he is the custodian of friendship’s
-offering, the distributor of the small sweet joys of childhood,
-the dawning intellectual pleasures of youth, the
-rose-hued, enchanting flower-tokens of love. As the days
-of the years of our pilgrimage roll on, ‘the air is full of
-farewells to the dying and mournings for the dead.’ How
-altered is the character of the missives which lie motionless,
-but charged with subtle, terrible forces!—electric
-agents they!—thrilling or rending the vital frame from
-that overcharged battery, the heart!</p>
-
-<p>To this undesirable tenor and complexion had much
-of Mr. Neuchamp’s correspondence, drought-leavened and
-gloomy, arrived. Many of his smaller accounts were of
-necessity left unpaid. The cruel season, unchanged in
-the more vital characteristic of periodic moisture, seemed
-to be culminating in an apparently fixed and fatal determination
-on the part of Messrs. Oldstile and Crampton
-to let him have no more money on account.</p>
-
-<p>But several minor matters, on this particular day,
-besides the visit of Mr. Levison, seemed to point to
-Fortune’s more indulgent mood. The pile of letters and
-papers was pleasantly, if not hopefully, variegated by
-those periodicals and peculiarly stamped envelopes which
-denote the delivery of the European mail. Upon these<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">18</span>
-Ernest dashed with unconcealed eagerness, and tearing
-open a letter in his brother Courtenay’s delicate Italian
-handwriting, utterly devoid of linear emphasis, read as
-follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p class="psig">
-<span class="smcap">Neuchampstead</span>, <i>6th March 18—</i>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Ernest</span>—I cannot acknowledge surprise at the contents
-of your last letter, having always looked for some such ending to
-your colonial adventure. The day of success for such enterprises
-has gone by—if indeed <i>any one</i> ever was really successful at any
-time in such wanderings and Quixotisms. You quote the greater
-examples. Yet a little temporary notoriety, chiefly ending in imprisonment
-or the block, was the guerdon of Columbus and one
-Raleigh, instances which occur to me. As I have said before, I
-have no doubt that our family would have substantially benefited
-by remaining on their paternal fiords and leaving Normandy and
-England to the robbers and hangers-on who followed the popular
-pirate of the day. Being in England, I suppose we shall have to
-stay, though the climate daily recommends itself less to any one
-whose epidermis does not resemble a suit of armour. The crops
-have been bad this year. The tenants are slow and deficient. No
-one seems to have any money except certain Liverpool or Manchester
-persons, born with an aptitude for swindling in ‘gray
-shirtings,’ cotton twist, racehorses, or other equally plausible instrument
-for gambling. I spend little and risk nothing. So I
-may hope to survive in my insignificance, unless the grand Radical
-earthquake, which will surely swallow England’s aristocracy of
-birth and culture in a coming day, be antedated. All men of
-family who dabble in agriculture, commerce, or colonisation, are
-earthen pots which must inevitably be shattered by the aggressive
-flotilla of brazen vessels which encumbers every tide nowadays.
-You will admit I had no expectation of other result than your ruin
-when you embarked. In announcing that fact spare me the details.
-You will find your old rooms ready at Neuchampstead, and refurnished.
-I have been extravagant in some curious antique
-furniture.</p>
-
-<p>I enclose a draft for three thousand pounds. Such a sum is of
-no use to a gentleman in England. Fling it after the rest. It
-may console you, years hence, when you are adding Australian
-pollen masses to the famous collection of orchids for which <i>alone</i>
-Neuchampstead is celebrated, that your experiment had full justice.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">19</span>
-It is only the bourgeois who leaves the table before his ‘system’ is
-fairly tried.—Good-bye, my dear brother. Yours sincerely,</p>
-
-<p class="psig">
-<span class="smcap">Courtenay Neuchamp</span>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><i>P.S.</i>—I forgot to add that I gave Augusta your message. How
-could you be so incautious? I would have suppressed it, but had,
-of course, no option. She starts for Sydney by the mail steamer.
-Are the women in Australia so obstinate? But they are much the
-same everywhere, I apprehend.—C. N.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>The first emotion which Mr. Neuchamp experienced
-after reading this characteristic letter was one of unqualified
-delight. The sight of the draft for the three
-thousand pounds, so slightingly alluded to by Courtenay,
-was as the vision of the palm-trees at the well to the
-fainting desert pilgrim, of the distant sail to the gaunt,
-perishing seaman on the drifting raft—the symbol of
-blessed hope, of assured deliverance. The capital sum,
-or the trifling annual income derivable from it, in gold-flooded
-England, might be of little utility there, as
-Courtenay had averred with the humorous indifferentism
-which he professed. But <i>here</i>, in this rich unwatered
-level, metaphorically and otherwise, it was like the river-born
-trickling tunnels with which, since forgotten Pharaoh
-days, the toiling fellaheen saturate the black gaping Nile
-gardens, sure precursor of profound vegetation and the
-hundred-fold increase.</p>
-
-<p>No use to a gentleman in England! A company of
-guardian angels must surely have wafted to him the
-precious, delicate document across the seas, across the
-desert here. What use would it not be to him, Ernest?
-It would pay in full for the Circle Dot store cattle, also
-for those purchased from Freeman Brothers, leaving a
-balance to the credit of his account with those treasure-guarding
-griffins, Oldstile and Crampton. Besides, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">20</span>
-bills due to Levison for the store cattle were not due for
-several months yet. In the meantime rain or other
-wonders might happen. The young horses, too, children
-of Omar, fleet son of the desert, with delicately-formed
-aristocratic heads, deerlike limbs, which had been dear to
-him almost as their ancestors had been to some lonely
-subdivision of the wandering Shammar or Aneezah!—they
-were saved from ruin and disgrace—saved from the
-indignity of passing for the merest trifle into the possession
-of unheeding vulgar purchasers, who would probably
-stigmatise them as weeds, wanting in bone, or by any
-other cheap form of ignorant depreciation.</p>
-
-<p>Saved! saved! saved! All was saved. Once more
-secure. Once more his own. Once more the land and
-the grazing herd, the humble abode, the garden, the
-paddock, even the long-neglected but not despaired-of
-canal, all the acted resolves and outcome of a sincere but
-perhaps over-sanguine mind, dearer than ever were they
-to him, their author and projector. They were his own
-again. How like Courtenay, too! Ever better than his
-word; incredulous as to improved benefits and successes;
-deprecating haste, risk, imprudence; doubtful of all but
-the garnered grain, the assayed gold, the concrete and the
-absolute in life,—but, in the hour of need, sparing of that
-counsel which is but another name for reproach, stanch
-in aid, generous alike in the mode and measure of his
-gift.</p>
-
-<p>Having recovered from this natural exaltation and
-relief at the unexpected succour, Mr. Neuchamp turned to
-the consideration of the very important postscript of his
-brother’s letter with apprehension.</p>
-
-<p>Had his cousin, Miss Augusta Neuchamp, really sailed
-and arrived in Sydney, as would appear? If so, where<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">21</span>
-was she to go? What was he to do? She could hardly
-come to Rainbar to take up her abode in this small
-cottage, which, though possessing several rooms, was, like
-many dwellings in the bush proper, practically undivided
-as to sound; the conversation of any one, in any given
-room, being equally beneficial and entertaining to the
-occupant of any other. Then there was not a woman
-upon the whole establishment. The wives and daughters
-of the Freemans, even if the latter were eligible for ladies’
-maids, were little less than hostile.</p>
-
-<p>A residence in Sydney seemed the only possible plan;
-but he knew his cousin too well to think that there would
-be no drawback to that arrangement. Energetic, well-intentioned,
-possessing a clear available intelligence, and
-considerable mental force, when exercised within certain
-well-defined, but it must be confessed narrow limits,
-Augusta Neuchamp was a benevolent despot in her own
-way. She ardently desired to arrange the destinies of
-the classes or individuals who came within the sphere of
-her action in accordance with what <i>she</i> considered to be
-the plain intentions of Providence with regard to them.
-Of the tremendous issues involved in such a translation,
-she had no conception. Plain to bluntness in her speech,
-she rarely evaded the awkwardness of expressing disappointment.
-Unquestionably refined by habit and
-education, she possessed little imagination and less tact.
-Thus she rarely failed to provide herself, in any locality
-which she honoured with her presence, with a large and
-increasing supply of opponents, if not of enemies. A
-moderate private income enabled her to indulge her tastes
-for improving herself or others. Possessing no very near
-relatives, she was uncontrolled as to her movements and
-mode of life. She had reached the age of twenty-five,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">22</span>
-though by no means unprepossessing in appearance,
-without finding any suitor sufficiently valorous to adopt
-or oppose, in the character of a husband, her very clearly
-expressed views of life. Had she consented to reserve
-a modification in these important respects, her friends
-averred that she might have been ‘settled’ ere now.
-But such palterings with principle were alien and abhorrent
-to the nature of Augusta Neuchamp. And
-Augusta Neuchamp she had accordingly remained.</p>
-
-<p>The appearance of Miss Neuchamp was generally
-described as commanding, although she was slightly, if at
-all, over the medium height of woman. But there was
-an expression about her high-bridged aquiline nose and
-compressed lips which left no one in doubt as to the fact
-that, in controversy or contending action, the first to yield
-would <i>not</i> be the possessor of those features. Her clear
-blue eyes would have been handsome had there been a
-shade of doubt or softness at any time visible. Such a
-moment of feminine weakness never came. They looked
-at you and through you and over you, but never fell in
-maiden doubt or fear beneath your gaze. Two courses
-were open to the individual of the conflicting sex in her
-presence—unconditional surrender or flight.</p>
-
-<p>It was hard, Ernest thought, that just as he was
-relieved from one anxiety he should be provided by unkind
-Fate with another. He revolved the imminent
-question of the disposition of Miss Augusta Neuchamp in
-his mind until prevented by mutual apprehension from
-pursuing the terribly perplexing subject. Of all people
-in the wide world, he thought his cousin was the most
-impracticable, the most unyielding to argument, the most
-certain to expose herself to dislike and ridicule in
-Australia. She knew everything. She believed nothing,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">23</span>
-unless indeed it related to herself or proceeded directly
-from that source. Everything which differed from her
-stereotyped system was wrong, ruinous, degenerate, or
-provincial. How she would criticise the place, the people,
-the climate, the railways, the houses, the fences, the
-workmen, the men and the women, the grass, and the
-gum-trees!</p>
-
-<p>If he could only persuade her to take lodgings in
-Sydney, until he could go down and argue the point with
-her, much might be gained. Antonia Frankston would
-visit her, and harder than adamant must she be if that
-gentle voice and natural manner did not convert her to a
-favourable opinion of Australian life.</p>
-
-<p>No such preparatory process was possible. A letter
-arrived from the fair emigrant which left no doubt of her
-immediate intentions. It ran thus:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Cousin Ernest</span>—I have dared the perils of the deep,
-not the least for your sake, but <i>me voici</i>. I made a short stay in
-Sydney, but being extremely tired of the dust and mosquitoes, I
-decided upon the course of travelling by rail and coach to your
-far-away estate at once. [Here Ernest groaned, a suspicious sound
-which might have been in sympathy for the trials of a lonely if not
-distressed damsel, or an expression of despondency at the idea of
-his own inevitable cares and anxieties, such as must attend the
-entertainment of the first lady-guest ever seen at Rainbar. He
-continued the reading of the epistle.] If Sydney had been a more
-interesting place I might have lingered for a week or two so as to
-exchange letters with you. Had it possessed that foreign air which
-one finds so pleasant in many continental spots, otherwise dull
-enough, I could have amused myself. But being, as it is, a second-hand
-copy of a provincial British town—I grant you the botanical
-element is lovely, though neglected—I could not endure another
-week. I seemed to long for the desert, in all its vastness and
-grandeur, where your abode is placed. It was like staying in an
-Algerian town, a dwarfed and dirty Paris, full of <i>cafés</i> and shabby
-Frenchmen playing at dominoes. I had no lady acquaintances.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">24</span>
-There <i>are</i> a few, I suppose. So I grew desperate, and took my
-passage through the agency company; Cobb, I think, is the name.
-If you have no phaeton or dogcart available, you might bring a
-saddle-horse for me.—Your affectionate cousin,</p>
-
-<p class="psig">
-<span class="smcap">Augusta Neuchamp</span>.<br />
-</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Just after the perusal of this letter, which showed
-that Miss Neuchamp’s angles still stood out as sharply as
-those of a Theban obelisk—the voyage and change of
-sky notwithstanding—Mr. Neuchamp was startled by
-the sudden appearance of Piambook, who rushed into his
-presence with an air of sincere discomposure very different
-from that of his usual unimpressible demeanour.
-His rolling dark eyes gleamed—his features worked—his
-mouth, slightly open, could only articulate the borrowed
-phrase of his conquerors, ‘My word! my word!’
-It was for some moments the only sound that could be
-extracted from him by Ernest’s inquiries.</p>
-
-<p>‘What is it, Piambook?’ at length demanded Ernest,
-so decidedly, almost fiercely, that his sable retainer
-capitulated.</p>
-
-<p>‘Me look out longa wheelbarrow,’ he explained at
-length. He had been despatched to a distant point of the
-run at a very early hour of the morning.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, what did you see?’ pursued his master. ‘You
-can yabber fast enough when you like.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That one wheelbarrow plenty broket,’ explained the
-observing pre-Adamite. ‘Mine see um longa plain—plenty
-sit down—liket three fellow wheel. Billy Robinson,
-he go longa township.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, what then? the coach broke down; that’s not
-wonderful—passengers walked, I suppose.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Me seeum that one white-fellow gin,’ quoth Piambook,
-in a low, mysterious voice. Then, bursting into<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">25</span>
-an immoderate fit of laughter, he continued, ‘That one
-carry liket spyglass.’ Here he placed his thumb and
-forefinger, circularly contracted, to his eye, and, gazing
-at Mr. Neuchamp, again laughed till his dusky orbs were
-dim.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Neuchamp at once comprehended by this pantomime
-the gold eyeglass which Miss Augusta, partially
-short-sighted, habitually wore; and becoming uneasy as
-to her state and condition under the circumstances of a
-presumed breakdown, asked eagerly of his follower what
-she was doing.</p>
-
-<p>‘That one sit along a wheelbarrow, liket this one;’
-here he took up a book from Ernest’s table and pretended
-to look into it with great and absorbed interest.</p>
-
-<p>‘Anybody in the coach, Piambook?’</p>
-
-<p>‘One fellow Chinaman,’ returned the messenger, with
-cool indifference.</p>
-
-<p>After this information Mr. Neuchamp at once perceived
-that no time must be lost. Augusta could not
-be left a moment longer than was necessary, sitting in a
-disabled coach in the midst of a boundless plain, with a
-Chinaman for her <i>vis-à-vis</i>. What a situation for a
-young lady to whom Baden was as familiar as Brompton,
-Paris as Piccadilly, Rome, Florence, Venice, as the
-stations on the Eastern Counties Railway! He did not
-believe she was afraid. She was afraid of nothing. But
-the situation was embarrassing.</p>
-
-<p>The hawk-eyed Piambook had descried the stranded
-coach—the wheelbarrow, as his comrades called it—on
-the mail track, about a mile off his path of duty. It
-was full twelve miles from Rainbar. In a quarter of an
-hour the express waggon with two cheerful but enfeebled
-steeds stumbled and blundered along at a very different<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">26</span>
-pace from that of Mr. Parklands, when he rattled up
-Ernest to the Rainbar door, on the occasion of their first
-memorable drive.</p>
-
-<p>However, the distance from home was luckily short,
-and in about two hours Mr. Neuchamp arrived at the
-spot where, in the disabled coach, sat Miss Augusta
-Neuchamp, possessing her soul in <i>impatience</i>, and
-gradually coming to the conclusion that Ah Ling—who
-sat stolidly staring at her and regretting the loss of time
-which might have been spent in watering his garden or
-smoking opium, the only two occupations he ever
-indulged in—was about to rob and perhaps murder her.
-As she always carried a small revolver, and was by no
-means ignorant of its use, it is possible that Ah Ling
-was in greater danger than he was aware of. His fair
-neighbour would infallibly have shot him had he made
-any hasty or incautious motion.</p>
-
-<p>When Mr. Neuchamp rumbled up in his useful but
-not imposing vehicle, a slight shade of satisfaction overspread
-her features.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, Ernest, I am delighted to see you; however did
-you find out my position? Don’t you think it was
-inexcusable of the coach company to send us all this
-way in a damaged vehicle? I thought all your coaching
-arrangements were so perfect.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Accidents will happen, my dear Augusta,’ said
-Ernest, ‘in all companies and communities, you know.
-Cobb and Co. are the best of fellows in the main. But
-<i>whatever</i> induced you to come up into this wild place
-without writing to me first? Have you not suffered all
-kinds of hardship and disagreeables?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, perhaps a few; but I knew all about the
-country from some books I read on the voyage out. I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">27</span>
-studied the directory till I found out the coach lines,
-and I should not have complained but for this last
-blunder. But what a barren wilderness this all seems.
-I thought Australia was a land of rich pastures.’</p>
-
-<p>‘So it is—but this is a drought. “And the famine
-was sore in the land.” You remember that in the Bible,
-don’t you? We are a good deal like Palestine in our
-periodical lean years, except that they didn’t import
-their flour from beyond sea, and we do.‘</p>
-
-<p>‘But this looks so very bad!’ said she, putting up
-her eyeglass and staring earnestly at the waste lands of
-the crown, which certainly presented a striking contrast
-to the Buckinghamshire meadows or uplands either.
-‘Why, it seems all sand and these scrubby-looking
-bushes; are you sure you haven’t made a mistake and
-bought inferior land? A gentleman who came out with
-me said inexperienced persons often did.’</p>
-
-<p>‘My dear Augusta,’ said Ernest, quelling a well-remembered
-feeling of violent antagonism, ‘you must
-surely have forgotten that I have been more than two years
-in Australia, and may be supposed to know the difference
-between good country and bad by this time.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Do you?’ said his fair cousin indifferently. ‘Well,
-you must have improved. Courtenay says you are the
-most credulous person he knows; and as for Aunt
-Ermengarde, she says that, of all the failures the family
-has produced——’</p>
-
-<p>‘Please to spare me the old lady’s review of my life
-and times,’ said Ernest, waking up his bounding steeds.
-‘We never did agree, and it can serve no good purpose
-to further embitter my remembrance of her.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, but she did not wish to say anything really
-disparaging of you, only that you were not of sufficiently<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">28</span>
-coarse material to win success in farming, or trade, or
-politics.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Or colonisation, my dear Augusta. Perhaps she
-was not so far wrong, after all; but somehow one doesn’t
-like to be told these things, and I must ask you and
-Aunt Ermengarde to suspend your judgment until the
-last scene of the third act. Then you will be able to
-applaud, or otherwise, on correct grounds. I think you
-will find the country and its ways by no means too easy
-to comprehend.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I expect nothing, simply, so I cannot be disappointed.
-It seems to me a sort of provincial England jumbled up
-with one’s ideas of Mexico.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And the people?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I haven’t noticed them much yet. I thought many
-of the women ridiculously overdressed in Sydney,
-copying our English fashions in a semi-tropical climate.
-I left everything behind except a few tourist suits.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And most extraordinary you look,’ thought Ernest
-to himself, though he dared not say so, mentally contrasting
-the stern Augusta’s dust-coloured tusser wrap,
-broad-leafed hat with green lining, rather stout boots,
-short dress, and flattened down hair, with Antonia, cool,
-glistening, delicately robed, and rose-fresh amid the
-bright-hued shrubberies of Morahmee, or even the Misses
-Middleton, perfectly <i>comme il faut</i>, on shipboard, in
-George Street, or at the station, as everybody ought to
-be, thought Ernest—unless she is an eccentric reformer,
-he was just about to say, but refrained. Was any one
-else of his acquaintance going to do wonders in the
-alleviation and reformation of the Australian world?
-and if so, what had <i>he</i> accomplished? Had he not been
-in scores of instances self-convicted of the most egregious<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">29</span>
-mistakes and miscalculations? After all his experience,
-was he not now indebted almost for his financial existence
-to certain of these very colonists whose intelligence
-he had formerly held so cheap?</p>
-
-<p>These reflections were not suffered to proceed to an
-inconvenient length, being routed by the clear and not
-particularly musical tones of Miss Augusta’s voice.</p>
-
-<p>‘I can’t say much for Australian horses, so far,
-Ernest. I expected to see the fleet courser of the desert,
-and all that kind of thing. These seem wretched underbred
-creatures, and miserably poor.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Lives there the man, with soul so dead,’ who doesn’t
-mind hearing his horses run down?</p>
-
-<p>‘They are not bad horses, by any means, though low
-in condition, owing to this dreadful season,’ answered
-Ernest, rather quickly. ‘This one,’ touching the off-side
-steed, ‘is as good and fast and high-couraged a horse as
-ever was saddled or harnessed, but they have had
-nothing to eat for six months, to speak of. So they
-quite surpass the experience of the cabman’s horse in
-<i>Pickwick</i>; and I can’t afford to buy corn at a pound a
-bushel.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I forgot about the horse in <i>Pickwick</i>,’ said Augusta,
-who, a steady reader in her own line, which she denominated
-‘useful,’ had little appreciation of humour, and
-never could be got to know the difference between
-<i>Pickwick</i> and <i>Nicholas Nickleby</i>, <i>Charles O’Malley</i> and <i>The
-Knight of Gwynne</i>. ‘But surely more neatness in
-harness and turn-out might be managed,’ and she looked
-at the dusty American harness and rusty bits.</p>
-
-<p>‘You must remember, my dear Augusta, that you are
-not only in the provinces, but in the far far Bush, now—akin
-to the Desert—in more ways than one. I don’t<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">30</span>
-suppose the Sheik Abdallah turns out with very bright
-bits; but, if he does, he has the advantage of us in the
-labour supply. We are compelled to economise rigidly
-in that way.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You seem compelled to economise in every way that
-makes life worth having,’ said his downright kinswoman.
-‘Does any one ever make any money at all here to
-compensate for the savage life you seem to lead?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, a few people do,’ replied Ernest, half amused,
-half annoyed. ‘If we had time to visit a little, not
-perhaps in this neighbourhood, I could show you places
-well kept and pretty enough, and people who would be
-voted fairly provided for even in England.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I have seen none as yet,’ said Miss Neuchamp; ‘but
-I believe much of the prosperity in the large towns is
-unreal. I met a very pleasant, gentlemanlike man in
-Sydney, in fact one of the few gentlemen I did see there—a
-Mr. Croker, I think, was his name—who said it
-was all outside show, and that nobody had made any
-money in this colony, or ever would.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, Jermyn Croker,’ said Ernest, laughing; ‘you
-must not take him literally; he is a profound cynic, and
-must have been sent into the world expressly to counterbalance
-an equally pronounced optimist, myself for
-instance. That’s his line of humour, and very amusing
-it is—in its way.’</p>
-
-<p>‘But does he not speak the truth?’ inquired the
-literal Augusta; ‘or is it not considered necessary in a
-colony?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Of course he <i>intends</i> to do so, but like all men
-whose opinions are very strongly coloured by their individualism,
-which again is dominated by purely physical
-occurrences, such as bile, indigestion, and so on, he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">31</span>
-unconsciously takes a gloomy, depreciatory view of matters
-in general, which I, and perhaps others, think untrue
-and misleading.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I believe in a right and a wrong about everything
-myself,’ said the young lady, ‘but I must say I feel inclined
-to agree with him so far.’</p>
-
-<p>Ernest was on the point of asking her how she could
-possibly know, when the turrets of Rainbar appearing in
-sight, the conversation was diverted to that ‘hold’ and
-its surroundings, the danger of arriving in the midst of
-an altercation being thereby averted.</p>
-
-<p>‘Allow me to welcome you to my poor home,’ said
-Mr. Neuchamp, driving up to the door of the cottage,
-and assisting her to alight. ‘I wish I had had notice of
-the honour of your visit, that we might have been suitably
-prepared.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Stuff!’ said Miss Augusta. ‘Then you would have
-written to prevent me coming at all. I was determined
-to see how you were <i>really</i> getting on, and I never
-allow trifling discomforts to stand in the way of my
-resolves.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I am aware of <i>that</i>, my dear Augusta,’ replied Mr.
-Neuchamp, with a slight mental shrug, in which he decided
-that the trifling discomforts alluded to occasionally
-involved others besides the heroine herself. ‘But can
-you do without a maid? I am afraid there is not a
-woman on the place.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That’s a little awkward,’ confessed Miss Neuchamp.
-‘I did not quite anticipate such a barrack-room state of
-matters. But is there none at the village, or whatever it
-is called, in the neighbourhood?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I have a village on the run, I am sorry to say; but
-though we are at feud with the villagers, I did attempt<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">32</span>
-to procure you a handmaid, and I will see what has been
-done.’</p>
-
-<p>It was yet early in the day. Miss Neuchamp, being
-put into possession of the best bedroom, hastily arranged
-for her use and benefit, was told to consider herself as the
-sole occupant of the cottage for the present. Mr. Neuchamp
-in the meanwhile having ordered lunch, went over to the
-barracks to see if Mr. Banks had returned. He had been
-sent upon an embassy of great importance and diplomatic
-delicacy: no less, indeed, than to prevail upon Mrs.
-Abraham Freeman to permit her eldest daughter, Tottie,
-a girl of seventeen, to come to Rainbar during the period
-of Miss Neuchamp’s stay, to attend upon that lady as
-housemaid, lady’s maid, and general attendant. He was
-empowered to make any reasonable promises to provide
-the girl with everything she might want, short of a husband,
-but to bring her up if it could possibly be done.
-For, of course, Ernest was duly sensible of the extreme
-awkwardness that would result from the presence of Miss
-Neuchamp—albeit a near relative—as the sole representative
-of womanhood at such an essentially bachelor
-settlement as Rainbar.</p>
-
-<p>Tottie Freeman, who had commenced to bloom in the
-comparatively desert air of Rainbar, was a damsel not altogether
-devoid of youthful charms. True, the unfriendly sun,
-the scorching blasts, together with the culpable disuse of
-veil or bonnet, had combined to embrown what ought to
-have been her complexion, and, worse again, to implant
-such a crop of freckles upon her face, neck, and arms,
-that she looked as if a bran-bag had been shaken over
-her naturally fair skin.</p>
-
-<p>Now that we have said the worst of her, it must be
-admitted that her figure was very good, well developed,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">33</span>
-upright, and elastic. She could run as fast as any of her
-brothers, carrying a tolerable weight, and (when no one
-was looking) vault on her ambling mare, which she could
-ride with or without a saddle over range or river, logs,
-scrub, or reed-beds, just as well as they could. She
-could intimidate a half-wild cow with a roping pole, and
-milk her afterwards; drive a team on a pinch, and work
-all day in the hot sun. With all this there was nothing
-unfeminine or unpleasing to the eye in the bush maiden.
-Quite the contrary, indeed. She was a handsome young
-woman as regards features, form, and carriage. Cool and
-self-possessed, she was by no means as reckless of speech
-as many better educated persons of her sex; and though
-she liked a little flirtation—‘which most every girl
-expex’—there was not a word to be said to her detriment
-‘up or down the river,’ which comprehended the
-whole of her social system.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the damsel whom Charley Banks had been
-despatched to capture by force, fraud, or persuasion for
-the use and benefit of Miss Augusta Neuchamp. A less
-suitable ambassador might have been selected. Charley
-Banks was a very good-looking young fellow, and had
-always risked a little badinage when brought into contact
-with Miss Tottie and her family. War had been formally
-declared between the houses of Neuchamp and Freeman,
-yet Ernest, as was his custom, had always been unaffectedly
-polite and kindly to the women of the tribe, young
-and old.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore Mrs. Freeman had no strong ill-feeling
-towards him, and Miss Tottie was extremely sorry that
-they never saw Mr. Neuchamp riding up to the door
-now, with a pleasant good-morrow, sometimes chatting
-for a quarter of an hour, when the old people were out<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">34</span>
-of the way. When Charley Banks first asked Mrs.
-Freeman to let her daughter go as a great favour to Mr.
-Neuchamp, and afterwards inflamed Tottie’s curiosity by
-descriptions of the great wealth and high fashion of Miss
-Neuchamp (who had a dray-load of dresses, straight from
-London and Paris, coming up next week), he found the
-fort commencing to show signs of capitulation. At first
-Mrs. Freeman ‘couldn’t spare Tottie if it was ever so.’
-Then Tottie ‘couldn’t think of going among a parcel of
-young fellows, and only one lady in the place.’ Then
-Mrs. Freeman ‘might be able to manage for a week or
-two, though what Abe would say when he came home
-and found his girl gone to Rainbar, she couldn’t say.’
-Then Tottie ‘wouldn’t mind trying for a week or two.’
-She supposed ‘nobody would run away with her, and it
-must be awfully lonely for the lady all by herself.’
-Besides, ‘she hadn’t seen a soul lately, and was moped to
-death; perhaps a little change would do her good.’ So
-the ‘treaty of Rainbar,’ between the high contracting
-personages, resolved itself into this, that Tottie was to
-have ten shillings a week for a month’s service, if Miss
-Neuchamp stayed so long, was to obey all her lawful
-commands, and to make herself ‘generally useful.’</p>
-
-<p>‘So if you’ll be kind enough to run in the mare, Mr.
-Banks—she’s down on the flat there, and not very flash,
-you may be sure—I’ll get my habit on, and mother will
-send up my things with Billy in the evening. Here’s
-my bridle.’</p>
-
-<p>Having stated the case thus briefly, Miss Freeman
-retired into a remarkably small bedroom which she
-shared with two younger sisters and a baby-brother, to
-make the requisite change of raiment, while Charley
-Banks ran into the stockyard and caught the varmint,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">35</span>
-ambling black mare, which he knew very well by sight.
-As he led her up to the hut Miss Tottie came out, carrying
-her saddle in one hand and holding up her alpaca
-habit with the other. She promptly placed it upon the
-black mare’s back, buckled the girths, and touching the
-stirrup with her foot, gave a spring which seated her
-firmly in the saddle, and the black mare dashed off at an
-amble which was considerably faster than a medium trot.</p>
-
-<p>‘What a brute that mare of yours is to amble, Tottie,’
-said Mr. Banks, slightly out of breath; ‘can’t you make
-her go a more Christian pace? Come, let’s have a spin.’</p>
-
-<p>‘All right,’ said the girl, going off at speed, and sitting
-down to her work, ‘but it must be a very short one;
-my mare is as weak as a cat, and I suppose your horse
-isn’t much better.’</p>
-
-<p>‘He’s as strong as nothing to eat three times a day
-can make him. So pull up as soon as you like. I say,
-Tottie, I’m awfully glad you’ve come up this time to help
-us with our lady. It was firstrate of your mother to
-let you come. Fancy Miss Neuchamp coming up in the
-coach by herself from Sydney!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Why shouldn’t she? I wish I had the chance of
-going down by myself—wouldn’t I take it—quick? But
-I say, Mr. Banks, what am I to do when I get there? I
-shall be so frightened of the lady. And I never was in
-service before.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, you must take it easy, you know,’ commenced
-Mr. Banks, in a very clear explanation-to-a-child sort of
-way. ‘Do everything she tells you, always say “Yes,
-ma’am,” and “No, ma’am,” and be a good girl all round.
-I’ve seen you <i>look</i> awfully good sometimes, Tottie, you
-know.‘</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, nonsense, Mr. Banks,’ said the nut-brown maid,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">36</span>
-blushing through her southern-tinted skin in a very
-visible manner. ‘I’m no more than others, I expect.
-What shall I have to do, though?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, a good deal of nothing, I should say. You’ll
-sleep in the room I used to have, next to hers; for you’ll
-be in the cottage all by yourselves all night. You’ll
-have to sweep and dust, and wash for Miss Neuchamp,
-and wait at table. The rest of the time you’ll have to
-hang it out the best way you can. You mustn’t quarrel
-with old Johnnie, the cook, or else he’ll go away and
-leave us all in the bush. He’s a cross old ruffian, but
-he <i>can</i> cook.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I wonder if it will be very dull—but it won’t be
-for long, will it, Mr. Banks?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Dull? don’t think of it. Won’t there be me and
-Jack Windsor, and an odd traveller to talk to. Besides,
-Jack’s a great admirer of yours, isn’t he, Tottie?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Not he,’ quoth the damsel, with decision; ‘there’s
-some girl down the country that he thinks no end of;
-besides, father and he don’t get on well,’ added Miss
-Tottie, with much demureness.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, that don’t signify,’ said Mr. Banks authoritatively.
-‘Jack’s a good fellow, and will be overseer
-here some day; you go in and cut down the other girl.
-He said you were the best-looking girl on the river last
-Sunday.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, you go on,’ said Tottie, playing with the bridle
-rein, and again making her mare run up to the top
-of her exceptional pace, so that further playful conversation
-by Mr. Banks was restricted by his lack of
-breath.</p>
-
-<p>As they approached the Rainbar homestead Tottie
-slackened this aggravating pace (which resembles what<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">37</span>
-Americans call ‘racking or pacing’—it is natural to
-many Australian horses, though of course capable of
-development by education), and in a somewhat awe-stricken
-tone inquired, ‘Is she a <i>very</i> grand lady, indeed,
-Mr. Banks?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, she’ll be dressed plainly, of course,’ said
-Charley. ‘The dust’s enough to spoil anything above a
-gunnybag after all this dry weather. Her things are
-coming up, as I told you, but you never saw any one
-with half the breeding before. You were a little girl
-when you came here, Tottie; did you ever see a real
-lady in your life, now?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I saw Mrs. Jones, of Yamboola, down the country,’
-said Tottie doubtfully. ‘Father sent me up one day
-with some fresh butter.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I wish he’d send you up with some now,’ said
-Charley, who hadn’t heard of butter or milk for six
-months. ‘Mrs. Jones is pretty well, but think of Miss
-Neuchamp’s pedigree. Her great-grandmother’s <i>great-grandmother</i>
-was a grand lady, and lived in a castle, and
-so on, for five hundred years back, and all the same for
-nearly a thousand. I saw it all in an old book of Mr.
-Neuchamp’s one day, about the history of their county.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Lor!’ said Tottie, ‘how nice! Why, she must be
-like the imported filly we saw at Wargan Races last
-year. Oh, wasn’t she a real beauty? such legs! and
-such a sweet head on her!—I never saw the like of it!’</p>
-
-<p>‘You’re a regular Currency lass, Tottie,’ laughed Mr.
-Banks; ‘always thinking about horses. Don’t you tell
-Miss Neuchamp that she’s very sweet about the head
-and has out-and-out legs: she mightn’t understand it.
-Here we are—jump down. I’ll put the mare in the
-paddock.’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">38</span></p>
-
-<p>Miss Neuchamp, having had time to finish luncheon,
-had walked out into the verandah with her cousin, when
-she was attracted by the trampling of horses, and looked
-forth in time to see her proposed handmaid sail up to
-the door at a pace which would have excited observation
-in Rotten Row.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Banks awaited her dismounting, knowing full
-well that she required no assistance. The active maiden
-swung herself sideways on the saddle and dropped to
-the ground as lightly as the ‘hounding beauty of Bessarabia,’
-or any ordinary circus sawdust-treading
-celebrity. Lifting her habit, she advanced to the
-verandah with a curious mixture of shyness and self-possession.
-She successfully accomplished the traditional
-courtesy to Miss Neuchamp, and then shook hands
-cordially with Ernest, as she had been in the habit of
-doing. Miss Augusta put up her eyeglass at this, and
-regarded the ‘young person’ with a fixed and critical
-gaze.</p>
-
-<p>‘I’m very much obliged to your mother for letting
-you come, Tottie, and I am very glad to see you at
-Rainbar,’ said Mr. Neuchamp. ‘If you go into the
-dining-room, you will find the lunch on the table; I
-daresay you will have an appetite after your ride. You
-can clear it away by and by, and Miss Neuchamp will
-tell you anything she wishes you to do. You will live
-in the cottage, and you must help old Johnny as well as
-you can, without quarrelling with him—you know his
-temper—or letting him bully you.’</p>
-
-<p>Tottie was about to say, ‘I’m not afraid of the old
-tinker,’ but, remembering Mr. Banks’s advice, replied
-meekly, ‘Yes, sir; thank you, Mr. Neuchamp,’ and retired
-to her lunch and duties.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">39</span></p>
-
-
-<p>‘I suppose that is a sample of your peasantry,’ said
-Miss Neuchamp, with cold preciseness of tone. ‘Do you
-generally shake hands with your housemaids in the
-colonies? I suppose it must be looked for in a
-democracy.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, Tottie Freeman isn’t exactly a peasant,’
-explained Ernest mildly. ‘We haven’t any of the breed
-here. She is a farmer’s daughter, and her proud sire
-has or had an acreage that would make him a great man
-at fair and market in England. You will find her a
-good-tempered, honest girl, not afraid of work, as we say
-here, and as she is your only possible attendant, you
-must make the best of her.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Is she to join us at table?’ inquired Miss
-Neuchamp, with the same fixed air of indifference. ‘Of
-course I only ask for information.’</p>
-
-<p>‘She will fare as we do, but will take her refection
-after we have completed ours. She cannot very well be
-sent to the kitchen.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Why not?’ demanded Miss Augusta.</p>
-
-<p>‘For reasons which will be apparent to you, my dear
-Augusta, after your longer stay in Australia. But
-principally because there are only men there at present,
-and our old cook is not a suitable companion for a young
-girl.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Very peculiar household arrangements,’ said Miss
-Neuchamp, ‘but I suppose I shall comprehend in time.’</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">40</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><a name="CHAPTER_XXV" id="CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV</a></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Having communicated this sentiment in a tone which
-did not conduce to the lighter graces of conversation,
-Miss Neuchamp resumed her reading. Silence, the
-ominous oppressive silence of those who do not wish to
-speak, reigned unbroken for a while.</p>
-
-<p>At length, lifting her head as if the thought had
-suddenly struck her, she said, ‘I cannot think why you
-did not buy a station nearer to town, where you might
-have lived in a comparatively civilised way.’</p>
-
-<p>‘For the very sufficient reasons that there is never so
-much money to be made at comfortable, highly improved
-stations, and the areas of land are invariably smaller.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Then you have come to regard money as everything?
-Is this the end of the burning philanthropy, and all that
-sort of thing?’</p>
-
-<p>‘You are too quick in your conclusions, my dear
-Augusta,’ replied Mr. Neuchamp, somewhat hurt. ‘It is
-necessary, I find, to make some money to ensure the
-needful independence of position without which philanthropical
-or other projects can scarcely be carried
-out.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I daresay you will end in becoming a mere colonist,
-and marrying a colonial girl, after all your fine ideas. I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">41</span>
-suppose there are some a shade more refined than this
-one.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Neuchamp stood aghast—words failed him.
-Augusta went on quietly reading her book. She failed
-to perceive the avalanche which was gathering above her
-head.</p>
-
-<p>‘My dear Augusta,’ he said at length, with studied
-calmness, ‘it is time that some of your misconceptions
-should be cleared away. Let me recall to you that you
-were only a few days in a hotel in Sydney before you
-started on your journey to this distant and comparatively
-rude district. If you had acted reasonably, and remained
-in Sydney to take advantage of introductions to my
-friends, you would have had some means of making
-comparisons after seeing Australian ladies. But with
-your present total ignorance of the premises, I wonder
-that a well-educated woman should be so illogical as to
-state a conclusion.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, perhaps I am a little premature,’ conceded
-Miss Augusta, whose temper was much under command.
-‘I suppose there is a wonderful young lady at the back
-of all this indignation. Mr. Croker said as much. I
-must wait and make her acquaintance. I wish you all
-sorts of happiness, Ernest. Now I must go and look
-after the <i>other</i> young lady.’</p>
-
-<p>When Miss Neuchamp returned to the dining-room
-she perceived that the damsel whose social status was so
-difficult to define had finished her mid-day meal, and
-had also completed the clearing off and washing up of
-the various articles of the service. She had discovered
-for herself the small room used as a pantry, had ferreted
-out the requisite cloths and towels, and procured hot
-water from the irascible Johnny. She had extemporised<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">42</span>
-a table in the passage, and was just placing the last of
-the articles on their allotted shelves with much deftness
-and celerity, when Miss Neuchamp entered. Her riding-skirt
-lay on a chair, and she had donned a neat print
-frock, which she had brought strapped to the saddle.</p>
-
-<p>‘I was coming to give you instructions,’ said Miss
-Neuchamp, ‘but I see you have anticipated me by doing
-everything which I should have asked you to do, and
-very nicely too. What is your name?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Mary Anne Freeman,’ said Tottie demurely.</p>
-
-<p>‘I thought I heard Mr. Neuchamp address you by
-some other Christian name,’ said Miss Neuchamp, with
-slight severity of aspect.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, Tottie,’ said the girl carelessly; ‘every one calls
-me Tottie, or Tot; suppose it’s for shortness.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I shall call you Mary Anne,’ said Miss Neuchamp
-with quiet decision; ‘and now, Mary Anne, are you
-accustomed to the use of the needle? do you like
-sewing?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, I don’t <i>like</i> it,’ she replied ingenuously, ‘but of
-course I can sew a little; we have to make our own
-frocks and the children’s things at home.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Very proper and necessary,’ affirmed Augusta; ‘if
-we can get the material I will superintend your making
-a couple of dresses for yourself, which perhaps you will
-think an improvement in pattern on the one you wear.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, I should <i>so</i> like to have a new pattern,’ said
-Tottie, with feminine satisfaction. ‘There’s plenty of nice
-prints in the store; I’ll speak to Mr. Banks about it,
-mem.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I will arrange that part of it,’ said Miss Neuchamp.
-‘In the meanwhile I’ll point out your bedroom, which
-you can put in order as well as mine for the night.’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">43</span></p>
-
-<p>After the first day or two Miss Neuchamp, though
-occasionally shocked at the Australian girl’s ignorance of
-that portion of the Church Catechism which exhorts
-people to behave ‘lowly and reverently to all their
-betters,’ was pleased with the intelligence and artless
-good-humour of her attendant. She was sufficiently
-acute to discriminate between the genuine respect which
-the girl exhibited to her, ‘a real lady,’ and the mere lip
-service and servility too often yielded by the English
-poor, from direct compulsion of grinding poverty and
-sore need. She discovered that Tottie was quick and
-teachable in the matter of needlework, so that, having
-been stimulated by the alluring expectation of ‘patterns,’
-she worked readily and creditably.</p>
-
-<p>For a few days Miss Neuchamp managed to employ
-and interest herself not altogether unpleasantly. Ernest,
-of course, betook himself off to some manner of station
-work immediately after breakfast, returning, if possible,
-to lunch. This interval Miss Neuchamp filled up in
-great measure by means of her correspondence, which was
-voluminous and various of direction, ranging from her
-Aunt Ermengarde, a conscientious but ruthless conservative,
-to philosophical acquaintances whom she had met
-in her travels, and who, like her, had much ado to fill
-up those leisure hours of which their lives were chiefly
-composed. This portion of the day also witnessed Tottie’s
-most arduous labours, to which she addressed herself
-with great zeal and got through her work, as she termed
-it, so as to attire herself becomingly and wait at table.</p>
-
-<p>In the afternoon Ernest went out for walking excursions
-to such points of interest, neither many nor picturesque,
-as the neighbourhood supplied. There was a
-certain ‘bend’ or curving reach of the river where, from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">44</span>
-a lofty bluff, the red walls of which the rushing tide
-had channelled for ages, a striking and uncommon view
-was obtained. The vast plain, here diversified by the
-giant eucalypti which fringed the winding watercourse,
-stretched limitless to the horizon. But all was apparently
-barren from Dan to Beersheba. The reed-beds
-were trampled and eaten down to the last cane. The
-soft rich alluvium in which they grew was cracked, yet
-hard as a brickfield. How different from the swaying
-emerald billows with feathered tasselled crests which
-other summers had seen there! Something of this sort
-had Ernest endeavoured to explain to Miss Neuchamp
-when she spoke disrespectfully of the trodden cloddy
-waste, contrasting it scornfully with the velvet meads
-which bordered English rivers. But Augusta, defective
-in imagination, never believed in anything she did not
-see. Therefore a reed-bed appeared to her mental
-vision till the day of her death always as a species of
-abnormal dismal swamp, lacking the traditional element
-of moisture.</p>
-
-<p>Other explorations were made in the cool hours of
-the evening, but gradually Miss Neuchamp tired of the
-monotonous aspect of matters. The dusty tracts were
-not pleasant to her feet. The mosquitoes assailed her
-with savage virulence, whether she walked at sunrise,
-mid-day, or darkening eve. If she sat down on the
-river bank and watched the shallow but still pure and
-gleaming waters, ants of every conceivable degree of
-curiosity or ferocity discomposed her. There was no
-rest, no variety, no beauty, no ‘proper’ wood, valley,
-mountain, or brook. She could not imagine human
-beings living constantly in such a hateful wilderness. If
-Ernest had not all his life, and now most of all, developed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">45</span>
-a talent for useless and incomprehensible self-sacrifice, he
-would abandon such a spot for ever.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Neuchamp felt himself pressed to his last entrenchments
-to defend his position; Fate seemed to have
-arrived personally, masked, not for the first time in man’s
-strange story, in the guise of a woman. That woman,
-too, his persistent, inexorable cousin Augusta. ‘The
-stars in their courses fought against Sisera.’ The heavens,—dead
-to the dumb, imploring looks of the great armies
-of perishing brutes, to the prayers of ruined men; the
-earth, with withered herb and drying streamlet gasping
-and faint, breathless, under the burning noon and the
-pitiless dry moon rays,—alike conspired against
-him!</p>
-
-<p>And now his cousin, who, with all her faults and
-defects, was stanchly devoted to her kindred and what
-she believed to be their welfare, came here to madden
-him with recollections of the wonderland of his birth,
-and to fill him with ignoble longings to purchase
-present relief by the ruinous sacrifice of purpose and
-principle.</p>
-
-<p>‘I don’t know,’ he said, at the end of a closely contested
-argument, ‘whether all women are incapable of
-comprehending the adherence to a fixed purpose, to the
-unquestioned end and climax. But you must forgive
-me, my dear Augusta, for saying that you appear to me
-to be in the position of a passenger who urges the captain
-of a vessel to alter his course because the gale is wild
-and the waves rough. Suppose you had made a suggestion
-to the captain of the <i>Rohilla</i>, in which noble steamer
-you made your memorable voyage to these hapless isles.
-The officers of the great company are polished gentlemen
-as well as seamen of the first order, but I am afraid<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">46</span>
-Gordon Anderson would have been more curt than
-explanatory on <i>that</i> occasion.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And you are like the man in Sinbad the Sailor, as
-you like marine similes,’ retorted Augusta; ‘you will see
-your vessel gradually drawn toward the loadstone island
-till all the nails and rivets fly out by attraction of ruin,
-and you will sink in the waters of oblivion, unhonoured
-and unsung.’</p>
-
-<p>‘But not “unloved,” I trust,‘ rejoined Ernest; ‘don’t
-think that matters, even in Australia, will be quite so
-bad as that. By the way, let me congratulate you upon
-your facility of quotation. Your memory must have
-improved amazingly of late.’</p>
-
-<p>This unfair taunt closed the conversation abruptly.
-But like some squabbles between very near and dear
-friends, there was a tacit agreement not to refer to it.
-Subsequently all went on as usual.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Neuchamp was a very fair horsewoman, having
-hunted without coming very signally to grief, by dint of
-a wonderfully broken hunter, who was first cousin to a
-rocking-horse—after this wise: he would on no account
-run away; he was easy, he was safe; you could not
-throw him down over any species of leap,—hedge, ditch,
-brook, or bulfinch. It was all alike to Negotiator.
-After a couple of seasons and the aid of this accomplished
-palfrey, Miss Neuchamp, with some reason, came to the
-conclusion that she could ride fairly well. So, having
-broached the idea at breakfast one morning, Ernest joyfully
-suggested Osmund as the type of ease and elegance,
-and of such a nerve that an organ and monkey might,
-were the consideration sufficient, be placed on his short
-back to-morrow without risk of casualty.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Neuchamp thought that she should like to ride<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">47</span>
-down and visit the Freeman encampment, when Tottie,
-who would of course attend her, might have the opportunity
-of seeing her mother and other kinsfolk.</p>
-
-<p>The side-saddle was the next difficulty; but Tottie
-proffered hers at once, saying that she could ride in a
-man’s saddle, which she could borrow from Mr. Banks.</p>
-
-<p>‘But you cannot ride in a man’s saddle, Mary Anne;
-at any rate with me,’ said Miss Neuchamp decisively,
-while a maidenly blush overspread her features.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why not?’ inquired Tottie, with much surprise.
-‘I can ride in one just as well as the other. You have
-only to throw the off-side stirrup over the pommel, sit
-square and straight, and there you are. You didn’t think
-I was going to ride boy-fashion, did you?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I was not sure,’ conceded Miss Neuchamp. However,
-your explanation has satisfied me. If you like, we
-will ride down to your father’s place this afternoon.‘</p>
-
-<p>So Osmund being brought round, and Tottie’s side-saddle
-upon him placed, that temperate charger walked
-off with Miss Neuchamp as if he had carried a ‘pretty
-horsebreaker’ up Rotten Row before the eyes of an
-envious aristocracy, while Tottie disposed herself upon a
-station saddle and ambled off so erect and free of seat
-that few could have known that she was crutchless and
-self-balanced. Mr. Windsor followed at a respectful
-distance, in case of any <i>contretemps</i> requiring a groom’s
-assistance.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Neuchamp was perhaps never more favourably
-impressed with the South Land, in which she was
-sojourning, than when she felt herself borne along by
-Osmund, a hackney of rare excellence—free, elastic, safe,
-fast, easy! How many horses of whom so much can be
-said does one come across in a lifetime?<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">48</span></p>
-
-<p>‘This seems to be an exceedingly nice horse of my
-cousin’s,’ said she to Tottie. ‘I had no idea that such
-riding horses could be found in the interior. He must
-have been very carefully trained.’</p>
-
-<p>‘He’s a plum, that’s what he is!’ affirmed Tottie with
-decision. ‘He’s the best horse in these parts, by long
-chalks. Mr. Neuchamp let me have a spirt on him one
-day. My word! didn’t I put him along?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I am surprised that he should have let you ride him,’
-replied Miss Neuchamp with dignity; ‘but my cousin is
-very eccentric, and does not, in my opinion, always keep
-his proper position.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I don’t know about his proper position,’ said Tottie
-with great spirit, ‘but before our people had the row
-with him—and that was Uncle Joe’s fault—there was
-no one within fifty mile of Rainbar that wouldn’t have
-gone on their knees to serve Mr. Neuchamp. <i>As a
-gentleman he can’t be beat</i>; and many a one besides me
-thinks that.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh well, if you have that sort of respectful feeling
-towards my cousin, Mary Anne, I have nothing to say,’
-said Miss Augusta. ‘No one can possibly have better
-intentions, and I am glad to see them so well appreciated,
-even in the bush. Suppose we canter.’</p>
-
-<p>She drew the curb rein as she spoke, and Osmund
-sailed off at a long, bounding, deerlike canter over the
-smooth dusty track, which convinced Miss Neuchamp
-that she had not left all the good horses in England.
-The scant provender had impaired his personal appearance,
-but had not deprived him of that courage which
-he would retain as long as he possessed strength to stand
-on his legs.</p>
-
-<p>‘I have not enjoyed a ride like this for many a day,’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">40</span>
-she said with unusual heartiness. ‘This is a very comfortable
-saddle of yours, though I miss the third pommel.
-How do you manage, Mary Anne, to ride so squarely and
-easily upon that uncomfortable saddle?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I’ve ridden many a mile without a saddle at all—that
-is, with nothing but an old gunny-bag to sit on,’
-said Tottie, ‘and jumped over logs too. Of course I was
-a kid then.’</p>
-
-<p>‘A what?’ said Miss Neuchamp anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, a little child,’ explained Tottie. ‘I often used
-to go out at daylight to fetch in the cows and the working
-bullocks when we lived down the country. Bitter
-cold it was, too, in the winter; such hard frosts.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Frosts?’ asked Miss Augusta. ‘Do you ever have
-frosts? Why, I supposed they were unknown here.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You don’t suppose the whole country is like this,
-miss?’ said Tottie. ‘Why, near the mountains there’s
-snow and ice, and it rains every winter, and the floods
-are enough to drownd you.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Are there floods too? It does not look as if they
-could ever come.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Do you see that hut, miss? That’s our place. I
-heard Piambook, the black boy, tell father it would be
-swep’ away some day. Father laughed at him.‘</p>
-
-<p>Here they arrived at the abode of Freeman <i>père</i>, at
-which Miss Neuchamp gazed with much curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>In the language of architecture, the construction had
-been but little decorated. A plain and roughly-built
-abode, composed of round saplings nailed vertically to
-the wall-plate, and plastered insufficiently with mud.
-The roof was thatched with reeds, put on in a very ineffectual
-and chance-medley manner. The hut or cottage
-contained two large and three small rooms. There was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">50</span>
-no garden whatever, or any attempt at the cultivation of
-the baked and hopelessly-looking clay soil. Close to the
-side of the house was a stockyard, comprising the ‘gallows’
-of the colonists, a rough, rude contrivance, consisting of
-two uprights and a crosspiece, for elevating slaughtered
-cattle. Upon this structure was at present hanging the
-carcass of a fine six-months-old calf. No other enclosure
-was visible, the only attempt at the preservation of neatness
-being the sweeping of the earth immediately around
-the front and back doors.</p>
-
-<p>Tottie immediately clattered up to the hut door, the
-black mare putting her head so far in that she obstructed
-the egress of a middle-aged woman, who made haste to
-come forth and receive the guests.</p>
-
-<p>‘Mother,’ said the girl, ‘here’s Miss Neuchamp come
-to see you; bring a chair for her to get off by.’</p>
-
-<p>This article of furniture having been supplied, Augusta
-was fain to descend upon it with as much dignity as she
-could manage, not being confident of her ability to drop
-down, like the agile Tottie, from a tallish horse, as was
-Osmund. Tottie, having given the horses in charge of a
-small brown-faced brother, who spent his whole time in
-considering Osmund, and apparently learning him by heart,
-welcomed Miss Neuchamp into her home. That young
-lady found herself for the first time under the roof of an
-Australian free-selector, and felt that she had acquired a
-new experience.</p>
-
-<p>‘Come in, miss; I’m very glad to see you, I’m sure;
-please to sit down,’ was the salutation Augusta received,
-in tones that spoke a hearty welcome, in very pure unaccented
-English.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Neuchamp selected the most ‘reliable’ looking
-of the wooden-seated American chairs, and depositing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">51</span>
-herself thereon, looked around. The dwelling was, she
-thought, more prepossessing than the outside had led her
-to imagine. Though everything was plain to ugliness,
-there was yet nothing squalid or repulsive. All things
-were very clean. The room in which they sat was
-evidently only used as a parlour or ‘living room.’ It
-was fairly large and commodious. The earthen floor was
-hard, even, and well swept. A large table occupied the
-centre. The fireplace was wide and capacious, the mantelpiece
-so high that it was not easy to reach. There was
-a wooden sofa covered with faded chintz, and an American
-clock. Half a dozen cheap chairs, a shelf well filled with
-indifferently bound books, a few unframed woodcuts hung
-upon the walls, made up the furniture and ornamentation.
-Opening from this apartment laterally was evidently a
-bedroom. At the back a skilling, a lower roofed portion
-of the building, contained several smaller rooms. A
-detached two-roomed building, in what would have been
-the back-yard had any enclosure been made, was probably
-the kitchen and laundry.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Freeman insisted upon putting down the kettle
-to boil, in order that she might make a cup of tea for
-her distinguished visitor, evidently under the opinion
-that every one naturally desired to drink tea whenever
-they could get it.</p>
-
-<p>‘And how have you been behaving yourself, Tottie?’
-said she, addressing her daughter, as a convenient mode
-of opening the conversation. ‘I hope and trust you’ve
-been a help to Miss Neuchamp. Has she, miss?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, certainly,’ answered Augusta; ‘Mary Anne has
-been a very good girl indeed. I don’t know how I should get
-on without her. And I have borrowed her side-saddle too.
-How long will it be before Mr. Freeman comes home?’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">52</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, he won’t be home much before dark. He’s
-always out on the run all day long. He hates coming in
-before the day is done.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Why is that, Mrs. Freeman?’</p>
-
-<p>‘“Because,” he says, “what can a man do after his
-day’s work but sit down and twirl his thumbs.” He
-haven’t got any garden here to fiddle about in, and he
-can’t sit still and smoke, like some people.‘</p>
-
-<p>‘But why don’t you have a garden?’ promptly inquired
-Augusta. ‘I suppose there’s no reason why you
-shouldn’t have one?’</p>
-
-<p>‘You see, miss,’ said Mrs. Freeman, casting about for
-a mode of explaining to her young lady visitor that she
-didn’t know what she was talking about, ‘the ground
-ain’t very good just here; and though it’s so dry and
-baked just now, they say the floods come all over it;
-and perhaps we mightn’t be here altogether that long.
-And Freeman, he’s had a deal of trouble with the stock
-lately. I don’t say but what a garden would look pretty
-enough; but who’s to work in it? It ain’t like our
-place down the country. There we had a garden—lots
-of peaches and grapes, and more plums, apples, and quinces
-than we could use and give away, besides early potatoes
-and all kinds of vegetables.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I suppose you regretted leaving such a home,’ said
-Miss Neuchamp, rather impressed by the hothouse profusion
-of the fruits mentioned.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, I’d rather live there on a pound a week,’ said
-Mrs. Freeman, ‘than here on riches. Freeman thought
-the stock would make up for all, but I didn’t, and I’m
-always sorry for the day we ever left the old farm.’</p>
-
-<p>As the good woman spoke the tears stood in her eyes,
-and Miss Neuchamp much marvelled that any spot in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">53</span>
-the desolate region of Australia should have power to
-attract the affection even of hard-worked, unrelieved Mrs.
-Freeman.</p>
-
-<p>‘Mother’s always fretting about that old place at
-Bowning,’ said Tottie. ‘I don’t believe it was any great
-things either. It was a deal colder than this, and we
-had lots of milk and butter always; but bread and butter’s
-not worth caring about.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You don’t recollect it, Tottie,’ said her mother, ‘or
-you would not talk in that way. Don’t you remember
-going into the garden to pick the peaches? How cool
-and shady it was in the mornings, to be sure, without
-scores of mosquitoes to sting and eat us up! Then there
-was always grass enough for the cows, and we had plenty
-of milk and butter and cheese, except, perhaps, in the
-dead of winter. It was better for all of us in other
-ways too, and that’s more.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I don’t see that, mother,’ said Tottie.</p>
-
-<p>‘But I do,’ said Mrs. Freeman, ‘and more than me
-knows it. There’s your father isn’t the same man, without
-his regular work at the farm, and the carrying and
-the other jobs, that used to fill up his time from daylight
-to dark. Now he’s nothing but the cattle to look after;
-and such weather as this there’s nothing to do from
-month’s end to month’s end, unless to pull them out of
-the waterholes. And I <i>know</i> he had a “burst” at that
-wretched <i>Stockman’s Arms</i> the last time he was down
-the river. He that was that sober before you could not
-tell him from a Son of Temperance.‘</p>
-
-<p>‘I feel sorry that you should have so much reason to
-complain of your lot,’ said Miss Neuchamp. ‘The poor,
-I am aware, are never contented, at least none that I
-ever saw in England. Yet it seems a pity, indeed, that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">54</span>
-want of patience and trust in Providence should have led
-to your moving to this unsuitable and, I am afraid, ill-fated
-locality.’</p>
-
-<p>‘We’re not altogether so poor, miss,’ said the worthy
-matron, recovering herself. ‘Abe will have over five
-hundred pounds in the bank when he’s delivered up the
-land and the stock to this Mr. Levison, that’s bought
-us all out. But what’s a little money, one way or the
-other, if your life’s miserable, and your husband takes to
-idle ways and worse, and your children grow up duffers
-and planters, and perhaps end in sticking up people?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, mother, shut up!’ ejaculated Tottie, with more
-kindliness in her tone than the words would have indicated.
-‘Things won’t be as had as that. Don’t I teach
-Poll and Sally and Ned and Billy? Besides, what does
-Miss Neuchamp know about duffing and sticking up?
-We’ll be all right when we clear out next year, and you
-can go back to Bowning and buy Book’s farm, and set
-father splitting stringy-bark rails for the rest of his life,
-if that’s what keeps him good. I expect the tea is
-ready. Won’t you give Miss Neuchamp a cup?’</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Freeman made haste to fill up a cup of tea, and
-a small jug of milk being produced, Miss Augusta found
-herself in possession of the best cup of tea she had tasted
-at Rainbar. She felt a sincere compassion for her hostess
-as a woman of properly submissive turn of mind, who
-had sense enough to regret her improper and irreligious
-departure from the lowly state in which Providence had
-placed her.</p>
-
-<p>Promising to call again, and comforting the low-spirited
-matron as far as in her lay, she remounted
-Osmund with some difficulty by means of the chair,
-and rode homewards, followed by Mr. Windsor, who had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">55</span>
-solaced his leisure by extracting from the younger girls,
-whom he had descried fishing, the latest news of the
-cattle operations of the family generally.</p>
-
-<p>‘Your mother seems to be very much of my opinion,
-Mary Anne,’ said Miss Augusta as soon as they were
-fairly on the sandy home-station track, ‘that this is a
-most undesirable place to live in.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Mother’s as good a woman as ever was,’ said Tottie,
-‘but she don’t “savey.” She’s always fretting about
-our old farm; and it certainly was cooler—that’s about
-all the pull there was in it. Father’s made more money
-here in two or three years than he’d have got together
-in twenty there. I should have been hoeing corn all
-day with a pair of thick boots on, and grown up as wild
-as a scrub filly. I don’t want to go back.‘</p>
-
-<p>‘Your mother seems a person of excellent sense,
-Mary Anne, and I must say that I <i>fully agree with her</i>,’
-said Miss Neuchamp, with her most unbending expression,
-designed to modify her attendant’s lightness of tone.
-‘Depend upon it, unhappiness and misfortune invariably
-follow the attempt to quit an allotted station in life.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, that be hanged for a yarn! Oh, I beg your
-pardon, miss,’ said Tottie confusedly, for she was on the
-point of relapsing into the Rainbar vernacular. ‘But
-surely every one ain’t bound to stop where they’re planted,
-good soil or bad, water or no water, like a corn-seed in a
-cow track or a pumpkin in a tree stump! Men and
-women have it in ’em to forage about a bit, else how do
-some people get on so wonderfully. I’ve read about self-help,
-and all that, and heaps of people beginning with
-half-a-crown and making fortunes. Ought they to have
-thrown the half-crown away or the fortune after they
-had made it?’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">56</span></p>
-
-<p>‘No doubt some people are apparently favoured,’ said
-Miss Augusta, regarding Tottie’s argument as another
-result of the over-education of ‘these sort of persons.’
-‘In the end it is often the worst thing that can befall
-them. Now let us canter.‘</p>
-
-<p>When Augusta Neuchamp had remained for a fortnight
-at Rainbar she began to perceive that the monotonous
-existence likely to be unreasonably prolonged
-would serve no object either of pleasure or profit. No
-amount of residence would teach her an iota more of the
-nature of such an establishment as Rainbar than she
-knew already. What was there to learn? The plains
-within sight of the cottage needed but to be indefinitely
-multiplied; and what then? An area of country equally
-arid, barren, unspeakably desolate. Other droves and
-herds of cattle equally emaciated. Nothing possibly
-could be in her eyes more hopeless and horrible than
-these endless death-stricken, famine-haunted wastes.
-Why did Ernest stay here? She had tried her utmost
-to induce him to abandon the whole miserable delusion,
-quoting the arguments of Mr. Jermyn Croker until he
-spoke angrily about that gentleman and closed the
-debate.</p>
-
-<p>The obvious thing to do was to return to Sydney, but
-even this comparatively simple step was difficult to carry
-out. Miss Neuchamp did not desire again to tempt the
-perils of the road unattended. She had taken it for
-granted that Ernest, the most complying and good-natured
-of men ordinarily, would return to Sydney with
-her; and she had trusted to the influence of civilisation
-and her steady persuasion to prevail upon him to return
-to England to his friends, and to what she deemed to be
-his fixed and unalterable position in life.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">57</span></p>
-
-<p>On this occasion she met with unexpected opposition.
-Ernest positively declined to quit his station at present.</p>
-
-<p>‘My dear Augusta,’ said he, ‘you do not know what
-you are asking. I have a number of very important
-duties to perform here. My financial state is an extremely
-critical one. I cannot with any decency appear
-in Sydney when everything points to the ruin of myself
-and my whole order. I am sincerely sorry that you
-should feel life here to be so extremely <i>ennuyant</i>, but I
-should never, if consulted, have advised you to come;
-and now I am afraid you must wait until a proper escort
-turns up or until I can accompany you.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And when will that be?’</p>
-
-<p>‘When the rain comes, certainly not before.’</p>
-
-<p>Miss Augusta said that this last contingency was as
-probable as the near advent of the millennium. She
-would wait a given time, and, that expired, would go
-down to Sydney as she had come up by herself.</p>
-
-<p>A fortnight, even three weeks, passed away. Augusta
-had mentioned a month as the outside limit of her forbearance.
-She read over and over ‘Mariana in the
-Moated Grange’ and ‘Mariana in the South’ with quite
-a new appreciation of their peculiar accuracy as well as
-poetic sentiment.</p>
-
-<p>Daily she worked and read, and walked and rode, and
-alternately was hopeful or otherwise about the ultimate
-conversion of Tottie to the true faith of proper English
-village lowliness and reverence. Daily Ernest went forth
-‘out on the run’ immediately after breakfast, reappearing
-only at or after sunset. Insensibly Miss Neuchamp became
-alarmed to find creeping over her a kind of provincial
-interest in the affairs of the ‘burghers of this
-desert city.’ She listened almost with excitement to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">58</span>
-account of a lot of the new cattle having been followed
-twenty miles over the boundary and recovered by Charley
-Banks. She heard of a bushranger being captured about
-fifty miles off—this was Jack Windsor’s story; of the
-mail coming in twelve hours late in consequence of the
-horses being exhausted. Ernest gathered this from the
-overseer of the last lot of travelling sheep that passed
-through, having been locked up in Wargan Gaol for disobeying
-a summons. ‘Such a handsome young fellow,
-miss.’ This was Tottie’s contribution.</p>
-
-<p>What with the reading, the sewing, the teaching of
-Tottie, the daily cousinly walks and talks, the hitherto
-uncompromising Augusta became partially converted to
-station life, and finally admitted in conversation with
-Ernest that, other things being equal, she <i>could</i> imagine a
-woman enduring such privation for a few years, always
-assuming that she had the companionship of the one man
-to whom alone she could freely devote every waking
-thought, every pulsation of the heart.</p>
-
-<p>‘Do you think there’s any man born, miss,’ inquired
-Tottie, who was laying the cloth for dinner, but who
-stopped deliberately and listened with qualified approval
-to the sentence with which Miss Neuchamp concluded
-her statement—‘any man born—except in a book—like
-that? I don’t. They most of ’em seem to me to take it
-very easy, smoking and riding about, and drinking at odd
-times. It’s the women that all the real pull comes on.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I was not addressing myself to you, Mary Anne,’ replied
-Miss Augusta with dignity; ‘I was speaking to
-Mr. Neuchamp only. I should hardly think your experience
-entitled you to offer an opinion.’</p>
-
-<p>‘H—m,’ said Tottie, proceeding with the plates.
-‘I’m young, and I suppose I don’t know much. But I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">59</span>
-hear what’s going on. Don’t you think I’d better go
-down to Sydney, to take care of you on the road, miss, in
-case there’s a Chinaman to knock over? I think I could
-do that, if I was drove to it.’</p>
-
-<p>On the next day an unusual occurrence took place in
-that land where events and novelties seemed to have
-perished like the grass, under the slow calcining of the
-deadly season—a dray arrived from town.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Neuchamp, in her sore need of change and occupation,
-could have cheerfully witnessed the unpacking of
-ordinary station stores, in which, as usual, a little drapery
-would be comprised. But here again disappointment. It
-was merely a load of flour.</p>
-
-<p>Depressed and discouraged, Miss Neuchamp had condescended
-to watch the unloading of the unromantic
-freight, deriving a faint interest in noting with what
-apparent ease Jack Windsor and Charley Banks placed
-the heavy bags upon their shoulders and deposited them
-in the store.</p>
-
-<p>Rarely was Miss Augusta so lowered in spirit as not
-to be able to talk. On this occasion she had informed
-Tottie, with some relish, that English country girls were
-much ruddier and more healthy looking, as well as, she
-doubted not, stronger and more capable of endurance, than
-those born in Australia could possibly be.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why so?’ inquired Tottie with animation.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why?’ said Miss Neuchamp with asperity; ‘because
-of the cool, beautiful climate they live in, the regular,
-wholesome labour they are born to, the superiority of the
-whole land and people to this dull, deceitful country, all
-sand and sun-glare.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, I can’t say, miss,’ replied Tottie, plotting a
-surprise, with characteristic coolness, ‘about English<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">60</span>
-girls’ looks, because I’ve hardly ever seen any; but as for
-health, I’ve a middling appetite, I never was a day ill
-since I was born, and as to being strong—look here.‘</p>
-
-<p>Before the horrified Augusta could forbid her rapid
-motion, she bounded over to the dray, from which Mr.
-Windsor had just borne his two hundred pounds of
-farina. She placed her back beneath the lessening load,
-and stretching her arms upward in the way proper to
-grasp the tied corner of the bag, said imperiously, ‘Here,
-Mr. Carrier, just you lower that bag steady; I want to
-show the English lady what a Currency girl can walk
-away with.’</p>
-
-<p>The tall sunburned driver entered into the joke, and
-winking at Charley Banks, who stood by laughing, he
-placed the heavy bag fairly and square upon Tottie’s
-plump shoulders. Miss Neuchamp’s gaze was riveted
-upon the erratic ‘help’ as if she had been about to commit
-suicide.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh! don’t—don’t,’ she gasped; ‘are you mad, Mary
-Anne? You will break your back, or cripple yourself
-for life. Mr. Banks, pray interfere! I am sure my
-cousin will be angry—pray stop her!’</p>
-
-<p>Charley Banks was not afraid that anything dreadful
-would happen. He had seen the bush girls perform
-feats of strength and activity ere now which proved to
-him that very little cause for apprehension existed in the
-present case.</p>
-
-<p>And there was not much time. For one moment the
-girl stood, with her arms raised above her head, her
-figure, in its natural and classic grace, proving the unspeakable
-advantage of the free, open-air life, with fullest
-liberty for varied exercise, which she had had from her
-birth. The next she had moved forward with firm,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">61</span>
-elastic tread, under a load which a city man out of training
-would have found no joke, and, walking into the
-store, permitted it to fall accurately beside the others
-which had been shot from the backs of Jack Windsor
-and Mr. Banks into their appointed corner.</p>
-
-<p>There was a slight cheer, and an exclamation of,
-‘Well done, Tottie,’ as she returned with a heightened
-colour and half-triumphant, half-confused air to Miss
-Neuchamp, who, relieved at her safe return from the
-dangerous feat, did not administer so severe a rebuke as
-might have been expected.</p>
-
-<p>‘You may be thankful, Mary Anne, if you do not
-hereafter discover that this day’s folly has laid the foundation
-of lifelong ill-health. But come into the house,
-child. You <i>have</i> some colour for once. Let me see no
-more pranks of this sort again, while <i>I</i> am here.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Lor, miss,’ said Tottie, ‘that’s not the first bag of
-flour I’ve carried. And father says there was a girl he
-knew at the Hawkesbury that took one—and <i>him a-top
-of it</i>—around her father’s barn. He was only a boy
-then.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I think you may lay the tea, Mary Anne,’ said Miss
-Neuchamp, not requiring any more Hawkesbury anecdotes.
-‘I feel unusually fatigued to-day.’</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately for all parties, before the extreme limit of
-Miss Neuchamp’s patience and the resources of Rainbar
-had been reached, a welcome auxiliary arrived in the
-person of Mr. Middleton. That worthy paterfamilias had
-been compelled to visit his outlying stations, in order to
-ascertain the precise amount of death and destruction
-that was taking place, and was returning to his usual
-residence nearer the settled districts. He travelled in a
-light buggy with one horse, being thus enabled to carry<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">62</span>
-a supply of forage, and even water, with him. This, the
-only known plan for crossing ‘dry country’ in a bad
-season, and at the same time maintaining a horse in
-tolerable condition, was not ornamental in detail. The
-buggy, with two bags of chaff secured behind, a bushel of
-maize in front, and a large water bag and bucket swung
-from the axle, had a striking and unusual effect. But
-the active, upstanding roadster was in better condition
-than any horse which had passed Rainbar for many a
-day, and Mr. Neuchamp at once saw his way to a
-transfer of responsibility, as far as Miss Augusta was
-concerned.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, Neuchamp, what do you think of Australia
-now?’ said the old gentleman, in a jolly voice, as, sunburned
-and dusty, with a great straw hat, a curtain and
-a net veil, a canvas hood to his buggy, and the fodder
-previously referred to picturesquely disposed about his
-travelling carriage, he drove up to the verandah, causing
-Augusta to put up her eyeglass with amazement. ‘Made
-any striking alterations for our good? Wish you’d try
-your hand at the weather, if that’s in your line.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Come in, and we’ll talk it over,’ replied Ernest.
-‘I’m charmed to see you in any kind of weather. Permit
-me to present you to my cousin, Miss Neuchamp, who
-doesn’t approve of your country at all. I must inform
-you, Augusta, this is Mr. Middleton, my fellow-passenger,
-whom you have heard me mention. I hope the ladies
-are all well.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Pretty well when they wrote last; but, like all ladies,
-I fancy, they are terribly tired of the present state of the
-season—and no wonder. I can only recollect one
-worse drought during the thirty years I have been out
-here.’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">63</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Worse!’ ejaculated Augusta, ‘I should have thought
-that impossible. How did you contrive to exist?’</p>
-
-<p>‘We <i>did</i> manage to keep alive, as I am here to
-testify,’ laughed the old gentleman, whose proportions
-were upon an ample and generous scale; ‘but of course
-it was a serious matter in every aspect. However, we
-weathered that famine, and we shall get over this, with
-patience and God’s blessing.’</p>
-
-<p>That evening it was definitely arranged that Mr.
-Middleton should give Miss Neuchamp a seat in his encumbered
-but not overladen buggy as far as his own
-home station, which he trusted to reach in a week; after
-which he would undertake, when she was tired of Mrs.
-Middleton and the girls, to deposit her safely in Sydney.</p>
-
-<p>This was an unlooked-for piece of good fortune.
-Ernest was much relieved in mind at being freed from
-the dilemma of returning Augusta as a kind of captive
-princess of Rainbar, or undertaking an expensive and
-inopportune journey for the sole purpose of accompanying
-her to a place which she never should have quitted.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Middleton, confident of securing provender, now
-that he had commenced to approach the confines of
-civilisation, was not sorry to be provided with a young
-lady companion, having had of late much of his own
-unrelieved society; and Augusta was more pleased than
-she cared to show at the prospect of escape from this
-Sahara existence, without the prestige of the desert or
-the novelty of Arabs. That night her portmanteau was
-packed, Tottie coming in for the reversion of as much
-raiment as constituted her an authority in fashions ‘on
-the river’ ever after, and such a <i>douceur</i> as confirmed
-her in Mr. Bank’s high estimate of Miss Neuchamp as a
-‘real lady.’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">64</span></p>
-
-<p>At six o’clock next morning Augusta Neuchamp bade
-farewell for ever to the abode of the Australian representative
-of her ancient house.</p>
-
-<p>‘When shall I see you in Sydney, Ernest?’ she said,
-as a last inquiry. ‘I daresay they will wish to know at
-Morahmee.’</p>
-
-<p>‘When the rain comes,’ said Ernest resolutely.
-‘Good-bye, Middleton; take great care of her. Remember
-me to the ladies.’ And they were off.</p>
-
-<p>It has been more than once remarked by those of our
-species who rely for their intellectual recreation less
-upon action than observation, that great events are apt
-to be produced by inconsiderable causes. The sighing
-summer breeze sets free the mountain avalanche. The
-spark creates the red ruin of a conflagration. The rat in
-Holland perforates a dam and floods a province.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Neuchamp sat in his apartment at Rainbar contrasting,
-doubtfully, his regret at the departure of his
-cousin with his recovered sense of freedom and independence.
-True, she was the sole link which in Australia
-connected him with the thousand spells of home.</p>
-
-<p>But, ever angular in mind, she had proved herself
-to be so incapable of accommodation to the necessarily
-altered conditions of a new land, that he had despaired
-of her acclimatisation. She had even failed to comprehend
-them.</p>
-
-<p>‘This is the result,’ he would assert to himself, ‘of
-her deficiency in the faculty of imagination. It may be
-there are other reasons, but I trace her special failure in
-<i>camaraderie</i> to this neglect of her fairy godmother.’</p>
-
-<p>A person with deficient ideality is necessarily imprisoned
-by the present. Unable to portray for themselves
-a presentment of unaccustomed conditions on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">65</span>
-mental canvas, such as is traced by Fancy, coloured by
-Hope, yet corrected by Prudence, they are wholly precluded
-from the prevision, even in part, of the living
-wonders, the breathing enchantments, of the future. To
-them no city of rest, glorious and beautiful, arises from
-the dull vulgarities of life and endeavour; all with
-them is of the earth, earthy. A gospel of hard-eyed
-economy, grudging gain, unrelieved toil, for the poor; for
-the sordid aspirant, by endless thrift and striving, ‘property,
-property, property;’ for the rich, a message of
-selfish enjoyment, grasping monopoly, ungenial ease.</p>
-
-<p>‘Such would the world be were the human mind
-divested of the sublime attributes of Faith and Imagination!’
-exclaimed Ernest, borne away from his present
-cares. ‘There may be perils for the glad mariner on the
-sun-bright, flashing wave; but he has the possible glory
-of descrying purple isles, undiscovered continents. Dying,
-he falls as a hero; living, he may survive to be hailed as
-the world’s benefactor.’</p>
-
-<p>Much comforted by these bright-hued imaginings and
-illuminings of the path in which he knew himself to be
-an ardent traveller, Mr. Neuchamp awaited his mail-bag
-with more than usual serenity.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">66</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><a name="CHAPTER_XXVI" id="CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI</a></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The untoward season had not been without its effect
-upon the thousand and one gardens that paint, in each
-vivid delicate hue, with flower tracery and plant glory,
-the rocky steeps and fairy nooks which engirdle Sydney.
-The undulating lawns were dimmer, the plant masses less
-profuse, the showery blooms less dazzling, the trailers less
-gorgeous, than in other years. Yet were not the shores
-of the fair, wondrous haven, beloved by Ocean for many a
-long-past æon of lonely joy, before the bold scion of a
-sea-roving race invaded its giant portals, without some
-tokens of his favour. In the long, throbbing, burning
-days, when the sun beat blistering upon the heated roof,
-the white pavement, the dusty streets, he summoned
-from beyond the misty blue horizon the rushing wind-sisters
-fresh from the ice-galleries, the snow-peaks, the
-frozen colonnades of that lone land where sits enthroned
-in dazzling splendour, during days that die not or nights
-that never end, the sorceress of the Southern Pole. From
-their wings, frost-jewelled, dripped gentlest showers, refreshing
-the shore, though they passed not the great
-mountain range which so long guarded the hidden
-treasure-lands of the central waste. Hot and parched,
-compared with former seasons, the autumn seemed endless,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">67</span>
-yet were the gardens and shrubberies of Morahmee
-so comparatively verdant and fresh, from their proximity
-to the sea, that Ernest would have hailed it as an Eden of
-greenest glory, in comparison with the ‘sun-scorched desert
-brown and bare’ which Rainbar had long resembled.</p>
-
-<p>Among the inhabitants of Sydney who made daily
-moan against the slow severity of the hopeless season
-(and who had in some cases good cause, in diminished
-incomes and receding trade, for such murmurings), Paul
-Frankston, to his great surprise, found his daughter to be
-enrolled.</p>
-
-<p>This occurrence, involving as he thought a radical
-change of disposition, if not of character, much alarmed
-the worthy merchant. Calm and resolute, if occasionally
-variant of mood, Antonia Frankston had hitherto
-been one of the least querulous of mortals. Sufficiently
-cultured to comprehend that the stupendous laws of the
-universe were not controlled by the fancied woe or weal
-of feeble man, she had never sympathised with the unmeaning
-deprecation of climatic occurrences.</p>
-
-<p>‘The wind and the weather are in God’s hands,’ she
-had once answered to some shallow complainer. ‘What
-are we that we should dare to blame or praise? Besides,
-I am a sailor’s daughter, and at sea they take the
-weather as it comes.’</p>
-
-<p>In other matters, which could be set right by personal
-supervision or self-denial, she held it to be most
-unworthy weakness to make bitter outcry or vain
-lamentation. ‘If the evil can be repaired, why not
-at once commence the task? If hopeless, then bear
-it with firmness. Provide against its recurrence, if
-you like; but, in any case, what possible good can
-talking or, more correctly, whining do? That is the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">68</span>
-reason why men so often despise women, so often suffer
-from them. Look at <i>them</i> when anything goes wrong,—how
-hard they work, how little they talk! Perhaps
-they smoke the more. But even that has the virtue
-of silence, and therefore of wisdom. Talk is a very good
-thing in the right place, but when things go wrong, it is
-<i>not</i> in its right place.’</p>
-
-<p>In former days of autumn, when the rains came not,
-when the flowers drooped, when bad news came from
-Paul Frankston’s pastoral constituents, and that worthy
-financier was troubled in mind, or smoked more than his
-proper allowance of cigars over the consideration of the
-state of trade, it was Antonia who invariably cheered
-and consoled him. She pointed out the triumphs of the
-past; she steadfastly counselled trust in the future; she
-soothed the night with her songs; she cheered the day
-with unfailing ministration to his comfort and habitudes.</p>
-
-<p>Now, curiously, the old man thought his darling was
-different from what he had ever recollected. She suffered
-repinings to escape her as to the weary rainless season.
-She did not deny or controvert his occasional grumbling
-assertions, after a hot day in the city, that the whole
-country was going to the bad. She was, wonder of
-wonders, occasionally irritable with the servants, and
-impatient of their shortcomings. She kept her books
-unchanged and apparently unread for a time unprecedented
-in Mr. Shaddock’s experience.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Frankston could not by any means comprehend
-this deflection of his daughter’s equable mental constitution.
-After much consideration he came to the conclusion
-that she wanted change of air—that the depressing hot
-season was telling upon her health for the first time in
-his recollection; and he cast about for an eligible chance<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">69</span>
-to send her to some friends in Tasmania, where the
-keener air, the somewhat more bracing island climate,
-might restore her to the animation which he feared she
-was losing day by day.</p>
-
-<p>He thought also, amid his loving plans and plottings
-for his daughter’s welfare, that possibly she needed the
-stimulus of additional society. They had been living
-quietly at Morahmee of late, and the season of comparative
-gaiety, which in Sydney generally dates from the
-birthnight of the Empress of Anglo-Saxondom, had not
-as yet arrived.</p>
-
-<p>‘We want a little rousing up,’ thought poor Paul;
-‘we have had no little dinners lately, no one in the evenings.
-I have been thinking over this confounded season
-and these bothering bills till I have forgotten my own
-darling, but for whose sake the whole country might be
-swallowed up in Mauna Loa, for all old Paul cares. I
-shouldn’t say that either; but it seems hard that anything
-should ail the poor darling that care might have
-prevented. If her mother had lived—ah!’ and here
-Paul fell a-thinking, until the wheels of the dogcart grated
-against the pavement near the office door.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it so chanced that, towards the end of the week,
-occurred one of the little dinners for which Morahmee
-was famous, with a ‘whip’ of certain musical celebrities
-of the neighbourhood, and as many ordinary guests as
-made a successful compromise between all ‘music,’ which
-sometimes hath not ‘charms’ for the masculine breast,
-and a regulation evening party, which would have been
-an anachronism.</p>
-
-<p>Among the guests for whom Paul, in his anxiety for
-a healthful distraction for Antonia, had swept the clubs
-and the hotels, were Mr. Hardy Baldacre and Jermyn<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">70</span>
-Croker. Squatters were scarce in Sydney beyond
-previous experience. They were all at home on their
-stations attending to their stock, except those who were
-in town attending to their bills. These last were
-chiefly indisposed to society. They dined at their clubs
-or hotels after half a day’s waiting in the manager’s
-ante-chamber, and felt more inclined for the repose of
-the smoking-room than for the excitement of the society.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Hardy Baldacre had managed to come to town,
-however, without such anxieties of a pecuniary nature
-as interfered with his amusements. Of these he partook
-of as full measure of every kind and description as he
-could procure cheaply. He had early developed a taste
-for pleasure, controlled only by considerations of caution
-and economy. Those who knew him well disliked him
-thoroughly, and with cause. Those who met him occasionally,
-as did Mr. Neuchamp and Paul Frankston, saw in
-him a well-dressed, good-looking man, with an affectation
-of good-humour and liberality by no means without
-attraction. Paul <i>had</i> heard assertions made to his disadvantage,
-but not having bestowed much thought upon
-the matter, had not gone the length of excluding him
-from his invitation list; on this occasion he had been
-rather glad to fill up his table.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Jermyn Croker, as usual, had constituted himself
-an exception to ordinary humanity by remaining at
-his club during the terrible season which sent the most
-ardent lovers of the metropolis to their distant duties.
-In explanation he stated that either the whole country
-would be ruined or it would not. He frankly admitted
-that he inclined to the first belief. If the former state
-of matters prevailed, what was the use of living in the
-desert till the last camel died and the last well was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">71</span>
-choked? No human effort could avert the final simoom,
-which was evidently on its way to engulf pastoral
-Australia. Now, here at the club (though the wines were
-beastly, as usual, and the committee ought to be sacked)
-there would be a little claret and ice available to the
-last. He should remain and perish, where, at least, a
-club waiter could see to your interment.</p>
-
-<p>Such was Mr. Jermyn Croker’s faith, openly professed
-in club and counting-house. But those who knew him
-averred that he took good care to have one of the best
-overseers in the country at his head station, whose
-management he kept up to the mark by weekly letters
-of so consistently depreciatory a nature that nobody
-expected <i>he</i> would survive the season, whatever the
-issue to others. ‘Died of a bad season and Jermyn
-Croker’ had, indeed, been an epitaph written in advance
-and forwarded to him by a provincial humorist.</p>
-
-<p>Hartley Selmore had also been found available. He,
-indeed, could not very well remain away from financial
-headquarters. So many of his unpaid orders and acceptances,
-with the ominous superscription ‘Refer to drawer,’
-found their way to bank and office by every mail from
-the interior, that a residence in the metropolis was vitally
-necessary. In good sooth, his unflagging energy and
-great powers of resource, under the presence of constant
-emergency, were equal to the demand made upon them.
-With the aid of every device of discount and hypothecation
-known to the children of finance, he managed to
-keep afloat. His day’s work, neither light nor easy of
-grasp, once over, the philosophical Hartley enjoyed his
-dinner, his cigar, his whist or billiards, as genuinely as
-if he had not a debt in the world, and was always ready
-for a <i>petit dîner</i> if he distrusted not the wine.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">72</span></p>
-
-<p>This dinner was, as usual, perfect in its way. The
-cooking at Morahmee was proverbial; the wines were too
-good for even Jermyn Croker to grumble at—had he done
-so he would have imperilled his reputation as connoisseur,
-of which he was careful; the conversation of the guests, at
-first guarded and unsympathetic, rose into liveliness with
-the conclusion of the first course, and, simultaneously
-with the circulation of Paul’s unrivalled well-iced vintage,
-became more adventurous and brilliant.</p>
-
-<p>‘Where is our young friend Neuchamp?’ inquired
-Hartley Selmore. ‘I haven’t seen him for an age.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Gone to the bad long ago, hasn’t he?’ replied
-Croker, with an air of pleasing certainty.</p>
-
-<p>‘Heard he had bought a terribly overrated place on
-the Darling,’ said Selmore. ‘Very sharp practice of
-Parklands. Too bad of him—too bad, wasn’t it, now?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Was it as good a bargain as Gammon Downs, Mr.
-Selmore?’ inquired Antonia, with a faint resemblance to
-former archness that lit up her melancholy features.
-‘I am afraid there is not much to choose between you
-hardened pioneers when there is a newly-landed purchaser
-signalled.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Really, Miss Frankston, really!’ replied Selmore,
-with a fine imitation of the chivalrous and disinterested;
-‘you do some of us injustice. In all this dreadful
-season, I assure you, the creeks at Gammon Downs are
-running like English brooks, and the grass is green—absolutely
-green!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, what colour should it be, Mr. Selmore—blue
-or magenta? But you know that I am an Australian,
-and therefore must have learned in the many conversations
-which have passed in my hearing about station
-matters that “green grass country” is generally spoken<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">73</span>
-disrespectfully of, and “permanent water” is not everything.
-But we will not continue the rather worn
-subject.‘</p>
-
-<p>‘I fancy Neuchamp can’t be doing so badly,’ cut in
-Hardy Baldacre, with his customary assurance, ‘for I
-hear he is going to be married.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Married!’ echoed Antonia, as she felt the tide of
-life arrested in her veins for one moment, and, with the
-next, course wildly back to her beating heart. ‘Married,
-Mr. Baldacre, and why not? But papa often hears from
-him, don’t you, pappy, and he never mentioned it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Mentioned it! I should think not,’ growled Paul,
-with a leonine accent, as scenting danger. ‘I heard
-from him, let me see, a month or two back. I don’t
-believe a word of it. Who to?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, <i>I saw the young lady</i>,’ persisted Baldacre,
-wholly unabashed, while he noted Antonia’s pale and
-unmoved features. ‘I went up in the coach with her,
-half way to Rainbar. She’s a cousin of his own; same
-name. Just out from England, and ever so rich.’</p>
-
-<p>‘How the deuce should she go alone up to Rainbar?’
-said Paul, full of doubt and dread. ‘Surely <i>we</i> should
-have heard of her, when she landed.’</p>
-
-<p>‘She told me that she made up her mind suddenly
-to come out to him—did not let him know, and only
-stayed a week in Sydney, at Petty’s.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Most romantic!’ said Antonia, driving the unseen
-dagger more deeply into her heart, after the fashion of
-her sex, but smiling and forcing a piteous and unreal
-gaiety; ‘and was she fair to look upon—a blonde or
-brunette? Mr. Baldacre, you were evidently in her
-confidence; you cannot escape a description.’</p>
-
-<p>‘She was very good-looking indeed,’ said the ruthless<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">74</span>
-Hardy, who had been struck with Augusta’s fresh complexion
-and insular manner. ‘She wore a gold eyeglass,
-which looked odd; but she was very clever, and
-all that kind of thing, as any one could see.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Even Mr. Baldacre,’ said Antonia, with a sarcastic
-acknowledgment. ‘You must have had a delightful
-journey. You will tell me any other particulars that
-occur to you in the drawing-room. I feel quite interested.’</p>
-
-<p>Here the faint signal passed which proclaims the
-withdrawal of the lady <i>convives</i> and the temporary
-separation of the sexes. What mysterious rites are
-celebrated above by the assembled maids and matrons,
-freed awhile from the disturbing influence of the male
-element? Does a wholly unaffected, perhaps unamused
-expression possess those lovely features, erst so full of
-every virtue showing forth in every look? Do they
-exchange confidences? Do they <i>trust</i> each other? Do
-they doff their uniforms, and appear unarmed, save with
-truth, innocence, simplicity? <i>Quien sabe?</i></p>
-
-<p>It may not have been apparent to the lady guests, to
-whose comfort and enlivenment Antonia was so assiduous,
-so delicately, yet so unfailingly attentive in her <i>rôle</i>
-of hostess, that Miss Frankston’s heart was beating, her
-head aching, her temples throbbing, her pulse quickened,
-to a degree which rendered the severest mental effort
-necessary to avoid collapse. They heeded not the faint
-smile, the piteous quivering lip, the sad eyes, while words
-of mirth, of compliment, of entreaty, flowed rapidly forth,
-as she played her part in the game we call society. But
-when the small pageant was over and the last carriage
-rolled away she threw her arms round old Paul’s neck,
-and resting her head upon that breast which had cherished
-her, with all a woman’s love, and but little short<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">75</span>
-of a woman’s tenderness, since her baby days of broken
-doll and lost toy, she lay in his clasp and sobbed as if
-her heart—poor overburdened, loving, despairing heart—was
-in verity, then and there, about to break.</p>
-
-<p>‘My darling, my darling! my own precious pet,
-Antonia!’ said the old man, kissing her forehead, and
-wiping the tears from her eyes, as he had done many a
-time and oft in the days of her childish grief. ‘I know
-your sorrow and its cause; but do not be too hasty.
-We do not know if this loose report be true. It is most
-unlikely and improbable to me; though, if it be true,
-Paul Frankston is not the man to suffer this wrong to
-lie a day without—without claiming his right. But do
-not take it for proved truth till further tidings come.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It <i>is</i> true—it is true,’ moaned Antonia. ‘I had a
-foreboding. I have been so wretched of late—so unlike
-your daughter, my dearest father. How could Hardy
-Baldacre have invented such a story? Why did he not
-give his—his betrothed—our address, if he had no—no—reason
-to do otherwise?’ sobbed poor Antonia.</p>
-
-<p>‘I can’t say—I don’t know—hang her and her eyeglass—and
-the day I first saw him enter this house!
-But, no, I cannot hate the boy, whose pleasant face so
-often made a second youth for me. I hate taking things
-for granted; I must have proof before I—and then—Go
-to bed, my darling, go to bed; I will tell you what I
-think in the morning.’</p>
-
-<p>It was well for Miss Frankston, perhaps, that the
-intense pain towards which her headache had gradually
-culminated rendered her for a while unable to frame any
-mental processes. As she threw herself upon the couch
-she was conscious of a crushing feeling of utter darkness
-and blank despair, which simulated a swoon.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">76</span></p>
-
-<p>She awoke to a state of mind to her previously unknown.
-In her breast conflicting emotions passionately
-contended. Chief among them was the bitter disappointment,
-the indignant sense of slight and betrayal, endured
-by every woman who, conscious that each inmost sacred
-feeling of her heart has been given to the hero of her
-choice, has been deliberately forsaken for another.</p>
-
-<p>True, no word of love, no promise, no seeking of
-favour on one side, no half denial, half granting of precious
-gifts, had passed between them. In one sense, the
-world would have held him harmless, while friends and
-companions of her own sex, prone always to decry and
-distrust all feminine victims, would most certainly hint at
-mistaken feelings, delusive hopes, on her part—would be
-ready to welcome and to tempt the successful purloiner
-of a sister’s heart, the unpunished wrecker of a sister’s
-happiness.</p>
-
-<p>But was there no tacit agreement, no unwritten bond,
-no fixed and changeless contract, slowly but imperceptibly
-traced in characters faint and pale, then clearer, fuller,
-deepening daily to indelible imprint on her heart—upon
-his, surely upon his? Were the outpourings of the
-hitherto sacred thoughts, feelings, emotions, from the
-innermost receptacles of an unworn, untempted nature,
-to be reckoned as the idle, meaningless badinage of
-society? Were the friendly counsels, the deep, unaffected
-interest, the frank brotherly intercourse, all to
-pass for nothing—to be translated into the careless
-courtesy affected by every formal visitor?</p>
-
-<p>And yet, again, did not such things happen every
-day? Her own experience was not so limited but that
-she had known more than one pale maiden, weary of life,
-sick unto death for a season, unable as a fever patient to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">77</span>
-simulate ordinary cheerfulness because of the acted, if not
-spoken, falsehood of man. Had she pitied these too
-confiding victims, these hopeless, uncomplaining invalids,
-maimed in the battle of life, hiding the mortal wound
-from human gaze, bearing up with trembling steps the
-burden of premature age and sorrow?</p>
-
-<p>Had not her pity savoured of contempt—her kindness
-of toleration? and now, lo! it was her own case.
-But could it be <i>herself</i>—Antonia Frankston, who from
-childhood had felt no want that wealth and opportunity
-could supply? who had never known a slight or felt an
-injury since childhood’s hour? to whom all sorrow and
-sufferings incidental to what books and fanciful persons
-called ‘love’ were as practically unknown as snow blindness
-to an inhabitant of the Sahara? Was she a wronged,
-insulted, deserted woman like those others? It was inconceivable!
-it was phantasmal! it was impossible! She
-would sleep, and with the dawn the ghastly fear would
-be fled. Perhaps this dull pain in her throbbing temples,
-this darksome mysterious heart-agony, would leave her.
-Who knows?</p>
-
-<p>It is wonderful how much is taken for granted every
-day in this world, more especially in the interest of evil
-devices.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Hardy Baldacre would have been sorely puzzled
-by a cross-examination, but no one had presence of mind
-to put it to the proof. He was rapid in conceiving his
-plans, wonderfully accurate and thoughtful in carrying
-them through. His endowments were exceptional in
-their way. Bold, even to audacity, he never hesitated;
-cunning and unscrupulous, he pursued his schemes,
-whether for money-making or for personal aggrandisement
-of the lower sort, with a swift and sure directness<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">78</span>
-worthy of more exalted aim. Undaunted by failure, he
-was careless of partial loss of reputation. He was known
-by the superficial crowd as a successful operator whenever
-there was a bargain to be had in stock or station
-property. He was shunned and disliked by those better
-informed and more scrupulous in their acknowledgment
-of friends, as a gambler, a niggard, and a crafty profligate.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the man who had succeeded, by a lying
-device, in working present evil—it may be, incalculable
-future misery—to two persons who had never injured
-him. In this deliberate fabrication he had two ends in
-view. He secretly envied and disliked Ernest Neuchamp
-for qualities and attainments which he could never hope
-to rival. He was one of a class of Australians who
-cherish an ignorant prejudice against Englishmen, regarding
-them as conceited and prone to be contemptuous of the
-provincial magnate. With characteristic cunning he had
-kept this feeling to himself, always treating Mr. Neuchamp
-with apparent friendliness. But he was none the
-less determined to deal him an effectual blow when an
-opportunity should offer. The time had come, and he
-had struck a felon blow, which had pierced deeply the
-pure, passionate heart of Antonia Frankston.</p>
-
-<p>He had for some time past honoured that young lady
-with his very questionable approbation. He admired
-her personally after his fashion; but he thoroughly
-appreciated and heartily desired to possess himself of
-what constituted in his eyes her crowning charm and
-attribute—the large fortune which Paul Frankston’s
-heiress must, in spite of all changes of season and fluctuation
-of securities, inevitably inherit.</p>
-
-<p>Not unskilled in the ways of women, with whom his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">79</span>
-undeniable good looks and his prestige of wealth gave
-him a certain popularity, he thought he saw his way
-during her period of anger and mortification to a dash at
-the lady and the money, which needed but promptness
-and resolution to ensure a strong chance of success.</p>
-
-<p>He saw by her change of countenance, by her forced
-gaiety, by her every look and tone, that the barbed
-arrow had sped far and been surely lodged.</p>
-
-<p>‘Neuchamp, like a fool as he was, had evidently not
-written lately. The cousin (and a deuced fine girl, too,
-with pots of money of her own) had been staying up at
-Rainbar—a queer thing to do. Old Middleton, when
-bringing her to his place, had told every one that she
-was his friend Neuchamp’s cousin. It would be some
-time before Frankston or his daughter would find out the
-untruth of the report. In the meantime he would butter
-up the old man, humbug him with regret for his occasional
-“wildness,” promise all kinds of amendment and
-square behaviour for the future; then go straight to the
-girl, who, of course, could know nothing of his life and
-time, and say, “Here am I, Hardy Baldacre, with a half
-share in Baredown, Gogeldra, and No-good-damper (hang
-it; I must change that)—anyway, three of the best
-cattle properties of the south; here am I, not the worst-looking
-fellow going, at your service. Take me, and
-we’re off to Melbourne or Tasmania for a wedding-trip,
-and that stuck-up beggar Neuchamp may marry his
-cousin, and go up King Street the next week for all we
-care.” I shan’t say the last bit. But it will occur to
-her. Women always think of everything, though they
-don’t say it. That might fetch her. Anyhow, the odds
-are right. I’m on!’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">80</span></p>
-
-<p>This exceedingly practical soliloquy having been
-transacted at his hotel during the performance of his
-toilette, Mr. Baldacre partook of the matutinal soda-and-brandy
-generally necessary for the perfect restoration of
-his nerves, and breakfasted, with a settled resolution to
-call at Morahmee that afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>This intention he carried out. He found Antonia
-apparently not unwilling to receive him upon a more
-intimate conversational footing than he ever recollected
-having been accorded to him. She was in that state
-of anxiety, unhappiness, and nervous irritability which
-makes the patient only too willing to fly to the relief
-afforded by a certainty even of evil. The climber upon
-Alpine heights, with shuddering death-cry, ever and anon
-casts himself into the awful chasm on the verge of which
-his limbs trembled and his overwrought brain reeled.
-The overtaxed sufferer under the pangs of mortal disease
-chooses death rather than the continuance of the pitiless
-torment. So the agonised heart, poised on the dread
-pinnacle of doubt, flees to the Lethean peace of despair.</p>
-
-<p>Having not unskilfully brought the conversation
-round to the subject of Miss Neuchamp, Mr. Baldacre
-touched, with more or less humour, on certain unguarded
-remarks of that inexperienced but decided traveller.
-He enlarged, as if accidentally, upon her good looks and
-apparent cleverness, giving her the benefit of a tremendous
-reputation for learning of the abstrusest kind, and
-generally exaggerating all the circumstances which might
-render probable the admiration of an ultra-refined
-aristocrat.</p>
-
-<p>Much of this delicate finesse, as Mr. Baldacre considered
-it to be, was transparent and despicable in the
-eyes of his listener. But, difficult as it may be to
-account for, otherwise than by ignoring all known rules<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">81</span>
-and maxims for the comprehension of that mysterious
-mechanism, the feminine heart, there was, nevertheless,
-something not wholly disagreeable in the outspoken
-admiration of the bold-eyed, eager admirer who now
-pressed his suit.</p>
-
-<p>With one of the sudden, tempestuously capricious
-changes of mind, common to the calmest as to the most
-impulsive individual of the irresponsible sex, a vague,
-morbid desire for finality at all hazards arose in her
-brain. She had listened and loved, and waited and
-dreamed, and dedicated her leisure, her mental power,
-her <i>life</i>, to the path of habit and culture which would
-render her every thought and speech and act more harmonious
-with his ideal. She had thought but of him.
-He had his plans, his projects, a man’s career, his return
-to England—a thousand things to distract him—all
-these might delay the declaration of his love. But she
-had never thought of <i>this</i>! She had never in wildest
-flight of conjecture conjured up a <i>fiancée</i>, a cousin loved
-from earliest child-betrothals, to whom he doubtless
-had written pages of minute description of all their
-well-intended kindness and provincial oddities at
-Morahmee.</p>
-
-<p>And was she to sigh and droop, and pale and wither,
-beneath the unexplained, unshared burden of betrayed
-love? Had she not seen the colour fade from the fair
-cheek, leaving a cold ashen-gray tint where once was
-bright-hued joy, eager mirth, and laughter? Had she
-not seen the light die out of the pleading, wistful eyes,
-once so deeply glowing, so tender bright, the step fall
-heavy, the voice lose its ring, the <i>woman</i> quit the
-haunted dwelling where a dead heart lay buried and a
-still, gray-hued, hard-toned tenant sat therein, for evermore<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">82</span>
-resignedly indifferent to all things beneath the sky?
-Was this her near inexorable fate?</p>
-
-<p>No! a thousand times, no! Had she not in her
-veins the bold blood of Paul Frankston, the fearless sea-rover,
-who had more than once awed a desperate crew
-by the promptness of his weapon and the terror of his
-name? And was she to sink into social insignificance,
-and tacitly sue for the pity of <i>him</i> and others, because
-she had mistaken his feelings and he had with masculine
-cruelty omitted to consider hers?</p>
-
-<p>No! again, no! The rebellious blood rushed to her
-brow, as she vowed to forget, to despise, to trample
-under foot, the memory, false as a broken idol, to which
-she had been so long, so blindly faithful. And as all
-men save one—for even in that hour of her wrath and
-misery she could not find it in her heart to include her
-father among the reprobate or despicable of his sex—were
-alike unworthy of a maiden’s trust, a maiden’s
-prayers, why not confide herself and her blighted heart
-to the custody of this one, who, at least, was frank and
-unhesitating in proffering his love and demanding her
-own?</p>
-
-<p>Mr Hardy Baldacre had not thought it expedient to
-delay bringing matters to a climax, fearing that highly
-inconvenient truth, with respect to the fair Augusta,
-might arrive at any moment. With well-acted bluntness
-of sincerity he had adjured Miss Frankston to forgive his
-sudden, his unpremeditated avowal of affection.</p>
-
-<p>‘He was a rough bushman,’ he confessed, ‘not in the
-habit of hiding his feelings. On such a subject as this
-he could not bear the agony of anxiety or delay. He
-must know his fate, even if the doom of banishment, of
-just anger at his imprudence, went forth against him.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">83</span>
-He expected nothing else. But if, before condemning
-him to go back to his far-off home (little she knew of its
-peculiar characteristics) a lonely, despairing man, she
-would only give consideration to his claims, rashly but
-respectfully urged, she might deign to accept a manly
-heart, the devotion of a life that henceforth, in good or
-had fortune, was hers, and hers only.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Hardy Baldacre had an imposing, stalwart figure,
-by no means unfashionably attired, and Nature, while
-unsolicitous about his moral endowments, had gifted him
-with a handsome face. If not in the bloom of youth, he
-had not passed by a day the matured vigour of early
-manhood. As he bent his dark eyes upon Antonia and
-poured forth his not entirely original address, but which,
-heard in the tones of a pleading flesh-and-blood lover,
-sounded a deal better than it reads, Antonia felt a species
-of mesmeric attraction to the fatal and irrevocable ‘yes,’
-which should open a new phase of life to her and obliterate
-the maddening, hopeless, endless past. <i>For one
-moment</i>, for one only, the fate of Antonia Frankston
-wavered on the dread eternal balance. She fluttered,
-birdlike, under the fascination of his serpentine gaze.
-Her words of regret and courteous dismissal refused to
-find utterance. At length she said, ‘I must have time
-to consider your flattering but quite unexpected offer.
-You will, I am sure, not press for an immediate answer.
-I will see you again. Meanwhile let me tell you that I
-value your good opinion, and shall always recall with
-pleasure your very kind intention of to-day.’</p>
-
-<p>But, with that still hour of evening meditation in
-which Antonia was wont to indulge before retiring, came
-calmer, humbler, more tranquillising thoughts. As she
-sat at her chamber window, looking out over the wide<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">84</span>
-waters of the bay, in which a crescent moon caused the
-endless bright expanse of tremulous silver, the frowning
-headlands, the garden slopes, to be all clearly, delicately
-visible,—as she heard the rhythmical, solemn cadence of
-the deep-toned eternal surge,—she recalled the moon-lighted
-eves, the soul-to-soul communing, of ‘that lost
-time.’</p>
-
-<p>A strong reactionary feeling occupied her heart. It
-seemed as if, like the rushing of the tide, the stormy
-sway of the ocean she loved so well, her heart had surged
-in rising tempest and with passion’s flow, to ebb with yet
-fuller retrogression. Surely such were the words of this
-murmuring sea-song on the white midnight strand, which
-calmed, as with a magic anodyne, her restless, rebellious
-mood.</p>
-
-<p>‘I have been wayward and wicked,’ she half sighed to
-herself, ‘false to my better self, to the teaching of a life,
-unmindful of my duty to my father, who loves me better
-than life, of my duty to One above, who has shielded and
-cherished me, all undeserving as I am, up to this hour.
-I will repent of my sin. I will abase myself, and by
-prayer and penitence seek strength where alone it can be
-found.’</p>
-
-<p>It was long ere Antonia Frankston sought her couch;
-but she slept for the first time that night, since a serpent
-trail had passed over the Eden flowers of her trusting
-love, with an untroubled slumber and a resolved purpose.</p>
-
-<p>Pale, but changed in voice and mien, was she when
-she joined her father at breakfast.</p>
-
-<p>‘I see my little girl’s own face again,’ said Paul, as he
-embraced her, with tenderest solicitude in every line of
-his weather-beaten countenance. ‘I thought I had lost<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">85</span>
-her. She must not be hasty; she was never so before.
-All may come right in the end.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I have been a very naughty girl,’ said she, with a
-quiet sob, ‘ungrateful, too, and wicked. I have come to
-my senses again. It must have been the dreadful
-drought, I think, which is going to be the ruin of us all,
-body and mind. Fancy losing one’s daughter, as well as
-one’s money, because of a dry season!’</p>
-
-<p>This small pleasantry did not excite Paul’s risible
-muscles much, but he was more pleased with it than
-with a volume of epigrams. It showed that experienced
-mariner, accustomed to slightest indications of wind and
-wave, that a change of weather had set in. His soul
-rejoiced as he took his daughter in his arms and exclaimed,
-‘My darling, my darling, your mother is with
-the angels, but she watches over you still. Think of her
-when your old father is too far off or too dull to advise
-you. If she had lived——’ But here there were tears
-in the old man’s eyes, and the rugged features worked in
-such wise as to fashion a mask upon which no living
-man had ever gazed. There was a long confession.
-Once more every thought of Antonia Frankston’s heart
-lay unfolded before her parent.</p>
-
-<p>That morning, before driving, as usual, to the counting-house,
-Mr Frankston sought the Royal Hotel, and, upon
-business of importance, obtained an interview with Mr.
-Hardy Baldacre ere that ‘talented but unscrupulous’
-aspirant had completed his breakfast.</p>
-
-<p>So decided was the assurance imparted by his visitor
-that, with all possible appreciation of the honour conferred,
-Miss Frankston felt herself compelled to decline
-his very flattering offer, that Mr. Baldacre knew instinctively
-that any further investment of the Morahmee<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">86</span>
-fortress was vain, if not dangerous. He condoled with
-his early visitor about the state of the season, congratulating
-himself audibly that his runs were understocked,
-and that he had no bills to meet like some people; and
-finally accompanied Mr. Frankston to the door, with a
-friendly leave-taking, to be succeeded by a bitter oath as
-he lighted a cigar and paced the well-known balcony.</p>
-
-<p>‘She has told her father. I saw the old boy was
-down to every move I had made. Knowing old shot,
-too, in spite of his politeness and humbug. I’d have
-hacked myself, too, at a short price, if I had had
-only another week’s innings. They may have heard
-something, or that fool Neuchamp is coming down and
-leaving everything to go to the devil. I had a good
-show, too. I thought I held trumps. Never mind,
-there are lots of women everywhere. One more or less
-don’t make much difference. Of course, it was the
-“tin” that fetched me, but I don’t see that I need care
-so much about that. I think that I shall make tracks
-to-morrow.‘</p>
-
-<p>On the morning following that of Mr. Baldacre’s
-unlucky piece of information Paul Frankston lost no
-time in applying to headquarters for information. He,
-‘with spirit proud and prompt to ire,’ would, a quarter of
-a century before, probably have smote first and inquired
-after. ‘But age had tamed the Douglas blood,’ and even
-if its current still coursed hotly on occasion, the experience
-of later manhood called loudly for plain proof and
-full evidence before he adopted the strange tale which
-had been told at his board.</p>
-
-<p>Suspending all thought of what he might chance if
-<i>any man</i> were proved to have trifled with his darling’s
-heart, he simply wrote as follows:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">87</span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p class="psig">
-<span class="smcap">Sydney</span>, <i>10th April 18—</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Ernest</span>—We have heard a report down here—brought
-to our table, in fact, by Hardy Baldacre, a man you know a
-little—that you are engaged and about to be married shortly to a
-young lady, a cousin of your own, just arrived from England. Also
-that Miss Neuchamp left Sydney for Rainbar, after a week’s stay,
-and was seen by him on the way there in a coach.</p>
-
-<p>For reasons which can be hereafter explained, I wish you to
-send me a specific admission or denial of this statement. I will
-write you again upon receipt of your reply to this letter. I am,
-always yours sincerely,</p>
-
-<p class="psig">
-<span class="smcap">Paul Frankston</span>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">E. Neuchamp</span>, Esq.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>On the following evening, after sending this, the most
-laconic epistle which had ever passed between them, Paul
-no sooner beheld his daughter’s face than he saw shining
-in her eyes the light of recovered trust, of renewed hope,
-of restored belief in happiness.</p>
-
-<p>‘She must have received a letter,’ mused the sagacious
-parent. ‘Where is it, my darling?’ said he aloud.</p>
-
-<p>‘Where is what?’ she replied, with a sweet air of
-embarrassment, pride, and mystery commingled.</p>
-
-<p>‘Of course you have had a letter, or heard some news.
-I took the chance of the little bird’s whisper coming by
-post. I think I am right.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Here it is, you wicked magician. Antonia will never
-have another secret from her dear old father. What
-agonies I suffered for my hard-heartedness! And oh,
-what have I escaped!’</p>
-
-<p>Here was the letter, with a mere stamp thereon,
-which contained such a fortune in happiness as should
-have entitled the Government to a round sum on the
-principle of legacy duty:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p class="psig">
-<span class="smcap">Rainbar</span>, <i>4th April 18—</i>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">My dear Antonia</span>—This letter will probably reach Sydney
-some days, or weeks even, before a young lady, for whom I entreat<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">88</span>
-your friendship and kind offices. [H—m.] When I say that she is
-Augusta Neuchamp, my cousin, and my only relation in Australia,
-I feel certain that I need not further recommend her to you and
-the best of fathers and friends. [H—m.]</p>
-
-<p>You will acknowledge her to be a refined and intelligent woman,
-that goes <i>sans phrase</i>, I should hope, and no truer heart, with more
-thoroughly conscientious acceptance of duty, ever dwelt in one of
-her sex. [H—m.]</p>
-
-<p>But, writing to you with the confidence of old and tender
-friendship, I may as well state, delicately but decidedly, that
-Augusta and I have been utterly unsympathetic from our childhood,
-and must so remain to the end of the chapter. [Oh dear!
-surely I can’t have read aright.]</p>
-
-<p>Even at Rainbar, to which rude retreat she posted with her
-usual impetuosity, without giving me the opportunity of forbidding
-her, we had our old difficulty about preserving the peace
-(conversationally), and once or twice I thought we should have
-come to blows, as in our childish days. [Thank Heaven! Oh,
-oh!]</p>
-
-<p>You know I am not given to dealing hardly with your sex,
-whatever may be their demerits, and of course I am not going to
-abuse my cousin in a strange land; but I am again trusting to
-your perfect comprehension of my real meaning, when I say that,
-companionably, Augusta appears to me to be the <i>only woman</i> in
-the world I cannot get on with. [Blessed girl, dear, charming
-Augusta—I love you already!]</p>
-
-<p>Of course, as soon as she left Rainbar (we were on very short
-commons of politeness by that time) I resolved to write and ask
-you to take her in at Morahmee, and show her Sydney and our
-<i>monde</i>, in the existence of which she disbelieves. You must be
-prepared for her abusing everything and everybody. But I know
-no one who can more gently and effectually refute her prejudices
-than yourself, my dear Antonia. You even subjugated Jermyn
-Croker, I remember. By the bye, have him out to meet Augusta.
-She admires his file-firing style of attack. Perhaps they may
-neutralise each other’s ‘arms of precision.’ [Do anything for her—ask
-the Duke to meet her, if she would like!]</p>
-
-<p>I feel that I am writing a most indefensibly long letter. But
-I am very lonely, and rather melancholy, with ruin taking the
-place of rain—only one letter of difference—and advancing daily.
-Were it not so, I would, as the Irishman said, bring this letter<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">89</span>
-myself. Oh, for an hour again in the Morahmee verandah, with
-your father smoking, the stars, the sea, the soft tones of the music,
-of a voice always musical in my ear! Ah me! it will not bear
-thinking of. It is midnight now, yet I can see a cloud of dust
-rising, as my men bring an outlying lot of cattle to the yard.
-[‘Poor fellow! poor, poor Ernest!’ sighed the voice referred to.]</p>
-
-<p>I know you will be kind and <i>forbearing</i> with Augusta. She
-will not remain long in Australia. I think you will appreciate
-the unquestionably strong points in her character. Of these she
-has many—too many, in fact. Apparently it is time to close this
-scrawl—the paper says so. ‘Pray for me, Gabrielle,’ your song
-says, and always trust me as your sincere friend,</p>
-
-<p class="psig">
-<span class="smcap">Ernest Neuchamp</span>.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>[Bless him, poor dear!‘]</p>
-
-<p>‘So we are to have the honour of entertaining Ernest’s
-cousin, and not his future wife, it seems?’ said Mr.
-Frankston, also cheered up.</p>
-
-<p>‘Never had the slightest thought of it, poor fellow,’
-said Antonia, radiant with appreciation of the antipathetic
-Augusta. ‘How I could have been such a
-goose as to believe that wicked Hardy Baldacre, I can’t
-think. And, papa dear, I <i>might</i> have found myself
-pledged to marry him, doomed to endless misery, in my
-folly and madness. I shall never condemn other foolish
-girls again, whatever they may do.’</p>
-
-<p>‘All’s well that ends well, darling,’ said the old man,
-with a grateful ring in his voice; ‘Paul Frankston and
-his own pet daughter are one in heart again. We don’t
-know what may happen when the rain comes.’</p>
-
-<p>How joyous the world seemed after the explanation
-which Mr. Neuchamp’s letter indirectly afforded! Life
-was not a mistake after all. There was still interest
-in new books, pleasure in new music. A halo of dim
-wondrous glory was ever present during her nightly contemplation
-of sea and sky, in the lovely, all-cloudless<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">90</span>
-autumn nights. The moan of the restless surge-voices
-had again the friendly tone she had heard in them from
-childhood. The sea was again splendid with possible
-heroes and argosies; it was again the realm of danger,
-discovery, enchantment—not a storm-haunted, boding
-terror, with buried treasures and drowned seamen, with
-treacherous, fateful wastes into which the barque, freighted
-with Antonia Frankston’s hopes, had been wafted forth to
-return no more.</p>
-
-<p>It was during this enviably serene state of her mind
-that a note from the innocent cause of the first tragic
-scene which had invaded the idyl of Antonia Frankston’s
-life appeared on the breakfast-table at Morahmee.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p class="psig">
-<span class="smcap">Middleham</span>, <i>20th April</i>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Dear Miss Frankston</span>—My cousin Ernest, with whom I
-believe you are acquainted, made me promise to inform you of my
-proposed arrival in Sydney, on the conclusion of my visit to Mr.
-and Mrs. Middleton. That gentleman has kindly promised to
-accompany me to Sydney, which we shall reach (<i>D.V.</i>) by the five
-o’clock train on Friday next. I purpose taking up my abode at
-Petty’s Hotel.—Permit me to remain, dear Miss Frankston, yours
-very truly,</p>
-
-<p class="psig">
-<span class="smcap">Augusta Neuchamp</span>.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Of course nothing would content Antonia short of
-meeting at the station and carrying off to Morahmee, bag
-and baggage, this inestimable cousin, who had behaved so
-honourably, so perfectly.</p>
-
-<p>Any other woman, with the mildest average of good
-looks, shut up in such a raft of a place as Rainbar metaphorically
-was, would have carried off Ernest, or any man
-of his age, easily and triumphantly. All the pleasant
-freedom of a cousin, all the provocation of a possible,
-unforbidden bride, the magic of old memories, the bond
-of perfect social equality as to rank and
-habitudes,—<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">91</span>what
-stupendous advantages! And yet she was so
-happily and delightfully constituted by nature that, in
-spite of dangerous proximity and all other advantages,
-she was, it was plain from his letter, the very last woman
-in the world whom he could have thought of marrying.
-O most excellent Augusta!</p>
-
-<p>Paul, of course, after a show of deep consideration,
-came to the conclusion that Antonia’s plan was the
-kindest, wisest, ‘onliest’ thing, under the circumstances.
-‘Take her home straight from the train. Bother Petty’s—what’s
-the use of her moping there, and spending her
-money? I don’t think another girl for you to have a
-few talks with, and drives, and shopping, and Botanical
-Gardens, and Dorcas work together, could do you any
-harm, pet. So have her home quietly to-night. We
-must have a little dinner for her.’</p>
-
-<p>Accordingly, when the punctual train arrived bearing
-Miss Neuchamp and her fortunes, she was astonished to
-hear Mr. Middleton exclaim, ‘Why, there is Miss Frankston
-come to meet us! How do you do, Antonia, my
-dear? Allow me to make known Miss Neuchamp; probably
-you are already acquainted with one another by
-description.’</p>
-
-<p>Miss Neuchamp’s expectations can only be a matter of
-conjecture, but she was unaffectedly surprised at the
-apparition of this distinguished-looking girl, perfectly
-dressed and appointed, who stood on the platform, flanked
-by a liveried servant of London solidity of form and
-severe respectability of manner.</p>
-
-<p>‘Very, <i>very</i> happy to welcome you to Sydney, Miss
-Neuchamp,’ said Antonia. ‘Papa and I were so disappointed
-that we did not know of your address before
-you left for the bush. He won’t hear of your going anywhere<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">92</span>
-but to our house for the present. And, Mr.
-Middleton, I am pledged to bring you, as papa says we
-young ladies will be wrapped up in each other and leave
-him in solitude. I can command you, I know. Pray
-say you’ll come, Miss Neuchamp.’</p>
-
-<p>‘If I may add my persuasion,’ said Mr. Middleton, ‘I
-could tell Miss Neuchamp that she could not act more
-discreetly for the present. I shall be delighted to wash
-all the dust out of my throat with some of your father’s
-claret, Antonia. I’m your humble admirer, you know,
-when I’m away from home.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I shall be very happy to accept your hospitality, so
-kindly offered, for the present,’ said Augusta, overpowered
-by briskness of attack and defection of allies.</p>
-
-<p>The grave servant immediately addressed himself to
-the luggage and, handing the strange lady’s nearest and
-dearest light weights into the carriage, remained behind
-to deposit one of Mr. Middleton’s portmanteaus at the
-club, and to convey the remaining impedimenta to Morahmee
-per cab. As Miss Neuchamp ensconced herself in
-the yielding, ample cushions of the Morahmee carriage
-beside Antonia, and was borne along at a rapid pace, the
-mere rattling of the wheels upon the macadamised road
-was grateful and refreshing to her soul, as a reminiscence
-of the unquestioned proper and utterly befitting, from
-which she had hitherto considered herself to be hopelessly
-sundered by the whole breadth of ocean.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">93</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><a name="CHAPTER_XXVII" id="CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII</a></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>When Miss Neuchamp found herself installed in a large,
-cool upper chamber at Morahmee with a glorious view of
-the harbour, while on her table stood a great rapturous
-bouquet all freshly gathered, roses intermingled with
-delicate greenhouse buds, she commenced to wonder
-whether all her previously formed ideas of Australia were
-about to be seriously modified.</p>
-
-<p>A good sound reserve of prejudice reassured her, and
-she bided her time. She had tasted the fullest measure
-of comfort perceivable in Australian country life at the
-house of Mr. Middleton, where she had sojourned several
-weeks. Now she was about to experience whatever best
-and pleasantest the metropolis could afford.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Frankston had brought home with him Count von
-Schätterheims and Mr. Jermyn Croker, so that he and
-Mr. Middleton, having endless semi-stock and station lore
-to interchange, each of the ladies was provided with a
-cavalier.</p>
-
-<p>The Count, who had been informed by Paul that Miss
-Neuchamp was an English heiress of vast wealth, travelling
-to indulge her eccentric insular taste, paid great
-attention to that young lady, cutting in from time to
-time, to the speechless wrath and exasperation of Jermyn<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">94</span>
-Croker, who renewed his former acquaintance with great
-success.</p>
-
-<p>The fair Augusta was entertained, and not wholly
-displeased, with their manifest admiration.</p>
-
-<p>As the verandah was voted by far the pleasantest
-place after dinner, the whole party adjourned to this
-invaluable retreat, where Paul and his friend were permitted
-to light their cigars, and all joined in conversation
-with unaffected freedom impossible in a drawing-room.</p>
-
-<p>‘Sing something, my darling,’ said the old man, ‘and
-then, perhaps, the Count will give us that new song of
-his, which I hear all Sydney is raving about.’</p>
-
-<p>As the rich tones of the grand Erard came forth to
-them, luxuriously softened by the intervening distance,
-Miss Neuchamp tasted a pleasure from which she had for
-an age, it would seem, been debarred. She did not herself
-perform with more than the moderate degree of
-success which can be attained by those who, without
-natural talent, have received thoroughly good teaching.
-But her training, at least, enabled her to appreciate the
-delicacy of Miss Frankston’s touch, her finished and rare
-execution, and the true yet deep feeling with which she
-rendered the most simple melodies as well as the most
-complicated operatic triumphs.</p>
-
-<p>Somewhat to the discomposure of the Count, who had
-commenced to believe the opportunity favourable, she
-rose, and with an expression of delight passed on to
-Antonia’s side. Miss Neuchamp had seen too many
-counts to attach importance to that particular grade of
-continental rank; and this particular specimen of the
-order she held in fixed distrust, derived from the recollection
-of comments to which she had listened at Rainbar.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">95</span></p>
-
-<p>‘<i>La belle Anglaise</i> prefers music to your compliments,
-Count,’ said Mr. Croker.</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>Chacun à son tour</i>,’ replied the injured diplomatist.
-‘Dey are both ver good in dere vay.’</p>
-
-<p>Whatever might be the Count’s shortcomings, a deficiency
-of self-control could hardly be reckoned among
-them. He twirled his enormous moustache, condoled
-with Paul and Mr. Middleton, and explained that his
-steward in Silesia had written him accounts of an unusually
-wet season.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ah, dat is de condrey! You should see him, my
-dear Monsieur Paul: such grops, such pasdures, such
-vool, so vine as de zilks.’</p>
-
-<p>‘How about labour?’ said Mr. Middleton. ‘I suppose
-you are not bothered as we are every now and then
-with a short supply, and half of that bad?’</p>
-
-<p>‘De bauer—vat you call “beasand” in my condrey—he
-vork for you all de yahres of his live, and pray Gott
-for your brosperity—it is his brivilech to be receive
-wid joys and danks. De bauer, oh, de bauer is goot
-man!‘</p>
-
-<p>‘I wish our fellows received their lot with joy and
-thanks; half of my Steam Plains shepherds have gone
-off to these confounded diggings. But don’t your men
-emigrate to America now and then? I thought half
-Germany went there.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I vill dell you one dale,’ said the Count earnestly.
-‘I had one hauptman, overzeer, grand laboureur, ver goot
-man—he is of lofdy indelligence, he reat, he dinks mooch,
-he vill go to Amerika. I consoolt mit my stewart, he say
-Carl Steiger is ver goot, he is so goot as no oder mans
-what we have not got. I say, “Ingrease his vages, once,
-twyei, dree dime—he reach de vonderful som of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">96</span>
-<i>fivedeen bount</i> per yahr. He go no more. De golten demdadion
-is doo crade; he abandon his shpirit-dask to leat mankint,
-he glass my vools now dill his lives is ofer.”‘</p>
-
-<p>‘Ha! he wanted a summer on the wallaby track to
-open his mind,’ said Mr. Middleton; ‘that would have
-been a “wanderyahr” with different results, I am afraid.
-But I really think many of our fellows would do better
-if they had more of the thrift and steady resolve of your
-countrymen, Count. I remember when wages were much
-lower than now in the colony, and when the men really
-saved something worth while, besides working more cheerfully.
-Don’t you, Croker’ But Mr. Croker had departed
-in the midst of the Count’s story, and was charming Miss
-Neuchamp with such delightful depreciation of the Australias,
-and all that in them is, that she became rapidly
-confirmed in her first opinion, formed soon after her
-arrival, that he was the best style of man she had as yet
-met in the colony. Mr. Croker, on his side, declared
-himself to be encouraged and refreshed by thus meeting
-with a genuine English lady not afraid to speak out her
-mind with respect to this confounded country, and its
-ways, means, and inhabitants.</p>
-
-<p>The Count, fearing that the evening would be an
-unprofitable investment of his talents and graces, particularly
-in the matter of Miss Neuchamp, by whom he was
-treated with studied coldness, departed after having sung
-his song. This effort merely recalled to Augusta some
-occasion when she had heard it very much better performed
-in the Grand Opera at Paris. Jermyn Croker,
-who had never heard it before, openly depreciated the air,
-the words, the expression, and execution. With more
-than one household languishing for his presence, this was
-a state of matters not to be continued, so the Count, with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">97</span>
-graceful apologies and vows of pressing engagements,
-took his departure.</p>
-
-<p>‘You and I, Middleton, can go home to the club
-together, now that the <i>chevalier d’industrie</i>—beg your
-pardon, Frankston—I mean, of the Order of the Legion
-of Honour, Kaiser Fritz, and all his other orders, medals,
-and decorations—— But I daresay the first represents
-his truest claim.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You are always charitably well informed, we know
-that, Croker,’ said Mr. Middleton. ‘Mind, I don’t put my
-trust in princes or counts of <i>his</i> sort. I wonder how he
-gets along. Still swimmingly?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Don’t think the fellow has a shilling in the world
-myself—never did,’ replied Croker, with cheerful disbelief.
-‘But from what I heard the other day, he will have to
-make his grand <i>coup</i> soon, now that it’s known his chance
-of marrying Harriet Folleton is all up.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Is it finally unsettled, then, Mr. Croker?’ said Antonia.
-‘Every one said she admired him so much.’</p>
-
-<p>‘She is quite equal to that or any other madness, I
-believe,’ said the well-informed Jermyn; ‘and, with her
-mother’s extraordinary folly to back her, there is no limit
-to the insanity she is capable of. But the old man <i>has</i> a
-little sense—people who have made a pot of money often
-have—and he stopped the whole affair last week.’</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Mr. Neuchamp was, perhaps, more disturbed in mind
-than he had ever been since his arrival in Australia
-when he received the unusually laconic letter referred to
-from Paul Frankston. Surprise, anger, uncertainty by
-turns took possession of his soul. A wholly new and
-strangely mingled sensation arose in his mind. Had he
-misinterpreted his own emotions as well as those of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">98</span>
-Antonia? That such was the case as to his own feeling
-was evidenced by his sudden and unreasonable rage when
-he thought of Hardy Baldacre in the character of an
-accepted suitor for the hand of the unconventional, innocent
-girl whose half-childish, half-womanly expressions of
-wonder, admiration, dislike, or approval, called forth by
-incidents in their daily studies, he could <i>now</i> so clearly
-remember.</p>
-
-<p>Had he, then, won that priceless gem, the unbought
-love of a pure and loving heart—no fleeting fancy, born
-of vanity or caprice, but the deeply-rooted, sacred, lifelong
-devotion of an untarnished virgin-soul, of a cultured
-and lofty intellect?</p>
-
-<p>This heavenly jewel had been suspended by a crowned
-angel above his head, and had he not, with sordid indifference,
-bent earthward, all unheeding, save of hard and
-anxious travail? He had narrowed his mind to beeves
-and kine, dry seasons and wet, all the merest workaday
-vulgarities of short-sighted mortals, resolute only in the
-pursuit of dross.</p>
-
-<p>Had he, from neglect, heedlessness, absence, however
-indispensable, chilled the fond ardour of that lonely heart,
-cast the priceless treasure into careless or unworthy
-hands? Who was he, that a girl so much courted, so
-richly dowered in every way, as Antonia Frankston,
-should wait till youth was over for his deliberate approval?
-And yet, if she <i>had</i> delayed but for a short while longer—till
-<i>the rain came</i>, in fact. Ah me! was not all the
-Australian world waiting with exhausted, upturned eyes
-for that crowning, long-delayed blessing? Fancy such a
-reason being proffered in England. Weddings, in that
-happy land, were occasionally postponed till a semblance
-of fine weather might be calculated upon, but surely only<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">99</span>
-in this antipodean land of contrast and confusion did any
-one defer the great question of his life until the <i>departure</i>
-of fine weather. Antonia was, doubtless, besieged by hosts
-of suitors, among them this infernal, lying scoundrel of a
-cad, Hardy Baldacre, besides Jermyn Croker, the Count,
-Hartley Selmore, and numberless others. Madness was in
-his thoughts—he would go down, rain or no rain, wet or
-dry, tempest or zephyr, hurricane or calm. He would
-hunt for the ruffian Baldacre, and slay him where they
-met.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless he must at once answer Paul’s letter,
-which he did to the effect that, ‘He wondered that his
-old friends should believe any mere fabrications, unsupported
-by testimony, to his prejudice. Not that there
-was anything discreditable about the report, if true; but
-this was <i>not</i> true. His cousin, with misplaced heroism,
-had visited him in his solitude; a refined and highly
-educated woman, as would be apparent to all, she certainly
-was. But as a <i>wife</i> he had never thought of her, nor
-could he, if their existence ran parallel for years.’ Having
-despatched the letter, Ernest felt easier in mind, more
-removed from that condition the most irritating and intolerable
-of all, the accusation of wrong without the
-power of justification. It was hard to resist an almost
-uncontrollable desire to rush down to Sydney then and
-there to set himself right with his friends. But, as he
-ran over the obstacles to such a course, it seemed, on cooler
-thought, to be unadvisable in every way. First, there
-was the extreme difficulty of performing the journey: he
-had not a horse at Rainbar capable of carrying him across
-to the mail station. When he got there it was problematical
-whether the contractor was running a wheel mail
-or not. It would be undesirable, even ridiculous, to find<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">100</span>
-himself a couple of hundred miles from home, stranded on
-the endless, dry, hopeless plain. To make a lengthened
-stay in Sydney, should he get there, was not to be thought
-of under his present circumstances of debt and anxiety.
-‘No,’ he said, as he crushed the feeling back with a self-repression
-more nearly allied to heroism than mere ostentatious
-efforts of courage, ‘no, my colours are nailed to
-the masthead, and there shall they hang till the cry of
-“victory” is once more heard, or till the fight is lost
-beyond mortal hope.‘</p>
-
-<p>So, sadly yet steadfastly, Ernest Neuchamp turned
-himself to the monotonous tasks which, like those of
-sailors on a desert island, or of the crew of a slowly-sailing
-ship, were yet carried on with daily, hopeless
-regularity. Still the ashen-gray pastures became more
-withered and deathlike. Still the sad, staggering lines of
-cattle paced in along the well-worn dusty trails to their
-watering-places, and paced back like bovine processions
-after witnessing the funeral obsequies of individuals of
-their race, which experience, in truth, was daily theirs.</p>
-
-<p>Then the diet, once not distasteful to the much-enduring
-palate of youth, became wellnigh intolerable:
-the flaccid unfed meat, the daily bread with never a
-condiment, the milkless tea, the utter absence of all fruit,
-vegetable, herb, or esculent. Truly, as in those ancient
-days when a pastoral people record their sorrowful
-chronicles of the dry and thirsty region where no water
-is, ‘the famine was sore in the land.’</p>
-
-<p>At this time, so dreary, so endless, so crushing in its
-isolated, unchanging, helpless misery, Ernest was unutterably
-thankful for the hope and consolation which his
-studious habits afforded him. His library, the day’s work
-done, filled up his lonely evening as could no other employment<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">101</span>
-possible under the circumstances. He ransacked
-his moderate references for records of similar calamities
-in all lands which, unlike the ‘happy isles’ of Britain,
-are from time to time invaded with drought, the chief
-agent in all the recorded wholesale destruction of animal
-life. He noted with painstaking and laborious accuracy
-the duration, the signs, the consequences, the termination
-of such dread seasons. From old books of Australian
-exploration he learned, almost by heart, the sad experiences
-of the pioneers of the land when they stood
-face to face with what to them were new and terrible
-foes.</p>
-
-<p>‘It is hard,’ said he to himself, as he paced his room
-at midnight, after long hours of close application to such
-studies, ‘it is hard and depressing to me, and to many a
-wretched colonist who has worked longer and has more
-on the hazard than I, to see the fruit of our labours
-slowly, pitilessly absorbed by this remorseless season.
-But what, after all, is a calamity which can be measured,
-like this, by a money standard, compared to one which,
-like this latest famine in Hindostan, counts its <i>human</i>
-victims by tens of thousands, by millions? See the dry
-record of a food failure, which comprehends the teeming
-human herds which cover the soil more thickly than
-even our poor starving flocks!</p>
-
-<p>‘Can we realise thousands of lowly homes where the
-mother sits enfeebled and spectral beside her perishing
-babes, whose eyes ask for the food which she cannot
-grant; where the frenzied peasant rushes, in the agony
-of despair, from his cabin that he may not hear the
-hunger cries, the death groans of his wife and babes;
-where the dead lie unburied; where the beast of prey
-alone roams satiated and lordly; where nature mourns<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">102</span>
-like a maniac mother with tears of blood for her
-murdered offspring?</p>
-
-<p>‘Such is not, may never be, the fate of this wide,
-rich, peaceful land, vast and wondrous in its capabilities
-in spite of temporary disasters. Let us take heart.
-Our losses, our woes, are trifling in comparison with the
-world’s great miseries. We are, in comparison, but as
-children who lose their holiday gifts of coin or cakes.
-Our lives, our health and strength, are all untouched.
-We have hope still for our unbartered heritage, the
-stronger for past dangers of storm and tide. The world
-is yet before us. There are other seas, untried and
-slumbering oceans, where our bark may yet ride
-with joyous outspread sail. Let us still labour and
-endure, until Fate, compelled by our steadfastness, shall
-be once more propitious.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Si fractus illabitur orbis</div>
-<div class="verse indent4">Impavidum ferient ruinæ.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>I hardly expected to be quoting Horace at Rainbar, but the
-old boy probably had some experience of untoward seasons,
-sunshiny desolation, like this of ours. I don’t know
-whether “Impavidum” applies strictly to any one but
-Levison. I am afraid that the “fractus orbis” pertains
-to our cosmos of credit, which, shattered to its core, will
-strike us all soon and put us to the proof of our philosophy.‘</p>
-
-<p>A trifling distraction was created about this time,
-much to Ernest’s relief, by the arrival of Mr. Cottonbush,
-who had received instructions from Mr. Levison to
-muster, brand, and take delivery of the small herd of
-cattle, the single flock of sheep, and the lot of horses
-which that far-seeing speculator had purchased from the
-brothers Freeman. This pastoral plenipotentiary, a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">103</span>
-wiry, reticent individual, utterly impervious to every
-wile and stratagem which the art of man in Australia
-had hitherto evolved from the very complicated industry
-of stock-raising, first informed the Freemans of his
-mission, producing a written authority with the awe-striking
-signature of Abstinens Levison, and then
-reported himself to Mr. Neuchamp.</p>
-
-<p>‘It <i>is</i> a bad season, sir,’ he said, in answer to that
-gentleman’s greeting, which of course comprehended the
-disastrous state of the weather, ‘and many a one
-wouldn’t bother mustering these three or four hundred
-crawling cattle. They might be all dead in three
-months for all we can see. But Mr. Levison isn’t like
-any one else. He sends me a line to do this, or go
-there, and I always do it without troubling about the
-reasons. <i>He</i> finds them for the lot of us, and pretty fair
-ones they generally are when time brings ’em out.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I think <i>I</i> know why he made this bargain,’ said
-Ernest, ‘and I must say I wonder more about it every
-day. But I am so far of your opinion, now that I am
-becoming what you call an “old hand,” that I shall
-imitate your example in letting Mr. Levison’s reasons
-work themselves out in practice.‘</p>
-
-<p>‘That’s the best way, sir,’ assented the colonel of
-cavalry under this pastoral general of division. ‘I’ve
-never done anything but report and obey orders since
-I’ve been with Levison, this many a year. I used to
-talk and argue a bit with him at first. I never do now,
-though he’s a man that will always hear what you’ve got
-to say, in case he might pick something out of it. But
-I never knew him alter his mind after he’d got all the
-information he wanted. So it’s lost time talking to him.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And what do <i>you</i> think about this terrible season?’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">104</span>
-asked Ernest, anxiously looking at this iron man of the
-desert, whose experience was to his, he could <i>now</i> in this
-hour of wreck and ruin realise, as immeasurably superior
-as the grizzled second mate’s to the cabin boy’s when the
-tempest cries aloud with voice of death and the hungry
-caverns of the eternal deep are disclosed.</p>
-
-<p>‘It’s bad enough,’ assented Mr. Cottonbush thoughtfully,
-‘bad enough; and there’s many a one will
-remember it to his dying day. In some places they’ll
-lose most of their stock before the winter’s on for want
-of feed, and all the rest, when it <i>does</i> come, from the
-cold. There were ten thousand fat sheep (or supposed
-to be fat) of Lateman’s caught in the Peechelbah mallee
-the other day as they were going a short cut. When I
-say “caught,” the water had dried up that they reckoned
-on, and was only found out when they was half way
-through. The sheep went mad and wouldn’t drive. So
-did the chap in charge, very nigh. When he got out he
-had only some four thousand three hundred odd left.
-That was a smash, wasn’t it?‘</p>
-
-<p>‘Sheep are not so bad as cattle in one way,’ said Mr.
-Neuchamp; ‘you can travel them and steal grass. A
-good many people seem unprincipled enough to resort to
-the meanness of filching from their neighbours and the
-country generally what no man can spare in this awful
-time.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well,’ said Mr. Cottonbush, smiling and wincing
-slightly, ‘it ain’t quite the clean potato, of course; but if
-your sheep’s dying at home, what can you do? Every
-man for himself, you know; and you can’t let ’em stop
-on the run and die before your eyes. We’ve had to do
-a bit of it ourselves. But the old man, he bought two
-or three whacking big bits of country in the Snowy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">105</span>
-Mountains, Long Plains, the Gulf, Yarrangobilly, and
-two or three more, enough to feed all the sheep in the
-country, and started ours for it directly after shearing,
-while the roads were good. <i>He</i> knew what was coming
-and provided in time, same as he always does. Blessed
-if he didn’t lease a lot of the country he could spare to
-people who were hard pushed and came late, so he got
-his own share cheap.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And was there abundance of grass and water?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Green grass two feet high, running creeks all the
-summer, enough to make your mouth water. If we get
-rain down before the snow comes next month our flocks
-will come back better than they went, and with half as
-much wool again as the plains sheep.’</p>
-
-<p>That day Mr. Cottonbush informed the Freeman
-family that, inasmuch as the Rainbar stockyard was a
-strong and secure enclosure, and as his employer, Mr.
-Levison, was a very particular man in having cattle that
-he bought properly branded up, he didn’t like any to be
-left over, and they must yard every mother’s son of ‘em.</p>
-
-<p>So, as Mr. Neuchamp had kindly given permission
-for his yard to be used, the entire Freeman clan,
-including a swarm of brown-faced, bare-legged urchins,
-arrived on the following day with the whole of their
-herd. It was a strange sight, and not without a
-proportion of dramatic interest. The cattle were so
-emaciated that they could hardly walk; many of them
-staggered and fell. In truth, as they moved up in a
-long woebegone procession, they looked like a ghostly
-protest against man’s lack of foresight and Heaven’s
-wrath. The horses were so weak from starvation that
-they could barely carry their riders. One youngster was
-fain to jump off his colt, that exhausted animal having<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">106</span>
-come to a dead halt, and drive him forward with the
-cattle.</p>
-
-<p>Even the men and the boys had a wan and withered
-look. Not that they had been on short commons, but,
-dusty, sunburned, and nervously anxious to secure every
-animal that could walk to the yard, they harmonised
-very fittingly with their kine.</p>
-
-<p>When they arrived at the yard Mr. Cottonbush
-counted them carefully in, and then signified to the
-vendors that, in his opinion, it would be wise of them to
-go back and make a final ‘scrape,’ as he expressed it, of
-their pasture-ground, lest there might inadvertently have
-been any left behind.</p>
-
-<p>‘That sort of thing always leads to trouble, you know,’
-said he; ‘there’s a sort of doubt which were branded and
-which were not. Now, Mr. Levison bought every hoof
-you own, no milkers reserved and all that; he don’t
-believe in having any of the best cattle kept back. So
-you’d better scour up every beast you can raise before
-we begin to brand. We can tail this mob, now they’re
-here.’</p>
-
-<p>This supplementary proceeding resulted in the production
-of about thirty head of cattle, among which
-there curiously happened to be, by accident, half a dozen
-cows considerably above the average in point of breeding
-and value.</p>
-
-<p>This very trifling matter of a ‘cockatoo’s’ muster
-having been thus concluded, all the horses having been
-yarded, and the flock of sheep driven up—Mr. Levison
-having made it a <i>sine quâ non</i> that he would have all or
-none—the fires were lighted and the brands put in.</p>
-
-<p>To the wild astonishment of the Freemans, Mr. Cottonbush, having
-put the <img src="images/i_110.jpg" alt="[Ǝ]NE" /> brand in the fire,
-commenced<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">107</span>
-to place that conjoined hieroglyph upon every cow,
-calf, bullock, and steer, assisted by Mr. Windsor, Charley Banks, and
-the black boys.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, “the cove” ain’t bought ‘em, surely?’ said
-Joe Freeman, with a look of much distrust and disapproval.
-‘Where’s he to get the sugar, I want to
-know; or else it’s a “plant” between him and old
-Levison.‘</p>
-
-<p>‘When the stock’s counted and branded you’ll get
-your cheque,’ said the imperturbable manager; ‘that’s all
-you’ve got to bother your head about. It’s no business
-of yours, if you’re paid, whether Levison chooses to sell
-’em, or boil ’em, or put ’em in a glass case.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, I’m blowed,’ said Bill Freeman, ‘if we ain’t
-regularly sold. If I’d a-known as they was a-comin’ here,
-I’d have seen Levison in the middle of a mallee scrub
-with his tongue out for water before I’d have sold him a
-hoof. One comfort: the cash is all right, and half of
-these crawlers will die before spring.‘</p>
-
-<p>‘Not if rain comes within a month,’ said Mr. Cottonbush
-cheerily. ‘You’d be surprised what a fortnight
-will do for stock in these places, and the grass grows like
-a hotbed. These cattle are smallish and weak, but not
-so badly bred. They’ll fill out wonderfully when they
-get their fill. You’d better wait and see them counted,
-and then you can have your cheque.’</p>
-
-<p>Jack Windsor and Charley Banks worked with a will,
-so did the younger members of the yeomanry plantation.
-The grown cattle were of course pen-branded. By night-fall
-every one was marked very legibly and counted out.
-Four hundred and seventy head of cattle over six months
-old, eighty-four horses, and twelve hundred mixed sheep,
-principally weaners. These last were fire-branded on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">108</span>
-the side of the face, provided with a shepherd, and kept
-near home.</p>
-
-<p>The necessary preliminaries being concluded, Mr.
-Cottonbush handed a cheque, at the prices arranged, to
-Abraham Freeman, and turned the horses and cattle out
-of the yard.</p>
-
-<p>‘You haven’t a horn or a hoof on Rainbar now,’ said
-he composedly; ‘perhaps you have ’em in a better place,
-in your breeches pockets; and remember I’ll be up here
-next November, or else Mr. Levison, to take up your
-selections as agreed. Then, I suppose, you’ll be fixing
-yourself down upon some other miserable squatter. You’re
-bound not to stop here, you know.’</p>
-
-<p>Having thus accomplished his mission clearly and unmistakably,
-Mr. Cottonbush, whose acquaintance Ernest
-had first made at Turonia when he took delivery of Mr.
-Drifter’s cattle, declared his intention of starting at daybreak.
-Waste of time was never laid to the charge of
-Mr. Levison’s subordinates. ‘Like master like man’ is
-a proverb of unquestionable antiquity. There is more
-in it than appears upon the surface. Whatever might
-have been the moulding power, it is certain that his
-managers, agents, and overseers attached great importance
-to those attributes of punctuality, foresight, temperance,
-and thrift which were dear to the soul of Abstinens
-Levison.</p>
-
-<p>‘I’m glad these crawlers of cattle are branded up and
-done with while it’s dry, likewise the horses. All this
-kind of work is so much easier and better done in dry
-weather,’ said the relaxing manager. ‘They’re not a very
-gay lot to look at now. But I shouldn’t wonder to see
-you knocking ten pounds a head out of some of those cats
-of steers before this day two years.’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">109</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Ten pounds a head!’ echoed Ernest. ‘Why not say
-twenty, while you’re about it?’</p>
-
-<p>‘You don’t believe it,’ said Mr. Cottonbush calmly,
-rubbing his tobacco assiduously in his hands preparatory
-to lighting his pipe. ‘Levison writes that stock are
-going up in Victoria to astonishing prices, and that what
-they’ll reach, if the gold keeps up, no man can tell. So
-your cattle <i>might</i> fetch twenty pounds after all.’</p>
-
-<p>‘What would you advise me to do with the Freemans’
-stock, now that I have got them?‘ asked Ernest.</p>
-
-<p>‘If I was in your place,’ said Mr. Cottonbush judicially,
-‘I should stick to the cattle, for every one of them,
-down to the smallest calf, will be good money when the
-rain comes. The sheep also you may as well keep:
-they’ll pay their own wages if you put ’em out on a bit
-of spare back country, and there’s plenty that your cattle
-never go near. You could bring ’em in to shear them,
-and they’ll increase and grow into money fast enough.
-You might have ten thousand sheep on Rainbar and never
-know it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I don’t like sheep much,’ said Ernest; ‘but these
-are very cheap, if they live, and there is plenty of room,
-as you say. And the horses?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Sell every three-cornered wretch of ’em—a set of
-upright-shouldered, useless mongrels—directly you get a
-chance,’ said Mr. Cottonbush with unusual energy of
-speech. ‘And now you’re able to clear the run of ’em,
-being your own, which you never could have done if they
-remained theirs. You’d have had young fellows coming
-for this colt or that filly till your head was gray.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I hope not,’ said Ernest, laughing; ‘but I am glad
-to have all the stock and land of Rainbar in my own hands
-once more.’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">110</span></p>
-
-<p>Mr. Cottonbush departed at dawn, and once more
-Ernest was alone in the gray-stricken, accursed waste,
-wherein nor grass grew nor water ran, nor did any of
-these everyday miracles of Nature appear likely again to
-be witnessed by despairing man.</p>
-
-<p>Still passed by the hungry hordes of travelling sheep,
-still the bony skeletons of the passing cattle herds. No
-rain, no sign of rain! All pastoral nature, brute and
-human, appeared to have been struck with the same
-blight, and to be forlorn and moribund. The station
-cattle became weaker and less capable of exertion;
-‘lower,’ as Charley Banks called it, as the cold autumn
-nights commenced to exhibit their keenness. The Freemans
-relinquished all control over their cattle, and
-chuckled over the weakly state of the Rainbar herd.</p>
-
-<p>The autumn had commenced, a peerless season in all
-respects save in the vitally indispensable condition of
-moisture. The mornings were crisp, with a suggestive
-tinge of frost, the nights absolutely cold, the days, as
-usual, cloudless, bright, and warm. If there was any
-variation it was in the direction of a lowering, overcast,
-cloudy interval, when the bleak winds moaned bodingly,
-but led to no other effect than to sweep the dead leaves
-and dry sticks, which had so long passed for earth’s
-usual covering, into heaps and eddying circular lines.
-The roughening coats on the feeble frames of the stock,
-now enduring the slow torture of the cold in the lengthening
-nights, told a tale of coming collapse, of consummated,
-unquestioned ruin. Daily did Ernest Neuchamp dread
-to rise, to pass hours of hopeless despondency among
-these perishing forms, dying creatures roaming over a
-dead earth during their brief term of survival! Daily
-did he almost come to loathe the sight of the unpitying<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">111</span>
-sun, which, like a remorseless enemy, spared not one
-beam of his burning rays, veiled not one glare of his
-deadly glance. He had an occasional reminiscence of the
-steady, reassuring tones, the unwavering purpose of which
-abode with the very presence of Abstinens Levison. But
-for these he felt at times as though he could have distrusted
-the justice of an overruling Power, have cursed
-the hour of his birth, and delivered himself over to despair
-and reprobation.</p>
-
-<p>While Mr. Neuchamp was not far removed from this
-most unusual and decidedly unphilosophical state of mind,
-it so chanced on a certain afternoon (it was that of
-Wednesday, the eighteenth day of May, as was long after
-remembered) that he and Jack Windsor were out together,
-a few miles from home, upon the ironical but necessary
-mission of procuring a ‘fat beast.’ This form of speech
-may be thought to have savoured too much of the wildly
-improbable. The real quest was, of course, for an animal
-in such a state of comparative emaciation as should not
-preclude his carcass for being converted into human food.
-The meat was not palatable, but it supported life in the
-hardy Anglo-Saxon frame. It was all they had, and they
-were constrained to make the best of it.</p>
-
-<p>‘Look at these poor devils of cattle,’ said Jack,
-pointing to a number of hide-bearing anatomies moving
-their jaws mechanically over the imperceptible pasture.
-‘They have water, but what the deuce they find to eat I
-can’t see. There’s that white steer, that red cow, and
-one or two more, with their jaws swelled up. There’s
-plenty of ’em like that.’</p>
-
-<p>‘From what cause?’ asked Mr. Neuchamp. ‘Cancer
-is not becoming epidemic, I hope.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It comes from the shortness of the feed, <i>I</i> think,’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">112</span>
-returned Jack; ‘you see the poor creatures keep licking
-and picking every time they see a blade of grass, if it’s
-only a quarter of an inch long; half their time they
-miss their aim and rattle their jaws together with
-nothing between them. That’s what hurts ’em, I expect,
-and after a bit it makes their heads swell.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I wonder what they would think in England of such
-an injury, occurring in what we always believed to be a
-rich pastoral country.’</p>
-
-<p>‘So it is, sir, when the season’s right. I expect in
-England you have your bad seasons in another way, and
-get smothered and flooded out with rain; and the crops
-are half rotten; and the poor man (I suppose he is
-<i>really</i> a poor man there, no coasting up one side of a
-river and down the other for six months, with free rations
-all the time) gets tucked up a bit.’</p>
-
-<p>‘As you say, Jack, there are bad seasons, which mean
-bad harvests, in England,’ answered Ernest, always
-inclined to the diversion of philosophical inquiry; ‘and
-the poor man there, as you say, properly so called, inasmuch
-as he requires more absolute shelter, more sufficient
-clothes in the terrible winter of the north, than our
-friends who pursue the ever-lengthening but not arduous
-track of the wallaby in Australia. They may in England,
-and do occasionally, I grieve to say, if unemployed and
-therefore unfed, actually <i>starve to death</i>. But what are
-those cattle just drawing in?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Those belong to a lot that keeps pretty well back,’
-answered Jack, ‘and they’re different in their way from
-these cripples we’ve been looking at, as they’ve had
-something to <i>eat</i>, but they’re pretty well choked for a
-drink. I don’t know when they’ve had one. That’s
-how it is, you see, sir; half the cattle’s afraid to go<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">113</span>
-away for the water, and the rest won’t leave what
-little feed there is till they’re nearly mad with drouth.
-It’s cruel work either way. I’m blest if that wasn’t a
-drop of rain!’</p>
-
-<p>This sudden and rare phenomenon caused Ernest to
-take a cursory examination of the sky, which he had
-long forborne to regard with hope or fear. It was clouded
-over. But such had been the appearance of the firmament
-scores of times during the last six months. The air
-was still, sultry, and full of the boding calm which precedes
-a storm. Such signs had been successfully counterfeited,
-as Ernest bitterly termed it, once a month since
-the last half-forgotten showery spring. He had observed
-a halo round the moon on the previous night. There had
-been dozens of dim circular rings round that planet all
-the long summer through. The rain was certainly falling
-now. So had it commenced, on precisely such a day,
-with the same low banks of clouds, many a time and oft,
-and stopped abruptly in about twenty minutes, the
-clouds disappearing, and the old presentment reverting
-to a staring blue sky, a mocking, unveiled sun therein,
-with the suddenness of a transformation scene in a
-pantomime.</p>
-
-<p>‘I think that spotted cow looks as near meat as
-anything we’re likely to get, sir,’ said Jack Windsor,
-interrupting the train of distrustful reverie. ‘It begins
-to look as if it meant it. Lord send we may get well
-soaked before we get home!’</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Windsor’s pious aspiration was appropriate this
-time. They reaped the benefit of a genuine and complete
-saturation before they reached the yard with the small
-lot of cattle they were compelled to take in for companionship
-to their ‘fat beast.’ There was no appearance<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">114</span>
-of haste about the rain, no tropical violence, no waterspout
-business. It trickled down in slow, monotonous,
-still, and settled drizzle, much as it might have done in
-North Britain. It only did not stop; that was all. It
-was hopefully continuous all the evening. And when
-Mr. Neuchamp opened his casement at midnight he
-thankfully listened to the soaking, ceaseless downpour,
-which seemed no nearer a sudden conclusion than during
-the first hour.</p>
-
-<p>Before dawn Mr. Neuchamp was pacing his verandah,
-having darted out from his couch the very moment that
-he awoke. The temperature had sensibly fallen; so had
-the clouds, which were low and black; and still the
-rain streamed down more heavily than at first. There
-was apparently no alteration likely to take place during
-the day. The water commenced to flow in the small
-channels. The minor watercourses, the gullies, and
-creeks were filling. Wonder of wonders—it was a
-settled, set-in, hopelessly wet day! What a blessed and
-wonderful change from last week! Ernest had a
-colloquy with Charley Banks about things in general,
-and then permitted himself a whole day’s rest—reading
-a little, ciphering a little, and looking up his correspondence,
-which had fallen much into arrear. As the
-day wore on the rain commenced to show determination,
-heavily, hour after hour, with steady fall, saturating the
-darkened earth, no longer dusty, desolate, hopelessly
-barren. The gaping fissures were filled. The long
-disused ruts and gutters ran full and foaming down to
-their ultimate destination, the river. That great stream
-refused to acknowledge any immediate change of level
-from so inconsiderable a cause as a rainfall so far from
-its source. But, doubtless, as Charley Banks pointed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">115</span>
-out, in a week or more it would ‘come down’ in might
-and majesty, when the freshets at the head waters should
-have time to gather forces and swell the yellow tide.
-It was well if there was not then a regular flood, but
-that would do them no harm; might swamp out the
-Freemans, perhaps, but as long as Tottie wasn’t drowned,
-and the old woman, the rest of the family might be
-swept down to Adelaide for all he, Charley, cared.
-So let it rain till all was blue. There was no mistake
-this time. It was a general rain. We should have
-forty-eight hours of it before it stopped. Every hoof of
-stock was off the frontage now and away back, where
-there was good shelter and a trifle of feed. In a
-fortnight after this there would be good ‘bite’ all over
-Rainbar run. We should have a little comfort in our
-lives now. What a pull it was, that old Cottonbush had
-branded up those last stores before the rain came.</p>
-
-<p>Thus Mr. Charles Banks, jubilantly prophetic, with
-the elasticity of youth, having thrown off at one effort
-all the annoyance and privation of the famine year,
-was fully prepared for an epoch of marvels and general
-prosperity.</p>
-
-<p>The day ended as it had commenced. There was
-not a moment’s cessation from the soaking, pouring,
-saturating, dripping downpour of heaven’s precious rain.
-‘As the shower upon the mown grass,’ saith the olden
-Scripture of the day of David the King. Doubtless the
-great City of Palaces was erst surrounded by shaven
-lawns, by irrigated fields and gardens. But on the
-skirts of the far-stretching yellow deserts, tenanted then
-as now by the wild tribes, to whom pasture for their
-camels and asses, and horses and sheep, was as the life-blood
-of their veins, doubtless there were thousands of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">116</span>
-leagues all barren, baked sterility, until the long-desired
-rain set in, when, as if by magic, herbs and waving
-grains and flowerets fair sprang up, and rejoiced the
-hearts of the tribe, from the silver-bearded sheik to the
-laughing child.</p>
-
-<p>So it would be at Rainbar. Ernest knew this from
-many a conversation which he had had upon the subject
-with Jack Windsor and Charley Banks. In this warm,
-dry-soiled country, the growth of pasture under favourable
-circumstances is well-nigh incredible. Nature
-adapts herself to the most widely differing conditions of
-existence with amazing fertility of resource. In more
-temperate zones the partial heat which withers the
-flower and the green herb when cut down, slays the
-plant and destroys germination in the seed for evermore.
-Here, in the wild waste, when the fierce and burning
-blast revels over scorched brown prairies, and the
-whirlwind and the sand column dance together over
-heated sands, the plant life is well and truly adapted to
-the strange soil, the stranger clime. The tall grasses
-grow hard and gray, or faint yellow, under the daily
-desiccation which spares no tender growth; but they
-remain nutritive and life-sustaining for an incredible
-period, if but the necessary cloud water can be supplied
-at long intervals. Then the hard-pushed pastoral colonist,
-when he found that his flocks had bared to famine pitch
-the pastures within reach of the watercourses, which were
-his sole dependence in the earlier days, was compelled
-to resort to the most ancient practice of well-digging, of
-which he might have gained the idea from the familiar
-records of a hard-set pastoral people in the sandy wastes
-of Judea. Receding to the wide plains and waterless
-forests of the vast region which lay cruelly distant from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">117</span>
-any known stream or fountain, which was in summer
-regularly abandoned by the aboriginal denizens of the
-land, he sank, at much expense, wells of great depth—at
-first with uncertain result; but, though much of
-the water thus painfully obtained—for from three to
-five hundred pounds for two to three hundred feet
-sinking was no uncommon expense in a single well—was
-brackish, much salt, still progress was made. The
-stock was enabled in the midst of summer heat or protracted
-autumn drought to feed upon these previously
-locked-up pastures, upon the saline herbs and plants,
-the nutritious, aromatic shrubs peculiar to this land,
-where no white man had ever before seen stock except
-in winter.</p>
-
-<p>By degrees it began to be asserted that ‘back country,’
-<i>i.e.</i> the lands remote from all visible means of subsistence
-for flocks and herds, as far as water was concerned, paid
-the speculative pastoral occupier better than the ‘frontage,’
-or land in the neighbourhood of permanent creeks,
-and of the few well-known rivers. <i>There</i> roamed that
-unconscionable beast of prey, the all-devouring free
-selector. He could select the choicest bends, the richest
-flats, the deepest river reaches, even where the squatter
-had fenced or enclosed. For were not the waters free
-to all? He naturally appropriated the best and most
-tempting conjunctions of ‘land and water.’ These were
-precisely those which were most profitable, most necessary,
-occasionally most indispensable to the proprietor of
-the run.</p>
-
-<p>But it was not so with the back blocks. There
-capital yet retained much of its ancient supremacy.
-The wielder of that implement or weapon was enabled
-to cause his long-silent wilderness to blossom as the rose,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">118</span>
-by means of dams and wells. He was in a position also
-to drive off, keep out, and withstand the invading pseudo-grazier,
-with his sham purchases and his wrongful grass
-rights.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, by a wise provision of the Land Act, all improvements
-of a value exceeding forty pounds sterling,
-when placed by the pastoral tenant upon the Crown
-lands which he was facetiously supposed to rent, protect
-the lands upon which they stand, or which, in the case
-of a well, they underlie; that is to say, a five-hundred-guinea
-well or a hundred-pound dam cannot be free-selected
-or taken cool possession of as a conditional
-purchase by the land marauder of the period. Some
-people might see a slight flavour of fairness in this provision
-which has not always in other colonies, Victoria
-notably, been granted by the democratic wolf to the
-conservative lamb. However the Government of New
-South Wales may have erred in other respects, it has in
-the main so far ruled the outnumbered pastoralists with
-a courtesy, fairness, and freedom from small greed such
-as might be expected from one body of gentlemen in
-responsible dealing with a class of similar social rank.</p>
-
-<p>One successful well or dam, therefore, converted a
-block of country hitherto useless for nine months out of
-the twelve into a run capable of carrying ten thousand
-sheep all the year round. Of course, any portion of the
-Crown estate the conditional purchaser might ‘take up,’
-or, without notice, occupy. But where was he to procure
-his water from? He had not often five hundred pounds,
-or if so, did not ‘believe’ in such solemn disbursement
-for ‘mere improvements.’ Therefore he still haunted,
-cormorant-like, the rivers and creeks—the ‘permanent
-water’ of the colonist. To the younger sons of ancient<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">119</span>
-houses, scions of Howards, Somersets, and of the untitled
-nobility of Britain, he conceded the right to live like
-hermits in the Thebaid, upon their artificially and expensively
-watered back blocks.</p>
-
-<p>A special peculiarity of the ocean-like plains of inmost
-Australia is the miraculous growth of vegetation after the
-profuse irrigation which invariably succeeds a drought.
-In the warm dry earth, now converted into a bed of
-red or black mud, saturated to its lowest inch, and rich
-for procreation of every green thing, lies a hoard of seeds
-of wondrous number and variety of species. Broad and
-green, in a few days, as the vivid growth from the aged,
-still fruitful bosom of mysterious Nile, along with the
-ordinary pasture appear the seed leaves of unknown,
-half-forgotten grasses, reeds, plants, flowers, never noticed
-except in an abnormally wet season. In cycles of
-ordinary moisture, the true degree of saturation not
-having been reached, they lie death-like year after year,
-until, aroused by Nature’s unerring signal, they arise and
-burst forth into full vitality. In such a time an astonishing
-variety of herbs, plants, and flowers is to be seen
-mingling with gigantic grasses, such as Charley Banks
-described to Mr. Neuchamp when he prophesied, after
-forty-eight hours of steady rain had fallen, that on the
-Back Lake Plains this year he would be able to tie the
-grass tops together before him, <i>as he sat on horseback</i>.
-Mr. Neuchamp had never before discovered his lieutenant
-in a wilful exaggeration; but on this occasion he felt
-mortified that he should still be supposed a fit subject
-upon which to foist humorous fabrications.</p>
-
-<p>‘I see you don’t believe me,’ said Charley, rather put
-out in turn at not being credited. ‘Let’s call Jack.
-You ask him the height of the tallest grass he ever saw<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">120</span>
-in this part of the country in a real wet season. There
-he goes. Here, Jack, Mr. Neuchamp wants to ask you a
-question.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I wish to know,’ said Ernest gravely, ‘to what height
-you have ever known the grass grow up here in a firstrate
-season?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, I don’t know about measurement,’ said Jack,
-‘but I remember at Wardree one year we had to muster
-up all the old screws on the run to give the shepherds to
-ride.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Why was that?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Because they couldn’t <i>see</i> their sheep in the long
-grass; and out on a plain where the grass was over their
-own heads, it was hard work not to lose themselves. Of
-course it was an out-and-out year; something like this is
-going to be, I expect. Why, I’ve tied the grass over my
-horse’s shoulder in the spring, as <i>I’ve been riding along</i>,
-many a time and often.’</p>
-
-<p>Charley Banks smiled.</p>
-
-<p>‘That will do, John,’ said Mr. Neuchamp.</p>
-
-<p>‘I apologise fully,’ said Ernest, as soon as they were
-alone. ‘I promise never to lack that confidence in your
-statements, my dear fellow, which I must say I have
-hitherto found in every way deserved. How are the
-cattle doing? You have been out all day, and must have
-been soaked through and through.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I didn’t put on anything that water could hurt,’ said
-Charley, ‘or very much in the way of quantity either.
-Jack and I only wanted to be sure of the line the cattle
-took, so as to get after them to-morrow. We could track
-them as if they had been walking in batter pudding. If
-they got off the run now we should have no horses to
-fetch them back with, and if we left them away till they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">121</span>
-got strong, they’d be broken in to some other man’s run,
-which would be so much time lost. Luckily they all
-made for the Back Lake, where there’s some sandy ridges
-and good bedding ground. Freeman’s cattle are mixed
-up with the “circle dots,” which is all the better, as they
-know the run well, and can’t be got off it. Lucky they’re
-branded.‘</p>
-
-<p>‘And how about the old herd?’</p>
-
-<p>‘We didn’t tire our horses going after them, but, by
-the main run of the tracks, the nearest of them will stop
-at the Outer Lake timber; and the head cattle will go
-slap back to the very outside boundary. We’ve no neighbours
-at the back, so the farther back they go the fresher
-the feed will be. <i>They’re</i> right.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I suppose they will begin to improve in a few
-months?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Improve?’ echoed Mr. Banks; ‘if this weather is
-followed up, every beast on Rainbar run, down to a
-three-months-old calf, will be mud fat <i>in three months</i>,
-and you may begin to take away the first draft of a
-thousand head of fat cattle that we can send to market—and
-a rising market, too—before next winter.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Neuchamp did not shout aloud, nor cast any part
-of his clothing into the air, like Jack Windsor: his way
-of receiving sudden tidings of weal or woe was not demonstrative.
-But he grasped Charley Banks’s hand, and
-looked into the face of the pleased youngster with a
-gleam in his eye and a look of triumph such as the latter
-had rarely witnessed there.</p>
-
-<p>‘We have had to wait—“to suffer and be strong,”—Charley,
-my boy,‘ he said, ‘but I think the battle is won
-now. You shall have your share of the spoils.’</p>
-
-<p>When Mr. Neuchamp sallied forth on the second day<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">122</span>
-after the rain, he could not but consider himself in a
-somewhat similar position to one of the Noachian family
-taking an excursion after the flood. True, his flood had
-been of a temporary and wholly beneficial nature, but
-not the less had it entirely altered the expression upon
-the face of Nature. Aqueous effects and results were
-prominently apparent everywhere. Mud and hardened
-sandy spaces, already flushed with green, had succeeded
-to the pale, dusty, monotoned landscape.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, once more, short as had been the time of change,
-the eye was relieved by the delicate but distinct shade of
-green which commenced to drape the long-sleeping, spellbound
-frame of the mighty Mother. Even in the driest
-seasons, except on river flats, there are minute green
-spikelets of grass at or just below the surface. Let but
-one shower of rain fall, softly cherishing, and on the
-morrow it is marvellous to perceive what an approach to
-verdure has been made. Then the family of clovers, long
-dead and buried, but having bequeathed myriads of burr-protected,
-oleaginous seed vessels to the kind keeping of
-the baked and powdered soil, reappear in countless hosts
-of minute leaflets, which grow with incredible rapidity.
-It is not too much to say that in little more than a week
-after the ‘drought broke up’ at Rainbar there was grass
-several inches high over the entire run. The salt bushes
-commenced to put forth tender and succulent leaves. All
-nature drew one great sigh of relief, every living creature—from
-the small fur-covered rodents and marsupials which
-pattered along their minute but well-beaten paths when the
-sun was low to the water, from the wild mare that galloped
-in snorting through the midnight, with her lean, tireless
-offspring, to sink her head to the very eyes in the river
-when she reached it, to the thirsty merino flock at the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">123</span>
-well-trough, or the impoverished herd that struggled in
-hungered and athirst to muddy creek or treacherous
-river bank—every living creature did sensibly rejoice
-and give thanks, audibly or otherwise, for this merciful
-termination to the long agony of the Great Drought.</p>
-
-<p>That morning of the 18th May was a fateful morn
-to many a struggling beginner like Ernest Neuchamp;
-to many a grizzled veteran of pioneer campaigns and long
-wars of exploration, of peril of body and anguish of mind;
-to many a burdened sire with boys at school to pay for,
-and the girls’ governess to consider, whom the next year’s
-losses, if <i>the rain held off</i>, would compel the family to
-dispense with.</p>
-
-<p>On the night which preceded that day of deliverance
-Ernest Neuchamp went to bed utterly ruined and hopelessly
-insolvent; he arose a rich man, able within six
-months to pay off double the amount of every debt he
-owed in the world, and possessed beside of a run and
-stock the market value of which exceeded at least four-fold
-what he had paid for it.</p>
-
-<p>This was a change, sudden as an earthquake, swift as
-a revolution, almost awe-striking in its shower of sudden
-benefits, dazzling in its abrupt change from the dim light
-of poverty, self-denial, and anxiety, to an unquestioned
-position of wealth, reputation, and undreamed-of success.</p>
-
-<p>How differently passed the days now! What variety,
-what hope, what renewed pleasure in the superintendence
-of details ever leading upward to profit and satisfaction
-in a hundred different directions!</p>
-
-<p>Day by day the grass grew and bourgeoned and
-clothed the flats with a meadow-like growth akin to that
-of his native country. None of this amazing crop, however,
-was used except by the flocks of travelling sheep<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">124</span>
-returning strong and well-doing to their long-abandoned
-homes. These passing hosts made so little impression upon
-the wonderfully rapid growth that, as Mr. Banks averred,
-‘you could not see where they had been.’ The station
-cattle, and even the small flock of sheep were ‘well out
-back,’ and, presumably, were content to leave the ‘frontage’
-as a reserve for summer needs.</p>
-
-<p>Concurrently with this plenty and profusion, in which
-every head of the Rainbar stock revelled, from Mr.
-Levison’s ‘BI,’ whose skin now shone with recovered
-condition, and who snorted and kicked up his heels as he
-galloped into the yard with the working horses, to the
-most dejected weaner of the Freeman ‘crawlers,’ came
-strangely exciting news of the wondrous discovery of
-gold in Victoria, and the rapid rise in the price of
-meat.</p>
-
-<p>Fat stock were higher and higher in each succeeding
-market, until the previously unknown and, as the democratic
-newspapers said, unjustifiable and improper price
-of ten pounds per head for fat cattle was reached, with a
-corresponding advance for sheep. As this astounding
-but by no means dismaying intelligence was conveyed to
-Mr. Neuchamp in the hastily-torn-open newspaper which
-he was glancing at outside, just as Jack Windsor had
-directed his attention to the gambols of ‘BI,’ who, with
-arched neck and perfect outline, fully justified Mr. Levison’s
-encomium upon his shape, that gentleman’s prophecy
-as to the enhanced value of Rainbar reaching twenty
-thousand pounds when ‘BI’ kicked up his heels seemed
-likely to be fulfilled to the letter.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Windsor, in his enthusiasm concerning the condition
-of the horse left in his charge, and that of the stud
-generally, had for the moment omitted to open an unpretending<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">125</span>
-missive delivered by the same post which lay
-in his hand. As Ernest turned to walk towards the
-house he was stopped by the sound of a deep and bitter
-curse, most infrequent now upon the lips of his much
-altered follower.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">126</span>
-
-
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><a name="CHAPTER_XXVIII" id="CHAPTER_XXVIII">CHAPTER XXVIII</a></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>As Mr. Neuchamp turned, he saw an expression so fell
-and deadly upon Jack’s changed face that he instinctively
-recalled the day when he first stood before him with
-levelled weapon and the same stern brow.</p>
-
-<p>‘What is the matter, John?’ said Ernest kindly.
-‘Any had news?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Bad enough,’ said the man gloomily. ‘Never mind
-me, sir, for a minute or two. I’ll come to the house,
-and tell you all about it directly I’ve saddled Ben Bolt.’</p>
-
-<p>Then, repressing with an effort all trace of previous
-emotion, and permitting his features to regain their usual
-expression, he proceeded to catch and lead to the stable
-that determined animal, whose spirit had by no means
-been permanently softened by adversity, as was exhibited
-by his snorting and trembling as usual when the rein
-was passed over his neck and the bridle put on. Having
-done this, Mr. Windsor carefully saddled up, and
-shortly afterwards appearing in his best suit of clothes,
-strapped a small roll to the saddle, and rode quietly up
-to the verandah of the cottage.</p>
-
-<p>‘I see that something unusual has happened,’ said
-Mr. Neuchamp, with sympathy in his voice. ‘Tell me
-all about it.’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">127</span></p>
-
-<p>‘You’ll see it here,’ said his retainer, handing over a
-short and simple letter from Carrie Walton, in which the
-impending tragedy of a woman’s life-drama was briefly
-told. In a few sorrowful words the girl told how
-that worked upon by the continuous persuasions and reproaches
-of her parents, she had consented to marry Mr.
-Homminey on the following Friday week. She had not
-heard from him, John Windsor, for a long time—perhaps
-he had forgotten her. In a few days it would be too
-late, etc. But she was always his sincere friend and
-well-wisher, Caroline Walton.</p>
-
-<p>‘You see, sir,’ began Mr. Windsor, with something of
-his old confidence and cool calculation of difficulties in
-an emergency which required instant bodily exertion,
-‘it’s been this way. I’ve been so taken up with these
-new cattle, and the way everything’s been changed lately,
-since the weather broke, that I’ve forgot to write to the
-poor thing. I was expecting to go down with the first
-lot of fat cattle next month, and I laid it out to square
-the whole matter, and bring her back with me, if you’ll
-give us the hut by the river bank to live in. I’ve been
-a little late—or it looks like it—and they’ve persuaded
-her into marrying that pumpkin-headed, corn-eating
-Hawkesbury hog, just because he’s got a good farm and
-some money in the bank. But if I can get down before
-the time, if it’s only half an hour, she’ll come to me,
-and I think I can win the heat if Ben Bolt doesn’t
-crack up.’</p>
-
-<p>‘What time have you to spare between this and the
-day of the wedding?’ inquired Ernest.</p>
-
-<p>‘It’s to be on Friday week,’ said Jack.</p>
-
-<p>‘You can never be there in time—it is impossible!’
-cried Ernest in a tone of voice which showed his sympathy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">128</span>
-with his faithful servant. ‘I pity you sincerely,
-John!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Pity be hanged, sir. You’ll excuse my way of talking.
-I’m a little off my head, I know; what I mean to
-say is, I ain’t one of those chaps that can grub upon
-pity, and the likes of it. But I <i>can</i> do it, if the old
-horse holds out, and luckily Joe’s been riding him regular
-since the feed came, and he’s fit to race a mile, or travel
-a hundred, any day.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, it is a hundred and eighty miles to the mail-coach
-station, and unless you get there by to-morrow
-night, you can’t get down for another week.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I <i>shall</i> get there,’ replied Jack slowly and with
-settled determination. ‘Ben can do a hundred miles a
-day, for two days at a pinch, and I have a good bit of
-the second night thrown in. The mail don’t start until
-midnight. If we’re not there, I’ll turn shepherd again,
-and sell Ben to a thrashing machine; we won’t have any
-call to be thought horse or man again. I shall get to
-Mindai some time to-night—that’s eighty miles—and
-save the old horse all I can; then start about three in
-the morning, and polish off the hundred miles, if he’s the
-horse I take him to be. He’ll have easy times after, if
-he does it, for I’ll never sell him. Good-bye, sir.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Good-bye, John; I wish you good fortune, as I really
-believe my young friend Carry’s happiness is at stake.
-Here are some notes to take with you—money is always
-handy in elopements, I am informed.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You have my real thanks, sir,’ said Jack, pocketing
-the symbols of power; ‘I’ve been a good servant to you,
-sir, though I say it. I shan’t be any the worse if I’ve
-a good wife to keep me straight—that is if I get
-her.’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">129</span></p>
-
-<p>Here Mr. Windsor gave a short groan, followed by
-an equally brief imprecation, as he pictured the shining-faced
-giant, in a wondrous suit of colonial tweed, leading
-Carry away captive to his Flemish farm, evermore to
-languish, or grow unromantically plump, in a wilderness
-of maize-field varied by mountains of pumpkins.</p>
-
-<p>Ernest watched him as he mounted Ben Bolt, whose
-ears lay back, whose white-cornered eyes stared, whose
-uneasy tail waved in the old feline fashion, sufficient to
-scare any stranger about to mount. He saw him take
-the long trail across the plain at a bounding canter,
-which was not changed until horse and rider travelled
-out of the small Rainbar world of vision, and were lost
-amid the mysteries of the far sky-line. Much he marvelled
-at this Australian edition of ‘Young Lochinvar,’
-only convinced that if that enterprising gallant had been
-riding Ben Bolt, when</p>
-
-<p>
-On to his croupe the fair ladye he swung,<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>the layers of the odds might have confidently wagered
-on a very different ending to the ballad. He did not
-anticipate that the reckless bushman would attempt to
-‘cut out’ his sweetheart from the assembled company of
-friends and kinsfolk. Yet he could not clearly see how
-he proposed, so close was the margin left, to possess himself
-of the fair Carry. But that, if Ben Bolt did not
-break down, Jack Windsor would, in some shape or
-form, effect his purpose, and defeat the intended disposal
-of the Maid of the Inn, he was as certain as if he had
-witnessed their arrival at Rainbar.</p>
-
-<p>It is not placed beyond the reach of doubt whether
-or not this matrimonial adventure in any way led
-Mr. Neuchamp to considerations involving similar possibilities.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">130</span>
-It may, however, be looked upon as an authenticated
-legend that although several letters of a congratulatory
-nature had passed between Paul Frankston
-and Mr. Neuchamp, ‘since the weather broke,’ the
-latter thought it necessary to write once more and
-acquaint him with the fact that early next month he
-should commence to send off fat cattle, and that he
-would come down himself in charge of the first drove.</p>
-
-<p>In the austere boreal regions of the Old World all
-nature, dormant or pulsating, dumb or informed with
-speech, waits and hopes, prays and fears, until the unseen
-relaxation of the grasp of the winter god. Then the
-ice-fetters break, the river becomes once more a joyous
-highway, echoing with boat and song, and gay with
-ensigns. Once more the unlocked earth receives the
-plough; once more the leaf buds, the flower all blushing
-steals forth in woodland and meadow; once more the
-carol of bird, the whistle of the ploughman, the song of
-sturdy raftsmen, proclaim that the war of Nature with
-man is ended. So beneath the Southern Cross the
-unkind strife which Nature ever and anon wages with
-her children is accented not by wintry blast and iron
-frost-chain, but by burning heat and the long-protracted
-water famine. The windows of heaven are locked fast.
-The thirsty earth looks anguished and sorrow-stricken,
-daily, hourly, witnessing the torture, the death of her
-perishing children.</p>
-
-<p>Then, wafted by unseen, unheard messengers, as in
-the frozen North, the fiat goes forth in the burning
-South. The soft touch of the Daughter of the Mist is
-felt upon plant and soil, pool and streamlet. They
-listen to the sound of softly-falling tear-drops from the
-sky, and, lo! they arise, rejoicing, to regain life and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">131</span>
-vigour, as the sick from the physician, as the babe from
-the mother’s tendance.</p>
-
-<p>Once more was there joy in the broad Australian
-steppes and pastures, from the apple orchards of the
-south to the boundless ocean-plains of the far north-west,
-where the saltbush grows, and the myall and the
-mulgah, where the willowy coubah weeps over the dying
-streamlet, where the wild horse snorts at dawn on the
-lonely sandhill, where the emu stalks stately through the
-golden clear moonlight.</p>
-
-<p>Now had arisen in good sooth for Ernest Neuchamp
-a day of prosperity and triumph. By every post came
-news of that uprising of prices which Mr. Levison had
-foretold, in stock and stations, in horses and in cattle, in
-land and in houses, in corn and in labour. This last
-consideration, though serious enough to the owners of
-sheep, in the comparatively unenlightened days which
-preceded the grand economy of fencing runs, was not of
-much weight with Ernest. His adherents were tried
-and trusty, and neither Charley Banks nor Jack Windsor
-would have abandoned him for all the gold in Ballarat
-and all the silver in Nevada. Piambook and Boinmaroo,
-incurious and taking no thought for the morrow, with
-the characteristic childishness of their race, dreamed of
-no adequate motive which should sever them from the
-light work and regularly-dispensed tobacco of Misser
-Noochum. With his own assistance they were amply
-sufficient for all the work of the establishment, now that
-the ‘circle dot’ cattle, thoroughly broken to the run, had
-taken up regular beats, and divided themselves by consent
-into mobs or subdivisions, each with its own
-leader.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">132</span></p>
-
-<p>Many a pleasant ride had Ernest now that all things
-‘had suffered,’ not ‘a sea-change,’ but none the less an
-astounding metamorphosis, into ‘something rich and
-strange.’</p>
-
-<p>Daily he made long-disused excursions into the mysterious,
-half-unknown land of ‘the Back,’ only to find,
-after each fresh day’s exploring, richer pasture, fuller
-watercourses, stronger, more frolicsome cattle. These
-last had grown and thriven on the over-abundant pasture,
-‘out of knowledge,’ as Charley Banks averred.
-Again were the old triumphs and glories of a cattle-station
-re-enacted. Again he saw the heavy rolling
-droves of bullocks come panting and teeming into camp.
-Again he witnessed the reckless speed and practised
-wheel of the trained stock horses. All things, indeed,
-were changed.</p>
-
-<p>Charley Banks was never tired of sounding the
-praises of the glorious season, and of the splendid fattening
-qualities of Rainbar, with its extraordinary variety of
-plant-wealth, herbs, grasses, saltbushes, clovers, every green
-thing, from wild carrots to crowsfoot, which the heart of
-man, devoted to the welfare of his herd, could desire.</p>
-
-<p>‘I never saw anything like those “circle dot” cattle
-for laying it on,‘ he would say. ‘They’re as big again as
-they were. And those crawlers of Freemans’—they’ll
-pay out and out. We’ve branded as many calves from
-’em as will come to half the purchase money, at present
-prices. It will soon be time to move the fat cattle; in
-another month or two Rainbar will be full of ’em.’</p>
-
-<p>The only persons to whom the rain had not brought
-joy and gladness were Freeman Brothers. These worthy
-yeomen began to consider that after all this hard work,
-as they expressed it, they had been shamefully outwitted
-and deceived. The travel-worn cattle-dealer, who had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">133</span>
-driven so hard a bargain with them, had turned out to
-be the great Abstinens Levison, no less. Their stock
-had been handed over to Mr. Neuchamp, with whom,
-doubtless, he had been in league. Now they were growing
-and fattening fast, prices rising faster, and not a
-shilling for <i>them</i>, out of it all. Then they had to wait
-idle on their land till November, or less lose the cash
-agreed on.</p>
-
-<p>‘Then to hand everything over—most likely for the
-benefit of a young fellow who knew nothing about the
-country—a —— blessed “new chum”—hang him. The
-country was getting too full of the likes of him. It was
-enough to make a man turn digger.‘</p>
-
-<p>Abraham Freeman and his wife were the only contented
-individuals of the once peaceful co-operative community.
-They would have secured sufficient capital upon
-the payment of the coming instalments to purchase a
-well-improved farm in their old neighbourhood, to which
-they proposed immediately to return, and there spend the
-remainder of an unambitious existence.</p>
-
-<p>‘They had seen quite enough of this far-out life,’ they
-said. ‘Free-selecting here might be very well for some
-people; it didn’t suit them. They liked a quiet place in
-a cool climate, where the crops grew, and the cows gave
-them milk all the year round—not a feast or a famine.
-If they had the chance, please God, they would know
-<i>next time</i> when they were well off.’</p>
-
-<p>One afternoon Charley Banks came tearing in, displaying
-in triumph a provincial journal, the <i>Parramatta
-Postboy</i>, directed to him in unknown handwriting. Pointing
-to a column, headed ‘Elopement extraordinary,’ he
-commenced with great difficulty, owing to the frequency
-of his ejaculations and bursts of laughter, to read aloud<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">134</span>
-to Mr. Neuchamp the following extract, from which it
-may be gathered that Mr. Windsor ‘was on time,’ in
-spite of all apparent obstacles:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>It is seldom that we have to chronicle so dramatic an incident
-as that which has just occurred in our midst, and which was fraught
-with deep interest to one of our most respected residents of old
-standing in the neighbourhood. We refer to the sudden and wholly
-unexpected matrimonial arrangement made by Miss C—y W—n,
-the daughter of mine host of the old-established well-known family
-hotel, the ‘Cheshire Cheese.’ It would appear that Mr. Henry
-Homminey, the successful Hawkesbury agriculturist, was about to
-lead the blushing fair one, with the full consent of the family, to
-the hymeneal altar, on Friday last. ‘All went merry as a marriage
-bell,’ till on Thursday evening Mr. John Windsor, cattle manager
-at Rainbar for Ernest Neuchamp, Esq., appeared at the ‘Cheshire
-Cheese,’ and joined the family party. He had been formerly
-acquainted with the bride-elect, but stated that he had merely
-come to offer his congratulations, and pass a pleasant hour. He
-was warmly welcomed, and the evening passed off successfully.
-At the appointed hour next morning the happy bridegroom
-appeared with his friends, who had mustered strongly for the
-occasion, but, to their dismay and disappointment, they were
-informed by Mr. W—n that the bride’s chamber was empty, and
-that she had not attended the family matutinal repast. Mr.
-Homminey’s feelings may be imagined but cannot be described.
-He at once started in pursuit of the fugitives, but after riding a
-few miles at a furious pace, his horse showed signs of distress, and
-he was persuaded by his personal friends to wend his steps in the
-direction of Richmond. Much sympathy is felt for his loss and
-disappointment. But, since the days of earliest classic records, the
-man of solid worth has occasionally been eclipsed, in the eyes of
-the fair, by the possessor of the more ornamental qualities with
-which Mr. Windsor is credited.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>‘Well done, Jack!’ shouted Mr. Banks, as he finished
-the concluding editorial reflection; ‘and well done, Ben
-Bolt! He must have polished off that hundred and
-eighty miles, or else Jack would never have been up
-to time. It’s a good deal to depend on a horse’s legs.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">135</span>
-Well, Carry Walton’s a stunning girl, and it will be the
-making of Jack. He’ll go as straight as a die now.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I must say I feel much gratified also,’ assented
-Ernest. ‘I should have been afraid of some of the old
-reckless spirit prevailing over him, if he had lost our
-friend Carry. How I feel assured of his future prosperity.
-He is a fine, manly, intelligent fellow, and wants nothing
-but a sufficient object in life to make him put out his
-best energies.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Jack’s as smart an all-round man as ever stepped,’
-said Mr. Banks, ‘and with a real good headpiece too,
-though there’s not much book-learning in it. He’d fight
-for you to the last drop of his blood, too. I know that.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It is well to have a faithful retainer at times,’ said
-Mr. Neuchamp thoughtfully. ‘It carries a mutual benefit,
-often lost sight of in these days of selfish realism.</p>
-
-<p>‘How shall we manage with the cattle without him?’
-queried Mr. Banks.</p>
-
-<p>‘I must take the two black boys,’ said Mr. Neuchamp,
-‘and you must do the best you can on the run by yourself;
-for business renders it absolutely necessary that I
-should visit Sydney.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I daresay I’ll manage, somehow,’ said Mr. Banks.
-‘I must get Tottie Freeman to help me, if I’m hard
-pushed. She’s the smartest hand with cattle of the lot.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I do not think that arrangement would quite answer,’
-quoth Mr. Neuchamp gravely.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Within a fortnight after this conversation Mr.
-Neuchamp and his sable retainers might have been
-observed making the usual stages with a most satisfactory
-drove of fat cattle in front of them. They were not,
-perhaps, equal to the first lot he recollected despatching<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">136</span>
-from Rainbar; but ‘cattle were cattle’ now, in the
-language of the butchers. There were plenty more
-coming on, and it was not thought advisable to wait
-longer for the ultimate ‘topping up’ of the beeves.
-They were good enough. The demand was prodigious;
-and purchasers did not make half the critical objections
-that were used in the old days, when cattle were not
-half the price.</p>
-
-<p>In the appointed time the important draft reached
-Sydney, and before Mr. Neuchamp could look round, it
-seemed to him, they were snapped up at eight-pounds-ten
-a head, no allusions made to ‘rough cattle,’ or ‘very plain
-on the back,’ ‘old cows,‘ ‘light weights,’ or any of the
-usual strong depreciations customary on former occasions.
-No; a new era seemed to have set in. All was right as
-long as the count was accurate. So satisfactory was the
-settling that Mr. Neuchamp at once wrote to Charley
-Banks to muster and send down another draft, even if he
-<i>had</i> to put Tottie Freeman in charge of Rainbar while he
-was on the road.</p>
-
-<p>Then came the immediate rush to the office of Frankston
-and Co., and a meeting with old Paul, that made up
-for much of enforced privation and protracted self-denial.</p>
-
-<p>‘My dear boy! most glad to see you, at last; thought
-that we should never see your face again. Knew you
-couldn’t come before the rain did. Can’t leave the ship
-until tide serves and the wind’s fair. But <i>now</i> the
-voyage is over, first mate’s in charge of the ship, and the
-skipper can put on his long-shore toggery and cruise for
-a spell. Of course you’re on your way out to dine with
-us?’</p>
-
-<p>Ernest mentioned that, presuming upon old acquaintance,
-such had been his intention.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">137</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Antonia will be ever so glad to see you; but she
-must tell you all the news herself. You will find your
-cousin at Morahmee. She and Antonia are wonderful
-friends—that is——’</p>
-
-<p>‘That is,’ said Ernest, completing Paul’s sentence, over
-which the worthy merchant appeared to hesitate somewhat—‘that
-is, as close as two people very widely
-dissimilar in taste and temperament can ever be.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Perhaps there <i>may</i> be a slightly different way of
-looking at things, and so on,’ said his old friend cautiously;
-‘but all crafts are not built out of the same sort
-of timber, or on the same lines. Some are oak, some of
-American pine, some of teak, some of white gum; some
-with a smart shear, some with a good allowance of beam;
-and they can’t be altered over much. As the keel’s laid
-down, so the boat’s bound to float.’</p>
-
-<p>‘H—m!’ replied Ernest thoughtfully, ‘that involves
-a large question—several large questions, in fact. Good-bye
-for the present.’</p>
-
-<p>How many memories crowded upon the brain of
-Ernest Neuchamp as he once more trod the massive
-sandstone flags underneath the portico of the verandah at
-Morahmee! The freshly raked gravel walks, the boscage
-of glowing green which formed the living walls of the
-renovated shrubberies, the well-remembered murmur of
-the low-toned restless surge, the odour of the unchanged
-deep, all these sharply contrasted sights and sounds after
-his weary sojourn in the desert composed for him a page
-of Boccaccio, framed a panel of Watteau-painting. He
-was a knight in an enchanted Armida garden. And as
-Antonia, freshly attired in evening dress, radiant with
-unmistakable welcome, appeared to greet him on the
-threshold of the open door, he felt as if the knight who<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">138</span>
-had done his devoir was about to receive the traditional
-guerdon, so necessary to the perfect equilibrium of the
-world of chivalry and romance.</p>
-
-<p>‘Welcome from Palestine!’ she said, unconsciously
-following out his train of thought, as she ran forward and
-clasped him by the hand. ‘I don’t know whether one
-can call any part of the bush the Holy Land; but you
-have been away quite long enough to have gone there.
-Had you vowed a vow never to come back till rain fell?
-People may stay away too long sometimes.’ Here she
-gazed at Ernest with a long, searching, humbled gaze,
-which suddenly brightened as when the summer cloud
-catches the partially obscured sun-ray. ‘But here is
-Augusta, coming to ask you if Rainbar won’t be swallowed
-up in a second deluge now that the drought has
-broken up, as she is credibly informed is always the case
-in Australia!’ A mischievous twinkle in her mirthful
-eye informed Ernest that his cousin’s peculiarities had
-been accurately measured by the prepossessing reviewer
-before him.</p>
-
-<p>As Miss Neuchamp, also attired in full evening costume,
-approached, while not far behind, with the air of a
-confirmed <i>habitué</i>, sauntered Mr. Jermyn Croker, Ernest
-thought he had never seen that young lady look to
-greater advantage. Something had evidently occurred
-with power to revive an attention to the details of dress
-which had been suffered of late to lie in abeyance.
-There was also a novel expression of not unbecoming
-doubt upon her resolute features which Ernest had never
-observed before. It soon appeared, however, that her
-essential characteristics were unchanged.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am truly glad to see you, my dear Ernest,’ she said,
-offering him her cheek with proper cousinly coolness. ‘I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">139</span>
-hear that a beneficial change has taken place in your
-shocking climate. Mr. Croker says that prices have
-risen to their outside limit, and cannot possibly last. Of
-course you will sell out at once and go home?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Of course I shall do no such thing,’ returned Ernest,
-with such unusual animation that Antonia could not
-help smiling. ‘I should consider it most ungrateful, as
-well as impolitic, to quit the land which has already done
-much for me, and may possibly do more.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well done, Ernest, my boy!’ said Mr. Frankston,
-who had just joined the party. ‘Never quit the ship
-that has weathered the storm with you while a plank is
-left in her. Now that we have our country filled with
-the sweepings of every port under the sun, we want the
-captain and first officer to act like men, and show the
-stuff they’re made of.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I take quite a different view of my duty to Jermyn
-Croker, about whom I have felt much anxiety of late,’
-drawled out that gentleman. ‘I see before me a chance
-of selling out at an absurdly high price, and taking my
-passage by next mail for one of the few countries that is
-worth living in. A madman might neglect such an
-opportunity for the sake of a few thousand roughs
-scrambling for gold at California, or Ballarat, but not
-Jermyn Croker, if I know him.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And suppose stock rise higher still?’ queried Mr.
-Frankston, smiling at the magnificent dogmatism of his
-unsentimental friend.</p>
-
-<p>‘My dear Frankston, how a man of your age and
-experience can so blind himself to the real state of affairs
-is a marvel to me. Cattle <i>can’t</i> rise. Five pounds all
-round for young and old on the station is a price never
-before reached in Australia. You <i>must</i> see the crash<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">140</span>
-that is coming. Really, now, without humbug, don’t you
-know that there will be a change before Christmas?’</p>
-
-<p>‘So there will,’ answered Paul, ‘but it will be for the
-better. We have not half the stock in the country to
-feed the great multitude that are, even now, on the sea.
-But if you <i>will</i> sell, you might give me the offer.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Sold out of every hoof to Parklands this morning!’
-answered Mr. Croker, looking round with a triumphant
-air. ‘I was standing on the club steps before breakfast
-when he came in from the northern steamer, and made
-me an offer before he got out of his hansom.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And you took it?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Took it? of course. We went into the library,
-where he wrote me out a cheque then and there for
-twenty thousand pounds, and I gave him the delivery
-note. Booroo-booroo and Chatsworth, with four thousand
-head of cattle, taken, without muster, by the book,
-everything given in. Something like a sale, wasn’t it?’</p>
-
-<p>‘First-rate for some one—I don’t say who. But I’ll
-take three to one that Parklands knocks five thousand
-pounds profit out of it before the year is over.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I take you, provided he doesn’t sell to Neuchamp,’
-answered Croker. ‘I must say I think one bargain with
-him ought to satisfy any man, except Selmore.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I’ll bet you a level hundred,’ said Paul, a little
-quickly, ‘that in five years Ernest here will be able to
-buy you up—horse, foot, and dragoons—without feeling
-the amount.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Particularly if he has the invaluable aid and counsel
-of Paul Frankston,’ sneered Mr. Jermyn Croker. However,
-I shan’t be here to see, as I never intend to cross
-the Nepean again, or to see Sydney Heads except in an
-engraving.‘<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">141</span></p>
-
-<p>‘We’ll all go and see you off,’ said Antonia, who with
-Ernest suddenly appeared as if they had not been listening
-to the conversation, which indeed they had not, but
-had taken a quiet walk down ‘an alley Titanic’ with
-glorious araucarias. ‘But whoever goes or stays, we
-must have dinner. I really <i>do</i> believe that it’s past
-seven o’clock.’</p>
-
-<p>At this terrible announcement Paul’s ever robust
-punctuality asserted itself with a rebound. Seizing upon
-the fair Augusta he hurried her to the dining-room,
-where all conversation bordering upon business was
-banished for the present.</p>
-
-<p>After the ladies had retired, the fascinating topic of
-the changed social aspect of the country since the gold
-crop had alternated with those of wheat, maize, wool,
-and tallow, which formerly absorbed so large a share of
-interest, again came uppermost. Upon this point Mr.
-Croker was grandly didactic.</p>
-
-<p>‘Mark my words, Frankston,’ said he, throwing
-himself back in his chair, ‘in two years you will see this
-country a perfect hell upon earth! What’s to hinder it?
-Even now there’s hardly a shepherd to be got; people
-are talking of turning their sheep loose—that, of course,
-means ruin to wool-growing. Cattle will soon overtake
-the temporary demand; all the new buyers—nothing
-personal intended, Neuchamp—will be ruined. Tallow
-will fall directly the Russians have settled their difficulty.
-I know this from private sources. Flour will be a
-hundred pounds a ton again; of course there will be no
-ploughing for want of hands. These digger fellows will
-take to cutting their own throats first, and when in good
-practice those of the propertied classes for a change; and
-lastly, you’ll have universal suffrage. The scum will be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">142</span>
-uppermost, and you’ll end suitably with an unparalleled
-Jacquerie.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Croker, having completed this pleasing patriotic
-sketch, filled his glass and looked round with the air of
-a man who had just demonstrated to inquiring youth
-that two and two make four.</p>
-
-<p>‘Australia was always a beastly hole,’ he continued;
-‘but really, I think, when—even before—it comes to
-what I have outlined, it will cease to be fit for a gentleman
-to live in.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You must pardon me for expressing a directly
-contrary opinion,’ replied Ernest, who had been gradually
-girding himself up to answer Mr. Croker according to
-his humour. ‘I hold that this is precisely the time, and
-these are the exact circumstances, which render it a
-point of honour for every gentleman who has past or
-present interest in the land to live in it, to stand by his
-colours and lead his regiment in the battle which is
-so imminent. Now is the time for those who have felt
-or asserted an interest in this glorious last-discovered
-Eldorado, far down in the list of English provinces which
-have a way of changing into nations, to uphold with all
-the manhood that is in them her righteous laws, her
-goodly customs, her pure yet untrammelled liberty.
-In my mind, he who takes advantage of the rise in
-prices to quit Australia for ever at this hour of her
-social need, deserts his duty, abandons his post, and
-confesses himself to be less a true colonist than a sordid
-huckster!’</p>
-
-<p>As Mr. Neuchamp delivered himself of this perhaps
-slightly coloured estimate of the duty of a pastoral
-tenant, unheeding of the implied rebuke to the last
-speaker, he raised his head and confronted the company<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">143</span>
-with the air of the captain of a sinking ship who has
-vowed to stand by her while a plank floats.</p>
-
-<p>Jermyn Croker coloured, but did not immediately
-reply, while the host took occasion to interfere, as
-became his position of mediator between over-hasty
-disputants.</p>
-
-<p>‘I think you are both a little beyond the mark,’ he
-said; ‘if you will allow me, who have lived here since
-Sydney was a small seaside village, to give you my ideas.
-No doubt, as Croker says, we shall have a queer crew,
-with every kind of lubber and every known sort of
-blackguard to deal with. But what of that? Discipline
-has always been kept up in old New South
-Wales,—in times, too, when matters looked black
-enough. The same men, or their sons, are here now
-who showed themselves equal to the occasion before.
-We have Old England at our backs; and though she
-doesn’t bother us with much advice or short leading
-strings, she has a ship or two and a regiment left which
-are at the service of any of her colonies when need is.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Every country where gold has been discovered up to
-this time has gradually degenerated and come to grief,’
-asserted Croker, recovering from his dissatisfied silence;
-‘not that much degeneration is possible here.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You are thinking of the Spaniards, the Mexicans,
-and so on,’ said Paul. ‘I’ve been among them, and know
-all about their ways. They are not so much worse than
-other people. But even so: English people have always
-managed to govern themselves under all circumstances,
-and will again, I venture to bet.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I came out here thinking Australia a good place to
-make money. I always knew England was a good place
-to spend it in,’ averred Mr. Croker. ‘I’m a man of few
-ideas, I confess. But I have stuck to these few, and I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">144</span>
-think I see my way.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I suppose we all do,’ said Mr. Frankston; ‘but some
-have more luck or better eyesight than others. Our
-friend Levison wouldn’t make a bad man at the “look-out”
-in dirty weather, eh, Ernest? What do you think
-of him, Croker?‘</p>
-
-<p>‘Think? why, that he’s an immensely overrated
-man; he has made a few hits by straightforward
-blundering and kept what he has got. I give him
-credit for that. But who’s to know whether all this
-station property that stands in his name is <i>really</i> his?
-The banks may have the lion’s share for all anybody
-knows.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Highly probable,’ assented Ernest, with fierce
-sarcasm; ‘and Levison’s steady prophecy that the season
-was going to break just before it did was an accidental
-guess! His purchasing stock, stations, and town
-property for the rise, which no one else believed in, was
-a chance hit! His uniformly good sales when every one
-else was holding! His large purchases when all the
-world was selling! His unostentatious gifts, at the rate
-of two to a thousand pounds, to church buildings were
-unredeemed parsimony! His advice to me to buy and
-his actual purchases of stock for my benefit, every pound
-invested in which has furnished a profit of ten, were
-selfish mistakes! You must excuse me, Croker, for
-saying that I think you have reared a larger crop of
-prejudices in Australia than any man I have seen here.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It’s a fine climate!’ quoth Paul; ‘everything grows
-and develops; even experience, like Madeira in the
-voyage round the Cape, ripens twice as fast here as
-anywhere else. A whitewasher, Croker? I really<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">145</span>
-believe this is a bottle of the Manzanares you prefer,
-and we’ll join the ladies, which means adjourn to the
-verandah.’</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>If happiness, at any period or season, did dwell upon
-the earth, she must have sojourned, about the month of
-September 185—, so near to the New Holland Club, so
-near to the person of Ernest Neuchamp, as to have been
-occasionally visible to the naked eye. Had a company
-of <i>savans</i> been told off to view the goddess, as in the far
-less important matter of the transit of Venus, success
-had been certain. But society never recognises its real
-wonders—its absolute and imperious miracles. Therefore
-for a little space that earthly maid glorified the
-dwelling and precincts of the untrammelled, rejoicing,
-successful proprietor. She sat by Mr. Neuchamp at the
-daintily prepared refections of the club, and gave an
-added flavour to his moderate but intense enjoyment of
-viand and vintage, so wondrous in variety, so miraculous
-of aroma, after his long endurance of the unpalatable
-monotony of the Rainbar cuisine. She whispered in the
-mystic tones of the many-voiced sea-breezes, as they
-murmured around his steps when, with Antonia at his
-side, he roamed through the mimic woods of Morahmee,
-or gazed with never-ending contemplative joy on the
-pale moon’s silver tracery o’er wave and strand. She
-rose with him in the joyous morn, telling him the ever-welcome
-tale that all cause for anxiety had fled, that a
-new ukase had gone forth, bringing unmixed joy to every
-man of his order, always excepting the sheepholders and
-Jermyn Croker. She sat behind him, on Osmund,
-displacing ‘the sad companion ghastly pale’ even ‘atra
-Cura,’ who had been the occupant of a croup seat on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">146</span>
-that gallant steed for many a day. Once more the
-rattle of flying hoofs was heard upon the sandy downs
-and red hill-roads which, near Bondi’s ceaseless surge,
-overlook the city’s mingled mass, the ocean’s fresh eternal
-glory. In this season of joy and pride—the natural and
-becoming pride of him who has suffered and struggled,
-waited and warred for no mean reward, which at length
-he has been permitted to grasp—the bright goddess
-smiled on every act, thought, and hope of Ernest
-Neuchamp. In that fair brief bygone day of unalloyed
-triumph, of unclouded hope, it is a truth most absolute
-and indisputable that she stood by his side in serene and
-awful beauty; but, like her austere sister of old who
-cried aloud in the streets to a heedless generation, ‘no
-man regarded her.’</p>
-
-<p>Through all this halcyon time no definite pledge or
-vow had passed between him and the woman whom he
-had slowly, but with all the force of an inflexibly tenacious
-nature, come to consider as the embodied essence
-of that mysterious complement to man’s nature, at once
-the vital necessity, the crowning glory, of this mortal
-state, the vision of female perfection! Proud, fastidious,
-a searcher after ideals, prone to postpone the irrevocable
-decision by which man’s fate here below is for ever
-sealed, he was now face to face with Destiny. Even
-now he felt so utterly fascinated, so supremely content,
-with the graduated intimacies of which the daily process
-which draws two human hearts together into indescribable
-union is composed, so charmed with the undreamed-of
-treasures of mind and heart which each fresh casket
-unlocked displayed to his gaze, that he felt no desire to
-change the mode of bliss. Why hurry to an end this
-sojourn in the land of Faerye, while the bridle-reins of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">147</span>
-the Queen of Elf-land and her troop were ringing still
-through the haunted woods, while feast and tournament
-still went merrily on, while stream and emerald turf and
-bosky glade were still touched with the glory of successful
-love, while the glamour still held sea and sky and
-far-enpurpled mounts, upon which, let but once the knell
-of disenchantment sound, no mortal may again gaze <i>while
-life endures</i>?</p>
-
-<p>During all this time of joy and consolation Mr. Neuchamp
-had regular advices from his lieutenant, Charley
-Banks. That young gentleman complained piteously of
-his lonely state and solitary lodging in the wilderness,
-for which nothing compensated, it would appear, but the
-increasing beauty of the season (pastorally considered)
-and an occasional gossip with Tottie Freeman.</p>
-
-<p>Now that the rain had found out the way to saltbush
-land, there seemed to be but little variety of
-weather. It rained every other day, sometimes for nearly
-a week, incredible to relate, without stopping. The
-creeks were full, the flats were soaked, spongy, and knee-deep
-in clover. The river was high, had come down ‘a
-banker,’ and any further rainfall at the head waters, or
-even the melting of the snow, might bring down a flood
-such as the dwellers in those parts had not seen for
-many a day. The Freemans were uncomfortable enough.
-They had found that their huts and fencing had been
-placed on land too low for comfort in a wet season, and
-even for safety if the threatened floods rose higher than
-usual.</p>
-
-<p>In November, the third spring month of the Australians,
-another despatch of greater weight and importance
-reached Mr. Neuchamp, who apparently was not hasting
-to quit the land of French cooks and Italian singers, of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">148</span>
-pleasant day saunterings, of cheerful lunch parties, and
-moonlight rambles by the murmuring sea. Mr. Banks
-had the distinguished honour of entertaining Mr. Levison,
-but lately returned from Melbourne, and engaged in
-starting two or three thousand head of fat cattle for that
-market. He had come round by Rainbar, he said, on
-purpose to take delivery of the Freemans‘land, but he,
-Charley Banks, thought it more likely that he wanted to
-see old ‘BI’ (who looked splendid, with a crest like a
-lion), and whom he rode away in triumph. He handed
-over the deeds of all the Freemans‘conditional purchases
-to him to give to Mr. Neuchamp, saying that he hoped
-he wouldn’t do that sort of thing again, as he might not
-come out of it right another time.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Banks further related that he had volunteered as
-his deliberate opinion, from what he had noticed about
-the Victorian gold mines, that the yield of gold would
-last many years, during which time stock would continue
-to be high in price, although there might be temporary
-depressions. As a consequence of which state of things,
-the sooner every one bought all the store stock they
-could lay hands on the better. ‘“My word,” he said,
-“it was a lucky drop-in—not for them though—that I
-picked you up those Freeman cattle, not to speak of the
-‘circle dots.’ There will be no more eight-and-sixpenny
-store cattle, or fifteen-bob ones either—two pounds for
-cows, and fifty shillings and three pounds for good steers
-and bullocks will be more like it, and they will pay at
-that price too. But what I want you to tell Mr. Neuchamp
-is this. I’d write to him, but I’m in a hurry off,
-and you can do it quite as well, if you’re careful and
-attend to what I tell you.</p>
-
-<p>‘“I’ve just had information that the Sydney people<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">149</span>
-who have got the agency of the Mildool run, that joins
-you, are going to sell. They’ve got it into their wise
-heads that cattle have seen their top, because they’re
-worth five pounds all round, that is, with stations; and
-because they’re old-fashioned Sydney-siders that never
-heard of such a price since the days when they used to
-bring buffaloes from India.</p>
-
-<p>‘“They believe that Victoria is choke-full of Yankees
-and diggers, stowaways and emigrants, and that the
-whole thing will ‘bust up’ directly, and let down prices
-everywhere to what they were before the gold.</p>
-
-<p>‘“People that travel, and keep their eyes open, know
-what foolishness all this sort of thing is. A regular
-Sydney man thinks all Victorians are blowers and
-speculators. A regular Victorian thinks all Sydney men
-are old-fashioned, slow prigs who wouldn’t spend a guinea
-to save five pounds. The truth is pretty near the
-middle. Don’t you stick at home all your life, like a
-mallee scrubber, that has only one dart, on the plain and
-back to his scrub, and then you won’t run away with the
-notion that because a man is born on one side of a river
-and not on the other, he ain’t as clever, or as sensible, or
-as good a hand at making money or saving it, as you are.
-It’s only country-bred, country-reared folks that think
-that way.</p>
-
-<p>‘“What I want you to tell the boss is this. He’d
-better set old Paul Frankston to get a quiet offer of this
-Mildool with four thousand odd head—it will carry
-about seven or eight—and if they’ll take four-fifteen or
-five pound all round, ram ’em with it at once. Tell
-Neuchamp he can send that native chap to manage it,
-and it will be the best day’s work he’s done for some
-time. Tell him Ab. Levison said so. Good-bye. You<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">150</span>
-take a run down to Melbourne next chance you get of a
-holiday, and don’t stay out here till you get the Darling
-rot. Good-bye.”</p>
-
-<p>‘And so he cantered off on old “BI.” Levison don’t
-go in for much talk in a general way, but when he once
-begins he don’t leave off so easy. I thought he was
-going to talk all night, and so lose a day. But catch
-him at that. I think I’ve told you every word he said,
-for I went and wrote it down as soon as he went away.‘</p>
-
-<p>So far Mr. Banks. Upon the receipt of his artless
-missive, Ernest went at once to Paul Frankston, and
-communicated to him the substance of the message of
-Mr. Levison.</p>
-
-<p>‘This is putting on the pot, my dear boy,’ said he.
-‘If anything happens to shake stock, Rainbar and Mildool
-will tumble down like a house of cards. But now
-the wind is dead fair, and we may venture on studding-sails—crowd
-on below and aloft. I back Levison’s
-opinion that it is the right time to buy before Sticker
-and Pugsley’s notion that it is the right time to sell.’</p>
-
-<p>‘What sort of terms do you think they will require?’
-asked Ernest, who was fired with the idea of consolidating
-into one magnificent property the two crack cattle
-runs of Rainbar and Mildool, the latter a grandly watered,
-splendidly grassed station, but wofully mismanaged according
-to old custom.</p>
-
-<p>‘Half cash at least, and not very long dated bills
-either,’ said Paul, ‘but we can manage the cash on
-your security, as your name now stands high in the
-money market. As to the bills, tell them that I will
-endorse them. They won’t make any objection then.’</p>
-
-<p>‘How much heavier is the load of my obligations to
-you to become?’ asked Ernest. ‘I feel as if I should<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">151</span>
-never live to free myself from the debt I owe you
-already.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Don’t trouble yourself, my dear boy,’ said the liberal
-endorser. ‘If things go well, nothing’s easier for you
-than to clear off every stiver of debt. See how you have
-been able to pay off Levison, principal and interest, out
-of that last lot of cattle, without a shade of difficulty.
-If the rise takes place which Levison and I and some
-more of us anticipate, why you, I, and he stand to win
-something very respectable. You can then give us all a
-cheque for the amount advanced, and the whole thing is
-over and finished. Until the drought broke up, I don’t
-deny that we all had to be very close-hauled, and lay-to
-a good deal from time to time; but now, with bullocks
-eight pounds a head, and fat sheep ten shillings—wool
-up too, and real property rising,—not to mention the
-shipping trade doubling every month,—why, if we can’t
-clap on sail, my boy, we never can, and what the ship
-can’t carry she may drag.’</p>
-
-<p>The old man looked so thoroughly convinced of the
-truth of his convictions as he spoke, with the kindling
-eye and elevated visage of one resolved upon a hazardous
-but honourable enterprise, that Ernest Neuchamp, always
-prone to be influenced by contagious exaltation of sentiment,
-caught fire from his ardent mien and tone.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, so be it,’ he said; ‘I am content to sink or
-swim in the same boat with you and yours. We have
-Ab. Levison for a pilot, and he knows all the rocks and
-soundings of the pastoral deep sea from Penrith to Carpentaria,
-I should say. As you say there’s a time for all
-things, I think this is the time to back one’s opinion
-in reason and moderation. I will go and confront the
-agents for Mildool.’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">152</span></p>
-
-<p>Messrs. Sticker and Pugsley were steady-going, precise
-men of business of the old school. As stock and station
-agents they had always steadily set their faces against all
-outlay except for the merest necessaries of life. Bred to
-their business in the old times when stock were plentiful,
-labour cheap, and cash extremely hard to lay hold of in
-any shape or form, they struggled desperately against
-these new-fangled notions of ‘throwing away money uselessly,’
-as they termed the comparatively large outlay
-which they occasionally heard of upon dams, wells,
-fencing, woolsheds, and washpens. Large profits had
-been made in the good old times, when such speculations
-would have gone nigh to have furnished a warrant <i>de
-lunatico inquirendo</i>. They did not see how it was all to
-be repaid. They doubted the management which comprehended
-such sinful extravagance; and they proposed
-to continue their time-honoured system, which made it
-imperative upon all stockholders who were unlucky
-enough to be in debt to them, to spend nothing, to live
-upon shepherds‘wages, and not to think of coming to
-town until times improved.</p>
-
-<p>One wonders if it ever occurred to these snug-comfort
-loving cits, as daily they drove home to pleasant villas
-and luxurious surroundings—did it ever occur to them,
-after the second glass of old port, to what a life of
-wretchedness, solitude, and sordid surroundings their
-griping parsimony was condemning the unlucky exile
-from civilisation, who was hopelessly chained to their
-ledger? For him no beeswing port, no claret of Bordeaux.
-He drank his ‘Jack the Painter’ tea milkless,
-most probably, and flavoured with blackest sugar, occasionally
-stimulating his ideality with ration rum or
-villainous dark brandy. Though his the brain that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">153</span>
-planned, the hand that carried out long desert wayfarings
-of exploration—long, toilsome drudgeries of stock
-travelling to lone untrodden wilds; his the frame that
-withered, the eye that dimmed, the health that failed,
-the blood that flowed, ere the process of colonising, progression,
-and commercial extension was complete. Thus
-land was occupied, villages sprang up, inter-communication
-was established, and the wilderness subdued. All
-the magnificent results of civilisation were brought about
-over territories of incredible area by the intelligence,
-enterprise, and energy of one individual. And he, too
-often, when the battle was won, the standard hoisted,
-and the multitude pouring over the breach, found himself
-a beggared and a broken man.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Neuchamp, after due preliminaries, entered the
-office of Messrs. Sticker and Pugsley, with whom he had
-an interview by no means of a disagreeable character.
-The senior partner, an elderly, gray-haired personage,
-showed much of the formal politeness which is commonly
-thought to distinguish the gentleman of ‘the old school.’
-He received Ernest courteously, begged that he would
-take a chair, alluded to the weather, deplored the arrival
-of the mosquitoes, to which the rain and the spring in
-conjunction had been jointly favourable, requested to
-know whom he had the honour of receiving, and finally
-desired information as to the particular mode in which
-he could be of service to him.</p>
-
-<p>‘I have been informed,’ said Ernest, ‘that your firm
-are agents for the Mildool station, and that it is in the
-market. I have come to request that you will put it
-under offer to me, as I have some intention of purchasing
-a property of that sort.’</p>
-
-<p>‘We have not as yet advertised it,’ replied Mr.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">154</span>
-Sticker; ‘still, you have been rightly informed that the
-station and stock are for sale. But we do not think of
-offering it upon the usual terms; our own opinion is, I
-do not disguise it from you, that present prices will not
-last. I have been many years in the colony, and such is
-my belief. Mr. Pugsley, whose opinion of the permanence
-of present high rates is better than mine, also
-believes that, with the properties entrusted to us, it is as
-well to be safe, and to take advantage of an opportunity
-that may never occur again. Our terms for Mildool are
-briefly these: We offer four thousand head of mixed
-cattle, above six months old, with, of course, the
-<img src="images/i_158.jpg" alt="M[D]" />
-brand, at five pounds per head, everything given in. I
-am informed that the improvements are scanty and in
-bad repair; there are twenty stock horses, and a team
-of bullocks and dray, two huts, and a stockyard. But,
-perhaps, you know the property, and the appearance of
-the buildings.’</p>
-
-<p>‘The huts <i>are</i> old and bad,’ said Ernest, smiling; ‘and
-as for the stockyard, the Mildool stockmen have for the
-last few years brought their cattle to our yard for safety,
-as you could kick down the Mildool yard anywhere.
-But what is your idea of terms?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Half cash, and the balance in approved bills, at one
-and two years, secured upon the stock and station.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Rather stiff,’ said Ernest; ‘but will you put the
-offer in writing, and leave it open for a week? I will
-before that time give you a decided answer.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Sticker would have much pleasure in doing so.
-As Ernest preferred to wait for the important document,
-it was soon prepared, and he finally marched away with
-a fortune, as it turned out (fate and opportunity are queer
-things), in his waistcoat pocket. He was not too quick<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">155</span>
-in his conditional annexation of this desirable territory.
-Ten minutes afterwards Mr. Hardy Baldacre dashed into
-the office on the same errand, quitting it with a curse
-which shocked Mr. Sticker, and provoked Mr. Pugsley,
-who was young and athletic, to inform him that he must
-not suppose that his money provided him the permission
-to be rude, though it did procure him consideration far
-beyond his deserts. Altogether, Mr. Baldacre felt as if
-his brandy-and-soda had been scarcely so efficacious as
-usual that morning.</p>
-
-<p>When Mr. Neuchamp produced this small but important
-document to Paul Frankston, that commercial
-mentor rubbed his hands with unconcealed satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>‘You’ve got ’em, Ernest, my boy, hard and fast. I
-believe you might make a pound a head, say four thousand
-pounds out of it, in a month. Sticker is a good
-man, according to his light, and Pug’s a sharp fellow.
-But they don’t see, and won’t see, the signs of the times.
-They’re always remembering the old boiling-down days,
-and they fancy that the least change in markets will
-send us back to it. You did right to get the offer in
-writing, and for a deferred time. We’ll keep it a day or
-two, and then you shall go and accept the terms like a
-man.’</p>
-
-<p>‘But how about the money?’ inquired Mr. Neuchamp
-with a shade of natural anxiety. ‘Twenty thousand
-pounds are no nutshells, however little it may sound in
-these extravagant days.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Look here,’ said Paul, ‘find this ten thousand down;
-any agent will give you five thousand on the security of
-your year’s draft of fat stock from the two runs; it will
-come to more, I daresay, but we must be as careful as
-we can. I think that you will have to give a mortgage<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">156</span>
-over Rainbar and Mildool—a second one—and then you
-may draw a cheque for the ten thousand as soon as you
-like.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And what about the “approved” bills?‘</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, the day after to-morrow you can go to old
-Sticker and pay him the half cash. I’ll put the cash
-part of it through; ask him to make out the bills, with
-interest added at 8 per cent; bring them to me, and I
-will put a name on the back which will render them
-legal tender, whatever may come of them after.’</p>
-
-<p>‘The old story since I came to Australia,’ said Ernest.
-‘It seems that I can do nothing without your advice;
-and that your help follows me as a natural consequence—whatever
-I do, and whatever I buy.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, if this shot turns out badly,’ said Paul, ‘I’ll
-promise not to <i>back your bills any more</i>. Will that
-satisfy you? But Levison seems quite determined, “just
-this once,” as the children say, and I generally take his
-tip if I see a chance. I think our money is on the right
-horse.‘</p>
-
-<p>‘I hope so,’ said Ernest, thinking, respectfully, of the
-lovely condition of Rainbar at the moment, and fearing
-lest, by any financial legerdemain, it might be taken away
-from him in time to come.</p>
-
-<p>Before the week was ended, during which the offer of
-Mildool was open for his acceptance, Mr. Neuchamp had
-the satisfaction of handing Mr. Sticker a cheque for ten
-thousand pounds, which he had been obligingly permitted
-by his banker to draw against certain securities, and also
-two bills, with interest added at the rate of 8 per cent,
-for the balance. Upon which somewhat important documents
-being well scanned and examined, and further
-submitted to Mr. Pugsley, who was on that occasion introduced,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">157</span>
-Ernest received an order to obtain delivery of the
-Mildool station, having twenty-four miles frontage to the
-river, and going thirty miles back, with four thousand
-head of cattle, more or less, depasturing thereon, the same
-to be mustered and counted over in six weeks; any cattle
-deficient to be paid for by Sticker and Pugsley, at the
-rate of two-pounds-ten per head, and all cattle in excess
-to be taken by the purchaser at that price. When this
-transaction was concluded—on paper, Mr. Neuchamp
-began to realise that he was having pastoral greatness
-thrust upon him.</p>
-
-<p>Speculation is a grandly exciting occupation, when all
-goes well. When the bark is launched, mayhap with
-tremulous hope, perchance with the reckless pride of
-youth, there is a wondrously intoxicating triumph in
-noting the gradual, ever-deep, engine-flowing tide, the
-steady, favourable gale before which the galley which
-carried Cæsar and his fortunes ‘walks the waters like a
-thing of life,’ and finally conveys the illustrious freight to
-one of the fair havens of the gracious goddess Success.
-A triumph is decreed to Cæsar. Immediately Cæsar’s
-critics become bland, his enemies fangless, his friends are
-pacified—<i>they</i> are always the most difficult personages
-to assuage; his detractors go and detract from others;
-his creditors burn incense before him; his feminine
-acquaintances dress at him, talk at him, sing at him, and
-<i>look</i> at him—oh! so differently.</p>
-
-<p>Cæsar needs all of his unusually powerful mental
-attributes if he does not become abominably conceited,
-and straightway refer the kindness of circumstance to his
-own inherent talent for calculation and brilliant combination.
-Let him haste to place yet higher stakes upon the
-tables, and after the usual fluctuation and flattery of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">158</span>
-Fiend, he arises one day ruined, undone, and despised by
-himself, neglected by others.</p>
-
-<p>The fate of Ernest Neuchamp could never thus be
-told. Naturally too prudent in pecuniary matters to go
-much further than he had good warrant for, he was even
-alarmed at his present comparatively risky position. But
-he had adopted the advice of his best friend, whose former
-counsels had been accurately borne out in successful
-practice. He had taken time to consider. Wiser heads
-than his own were committed to the same results; and
-he was according to his custom, prepared to dismiss
-anxiety, and to await the issue.</p>
-
-<p>Nor was he minded on this account to cut short his
-stay in Sydney. He determined, in accordance with his
-own feelings and Mr. Levison’s suggestion, to give the
-management of the new station to his faithful henchman
-Jack Windsor, who, now that he was married and settled,
-would be all the better fitted to undertake a position of
-responsibility. As for Charley Banks, he should retain
-him as general manager of Rainbar. He ought not even
-to live there always himself. If it kept on raining and
-elevating the fat cattle market <i>ad infinitum</i>, the place
-could be managed with a ‘long arm.’ No reason to bury
-himself there for ever. He might even run home to
-England for a year or so.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile it was not unpleasant to be congratulated
-at the club upon his improved prospects, and his spirited
-purchase of so extensive and well-known a property as
-Mildool. He commenced to divide the honour of rapid
-operation with Mr. Parklands, and found from day to day
-offers awaiting him of desirable properties situated north,
-south, east, and west, with any quantity and variety of
-stock, and of every sort and description of climate and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">159</span>
-‘country.’ Mr. Parklands, to the ineffable disgust of
-Jermyn Croker, had already sold Booroo-booroo and
-Chatsworth at a profit of six thousand pounds, which Mr.
-Croker said he regarded as being taken out of his pocket,
-so to speak. Parklands had, moreover, the coolness to
-say that, if it had been worth his while to keep two such
-small stations on hand for a longer time, he could have
-made ten thousand as easily as the six. Mr. Croker
-objected to the claret and cookery more pointedly than
-usual that day, and the committee and the house steward
-had an evil time of it; that is, as far as contemptuous
-reference may have affected them.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Parklands, now truly in his element, indulged his
-fancy for unlimited speculation and locomotion to the
-fullest extent. He filled the Melbourne markets with
-store stock and fat stock, horses and sheep, working
-bullocks and milch cows, every possible variety of animal,
-except goats and swine. It was asserted that he <i>did</i>
-consider the nanny question, and calculated roughly
-whether a steamer-load of those miniature milchers would
-not pay decently. He ransacked Tasmania for oats,
-palings, and jam, and, no doubt, would have largely imported
-that other interesting product, of which the sister
-island has always yielded so bounteous a supply, could he
-have seen his way to a clearing-off sale when he landed
-the cargo. Finally, he dashed off to Adelaide for a slap
-at copper, and having taken a contract for ‘ship cattle’
-for New Zealand, paused, like another Alexander, awaiting
-the discovery of fresh colonies in which he might revel in
-still more colossal operations.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">160</span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><a name="CHAPTER_XXIX" id="CHAPTER_XXIX">CHAPTER XXIX</a></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>A letter had been despatched to Mr. Windsor’s address,
-of which his master had knowledge, requesting him to
-proceed to Sydney upon important business. Accordingly,
-at an early hour next day he presented himself at the
-club steps and greeted his employer with a subdued air of
-satisfaction, as if doubtful how far his recent decided
-action had met with approval.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am very glad to see you, John,’ said Mr. Neuchamp;
-‘I hope Mrs. Windsor is well. I congratulate you both
-heartily. Yours was a spirited plan, and your success in
-the carrying out, or rather the carrying off, of my old
-friend Carry most enviable. I was afraid there might
-be obstacles. How did you arrange it all? Suppose
-you walk over to the Domain with me, and tell me all
-about it.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Windsor, much doubting if this were the important
-business upon which he had been summoned to town, but
-not unwilling to relate the tale of his victory to so sympathising
-an auditor as he knew his master to be, thus
-commenced—</p>
-
-<p>‘You know, sir, I had a tightish ride to get over before
-I caught the mail. I felt very queer, I tell you, as if I
-didn’t meet that identical coach I should never get down<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">161</span>
-in time. I was horrid frightened every time I thought
-about it, there’s no mistake. I saved Ben Bolt as much
-as I could the first day and bandaged his legs when I got
-to the stable late at night. I did eighty miles that day,
-and dursn’t go farther for fear I might crack him at the
-first burst. I was up with the stars and fed him. I
-didn’t sleep much, you’re sure, and at three in the morning
-I was off for a hundred mile ride! and that heat, <i>a man’s
-life</i>! Mine wouldn’t have mattered much afterwards, if
-I’d lost. I didn’t feel gay just then, and I thought Ben
-Bolt walked out rather stiff. However, he put his ears
-back, and switched his tail sideways, as I mounted. That
-was a good sign. It was all plains, of course, soft, sandy
-road—couldn’t be beat for smoothness, and firm, too. I
-kept him going in a steady hand-gallop, pulling him up
-only now and again during the forenoon. In the middle
-of the day I stopped for three good hours, gave him a
-middling feed—not too much, and got a little water; but
-he got a real good strapping. I stood over the feller
-doing it, and gave him half-a-crown.</p>
-
-<p>‘I’d done fifty miles between three and eleven—I
-wasn’t going fast, you see—but of course the second fifty
-makes all the difference. I began to be afraid he was
-too big. The feed at Rainbar was awfully good, you
-know, sir; but as luck would have it, I’d given him some
-stiffish days after the farthest out cattle, and that had
-hardened him a bit.</p>
-
-<p>‘About two o’clock I cleared out again; saddled him
-myself; saw that his back was all right, and felt his legs,
-which were as cool and clean as if he hadn’t gone a yard.
-I had the second fifty to do before twelve at night. That
-was the time the coach passed, and hardly waited a
-moment, either.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">162</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Off again, and I kept on steady at first, trusting to
-six miles an hour to do it in, and something to spare;
-but every now and again I kept thinking, thinking, suppose
-he goes lame all of a sudden! suppose he jacks up!
-suppose he falls, put his foot into a hole, or anything—rolls
-over me and gallops off, all the men in the world
-wouldn’t catch him! suppose I’m stopped by bushrangers—Red
-Cap’s out, you know;—why don’t they hang
-every scoundrel that turns out the moment he hoists his
-flag?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Because they might reform, John,’ mildly interposed
-Mr. Neuchamp.</p>
-
-<p>‘No fear—that is, mostly, sir,’ continued Jack apologetically;
-‘but they wouldn’t have had the heart to stop
-me; and besides, I expect I could have dusted any of ’em
-with Ben.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, bushrangers or not, I got within twenty miles
-of Boree; and then my head got so full of fancies, that I
-settled to make a call on Ben Bolt, and do it in two hours.
-Suppose the coach was earlier than usual! No passengers,
-or only some young squatter, who wanted to go faster and
-to stop nowhere—and tipped the driver! I’ve seen these
-things done before now.</p>
-
-<p>‘So I took the old horse by the head, gave him a
-hustle and a pull, and, by George, if you’ll believe me,
-sir, he went away with his mouth open, as if he hadn’t
-only been out to the Back Lake. The sun was down
-then, and the night air was coolish. But I knew the
-track well, and as we sailed along, Ben Bolt giving a kind
-of snort every now and then, same as he used to do
-when he didn’t know the place he was going to, I felt
-that I had the field beat, and the race as good as won.
-I thought I could see Carry a-beckonin’ to me at the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">163</span>
-winning-post. I hardly think I pulled up three times,
-I felt that eager, and bound to win or die, before I saw
-the light of the Boree Inn, and the coach stables across
-the plain.</p>
-
-<p>‘“Has the coach from down the river come in yet,
-Joe?” says I to the ostler, trembling all over.</p>
-
-<p>‘“No, nor won’t be this hours yet; you needn’t have
-rode so fast.”</p>
-
-<p>‘“I couldn’t afford to be late,” says I. “Lend us a
-rug while I cool my old horse a bit. He’s carried me
-well this day, if he never does another.”</p>
-
-<p>‘Ben didn’t look beat—nor yet half beat. My belief
-is he could have done another twenty or thirty miles
-without cracking up. But a hundred miles is a hundred
-miles, and no foolish ride, even in this country where
-horses are as plenty as wallabies, such as they are, so
-I did my best for him. I let him rinse his mouth,
-and then I walked him up and down, with the rug on,
-for a solid hour. Of course he broke out at first, but he
-gradually dried and come all right. Before the coach
-started with me on board, he was doing nicely for the
-night, littered down (for we foraged some straw out of
-the bottled ale casks) and eating his feed just as he would
-after a longish day’s muster out back at Rainbar.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I am very glad he carried you so well, John,’ said
-Mr. Neuchamp, at the conclusion of this antipodean
-Turpin’s ride; ‘but how did you speed in the last and
-most momentous stage?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, <i>that</i> was easy drafting enough,’ replied Mr.
-Windsor, who apparently had considered that portion of
-his matrimonial adventure which depended upon horseflesh
-as the really important and exciting part of the
-transaction. ‘I was safe and sound in Parramatta on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">164</span>
-the Thursday afternoon. I heard enough about the grand
-wedding for next day—but I never let on. Said I was
-off by sea to Queensland to look at some store cattle, and
-hired a trap, with a fairish horse, and a boy to mind it,
-which I drove down to the cross-roads, just about a mile
-from the “Cheshire Cheese.” There was an old woodcutter’s
-hut just inside the fence at the corner. So I
-left the boy there, and told him to hold the horse among
-the trees, and not to go away till I came—if it wasn’t
-till dinner-time to-morrow. Of course, I squared him
-right. He was sharp enough; them Parramatta boys
-mostly are.</p>
-
-<p>‘Down I goes to the old house, and marched in quite
-free and pleasant like, to spend the evening for the sake
-of old times. There was Carry looking half dull, half
-desperate, like a mountain filly three days in the pound—as
-I told her afterwards—though she was among her
-own people, in a manner of speaking.</p>
-
-<p>‘There was Homminey, and some other Hawkesbury
-chaps, full of their jokes and fun—my word! if I could
-only have gone in at him and his best man, a great, slab-sided,
-six-foot-three fellow, just about as scraggy as he
-was tallowy, I think I could have spoilt both their figure-heads—one
-up and the other down.</p>
-
-<p>‘However, there wouldn’t have been any sense in
-charging the whole family, like a knocked-up bullock
-meeting a picnic party—as I once saw, and didn’t he
-scatter ’em!—so I put on all the side I could, and laid
-by for a chance.</p>
-
-<p>‘First of all, I shook hands with ’em all round, and
-came the warm-hearted fakement. Said “I’d come to
-say good-bye; they mustn’t think I bore any ill-will—just
-on my way to the north for store cattle, passage<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">165</span>
-taken and all—happened to hear of the wedding to-morrow,
-and thought I’d look in and wish ’em joy.”</p>
-
-<p>‘Then, of course, I threw my money about—must have
-a round of drinks for luck. I never saw a publican yet
-that could refuse to serve a “shout.” Then, of course,
-<i>they</i> must treat me, seeing I was behaving so handsome.
-Then I must have another round for all hands; and last
-of all, I gammoned to be a bit “sprung,” and must propose
-the bride’s health. So I made ’em fill up. Homminey’s
-little round eyes was beginning to twinkle a bit, and old
-Walton was getting affectionate, but Carry’s mother
-watched us both like a cat. I said, “I knowed the bride
-these two years or more, and I proposed her health, and
-that of the good-hearted, honest, straightforward chap as
-was going to marry her to-morrow morning.” This
-fetched ’em about a bit. I said, “I’d knowed him a
-goodish while, and heard tell of him, too, and a better
-feller couldn’t be. After he was married he’d be still
-better,—a deal better, <i>that</i> I could safely go bail for.
-He couldn’t help it, with such a wife. I therefore gave
-the health of Miss Carry Walton and her husband that
-was to be, to-morrow, and no heel-taps.” I never proposed
-my own health before.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, Homminey, after this, came over and squeezed
-my hand in his great mutton fist, and looked at me, as
-if he wasn’t quite sure; then he bust out and said I
-was a real good-natured chap, as didn’t bear malice, and
-I’d always be welcome at Richmond Point.</p>
-
-<p>‘“Right you are, old corn-cob,” says I; “I’ll come
-and see you the very first time you ask me. And now
-let’s have a bit of a dance to finish up with, for my
-time’s short, and I must be off. The steamer leaves at
-daylight.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">166</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Well, between the grog, and being that glad to get
-rid of me, that they’d have done anything to see my back,
-they all agreed to it. There were three or four other
-girls there; one of ’em, his cousin, was fourteen stone if
-she was a pound. I gave her a few turns when the music
-struck up, and then turned to Carry, quite promiskus,
-directly the tune was altered.</p>
-
-<p>‘“Oh dear, oh dear, why did you come?” she said in
-a low tone; “wasn’t I miserable enough before?”</p>
-
-<p>‘“You know the cross-roads?” I says, knocking
-against the tall chap’s partner to drown the words.
-“There’s no time for talking. If you’re as true to me as
-I am to you, will you do as I tell you?”</p>
-
-<p>‘“You know I will,” she said; “what can I do?”</p>
-
-<p>‘“Can you get out of your bedroom?” I says.</p>
-
-<p>‘“No. I don’t know. Yes—perhaps. I think I
-can,” she said in a strange voice, not a bit like her
-own.</p>
-
-<p>‘“Then get away the moment you get to bed—don’t
-stop to take anything with you, but make straight for the
-cross-roads. Inside the trees you’ll see a buggy with a
-boy. Stay with him till I come. It will be there till
-daylight and long afterwards. Will you come, Carry?”</p>
-
-<p>‘“If I don’t come I shall be mad, or locked up, or
-dead,” she said, with such a miserable look on her face
-that I could hardly help kissing her and comforting her
-before them all.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now, the old woman helped us, without wanting to,
-for she says, “Carry, you’re looking like a washed-out
-print frock; do, for gracious sake, go to bed, and sleep
-away your headache. She’s not been well lately, Mr.
-Windsor, and she’s flustered like at seeing strangers, not
-but what you’ve behaved most gentlemanly.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">167</span></p>
-
-<p>‘“I’m afraid she’s thinkin‘about her wedding-dress
-or her veil, or something,” says I. “I wish I could stay
-and see how she looks to-morrow, but I can’t, and business
-is business.”</p>
-
-<p>‘Poor Carry was off before this, with just “Good-night
-all,” which made Homminey look rather glum. I
-ordered another round, saying I must be off; but when
-it was drunk and paid for, I stayed half an hour before
-I shook hands, most hearty, and walked out.</p>
-
-<p>‘The moment I turned the corner of the garden-fence
-I started off, and ran that mile up to the cross-roads as
-if all the blacks on Cooper’s Creek was after me. Just
-as I got to the trap I overtook a woman, with a large
-bundle, labouring along. It never could be—yes <i>it was</i>—Carry!</p>
-
-<p>‘I first kissed her and then scolded her. “Never a
-woman born,” I said, “that could do without a bundle.
-Why didn’t you leave all that rubbish? ain’t you good
-enough for me as you are?”</p>
-
-<p>‘“Oh, John,” says she, “would you have me come to
-you in my—in my one frock? Nonsense! every woman
-must have a little dress.”</p>
-
-<p>‘“Suppose you had been caught?”</p>
-
-<p>‘“But I’m not caught, except by a bushranger, or
-some wild character,” says she, smiling for the first time.
-“I’m afraid poor Harry will not enjoy his dinner to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>‘“Hang him and his dinner!” said I. “He’s all
-dinner. I’ve half a mind to go back and murder him
-now.”</p>
-
-<p>‘But instead of that, we made haste for Appin, after
-giving the boy a pound. And, to make a long story
-short, were married there <i>that day</i>, for it was past twelve<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">168</span>
-o’clock. And Carry’s there with my old mother now,
-and very proud she is of her.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I see, John,’ said Mr. Neuchamp, ‘that you have
-carried out one enterprise with your usual success. The
-other one I want you for, now, is to start at once for
-Rainbar, and to take delivery of Mildool run and stock,
-which I bought last week. They agree to muster in six
-weeks. And you can tell Carry—Mrs. Windsor, I beg
-her pardon—that she is the overseer’s wife at Mildool.
-I have decided to give you the management of that run,
-and I look for wonderful profits from it all this season.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And you’ll get ’em, sir,’ said Mr. Windsor, ‘if there’s
-any faith in a fust chop season, and right-down hard
-work. God Almighty’s given us the fust, and if Jake
-Windsor don’t find the second, he wishes his right arm
-may rot off to the shoulder.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I have no doubt that you will do your best, John,’
-answered Mr. Neuchamp, much gratified by the warm
-gratitude exhibited by one whose fate at one time lay in
-his hand; whose after-career had done so much to justify
-his anxiety for the welfare of his fellow-man. ‘I have
-no doubt that Mildool will be the best-managed station
-on the river—after Rainbar, of course; and that there
-will be a splendid increase this year,—always providing
-that no calf bears my brand—and never mistake me on
-that score—that cannot be honestly provided with a
-mother of the same ownership.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Windsor made a slight gesture of compulsory
-resignation, as of one who feels himself bound down to
-superhuman purity; but he said, ‘You shall be obeyed
-in that, sir; and in every other thing you choose to order;
-though it will come queer to the old hands at Mildool,
-if all tales are true, to kill their own beef, let alone<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">169</span>
-mothering their calves. But <i>your word’s my law</i>! And
-I see now that going straight is the best in the end,
-whether in big things or little. We’ll be off to-morrow,
-Carry and I, and she can hang it out at Rainbar and
-have Tot Freeman to talk to—those chaps ain’t left yet,
-I believe—while I’m taking over the cattle at Mildool.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That will do very well, John. Meanwhile you can
-let a contract for a neat six-roomed cottage at Mildool,
-as there isn’t a place there fit for Piambook and his gin
-to live in. You must consult your wife about the site of
-it, though, as she will have to live in it and spend many
-a day by herself there. Don’t let her regret the snug
-parlour and the old orchard at the “Cheshire Cheese,”
-eh, John?‘</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, it <i>is</i> a great change, now I come to think of it,’
-said Mr. Windsor, the first expression of distrust coming
-over his bold features that had been there exhibited since
-his successful raid upon the lowlanders. ‘I daresay she
-<i>would</i> feel struck all of a heap if she was to come upon
-Mildool old station sudden-like, with the dog-holes of huts,
-and every tree cut down on the sandhill because the
-men were too lazy to go out for firewood, or for fear the
-blacks might sneak on them, and the pile of bones, like
-a boiling down round the gallows. But, thank God!
-there’s grass now, and there’s fat cattle enough in Mildool
-by this time—for they’ve never sent away a beast
-this season, I hear—to build an Exhibition, if it’s wanted.
-Carry’s got me, and I’ve got her, that’s the main thing;
-and I think we shall make shift to jog along. We’ve
-got to do it, and no two ways about it. So, good-bye,
-sir. When shall we see you at Rainbar?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I am afraid that business will detain me in Sydney
-for some weeks longer,’ said Mr. Neuchamp thoughtfully,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">170</span>
-as if mentally calculating the exact day on which he
-might quit the metropolis. ‘But you and Mr. Banks
-will be able to manage the muster easy enough.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Not a bit of bother there need be about it, that I
-can see, sir. We shall have lots of help; every stockman
-within a hundred miles will be there. There’ll be
-an awful big mob of strangers; and the Drewarrina
-poundkeeper hasn’t had such a lift for many a day as he’ll
-get. We must square the tails of every beast that’s
-counted, that’s one thing, so as not to have ’em played
-on to us twice over. I think Mr. Banks is down to most
-moves about cattle work, and what he don’t know I can
-tell him. Good-bye, sir.’</p>
-
-<p>‘By the way, John,’ said Mr. Neuchamp, ‘I shall
-want you to stay in town this evening, if you can spare
-so much time away from Carry. I have to see about the
-draft copy of the sale agreement, which you will take up
-with you and give to Mr. Banks. Mr. Frankston informs
-me that these agreements need to be very strictly carried
-out, and that advantageous purchases <i>have</i> been evaded
-from neglect in doing so. So come out to Morahmee
-this afternoon, when you can have my final instructions.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Neuchamp spent the morning in tolerably close
-attendance upon lawyers and persons addicted to the
-drawing up of those paper and parchment promises
-which, if honour were binding, need never to have
-troubled penman or engrosser. Nathless, human nature
-being what it is, and retaining simian tendencies to steal,
-hide, falsely chatter and closely clutch, the sheepskin
-may not be safely relinquished. Before Mr. Neuchamp
-bethought himself of the mid-day solace of lunch he was
-possessed of a legal document, wherein the exact time
-granted for mustering and several other leading conditions<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">171</span>
-were set forth with such clearness that evasion or misunderstanding
-seemed impossible.</p>
-
-<p>A copy of this all-important document was posted to
-Charley Banks; he brought with him another for the use
-of Mr. Windsor, who might employ his leisure time on
-the journey up in learning it by heart, and so render
-himself able to meet all comers respecting its provisions.</p>
-
-<p>Antonia had expressed a wish to see Jack Windsor,
-and to send a message to his wife before he left town.
-For this reason chiefly Ernest had appointed Morahmee
-as the rendezvous on this particular afternoon. As
-the shadows lengthened, Mr. Neuchamp betook himself
-in that direction, as indeed he had done daily for
-weeks past.</p>
-
-<p>It so chanced that, on the evening before, Antonia
-had received a pink triangular note from Miss Harriet
-Folleton, who was more or less a friend of hers, to say
-that she intended to come and lunch with her next day
-at Morahmee, and would be there, unless her dear Antonia
-wrote to say she couldn’t have her. There was
-not any great similitude of taste or disposition between
-the two girls—one indeed much disapproved of the other.
-But those who have noted the ways of their <i>monde</i> will
-not decide from this statement that Antonia Frankston
-and Harriet Folleton did any the less greet one another
-with kisses and effusion when meeting, or say farewell
-with lavish use of endearing epithets.</p>
-
-<p>Such being the state of matters, it was by no means
-surprising that Harriet Folleton, a girl of great beauty
-and soft, enthralling manner, but of so moderate a development
-of intellect that she might have been called,
-if any one had been so rudely uncompromising as to
-speak the unvarnished truth about so pretty a creature,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">172</span>
-‘a fool proper,’ should arrive in the paternal brougham
-before mid-day, and therefore share luncheon with her
-dear Antonia in much innocence and peace.</p>
-
-<p>It would have been even less surprising to any one
-who had possessed the requisite leisure and opportunity
-to study that fair girl’s ways, that, as the two friends
-were strolling near the strand, where a giant fig-tree
-shadowed half the little bay, a boat should pull round
-the adjoining headland, manned by four man-of-war-looking
-yachtsmen, with the <i>White Falcon</i> on their breasts
-and hat-ribbons, while from the boat, as she ran up
-to the jetty, stepped the gracious form of Count von
-Schätterheims.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, you naughty girl,’ said Antonia, instantly
-divining the ruse, ‘I do believe you planned to meet the
-Count here, and disobey your father. So this coming to
-see me was all deception! How dare you treat me like
-this? I have a great mind to tell your father, and never
-speak to you again.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, pray don’t, Antonia dearest,’ whimpered the softly
-insincere one, ‘I only said I <i>might</i> be here this afternoon;
-and he said he was going off to Batavia, or Russia, or
-India, or somewhere. And papa was so dreadful, that
-I thought there was no harm in it. I shall never see
-him again—oh!’ Here the despairingly undecided
-damsel commenced to weep, and so interfere with the
-natural charms of her fine and uncommon complexion,
-that Antonia, inwardly resolving to restrict the acquaintance
-to conventional limits in future, was constrained
-to soothe and console her. Meanwhile the Count,
-who had been engaged in an earnest colloquy with
-his crew, advanced with his customary gallantry to meet
-them.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">173</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘My boad is on de zhore</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">And my barg is on de zea;</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>is not dat the voord of your boet? I come to make
-farevell to you, Miss Frankstein; to you, Miss Folledon,
-to lay at your veet dis hertz—mein hertz—vich is efer
-for dee so vondly beating.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And are you really going to leave us, Count?’ asked
-Antonia, without any particular interest or otherwise in
-the noble foreigner, of whom she was becoming wearied
-and increasingly distrustful. Then happening to look at
-Harriet Folleton’s face, she saw that she was deathly
-pale, and trembled as if about to fall. The Count, too,
-though complimentary as usual, seemed annoyed and
-uneasy at her presence.</p>
-
-<p>The Count, in answer to the question, pointed to his
-yacht, a beautiful schooner, more fair than honest of
-aspect, and of marvellous sailing powers, which had,
-perhaps, more than any of his reported possessions,
-tended to sustain his prestige since his arrival in
-Sydney.</p>
-
-<p>Antonia’s practised eye at once discerned that she was
-fully equipped for sea. With sails ready to be unfurled
-at a moment’s notice, she could sweep out unchallenged
-and trackless as the falcon on her ensign, before the
-freshening south wind which was even now curling the
-waves with playful but increasing power.</p>
-
-<p>With lightning rapidity she divined the full extent of
-the girl’s imprudence and the Count’s villainy. In the
-same sudden mental effort she resolved, at all hazards,
-to save her companion from the consequences of her inconceivable
-folly.</p>
-
-<p>‘I did vorm de resolution dat I shall bezeegh you
-and Miss Folledon to honour me by paying me von last<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">174</span>
-leetle visit on board de <i>Valgon</i>, dis afdernoon. Mine
-goot friend Paul, he was goming, but de business—dat
-pete noir—he brevent him. He ask me to peg Miss
-Frankstein if she vill, zo also Miss Folledon, vizout her
-fader, to my so-poor-yet-highly-to-be-honoured graft go.
-Dere is izes, one small collation, a few friend. Surely
-you will join dem?’</p>
-
-<p>Here the Count beamed the irresistible smile which
-had through life served him well, and advancing, held
-out both hands to the young ladies.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, do let us go!’ said the reassured weakling. ‘It
-would be so pleasant. It is such a delightful afternoon.
-I should like it of all things.’</p>
-
-<p>But Antonia more than ever distrusted the Count, <i>et
-dona ferentes</i>. She disliked his eye, his wily words, the
-appearance of his swarthy crew, the evidently sea-fitted
-appearance of the yacht. She felt more than ever convinced
-that he had matured a deliberate plot to carry off
-an unsuspecting girl.</p>
-
-<p>Such in truth was the unpardonable sin with which
-the Herr von Schätterheims had resolved to conclude his
-Australian career. Unable to meet the many pressing
-claims upon his finances, the holders of which, he had
-reason to know, were meditating an advance in line;
-having failed in the daring speculations in which, by
-means of humble foreign agents, he had invested the
-small capital with which he had arrived, and the incredibly
-large loans which his assurance and reputation
-for wealth had enabled him to procure,—he had conceived
-the desperate plan which Antonia’s quick intuition
-had discovered. He had determined, by force or fraud,
-to carry off Harriet Folleton, trusting that the irrevocable
-<i>coup</i> once made, time and other considerations would tend<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">175</span>
-to the ultimate wresting of her immense fortune from
-her father’s hands.</p>
-
-<p>Hunted by his creditors and threatened with imprisonment,
-the Count was now desperate. In such a position
-he had, more than once during his career, showed no
-disposition to stick at trifles. His yacht lay within hail—a
-seabird with her great wings plumed for instant
-flight, a Norway falcon looking on ocean from a low-placed
-rocky ridge. His crew of mixed nationality, who
-had followed him through many a clime, were lawless
-and devoted. The hour had come when Albert von
-Schätterheims would stand forth with front unveiled,
-and show these simple dwellers by the shore of the
-southern main what manner of man they had dared to
-drive to bay.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, when Antonia Frankston stepped forward,
-and with head erect and flashing eye interposed between
-the Count and his sacrifice, she confronted a different
-man from the silky, graceful <i>serviteur des dames</i> with
-whom she had often wished, for some instinctive reason,
-to quarrel.</p>
-
-<p>‘I cannot go with you now, nor shall Miss Folleton,
-Count Schätterheims; it would not be right, in my
-father’s absence. Permit us to return to the house.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Beholt me desoladed if Miss Frankstein will not
-honour my poor boad,’ said the Count, as he barred the
-progress of the two young ladies on the somewhat narrow
-green-walled alley which led to the house; ‘but’—fixing
-his eye steadily upon Harriet Folleton—‘I go not forth
-alone; Miss Harriet Folledon, you bromised me. I haf
-your vord. You vill come with me now; is it not so,
-belofet one? Ja! you vill follow de fortunes of Albert
-von Schätterheims, for efer.’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">176</span></p>
-
-<p>He strode forward a pace, and seizing the wrist of the
-frightened girl, spoke rapidly in Spanish, while two of
-his sailors ran up from the boat, to whom he committed
-the half-insensible form of the fainting girl.</p>
-
-<p>Antonia Frankston did not faint or swoon. With
-sudden movement she confronted the Count, with so
-fierce an air and so unblenching a brow that he involuntarily
-stepped back a pace, and made as though to protect
-himself from the onset of a foe.</p>
-
-<p>‘Coward and robber that you are, release her this
-instant,’ she cried.</p>
-
-<p>The Count smiled sardonically. ‘You will parton
-me, mademoiselle, if I redurn you with my complimend
-for your goot opinion. My engachemends is more pressing,
-as you gan pelief.’</p>
-
-<p>On the girl’s face, as she stood with threatening
-aspect—a young Bellona, as yet unversed in battles—burned
-a deeper glow; in her eye flashed a fiercer light
-as she marked the smile on the calm features of the
-Count, which, in her heated fancy, seemed the mocking
-regard of a fiend.</p>
-
-<p>‘She shall <i>not</i> go!’ cried she, springing forward and
-throwing her arms round the neck of the helpless maid.
-‘Oh that my father were here—or Ernest —— Robbers,
-villains, assassins that you are, release her—don’t
-dare to touch <i>me</i>!’</p>
-
-<p>But at this moment, at a signal from their chief, the
-dark-browed, swarthy seamen laid their rude hands upon
-the sacred form of the deliverer herself, and rapidly
-hurried both damsels towards the gig. With one wild
-look to heaven, one frantic gesture of wrath, despair, and
-abandonment, Antonia Frankston betook herself to one of
-the best weapons in her sex’s armoury, and shrieked till<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">177</span>
-every rock and tree within a mile of Morahmee echoed
-again.</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>Carambo!</i>’ said one of the men, ‘we shall have half
-Sydney here before we are clear with these shrieking
-senoritas; have you no muffler for her cursed mouth?’</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>Paciencia</i>, Diego!’ said the Count, ‘harm her not.
-A few minutes will suffice—and then——’</p>
-
-<p>But before further infraction of the liberty of the subject
-could be carried out, Miss Frankston had exhibited
-for some moments the full force of a very vigorous pair
-of lungs. The party had nearly reached the little pier,
-whence so many joyous bands had taken the water, when
-a man came crashing through the shrubbery, and rushed
-furiously at Von Schätterheims.</p>
-
-<p>‘Stand back, Neuchamp!’ shouted the Count, levelling
-a revolver, ‘or you die.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Scoundrel and pirate that you are,’ said Ernest,
-facing him with steady eye, ‘fire! do your worst. By
-heaven, I will tear you limb from limb if you do not instantly
-order your ruffians to desist.’</p>
-
-<p>This rather melodramatic threat was used by Mr.
-Neuchamp, who was cool enough to take in the precise
-aspect of the fray at a glance, more with the intention of
-gaining time than of intimidating five armed men.</p>
-
-<p>He was eminently at a disadvantage as matters stood.
-He was, so to speak, at the Count’s mercy, being at the
-wrong end of his revolver, and that experienced soldier,
-sailor, tinker, tailor, or whatever, indeed, in time past
-might have been his true designation, was far too wary
-to permit him a chance of closing.</p>
-
-<p>The sailors in whose grasp were Antonia and her
-guest had drawn their knives, and were prepared for an
-affray <i>à l’outrance</i>. The two seamen in the boat carried<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">178</span>
-sheath-knives at least. He could not but admit to himself,
-grinding his teeth the while, that he had the hazard
-of beholding his love torn from her home by the rude
-hands of lawless men, or of dying vainly in her defence.</p>
-
-<p>To this latter alternative, could it but avert her peril,
-he was willing, nay anxious, to yield himself. But if—if
-only a short respite could be gained—even now—the
-issue was uncertain. His resolution was taken.</p>
-
-<p>‘Stop your men, Count, while we parley,’ he said, ‘or,
-by the God above us, you shall shoot me down the next
-second, and I tear the false heart out of your breast, if
-you miss. Choose!’ And he stepped forward in the
-face of the levelled weapon.</p>
-
-<p>‘You are mat, like every dummer Englander, I pelief,’
-said the nineteenth-century buccaneer. ‘Why should I
-not kill you for your insults to my honour? But I
-revrain. I would not meddle with the Fräulein Frankstein—she
-dell you herselve, but she try to rop me of
-my shpirit-star—my schatz—bromised prite—I presend
-her to you. I know your sendimend for her. I make
-you my complimend. Her dempers is angelig.’</p>
-
-<p>Here the Count wreathed his face into such a smile
-as the companion of Faust may have worn when Marguerite
-implores the Mater Dolorosa, and spoke rapidly
-with commanding gesture to his myrmidons, who released
-their hold upon Miss Frankston. But Antonia still
-clung with desperate tenacity to the cold hands, the
-corpse-like form of Harriet Folleton.</p>
-
-<p>‘You see she is obstinade—to the death,’ said the
-Count, whose moustache seemed to curl with wrath. ‘It
-is not her affair, or yours; go in beace, gross not my path
-more furder.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I cannot abandon Miss Folleton, nor will Antonia,’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">179</span>
-said Mr. Neuchamp, raising his voice so as to drown a
-peculiar crackling noise in the shrubbery which his ear
-had caught. ‘Do <i>you</i> go in peace, Von Schätterheims?
-Wrong not further the kind hearts that have trusted you;
-betray not hospitality free and open as ever man received.
-I will return with both, or not at all.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Then die, fool!’ hissed the Count, as he raised his
-weapon and fired full at the head of Ernest Neuchamp,
-who at the same moment rushed in and closed, while his
-blood flowed freely from a wound in the forehead, and
-ensanguined his adversary as they grappled in deadly
-conflict.</p>
-
-<p>The accuracy of the Count’s aim, faultless and unerring
-in gallery practice, or at the <i>poupée</i>, of which he could
-drill heart, head, or limb, five times out of six, may or
-may not have been shaken by the sudden apparition of
-Jack Windsor, or by the portentous yell which that
-gentleman emitted, worthy of Piambook or Boinmaroo, as
-he observed the Count in the act of firing at the sacred
-head of his benefactor.</p>
-
-<p>Too late to interpose with effect as he stood on a
-block of sandstone overlooking the scene of conflict, he
-raised his voice in one of the half-Indian cries with which
-the horsemen of the Central Desert are wont to intimidate
-the unwilling herd at the stockyard-gates. The
-sailors started and gazed with astonishment as Mr. Windsor
-sprang recklessly from his elevated post, and cleared
-the rough declivity with a succession of bounds, emulating,
-not unworthily, the hard-pressed ‘flyer’ of his
-country’s forests when the grim gazehounds are close on
-haunch and flank.</p>
-
-<p>Straight as a line for the men that held the captive
-maids went the henchman, and as they hurriedly released<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">180</span>
-their prey and stood on guard, Mr. Neuchamp could have
-offered a votary’s prayer to the patron saint of old England’s
-weaponless gladiators, as he marked the unarmed
-Anglo-Saxon’s rapid unswerving onset.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Though there, the western mountaineer</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Rushed with bare bosom on the spear,</div>
-<div class="verse">And flung the feeble targe aside,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">And with both hands the broadsword plied.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Mr. Windsor so far resembled Donald at Flodden
-Field, that he trusted chiefly to natural strength and
-courage. But none the less did he display an amount of
-coolness and cunning of fence characteristically Australian.</p>
-
-<p>Charging the nearest Frenchman, as he took him to
-be, and indeed in all future relation so described him,
-with the velocity of a mallee three-year-old, he feinted
-with his right hand at the forehead of his foe, and as the
-Mexican-Spaniard, for such he was, raised his arm for a
-deadly stab, he suddenly gripped his wrist, catching him
-full in the face with the ‘terrible left,’ and stretched him
-senseless and bleeding at his feet. Snatching up the
-knife, he had but time to parry a stroke which shrewdly
-scored his right arm, when his other antagonist was upon
-him. Both men glared at one another with uplifted
-knives—for a moment; in the next Mr. Windsor swept
-his antagonist’s outstretched foot from under him with
-a Cornish wrestler’s trick—a lift—a dull thud, and he
-lay on his back, with Jack’s knee on his chest and the
-dangerous knife in the bushman’s belt.</p>
-
-<p>In the meanwhile Miss Frankston, perceiving that the
-men who had charge of the boat showed no disposition to
-quit their station, half dragged, half raised Miss Folleton
-along the path to the verandah steps, halting just within
-sight of the combatants.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">181</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Now, do you prefer being dragged up to the house,
-Von Schätterheims?—by Jove! I shoot you where you
-stand if you resist,’ inquired Ernest of that nobleman,
-whom he had mastered after a severe struggle, and
-whose revolver he now pointed at those classical features,
-‘or will you depart in God’s name, and rid us of your
-presence for ever?’</p>
-
-<p>‘It is Fade,’ said the Count gloomily. ‘He is too
-strong. My shtar is under an efil influence. I will quid
-dese accurset lants. Let your man—teufel dat he is
-with his boxanglais—release my grew, and I go; but stay—I
-am guildy by your laws; why should you release me?’</p>
-
-<p>‘You deserve death for your outrage,’ replied Ernest
-sternly. ‘You could hardly escape lifelong imprisonment.
-But I would not willingly see the man, at whose
-board I have sat, in the felon’s cell. Go, and repent.
-Also—and this is my chief reason—I would willingly
-evade the <i>esclandre</i> which your public trial for this day’s
-proceedings would cause.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ha! not the deet. But the fama—what you call
-“scandall,”’ said the Count wonderingly. ‘But you
-English, you are as efer, a strange—a so wunderlich
-beoples. Still, I go. It is all that is left to Albert von
-Schätterheims in this hemis-vahr—to steal away, like
-the hund, beaden, disgraced, dishonoured. Fahrwohl.
-Dell to the Fräulein my regret, my despair, my shames.
-Under another schtar Albert von Schätterheims mighd
-haf geliebt und gelebt—but all dings is now ofer.’</p>
-
-<p>Ernest stepped back and motioned him to arise, still
-keeping guard. The Count called aloud to his men, one
-of whom still lay beneath Mr. Windsor’s thrall, and the
-other sitting up, all blood-stained, swayed backward and
-forward, as only half recovered from a swoon.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">182</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Let your men go, John,’ said Mr. Neuchamp. ‘The
-treaty of Morahmee is arranged between the high
-contracting powers. They will not renew the war,’ he
-continued, as the Count and Jack’s last antagonist
-between them raised the fainting man and led him down
-to the gig, which in the briefest period was seen heading
-for the yacht as fast as oars could drive her.</p>
-
-<p>‘My word, sir,’ said Mr. Windsor, ‘it looked very
-crooked when I come on the ground. I saw that frog-eating
-mounseer potting you with his squirt like a tree’d
-’possum—both the young ladies, too, being run off to sea
-with, clean and clear against their wills. I don’t hold
-with that sea business at all—it’s dangerous—let alone
-with a boss like the Count, who’s wanted in his own
-country, like as not. However, we euchred ’em this
-time, whoever plays next game.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You behaved like a trump, Jack. You were my
-genuine “right bower,”’ said Mr. Neuchamp with unwonted
-humour and heartiness. ‘Without you we should
-never have won the odd trick. I knew that you were
-just behind me at Woolloomooloo; but I was terribly
-afraid that you could not be up in time.’</p>
-
-<p>‘If one John Windsor’s anyways handy when you’re in
-trouble, sir, you’ll mostly find him there or thereabouts,
-as long as he’s alive, that is. I can’t say afterwards.
-What do you think, sir, about what comes after all this
-rough-and-tumble that we coves call life?’ demanded
-Jack with sudden interest.</p>
-
-<p>‘I don’t think too much about it, which is perhaps
-the best wisdom. But of this we may be sure, John,
-that no man will fare worse in the other world for doing
-his duty as a man and a Christian in this.’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">183</span></p>
-
-<p>When the house was reached, it appeared that Miss
-Folleton had been handed over to the good offices of her
-friend’s maid, and was recovering her nervous system in
-the seclusion of a guest-chamber. Antonia, having
-smoothed her hair, and rearranged herself generally,
-awaited the victor in the verandah. She stood gazing
-seawards with a haughty air of defiance, which still
-savoured of the fray. The light of battle had not faded
-from her eye; a bright flush embellished with rare and
-wondrous beauty the untinted marble of her delicate
-features.</p>
-
-<p>As she stood, unconsciously statuesque, and gazed
-half unheeding in her rapt regard of the flying bark, the
-long-loved, fast-thronging, magical glories of the evening
-ocean-pageant,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse indent20">... the day was dying:</div>
-<div class="verse">Sudden the sun shone forth; its beams were lying</div>
-<div class="verse">Like boiling gold on ocean, strange to see;</div>
-<div class="verse">And on the shattered vapours, which defying</div>
-<div class="verse">The power of light in vain, tossed restlessly</div>
-<div class="verse">In the red heaven like wrecks in a tempestuous sea.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>‘It is you,’ she said, suddenly turning towards Ernest
-with a look of praise and gratitude almost childlike in
-its absence of reserve. ‘How can I, how will my father,
-ever thank you for this day’s deeds? I had given up
-all for lost; that is, as far as that foolish Harriet was
-concerned. They should have torn me limb from limb
-before they should have placed us in their boat. Then
-I determined to fight for Harriet, to—yes! I believe
-that is the word, for I really felt the real fighting spirit
-all over—it is not such a very unpleasant sensation as
-one would think. I was quite <i>exaltée</i>, and if I had had
-a revolver, I think the Count would have paid forfeit<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">184</span>
-with his life, whatever might have come after. Papa
-would kill him now if they met.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Is there no fear of such a meeting?’</p>
-
-<p>‘None, thank Heaven!’ said Antonia, ‘though he
-deserves the worst in the shape of punishment. Sydney
-has seen the last of him. Look!’ she cried, as every
-sail on the long, low, beautiful schooner filled as if by
-magic, and the graceful craft, leaning to the full force of
-the strong south wind, swept forth towards the sea-way.</p>
-
-<p>‘He is safe from pursuit,’ she continued, ‘even if
-tidings could have been sent at the instant. With this
-breeze behind him, there is nothing in Sydney which
-would not be hull down behind the <i>White Falcon</i> before
-day broke. Of course he will steer for one of the
-northern ports, or else for the Islands. They must have
-had every sail tied with spun-yarn, so as to be ready to
-unfurl at a moment’s notice. To you alone, and to that
-brave Jack Windsor, it is due that we are not miserable
-captives in yonder flying bark. I shudder to think
-of it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I should have done little without John,’ said Mr.
-Neuchamp. ‘He came up like Blücher at Waterloo, and
-I was as impatiently awaiting his arrival as the Duke.
-Here—receive Miss Frankston’s thanks, John; then,
-with her permission, you can go and ask the butler for
-some beer. I daresay you feel equal to it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You have behaved this day, John Windsor, like a
-brave man and a true Australian,’ said Antonia, giving
-her hand to Jack, which he shook carefully and with
-much caution, relinquishing the dainty palm with evident
-relief. ‘My father will know how to thank the rescuer
-of his daughter; and she will remember you as a gallant
-fellow and a friend in need all the days of her life.’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">185</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Thank you, miss,’ said Mr. Windsor, with a
-respectful yet puzzled air. ‘I’ve had many a worse
-shindy than this in my time, and got no thanks either—’tother
-way on, ‘ndeed. But of course I couldn’t help
-rolling in, seeing the master double-banked, and you
-young ladies being made to join a water-party against
-your wills. Don’t you have no more truck with them
-boats, miss; they’re too uncertain altogether. Nothing
-like dry land to my taste; even if the season’s bad,
-there’s a something to hang on by. My respects, miss,
-and I’ll try that beer; my throat’s like a bark chimney
-with the soot afire.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And now I must order you, Mr. Neuchamp, to
-betake yourself to your room. Look in the glass and
-see if your complexion hasn’t suffered. Was it the
-Count’s blood which flowed, or did you scratch your face
-with the prickly pear hedge? Let me look! Merciful
-heaven!’ exclaimed the girl, with a half scream, as she
-narrowly scanned her deliverer’s face; ‘why, there is the
-deep trace of a bullet on your temple. How providential
-that it was the least bit wide—a slight turn of your
-head—a shade nearer the temple, and you would have
-been lying there dead—dead! How awful to think of!’</p>
-
-<p>Here she covered her face with her hands. Tears
-trickled through the slender palms as her overwrought
-feelings found relief in a sudden burst of weeping.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Neuchamp’s attempts at consolation would
-appear not to have been wholly ineffectual, if one may
-judge from the concluding sentences of rather a long-whispered
-conversation, all carried on prior to the
-lavation of his gory countenance.</p>
-
-<p>‘I always thought,’ said Antonia, smiling through her
-tears, with as much satirical emphasis as could coexist<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">186</span>
-with so sudden an access of happiness, ‘that you wanted
-some one to take care of you in Australia. I fear I
-have been led into undertaking a very serious responsibility.’</p>
-
-<p>‘May it not be the other way?’ very naturally inquired
-Ernest. ‘If I had not been, as Jack would say,
-“there or thereabouts” to-day, some one might have
-been a pirate’s bride, after all. Miss Folleton, of course,
-had prior claims, but——‘</p>
-
-<p>‘But—please to go and render yourself presentable,
-this instant. We shall have such an amount of talking
-to do before we can put poor dear old pappy in possession
-of all the news. Good gracious, how can we ever tell
-him? How furious he will be!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Will he?’ inquired Ernest, with affected apprehension;
-‘perhaps we had better defer our——’</p>
-
-<p>‘I don’t mean <i>that</i>—and you know it, sir; but, unless
-you wish to be taken for a pirate yourself, or an escaped
-I-don’t-know-what, you will do as I tell you.’</p>
-
-<p>So Ernest was fain to do as he was bid, commencing,
-unconsciously indeed, that period of servitude to which
-every son of Adam, all unheeding, is pledged who rivets
-on himself the flower-wreathed adamantine fetters of
-matrimony. He sought Mr. Frankston’s extremely comfortable
-dressing-room, at the behest of his beloved
-<i>châtelaine</i>; and very glad he was to find himself
-there.</p>
-
-<p>His sense of relief and general congratulation was,
-however, slightly alloyed by the thought of the stupendous
-amount of explanation and narrative due to Paul Frankston,
-when this now fast-approaching hour of dinner
-should arrive.</p>
-
-<p>‘I would it were bedtime, and all well,’ groaned he,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">187</span>
-in old Falstaff’s words, as he addressed himself to the
-rather serious duties of the toilette.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Frankston arrived from town but a few minutes
-before the dinner-hour, and, like a wise man, made at
-once for his room.</p>
-
-<p>‘Only just time to dress, darling,’ said he to his
-daughter. ‘Got such a budget of news; met Croker
-just as I was coming out, tell Ernest. No end of news—quite
-unparalleled. You will be surprised, and so
-will he.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And so will you,’ thought Mr. Neuchamp, who just
-came into the hall in time to hear the concluding sentence.
-But he darkly bided his time.</p>
-
-<p>As the dinner-bell rang, forth issued Mr. Frankston,
-radiant with snowy waistcoat and renovated <i>personnel</i>,
-having the air at once of a man in good hope and
-expectation of dinner, also conscious of the possession of
-news which, however sensationally disastrous, does not
-prejudicially affect himself.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now then,’ he said, the soup having been disposed
-of, and the mildly stimulating Amontillado imbibed,
-‘what do you think has become of our friend—or, rather,
-your friend, Antonia, for you never would let me abuse
-him—the Count von Schätterheims?’</p>
-
-<p>‘What indeed?’ replied Antonia, looking at her
-plate.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, he has bolted, levanted, cleared out, on board
-his famous yacht, the <i>White Falcon</i>, for some northern
-port—Batavia, the Islands, New Guinea—no one
-knows.’</p>
-
-<p>‘How about money matters?’ inquired Ernest.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, you both take it coolly, I must say,’ said Paul,
-hurt at the small effect of his great piece of ordnance.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">188</span>
-‘As to money, all Sydney, in the legitimate credit way,
-is left lamenting. He had been operating very largely
-of late, and his losses and defalcations are immense.
-Yorick and Co.’s bill for wines and liqueurs is something
-awful.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Alas, poor Yorick!’ said Ernest, with so pathetic an
-emphasis that Antonia could not help laughing.</p>
-
-<p>‘You two seem very facetious to-night,’ quoth Paul
-with dignity. ‘It is no laughing matter, I can tell you.
-But you won’t laugh at <i>this</i>, I fancy. Croker told me
-that it was everywhere believed that he had persuaded
-that unhappy, infatuated girl Harriet Folleton to accompany
-him in his flight.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Frankston uttered these last words with a deep
-solemnity, imparted to his voice by the heartfelt pity
-which, at any time, he could have felt for the victim in
-such a case.</p>
-
-<p>His daughter and Ernest were sufficiently ill-bred to
-laugh.</p>
-
-<p>‘Hang me if I understand this!’ he commenced, in
-tones of righteous indignation; and then, softening, ‘Why
-Antonia, dearest, surely you must pity——’</p>
-
-<p>‘Papa, she is upstairs and in bed at this very moment,
-so she can’t have run away with the Count. There
-must be a mistake somewhere.’</p>
-
-<p>‘So there must, so there must,’ said Paul, instantly
-mollified, and addressing himself to his dinner. ‘I’m a
-hot-tempered old idiot, I know. But there’s no mistake
-about the Count’s debts, or the Count’s flight. He was
-sighted by No. 4 pilot cutter that brought in the English
-liner, the <i>Cumberland</i>, this evening, steering nor’-nor’-east,
-and before such a breeze as will see him clear of
-anything from this port before daylight.’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">189</span></p>
-
-<p>‘He has gone, safe enough,’ said Ernest; ‘indeed, we
-watched him go through the Heads from the verandah—a
-most fortunate migration, in my opinion. He has
-conferred an immense benefit upon the country by
-leaving it, which I trust he will confirm by never
-returning.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Then you saw him go from here?’ inquired Mr.
-Frankston. ‘Was he close enough for you to see him?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well,’ admitted Ernest, ‘he certainly <i>was</i> close
-enough to see, and, indeed, to feel; but it’s rather a long
-story, and if you’re going to smoke this evening, we can
-have it all out on the verandah.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I think I must go and see how my visitor is getting
-on,’ said Antonia; ‘and as I feel tired, I will make my
-farewell for the evening.’</p>
-
-<p>Was there in the outwardly formal handshaking a
-sudden instinctive pressure? Was there in the hasty
-glance a lighting up of hitherto lambent fires in the clear
-depths of Antonia’s deep-hued eyes—an added, half-remorseful,
-half-clinging tenderness in the never-omitted
-caress which marked her evening parting with her father?
-If so, that father was all unconscious, and the outward
-tokens were so faint as to have been invisible to all but
-one deeply interested, near-sighted observer.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am much relieved to find that poor girl Harriet
-Folleton has not been carried off, after all, by that
-scoundrel, who has taken us all in so splendidly,’ growled
-Paul. ‘Of course, now the mischief is done, all kinds of
-reports are going about the city as to his real character.
-People say he was a valet, or a courier; others, a supercargo,
-who ran away with that pretty boat he brought
-here. He certainly had a very good notion of handling
-a yacht.’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">190</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Let me tell you, then, that it is chiefly owing to
-your daughter’s courage and unselfish determination to
-save her friend at all hazards, that Harriet Folleton is
-not now a captive in yonder yacht, hopelessly lost and
-disgraced,’ announced Mr. Neuchamp, commencing his
-broadside.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, you don’t tell me that the scoundrel came
-<i>here</i> and attempted any violence?’ said the old man,
-rising excitedly and performing the regulation quarter-deck
-walk up and down the verandah, while he dashed
-his ignited cigar excitedly out over the lawn. ‘If I
-knew—if I had known this day that he dared to set his
-foot upon these grounds with a lawless purpose towards
-any guest of Antonia’s, I’d have followed him to the
-Line and hanged him at his own yardarm.’</p>
-
-<p>As the old man uttered these very decided sentiments,
-somewhat at variance with the Navigation Act and international
-usage, his brow darkened, his eye gleamed with
-pitiless light, and his arm was raised with a gesture
-which indicated familiarity with the cutlass and the
-boarding-pike.</p>
-
-<p>‘You must not excite yourself,’ said Ernest, laying
-his hand kindly on the old man’s arm. ‘Remember,
-first of all, that the offender is beyond pursuit; that he
-was baulked in his evil purpose, and that he suffered
-ignominious defeat, chiefly through the timely help of
-Jack Windsor, who assisted me to rout the attacking
-force.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Good God!’ exclaimed the old man. ‘Attack—defeat;
-what has happened? and I sat gossiping at the
-club, while you were defending my home and my
-honour!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Could I do less? However, you had better hear the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">191</span>
-whole story straight out. No harm has been done, and
-the enemy was routed with loss.’</p>
-
-<p>The story was told. Full justice was done to
-Antonia’s heroism. Jack Windsor’s prowess received its
-meed of praise. His own fortunate overthrow of the
-Count by good luck and a little more practice in wrestling
-than continental usages render familiar, was slightly
-alluded to. Finally, he explained his reasons for assisting
-the escape of Von Schätterheims, and thereby confining
-the scandal of his attempted abduction to the
-narrow limit of the actual participators in the affray.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Frankston walked the deck of a long-departed
-imaginary vessel so long without speaking that Ernest
-feared some rending typhoon of wrath after the enforced
-calm. But the event justified his best surmises. Placing
-his hand upon his guest’s arm, Paul said, in a voice
-vibrating with emotion—</p>
-
-<p>‘I see in you, Ernest Neuchamp, a man who this day
-has saved my honour and my life—hers, to whom this
-poor remnant of existence is but as this worthless weed.’
-(Here he cast from him the half-consumed cigar.) ‘From
-this day forth you are my son—take everything that I
-can give. Paul Frankston holds nothing back from the
-man who has done what you have done this day. I am
-but your steward—your manager, my dear boy, henceforward.’</p>
-
-<p>‘There is <i>one</i> of your possessions—the most precious,
-the most priceless among them,’ answered Ernest, holding
-up his head with a do-or-die sort of air, ‘and that one I
-now ask of you. We are past phrases with each other.
-But you will understand that I at least do not undervalue
-the worth of Antonia Frankston’s heart, of your
-daughter’s hand!’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">192</span></p>
-
-<p>Mr. Frankston once more paced the long-faded deck
-and communed with the broad and heaving deep. Then
-he turned. His eyes, from which the strange fire had
-faded wholly out, had a softened, perhaps somewhat
-clouded light.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ernest Neuchamp,’ he said, ‘if this day has witnessed,
-perhaps, the most bitter insult, the deepest
-humiliation to which Paul Frankston has ever been subjected,
-it has also witnessed his greatest joy. Take her—with
-her old father’s blessing. You have, what he
-considers, earth’s greatest treasure; and it is no flattery,
-but honest liking, when he swears that you are worthy
-of her. As far as human look-out can see over life’s
-course, Paul Frankston’s troubles and anxieties are over.
-Now I can take my cigar again.’</p>
-
-<p>More than one cigar was needed to allay the old
-man’s overstrained nervous system. Long they sat and
-talked, and saw the moon rise higher in the star-gemmed
-sky, casting a broader silver flame across the tremulous
-illumined deep; while between Ernest Neuchamp and the
-old man again stood a shadowy, diaphanous, divinely-moulded
-form, turning into an elysian aroma the scent
-of Paul’s cigars, and echoing the secret gladness of each
-thought, which in that hour of supernal loveliness and
-unutterable joy flowed from the bared heart of Ernest
-Neuchamp.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>On the next morning Aurora in person must have
-attended to the proper arrangement of the dawn, the
-breakfast-hour, and other small matters which, apparently
-trivial, tend unquestionably to that due equilibrium
-of the nervous system, without which comfort is impossible
-and exhilaration hopeless.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">193</span></p>
-
-<p>Thus, Miss Folleton, having slept well, appeared
-renovated and just becomingly repentant. Antonia was
-severely happy, Mr. Neuchamp calmly superior to fate,
-and Mr. Frankston so hilarious that his daughter had
-to interpose more than once.</p>
-
-<p>That ambrosial repast concluded, Antonia departed
-for town in the carriage, and straightway delivered up
-Miss Folleton to her rejoicing relatives, who had suffered
-anxiety in her absence. Hers was an impressionable,
-shallow nature, recovering easily from moral risks and
-disasters—even from physical ills. Her appetite reasserted
-itself; her love of life’s frivolities, temporarily
-obscured, brightened afresh; and long before the legend
-of the debts, the daring, the disappearance of the Count
-von Schätterheims had been supplanted by newer scandal,
-her cheek had recovered its wonted bloom, her step its
-lightness in the dance, and her mien its touchingly
-dependent grace.</p>
-
-<p>In due time she had her reward; for she captured,
-after a short but brilliant campaign, consisting of an
-oratorio, a lawn party, and three dances, an immensely
-opulent northern squatter. She looks fair and pure as
-the blue sky above her, as she rolls by, dressed <i>à
-merveille</i>, in the best-appointed carriage in Sydney. But
-for happiness—who shall say?</p>
-
-<p>In the meanwhile, unlimited pleasure-seeking and
-universal admiration supply a reasonable substitute.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">194</span>
-
-
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak"><a name="CHAPTER_XXX" id="CHAPTER_XXX">CHAPTER XXX</a></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Mr. Neuchamp, having now occasional leisure to reflect,
-discovered that he was provided with an extensive and
-valuable property which he <i>had</i> partly come to Australia
-to seek, and with an affianced bride, whom he had not at
-all included among his probable possessions. As for the
-great project of Colonial Reform, which had stood out
-grandly dominating the landscape in the future of his
-dreams, with the solitary exception of the conversion of
-Jack Windsor, he could not aver that he had accomplished
-anything.</p>
-
-<p>His co-operative community had notably failed in
-practice. But for the aid and counsel of Mr. Levison, it
-might have overthrown his own fortune, without particularly
-benefiting the individuals of this society.</p>
-
-<p>Whenever he had acted upon his own discretion, and
-in furtherance of advanced views, he had been conspicuously
-wrong. Where he had followed the ideas of others,
-or been forced into them by circumstances, he had been
-invariably right. Where he had been generous, he had
-been deceived; where he had been cautious, he had
-found himself extravagant in loss; where he had been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">195</span>
-rash, riches had rolled in upon him with flowing tide.
-His most elaborate estimates of character had been
-ludicrously erroneous. His advice had been inapplicable,
-his theories unsound. Practice—mostly blindfold—had
-alone given him a glimmering knowledge of the relatively
-component parts of this most contradictory, unintelligible
-antipodean world.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Neuchamp, having reached the very visible landmark
-of an engagement in his pilgrimage of love, was
-much minded to press for an immediate union, believing,
-now that the rain had come, there existed no rational
-impediments in the way of this last supreme success.
-Well-informed persons will know that no such outrage
-upon <i>les convenances</i> could for a moment be tolerated.
-Baffled but not despondent, he returned to the charge
-with such determination that the event was fixed to take
-place in about two months, as being the earliest hour anything
-so dreadful could be thought of.</p>
-
-<p>So much being gained, Ernest became speedily aware
-that being at all hours and seasons subject to the raids of
-milliners‘attendants and others was a state of existence
-out of harmony with a poet’s soul. Thus, after divers
-unsatisfactory and interrupted interviews with Antonia,
-he took his passage by the mail, and heroically started for
-Rainbar.</p>
-
-<p>This brilliant combination of business with necessity
-would, he thought, serve to while away the weary hours
-between the scorned present and the beautiful future.
-Rainbar and Mildool had to be visited at some time or
-other. Although the luxurious life of the metropolis had
-gained upon him, Ernest Neuchamp always arose, Antæus-like,
-fresh to the call of duty.</p>
-
-<p>When he quitted the railway terminus and entered
-the mail-coach which was to convey him to his destination,
-the full magnitude of the mighty change of season<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">196</span>
-burst upon him. During his stay in Sydney the short,
-bright southern spring-time had been born and was ripening
-into summer, with what effect upon plant life it was
-now a marvel of marvels to see.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Neuchamp’s novitiate had been served during the
-latter years of a ‘dry cycle.’ He had seen fair growth of
-pasture towards Christmas time, but of the amazing crop
-of grass and herbage uncared for, wasted, or burned, in
-what Mr. Windsor called ‘an out-and-out wet season,’ he
-had no previous experience.</p>
-
-<p>From the moment that the coach cleared the forest
-parks which skirted the plains, Ernest found himself
-embarked upon a ‘measureless prairie,’ where the tall
-green grass waved far as eye could see in the summer
-breeze. A millennium of peace and plenty had apparently
-arrived for all manner of graminivorous creatures. How
-different was the aspect of these ‘happy hunting grounds,’
-velvet-green of hue, flower-bespangled, brook-traversed,
-with the forgotten sound of falling waters ever and anon
-breaking on the ear, with hum of bee and carol blithe of
-bird, as the sleek-coated, high-conditioned coach-horses
-rattled the light drag merrily over the long long road!
-What a wondrous transformation! Would Augusta, <i>la
-belle cousine</i>, have believed that all this glorious natural
-beauty had been born, grown, and developed ‘since the
-rain came’?</p>
-
-<p>When at length the journey was over, and the proprietor
-of Rainbar and Mildool was deposited, with his
-portmanteau, at the garden gate of the former station,
-Mr. Neuchamp was constrained to confess that he hardly
-knew his own place. There had been much growth
-and greenery when he left with the fat cattle; but the
-riotous extravagance of nature in that direction could<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">197</span>
-not have been credited by him without actual eye-witness.</p>
-
-<p>Around the buildings, the garden fence, the stockyard,
-the cowshed, was a growth of giant herbage, composed of
-wild oats, wild barley, marsh-mallows, clover, and fodder
-plants unnamed, that almost smothered these humble
-buildings and enclosures. A few milch cows fed lazily,
-looking as if they had been employed in testing the comparative
-merits of oilcake and Thorley’s cattle-food, for an
-agricultural experiment. The river-flats below the house
-were knee-deep in clover and meadow grasses, causing
-Mr. Neuchamp to wonder whether or no it would be
-worth while to go in for a mowing-machine and a few
-horse-rakes, for the easy conversion of a fraction of it
-into a few hundred tons of meadow hay, to be stored
-against the next, ‘dry year.’ The mixed grasses, as he
-had tested in a small way, made excellent hay. But how
-far off looked such a calamity! Thus ever with ‘youth
-at the prow and pleasure at the helm’ do we lightly
-measure the future, recking neither of stormy sky nor of
-the ravening deep.</p>
-
-<p>After Mr. Neuchamp had sufficiently admired the
-grassy wilderness, thoughts arose respecting dinner, and
-also a feeling of wonder where everybody was. The
-station appeared to be minding itself. The cook was
-absent, though recent indications of his presence were
-visible in the kitchen. Charley Banks was away and Jack
-Windsor, probably at Mildool; also Piambook, whose
-open countenance and dazzling teeth would have been
-better than nothing. Where was Mrs. Windsor, <i>née</i>
-Walton? He had rather looked forward to having a
-talk with her under new conditions of life. She could
-not be at Mildool, as there was no shelter for a decent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">198</span>
-woman there. What in the name of wonder had become
-of them all? There were no Indians in this country, or
-he might have turned his thoughts in the direction of
-Blackfeet or Comanches, the ‘wolf Apaché and the cannibal
-Navajo.’ Not even a Mormon settlement handy
-enough to organise a ‘mountain-meadows massacre’! He
-never thought Rainbar so lonely before. He went into
-the cottage, and in a leisurely way unpacked his portmanteau
-in the snug bedroom which he had so long inhabited—where
-he had so often, before the rain came, lain down
-in sorrow and arisen in despair. What a tiny wooden
-box it seemed! Yet he had thought it comfortable, even
-luxurious. Like those of many other distinguished travellers
-and heroes long absent from the scene of early conflict
-or youthful habitation, the eyes of Mr. Neuchamp
-had altered their focus.</p>
-
-<p>After three months’ familiarity with the lodging of
-clubs and villas, the neat but necessarily contracted
-apartments of his bush cottage appeared like cupboards,
-or even akin to a watch-box which he had once dwelt in
-at Garrandilla.</p>
-
-<p>However, he knew by former experience that a week
-or two of station life would restore his vision, his appetite,
-and his contentment with the district. Further than
-that he did not go. At the present price of cattle, it was
-not likely that he would need ever again to spend as
-many months consecutively at Rainbar as he had devoted
-to that desirable but isolated abode before the ‘drought
-broke up.’</p>
-
-<p>Having had ample time for comparison and appropriate
-reflections, he was at length set free from the
-apprehension that he was the sole inhabitant of Rainbar
-by the appearance of old Johnny, the cook, who expressed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">199</span>
-great delight and satisfaction at seeing him, and, explaining
-his absence by the statement that he had taken a
-walk of five miles down the river in order to buy a bag
-of potatoes from a dray loaded with those rare esculents,
-proceeded to place him in possession of facts.</p>
-
-<p>‘Every one about the place was away mustering at
-Mildool,’ he said, ‘including Mr. Banks, both the blackfellows,
-Jack Windsor, and even Mrs. Windsor, who,
-finding that there was an unoccupied hut formerly belonging
-to a dairyman at Mildool, had joined the mustering
-party. He (Johnny) hadn’t had a soul to talk to for
-three weeks since the muster began, and was as miserable
-as a bandicoot.’</p>
-
-<p>The old man bustled about, laid the cloth neatly, and
-cooked and served an inviting meal, which Ernest, after
-the reckless preparations supplied to coach passengers,
-really enjoyed. It was far into the night when the
-sound of horses‘hoofs was heard, and Mr. Banks, carrying
-his saddle and bridle, which he placed upon the verandah,
-let go his courser to graze at ease, entered the spare bedroom,
-undressed, and was in bed and asleep all in the
-space of about two minutes and a half, as it seemed to Mr.
-Neuchamp, from the first sound of his arrival. He did
-not care to make himself known to the wearied youngster,
-and reserved that sensation, very wisely, as might be
-many other pieces of news and matters of business, until
-morning light.</p>
-
-<p>With the new day arising, the active youth was much
-astonished, and even more gratified, to find his employer
-again under the same roof. At the daylight breakfast of
-the bush—<i>de rigueur</i> when unusual work of any kind is
-going forward—he favoured Ernest with a full recital of
-all the exciting news.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">200</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Everything was well as could possibly be. All the
-cattle at Rainbar were fat as pigs—all the “circle dot”
-cattle, all Freemans‘lot, which had really turned out a
-famous bargain. A dealer from Ballarat had been up a
-week since, and to him he had sold the whole of the
-Freeman horses at fifteen pounds a head, cash, young and
-old. He didn’t think, when old Cottonbush put the brand
-on them, that they’d ever see a ten-pound note for the
-whole boiling. He had the dealer’s cheque—a good one
-too, or he wouldn’t have taken it—for twelve hundred
-and fifteen pounds! There were just eighty-one head.</p>
-
-<p>‘As for the back country, it looked lovely. Grass and
-water everywhere. The Back Lake was full; the river
-was bank high, and if there was a flood—a regular big
-one—he wouldn’t say but what the water might flow into
-the canal after all and fill the Outer Lake. By the way,
-there were some back blocks for sale at the back of Rainbar
-and Mildool, and if he had his way they should be
-bought, as it would give them the command of all the
-back country as far as Barra Creek, and keep other
-people from coming in by and by, and perhaps giving
-trouble; nothing like securing all your back country
-while it is cheap.</p>
-
-<p>‘With regard to Mildool, it was the best bargain he
-(Charley Banks) had ever seen. All unbranded stock
-were to be given in, and there would be calves and yearlings
-enough to brand to pay two years’ wages to every
-man employed on both runs. They had pretty well got
-through the count; there would be a two or three hundred
-head over the muster number, which would be no
-harm, and it was only ordinary store price for half fat
-cattle broken in to the run. As to fat stock, you might
-go on to any camp and cut out with your eyes shut; you<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">201</span>
-couldn’t go wrong; they were all fat together, young and
-old. Mooney, the dealer, stayed a night last week, and
-said he would give seven pounds all round for a thousand
-head, half cows, to be taken in three months. He
-thought it was a fair offer. It saved all the bother of
-sending men on the roads, and when you let the mob out
-of your yard you get your cheque, or draft, as the case
-might be. He was always for selling on the run, as long
-as the buyers were known men.‘</p>
-
-<p>‘How was Mrs. Windsor?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, she was a brick—a regular trump—something
-like a woman! When she found Jack would only come
-back from Mildool once a week, she inquired whether
-there was any sort of a hut that could hold a small
-family at Mildool; was told there was the old dairyman’s
-hut at Green Bend, about a mile from the station.
-So she said she would rather live in a packing-case than
-be separated from her husband; and as Mildool was to
-be their home, they might as well go there at once. The
-end of it was that she made Jack take her traps over,
-and she has got the old place so neat and comfortable
-that any one might live there, small as it is, and enjoy
-life. She was a downright sensible woman, as well as a
-deuced good-looking one, and she would make Jack a rich
-man before he died.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Was there anything else to tell?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, not much. He was going to let Jack have
-Boinmaroo at Mildool, and keep Piambook here; when
-they mustered at either place they could join forces.
-Oh! the Freemans. Well, they had all gone a month
-back. Joe and Bill had gone to take up more land in
-the Albury district. Wish them joy wherever they go.
-We’re quit of them, that’s one comfort. Abraham Freeman<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">202</span>
-and his lot cleared out for his old place at Bowning.
-They’ll do well there in a quiet way. Poor Tottie was
-sorry to leave Rainbar, and cried like fun. Had to comfort
-her a bit when the old woman wasn’t looking. It’s
-a beastly nuisance having other people’s stock on your
-run, and other people’s boys galloping about all over the
-country, whether you like it or not. Was deuced glad
-to see their teams yoked and their furniture on, I can tell
-you. Suppose you’d like to ride over to Mildool, now
-you are here?’</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Neuchamp thought he might as well, although
-fully satisfied that the muster would have been satisfactorily
-completed without him. So the two men rode
-over that day and had a look at the humours of a
-delivery muster.</p>
-
-<p>There was, as usual, great skirmishing about the
-ownership of calves temporarily separated from their
-maternal parents, one stockman averring that he remembered
-every spot on a certain calf’s hide since its
-early infancy, others corroborating his assertion that it
-‘belonged to,’ or was the progeny of, his old black
-‘triangle-bar’ cow; Mr. Windsor, as counsel for the
-Crown, declaring, on the other hand, that no calf should
-leave the Mildool run unless provided with a manifest
-mother, then and there substantiating her claim to
-maternity by such personal attentions or privileges as
-could not be fabricated or misunderstood. To him the
-adverse stockman would remark that, if he was going to
-talk like that, he might stick to every blessed clear-skin
-on the river. Mr. Windsor retorting that he doesn’t say
-for that, but if people think they can collar calves for the
-asking, they’ve come to the wrong shop when they ride to
-Mildool muster. And so on, and so on.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">203</span></p>
-
-<p>Nathless, in course of time all things are arranged,
-in some shape, with or without a proportionate allowance
-of growling, as the men say. It being apparent
-that Mr. Windsor, now full-fledged overseer of Mildool,
-knows a thing or two, and will stand up stoutly for his
-master’s rights, fewer encroachments are, let us suppose,
-attempted.</p>
-
-<p>The cattle are counted and finally gathered, and are
-discovered to exceed, by three hundred odd, the station
-number. The former manager feels complimented that
-he has been able to muster beyond his books. The purchaser
-is satisfied, as the additional cattle are merely
-charged to him at store cattle price, and, being ‘to the
-manor born,’ will swiftly ‘grow into money.’ The strange
-stockmen depart, carrying with them a large mixed drove
-of strayed cattle. The ex-overseer pays his men and
-then leaves for down the country, there to wait on the
-agents, and receive his <i>congé</i> or further employment, as
-the case may be. Charley Banks and the black boys,
-Jack Windsor, and Mr. Neuchamp are left in undisputed
-possession of the new kingdom.</p>
-
-<p>With such a season, with such prices ruling, the
-management is the merest routine work, a few hundred
-calves to brand, arrangements to make for an early
-muster to show the herd to the great cattle-dealer, who
-wants to buy a thousand head fat to be taken away in
-three months, and paid for by his acceptance at that
-date. Mr. Mooney happens to come before Ernest leaves
-for Sydney, and the negotiation being successful, the new
-proprietor of Mildool sets out for the metropolis with a
-negotiable bill in his pocket for seven thousand pounds—more
-than a third of the purchase-money of the run.</p>
-
-<p>While Mr. Neuchamp was possessing his soul in tranquillity<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">204</span>
-at Rainbar, he was surprised at receiving a letter
-from his erstwhile Turonia comrade, Mr. Bright. That
-cheerful financier wrote as follows:</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p class="psig">
-<span class="smcap">Turonia</span>, <i>10th December 18—</i>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">My dear Neuchamp</span>—I hear you are to be married to the nicest
-girl in Sydney. I thought it only reasonable, considering our two
-or three larks here, to offer my congratulations; and, by the bye,
-talking of things happening, that fellow Greffham, whom you remember
-my helping to arrest, was hanged last Wednesday at
-Medhurst.</p>
-
-<p>The evidence, joined to his paying away the numbered notes,
-known to be in the escort parcel, was awfully strong against him.
-He made no confession, and was as cool and unconcerned to the
-very last, as you and I ever saw him at the billiard-table. What
-a wonderful uphill game he could play! It is just possible he
-might have got off; but Merlin fished up additional evidence
-which fixed him, in the eyes of the jury, I think—-the groom
-at the inn, who swore he saw a small parcel covered with a gray
-rug on his saddle, as he returned from the direction of Running
-Creek, which he had not when he passed up. You ought to
-have seen him and Merlin look at each other when Merlin asked
-the Crown prosecutor to have Carl Anderson called. It was a
-‘duel with eyes.’ But, even without that, I don’t see how he
-could have accounted for the notes.</p>
-
-<p>I happened to be in Medhurst the day he was to be turned off.
-I received a message that he wanted to see me, so I went to the gaol.
-I knew the sheriff well. They showed me into his cell at once.</p>
-
-<p>When I got in, Greffham nearly had finished dressing, and had
-only to put on his frock-coat to be better turned out, if possible,
-than he was for the lawn party Branksome gave when the Governor
-came up. He happened to be cleaning his teeth—you remember
-how white and even they were—as I came through the door.</p>
-
-<p>‘Sit down, old man,’ he said, just as usual, shying his toothbrush
-into the corner of the cell. ‘I daresay they’ll do; and I
-suppose I shan’t want <i>that</i> any more. What should you say?
-’Pon my soul, there isn’t a chair to offer you; devilish close about
-furniture, aren’t they now? But it’s very kind of you, Bright, to
-come and see a fellow, when he’s—well—peculiarly situated, eh?’</p>
-
-<p>Here he laughed quite naturally, I give you my word—not forced<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">205</span>
-at all. He certainly <i>was</i> the coolest hand I ever saw; and he died
-as he lived.</p>
-
-<p>‘What I wanted to see you for, Bright, was this’—here his voice
-shook and he <i>did</i> appear to show a little feeling—‘you’ll take these
-two letters for me, like a good fellow; one I want you to send to —— after
-I am gone; the other you can open <i>then</i>. Make what use you
-like of the contents. I shan’t care then; say nothing <i>now</i> to gratify
-curiosity. As to what I may have done, or not done, I hold myself
-the best judge of my reasons. You know what my life has
-been. Open and straightforward, if somewhat reckless. My cards
-have always been on the table. I have risked all that man holds
-dear on a throw before. This time I have lost. I pay the stakes;
-there is no more to be said. Lionel Greffham is not the man to
-say “I repent.” He is what he is, and will die as he has lived.
-My time on earth has not been spun out much, but, measured by
-enjoyment, with a front seat mostly at life’s opera, it adds up fairly.
-Give me a Havannah from your case. You will see me pretty
-“fit” for the stage when they ring in the leading performer. By
-the way, I told them to give you my revolver; and while I think
-of it, just remember this, if you want to make <i>very close shooting</i> at
-any time, only put in three parts of the powder in the cartridge.‘</p>
-
-<p>I really believe these were his last words, except to the —— hang-man.</p>
-
-<p>He finished his cigar, and lounged up to the gallows, where he
-died in the face of a tremendous crowd, calmly and scornfully, just
-as he was accustomed to bear himself to them in life. Jack Ketch
-was a new hand, and nervous. I heard Greffham say, just as if he
-was rowing a fellow for awkwardness in saddling his horse, ‘You
-clumsy idiot, what are you trembling for? Hang me, if I can see
-what there is to make a fuss about! I’ll bet you a pound I tuck
-you up in ten minutes without any baggling. <i>Now</i>, you’re right.
-Am <i>I</i> standing quite square?’</p>
-
-<p>‘You’re all right, sir,’ the man said respectfully. The drop fell,
-and poor Greffham (I can’t help saying it, although he was a precious
-scoundrel) died without the least contrition. Showed perfectly good
-taste to the last. Deuced rum people one meets on a goldfield, don’t
-you, now?</p>
-
-<p>I suppose you’re not likely to come this way again. We’re not
-quite so jolly as we were. The Colonel has gone back to India. Old
-De Bracy has got a good Government appointment, for which he
-looks more suited than market-gardening, though he was hard to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">206</span>
-beat at that, or anything he tackled. I hear you’ve made pots of
-money. Parklands was here the other day, and told me. I have
-a deuced good mind to turn squatter myself. My regards to old
-Frankston, and ask him if he remembers the last story I told him.
-Ha, ha!—Yours sincerely,</p>
-
-<p class="psig">
-<span class="smcap">John Wilder Bright</span>.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Now the great muster and delivery at Mildool was
-over and everyday life at Rainbar had again to be faced,
-Ernest began to feel like one Alexander, sometimes called
-Great, who had conquered his way into the kingdom of
-Ennui. He was the possessor of a fortune and of a bride,
-both above his utmost hopes, his loftiest aspirations; but
-he began to fear that he had lost that which leaves life
-very destitute of savour—he feared with a new and
-terrible dread that he had lost his Occupation!</p>
-
-<p>For life seemed so much more easy, so much less
-necessary to take thought about, now that he had two
-stations than when he had but one—one likely to be
-wrested from him. So is it that Difficulty is oft our
-friend in disguise, Success but the veiled foe which smiles
-at our faltering footsteps and watches to destroy. He
-saw now, that with Jack Windsor at Mildool, and Charley
-Banks, alert, energetic, fully experienced, at Rainbar, his
-life henceforth would be that of a visitor, a supernumerary—unless
-indeed he employed his mind in the
-construction and organisation of ‘improvements’! Ha,
-ha! ’<i>Vade retro</i>, Sathanas!‘ The Genie was safe immured
-in his brazen sealed-up vessel. There should he
-remain.</p>
-
-<p>Still was there one ‘improvement’ in which he had
-never altogether lost faith, long and dispiriting as had
-been the divorce between formation and utility. This
-was the cutting the connecting channel between the Back
-Lake and the ‘Outer Lake.’ Long had the ‘master’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">207</span>
-ditch’ been as useless as a fish-pond in the bosom of the
-Sahara, as a rose-garden in a glacier, as an oyster-bed in
-a steppe. Cattle had walked over it; grass had grown
-in it; stockmen and thoughtless souls had jeered at it,
-and at the English stranger who had thrown away upon
-its construction the money of which he possessed a
-quantity so greatly in excess of his apparent intelligence.
-As long as he remained the proprietor of the run, it
-would be hardly in keeping with the manner of the bush
-to call it ‘Neuchamp’s Folly.’ But had failure or absence
-chanced to occur in his case, the satirical nomenclature
-would not have been deferred for a week. In the solitary
-rides and musings to which, in default of daily work and
-labour, Mr. Neuchamp was fain to betake himself, it
-chanced that he had repeatedly examined that portion of
-this great sheet of water, which rang with the whistling
-wings of wild fowl, and on breezy days surged with long
-rippling waves against its bank.</p>
-
-<p>While in Sydney a number of back blocks, at no
-greater distance from this outer lake than it was from
-the former ‘frontage,’ had been put under offer to him.
-What if he should accept the terms—the price was low—and
-trust to the chance of the next great flood in the
-full-fed chafing river sending the water leaping down his
-tiny canal, and thus giving a value never before dreamed
-of to this splendidly grand but unnatural region. In
-spite of his half-settled determination to accept no other
-speculative risks, but, like a wise man, to rest contented
-with proved success, the next post conveyed instructions
-to Messrs. Paul Frankston and Co. to close for all the
-blocks, each five miles square, from A to M, comprising
-all the unoccupied country at the back of Rainbar and
-Mildool, at the price named.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">208</span></p>
-
-<p>On the following morning the weather was misty and
-unusually cloudy, with an apparent tendency to rain.
-No rain fell, however; but the raw air, the unusual
-bleakness of the atmosphere, seemed abnormal to Ernest
-Neuchamp.</p>
-
-<p>‘I should not wonder,’ said Mr. Banks, in explanation,
-‘that it was raining cats and dogs somewhere else, snowing,
-or something of that sort. Perhaps at the head of
-the river. If that’s the case, we shall have a flood and
-no mistake. Such a one as none of us has seen yet.
-However, we’ve neither hoof nor horn nor fleece on the
-frontage. It can’t hurt us, that’s one comfort.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Banks’s prognostications were correct. Within
-three days—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse indent7">... like a horse unbroken,</div>
-<div class="verse">When first he feels the rein,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">The furious river struggled hard,</div>
-<div class="verse">And tossed his tawny mane,</div>
-<div class="verse">And burst the curb and bounded,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Rejoicing to be free,</div>
-<div class="verse">And whirling down in fierce career</div>
-<div class="verse">Battlement and plank and pier,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Rushed headlong to the sea.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Battlement and plank and pier were in this case
-represented by hut slabs and rafters, haystacks and pumpkins,
-from the arable lands and meadows through which
-the great river held its upper course; while drowned
-stock and the posts and rails of many a mile of submerged
-fencing represented the latter floating trifles.
-There was much that was grand in the steadily deepening,
-broadening tide which slowly and remorselessly
-crawled over the wide green flats, which undermined the
-great waterworn precipices of the red-clayed bluffs, bringing
-down enormous fragments and masses, many tons in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">209</span>
-weight, which fell, foamed, and disappeared in the turbid,
-hurrying wave. Who could have recognised in this fierce,
-swollen, tyrant river, yellow as the Tiber, broad as the
-Danube, resistless as Ocean, the shallow, pellucid streamlet,
-rippling over its sandy shallows, of the dead, bygone
-famine year?</p>
-
-<p>On the larger flats it was miles wide. The white,
-straight tree-trunks stood like colonnades with arches
-framed in foliage, disappearing in endless perspective
-above a limitless plain of gliding waters.</p>
-
-<p>By night, as Mr. Neuchamp awoke in his cottage,
-which was built upon an elevation said by tradition to
-be above the reach of floods, the ‘remorseless dash of
-billows’ sounded distinctly, unpleasantly close in the
-darkness.</p>
-
-<p>On the following day, the flood still continuing to
-rise, Piambook was despatched to the Back Lake to
-report, and upon his return stated that ‘water yan along
-that one picaninny blind creek like it Murray, make
-haste longer Outer Lake.’ Full of hope and expectant
-of triumph, Mr. Neuchamp started out for ‘Lake country,’
-accompanied by Mr. Banks.</p>
-
-<p>When they arrived at the first lake the unusual
-fulness and volume of the water in that reservoir showed
-that the main stream must have been forced outwards
-along the course of the ancient, natural channel, by which
-in years of exceptional high floods—and in those years
-only—the lake had been filled.</p>
-
-<p>Now, thought Mr. Neuchamp, the hour, long delayed,
-long doubted, has surely come. Who could have dreamed
-but a few short months since, when our very souls were
-adust and athirst with perennial famine, that our eyes
-should behold the sight which I see now? How should<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">210</span>
-it teach us to hoard the garnered gold of truth, the
-‘eternal verity’ in our heart of hearts! ‘My lord delayeth
-his coming.’ Was that held to be a reason, an
-excuse for the unfaithful, self-indulgent? Truly this
-would seem to some as great a miracle as the leaping
-water which followed the stroke of the prophet’s staff in
-that other desert of which we read of old.</p>
-
-<p>And now his eyes did actually behold the first trickling,
-wondrous motion of the brimming reservoir to
-advance, gravitation-led, along the narrow path to its far-distant
-sister lake. Slowly the full waters rose to the
-very lip of the vast natural cup or vase, and then, first
-saturating the entrance, poured down the narrow outlet
-which the forecasting mind of man had prepared for it.
-It trickled, it flowed, it ran, it coursed, foaming and
-rushing, along the cutting, of which the fall at first exceeded
-that of the general passage. It was done! It
-was over! A proud success!</p>
-
-<p>Charley Banks threw up his hat. Together they rode
-recklessly onward to the Outer Lake, and there Ernest
-Neuchamp enjoyed silently the deep satisfaction—then
-known but to the projector and inventor—of witnessing
-the waters of the Inner Lake, for the first time since the
-sea had ceased to murmur over these boundless levels,
-flow fast and flashing forward, driven by the pressure of
-the immense body behind, into the vast, deep, grass-clothed
-basin of the Outer Lake.</p>
-
-<p>This was a triumph truly. For this alone it was
-worth while to have journeyed across the long long
-ocean tide, to have toiled and suffered, waited and
-watched, to have eaten his heart with fear and sickening
-dread of the gaunt destroyer ‘Ruin,’ ever stalking
-nearer and nearer. This was true life—real adventure—the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">211</span>
-hazard and the triumph which alone constitute
-true manhood.</p>
-
-<p>In the ecstasy of the moment Ernest Neuchamp forgot
-the fortune he had gained, the bride whom he had won,
-the home of his youth, the grand and glorious future, the
-not uneventful past. All things seemed as dreams and
-visions by the side of this grand and living Reality.</p>
-
-<p>As he sat on his horse and gazed, still flowed the
-glorious wave into the century-dry basin by the channel
-which he, Ernest Neuchamp, had, in defiance of Nature,
-opinion, and society, conceived, formed, and successfully
-completed. Seasons might come and go; another dry
-time might come; the water might periodically evaporate
-and disappear,—but nothing could evade the great fact
-henceforth in the history of the land, that he had established
-the connection between the river and this distant,
-long-dry, unthought-of reservoir. There would be no
-more hint or menace of Neuchamp’s Folly—more likely,
-Neuchamp’s River.</p>
-
-<p>Lake Neuchamp! Pshaw! it was an inland sea.
-Why not name it now? Why not render immortal, not
-his own perhaps ancient patronymic, but the lovely and
-beloved name of his soul’s divinity? Now was the hour,
-the minute, when the virgin waters were falling for the
-first time in creation into the flower-besprinkled lap of
-the green earth before their eyes!</p>
-
-<p>‘Charley, my boy,’ he said to Mr. Banks, ‘take off
-your hat. Piambook, do liket me,’ he said, removing his
-own. ‘I name this water, now about to be filled for the
-first time within the memory of man, “Lake Antonia.”
-So mote it be. Hip, hip, hurrah!‘ and the echoes of the
-waste rang to the unfamiliar sounds of the great British
-shout of welcome, of salutation, of battle-joy, of death-defiance,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">212</span>
-which England’s friends and England’s foes have
-had ere now just cause to know.</p>
-
-<p>‘Hurrah!’ joined in Charley Banks with genuine
-feeling. ‘By George! I never thought to see this sight—last
-year particularly; but, of course, we might have
-known it wasn’t going to be dry always, as Levison said.
-We don’t see far beyond our noses, most of us. But it
-<i>was</i> hard to conjure up any notion of a regular out-and-out
-waterfall like this with a twelvemonth’s dust, and
-last year’s burnt feed keeping as black as the day it took
-fire. I believe there will be thirty feet of water in this
-when it’s full up, and it soon will be at this rate.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Budgeree tumble down water that one,’ said Piambook.
-‘Old man blackfellow yabber, debil-debil, make a
-light here when he yan long that one scrub.’</p>
-
-<p>Another occasion of congratulation awaited Mr. Neuchamp,
-the pleasure and pride accompanying which were
-perhaps only second in degree to the feelings inspired by
-the engineering triumph of Lake Antonia. His stud of
-Austral-Arabian horses had shared in the general advance
-and development of the property; they were now a perfect
-marvel of successful rearing.</p>
-
-<p>He had them brought in daily from the sandhills near
-the plain where they ordinarily grazed, and passed hours
-in reviewing the colts and fillies, the yearlings, the mares
-and the foals. Every grade and stage, from the equine
-baby which gambolled and frisked by the side of its dam,
-to the well-furnished three-year-old filly—‘Velut in latis
-equa trima campis ludit exsultim, metuitque tangi,’—all
-were satin-coated, sleek and round, fuller-fleshed, stronger,
-swifter; more riotously healthy could they not have been
-had they been fed with golden oats in an emperor’s stable.
-Daintily now they picked the half-ripened tops from the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">213</span>
-fields of wild oats or barley which spread for leagues
-around. They drank of the pure clear waters of every
-pool and brooklet. They lay at night in the thickly-carpeted
-sandy knolls, and snuffed up the free desert
-breeze, fresh wafted from inmost sands or farthest seas.
-Partaking on one side of their parentage of the stately
-height and generous scope of their southern dams, culled
-from the noble race of island steeds which bear up the
-large frames of the modern Anglo-Saxon, they inherited
-a strong, perhaps overpowering infusion of the priceless
-blood of the courser of the desert. Their delicate heads,
-their wide nostrils, their adamantine legs, their perfect
-symmetry, all told of the ancient lineage of Omar the
-Keheilan, whose dam was Najima Sabeh or the Morning
-Star, of the strain Seglawee Dzedran, which, as every
-camel-driver of the Anezeh knows, dates back to El
-Kamsch, that glorious equine constellation, the five mares
-of Mahomet!</p>
-
-<p>Here, again, was another instance of what Ernest
-could not but acknowledge gratefully as the generosity of
-Fate. Had but the season continued obdurate, his utter
-irrevocable ruin could not have been stayed. As a consequence,
-this stud, so precious, so profitable, so distinguished
-as it was apparently destined to be (for Mr.
-Banks told him that numbers of offers had already been
-received for all available surplus stock, while the agent
-of a large dealer had implored him to put a price upon
-the whole stud), would doubtless have passed under the
-hammer as most unconsidered trifles, to be sneered at,
-scattered, for ever wasted and lost, as had been many a
-good fellow’s pet stud ere now.</p>
-
-<p>At length the day arrived when, having witnessed the
-satisfactory conclusion of every conceivable business duty<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">214</span>
-and task which could be transacted at Rainbar or Mildool,
-Mr. Neuchamp took his place in the mail for Sydney,
-which city he had calculated to reach within a week of
-the dread ceremonial which was to seal his destiny. The
-coach did <i>not</i> break down or capsize, fracturing Mr.
-Neuchamp’s leg in two places. The train fulfilled its
-appointed task, and the stern steam-giant did not select
-that opportunity for running off the rails or equalising
-angles. Something of the sort might have been reasonably
-expected to happen to a hero so near the rapturous
-denouement of the third volume, in which, indeed, every
-hero of average respectability is killed, mysteriously imprisoned,
-or married.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Neuchamp had undergone trials and troubles,
-risks and anxieties, losses and crosses; but the season of
-tribulation was for ever past for him. He had henceforth
-but to submit to the compulsory laurel crown, to the
-caresses of Fortune’s favourite delegates, to listen to the
-plaudits of the crowd, to withstand the whispers and
-glances of beauty. He was now wise, beautiful, strong,
-and brave, a conqueror, an Adonis—in a word, he was
-<i>rich</i>!</p>
-
-<p>He stood successful, and the world’s praises, grudgingly
-bestowed upon struggling fortitude, were showered
-upon the obviously victorious speculator. All kinds of
-rumours went forth about him. His possessions were
-multiplied, so that Rainbar and Mildool stood sponsors
-for a tract of country about as large as from Kashgar to
-Khiva.</p>
-
-<p>The canal was magnified into the dimensions of its
-namesake of Suez, and a trade was prophesied which
-would overshadow Melbourne and revolutionise Adelaide.
-He had contracted for the remount service for the whole<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">215</span>
-Madras Presidency, such a matter being quite within the
-scope of his immense and high-bred studs. His herds of
-cattle were to supply Ballarat and Sandhurst with fat
-stock, and Melbourne buyers were on their way to secure
-everything he could deliver for the next two years!
-Ernest Neuchamp of Rainbar was the man of the day;
-the popular idol. Squatter though he might be, some of
-Jack Windsor’s grateful utterances had been circulated,
-and a democratic but strongly appreciative and generous
-populace adored him. Portraits of Mr. Neuchamp and
-his faithful retainer, Jack Windsor, contending victoriously
-with a swarthy piratical crowd, led on by the
-Count with a cutlass and a belt full of revolvers, appeared
-in the windows of the print-shops. Heroism and unselfish
-generosity, like murder, ‘will out.’</p>
-
-<p>Whether accidentally or otherwise, the Morahmee
-conflict had transpired. I make no reflections upon the
-well-known inviolable secrecy which shrouds all postnuptial
-communications. I content myself with stating
-a fact. Mr. Windsor was now a married man.</p>
-
-<p>Ernest was at first annoyed, then surprised, lastly,
-unaffectedly amused, when a highly popular dramatic
-version of the incident appeared at the Victoria Theatre,
-wherein he was represented as defying the Count, and
-assuring him that ‘berlood should flow from Morahmee
-Jetty to the South Head Lighthouse ere he relinquished
-the two maidens to his lawless grasp,’ while Jack Windsor’s
-representative, with a cabbage-tree hat and a hanging
-velvet band broad enough to make a sash for Carry,
-placed himself in an exaggerated, pugilistic attitude, and
-implored the foreign seamen to ‘come on and confront
-on his own ground, by the shore of that harbour which
-was his country’s pride, a true-born Sydney native!’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">216</span>
-This brought down the house, and occasioned Mr.
-Neuchamp such anguish of mind that he began to think
-Jermyn Croker not such a bad fellow after all, and to
-feel unkindly towards the great land and the warm-hearted
-people of his adoption.</p>
-
-<p>Incapable of being stimulated by flattery into a false
-estimate of himself, these exaggerated symptoms of appreciation
-but pained him acutely; they disturbed his
-philosophical mind, ever craving for the performance of
-justice and intolerant of all lower standards of right.</p>
-
-<p>As for Antonia Frankston, like most women, she was
-gratified by these tokens of the distinction which had
-been so profusely accorded to her hero. He was a hero
-who, in her eyes, though worthy of triumphs and processions,
-evaded his claims to such distinctions. He was
-too prone, she thought, to be over Scriptural in his social
-habitudes, and unless roused and incited, to take the
-lower rather than the higher seat at the board. Now
-that the people, wavering and impulsive, but still a
-mighty and tangible power, had endorsed and adopted
-him, Antonia’s expansive mind recognised the brevet
-rank bestowed upon him. After all, had he not done
-much and dared greatly? Was it not well for the world
-to know it? If he was to be decorated, few deserved it
-more. So Antonia accepted serenely and in good faith
-the plaudits and universal flattery which now commenced
-to be showered upon the hero of her choice, the idol of
-her heart, the image of all written manhood.</p>
-
-<p>The days which Mr. Neuchamp spent in Sydney after
-his return from Mildool and Rainbar were certainly more
-tedious than any which he had ever known in the pleasant
-city; but at length they passed away and were no more—strange
-thought! those atoms from the mighty mass<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">217</span>
-of Time—drops from his flowing river—draughts, alas!
-quaffed or spilled from life’s golden chalice. They were
-past, faded, dead, irrevocably gone, as the days of the
-years before Pharaoh, before the shepherd kings, before
-the dawn of human life, Eden, or the first gleam of light
-which flashed upon a darkened, formless world!</p>
-
-<p>Sad, pathetic even, is the death of a day! Its circling
-hours have known peace, joy, loving regard, social glee,
-charity, justice, mercy, repose. The allotted task has
-been done. The parent’s smile, the wife’s love, the babe’s
-prattle, have all glorified earth during its short season.
-And now the day is done! its tiny term is over, lost in
-the shoreless sea of past immensities! The brightly inconstant
-orb shines tenderly on the new-born stranger,
-full of joyous hope or dread expectancy. Who can tell
-what this, the new and garish day, may bring forth?
-Let us weep for the loved, fast-fading Child of Time, in
-whose golden tresses, at least, twined no cypress wreath.</p>
-
-<p>Then, heralded by calm and cloudless hours, did the
-wondrous unit, the Day of Days, dawn for Ernest Neuchamp.
-Rarely—even in that matchless clime, where
-the too ardent sun alone may be blamed by the husbandman,
-rarely by the citizen or the tourist—did a more
-perfect, unrivalled, wondrous day steal rosy through the
-ocean mists, the folded vapours, to change into fretted
-gold and Tyrian dyes the tender tints of flushed dawn.
-All nature visibly, audibly rejoiced. The tiny wavelets
-murmured on the milk-white sands of the Morahmee
-beach, that their darling—she who loved them and talked
-with them in many a hushed eve, in many a solemn
-starry midnight—was this day to be wed. The strange
-foreign pines and flower trees of the Morahmee plantation,
-brought from many a distant land to please the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">218</span>
-lady of the mansion, echoed the sound as they waved to
-and fro with oriental languor and tropical mystery. The
-flowerets she daily tended turned imperceptibly their
-delicately various sheen of petals to each other and
-sighed the tender secret. With how many secrets are
-not the flowers entrusted? Have they not been sworn
-to silence since those days of the great dead empires,
-when the vows and pleadings, songs and laughter, beneath
-the rose-chaplets were sacred evermore?</p>
-
-<p>Her gems, of which Antonia had great store—for
-there was more difficulty in preventing Paul from overlading
-her caskets than of replenishing them—even they
-knew it. They flashed and glittered, and reddened, and
-sent out green and purple light, for they are envious,
-hard, and remorseless of nature, as they noted the arrival
-of a bediamonded necklace, and a brooch outshining in
-splendour any of their rich and rare and very exclusive
-‘set.’</p>
-
-<p>The pensioners, her dependants, of the house, among
-the humble, and the very poor, knew it and raised for
-her welfare the brief unstudied prayer which comes from
-a thankful heart. The poor, in ordinary acceptation, are,
-and have always been, in Australia, difficult to discover
-and to distinguish. But to the earnest quest of the unaffectedly
-charitable, anxious to do good to soul or body,
-to succour the tempted, to help the needy, to save him
-that is ready to perish, worthy occasions of ministration
-have never been absent from the outskirts of every large
-city.</p>
-
-<p>The forlorn spinster, friendless and forsaken, the
-overworked matron,—the shabby genteel sufferers too
-secure to starve, too poor to enjoy, too proud to complain,
-and, occasionally, what seemed to be an example of unmerciful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">219</span>
-disaster,—among these were the rich maiden’s
-unobtrusive but unremittingly performed good works, of
-which none heard, none knew, but the recipients, and
-perhaps the discreetest of co-workers.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>And thus, with the day just dawned, had the maiden
-life of Antonia Frankston come to an end. From this
-day forth her being was to merge in that of one who,
-falling with the suddenness of a shipwrecked mariner
-into their society, had been, as would have been such a
-waif, treated with every friendly office, with the ample
-up-springing kindness of a princely heart, by her fond
-father. That father, no mean judge of his fellow-man,
-had seen in his early career but the noble errors of a
-lofty nature and an elevated ideal. Such disproportions
-between judgment and experience but prove the natural
-dignity of the mind as fully as the precocious wisdom of
-the gutter-bred urchin waif, his base descent and companionship.</p>
-
-<p>Paul Frankston had long foreseen that, when the
-lessons of life should have cleared the encrustation from
-the character of his <i>protégé</i>, it would shine forth bright
-and burnished as Toledo steel—all-sufficient for defence,
-nay, equal to spirited attack, should such need arise.
-He saw that the future possessor and guardian of his
-soul’s treasure was a ‘man’ as well as a ‘gentleman.’
-On both of these essentials he laid great weight. For
-the rest, his principles were high and unfaltering, his
-habits unimpeachable. Whatever trifling defects there
-might be in his character were merely such as were
-incident to mortality. They must be left to the influence
-of time, experience, and of Antonia.</p>
-
-<p>‘If she doesn’t turn him out a perfect article,’ said<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">220</span>
-Paul, unconsciously quitting the mental for the actual
-soliloquy, ‘why, nothing and no one can. If I had been
-any one else, and she had commenced early enough at
-me, I really believe that she’d have changed old Paul
-Frankston into a bishop, or, at any rate, a rural dean at
-least; even Charley Carryall——’</p>
-
-<p>But whether Captain Carryall’s utterances and anecdotes
-were scarcely of a nature calculated to harmonise
-with bishops and deans, or whether Mr. Frankston’s
-many engagements at this important crisis suddenly
-engaged his attention, can never be known with that
-precision which this chronicler is always anxious to
-supply. One thing only is certain, that he looked at
-his watch, and hastily arising from his arm-chair, departed
-into the city.</p>
-
-<p>For the information of a section of readers for whom
-we feel much respect and gratitude, it may be mentioned
-that the wedding took place at St. James’s, a venerable
-but architecturally imperfect pile in the vicinity of Hyde
-Park. There be churches near Morahmee more replete
-with ‘miserable sinners’ in robes of Worth and garments
-of Poole, but Mr. Frankston would none of them. In
-the old church had he stood beside his mother, a schoolboy,
-wondering and wearied, but acquiescent, after the
-manner of British children; in the old church had he
-plighted his troth to Antonia’s sainted mother; in the
-old church should his darling utter her vows, and in no
-other. Are there any words which can fitly interpret
-the deep joy and endless thankfulness which fill the
-heart and humble the mind of him who, all unworthy,
-knows that the chalice of life’s deepest joy is even then
-past all risk and danger, steadily uplifted to his reverent
-lips?<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">221</span></p>
-
-<p>Doubts there have been, delays that fretted, fears that
-shook the soul, clouds that dimmed, darkness that hid
-the sky of love. All these have sped. Here is naught
-but the glad and gracious Present, that blue and golden
-day which, pardoning and giving amnesty to the Past,
-beseeches, well-nigh assures, the stern veiled form of the
-Future.</p>
-
-<p>Some of these reflections would doubtless have
-mingled with the contemplations of Ernest Neuchamp
-at Aurora’s summons on that glad morn but for an unimportant
-fact—that he was at that well-known poetical
-period most soundly asleep.</p>
-
-<p>Restlessly wakeful during the earlier night-watches,
-he slept heavily at length, and only awoke, terrible to
-relate, with barely time for a careful toilet. Hastily
-disposing of a cup of coffee and a roll, he betook himself,
-in company with Mr. Parklands, who, I grieve to relate,
-had been playing loo all night, and was equally late and
-guilty, to the ancient church, where they were, by the
-good fortune of Parklands‘watch being rather fast—like
-all his movements—exactly, accurately the canonical five
-minutes before the time. Both of the important personages,
-being secretly troubled, looked slightly, becomingly
-pale. But the pallor of Parklands, entirely due to an
-unprosperous week, involving heavier disbursements and
-later sittings than ordinary, told much in his favour with
-the bridesmaids, so much so, that he always averred, in
-his customary irreverent speech, that ‘his flint was fixed’
-on the occasion.</p>
-
-<p>Probably owing to the calmly superior aspect of Mr.
-Hartley Selmore, or the tonic supplied by Jermyn
-Croker’s patent disapprobation and contempt of the
-whole proceedings, the protagonist and his acolouthos<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">222</span>
-went through the ordeal with that exact proportion of
-courage, reverence, deftness, and satisfaction, the full
-rendering of which is often hard upon him who makes
-necessarily ‘a first appearance.’ As for Antonia’s loveliness
-on that day, when, radiant, white-robed, and serene,
-she placed her hand in that of her lover, and greeted him
-with the trustful smile in which the virgin-soul shines
-out o’er the maiden-bride’s countenance, Ernest Neuchamp
-may be pardoned for thinking that the angel of
-his dreams had been permitted to visit the earth, to
-rehearse for his especial joy a premature beatific vision.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Parklands effected a sensation by dropping the
-bridal-ring, but as he displayed much quickness of eye
-and manual dexterity in regaining it, the incident had
-rather a beneficial effect than otherwise. Everything
-was happily concluded, even to the kissing of the bridesmaids,
-Mr. Parklands, with his usual energy and daring,
-having insisted on carrying out personally that pleasing
-portion of the programme, supposed to appertain of right
-to the holder of the ancient and honourable office of
-groomsman. This compelled the chasing of two unwilling
-damsels half-way down the aisle, after which the
-slightly scandalised spectators quitted the church, while
-the wedding-guests betook themselves to Morahmee.</p>
-
-<p>There, as they arrived, Mr. Frankston, sweeping the
-bay mechanically with long-practised eye, exclaimed,
-‘What boat is that heading for our jetty at such a pace?—a
-whaleboat, too, with a Kanaka crew. There’s a tall
-man with the steer oar in his fist; by Jove! it’s Charley
-Carryall for a thousand.’</p>
-
-<p>And that cheerful mariner and successful narrator it
-proved to be when the weather-beaten boat came foaming
-up to the little pier, drawn half out of the water by her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">223</span>
-wild-looking, long-haired crew, encouraged by their
-captain, who was backing up the stroke as if an eighty-barrel
-whale depended upon their speed.</p>
-
-<p>‘Frantically glad to see you, Charley, my boy,’ shouted
-Paul; ‘never hoped for such luck; the only man necessary
-to make the affair perfect—absolutely perfect.
-Isn’t he, Antonia? But how did you guess what we
-were about, and get here in time? I see the old <i>Banksia</i>
-is only creeping up the harbour now.’</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>That</i> guided me,’ said the Captain, pointing to the
-profusely decorated Morahmee flagstaff—an invariable
-adjunct to a marine villa. ‘I was sure all that bunting
-wasn’t up for anything short of Antonia’s wedding. So
-I dressed and came away. The operculums I was bringing
-our little girl here will just come in appropriately.
-They’re the first any of you have seen, I daresay.’</p>
-
-<p>The faintly subdued tone which is usual and natural
-in the pre-banquet stage could not be reasonably protracted
-after the first fusilade of Paul’s wonderful Pommery
-and Veuve Clicquot, Steinberger and Roederer.</p>
-
-<p>The guests were many and joyous, the day brilliant,
-the occasion fortunate and mirth-inspiring, the entertainment
-unparalleled, and henceforth proverbial in a city of
-sumptuous and lavish hospitality.</p>
-
-<p>Small wonder, then, that the merriment was as free
-and unconstrained as the welcome was cordial, and the
-banquet regal in its costly profusion. How the jests
-circulated! how the silvery laughter rang! how the
-bright eyes sparkled! how the fair cheeks glowed! how
-the soft breeze whispered love! how the blue wave
-murmured joy!</p>
-
-<p>Did not Mr. Selmore propose the health of the bride
-and bridegroom with such pathetic eloquence that the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">224</span>
-uninstructed were doubtful as to whether he was Antonia’s
-uncle or Mr. Neuchamp’s father? He referred to the
-mingled energy, foresight, acuteness, and originality displayed
-by his valued, and, he might add, distinguished
-friend Ernest Neuchamp. By utilising qualities of the
-highest order, joined with information always yielded, he
-was proud to say, by himself and other pioneers, he had
-achieved an unequalled, but, he must add, a most deserved
-success, which placed him in the front rank of the pastoral
-proprietors of New South Wales.</p>
-
-<p>Any one would have imagined from Mr. Hartley
-Selmore’s benevolent flow of eulogy that he had carefully
-nursed the infancy of Mr. Neuchamp’s fortunes instead
-of ruthlessly endeavouring to strangle the tender nursling.
-He himself, by means of luck and much discount, had
-managed to hang on, ostensible proprietor of his numerous
-stations, until the tide turned. Now he was a wealthy
-man, and needed not to call the governor of the Bank of
-England his cousin.</p>
-
-<p>With prosperity his character and estimation had
-much improved. There were those yet who said he was
-an unprincipled remorseless old humbug, and would none
-of him. But in a general way he was acceptable; popular,
-in private and in public. His natural talents were
-great; his acquirements above the average; his manner
-irresistible; it was no one’s particular interest or business
-to bring him to book,—so he dined and played billiards at
-the clubs, buttonholed officials, and greeted illustrious
-strangers, as if the greater portion of the pastoral interior
-of Australia belonged to him, or as though he were one
-of the Conscript Fathers, distinguished for an excess of
-Roman virtues, of this rising nation.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Parklands indeed desired to throw some missile<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">225</span>
-at him for his ‘cheek,’ as he confided to a young lady
-with sensational blue eyes, but desisted from that practical
-criticism upon being implored by his fair neighbour
-not to think of it, for her sake, and that of the ladies
-generally. The speaker was pretty enough to speak
-with authority, and so Hartley, like other fortunate conspirators
-and oppressors, departed in triumph, with the
-plaudits and congratulations of the unthinking public.
-For the rest, the affair went off much as such society
-fireworks do. Augusta Neuchamp, in a Paris dress,
-looked so extremely well that Jermyn Croker congratulated
-himself warmly, and mingled such vitriolic scintillations
-with his pleasantries, that every one was awed into
-admiration. The mail steamer was to sail in a few days,
-and he flattered himself that he had contrived a surprise
-for all his friends, which should contain an element of
-ignoring contempt so complete in conception and execution,
-that his departure from the colony should faithfully
-reflect the opinions and convictions formed during his
-residence in it.</p>
-
-<p>Having, after considerable hesitation, finally determined
-to enter upon the frightfully uncertain adventure of
-matrimony, he had offered himself and heart, such as it
-was, in marriage to Miss Augusta, with many apologies
-for the apparent necessity of the ceremony being performed
-in a colony. That young lady had endeared herself to
-Mr. Croker by her unsparing criticisms, by her ceaseless
-discontent with all things Australian, by her unmistakable
-air of <i>ton</i> and distinction. He did not entirely
-overlook her possession of a moderate but assured income.</p>
-
-<p>With his customary disregard for the feelings of
-others, he had insisted upon being married, without the
-usual time-honoured ceremonies and concomitants, on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">226</span>
-morning upon which the mail steamer started for Europe.
-By going on board directly afterwards, the Sydney people
-would be precluded from hearing of the event until after
-their departure; while their fellow-passengers, most of
-them strangers, would be ignorant as to whether the
-newly-married couple were of a week’s date or of six
-months.</p>
-
-<p>This arrangement, in which he had no great difficulty
-in persuading Miss Augusta to acquiesce, would have
-excellently answered Mr. Croker’s unselfish expectations
-but for one circumstance, which he doubtless noted to
-the debit of colonial wrongs and shortcomings—he had
-neglected to procure the co-operation of the elements.</p>
-
-<p>No sooner had the ceremony, unwitnessed save by
-Paul Frankston and Mr. and Mrs. Neuchamp, taken
-place, and the happy pair been transferred to the <i>Nubia</i>,
-their luggage having been safely deposited in that magnificent
-ocean steamer days before,—no sooner had the
-great steamer neared the limit of the harbour, when a
-southerly gale, an absolute hurricane, broke upon the
-coast with such almost unprecedented fury that till
-it abated no sane commander of the Peninsular and Oriental
-Company’s service would have dreamed of quitting
-safe anchorage.</p>
-
-<p>For three days the ‘tempest howled and wailed,’ and
-most uncomfortably the <i>Nubia</i> lay at anchor, safe but
-most uneasy, and, as she was rather crank, rolling and
-pitching nearly as wildly as she could have done in the
-open sea.</p>
-
-<p>It so chanced that one of Mr. Croker’s few weak
-points was an extraordinarily extreme susceptibility to
-<i>mal de mer</i>. On all occasions upon which he had cleared
-the Heads, for years past, he had suffered terribly. But<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">227</span>
-never since his first outward-bound experience in early
-life had he suffered torments, prostration, akin to this.
-He lay in his cabin death-like, despairing, well-nigh in
-collapse.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Neuchamp, in spite of her much travelling, was
-always a martyr during the first week of a voyage, if the
-weather chanced to be bad. Now it certainly was bad,
-very bad; and in consequence Miss Augusta lay, under
-the charge of a stewardess, in a stern cabin, well-nigh
-sick unto death, heedless of life and its chequered presentments,
-and as oblivious, not to say indifferent, to the
-fate of Jermyn Croker as if she had yesterday sworn to
-love and obey the chief officer of the <i>Nubia</i>.</p>
-
-<p>This was temporary anguish, mordant and keen,
-doubtless. But Time, the healer, would certainly in a
-few days have set it straight. The fact of an unknown
-lady and gentleman being indisposed at the commencement
-of the voyage afflicts nobody. But here was
-apparently the finger of the fiend. A ruffianly pilot,
-coming off in his hardy yawl, brought on board a copy
-of the <i>Sydney Morning Herald</i> of the day following their
-attempted departure, in which it was duly set forth how,
-at St. James’s Church, by Canon Druid, Jermyn, second
-son of Crusty Croker, Esq., of Crankleye Hall, Cornwall,
-was then and there married to Augusta, only daughter of
-the Rev. Cyril Neuchamp, incumbent of Neuchamp-Barton,
-Buckinghamshire, England. Now the joke was
-out. Even under such unpromising circumstances it
-told. Here were two mortals, passionately devoted of
-course, and in that state of matrimonial experience when
-all things tend to the wildest overrating, so cast down,
-so utterly prostrated by the foul Sea Demon, that they
-positively did not care a rush for each other. The great<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">228</span>
-Jermyn lay, faintly ejaculating ‘Steward, Ste-w-a-ar-d,’
-at intervals, and making neither lament nor inquiry
-about his similarly suffering bride. As for Augusta, she
-had scarce more strength of body or mind than permitted
-her to moan out, ‘I shall die, I shall die’; and
-apparently, for all she cared, in that unreal, phantasmal,
-pseudo-existence, which only was not death, though
-more dreadful, Jermyn Croker might have fallen overboard,
-or have been changed into a Seedee stoker. Then
-for this to happen to Jermyn Croker, of all people!
-The humour of the situation was inexhaustible!</p>
-
-<p>And though the fierce south wind departed and the
-<i>Nubia</i> drove swiftly majestic across the long seas that
-part Cape Otway from the stormy Leuwin, though in
-due time the spice-laden gales blew ‘soft from Ceylon’s
-isle,’ and the savage peaks of Aden, the lofty summit of
-the Djebel Moussa rose to view in the grand succession
-of historical landscapes; yet to the last day of the
-voyage a stray question in reference to the precise effects
-of very bad cases of sea-sickness would be directed, as to
-persons of proved knowledge and experience, to Mr. and
-Mrs. Jermyn Croker, by their fellow-passengers.</p>
-
-<p>It is due to Mr. Croker, as a person of importance, to
-touch lightly upon his after-career. His wife discovered
-too late that in reaching England he had only changed
-the theme upon which his universal depreciations were
-composed. ‘Non animam sed cœlum mutant qui trans
-mare currunt.’ He abused the climate and the people of
-England with a savage freedom only paralleled by his
-Australian practice. Becoming tired of receiving 3 or
-4 per cent for his money, he one day, in a fit of wrath,
-embarked one-half of his capital in a somewhat uncertain
-South American loan. His cash was absorbed, to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">229</span>
-reappear spasmodically in the shape of interest, of which
-there was little, while of principal it soon became
-apparent that there would be none.</p>
-
-<p>Reduced to the practice of marked though not distressing
-economy, Mr. Croker enjoyed the peculiar
-pleasure which is yielded to men of his disposition, of
-witnessing the possession of luxuries by others and a
-style of living which they are debarred from emulating.
-He was gladdened, too, by the occasional vision of an
-Australian with more money than he could spend, who
-rallied him upon his grave air, and bluntly asked why
-he was such a confounded fool as to sell out just as
-prices were really rising. Finally, to aggravate his
-sufferings, long unendurable by his own account, Mr.
-Parklands had the effrontery to come home, and, in the
-very neighbourhood where he, Croker, was living for
-economy, to buy a large estate which happened to be
-for sale.</p>
-
-<p>The unfailing flow of the new proprietor’s high
-spirits, his liberal ways, and frank manners, combined
-with exceptional straight going in the hunting-field,
-rendered him immensely popular, as indeed he had
-always contrived to be wherever fate and speculation led
-his roving steps. But it may be questioned whether his
-brother-colonist ever saw his old friend spinning by
-behind a blood team, or heard of his being among the
-select few in a ‘quick thing,’ without fulminating one of
-his choicest anathemas, comprehending at once the order
-to which he and Parklands had belonged, the country
-they had quitted, and the one in which they now
-sojourned.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Banks remained in the employment of Mr.
-Neuchamp at Rainbar until, having saved and acquired<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">230</span>
-by guarded investment a moderate capital, he had a
-tempting offer of joining, as junior partner, in the
-purchase of a large station in new country. Always a
-good-looking, manly fellow, he managed to secure the
-affections of a niece of Mr. Middleton, whom he met on
-one of his rare trips to Sydney, and, before he left for
-the Tadmor Downs, Lower Barcoo, they were married.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Joe Freeman had employed some of the compulsory
-leisure time rendered necessary during his
-fulfilment of the residence clause for Mr. Levison, in an
-exhaustive study of the Crown Lands Alienation Act.
-From that important statute (20 Vic. No. 7, sec. 13) he
-discovered that, provided a man had children enough,
-there is but little limit to the quantity of the country’s
-soil that he can secure and occupy at a rate of expenditure
-singularly small and favourable to the speculative
-‘landist’ of the period.</p>
-
-<p>Thus Joe Freeman, after considerable ciphering, made
-out that he could ‘take up’ for himself and his three
-younger children a total of twelve hundred and eighty
-acres of first-class land! He had determined that as
-long as there was an alluvial flat in the colony his choice
-should not consist of <i>bad</i> land. Added to this would be
-a pre-emptive grazing right of three times the extent.
-This would come to three thousand eight hundred and
-forty acres, which, added to the freehold of twelve
-hundred and eighty acres, gave a total of five thousand
-one hundred and twenty acres. The entire use of this
-territory he could secure by a payment of five shillings
-per acre for the <i>freehold portion</i> only—say, three hundred
-and twenty pounds.</p>
-
-<p>‘Of course his three children were compelled, by law,
-to reside on their selections. As two of these were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">231</span>
-under five years old, some difficulty in the carrying out
-of the apparently stringent section No. 18 might be
-anticipated.</p>
-
-<p>This difficulty was utterly obliterated by building his
-cottage <i>exactly</i> upon the intersecting lines of the four
-half-sections, thus:</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/i_235.jpg" alt="Diagram" />
-</div>
-
-<p>By this clever contrivance Mary Ellen, the baby, as well
-as Bob, aged three years, were ‘residing upon their
-selections’ when they were in bed at night, inasmuch as
-that haven of rest (for the other members of the family)
-was carefully placed across the south line which divided
-the estates.</p>
-
-<p>Nor was this all. Bill Freeman took up a similar
-quantity of land in precisely the same way, locating it
-about a mile from his brother’s selection, so that as it was
-clearly not worth any other selector’s while to come
-between them, they would probably have the use of
-another section or two of land for nothing. The squatter
-on whose run this little sum was worked out was a
-struggling, burdened man, unable to buy out or borrow.
-He was ruined. But the individual, in all ages, has
-suffered for the State.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Neuchamp’s Australian career had now reached a
-point when life, however heroic, is generally conceded to
-be less adventurous. His end, in a literary sense, is
-near. We feel bound in honour, however, to add the
-information, that upon the assurance of Mr. Frankston
-that they could not leave New South Wales temporarily<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">232</span>
-at a more prosperous time, Ernest Neuchamp resolved
-once more to tempt the main, and to taste the joy of
-revisiting, with his Australian bride, his ancestral
-home.</p>
-
-<p>Having taken the precaution to call a council of the
-most eminent floriculturists of flower-loving Sydney to
-his aid, he procured and shipped a case of orchidaceous
-plants, second to none that had ever left the land, for the
-delectation of his brother Courtenay. He had long since
-paid the timely remittance which had so lightened his
-load of anxiety in the ‘dry season’ at Rainbar, with such
-an addition of ‘colonial interest’ as temporarily altered
-the views of the highly conservative senior as to the
-soundness of Australian securities.</p>
-
-<p>Upon the genuine delight which Antonia experienced
-when the full glory of British luxury, the garnered wealth
-of a thousand years, burst upon her, it is not necessary
-here to dilate, nor, after a year’s continental travel, upon
-the rejoicings which followed the birth of Mr. Courtenay
-Frankston Neuchamp at the hall of his sires. His uncle
-immediately foresaw a full and pleasing occupation provided
-for his remaining years, in securing whatever lands
-in the vicinity of Neuchampstead might chance to be
-purchasable. They would be needed for the due territorial
-dignity of a gentleman, who, upon his accession to
-the estate, would probably have thirty or forty thousand
-a year additional to the present rental, to spend on one
-of the oldest properties in the kingdom.</p>
-
-<p>‘He himself,’ he said, ‘was unhappily a bachelor. He
-humbly trusted so to remain, but he was proud and
-pleased to think that the old House would once more be
-worthily represented. He had never seen the remotest
-possibility of such a state of matters taking place in his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">233</span>
-own time, and had never dreamed, therefore, of the
-smallest self-assertion.</p>
-
-<p>‘The case was now widely different. The cadet of
-the House, against, he would frankly own, his counsel
-and opinion, had chosen to seek his fortune on distant
-shores, as had many younger sons unavailingly. He had
-not only found it, but had returned, moreover, with the
-traditional Princess, proper to the King’s younger son,
-in all legends and romances. In his charming sister he
-recognised a princess in her own right, and an undeniable
-confirmation of his firmly-held though not expressed
-opinion, that his brother Ernest’s enthusiasm had always
-been tempered by a foundation of prudence and unerring
-taste.’</p>
-
-<p>Again in his native land, in his own county, Antonia
-had to submit to the lionisation of her husband, who
-came to be looked upon as a sort of compromise between
-Columbus and Sir Walter Raleigh, with a dash of Francis
-Drake. The very handsome income which the flourishing
-property of Rainbar and Mildool, <i>cum</i> Back-blocks A
-to M, and the unwearied rainy seasons and high markets,
-permitted him to draw, was magnified tenfold. His
-liberal expenditure gratified the taste of the lower class,
-among whom legends involving romantic discoveries and
-annexations of goldfields received ready credence.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Ernest Neuchamp was courteously distinguished
-by the county magnates, popular among the country
-gentlemen who had been his friends and those of his
-family from his youth, and the idol of the peasantry, who
-instinctively discerned, as do children and pet animals,
-that he viewed them with a sympathetic and considerate
-regard.</p>
-
-<p>When Mrs. Ernest Neuchamp, of Neuchampstead, was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">234</span>
-presented to her Gracious Sovereign by ‘the Duchess,’
-that exalted lady deigned to express high approval of her
-very delicately beautiful and exquisitely apparelled subject
-from the far southern land, and to inquire if all
-Australian ladies were so lovely and so sweet of aspect
-and manner as the very lovely young creature she saw
-before her. The Court Circular was unprecedentedly
-enthusiastic; and in very high places was Ernest assured
-that he was looked upon as having conferred lustre upon
-his order and benefits upon his younger countrymen, to
-whom he had exhibited so good and worthy an example.</p>
-
-<p>All this panegyrical demonstration Ernest Neuchamp
-received not unsuitably, but with much of his old philosophical
-calmness of critical attitude. What he really
-had ‘gone out into the wilderness’ to see, and to do, he
-reflected he had neither seen nor done. What he found
-himself elevated to high places for doing, was the presumable
-amassing of a large fortune, a proceeding popular
-and always favourably looked upon. But this was only
-a secondary feature in his programme, and one in which
-he had taken comparatively little interest. He could not
-help smiling to himself with humorous appreciation of
-the satiric pleasantry of the position, conscious also that
-his depreciation of great commercial shrewdness and
-boldness in speculation was held to be but the proverbial
-modesty of a master mind; while the interest which he
-could not restrain himself from taking in plans for the
-weal and progress of his old friend and client, Demos,
-was considered to be the dilettante distraction with
-which, as great statesmen take to wood-chopping or
-poultry-rearing, the mighty hunter, the great operator of
-the trackless waste, like Garibaldi at Caprera, occupied
-himself. It was hardly worth while doing battle with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">235</span>
-the complimentary critics, who would insist upon crediting
-him with all the sterner virtues of their ideal colonist—a
-great and glorious personage who combined the autocracy
-of a Russian with the <i>savoir faire</i> of a Parisian, the
-energy of an Englishman with the instinct of a Parsee
-and the rapidity of an American; after a while, no doubt,
-they would find out their god to have feet of clay. He
-would care little for that. But, in the meanwhile, no
-misgivings mingled with their enthusiastic admiration.
-The younger son of an ancient house, which possessed
-historic claims to the consideration of the county, had
-returned laden with gold, which he scattered with free
-and loving hand. That august magnate ‘the Duke’ had
-(vicariously, of course—he had long lost the habit of personal
-action save in a few restricted modes) to look to his
-laurels. There was danger, else, that his old-world star
-would pale before this newly-arisen constellation, bright
-with the fresher lustre of the Southern Cross.</p>
-
-<p>All these admitted luxuries and triumphs notwithstanding,
-a day came when both Ernest Neuchamp, and
-Antonia his wife, began to approach, with increasing
-eagerness and decision, the question of return. In the
-three years which they had spent ‘at home’ they had,
-they could not conceal from themselves, exhausted the
-resources of Britain—of Europe—in their present state
-of sensation.</p>
-
-<p>Natural as was such a feeling in the heart of Antonia,
-with whom a yearning for her birthland, her childhood’s
-home, for but once again to hear the sigh of the summer
-wave from the verandah at Morahmee, was gradually
-gaining intensity, one wonders that Ernest Neuchamp
-should have fully shared her desire to return. Yet such
-was undoubtedly the fact.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">236</span></p>
-
-<p>Briton as he was to the core, he had, during the third
-year of their furlough, been often impatient, often aweary,
-of an aimless life—that of a gazer, a spectator, a dilettante.
-Truth to tell, the strong free life of the new world
-had unfitted him for an existence of a mere recipiency.</p>
-
-<p>A fox-hunter, a fisherman, a fair shot, and a lover of
-coursing, he yet realised the curious fact that he was
-unable to satisfy his personal needs by devoting the
-greater portion of his leisure to these recreations, perfect
-in accessories and appointments, unrivalled in social concomitants,
-as are these kingly sports when enjoyed in
-Britain.</p>
-
-<p>Passionately fond of art, a connoisseur, and erstwhile
-an amateur of fair attainment, a haunter of libraries, a
-discriminating judge of old editions and rare imprints, he
-yet commenced to become impatient of days and weeks so
-spent. Such a life appeared to him now to be a waste
-of time. In vain his brother Courtenay remonstrated.</p>
-
-<p>‘I feel, my dear Courtenay, and it is no use disguising
-the truth to you or to myself, that I can no longer rest
-content in this little England of yours. It is a snug
-nest, but the bird has flown over the orchard wall, his
-wings have swept the waste and beat the foam; he can
-never again, I fear, dwell there, as of old; never again, I
-fear.’</p>
-
-<p>‘But why, in the name of all that is exasperating and
-eccentric, can you not be quiet, and let well alone?’
-asked Courtenay, not without a flavour of just resentment.
-‘You have money; an obedient, utterly devoted
-father-in-law, of a species unknown in Britain; a charming
-wife, who might lead me like a bear, were I so
-fortunate as to have been appropriated by her; troops of
-friends, I might almost say admirers—for you must own<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">237</span>
-you are awfully overrated in the county. What in the
-wide world can urge you to tempt fortune by re-embarkation
-and this superfluous buccaneering?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I suppose it is vain to try and knock it out of your
-old head, Courtenay, that there is no more buccaneering
-in New South Wales than in old South Wales. But,
-talking of buccaneers, I suppose I <i>am</i> like one of old
-Morgan’s men who had swung in a West Indian hammock,
-and seen the sack of Panama; thereafter unable
-to content himself in his native Devon.</p>
-
-<p>‘You might as well have asked of old Raoul de Neuchamp
-to go back and make cider in Normandy, after he
-had fought shoulder to shoulder with Taillefer and Rollo
-at Hastings, and tasted the stern delight of harrying
-Saxon Franklins and burning monasteries. I have found
-a land where deeds are to be done, and where conquest,
-though but of the forces of Nature, is still possible.
-Here in this happy isle your lances are only used in the
-tilt-yard and tournament, your swords hang on the wall,
-your armour is rusty, your knights fight but over the
-wine-cup, your ladye-loves are ever in the bowers. With
-us, across the main, still the warhorse carries mail, the
-lances are not headless, and many a shrewd blow on
-shield and helmet rings still.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am in the condition of “The Imprisoned Huntsman”—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘My hawk is tired of perch and hood,</div>
-<div class="verse">My idle greyhound loathes his food,</div>
-<div class="verse">My steed is weary of his stall,</div>
-<div class="verse">And I am sick of captive thrall;</div>
-<div class="verse">I would I were, as I have been,</div>
-<div class="verse">Hunting the roe in forest green,</div>
-<div class="verse">With bended bow and bloodhound free,</div>
-<div class="verse">For that is the life that is meet for me.’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">238 </span></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>‘I know from experience that it is as probable that a
-star should come down from the sky and do duty in the
-kitchen grate,’ said Courtenay Neuchamp sardonically,
-‘as that you should listen to any one’s opinion but your
-own, or I would suggest that the falcon, and greyhound,
-and steed business is better if not exclusively performed
-in this hemisphere. I never doubted you would go
-your own road. But what does Antonia say to leaving
-the land of court circulars and Queen’s drawing-rooms
-and Paris bonnets fresh once a week?’</p>
-
-<p>‘She says’—and here Mrs. Neuchamp crept up to
-her husband’s side and placed her hand in his—‘that
-she is tired of Paradise—tired of perfect houses, unsurpassable
-servants and dinners, drives and drawing-rooms,
-lawn parties and archery meetings, the Academy and the
-Park, Belgravia and South Kensington—in fact, of everything
-and everybody except Neuchampstead and dear old
-Courtenay. She wants, like some one else, to go out into
-the world again, a real world, and not a sham one like
-the one in which rich people live in England. She is
-<i>living</i>, not life. Perhaps I am “<i>un peu</i> Zingara”—who
-knows? It’s a mercy I’m not very dark, like some other
-Australians I have seen. But it is now the time to say,
-my dear Courtenay, that Ernest and I have grown tired
-of play, and want to go back to that end of the world
-where work grows.‘</p>
-
-<p>‘Please don’t smother me with wisdom and virtue,’
-pleaded Courtenay, with a look of pathetic entreaty. ‘I
-know we are very ignorant and selfish, and so on, in this
-old-fashioned England of ours. I really think I might
-have become a convert and a colonist myself, if taken up
-early by a sufficiently zealous and prepossessing missionaress.
-I feel now that it is too late. Club-worship is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">239</span>
-with me too strongly ingrained in my nature. Clubs
-and idols are closely connected, you know. But are we
-never to meet again?’ and here the rarely changed
-countenance of Courtenay Neuchamp softened visibly.</p>
-
-<p>‘We will have another look at you in late years,’ said
-Antonia softly; ‘perhaps we may come altogether when—when—we
-are old.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I think I may promise that,’ said Mr. Neuchamp.
-‘When Frank is old enough to set up for himself at
-Morahmee, with an occasional trip to Rainbar and Mildool,
-to keep himself from forgetting how to ride, then I
-think we may possibly make our last voyage to the old
-home, in preparation for that journey on which I trust we
-three may set forth at periods not very distantly divided.’</p>
-
-<p>The brothers shook hands silently. Antonia bestowed
-a sister’s kiss upon the calm brow of the elder brother,
-and quitted the room. No more was said. But all
-needful preparations were made, and ere the autumn
-leaves had commenced to fall from the aged woods
-which girdled Neuchampstead, the <i>Massilia</i> was steaming
-through the Straits of Bonifacio with Ernest Neuchamp
-watching the snowy mountain-tops of Corsica, while
-Antonia alternately enlivened the baby Frank or dipped
-into <i>The Crescent and the Cross,</i> which she had long
-intended to read over again in a leisurely and considerate
-manner.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>But little remains to tell of the after-life of Ernest
-Neuchamp. Settled once more in ‘the sunny land,’ he
-found his time fully and not unworthily occupied in the
-superintendence of his extensive properties and investments.
-There was much necessary journeying between
-Rainbar and Morahmee, at which latter place Paul Frankston<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">240</span>
-had insisted upon their taking up their permanent
-abode. ‘I am going down hill,’ he said; ‘the old house
-will be yours when I am gone; why should I sit here
-lonely in my age while my darling and her children are
-so near me? Don’t be afraid of the nursery-racket
-bothering me. Every note of their young voices is music
-in my ears, being what they are.’ So in Ernest’s absence
-in the bush, or during the sitting of the House of Assembly—having
-from a stern sense of duty permitted
-himself to be elected as the representative of the electoral
-district of Lower Oxley—Antonia had a guardian and a
-companion. She resolved upon making the journey to
-Rainbar, indeed, in order that she might fully comprehend
-the nature of the life which her husband had
-formerly led. During her stay she formed a tolerably
-fair estimate of the value of the property, being a lady of
-an observing turn of mind, and possessing by inheritance
-a hitherto latent tendency towards the management of
-affairs not generally granted to the sex. She visited
-Lake Antonia, and warmly congratulated Mr. Neuchamp
-upon that grand achievement. She patted Osmund and
-Ben Bolt, now bordering on the dignity of pensioners. She
-drove over to Mrs. Windsor’s cottage at Mildool, where
-she found Carry established as rather a <i>grande dame</i>,
-with the general approbation of the district and of all
-the tourists and travellers who shared the proverbial
-hospitality of Mildool. She caused the stud to be driven
-in for inspection, when she had sufficient presence of
-mind to choose a pair of phaeton horses for herself out
-of them. But she told her husband that she could not
-perceive any advantage to be derived from living at
-Rainbar as long as their income maintained its present
-average, and that he could manage the interesting but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">241</span>
-exceedingly warm and isolated territory equally well by
-proxy.</p>
-
-<p>Jack Windsor, upon Mr. Banks’s promotion and
-marriage, became manager of the whole consolidated
-establishment, with a proportionate advance in salary.
-He developed his leading qualities of shrewdness and
-energy to their fullest capacity under the influence of
-prosperity. Being perfectly satisfied with his position
-and duties, having a good home, a contented wife, the
-means of educating his large family, the respect of the
-whole country-side, and the habit of saving a large portion
-of his liberal salary, besides an abundance of the exact
-species of occupation and exercise which suited him, it
-is not probable that he will make any attempt to
-‘better himself.’ It is not certain that Mrs. Windsor
-would not favour the investment of their savings in
-property ‘down the country’ for the sake of the children,
-etc.; but Jack will not hear of it. ‘I should feel
-first-rate,’ he says scornfully, ‘shouldn’t I, in a place
-of my own, with a man and a boy, and forty or fifty
-head of crawling cattle to stare at while they were getting
-fit for market? That’s not my style. It wouldn’t
-suit any of us—not you either, old woman, to be poking
-about, helping at the wash-tub or something, or peelin’
-potatoes for dinner. We couldn’t stand it after the life
-we’ve had here. I couldn’t do without half-a-dozen
-stabled hacks and a lot of smart men to keep up to the
-mark. Give me something <i>big</i> to work at, done well, and
-paying for good keep and good spending all round. Five
-hundred and forty head of fat cattle cut out in two days
-like the last Mildool lot, and all the country-side at the
-muster—that’s John Windsor’s style—none of your
-Hawkesbury corn-shelling, butter-and-eggs racket. You<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">242</span>
-ought to have married old Homminey, Carry, if that’s
-what you wanted. Besides, after thinking and saving
-and driving up to high pressure for the master so long, it
-would feel unnatural-like to be only working for myself.‘
-So the argument was settled. Mr. Windsor had, it
-seems, tasted too fully of the luxury of power and command
-to relinquish it for humble independence.</p>
-
-<p>The undisputed sway over a large staff of working
-hands, the unquestioned control of money and credit,
-within certain limits, had become with him more and
-more an indispensable habitude. Accustomed to the tone
-of the leader and the centurion, he could not endure the
-thought of changing his wide eventful life into the
-decorous dulness of the small landed proprietor. Mrs.
-Windsor, too, who dressed exceedingly well, and was
-admitted on equal terms to the society of the district, a
-position which, from her tact, good sense, and extremely
-agreeable appearance, she suitably filled and fully deserved,
-would probably, as her husband forcibly explained, have
-felt the change almost as much as himself. So Mr.
-Neuchamp was spared the annoyance of looking out for a
-new manager.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy Baldacre accumulated a very large fortune, but
-was prevented, in middle life, from proving the exact
-amount of coin and property which may be amassed by
-the consistent practice of grinding parsimony, combined
-with an elimination of all the literary, artistic, social, and
-sympathetic tendencies. He habitually condemned the
-entire section, under the fatal <i>affiche</i> of ‘don’t pay.’ To
-the surprise—we cannot with accuracy affirm, to the
-regret—of the general public, this very extensive
-proprietor fell a victim to a fit of <i>delirium tremens</i>,
-supervening upon the practice of irregular and excessive<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">243</span>
-alcoholism. Into this vice of barren minds, the pitiless
-economist, guilty of so few other recreations, was gradually
-but irresistibly drawn.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>White Falcon</i> fled far and fast with the fugitive
-noble, whose debts added the keenest edge among his
-late friends and creditors to the memory of his treasons.
-He escaped, with his usual good fortune, the civil and
-criminal tentacula in which the dread octopus of the law
-would speedily have enveloped him. He laughed at
-British and Australian warrants. But passing into one
-of the Dutch Indian settlements, he was sufficiently imprudent
-to pursue there also the same career of reckless
-expenditure. By an accident his character was disclosed,
-and his arrest effected at the moment of premeditated
-flight. A severe logic, learned in the strict commercial
-schools of Holland, where debt meets with no favour,
-guards the commerce of her intertropical colonies. The
-<i>White Falcon</i> was promptly seized and sold to satisfy a
-small portion of the princely liabilities of the owner,
-while for long years, in a dreary dungeon, like another
-and a better sea-rover, Albert von Schätterheims was
-doomed to eat his heart in the darksome solitude of an
-ignoble and hopeless captivity.</p>
-
-<p>The Freeman family prospered in a general sense.
-Abraham Freeman settled down upon a comfortable but
-not over-fertile farm in the neighbourhood of Bowning.
-The thickness of the timber, and the conversion of much
-of it into fencing-rails, served to provide him with occupation,
-and therefore with good principles, as Tottie saucily
-observed, to his life’s end. That high-spirited damsel
-grieved much at first over the slowness and general fuss
-about trifles, which, after her extended experience, seemed
-to her to characterise the whole district, but was eventually<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">244</span>
-persuaded by a thriving young miller that there
-were worse places to reside in. He was resolute, however,
-in forbidding the carrying of bags of flour, and as
-she was provided with a smart buggy and unlimited
-bonnets, her taste for adventurous excitement became
-modified in time, and the black ambling mare was handed
-over to the boys.</p>
-
-<p>William and Joe Freeman made much money by
-nomadic agrarianism. After years passed in arduously
-constructing sham improvements and ‘carrying out the
-residence clause,’ with no intention of residing, they
-found themselves able to purchase a station.</p>
-
-<p>Having paid down a large sum in cash, they entered
-into possession of their property with feelings of much
-self-gratulation, as being now truly squatters, just as
-much so, indeed, as Mr. Neuchamp, who had thought
-himself so well able to patronise them. But, unluckily
-for them, and in direct contravention of the saying,
-‘Hawks winna pike oot hawks’ een,‘ the ex-owner of the
-station, formerly indeed an old acquaintance who had
-risen in life, displayed the most nefarious keenness in
-plotting an unscrupled treachery. He settled down,
-under the conditional purchase clause, section 13, upon
-the very best part of the run, the goodwill of which he
-had the day before been paid for. Having a large family,
-and the land laws having been recently altered so that a
-double area could be selected by each ‘person,’ he, with
-the Messrs. Freemans‘own cash, actually annexed, irrevocably,
-an area which reduced the value of the grazing
-property by about one-third. Shrewd and unscrupulous
-as themselves, he calmly informed the frantic Freemans
-‘that he had only complied with the law.’ He laughed
-at their accusations of bad faith. ‘Every man for himself,’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">245</span>
-he retorted, adding that ‘if all stories were true,
-they hadn’t been very particular themselves, but had sat
-down on the cove’s run that first helped ’em when they
-was bull-punchers without credit for a bag of flour.’</p>
-
-<p>Rendered furious by this very original application of
-their own practice to the detriment of their own property,
-they wasted much of their—well—we must say,
-legally acquired gains in endless suits and actions for
-trespass against this most unprincipled free selector, and
-others who shortly followed his example. The lawyers
-came to know Freeman <i>versus</i> Downey as a <i>cause célèbre</i>.
-It is just possible that these brothers may come to comprehend,
-by individual suffering, the harassed feeling which
-their action had, many a time and oft, tended to produce
-in others.</p>
-
-<p>The later years of Mr. Neuchamp’s life have been
-stated by himself to be only too well filled with prosperity
-and happiness as compared with his deserts. Those who
-know him are aware that he could not become an idler—either
-aimless or bored. He lives principally in
-Sydney. But if ever he finds a course of unmitigated
-town-life commencing to assail his nervous system, he
-runs off to a grazing station within easy rail, where
-he has long superintended the production of the prize
-shorthorns, Herefords, and Devons necessary for the
-keeping up the supply of pure blood for his immense
-and distant herds. Here he revels in fresh air—the
-priceless sense of pure country life—and that absolute
-leisure and absolute freedom from interruption which the
-happiest paterfamilias rarely experiences in the home
-proper. Here Ernest Neuchamp builds up fresh stores
-of health, new reserves of animal spirits. Here Ernest
-probably thinks out those theories of perfected representative<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">246</span>
-government in which, however, he fails at present
-to persuade an impatient, perhaps illogical, democracy to
-concur. His children are numerous, and all give promise,
-as, after a protracted and impartial consideration of their
-character, he is led to believe, of worthily carrying forward
-the temporarily modified but rarely relinquished
-hereditary tenets of his ancient House.</p>
-
-<p>Time rolls on. The great city expanding beautifies
-the terraced slopes and gardened promontories of the
-glorious haven. Old Paul Frankston lies buried in no
-crowded cemetery, but in a rock-hewn family vault under
-giant araucarias, within sound of the wave he loved so
-well. Yet is Morahmee still celebrated for that unselfish,
-unrestricted hospitality to the stranger-guest which made
-Paul Frankston’s name a synonym for general sympathy
-and readiest aid.</p>
-
-<p>Assuredly Ernest Neuchamp, now one of the largest
-proprietors in Australia, both of pastoral and urban property,
-has not suffered the reputation to decline. He
-remembers too well the hearty open visage, the kindly
-voice, the ready cheer of him who was so true at need,
-so delicate in feeling, so stanch in deed. Succoured himself
-at the crisis of fortune and happiness, he has vowed
-to help all whose inexperience arouses a sympathetic
-memory. The opinion of a social leader and eminent
-pastoralist may be considered to have exceptional weight
-and value. However that may be, much of his time is
-taken up in honouring the numberless letters of introduction
-showered upon him from Britain. Young gentlemen
-arrive in scores who have been obligingly provided with
-these valuable documents by sanguine ex-colonists. By
-the bearers they were regarded as passports to an assured
-independence. Some of these youthful squires, with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">247</span>
-spurs unwon, need restraining from imprudence, others
-a gentle course of urging towards effort and self-denial.
-But it has been noticed that the only occasions on which
-their respective guide, philosopher, and friend speaks
-with decision bordering on asperity, is when he exposes
-the fallacy of the reasoning upon which any ardent
-neophyte aspires to the position of A Colonial Reformer.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center spaced">THE END</p>
-
-
-<p class="center"><small><i>Printed by</i> <span class="smcap">R. &amp; R. Clark</span>, <i>Edinburgh</i>.</small></p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="transnote">
-
-<h3>Transcriber's Note</h3>
-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been silently corrected. Variations
-in hyphenation and all other spelling and punctuation remain unchanged</p>.
-<p>The book cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the
-public domain.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A COLONIAL REFORMER, VOL. III (OF 3)***</p>
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