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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #60482 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/60482)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Steve Brown's Bunyip and other Stories, by
-James Arthur Barry and Rudyard Kipling
-
-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: Steve Brown's Bunyip and other Stories
-
-Author: James Arthur Barry
- Rudyard Kipling
-
-Release Date: October 13, 2019 [EBook #60482]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STEVE BROWN'S BUNYIP, OTHER STORIES ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by MWS, David Wilson and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-STEVE BROWN’S BUNYIP.
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: ‘Oh! Good Mister Bunyip,’ he quavered, ‘let’s off
- this oncest.’ (Page 6.)
- _Frontispiece_]
-
-
-
-
- STEVE BROWN’S BUNYIP
-
- And Other Stories
-
-
- BY
- JOHN ARTHUR BARRY
-
-
- _WITH INTRODUCTORY VERSES_
-
- BY
- RUDYARD KIPLING
-
-
- _NEW EDITION_
-
- _Author of “In the Great Deep,” “The Luck of the Native Born,”
- “A Son of the Sea,” “Red Lion and Blue Star,”
- “Old and New Sydney,” etc._
-
-
- N.S.W. BOOKSTALL CO.
- SYDNEY.
- 1905
-
- _All Rights Reserved_
-
-
-
-
-_John Sands, Printer, Sydney._
-
-
-
-
-_CONTENTS._
-
-
- PAGE
-Introduction xi
-
-Steve Brown’s Bunyip 1
-
-Dead Man’s Camp 11
-
-The Shanghai-ing of Peter Barlow 20
-
-‘Ex Sardanapalus’ 31
-
-‘Mo-Poke’ 51
-
-Keeping School at ‘Dead Finish’ 60
-
-‘Number One North Rainbow’ 71
-
-The Protection of the ‘Sparrowhawk’ 91
-
-The Duke of Silversheen 105
-
-The Officer in Charge 116
-
-‘Sojur Jim’ 123
-
-Far Inland Football 136
-
-On the Grand Stand 146
-
-Too Far South 164
-
-The Mission to Dingo Creek 179
-
-Books at Barracaboo 192
-
-‘Barton’s Jackaroo’ 208
-
-Told in the ‘Corona’s’ Cabin 229
-
-‘Dot’s Claim’ 265
-
-A Cape Horn Christmas 277
-
-
-
-
-AGAIN.
-
-
-There have been occasions when, after long rest as a hulk lying in
-some land-locked cove, with little of its past history except the name
-left in people’s memories, that once again the old ship has been
-brought forth, staunch as ever, to perform, it is hoped, faithful
-service on the outer seas.
-
-Something of this kind has happened in the case of “Steve Brown’s
-Bunyip.” The book has been so long out of print as to perhaps render
-any apology for its re-appearance needless. All the more so, as from
-many quarters through the years that have elapsed since its
-retirement, there have been frequent and kindly enquiries after its
-welfare. Also, numerous requests have reached the author that the book
-might again be allowed to test the weather of popular opinion, and, if
-possible, hold its own as it did aforetime.
-
-Thus, in a new guise, and in a new land, the old “Bunyip,” rejuvenated
-and embellished, with, so to speak, colours flying and band playing,
-leaves its long rest at moorings, and once more sets sail in modest
-confidence that age will not have rendered its timbers less seaworthy,
-but rather have preserved and toughened them in such wise as may
-enable the old vessel to successfully compete with the modern craft of
-her class that have since appeared.
-
- The Author.
-
-
-
-
-_INTRODUCTION._
-
-
- There dwells a Wife by the Northern March
- And a wealthy Wife is she.
- She breeds a breed o’ rovin’ men
- And casts them over sea.
-
- And some they drown in deep water,
- And some in sight of shore;
- And word goes back to the carline Wife
- And ever she sends more.
-
- For since that Wife had gate or gear,
- Or hearth or garth or bield,
- She wills her sons to the white harvest,
- And that is a bitter yield—
-
- She wills her sons to the wet ploughing
- To ride the horse o’ tree,
- And syne her sons come home again
- Far spent from out the sea.
-
- The good Wife’s sons come home again
- Wi’ little into their hands
- But the lear o’ men that ha’ dealt wi’ men
- In the new and naked lands—
-
- But the faith o’ men that ha’ proven men
- By more than willing breath,
- And the eyes o’ men that ha’ read wi’ men
- In the open books o’ Death.
-
- Rich are they, rich in wonders seen,
- But poor in the goods o’ men:
- And what they ha’ got by the skin o’ their teeth
- They sell for their teeth again.
-
- Ay, whether they lose to the naked life,
- Or win to their hearts’ desire,
- They tell it all to the carline Wife
- That nods beside the fire.
-
- Her hearth is wide to every gust
- That gars the dead ash spin—
- And tide by tide and ’twixt the tides
- Her sons go out and in.
-
- [Out in great mirth that do desire
- Hazard of trackless ways,
- In wi’ great peace to wait their watch
- And warm before the blaze.]
-
- And some return in broken sleep
- And some in waking dream,
- For she hears the heels o’ the dripping ghosts
- That ride the long roof-beam.
-
- Home—they come home from all the seas—
- The living and the dead—
- The good Wife’s sons come home again
- For her blessing on their head.
-
- Rudyard Kipling.
-
-
-
-
-_Steve Brown’s Bunyip._
-
-
-
-
-STEVE BROWN’S BUNYIP.
-
-
-The general opinion of those who felt called upon to give it was that
-Steve Brown, of the Scrubby Corner, ‘wasn’t any chop.’
-
-Not that, on the surface, there seemed much evidence confirmatory of
-such a verdict—rather, indeed, the contrary.
-
-If a traveller, drover or teamster lost his stock, Steve, after a long
-and arduous search, was invariably the first man to come across the
-missing animals—provided the reward was high enough.
-
-Yet, in spite of this useful gift of discovery, its owner was neither
-liked nor trusted. Uncharitable people—especially the ones whom he
-took such trouble to oblige—would persist in hinting that none knew so
-well where to find as those that hid.
-
-All sorts of odds and ends, too, from an unbranded calf to a
-sheepskin, from a new tarpaulin to a pair of hobbles, had a curious
-knack of disappearing within a circuit of fifty miles of the Browns’
-residence.
-
-In appearance, Steve was long, lathy, awkward and freckled, also
-utterly ignorant of all things good for man to know.
-
-Suspicious, sly and unscrupulous, just able by a sort of instinct to
-decipher a brand on an animal, he was a thorough specimen of the very
-worst type of far inland Australian Bush Native, and only those who
-have met him can possibly imagine what that means.
-
-Years ago, his parents, fresh from the wilds of Connemara, had
-squatted on this forest reserve of Scrubby Corner. How they managed to
-live was a mystery. But they were never disturbed; and in time they
-died, leaving Steve, then eighteen, to shift for himself, by virtue of
-acquired knowledge.
-
-Shortly after the death of his mother, he took unto himself the
-daughter of an old shepherd on a run adjoining—a fit match in every
-way—and continued to keep house in the ramshackle shanty in the heart
-of the Corner.
-
-He had never been known to do a day’s work if he could possibly get
-out of it; much preferring to pick up a precarious living by ‘trading’
-stock, ‘finding’ stragglers, and in other ways even less honest than
-the last, but which nobody, so far, had taken the trouble of bringing
-home to him.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was Sunday, and the caravan was spelling for the day.
-
-Greg, having had his dinner—only a half ration, as feed was scarce—and
-feeling but little inclined for a chat with the tiger, or the lion, or
-the bear, or any other of the sulky, brooding creatures behind the
-iron bars, whom he saw every day, and of whose company he was heartily
-tired, took it into his great head to have a look at the country.
-
-So, unperceived of Hassan Ali, who was fast asleep in the hot
-sunshine, or any of the rest dozing in the tents, Greg, plucking a
-wattle up by the roots to keep the flies off, sauntered quietly away.
-He was not impressed by inland Australia. In the first place it was
-hot and dusty, also the flies were even worse than in his native
-Ceylon. Nor, so far as he could discover, was there anything to
-chew—that is—no tender banana stems, no patches of young rice or
-succulent cane. All that he tried tasted bitter, tasted of gum,
-peppermint, or similar abominations. He spat them out with a grunt of
-disgust, and meandered on.
-
-Presently the scrub grew thicker, and, heated more than ever by the
-exertion of pushing his huge body through an undergrowth of pine and
-wattle, he hailed with delight the sight of a big waterhole, still and
-dark, in the very heart of it. Descending the slope at the far side of
-the thickly-grassed, open glade, Steve Brown, driving a couple of
-‘lost’ horses, paused in dismay and astonishment at sight of the
-immense beast, black, shining wetly, and sending up thick jets of
-water into the sunlight to an accompaniment of a continuous series of
-grunts and rumbling noises.
-
-‘_Hrrmp! hrrmp!_’ blared Greg, in friendly greeting, as he caught
-sight of the figure staring fascinated.
-
-And then he laughed to himself as he saw how the loose horses,
-snorting with terror, galloped off one way, and the horseman another.
-
-But it was getting late; so, coming out of the water, and striking a
-well-beaten pad, he followed it. Supper time was approaching, and he
-kept his ears open for the shrill cry of Hassan Ali.
-
-Meanwhile Steve had made a bee-line on the spur for home, with some
-vague idea surging through his dull brain of having caught a glimpse
-of an Avenging Power. It is mostly in this way that anything of the
-sort strikes the uneducated conscience.
-
-‘What’s the matter now?’ asked his wife as he entered, pale, and with
-hurried steps. ‘You looks pretty badly scared. Did the traps spot yer
-a-plantin’ them mokes, or what?’
-
-‘Traps be hanged!’ replied Steve. ‘I seen somethin’ wuss nor traps. I
-seen the bunyip down at the big waterhole.’
-
-‘Gam, yer fool!’ exclaimed his wife, who was tall, thin, sharp-faced,
-and freckled, like himself. ‘What are you a-givin’ us now? Why, yer
-gittin’ wuss nor a black fellow wi’ yer bunyips!’
-
-‘Well,’ said Steve, fanning himself with his old cabbage-tree hat, and
-glancing nervously out of the door, ‘I’ll tell yer how it was. Ye
-knows as how I dropped acrost that darkey’s mokes when he was camped
-at the Ten Mile. Well, o’ course, I takes ’em to the water in the
-scrub—you knows the shop—intendin’ to hobble ’em out till such time as
-inquiries come this road. Well, jist as I gets in sight o’ the water I
-seen, right in the middle of it, I seen—I seen—’ but here he paused
-dead for want of a vocabulary.
-
-‘Well, thick-head, an’ wot was it ye seed—yer own hugly shadder, I
-s’pose?’ said Mrs Brown, as she caught up and slapped the baby playing
-with a pumpkin on the floor. ‘Look better on yer, it would, to wind me
-up a turn o’ water, an’ it washin’ day to-morrer, ’stead o’ comin’
-pitchin’ fairy stories.’
-
-‘It warn’t,’ replied Steve, taking no notice of the latter part of her
-speech. ‘But it was as big—ay, an’ a lot bigger’n this hut. All black,
-an’ no hair it was; an’ ’t’ad two white tushes’s, long as my leg, only
-crookt, an’ a snout like a big snake, an’ it were a-spoutin’ water
-forty foot high, and soon’s it seen me it bellered agin and agin.’
-
-‘You bin over to Walmsley’s shanty to-day?’ asked his wife, looking
-hard at his pale face and staring eyes.
-
-‘No, s’elp me!’ replied Steve; ‘not fer a month or more! An’ yer
-knows, Mariar, as it aint very often I touches a drop o’ ennythin’
-when I does go over.’ Which was strictly true, for Steve was an
-abstemious rogue.
-
-‘Well, then, you’ve got a stroke o’ the sun,’ said his better-half,
-dogmatically, ‘an’ you’d best take a dose of salts at oncest, afore ye
-goes off yer ’ead wuss.’
-
-‘_Hrrmp! hrrmp! hrrmp!_’ trumpeted Greg cheerfully, as at this moment,
-interposing his huge bulk before the setting sun, he looked in at the
-back door with twinkling eyes.
-
-With a scream the woman, snatching up her child, bolted into the
-bedroom, leaving Steve quaking in an ecstasy of terror, as Greg,
-spying the pumpkin, deftly reached in with his trunk and asked for it
-with an insinuating grunt.
-
-But Steve, pretty certain that it was himself who was wanted, and that
-his time had come at last, tumbled off the stool and grovelled before
-the Unknown Terror.
-
-Without coming in further, Greg could not get within a foot of the
-coveted article. To come in further would be to lift the house on his
-shoulders, so Greg hesitated.
-
-For ten years—long ago in the days of his youth—he had been a member
-of the Ceylon Civil Service, and had learnt discipline and respect for
-the constituted authorities. Also, besides being chief constable of
-his fellows, he had been a favourite at headquarters, had borne
-royalty itself, and was even named after Governor Gregory. Therefore,
-hungry as he was, Greg hesitated about demolishing a house for the
-sake of a pumpkin; but Steve, now on his knees in the middle of the
-floor, with that curling, snakelike thing twisting and twitching
-before his eyes, knew less than nothing of all this.
-
-Had he been able, he would doubtless have prayed in an orthodox manner
-to be delivered out of the clutches of the Evil One. Being unable to
-pray, he did the best he could, which was indifferent.
-
-‘Oh good Mister Bunyip,’ he quavered, ‘let’s off this oncest, an’ I’ll
-takes them mokes back to the nigger. I’ll give up them two unbranded
-foals as I shook off the carrier larst week, likewise the bag o’ flour
-off his waggin. If yer’ll go away, Mr Bunyip, I’ll never plant nor
-shake nothin’ no more. I won’t—s’elp me! An’ if yer’ll go back
-quiet’—here the wall-plate began to crack, and Steve’s voice to rise
-into a howl—‘I’ll promise faithful never to come next anigh yer
-waterhole over yonder to plant hosses.’
-
-As he concluded, Greg, having at length jammed his big head in far
-enough to just reach the pumpkin with his trunk, withdrew, taking both
-doorposts with him.
-
-‘He’s gone, Mariar,’ said Steve, after a pause, wiping his wet face;
-‘but it wor the narriest squeak you ever seed. Took nothin’, he
-didn’t, only that punkin as was on the floor. Tell you wot,’ as his
-wife came trembling out of the other room, ‘we’re a-goin’ to shift
-camp. Neighbours o’ that sort ain’t ter be played with. Ain’t it a
-wonder, bein’ so handy like, as he never come afore? I knows how it
-was, now!’ he exclaimed, a happy inspiration seizing him. ‘It were all
-through them two larst cussed mokes! The feller as owns ’em’s a flash
-blackfeller shearer. I had a pitch with him the night afore an’ he
-reckons as how he’d just cut out ov a big shed on the Marthaguy. So I
-sez to myself, “You’re good enough, ole chap, fer a fiver, ennyhow.”’
-
-‘What’s that got to do with it?’ asked his wife softly, regarding the
-crushed doorway with affrighted face.
-
-‘Don’t yer see? The bunyip’s the blackfeller’s Devil. Ole Billy Barlow
-tell’d me oncest as he seen the head ov one rise up out of a lagoon.
-I’ll have to fossick up them mokes, Mariar, an’ take ’em to that
-darkey straight away, afore wuss ’appens. S-sh, sh-sh! Wot’s that?’
-
-It was Greg, who wanted his supper badly, and was soliloquising at the
-other end of the hut. He had been down to a little fenced-in paling
-paddock on the flat, and, looking over, to his delight had seen a crop
-of maize, sweet and juicy and not too ripe, also more pumpkins.
-
-But with the love of the law and the memory of discipline still strong
-in him, he had returned to ask permission of the owner—the stupid
-white man who sat in his hut and talked nonsense. And now he was
-holding council with himself how best to make the fool understand that
-he was hungry, and wanted for his supper something more than a
-solitary pumpkin.
-
-Hassan Ali, he knew, had but dried hay and the rinds of melons to give
-him. Here, indeed, was a delectable change, and Greg’s mouth watered
-as he gurgled gently in at the opening which did duty for a window,
-and close to which the family crouched in terror.
-
-Why could not the stupid fellow understand? Could it be that he and
-his were deaf? A bright idea, and one to be acted upon, this last!
-
-Therefore, carefully lifting up and displacing half the bark roof,
-Greg looked benignly down and trumpeted mightily until the hut shook
-as with an earthquake, and the whole land seemed to vibrate, whilst
-his audience grovelled speechless. Then, finding no resulting effect,
-and secure in the sense of having done his uttermost to make himself
-understood, he went off with a clear conscience to the corn-patch and
-luxuriated.
-
-‘It ain’t no bunyip, Steve,’ wailed his wife, as they heard the
-retreating steps; ‘it’s the “Destryin’ Hangel” as I heerd a parson
-talk on oncest when I was a kid, an’ that wor the “Last Tramp”—the
-noise wot shows as the world is comin’ to an ind. It ain’t no use o’
-runnin’. We’re all agoin’ to git burnt up wi’ fire an’ bremston! Look
-out, Steve, an’ see if there’s a big light ennywheres.’
-
-‘Sha’n’t,’ replied Steve. ‘Wot’s the good? If it’s the end o’ the
-world, wot’s the use o’ lookin’? An’ I b’lieve ’ere’s yer blasted
-Hangel a-comin’ agen!’
-
-Sure enough, Greg, having had a snack, was returning just to assure
-the folk that he was doing well; that his belly was half full, and
-that he was enjoying himself immensely.
-
-So he _hrrmped_ softly round about in the darkness, and scratched his
-sides against the rough stone fireplace, and took off one of the
-rafters for a toothpick, and rumbled and gurgled meditatively, feeling
-that if he could only drop across a couple of quarts of toddy, as in
-the old Island days, his would be perfect bliss.
-
-All through the hot summer night he passed at intervals from the
-paddock to the house and back, and all the night those others lay and
-shivered, and waited for the horror of the Unknown.
-
-Then, a little after sunrise, a long, loud, shrill call was heard,
-answered on the instant by a sustained hoarse blare, as Greg
-recognised the cry of his mahout and keeper.
-
-And presently Steve, plucking up courage in the light, arose, and,
-looking out, shouted to his wife triumphantly,—
-
-‘Now, then, Mariar, who’s right about the bunyip! There he goes off
-home to the waterhole with a black nigger on his back!’
-
-
-
-
-DEAD MAN’S CAMP.
-
-
-One lurid summer, in 1873, I was crossing over from Saint George’s
-Bridge, on the Balonne, to Mitchell, on the Maranoa. I had been to a
-rush at Malawal, N.S.W., but as it proved a rank duffer, got up by the
-local storekeepers in a last effort to keep the township in existence,
-I made back again by ‘The Bridge,’ on chance of getting a job of
-droving with some of the mobs of sheep or cattle always passing
-through the Border town, bound south from the Central and Gulf
-stations.
-
-Queenslanders will remember that summer, on certain days of which men
-were stricken down in dozens, and birds fell dead off the trees in the
-fierce heat.
-
-There is no drearier track in Australia than the one I speak of—all
-pine-scrub, too thick for a dog to bark in, and the rest sand and
-ant-hills.
-
-There was nothing doing just then in ‘The Bridge,’ so I pushed on for
-the Maranoa. It was only the beginning of summer, and I reckoned on
-finding water twenty-five miles along the track, at a hole in the
-Wullumgudgeree Creek, known of aforetime.
-
-It was a dismal ride, with nothing but walls of close-set scrub on
-each side, and sand, heavy underfoot, and glaring ahead. Even the
-horses seemed to feel its influence as they ploughed along, heads
-bent down, coats black with sweat, and big clusters of flies swarming
-thickly at their leather eye-guards. Even one’s own close-knit veil
-was but poor protection, for the pests gathered on it in such numbers
-as to almost obscure the sight. The flies and mosquitoes were a
-caution that summer. However, shogging steadily on, with a pull at the
-water-bag now and then, I at length reached the creek, dry as a bone
-where it crossed the road. But, following it down through the scrub, I
-found the hole, pretty muddy and fast diminishing. Nor was it improved
-by the dog and the pack-horse rushing into it and rolling before I
-could stop them.
-
-The sun was setting, a big red ball, over the tops of the pines as I
-hobbled out, pitched the tent on one side of the round open space, lit
-a fire, and slung the billy. There was not bad picking for the horses,
-and as I belled the pack I fervently trusted they would not stray far
-in such a God-forsaken spot.
-
-After supper—damper, mutton and sardines, washed down by tea, boiled,
-skimmed and strained three times before coming to table—I felt pretty
-comfortable, and lay down with my head on one of the swags to enjoy a
-smoke and fight the mosquitoes, who were beginning to sample freely.
-The sun had set, but the moon, big, yellow and hot-looking, hung in a
-hazy sky.
-
-But for the buzzing of the insects and the snoring of the dog, fast
-asleep in a deep hole scratched in the sand, everything was very
-quiet. The thick scrub into which the horses had retreated deadened
-the sound of the bell.
-
-Presently, however, evidently compassionating my lonely state, a
-little bird, after partaking of the remnants of my supper, came and
-perched on the ridge-pole of the tent, and piped forth at short
-intervals in a shrill monotone. ‘Sweet, pretty creature! Pretty,
-sweet, little creature!’ He was company of a sort, spite of his
-egoism. But there was other toward.
-
-The flies had, ere this, gone to roost, but the mosquitoes were
-troublesome. They had also taken anticipatory possession of the tent.
-Burning some old rags, I cleared them out of that, fixed up the
-netting, and was preparing to turn in, when I heard the sound of hoofs
-coming thump, thump, down the dry creek bed. The dog, awaking, barked
-loudly, and in a minute or two a man and a woman rode into the bright
-firelight. They each had a big swag in front of them; and at a glance
-I saw that their horses were not only well-bred, but had come far and
-fast.
-
-‘Water!’ exclaimed the man.
-
-I gave him some; and he lifted the woman off and handed her the mug.
-
-‘We’re travellin’, mate,’ said he, as I helped him to unsaddle. ‘Got
-bushed atween ’ere an’ the Maranoa. A bit o’ damned bad country!’
-
-He had not come from that direction at all; but in such a scrub all
-directions were much alike. And, anyhow, it was no business of mine.
-They had plenty of tucker, and I put the billy on again.
-
-As the woman stood at the fire, holding up her riding-dress with one
-hand and with the other hastily fastening some stray braids of long
-hair that had come adrift, I saw that she was a fresh-faced,
-pleasant-featured girl of about eighteen or nineteen. As she presently
-dropped her skirt, took off her hat, and used both hands to her hair,
-I noticed by the flickering light a red, angry-looking scar extending
-from the bridge of the nose up to and across the left eyebrow.
-
-Her companion was a type I knew well. A cattleman all over, from the
-long, lean, curved legs of him to the sharp-eyed, tanned, resolute
-face. And from the swag I saw sticking out the curiously-carved handle
-of a stockwhip. They both seemed weary and thoughtful, and after
-supper I offered them the shelter of the tent. The man thanked me.
-
-‘The missus,’ said he, ‘’ll be only too glad of the chance. She ain’t
-much used to campin’ out.’
-
-So they lugged their belongings inside, whilst, making up the fire,
-and throwing some green bushes on it to drive the skeeters away, I
-laid on my blankets, with the pack-saddle for a pillow, and the dog at
-my feet.
-
-Awaking about midnight, as most bushmen do, I saw that big clouds were
-sailing fast across the moon. The air had become rather chilly, and,
-throwing more wood on the fire, I stood warming myself and filling my
-pipe. The dog, also getting up, yawned sleepily, and came and gazed
-into the blaze. The little bird from the ridge-pole still chirped its
-eulogistic call, but drowsily, and with effort, as of one who nods and
-winks. From the scrub came the faint tinkling of bells, showing that
-the horses were feeding steadily.
-
-Suddenly the silence was broken by the peculiar long, rumbling whinny
-with which a straggling horse greets the presence of others. Then I
-heard the hobble-chains clanking as our horses galloped up to inspect
-the newcomer. Then ensued a short pause, followed by the sound of a
-wild snorting stampede as they crashed away, their hobbles jingling
-and bells ringing furiously through the scrub.
-
-‘Bother!’ thought I, as the noise grew fainter and fainter, ‘that
-means, most likely, a long walk in the morning. Hang all brombees!’
-
-Preparing to lie down again, in not the best of tempers, I became
-aware of at least one horse steadily making towards the camp. As the
-steps approached, the dog, growling low, and with every hair
-bristling, backed towards the tent. A cold feeling of disquiet and
-nervousness took possession of me as I saw this.
-
-Turning from watching the animal, my eye caught a dark mass between
-scrub and fire. Just then the moon shone out from behind a bank, and,
-not ten yards away, stood a horseman, his head drooping on his chest,
-his body rocking slightly in the saddle.
-
-I gave a sigh of relief. Drunken riders are common enough in the Bush.
-And, with all trepidation vanished, I sang out gruffly enough,—
-
-‘Better get off, mate, before you fall off! Come and have a drink of
-tea!’
-
-He would be a nuisance, of course, with the inevitable bottle of rum
-in his swag, and in his person all the loathsome imbecility
-inseparable from the sobering-up process. But, as an institution, he
-had to be attended to.
-
-And I repeated my invitation irritably to him, sitting there in the
-bright moonlight, one hand grasping the reins, the other resting on
-the wither, his chin on his breast, staring fixedly at me from under
-the broad-leafed hat.
-
-‘Oh,’ I muttered, ‘you drunken brute! I’ve got to lift you down, have
-I! About all you’re fit for is to frighten people’s horses away.’
-
-The dog, only his head protruding from under the tent, kept up a long,
-snarling, choking growl, broken by gasps for fresh breath.
-
-Advancing, I placed my hand upon the horseman’s. It was like ice.
-Looking up, I saw a black-whiskered face, ashen-grey under the
-hat-leaf, and apparently leaning forward to gaze into mine out of
-wide-open, staring, glassy eyes.
-
-Suddenly, realising the meaning of the thing, I ran to one side and
-shouted hurriedly—I know not what.
-
-Then I heard someone in the tent cursing the dog, who yelped, as from
-a kick, and, presently, the stranger came out and walked up to the
-fire. Standing away, and in deep shadow, he did not see me. But,
-catching sight of that dread rider, sitting motionless, he went over
-and peered into its face.
-
-Then with a tremendous oath he sprang back, and I could see his
-sharp-cut features working with emotion as he exclaimed, ‘George! What
-game’s this?’
-
-Advancing again he stroked the horse, and, as I had done, placed one
-of his hands on that other so cold one.
-
-Apparently convinced, he ran into the tent, whence came in a minute an
-excited murmur of voices.
-
-A heavy cloud was across the moon, but I could make out the pair
-fumbling for their bridles amongst a heap of saddlery at the foot of a
-sapling.
-
-Meanwhile the horse was making ineffectual tugs at the bridle to get
-its head down to some dry tussocks growing near. But all its straining
-could not relax by one inch the steel-like grip of those dead fingers.
-Only the corpse at each jerk nodded in a ghastly cordial sort of
-fashion.
-
-Presently, moonlight filled the little plain again, and the horse,
-growing impatient, turned and made off towards the sound of the
-distant bells.
-
-Taking heart of grace, I ran up and caught it. As I led it back I
-noticed that the rider’s legs were bound tightly to the saddle by
-straps passed from the front D’s over the thighs to the ones on the
-cantle.
-
-As I began to undo them I saw the man slinging off into the scrub with
-the woman at his heels. I shouted to them. But they took no notice.
-
-Working away at the knots and buckles, the chin-strap slipped, the jaw
-fell, and the gleaming teeth showed in such an awful grin that I
-involuntarily stepped back.
-
-Now the hat tumbled off, revealing the features of a young man with
-coal-black hair and moustache, and beard flecked with spots of dry
-white foam.
-
-Even at its best, I should have called it a hard, cruel face. It was
-simply hideous now.
-
-As I stood irresolutely staring, a voice behind me made me jump. It
-was the woman.
-
-‘Here,’ she said, as with trembling fingers she essayed to loosen the
-dead grasp on the reins, ‘I’ll help you. He was a real bad un! But he
-couldn’t scare me when he were alive, an’ I aint goin’ to let him do
-it now. See’ (pointing to the cut on her forehead), ‘this is the last
-thing he done. Slip your knife through them reins,’ she continued.
-‘He’s had a fit, or a stroke o’ the sun, an’ he’ll never slacken his
-grip, no more’n he would my throat if he could ha’ got hold on it. He
-was my husband; an’ jealous of his own shadder. But I never minded
-much till he took to knockin’ me about. I couldn’t stand that. So I
-cleared with Jim yonder.’
-
-By this, we had undone the saddle and breast-plate straps with which
-the man, feeling himself mortally struck, and wishful to avoid falling
-off and lying there to rot in that wild scrub, had, in perhaps his
-last agony, tied himself to the saddle. And between us we let him
-slide gently down on to the sand, whilst the horse shook itself,
-sniffed unconcernedly at the body, and wandered away to the others.
-
-For a while she stood gazing on the thing as it lay there with stiffly
-curved legs and upturned glassy eyes.
-
-Then she smiled a little out of a white face, set hard with horror and
-detestation, saying,—
-
-‘After all, perhaps, he thought a lot of me!’ And, going to the tent,
-she returned with a blanket, and carefully spread it over the corpse.
-
-Then, as the man came up with the horses and began to saddle them, she
-said, holding out her hand,—
-
-‘So long! an’ many thanks. You’ve bin a real right bower. We’re
-a-goin’ into the Bridge, an’ we’ll send the traps out, all square an’
-fair. So long! agen.’
-
-‘So long, mate!’ shouted the man, with a tremor in his voice lacking
-in the woman’s. And then they rode away, two dark shapes against the
-moonlit scrub.
-
-‘Died by the visitation of God,’ said the Coroner’s Jury.
-
-‘Served him damned well right!’ said the district generally, who knew
-the story.
-
-But travellers along the Maranoa track make a point of giving ‘Dead
-Man’s Camp’ a very wide berth.
-
-
-
-
-THE SHANGHAI-ING OF PETER BARLOW.
-
-
-‘Yes, Peter, no doubt they’re a couple of fine colts, and should make
-good steppers. I hope you’ll have them well broken in for the drag by
-the time I return. Then, with the other pair of browns, they ought to
-turn out about the smartest four-in-hand in the district.’
-
-‘Goin’ away, sir?’ asked Peter Barlow, Head Stockman and Chief of
-Horse at Wicklow Downs.
-
-‘Yes, Peter; I’m thinking of taking a trip to the Old Country,’
-replied Mr Forrest, owner of the big cattle station on the border. ‘I
-mean to take Mrs Forrest and the children, and be away twelve months;
-so you’ll have plenty of time to fix up a team. We start in three
-weeks from to-day.’
-
-‘Well, sir,’ said Peter, ‘afore you goes I shouldn’t mind takin’ a
-spell down country myself, if you haven’t no objection.’
-
-His employer turned sharply round from the horse-yard rail, and looked
-at the young fellow.
-
-Twenty-five, born on the station, an orphan, fairly steady, very
-useful, the best rough-rider in the district, never more than fifty
-miles away from home in his life. Such was the record of Peter Barlow,
-who chewed a straw, and smiled as he noticed his master’s surprise.
-
-‘Why, what’s bitten you, my lad,’ said the latter, ‘that you want to
-get away amongst the spielers and forties of the big smoke? Isn’t
-Combington large enough for a spree?’
-
-‘Well, sir,’ replied Peter, rather sheepishly, ‘you see, they’re
-always a-poking borack an’ a-chiackin’ o’ me over in the hut because
-I’ve never seed nothin’. There’s chaps there as has been everywheres,
-an’ can talk nineteen to the dozen o’ the things they’ve gone through,
-an’ me a-settin’ listenin’ like a stuffed dummy.’
-
-‘I see, Peter,’ said Mr Forrest, laughing, ‘you want to travel.
-“Home-keeping youths have ever homely wits,” eh, Peter? Believe me, my
-lad, for all that, you’re better off as you are, notwithstanding the
-gas of those other fellows. However, you may take a month if you like.
-I think, though, that you’ll be glad to get back in the half of it.
-But how would it do for you to come down with us? I shall be staying
-in town for a week or so, and could often see you, and that you didn’t
-get into any mischief.’
-
-But Peter shook his head sagely, saying,—
-
-‘You see, sir, I’d like to git back in about a fortnight or so.
-There’s that lot o’ calves in the heifer paddock to be weaned, an’
-that last lot o’ foals ’ll want brandin’, an’—’
-
-‘All right, Peter, my boy,’ interrupted the squatter, laughing again.
-‘Put money in thy purse, go forth and see the world. Only, when
-you’re tired, don’t forget the track back to the old station.’
-
-So, after a day or two, Peter rode 150 miles to the railway terminus,
-and, leaving his horse in a paddock, embarked on a very strange
-adventure, and one that will be handed down with ever-increasing
-embroidery to each generation of Barlows, until, in time, the
-narrative overshadows that of Munchausen. It would be tedious to
-attempt to depict Peter’s astonishment at the first sight of steam. As
-a matter of fact, he was not a bit surprised—or, if he was, he didn’t
-show it. It takes more than the first sight of an express train to
-upset the marvellous stoicism, or adaptability—which is it?—of the
-Native-Born. It takes all that subsequently befel to do so. Peter
-arrived in safety at the first large inland town. Here he tarried
-awhile and enjoyed himself after the manner of his kind. He stared
-into shop windows; went to a race meeting, and there lost five pounds
-to a monte man. With a dim notion percolating under his cabbage-tree
-that he had been cheated, he made a furious attack on both man and
-table. Sequel—five shillings or twenty-four hours. This, now, was
-something like life! Would he not soon be able to ruffle it with the
-loudest of them on his return?
-
-After this exploit Peter decided to proceed on his travels.
-
-His first emotion of expressed surprise was displayed at sight of the
-sea. As the train ran along the embankment, and the stretch of water
-studded with ships’ masts caught his eye, he exclaimed,—
-
-‘By Jinks! that’s a thunderin’ big lagoon if yer likes. But what’s
-all that dead timber a-stickin’ up in it? Must ha’ been a good-sized
-flood hereabout!’
-
-Then his fellow-travellers laughed; and Peter, abashed, withdrew into
-himself, but stared steadily over that wondrous expanse of water whose
-like so far exceeded his imaginings.
-
-At the port Fate led him—of all people in the world—to put up at a
-sailors’ boarding-house. And here, for the first time in his life, he
-found himself an oracle.
-
-Many sailors ‘go up the Bush.’ But those who get so far as where Peter
-hailed from seldom or never return to the sea.
-
-Therefore, no one criticising, wondrous were the yarns he spun to an
-ever-shifting audience of all nations. Wondrous yarns of fierce
-blacks, of men perishing of thirst and hunger in the lonely bush, of
-wild cattle, of bucking horses, of the far inland life. And, in
-return, they told him tales of the stormy seas, and drank heartily at
-his expense. The port was busy, wages high, and men scarce. But
-Peter’s audience never failed him. The fame of the ‘Jolly Bushman down
-at Gallagher’s’ had spread about the shipping, and whole crews used to
-drop in of an evening to listen to Peter and drink his beer and rum.
-
-It would have taken a longer purse than Peter’s to stand this kind of
-thing.
-
-He had put aside enough money to take him back, and now he resolved to
-travel no further. He had heard and seen sufficient; and, above all,
-been listened to with deference and attention.
-
-Besides, had he not been on board of ships and there drank rum of
-such strength as made his very hair stand on end; and eaten biscuits
-and salt junk.
-
-Moreover, once his friends had taken him out and away upon the
-‘lagoon,’ away so far, than when he looked for his native land he
-beheld it not. Then the water, hitherto smooth, gradually began to
-heave and swell into hills as tall as the Wonga Ranges, and,
-presently, he fell deadly sick and lay in the salt water in the boat’s
-bottom, feeling as if the very soul-bolts were being wrenched out of
-him.
-
-Afterwards his friends had apologised, and said something about ‘a
-squall.’ But Peter would venture no more.
-
-These things, and many others, would he have to tell. Also the time
-was approaching for the weaning of calves and branding of foals. He
-had spent nearly all his money. But that did not trouble him. For the
-future he must be a bold man who, in the hut, or on the run, could
-snub Peter Barlow. One last jovial evening he and his sea-friends
-would have together, and then, hey for the far-inland scrubs and
-rolling downs.
-
-So far as Peter recollected, it _was_ a jovial evening. He had sung
-his famous ballad of ‘The Wild Australian Boy,’ applauded to the echo
-as he had never been at home. He had drunk healths innumerable in
-divers liquors; had accepted as much strong ‘niggerhead’ in parting
-gifts—it was all they possessed—as would have stocked a tobacconist’s
-shop, and seen the last guest lurch out into the night.
-
-Then Gallagher had proposed one more drink, ‘for luck!’ After
-that—oblivion.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When Peter awoke, his first thought was that he must have fallen
-asleep in the saddle, as he had done before now when camping out with
-cattle from the back of the run.
-
-But, on this occasion, his throat was hot and dry, and his head full
-of ringing bells. Raising himself, he bumped his nose sharply, and
-fell back to consider.
-
-It was almost dark, and he could hear a noise of wind and of rushing
-waters. Also he felt a rocking motion which assuredly was not that of
-a feeding horse.
-
-He had heard the same sounds and felt the same motion recently, but he
-could not recollect when. Presently a door slid open, and a flood of
-sunshine came in, with a black face in the midst of it.
-
-‘Ahi,’ said a voice, as Peter blinked at its owner. ‘You ’wake now,
-eh? Copper hot, I ’spect? Have drink?’ and the speaker handed up a
-hook-pot full of water.
-
-Peter drank copiously, and made shift to get out.
-
-‘Where the blazes am I?’ he exclaimed, weak and trembling all over, as
-his feet touched the deck.
-
-‘Barque _John F. Harkins_, o’ Boston, State o’ Maine. I’m de doctor.
-Guess you’ve been shanghaied. Best come out afore de greaser gets
-mad.’
-
-This was Greek to poor Peter. But, stumbling over the door-sill, he
-gazed about him with a wildly-amazed look, which made the negro cook
-grin more widely than ever.
-
-All around was blue water, blue water from where it touched the
-sky-line to where, close to him, it rushed swiftly past, curling,
-white-tipped. Above his head acres of snowy canvas bellied in graceful
-curves aloft into a blue sky; everywhere a maze of ropes and gear,
-crossed and re-crossed like the threads of a spider’s web.
-
-Peter gasped. He was astonished and dismayed too deeply for words; and
-at the expression of his face the darkey laughed outright.
-
-The ship giving a sudden lurch, he staggered, slipped over to leeward,
-and clutched a belaying pin. Then he heard a bell strike somewhere.
-Then men came out of a hole in the deck near by, and one, staring
-hard, exclaimed,—
-
-‘Why, damn my rags, if this ain’t the Jolly Bushman come to sea!’
-
-‘What!’ shouted the mate, walking for’ard to meet his watch. ‘Isn’t he
-a sailor-man?’
-
-‘Nary sailor-man,’ replied the other. ‘He’s a fellow from the
-country—a good sort o’ chap—but as green’s they make ’em as regards o’
-salt water.’
-
-‘Damn that Gallagher!’ exclaimed the officer. ‘He brought the coon
-aboard, an’ got the bounty, swearin’ he was a shellback all over—blood
-Stockholm tar, and every hair on his head a rope yarn! If ever we
-fetch Coalport again I’ll skin that Irish thief!’
-
-So also affirmed the captain of the _John F. Harkins_, who was out of
-pocket a month’s advance, besides two pounds “head money,” to the
-crimp who had netted poor Peter.
-
-Luckily, very luckily for Peter, he had not fallen into the hands of a
-set of ‘white-washed Americans,’ half Irish, half anything,
-proficients in the art of sea-bullying, and in the use of revolvers
-and knuckle-dusters.
-
-The officers and most of the men of the _John F._ were genuine
-Down-Easters, natives of Salem, Martha’s Vineyard, and thereabout,
-shrewd and kindly people; and, though all naturally indignant at the
-trick played upon them, too just to visit their wrath on its
-unfortunate object.
-
-Presently Peter was recognised by the steward, who had tasted of his
-hospitality ashore, and who now, seeing the poor fellow still
-suffering from the effects of the narcotic administered in that last
-‘for luck’ drink of scamp Gallagher’s, put him to bed and brought him
-restoratives. So, in due course, Peter became his own man again, and
-got fine-weather sea-legs upon him, and would have been comparatively
-happy but for thoughts of those far-away calves and foals, and the
-clumsy fingers of a certain assistant stockman. They taught him how to
-sweep decks, coil up ropes, and make sinnet. They also coaxed him
-aloft; but he never could get further up the rigging than the
-futtock-shrouds. There he stuck helplessly, and over them he never
-went. He was young and light and active; but, somehow, he couldn’t
-bend his body outward into empty air and trust its weight to a little
-bit of rope no thicker than a clothes-line. It didn’t seem natural.
-One cannot make a sailor at twenty-five.
-
-The _John F._ was bound for Colombo, thence to Hamburg, and, so far,
-everything had been fine sailing. But one day a dead-ahead gale arose
-and blew fiercely for three days.
-
-Then it was that Peter began to realise earnestly what he had before
-but dimly suspected, viz., that on such an occasion one foot of dry
-land is worth ten thousand acres of foaming ocean. Easier by far would
-it have been for him to sit the roughest colt that ever bucked than to
-stand a minute erect on the barque’s deck.
-
-Of such jumping and rearing, plunging and swerving, Peter had
-possessed no conception before, except in the saddle. There, however,
-he would have been comparatively safe. Here he was tossed about
-apparently at the pleasure of the great creature beneath him—one
-minute on to the back of his head, the next in the lee-scuppers. When
-he arose, dripping and grasping blindly for support, the rushing past
-of big seas, the wild, stern hum in the strained rigging, the roar of
-the blast in the bellies of the tugging topsails, and the swirling of
-green water round his legs, so bewildered him that he was unable to
-distinguish one end of the ship from the other.
-
-Under the circumstances, he did the wisest thing he could, and turned
-into his bunk. There he lay, and wondered with all his might why men
-should go to sea.
-
-On the fourth day, the gale moderating, they made sail again. During
-this operation an unfortunate A.B. fell from the main-yard, and broke
-his leg. The captain did his best, but he was, like the rest, quite
-unskilled, and the poor fellow lay in agony. Two days after this, when
-nearly a calm, the mate roused the skipper out of a nap with,—
-
-‘Here’s one of them big packet boats a-overhaulin’ us, sir.’
-
-‘Well,’ replied the skipper sleepily, ‘what about it? Let her rip. I
-don’t want her. Wish we had her wind, that’s all.’
-
-‘Poor Bill’s leg, sir,’ answered the other.
-
-‘Why, of course; I forgot,’ said the skipper. ‘Stop the beggar, by all
-manner of means. She’ll have a doctor, an’ ice, an’ all sorts o’
-fixin’s on board. Run the gridiron half-mast, Mr Stokes. They packets
-don’t care much about losin’ time for sich a trifle as a broken leg,
-but thet oughter ease her down.’
-
-And so it did. No sooner was the American flag seen flying half-way up
-the signal halliards than the steamer kept away, and came thundering
-down upon the barque.
-
-‘What’s the matter?’ shouted someone, as she slowed nearly alongside.
-
-‘A doctor!’ roared the mate. ‘Man very bad with a broken leg!’
-
-‘Send him on board, and look smart,’ was the reply.
-
-So a boat was lowered, and amongst its crew was Peter Barlow, who,
-from the first, had been told off to attend the injured man, and who
-assisted to carry him up the gangway-ladder of the R.M.S. _Barcelona_.
-
-‘Umph, umph,’ said the surgeon; ‘he’ll have to stay here if he wants
-to save his leg.’ Then to Peter, ‘Off you go back, my lad, and get his
-kit and what money’s coming to him. It’ll be many a long day before he
-sails the sea again.’
-
-But Peter, whose eyes had been roving over the surrounding crowd,
-suddenly, to the medico’s astonishment, shouting,—‘The boss, by G—d!’
-rushed through the people, and, regardless of appearances, seized a
-gentleman’s hand and shook it frantically, exclaiming,—
-
-‘Oh, Mr Forrest, sir, don’t you know me? I’m Peter, sir—Peter Barlow,
-from the ole station. I’ve been shanghaied an’ locussed away to sea,
-an’ I wants to git back home again!’
-
-Mr Forrest was more astonished than Peter at such a meeting. Matters,
-however, were soon arranged.
-
-Peter went on to Colombo in the _Barcelona_, and, in a fortnight,
-joining another boat, duly arrived at Wicklow Downs, whence he has
-never since stirred.
-
-And, if the reader chance one day to journey thither, he may hear at
-first hand this story, embellished with breezy Bush idioms and phrases
-that render it infinitely more graphic and stirring a version, but
-which, somehow, do not read well in type.
-
-
-
-
-‘EX SARDANAPALUS.’
-
-
-‘Make it eight bells! Go below, the starboard watch!’
-
-A few minutes later, and eight men sat on eight sea-chests, looking
-hungrily across at one another. Between them lay an empty meat-kid.[1]
-In a box alongside were some biscuits, black and honeycombed with
-weevil-holes. Dinner was over in the _Sardanapalus’_ fo’c’stle, but
-still her starboard watch glared hungrily at each other.
-
- [Footnote 1: Small wooden tub.]
-
-‘I’ve lost two good stone since I jined this starvation hooker!’
-presently growled one. ‘I ain’t never full, and I kin feel them cussed
-worms out o’ the bread a-crawlin’ about in my stummick like so many
-snakeses.’
-
-‘Same ’ere, matey,’ chimed in another. ‘A mouthful o’ salt horse an’ a
-bite o’ rotten bread for breakfus, ditto for dinner, an’ a soldier’s
-supper;[2] with lime-juice an’ winegar chucked in, according to the
-Hack,[3] ain’t to say fattenin’.’
-
- [Footnote 2: A smoke and a drink of water.]
- [Footnote 3: Merchant Seamen’s Act.]
-
-‘That’s wot’s the matter, when the skipper finds the ship,’ remarked a
-third. ‘Yer gets yer whack, an’ ye gits nae mair, as the Scotchies has
-it.’
-
-‘We doesn’t even get that itself,’ put in another, who was sitting on
-the edge of his bunk. ‘That yaller hound of a steward gives short
-weight all round. Lord!’ he continued, ‘only to think that, this time
-last year, I was a-smackin’ my chops over mutton uns; an’ full and
-plenty of everythin’ in the Hostralian Bush. What a hass I was to
-leave it! One’d think there was some sort o’ damned magic in the sea
-to be able to draw a feller a thousand miles down from good times,
-good tucker, good pay, an’ all night in, with a spree whenever you
-felt fit.’
-
-‘Too good, Billy, altogether,’ piped up a grey-headed old chap. ‘An’
-that’s what’s the matter. You gets up the Bush, you gets as fat as a
-bacon hog, you lives like a gentleman, an’, in the long run, it don’t
-agree with your constitooshun. You gets the boil,[4] an’ your liver
-turns a sort o’ dandy-grey, russet-colour, and you misses the
-gravy-eye[5] trick at the wheel, an’ you misses the jumpin’ out o’ a
-wet bunk, all standin’ in wet clothes, and the hissle o’ the gale in
-your ears, an’ the woof o’ the cold water over your boot-tops, an’
-down the small o’ your back as ye comes a-shiverin’ an’ a-shakin’ on
-deck. You’ve bin used to this sort o’ thing all your life, Billy, an’
-your liver an’ all the other innard parts gives notice when they’re
-a-tired o’ the soft lyin’ an’ the good livin’ up-country, an’ drives
-ye back to the old life an’ the old ways agin. That’s where the magic
-comes in, my son.’
-
- [Footnote 4: Bile.]
- [Footnote 5: Four till six a.m.]
-
-After this there was silence for a while. Each man’s face poked over
-his bunk with a short clay pipe in its mouth. Strong, rank fumes of
-tobacco filled the place.
-
-‘I say, boys,’ suddenly exclaimed one, ‘what’s this hooker got in
-her?’
-
-‘General,’ replied the old man, whose name was Nestor. ‘I heerd the
-customs officer at Gravesend say as it was one o’ the walluablest
-general cargers as ’ad ever left the docks.’
-
-‘Well then, mates,’ said the other, ‘all I’ve got to remark is as
-we’re the biggest an’ softest set o’ fools as ever left the docks, to
-go a-starvin’ in this fashion, when t’other side o’ that there
-bulkhead’s every sort o’ tucker you can mention.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-‘Make it eight bells! Go below, the starboard watch!’
-
-The same eight men sat on their respective sea-chests.
-
-Between them stood their allowance of beef and biscuit. But it was
-untouched. Yet the meal had been in progress an hour.
-
-Alongside of him every man had one or more tins of some kind of
-preserved provisions, out of which he was keeping his plate supplied
-to an accompaniment of plain and fancy biscuits.
-
-‘Try a little o’ this ’ere fresh herrin’, Jim,’ said one to his
-neighbour very politely; ‘I kin recommend it as tasty.’
-
-‘Thank ye, Billy (looking at the label, and passing his own tin), and
-’ere’s some sheep’s tongues with tomaty sauce, which p’raps ’ll remind
-you on the Bush of Australier.’
-
-‘Ah, if we’d only a drop o’ good stuff now, to wash these ’ere
-tiddlewinks down with,’ exclaimed Nestor, ‘I’d feel happy as a
-king—an’ as full!’
-
-‘All in good time, dad,’ remarked Billy; ‘this ’ere’s only what the
-swells’d call a hinstalment—a triflin’ hinstalment o’ what the
-_Sardinapples_ owes us for a whole month’s out-an’-out starvin’. Just
-wait awhile till we gets to the bottled ale an’ porter, which’ll
-likely be in the lower tiers, an’ then we’ll begin to live like
-gentlemen-shellbacks oughter.’
-
-‘I votes as how we should let on to the port watch,’ presently said a
-man, as he finished off his repast with a handful of muscatels and
-blanched almonds.
-
-‘Ay,’ responded old Nestor. ‘It do seem mean, us livin’ high, an’ them
-a-drawin’ their belts tighter every day. Besides,’ added he,
-meditatively, ‘company is pleasing; an’ there’ll be all the more for
-Pentridge. Not that I thinks it needs come to that if we’re careful.
-But (with a doubtful shake of the head) I’m afraid the grog’ll be too
-much for some of us when we gits to it.’
-
-A word here as to the _Sardanapalus_.
-
-She was one of the old-fashioned frigate-built ships—somewhat slow,
-but comfortable. Carrying, as per owner’s advertisement, ‘a
-first-class milch cow and surgeon,’ she was rather a favourite with
-that description of passengers who, obeying a doctor’s prescription,
-were obliged to take ‘a long sea voyage.’ The passage money was very
-high. There were no ‘intermediates,’ no subdivisions. A very good
-table was kept, and the ‘dog-basket’ and ‘menavelings’ from it alone
-would have supplied the fo’c’stle twice over. But for these leavings
-a host of ill-fed, brass-bound apprentices, boys, and petty officers
-were ever on the watch—the former knowing as crows, sharp as kites.
-Foremast Jack had not the ghost of a chance with them.
-
-Ever since she slipped along the ways the _Sardanapalus_ had borne the
-reputation of being a ‘hungry ship.’ More than half-a-dozen times had
-she hauled into dock with a collar of clean picked beef bones around
-her figure-head. It was currently understood that the skipper ‘found’
-the ship. He was an Orkney man, owned a part of her; and probably did
-so. She was a regular trader at that time. She is now a custom-house
-hulk in an East Indian harbour.
-
-The chief officer was a native of Vermont, U.S., and, with regard to
-the crew, a bit of a bully. As he was wont to often inform them, with
-the national snuffle intensified,—
-
-‘I’m a big lump of a horse—a high-bred stepper—an’ when I kick bones
-fly.’
-
-He came out a loser by this gift, as will be presently seen.
-
-Long before the opening of this yarn the crew had remonstrated with
-their superiors about their food. The captain had laughed at them, and
-the mate inquired whether they imagined the _Sardanapalus_ had been
-specially fitted out as a cook-shop for their pleasure.
-
-Perhaps it was this that now made them linger joyfully over their
-stolen meals; and, occasionally, explore with naked lights the
-‘general’ when they ought to have been sleeping on empty stomachs in
-their watch below.
-
-It being an article of faith with the crew that the chief mate was
-responsible for the cargo, they felt a thorough pleasure in its total
-destruction. Nestor, old sea-lawyer that he was, had told them that,
-although a parcel might be opened and the contents abstracted, yet,
-could the smallest portion of the case, cask, or whatever it chanced
-to be, be produced, the mate would be held blameless. But, on the
-other hand, if not a vestige of anything were to be found to
-correspond with the item in the manifest, then would the chief
-assuredly be mulcted in the full value of the missing article. With
-this devoutly-wished-for end in view, any light package was dragged
-for’ard, handed up, and given a free passage. This was criminal and
-indefensible. But they hated the Yankee with a very hearty hatred. Had
-they not been able to discharge some of it in this manner there would
-have surely been a mutiny, and possibly bloodshed, before the
-termination of the passage.
-
-In his character of ‘horse’ the mate had one day broken a poor
-submissive German sailor’s ribs by repeated kicks from his heavy
-sea-boots. Such things create antipathies, even on board ship.
-Consignors and consignees alike would have danced with wrath and
-anguish could they have witnessed that night’s jettison.
-
-The forecastle was what is known as a ‘lower’ one. A bulkhead
-separated the two watches. This partition was composed of very heavy
-hardwood planking, on the after side of which was the fore-hatchway,
-filled up to within six feet of the deck by a collection of sails,
-rope, water-tanks, bundles of hay for the cow, etc. Aft of these, at
-about the same height, stretched the cargo. It will thus be noticed
-that the _Sardanapalus_ was not a ‘full ship.’
-
-The starboard watch had removed two of the broad massive bulk-head
-planks. The port watch two also. At such times as a fresh supply of
-provisions was needed, four men from each watch in turn exploited the
-cargo. The others kept a look-out aft, and stood by the scuttle to
-receive and give things ‘a passage.’ As time passed, the crew, under
-the new regimen, began to grow fat and jolly-looking. They worked with
-a will, and as a pleasure to themselves. Also, to the utter
-astonishment of their superiors, they sang and skylarked in the second
-dog watch.
-
-‘And these,’ exclaimed the captain, ‘are the scoundrels who growled
-about their food!’
-
-He visited the galley, and sniffed and peered into the fo’c’sle
-coppers, and also cross-examined the cook and the steward.
-
-‘Give the beggars more rice,’ said he to the latter official—a sleek,
-oily quadroon. ‘Let ’em have “banyan day” three times a week. We’ll
-have enough meat left then for the trip home without buying any in
-port.’
-
-The crew grinned, but said nothing. The skipper was bothered.
-
-‘Had the fore-hatch off yesterday, didn’t you?’ he asked the mate.
-
-‘Yaas, sir,’ snuffled he.
-
-‘Everythin’ seem all right? No cargo shifted or broached?’
-
-‘Naw,’ replied the mate; ‘seems ’bout the saame as when we left dock;
-an’ I oughter know, for I hed a sight o’ trouble fixin’ that
-deadweight so’s to trim her forrard. I wonder, naow,’ he continued
-with a chuckle as at some joke, ‘how _It’s_ a-gettin’ on down below
-thar?’
-
-‘Damn _It_!’ answered the captain shortly, as he turned away. He was
-in a bad temper that night. He hated to hear the men jolly; and
-instead of lying moodily about, silent and depressed, as of yore, in
-the six till eight watch, here were both watches on the t’gallant
-fo’c’stle putting all the strength of their united lungs into
-‘Marching through Georgia.’
-
-Such a thing had never happened to Captain Flett before, and he took
-it as a personal insult. The mate, snubbed, went down on the main-deck
-and put a stopper on the singing with a yell of ‘Lee fore-braces
-there, and chuck yourselves about a bit!’ The yards didn’t want
-trimming in the least. So the men, who knew this, pulled slowly and
-silent, each with his mouth full of choice sweetmeats discovered the
-night previous.
-
-As yet they had found no strong liquors. But they had found nearly
-everything else. ‘Dry goods’ of every description, jewellery, clocks,
-firearms, stationery, patent medicines, etc. They had commenced
-operations, in the first place, under the main hatch, leaving all the
-fore part of the hold untouched. Without a purposeful search, no one
-would imagine cargo to have been broached. The throwing things, except
-_débris_—empty cases, bottles, baskets, etc.—overboard had been
-discontinued. It took up too much time, and the labour was too heavy.
-Besides, reckoning by Nestor’s calculation, the mate’s pay-day was
-worth already some hundreds of pounds less than nothing.
-
-But one night, coming across a case of toilet soaps, pomades, scented
-oils, etc., the temptation proved irresistible, and a stock was laid
-in. The love of personal adornment runs strong at all times in Jack’s
-heart. On the following Sunday morning the t’gallant fo’c’sle
-resembled a barber’s shop in a big way of business. Jack clipped and
-shaved and anointed himself until he fairly shone and reeked with the
-produce of Rimmel. Never had fore part of ship smelled so sweetly. The
-passengers staggered about with their heads well up, sniffing
-delightedly.
-
-‘Oh, captain,’ said one—a gushing widow whose age was uncertain, but
-mourning fresh—‘we really must be approaching some tropical climes.
-These are the lovely “spicy breezes,” you know, “blowing soft o’er
-Ceylon’s isle.”’
-
-The skipper didn’t know, but, sniffing also, answered,—
-
-‘Very likely, ma’am. But there’s no islands nearer ’n Tristan da
-Cunha, an’ I don’t think that there’s much spice about that one. I
-expect,’ he continued, glancing for’ard, ‘that it’s some of the hands
-titivatin’ themselves up. You see, ma’am, these scamps get all sorts
-of rubbishy oils and essences on an eastern voyage. One of ’em’s
-evidently found a bottle or two in the locker of his chest; and, now,
-he and his mates are swabbing themselves down with it.’
-
-‘Dear me, how very interesting,’ replied the widow blandly, with a
-languishing glance at the skipper. ‘But’ (as a burst of hoarse
-laughter came on the scented wind) ‘they’re a terribly rough set, are
-they not, captain? I’m sure, but for yourself and your brave officers,
-I shouldn’t feel safe for a minute. I think I heard someone say, too,
-that they actually complained about their food at the beginning of the
-journey.’
-
-This was touching the skipper on a tender spot.
-
-‘At first, ma’am, at first,’ assented he severely, after a sharp
-suspicious look at the somewhat faded features. ‘But they’ve found me
-out, now, ma’am. They know John Flett’s up to ’em and their little
-games. The less food you give a sailor, ma’am, the better he works.
-Full an’ plenty’s a mistake. Give ’em a belly full an’ they’ll growl
-from mornin’ till night, an’ all night through. They’ll growl, ma’am,
-I do assure you, at the very best of beef and pork, the whitest of
-biscuits, an’ the plumpest of rice. Growl! They’d growl if you gave
-’em toasted angels!’
-
-‘What horrible wretches!’ exclaimed the widow sympathetically. ‘And
-what a lot of worry you must have with them, captain!’
-
-‘No one but myself can imagine it, ma’am,’ replied the skipper, as he
-moved off, meditating on the possibility of stopping the usual dole of
-treacle for the Sunday duff. That laughter from for’ard annoyed him
-beyond endurance.
-
-Presently the cuddy went to luncheon; and the starboard watch to its
-dinner.
-
-The lump of dark unleavened dough and hook-pot full of molasses were
-there, but untouched, and awaiting the ocean sepulchre which had been
-their fate for many past Sundays.
-
-‘I ralely don’t know what this is,’ said Bill, as he helped himself to
-a _paté de foie gras_ out of a dozen which lay on the deck. ‘But
-whatever it is, it ain’t to be sneezed at. Some sorter swell pie, I
-reckons. Talk ’bout jelly, lor! What you got there, Ned?’
-
-‘Looks like soup an’ bully ’ithout the bully,’ answered the man
-addressed, who was pouring a steaming mixture out of a tin which he
-had just taken from over the big slush lamp—‘But it says on the paper
-“Ju-li-enne.” Sounds as if some woman had a hand in it. It don’t go
-very high,’ he resumed, after a few mouthfuls, ‘seems thinnish-like—no
-body—give us some o’ your meat to mix with it, Nestor.’
-
-‘’Taint meat,’ said the old man. ‘It’s what they calls jugged ’are,
-and there’s no bones in it.’
-
-‘Pity we couldn’t manage to hot this duff up,’ sighed one, cutting a
-huge slice off a big plum pudding; ‘but they’d smell it all over the
-ship.’
-
-‘The cake for me!’ exclaimed another, attacking one of Gunter’s
-masterpieces. ‘I ain’t seen a three-decker like this since I was a
-kid, an’ used to hang about smellin’ at the tip-top cook-shops in the
-Mile-End Road!’
-
-‘Wade in, my bullies, an’ line yer ribs,’ croaked old Nestor. ‘It’s
-the spiciest Sunday’s feed I’ve ’ad in forty year o’ the sea. I kin do
-three months chokey at the end o’ this trip, flyin’; an’ kin live on
-the smell of an oil rag all the time! If we on’y ’ad a few nips
-a-piece, now, it would be parfect!’
-
- * * * * *
-
-Midnight in the hold of the _Sardanapalus_. Four red spots moving
-slowly about in the thick gloom. From the irregular, tightly-packed
-mass proceeds all sorts of eerie creakings and groanings. The ship is
-pitching into a head sea and, at times, a wave catching her a
-thunderous slap, makes her seem to fairly stand still and shudder all
-over. The atmosphere is thick, and stuffy with an indescribable
-stuffiness. Presently the four points of light clustered together.
-
-‘What is it, I wonder?’ said Billy, sticking his candle into a
-crevice, and pointing to a long, square, narrow case embedded in a
-pile of others.
-
-‘Don’t know,’ replied another, stooping. ‘Got no marks, only “_Ex
-Sardinapples_—With great care.” Had any luck, you two?’
-
-‘Try this,’ answered one, holding out a bottle which old Nestor
-immediately clutched.
-
-‘Wine o’ some sort,’ was his verdict. ‘Poor stuff—got no grip o’ the
-throat—sourish. Let’s see what it sez on the bottle. “Chat-oo
-Mar-goox,” read he, straddling, with legs wide apart, and bottle and
-candle close to his nose.
-
-‘Ay, ay,’ he continued, ‘I thought’s much. Dutch, I reckon. Much the
-same kind o’ tipple as ye gets at the dance-houses in Hamburg. We
-wants a warmer drink for these ’ere latichudes—not but what it’s a cut
-above that sarseperiller, an’ ’op bitters, an’ such like slush as we
-bin livin’ on lately.’
-
-‘Well,’ asked Billy, tapping the case, as he spoke, with a short iron
-bar, ‘shall we see what’s in this?’
-
-‘Not worth while,’ replied Nestor, who had finished the claret, not
-without many grimaces—
-
-‘It’s only china crockery, or somethin’ o’ that. They always put “With
-great care,” an’ “This side hup” on sich. Blast the old hooker, how
-she do shove her snout into it!’
-
-This last, as a tremendous forward send of the ship nearly carried him
-off his legs.
-
-Billy, however, appeared determined on seeing the contents of the
-case, whose peculiar shape had aroused his curiosity, and started to
-break it out by himself. Finally the others came to his assistance,
-and a quarter-of-an-hour’s work hove it up from its nest. To their
-surprise it was locked and hinged. Curiosity took hold upon them. They
-prised and hammered, and strove, until, with a crash, the top flew
-back.
-
-‘Kind o’ cork chips!’ exclaimed Nestor, taking up a handful and
-putting it to his nose. ‘Poof! smells like a chemist’s shop, full o’
-camphor an’ drugs.’
-
-‘’Ere’s another box inside this un,’ said Bill, who had been groping
-amongst the odoriferous mass. And so it proved; another long, narrow
-case, also locked and hinged, made of some polished wood whose surface
-reflected dimly the faces bending over it.
-
-Subjected to similar treatment with its outer shell, it, too, soon
-yielded.
-
-As the lid, which was thickly padded, flew off under the pressure of
-the iron levers, the four men shrank away as if they had stumbled on
-a den of venomous serpents.
-
-On a strip of soft black velvet lay the shrouded corpse of a man. The
-grizzled head rested on a pillow, and the hands were crossed on the
-breast. Thin slats fitting athwartships kept the body in position.
-Although the eyes were closed, the features looked unnaturally
-natural. There even seemed to be a tinge of colour in the dead cheeks.
-But the artist had failed with the lips. The upper one had shrivelled
-and curled up over the white teeth, imparting a sardonic, grinning
-semblance to the whole face, unutterably ghastly to look upon,
-especially just then.
-
-This it was, and the life-like seeming of _It_, that frightened the
-cargo broachers so badly. And they _were_ terribly frightened. They
-were too frightened to run, even had running been practicable. But the
-man who attempts such tricks in a ship’s hold at night, and with a
-heavy head sea on, comes to rapid grief at the second step. So they
-just stood still, gripping each other’s arms, and swearing under their
-breath, as is the wont of the British seaman when badly scared.
-
-The old man, Nestor, was the first to speak. In quavering tones he
-said,—
-
-‘It’s only a wax himmidge.’
-
-‘Nothin’ o’ the kind,’ replied Bill, the boldest of the group, letting
-go his hold and coming a little closer. ‘It’s a ’barmed corpus, that’s
-wot _It_ is. I was shipmates with one on ’em afore. A soger officer
-he were. He were lashed under the mizzen-top, an’ labelled
-“Combustibles; do not touch!” in big black letters. One fine mornin’
-he come down by the run an’ busted the case. He was just the same’s
-this un, only they hadn’t put that howdacious grin on to him. It were
-in the old _Euryalus_, man-o’-war, so we had to suffer him; an’ a most
-hunlucky trip it were. Run her ashore twice. Took the sticks out on
-her twice. Lost four men overboard. No wonder _we’ve_ had three weeks
-o’ head winds. But this joker ’ll get a free passage without much
-delay, if I’ve got to give it him single-handed.’ So saying, he
-advanced, picked up the lid, and began to fasten it down.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The next morning dawned bright and clear; but the head wind still
-stood, and there was a nasty lump of a sea on. For the comparatively
-high latitude the air was warm and comfortable.
-
-Most of the passengers came up on the poop after breakfast. Presently,
-with the assistance of the skipper’s arm, the widow began a promenade.
-
-‘What an exhibition she’s making of herself! Her husband, if she ever
-had one, can’t be six months dead yet, by her mourning. She ought to
-be ashamed of herself—the sly thing!’
-
-If the widow did not exactly hear all this, she felt it, and cast
-looks of triumphant defiance at her female friends, clustered in
-groups, most of them holding on to something unassisted. Elderly
-unmarried convalescents, and very spiteful, the majority.
-
-‘Something—on—the—lee-quarter, sir!’ came down from aloft.
-
-The skipper called for his glass, without quitting his companion.
-
-‘Keep her away a couple of points,’ he commanded, as he brought the
-instrument to bear.
-
-‘Can’t make it out at all,’ he went on, after a minute’s focussing.
-‘Something white, jumping up and down. Bit of wreckage, spar, or the
-like, I expect. Keep her away another point. Take a peep, ma’am. Your
-bright eyes ’ll perhaps distinguish it.’
-
-The widow bridled coquettishly and, supported by the skipper, put
-herself in what she fancied an appropriate and elegant position.
-
-‘Oh!’ she squealed presently, ‘I see it, captain; it’s coming this
-way. How very interesting! “A message from the sea,” “Strange tale of
-the ocean,” and all that sort of thing, you know, that one reads about
-in the papers. What an exciting adventure!’ The widow had taken the
-glass from her eye whilst speaking.
-
-Suddenly a passenger cried,—
-
-‘I see it! Look! On top of that wave!’ But even as he spoke it
-disappeared.
-
-The starboard watch had been called aft by the second mate to try and
-jam the main-yards still further into the slack of the lee-rigging.
-The men now remained together with the eager knot of passengers
-staring over the quarter.
-
-All at once, and with startling unexpectedness, there bobbed up on a
-sea almost level with the taffrail, a nude figure, nearly upright. One
-arm, by some eccentric working of the water, was jerked backwards and
-forwards from the face with an awfully grotesque motion of throwing
-kisses to the horrified watchers.
-
-The notion was intensified by the grin on the lifelike features,
-startlingly distinct in the sunlight, as the embalmed figure, kept
-erect by the greater weight of its extremities, rose up and down, now
-in a hollow, now on a crest, not ten yards away.
-
-‘It’s IT, by G—d!’ shouted Nestor, who happened to be at the wheel.
-
-But no one took any notice of him in the general confusion.
-
-The male passengers stood stock still, fascinated by the spectacle.
-The female ones shrieked, and a couple fainted. But louder and higher
-than any of them shrieked the widow, who had got both arms around the
-skipper’s neck, to which she hung, half choking him, whilst her feet
-rattled frantically on the deck.
-
-‘Let go, ma’am!’ he gurgled. ‘Damn it, let go, can’t you?’
-
-‘It’s his ghost!’ she screamed, taking another horrified glance at the
-bobbing, grimacing thing as it travelled slowly across the broad wake.
-‘What have I done, James, that you should appear like this?’ she
-moaned. ‘I’m sure I thought you’d be comfortable down there!’ And here
-she began to laugh hysterically; and, held forcibly on the deck by the
-sorely-tried skipper, went off into a succession of violent fits.
-
-‘Main topsail braces there, some of you!’ roared the mate, who,
-aroused by the cry of ‘Man overboard!’ uttered by one of the boys, had
-rushed on deck. ‘Come here, four hands, and clear away the
-life-boat.’
-
-‘Don’t be a fool, Mr Sparkes!’ shouted the skipper, still struggling
-with the widow, who had got one hand in his long beard and was pulling
-it out by the roots.
-
-‘Never mind the boat!’ he panted, for the real state of the case had
-broken upon him. ‘But come and take this she-devil away! Let _It_ go
-to blazes as fast as it likes! It’s got a fair wind, seemingly, and
-that’s more’n we have!’
-
- * * * * *
-
-Anchor watch off Geelong, Victoria.
-
-Apparently the whole thing had quietly blown over. When the mate, with
-a terribly long face, had reported to the captain, as nearly as he
-could, the amount of cargo missing, and proposed as a set-off, to put
-one-half of each watch in irons until arrival, the skipper had only
-laughed.
-
-He obviously enjoyed the responsible man’s dismay.
-
-‘Nothing of the sort,’ he replied. ‘We can’t do without ’em. We’re
-bound to get a good blow or two ’tween here and Port Phillip Heads,
-and where would we be with half the men in irons, and the rest
-sulking? You’re a fool, Sparkes. I’m goin’ to smooth ’em down. They’ll
-have cabin biscuits and plum-duff three times a week from this out.
-And you knock off hazing ’em about so much’—chuckling heartily at the
-other’s stare of amazement—‘till we get abreast of Sandridge Pier.
-Then up goes the police flag. I’ll surprise the varmin, or my name
-ain’t John Flett! Meanwhile, let a couple of the hard-bargains[6]
-sling their hammocks in the after-hold. That’ll stop any more larks
-with the cargo. Has she been up in your watch since?’
-
- [Footnote 6: Apprentices.]
-
-‘Never seen a rag of her,’ answered the mate, who knew well to whom
-the skipper referred. ‘Kept her cabin ever since, I do believe.’
-
-‘Damned good job too!’ said his superior, as he tenderly felt his
-face. ‘Who’d have thought that _It_ was hers anyhow!’
-
-But ‘hard-bargains’ have long ears. One of them overheard the above
-conversation, and, reporting it to the crew, they got ready.
-
-Also, on making the land, everything went wrong. Twelve hours vain
-signalling for a pilot made a big hole in the skipper’s temper. So
-when, at last, one came off, and, to his astonishment, got soundly
-rated, with a promise of report, he, in revenge, box-hauled the
-_Sardanapalus_ about until dark, and then brought-up with every link
-of hawse out, in a particularly muddy spot opposite Geelong.
-
-Anchor watch had been set; and as old Nestor struck four bells in the
-chill morning and croaked hoarsely out his ‘All’s well!’ the stars saw
-a crowd of men in stockinged feet, and bearing bundles, slipping
-silently aft.
-
-The gig was hanging at the stern-davits. Noiselessly as greased falls
-could slide over greased sheaves she was lowered without a creak or a
-splash.
-
-The man who had been standing over the cuddy companion with a
-handspike joined his fellows. Fortunately—for themselves—no one had
-shown up. The boat pushed off, Bill sculling. The _Sardanapalus_ was
-crewless.
-
-Half-an-hour afterwards, the great Australian Bush took to itself
-sixteen hairy-breasted able seamen and this story.
-
-
-
-
-‘MO-POKE!’
-
-
-‘Yes, I’m from out back,’ said a dark, wiry little man, as he
-dismounted from his horse at a Queensland frontier-township hotel, in
-answer to a question from one of a knot of bushmen and drovers
-assembled in the verandah. ‘Out back beyond the Warburton, an’ a nice
-warm time I’ve had of it, too!’
-
-‘My eye!’ exclaimed the first speaker. ‘Been right away in that new
-country we been hearin’ of, eh? What like a shop is it, mate?’
-
-‘Oh, the country’s right enough; lots o’ grass an water,’ replied the
-newcomer, as, giving his horse to the groom, he strode into the bar,
-‘only the mopokes is so cussed bad an’ thick in them parts that
-there’s no livin’ for a quiet man. Roll up, lads, an’ give it a name!
-It’s a long time since I felt so dry!’
-
-‘What did yer mean by “mopokes,” just now, mate?’ queried an elderly,
-grizzled overlander, as, lighting their pipes, the party sat down on
-the wide wooden bench. ‘Was it snakes?’
-
-‘No, friend, it weren’t snakes. Wusser—a heap. Howsomever—I reckon
-it’s a hour or more till supper, so I’ll just tell you how it all
-happened. Gosh!’ he exclaimed emphatically, ‘what a comfort it is to
-git into a Chrischin place agin!’
-
-‘Well, boys,’ commenced the stranger, ‘last April, I ’greed with ole
-Davies—him as owns “Tylunga,” not far from this—to go out an’ herd
-cattle for him on his new Adelaide country. Wages was good, three
-notes a week—I reckoned it were worth thirty afore I left—but as for
-the tucker, well, a feller never knows what he can live on till he
-tries it.
-
-‘Howsomever, out we goes—him an’ me an three others; an’ in time we
-gets there all right, an’ musters the cattle, which was bein’ tailed
-at the head station—as they calls ’arf-a-dozen bark humpies on a
-waterhole. Then we drafts ’em into four mobs, an’ each on us takes one
-away out to blazes into the bush, where the old chap shows us our
-runs, which was about six or seven mile apart.
-
-‘Us herders had each a little hut to himself; so you see, mates, a
-feller warn’t likely to quarrel with his neighbours.
-
-‘“Now, Wilson,” sez old Davies, as he gits ready to start, arter
-puttin’ the things out o’ the waggonette at my hut—sez he, “Now,
-Wilson, take good care of them cattle in your charge, an’ mind none o’
-them black rascals come sneakin’ about ’em. If you sees any, pepper
-’em well. You’ve got a gun, an’ lots of ammunition.”
-
-‘You’ll obsarve, mates, that, like a good many more of his sort, he
-never thinks o’ the man. It’s only the dashed stock as troubles ’em.
-
-‘Howsomever, off he drives, an’ presently I catches a horse, as it was
-gettin’ close to sundown, an’ roun’s up the mob an’ puts ’em on camp,
-ties the dog up, lights a fire, an’ tries to make myself at home ’s
-well ’s I could.
-
-‘So a week or two slips away quiet enough, an’ I was gettin’ awful
-tired of the game. The cattle didn’t hardly want any lookin’ after,
-an’ all I could find to do was cuttin’ up green-hide an’ plaiting
-whips. I thought that the month ’d never go by till rations—such as
-they was—was due from the head station on Wild Horse Lagoon, nigh on
-thirty miles away.
-
-‘Up to this I’d never heard a bird singin’ out after dark. But one
-night, as I was just a-fallin’ off to sleep, mopokes begins cryin’
-like anything in the scrub close to the clear patch where the hut was.
-Suddently the dog starts barkin’ like mad, an’ I gets up an’ gives him
-a cut with the whip. Back I goes to the bunk, an’ lies down
-a-listenin’ to them birds, an’ thinkin’ to myself as all the mopokes
-in Australy had got roun’ the hut that night. Well, I cussed an’ swore
-at ’em no end for kickin’ up such a shine; an’ Towzer a-growlin’, an’
-a-snappin’, an’ pullin’ at his chain all the time. In a bit, up I gets
-agen, and catches hold of the ole gun, opens the door, an’ lets her
-off, both barrels. It was a moonlight night, an’ I could see the backs
-of a few of the cattle from where I stood, as, scared by the row, they
-gets off their camp, an’ I hears the horse-bell just over in the
-scrub. No more mopokes that night. But the next, at it they goes agen.
-Now one’d call, it seemed like close to the chimbly, then another,
-right at the head o’ my stretcher—outside, o’ course—“mopoke!”
-“more-pork!” “mo-po!” till I’m blessed if I didn’t get properly on my
-tail, an’ takin’ the gun, I lets Towzer off o’ the chain, and runs out
-an’ bangs away, as fast as I could load her, at the scrub, where I
-reckoned them blasted fowls was a-roostin’. An’ Towzer, he tears away
-into the bushes, barkin’ most furious. No more mopokin’ that night,
-but Towzer he never comes back agen. Thinkin’ he’d took arter a
-kangaroo-rat, I goes inside, makes up the fire, boils a quart o’ tea,
-an’ waits for daylight, which I know’d couldn’t be long.
-
-‘“I never did hear yet,” I says to myself, “of a feller bein’ harnted
-by a pack o’ birds; but I’m blessed if this game don’t ’pear somethin’
-like it.”
-
-‘You see, mates, I never dropped to the meanin’ o’ the racket; for
-though I’ve been stock-keepin’ an’ drovin’ pretty near five-an’-twenty
-year now, I never had no experience afore o’ the kind o’ gutter-snipes
-as was disturbin’ me these last two nights.
-
-‘At bird-twitter, out I goes, ’spectin’ to see Towzer under his sheet
-o’ bark. I seen no Towzer; an’, what’s more, I seen no cattle neither.
-They never moved off camp afore sunrise; an’, fearin’ les’ they’d made
-a clean break of it, I runs into the hut, collars my bridle, an’ off
-after the mokes.
-
-‘When I gets into the scrub, I hears the bell just ahead, an’ I hears,
-too, a few o’ them cussed birds a-strainin’ their throats, callin’
-about, as if they hadn’t done enough through the night.
-
-‘Well, I follers the bell back’ards an’ for’ards, without seemin’ to
-get any nearer to the horses, till I was nigh sick o’ stumblin’ over
-logs; an’ o’ swearin’ what I wouldn’t do to ’em when I gets ’em, an’
-o’ singin’ out for Towzer.
-
-‘All of a suddent, the bell sounds not ten yards away in a patch o’
-thick dogwood scrub, an’ as I makes off full trot, I nearly falls over
-somethin’ soft. Lookin’ down, I sees poor ole Towzer lyin’ there with
-his head caved in, and a bit o’ broken spear stickin’ in him.
-
-‘My Colonial, mates! I tumbles fast enough then, when it were too
-late. Jumpin’ through the scrub to where I last heard the bell, I runs
-slap up agen six ugly black beasts o’ niggers, an’ one on ’em was just
-a-startin’ to shake the dashed bell, which was hangin’ roun’ his neck.
-Close to ’em lies my best horse, ole “Cossack,” dead’s a herrin’.
-
-‘I takes it all in in a flash; an’ afore you could say “knife” I’d
-slung the bridle in their faces, and was makin’ tracks for the hut at
-the rate o’ sixty miles a hour—leastways it seemed so to me.
-
-‘Whizz, whizz! come the spears; but the scrub was too thick, and ne’er
-a one touches me. Yellin’ like ole Nick, after me they tears, full
-split, but I show’s ’em good foot for it till I comes in sight o’ the
-hut, a-standin’ there so quiet-like, with the chimbly smokin’ away,
-an’ the door wide open.
-
-‘Now, mates, what should make me, insted o’ rushin’ in an’ gettin’ the
-gun, an’ lettin’ the darkies know what o’clock it was, rip right past
-the hut an’ shin up a big gum tree about twenty yards away? I can’t
-make out what come over me to do sich a thing. But so it were. An’ up
-I swarms to nearly the top limb as the murderin’ willians comes out on
-to the open. In another minute eight or nine others tumbles out o’ the
-hut, where they’d been waitin’ on chance I might git away from the
-fust gang, an’ they all gathers roun’ the ole gum, a-lookin’ up, for
-all the world like a lot o’ hungry dogs at a ’possum.
-
-‘“Mo-poke, mo-poke!” sings out one, an’ another lot comes runnin’ up
-from the back scrub, just about where I should ha’ hit if the Lord
-hadn’t put it into my mind to take the tree for it.
-
-‘But this pitchin’s terrible dry work, lads,’ suddenly broke off the
-narrator. ‘Come inside, an’ let’s have another long-sleever apiece,
-an’ then I’ll finish the yarn. Spite o’ them “mopokes” I’ve got a bit
-o’ stuff left yet.
-
-‘Well, mates,’ went on Wilson, as the party resumed their seats, ‘the
-darkies throwed their spears, an’ slings their bommerangs, but it
-weren’t no use, I was too high up for ’em, and the nighest spear as
-come out of a couple o’ dozen, sticks in a good six foot below my
-limb. Seein’ this, one beggar gets the axe from the wood-heap. But she
-were old an’ blunt like her owner, ole Davies, an’ I soon see by the
-way they shapes as it’d take ’em a couple o’ years to fall me. For a
-while they niggles away at the big butt, turn an’ turn about, then
-jacks the contract, gruntin’ like a lot o’ pigs.
-
-‘Next move were, one gets the gun out o’ the hut, an’ I scwoushes down
-into a six-inch heap, till I remembers she weren’t loaded; an’ I
-didn’t give ’em credit for knowin’ how to do that.
-
-‘The mopoke as got her points her most careful, with the stock agen
-his belly, an’ with a grin at his mates, as much as to reckon, “You
-watch me pot him,” he shouts “Bung!” an’ as true’s I’m sittin’ here, I
-bursts out larfin’ to see them black fools a-starin’ up so hard, and
-wonderin’ why I didn’t fall down dead man.
-
-‘Presen’ly, ’bout half way up my tree, they spots a good-sized pipe,
-an’ bringin’ a fire-stick from the hut, up one comes like a
-lamplighter. I knowed the ole gum was sound an’ green enough at the
-butt, but I sees by the pipe that some of the top limbs must be
-holler, an’ I didn’ fancy this last move a little bit. So, as he’s
-busy straddled-out, a-blowin’ and a-puffin’ to raise the flame, I nips
-down, pulls out the spear, an’ lets drive at him ’s hard ’s I could.
-You never see such a thing in your lives! It hit him just acrost the
-loins, an’ goes more’n half way through him. He just gives a wriggle
-or two and twists over into a fork and lies there, a proper stiff ’un.
-
-‘You bet, lads, I was proud’s a dog with a tin tail; an’ sez I, “One
-for poor Towzer, you pot-bellied willian!” By gosh! didn’t they yell,
-an’ dance, an’ carry on when they sees this, an’ me safe agen back in
-the ole perch.
-
-‘Runnin’ to the hut, they tears out the slabs in a wink, piles ’em up
-at the butt of the ole gum, and sets fire to ’em.
-
-‘In a minute or two, I couldn’t see a stem for smoke; but, as they was
-green belar, not a blaze could they get out of ’em.
-
-‘Well, I was squattin’ up there, a-peepin’ down through the smoke for
-the next feller as wanted to show off his climbin’ abilities, when I
-hears a noise of horses gallopin’, an’ men shoutin’, an’ shots
-a-poppin’ off like Billy-ho.
-
-‘Down I comes through the smoke, an’ just clear o’ the tree was five
-darkies a-lyin’ stretched out as would never cry “mo-poke!” no more.
-Not another soul, dead or alive, could I see. But presen’ly back
-canters ole Davies, an’ says he, cool as you like, “Hello, Wilson,”
-says he, “is that you? Where’s the rest o’ the cattle? There’s eight
-head short yet!” Darn his ole skin, an’ all bosses like him, as thinks
-more of a few head o’ stock than a man’s life!
-
-‘You see, lads, when the cattle, disturbed by poor Towzer a-barkin’,
-and me a-firin’, moves quietly off afore daybreak, one lot of nigs
-follers ’em up, an’ one lot stops to ’tend on me.
-
-‘Them with the cattle, after they’d gone a little way, starts
-a-spearin’ ’em, an’ the mob breaks, an’ never stops till they gets to
-the fust seven-mile hut, where the other lot was; and the chap there,
-seein’ some with spears stickin’ in ’em, gallops off to the head
-station, and out comes ole Davies an’ all hands.
-
-‘No; no more new country for me—not if I knows it! I’m a-gettin’ too
-old now for such a little game as they played on me out there. Is that
-the supper-bell a-ringin’? Well, it’s the finest sound I’ve heard for
-five ’underd miles an’ more.’
-
-
-
-
-KEEPING SCHOOL AT ‘DEAD FINISH.’
-
-A Reminiscence of ‘The Rivers.’
-
-
-The people at Dead Finish had never applied for such a thing, nor
-dreamt of, nor wished for it, neither they nor their children. These
-latter were mostly of an age now to be of use about the house or in
-the field. They had imagined themselves, these half-a-dozen or so of
-scattered families hidden in the gloomy recesses of coastal scrubs,
-quite secure from any officious interference with their offspring by
-the Government. And, without exception, they took it as a most
-uncalled-for act of tyranny, this proposed establishment of a school
-and a teacher in their midst, and well within the two-mile radius from
-all.
-
-Here was the corn just ready to be pulled and husked, and got ready
-for Tuberville, and who was to do it with Tom, Jack and Bill wasting
-their time at a school?
-
-‘If Mr Gov’ment was here,’ growled ‘Brombee’ O’Brien, the largest
-selector of the lot, ‘I’d give ’im a bit o’ my mind. Wot bizness he
-got, comin’ an’ takin’ the kids just as they’re a-gittin’ handy? Why
-didn’t he come afore, when they was bits o’ crawlers, an’ no use to no
-one? Anyhow, me an’ the missis niver ’ad no schoolin’; an’ why should
-they? Will learnin’ cut through a two-foot log? Will ’rethmetic split
-palin’s or shingles? Will readin’ an’ writin’ run brombees, or drive a
-team o’ bullocks, or ’elp to plough or ’arrer? No; it ain’t likely.
-Then wot’s the good of it? Garn? Wot they givin’ us?’
-
-Thus Mr O’Brien, at a meeting of neighbours specially convened to
-confront the unlooked-for emergency, and whose own ideas he voices to
-the letter.
-
-And when, later, the Inspector (taken at first for the ‘Gov’ment’)
-puts in an appearance, the case is set before him precisely as above.
-But, instead of listening to reason, he only rated them, told them
-they ought to be ashamed of themselves, and dilated largely on the
-beauty and advantage of a State education at only threepence per week
-each child, and one shilling for seven or over. A paternal Government,
-he said, had long mourned over their degraded and benighted condition;
-and, at last, having, after much trouble, and at great expense,
-secured a most accomplished gentleman as a teacher, resolved that one
-of his first tasks should be that of making Dead Finish an ornament,
-in place of a reproach, to the district.
-
-This was, so the Inspector thought, putting the thing neatly indeed.
-But it was all of no avail. They not only unanimously refused to have
-anything to do with the erection of the school, but also to receive
-the teacher when he arrived. They swore, too, that their children
-should not leave work for education, and in the end, used language
-unrecordable here, and such as the Inspector had never in all his life
-heard before. But he persevered; and, bringing a couple of men from
-the township fifty miles away, set them to work.
-
-Dead Finish was situated at the extreme head of one of those short
-Australian coastal rivers whose existence begins in boggy swamps and
-ends in a big sand-bar.
-
-The country was mountainous and scrubby, abounding in ‘falls,’
-springs, morasses, giant timber, dingoes, ticks, leeches, and creeks.
-The wonder was, not that anybody should ever have settled on it, but
-that, once there, they should ever manage to get out of it, as they
-did once in six months.
-
-But for these few families on Dead Finish Creek, the district was
-totally uninhabited. It was hard to say where they came from
-originally. They were not a communicative people; but they were a
-hard-working, hard-living one, whose only wish was to be left at peace
-on the little patches they had hewn for themselves out of the mighty
-primeval forest that, dark and solemn, walled them in on every side.
-The spot chosen by the Inspector as the site of the new school was on
-the extreme edge of one of the lesser falls that ran sloping swiftly
-down three hundred feet or more into a small valley, generally full of
-mist and the noise of running waters.
-
-A mile away lived a settler named Brown, who, after an infinity of
-coaxing and persuasion, and to the utter disgust of his neighbours,
-had consented to receive and board the teacher on trial. As with the
-rest of the Dead Finishers, ready money was so rare that the thoughts
-of that proffered twelve shillings a week tempted him, and he fell,
-and became a Judas to his fellows, and a mark for the finger of
-scorn—he and his wife and their ten children.
-
-But the Inspector was jubilant; and after a last look around the
-little hut, smelling of fresh-cut wood, with its three forms, one
-stool, and bright, new blackboard, he departed, congratulating himself
-on the satisfactory finish of the campaign. Also he indited a minute
-and two memorandums to his Department with the intimation that
-‘Provisional School No. 28,890, Parish of Dead Finish, County of
-Salamanca,’ was completed and ready for occupation. Whereupon, an
-animated correspondence took place, which, after lasting six months,
-was at last closed by the announcement that a teacher had been
-appointed. Then both sides rested from their labours, and the
-Inspector, feeling that his annual holiday had been well earned, took
-it.
-
-Meanwhile, the little building perched on the brink of the gulf grew
-bleached and weather-beaten with wind and rain and fog, and the Dead
-Finishers derided ‘ole Gov’ment,’ and the Brown family emerged from
-Coventry, and all was once more peace along the creek.
-
-The winter passed, and a young man with thin legs and body, red hair,
-and freckled face, appeared in Tuberville and remarked to the
-residents generally that he would like to get to Dead Finish. He also
-added that he was the ‘new teacher’ for that place. He at once became
-an object of interest. People stared at him in much the same way as
-did those others, of whom we read, at Martin Chuzzlewit and the
-faithful Mark Tapley on their departure for Eden.
-
-The Tuberville people—the majority of them at least—knew of the Dead
-Finishers only by repute. These latter came in but twice a year to
-exchange corn and hardwood for stores, potatoes, and a little cash. At
-these times the programme was invariably the same. Their business
-done, the long-haired, touzly-bearded men drove their teams outside
-the town, and, leaving the bullocks in charge of the wild,
-bare-footed, half-clad boys, returned, and, clubbing their money,
-drank solidly as long as it lasted—generally two days.
-
-They kept well together, and no one molested or interfered with them.
-It was not worth while. Their especial house was a short distance out,
-and when, borne up on the wind, came the roar of bush revelry, strange
-and uncouth, the townspeople merely remarked one to the other that
-‘Them Dead Finishers must be in again down at Duffy’s.’
-
-Hence the interest taken in Mr Cruppy.
-
-The Dead Finishers all drank ‘rum straight,’ and about two gallons was
-their respective allowance. That safely stowed away, they took their
-long whips out of the corner of the bar, called their rough
-cattle-dogs, lying beside them, and made off to the wilderness again
-for another fight with fire and axe against the stubborn forest, and
-to raise corn enough for the next trip to market.
-
-That half-yearly or so excursion was their one treat, such as it was;
-and the toiling, hard-featured women at home, who never got away,
-acquiesced tacitly in the liquid wind-up of it. They never looked for
-any money on their men’s return. What was the good of money at Dead
-Finish? No wonder the people laughed when the Inspector talked to them
-of ‘school fees.’
-
- [Illustration: But presently there was a report, a cloud of smoke,
- and a flash out of the little window. (Page 68.)]
-
-At last Mr Cruppy drifted into the ‘Bushman’s Home’ in search of
-information. Could Mr Duffy tell him how to get to a place called Dead
-Finish? No; Mr Duffy was sorry, but he really couldn’t. All he knew
-about it was that it was up in the mountains, and a rough, long road
-to travel. The new teacher, was he? Well, he was pleased to hear it,
-but opined that he’d find some pretty hard cases amongst the kids up
-there. Did he know Mr Brown at Dead Finish? Yes, he thought he did,
-and a very strong cup of tea he was. Going to stay there, was he?
-Well, he hoped that Mr Brown would make him comfortable. But, somehow,
-he was doubtful. As to getting there, he would have to trust to
-Providence. After a little more talk, however, Mr Cruppy discovered
-that Providence, in this case, meant the sum of £4 sterling, for which
-the publican expressed his willingness to do his best to find the Dead
-Finish.
-
-They were four days on the road, got bogged twice, capsized twice, and
-broke the pole of the buggy before they found Brown, who received them
-with more surprise than cordiality. Foreseeing ostracism again, he
-wished to go back from his agreement, and was surly to a degree.
-
-He said he should get his head caved in. If no one else did it,
-‘Brombee’ O’Brien would. A week’s payment in advance mollified him
-somewhat. But, if Mr Cruppy had not been an orphan, friendless, and on
-his first appointment, he would have returned with Mr Duffy, who,
-very much to his surprise, had by the time he reached home, fairly
-earned his money.
-
-The teacher’s bedroom was a bark lean-to; his bed sacks stuffed with
-corn husks—and cobs. The food was hominy and pork, washed down with
-coffee made from corn roasted and ground. He ventured to remark that
-the accommodation was rough.
-
-‘It are,’ replied Mr Brown. ‘We’s rough. Take it or leave it. We niver
-arst fer no schoolin’. I’ll get stoushed over this job yet. Brombee’s
-got it in for me. So’s the Simmses, an’ all the rest ov ’em.’
-
-With much difficulty the teacher got one of the boys to show him the
-way to the school. They had to cross Dead Finish Creek fourteen times
-to get there. Regarding the youngster as his first scholar, Mr Cruppy
-endeavoured to detain him, but with a yell he fled down the mountain;
-and, figuratively, the fiery cross was sent round.
-
-Each day the teacher went up and waited in vain. No one came near the
-school. Then he essayed a journey of remonstrance from farm to farm,
-got bushed, was out for two nights, and would have been left out
-altogether only that Mandy Brown, who pitied him, went away and
-brought him in after running his tracks for a whole day. Then he
-simply sat down and waited despairingly. Then the Inspector came back
-from his holiday and visited Dead Finish, expecting to find everything
-in full swing. In his wrath he took out summonses against the whole
-settlement. No notice was taken of these until four troopers paid it a
-visit. Then it went into Tuberville in a body, and was promptly fined
-and admonished. Returning, it sent its children to school—a horde of
-young barbarians, unkempt, unwashed, almost unclad, but stout and
-sturdy. And it was the time of the pulling of the corn! Therefore the
-elders had to work double tides to make up for the lost labour of
-their offspring, stolidly glaring at poor Cruppy as he tried to beat
-into their shock heads the mystery of A B C.
-
-Amanda Brown was eighteen, buxom, bare-footed, curly-haired,
-red-cheeked, could ride as she put it ‘anythin’ with hair on,’ use an
-axe like a Canadian, and was reckoned the best hand at breaking in a
-young bullock to the team of anyone about. And she, since her finding
-of Cruppy in the ranges, leech-infested and draggled, had taken him
-under her protection. But even she was powerless to influence the
-feeling of public indignation, daily growing stronger, against the
-Inspector, the teacher, and the ‘Gov’ment,’ and which ended in Cruppy
-being requested to clear out from Brown’s. As the latter put it,
-‘Mister,’ said he, ‘it ain’t no good shenaneckin’! I dussent keep you
-no longer. It’s as much ’s our lives is wuth. Brombee an’ them’s
-gittin’ madder an’ madder. Ef you won’t slither complete, you’ll ’ave
-to go an’ camp in the schoolhouse up yonder. We’ll sell you a pot an’
-a bit o’ ration, an’ ye’ll have to do the best ye can.’ So Cruppy
-went, seeing nothing else for it, and Mr Brown once more held up his
-head amongst his fellows.
-
-Despite his lack of physique, Cruppy had a certain amount of stubborn
-resistance and endurance within him, often observable in red-headed
-people. He was, in short, plucky, and unwilling to give in. And Mandy,
-out of the largeness of her heart, helped him all she knew how.
-
-For instance, when Tom O’Brien (eldest son of ‘Brombee’) made his
-intention known of scaring the teacher out of Dead Finish, from Mandy
-came the few words of warning and the present of the old gun and some
-ammunition. Thus it happened that one night, when awakened by eerie
-yells from his lonely slumber, the teacher looked out and saw a wild
-figure clad in skins, and with a pair of bullock’s horns spreading
-from its head, he felt no whit dismayed. Capering and shouting round
-the hut under the dim moonlight went the weird thing, enough in that
-desolate spot to make even a brave man shudder with the uncanny
-grotesqueness of it.
-
-But presently there was a report—a cloud of smoke, and a flash out of
-the little window, and with a scream the thing dropped, then got up
-again, and ran swiftly out of sight.
-
-‘Caught him fair smack, ye did,’ said Mandy, afterwards. ‘Them pellets
-o’ coarse salt touched ’im up properly. He don’t set down now without
-lookin’ fer pillers. Tom won’t try no more gammonin’ to be a yahoo.
-He’s full ’s a tick ov sich sport, he is.’
-
-Other attempts were from time to time made to frighten Cruppy out of
-the district, but they were of no avail. The holidays were
-approaching, and he had made up his mind to hold out at least until
-then in hopes of getting a shift from Dead Finish.
-
-But one night, in melancholy mood, watching a piece of salt beef boil,
-and leaning over every now and again to take the scum off the pot, he
-heard the tramp of horses outside. Opening the door cautiously, he saw
-Mandy riding her own pony _en cavalier_, and leading another one ready
-saddled.
-
-‘Come along,’ she said, without dismounting. ‘They’re on their tails
-proper now. Wanter git the corn shelled for Tuberville. No more
-schoolin’ fer the kids. They’re a-goin’ to put the set on ye to-night,
-hut an’ all. Pap, and Brombee, an’ the Simmses, an’ Pringles, an’ the
-whole push is out. They got four teams o’ bullocks an’ all the ropes
-an’ chains in the country, an’ they’re a-goin’ to hyste school an’ you
-over the sidin’. It’ll be just one! two! three! an’ wallop ye all
-goes! Roll up yer swag slippy an’ come along.’
-
-Cruppy, seeing at once that a crisis, not altogether unexpected, had
-arrived, did as he was told.
-
-‘Now,’ said Mandy, leading the way into a dense clump of peppermint
-suckers, ‘le’s wait an’ see the fun. They reckoned as how, sleepin’ so
-sound, you wouldn’t know nothin’ till you struck bottom in the crik.
-But they’re euchred agin.’
-
-As the night wore on noises broke its stillness, and dark forms moved
-athwart the little open space, whilst from far below in the gully came
-the faint clank of chains and the muffled tramp of cattle.
-
-‘Look,’ whispered Mandy admiringly, ‘ain’t they cunnin’? There’s Pap,
-an’ ole Brombee, an’ young Tom, a-sneakin’ the big rope roun’ the hut.
-You’d niver ha’ woke, sleepin’ sound as ye does.’
-
-Even as she spoke a shrill whistle was heard. Then from below came a
-tremendous volleying of whips, accompanied by hoarse yells of ‘Gee,
-Brusher! Darling up! Wah Rowdy! Spanker! Redman!’ As the noose
-tightened, the school first cracked, then toppled. The din below
-redoubled, and with a crash the building disappeared bodily over the
-brow of the hill.
-
-‘That’s domino!’ remarked Mandy calmly. ‘There won’t be no more
-schoolin’ at Dead Finish. Come along; I’ll set ye on the track. Ye kin
-leave the horse an’ saddle at Duffy’s when you gits to the township. I
-shook ’em from ole Brombee. Won’t he bite when he finds it out. But
-you,’ she went on, ‘needn’t be scared. You seen him to-night doin’ his
-best to break your neck. Well, so long! Give us a cheeker afore ye
-goes; an’ don’t forget Mandy Brown o’ Dead Finish.’
-
-
-
-
-‘NUMBER ONE NORTH RAINBOW.’
-
-
-‘Another duffer!’
-
-‘Rank as ever was bottomed!’
-
-‘Seventy-five feet hard delving, and not a colour!’
-
-The speakers were myself, the teller of this story, and my mate, Harry
-Treloar.
-
-We were sitting on a heap of earth and stones representing a month’s
-fruitless, dreary labour. The last remark was Harry’s.
-
-‘That makes, I think,’ continued he, ‘as nearly as I can guess, about
-a dozen of the same species. And people have the cheek to call this a
-poor man’s diggings!’
-
-‘The prospectors are on good gold,’ I hazard.
-
-‘So are the publicans,’ retorts he, ‘and the speculators, and the
-storekeepers, and, apparently, everybody but the poor men—ourselves,
-to wit. This place is evidently for capitalists. We’re nearly
-“dead-brokers,” as they say out here. Let’s harness up Eclipse and go
-over to old Yamnibar. We may make a rise there. It’s undignified, I
-allow, scratching amongst the leavings of other men and other years;
-dangerous, also, but that’s nothing. And many a good man has had to do
-the same before us.’
-
-No life can equal that of a digger’s if he be ‘on gold,’ even
-moderately so; if not, none so weary and heart-breaking.
-
-It’s all very well to talk, as some street-bred novelists do, of ‘hope
-following every stroke of the pick, making the heaviest toil as
-nought,’ and all that kind of thing; but when one has been
-pick-stroking for months without seeing a colour; when one’s boots are
-sticking together by suasion of string or greenhide; when every meal
-is eaten on grudged credit; when one works late and early, wet and
-dry, and all in vain, then hope becomes of that description which
-maketh the heart sick, very sick, indeed. Treloar was, in general, a
-regular Mark Tapley and Micawber rolled into one. But for once, fate,
-so adverse, had proved too much for even his serenely hopeful temper.
-
-He was an Anglo-Indian. Now he is Assistant Commissioner at Bhurtpore,
-also a C.S.I.; and, when he reads this, will recollect and perhaps
-sigh for the days when he possessed a liver and an appetite, and was
-penniless.
-
-Our turnout was rather a curious one. The season was dry, and, feed
-being scarce, Treloar had concluded that, at such a time, a bullock
-would be better able to eke out a living than a horse. Therefore, a
-working bullock drew our tilted cart about the country.
-
-‘You see, my boy,’ said Treloar, when deciding on the purchase, ‘an ox
-is a beggar that always seems to have something to chew. Turn a horse
-out where there’s no grass, and he’ll probably go to the deuce before
-morning. But your ox, now, after a good look around, seeing he’s
-struck a barren patch, ’ll draw on his reserves, bring up something
-from somewhere, and start chewing away like one o’clock. That comforts
-his owner. I vote for the ox. He may be slow, but he generally appears
-to have enough in his stomach to keep his jaws going; and, in a dry
-time, that is a distinct advantage.’
-
-So Eclipse was bought, I merely stipulating that Treloar should always
-drive.
-
-I have an idea, that, after a while, as the old ‘worker’ sauntered
-along, regarding the perspiring Harry, and his exhortations and
-exclamations, often in Hindustani, with a mild stare of surprise, as
-he slowly stooped for a dry tussock, or reached aloft for an
-overhanging branch, the latter somewhat repented him of his
-experiment. But he never said so. And, to do him justice, Eclipse was
-not a bad ‘ox’; and, when he could get nothing better, justified
-Harry’s expectations by seeming able to chew stones. But his motto was
-decidedly _festina lente_.
-
-Yamnibar, ‘Old Yamnibar,’ at last. Behind us, on the far inland river,
-we had left a busy scene of activity. Hurrying crowds of men, the
-whirr of a thousand windlasses, the swish of countless cradles, and
-the ceaseless pounding by night and by day of the battery stamps. And
-now what a contrast!
-
-A wide, trackless valley, covered with grave-like mounds, on which
-grass grew rankly; with ruined buildings and rotting machinery, and,
-here and there, pools of stagnant water, whilst the only thing save
-the sweep of the wind that reached our ears was a distant rhythmical
-moaning, coming very sadly in that desolate place—the sounding of the
-sea on the rock-bound coast not far away.
-
-The only signs of life, as Eclipse, pausing now and again, and taking
-a ruminative survey of the valley, drew us by degrees down the sloping
-hills, were the buglings of a squad of native companions flying
-heavily towards the setting sun.
-
-‘What a dismal hole!’ I muttered, as the ‘ox,’ spying some green
-rushes, bolted at top speed—about a mile an hour—towards them.
-
-‘Let’s try and find a golden one,’ laughed my mercurial friend. ‘Here
-we have a whole gold-field to ourselves. Just think of it! “Lords of
-the fowl and the brute”—Eclipse and _Kálee_ and the bralgas. Take the
-old chap out of the _gharri_, and we’ll pitch our camp.’
-
-I ought to have spoken of _Kálee_ long ago. Indeed, when one comes to
-think of it, I ought to have called this story after her. But man is
-an ungrateful animal—worse than most dogs. Not that the great
-deerhound with the faithful eyes, who might have stepped out of one of
-Landseer’s pictures, was forgotten—far from it. But for her we should
-possibly now, both of us, be bundles of dry bones, with all sorts of
-underground small deer making merry amongst them.
-
-She ought, according to her merits, to hold pride of place here. But
-she was quiet and unobtrusive as she was faithful and affectionate,
-whereas Eclipse was nothing of the kind, only a noisy blusterer,
-thinking of no one but himself. Therefore, as happens so often with
-us, has he stolen a march on a failing memory for prior recognition.
-But the ‘ox’ is grass, and _Kálee_ still lives in the great Eastern
-Empire, and has two servants to wait upon her. _O Dea certe!_
-
-‘Behold!’ said Treloar, as we lay and smoked in the moonlight, after
-supper, in front of our tent, which we had pitched between the
-door-posts of what had evidently been a building of some size, but of
-which they were the sole remains. ‘Behold, my friend, the end of it
-all! But a few years are passed, and where, now, are the busy
-thousands that toiled and strove and jostled each other, below there,
-in earth’s bowels, in the fierce race for gold? Look at it now! Think
-of the great waves of human hopes and disappointments and joys that
-have rolled to and fro across this miserable patch of earth! Think of
-the brave hearts that came hot with the excitement of the quest, and
-departed broken with the emptiness of it. Also, of those others, who
-never departed, but lie at rest beneath that yellow clay. Just a
-little while, in the new-born one, is centred alike the glow of
-success and the cold chill of failure; all the might of swift fierce
-endeavour, every passion, good and bad, that convulses our wretched
-souls. And then, after a brief season, its pristine form defaced and
-scarred, comes the rotting solitude of the tomb! Why ’tis, in some
-sort, the story of our corporal life and death!
-
- ‘“Over the Mountains of the Moon,
- Down the Vale of Shadow,
- Ride, boldly ride,” the shade replied,
- “For there lies El Dorado.”
-
-Behold, my friend, the Valley of the Shadow that has passed, wherein
-many a bold soul has gone down to Hades, “unhouselled, disappointed,
-unaneled.” Do their ghosts wander yet, I ask?’
-
-‘O, bother!’ I mutter sleepily. ‘I’m tired. Let’s turn in.’
-
-Fortunately such outbursts were rare. But when the fit came on, I knew
-too well the uselessness of attempting to stop it.
-
-Awakened towards the small hours by the roarings of Eclipse,
-triumphantly apprising the world at large that his belly was full, I
-found the lantern still burning, and could see Treloar’s eye ‘in a
-fine phrenzy rolling,’ as he scribbled rapidly. Years afterwards I
-read in the _Bombay Pioneer_ ‘How the Night Falls on Yamnibar,’ and
-thought it passable.
-
-It was anything but pleasant work, this groping about old workings. It
-was also very dangerous. Many were the close shaves we had of being
-buried, sometimes alive, at others flattened out.
-
-The soil, for the first twenty or thirty feet, was of a loose, friable
-description. Thence to the bottom, averaging eighty feet, was
-‘standing ground,’ _i.e._, needed no timbering. But, in many cases,
-the slabbing from the upper parts had rotted away and fallen down,
-followed by big masses of earth, which blocked up the entrance to the
-drives where our work lay.
-
-Then after, with great trouble, clearing the bottom, generally yellow
-pipeclay, and exploring the dark, cramped passages for pillars, we
-had, before beginning to displace these, to support the roof by
-artificial ones. Timber had at the time of the rush been plentiful; as
-a consequence pillars were scarce. Also, the field, having in its
-prime been a wonderfully rich one, it had been repeatedly fossicked
-over. This made them scarcer still.
-
-Often after a heavy job of clearing out and heaving-up mullock, water,
-and slabs, all the time in imminent peril of a ‘fall’ from some part
-of the shaft, would we discover, on exploring the drives, that they
-were simply groves of props—not a natural support left standing.
-
-Such a network of holes and burrows as the place was! I can compare it
-to nothing but a Brobdingnagian rabbit-warren.
-
-The flat had been undermined, claim breaking into claim, until the
-wonder was that the whole top crust didn’t cave in. In some places
-this had happened, and one looked down into a dismal chaos of soil,
-rotten timber, and surface water.
-
-As I have remarked, it was risky work this hunting for the few
-solitary grains amongst the rotten treasure-husks left by others,
-especially without a local knowledge of the past, which would have
-been so invaluable to us. But there came to be, nevertheless, a sort
-of dreary fascination in it.
-
-We had heard that, on this same field, years after its total
-abandonment, a two hundred ounce nugget had been found by a solitary
-fossicker in a pillar left in an old claim.
-
-Very often, I believe, did the picture of that big lump rise before
-us as we crawled and twisted and wriggled about like a pair of great
-subterranean yellow eels, not knowing the moment a few odd tons of
-earth might fall and bury us.
-
-One day an incident rather out of the common befell. Lowering Treloar
-cautiously down an old shaft to, as usual, make a preliminary survey,
-I presently heard a splash and a cry of ‘Heave-up!’ Up he came, a
-regular Laocoon, in the close embraces of a thumping, lively carpet
-snake, whose frogging ground he had intruded upon.
-
-He had, by luck, got a firm grip of the reptile round the neck, and
-was not bitten. He was, however, badly scared.
-
-Doubtfully he listened as, while releasing him from the coils, I
-assured him that the thing was perfectly harmless.
-
-Was I quite certain on this point? he wished to know. Of course I was;
-and I quoted all the authorities I could think of.
-
-Then, before despatching it, would I let it bite me? As an ardent
-ophiologist, he took the utmost interest in such a fact, and would
-like to become as confident as myself of it.
-
-But I pointed out earnestly that this was simply trifling, and that we
-had no time to spare. Practical demonstration is a very capital thing
-in many cases. But _ver non semper viret_, and our friend of the
-curiously-patterned skin might not be _always_ innocuous.
-
-We took three ounces out of a pillar in Snake Shaft. That night, on
-returning to our camp, we found an old man there. He was the first
-person we had seen for a month; and so were inclined to be cordial.
-There was nothing particularly remarkable about the new-comer, except
-that he had a habit of tightly shutting one eye as he looked at you.
-
-I have called him old because his hair was grey; but he was still a
-very powerful man, and likely to prove a tough one at close quarters.
-
-‘Come and have some supper, mate,’ said Treloar.
-
-‘Call me Brummy, an’ keep yer dorg orf,’ replied the other, as he
-poured out a pannikin of tea. ‘I don’t fancy a big beast like yon
-a-breathin’ inter the back o’ a feller’s neck.’
-
-And, indeed, _Kálee’s_ attentions were marked. She sniffed around and
-around the new-comer, bristled all her hair up, and carried on a
-monologue which sounded unpleasant.
-
-‘No,’ he resumed in answer to a question, as Treloar sent _Kálee_ to
-her kennel. ‘I was never on this here field before. Down about the
-Lachlan’s my _towri_. Everybody theer knows Brummy. I’m goin’ to do a
-bit of fossickin’ now I got this far. Ain’t a-thinkin’ o’ interferin’
-wi’ you. Surfiss is my dart—roun’ about the old tailin’s and puddlers.
-Down below’s too risky in a rotten shop like this. I leaves that game
-to the young ’uns. An’’ (with a sly grin) ‘old Brum does as well as
-the best on ’em in the long run.’
-
-Soon after this he went away and pitched a ragged fly further along
-the flat.
-
-Next day, as we were having a smoke and a spell after rigging two new
-windlass standards, he came up to us, and in a furtive sort of
-manner, began to try and discover the position of those claims which
-we had already prospected. Having no motive for concealment, we told
-him as well as we could, also pointing out most of them from where we
-sat.
-
-He appeared quite pleased as we finished, and marched off with his old
-tin dish banging and rattling against the pick on his shoulder.
-
-‘That old man,’ remarked Harry presently, ‘is a dangerous old man.
-Moreover, he is a liar.’
-
-‘How do you know that?’ I asked.
-
-‘The first,’ he replied, ‘I feel—as _Kálee_ did. Now for the second
-count in the indictment. Did you not hear him tell us that this was
-his first visit to Yamnibar? Well, when he asked so carelessly if we
-had tried the big shaft over yonder—the one where you can see the
-remains of a horse-whim—and you said that we had not, a momentary
-gleam of satisfaction passed across his face. We’ll try that hole
-to-morrow morning. Luckily, our new standards are finished.’
-
-‘Pooh!’ I said. ‘My dear fellow, your legal training has made you too
-suspicious. The poor old beggar may have an idea of prospecting that
-very shaft himself.’
-
-‘He probably has,’ replied Treloar quietly. ‘Only don’t forget that he
-doesn’t like underground work.’
-
-However, my companion had his own way, which, except in such matters
-as that of the snake-test, he generally did; and next morning saw us
-fixing our windlass at the summit of the big heap of mullock which
-towered above its fellows.
-
-We seldom got anything in such claims. They had mostly been worked by
-rich companies, and every ounce of wash-dirt removed.
-
-It was pretty late by the time we had removed sufficient of the
-_débris_ from the bottom of the shaft—too late to do more that night.
-
-As we walked over to our camp, we caught a glimpse of ‘Brummy’
-following us.
-
-‘He’s been watching,’ said Treloar.
-
-‘Nonsense!’ I replied impatiently. ‘You’re becoming a monomaniac.’
-
-That evening our neighbour came over to our fire; and in consequence
-_Kálee_, in low threatening communion with herself, had to be put upon
-the chain.
-
-‘Goin’ to try the big un?’ he asked presently.
-
-‘Yes,’ said Harry; ‘there may be something there. One can never tell.’
-
-‘Not much danger!’ he blurted out. ‘The coves as worked Number One
-North Rainbow weren’t the chaps to leave much behind ’em.
-Leastways’—he quickly added, seeing his mistake, ‘so I’ve heerd say.’
-
-Treloar gave me a look which meant ‘How now?’ but neither of us took
-further notice.
-
-‘I’ve heard tell, too,’ he continued, ‘as that claim’s häänted.’
-
-‘Oh!’ said Treloar airily, and as if in constant association with
-them, ‘we don’t mind ghosts. It’s the living, not the dead, that force
-us betimes to keep a sharp look-out.’
-
-‘Well, mates,’ retorted Brummy, rather sulkily, ‘I ain’t quite
-cunnin’ enuff yet to chew tacks, but I ain’t not altogether a born
-hidjiot; an’ if anybody was to offer me a thousand poun’ to go down
-that ’ere shaft, where you got your win’less rigged, an’ up them
-drives, I wouldn’t do it.’
-
-‘I was down it to-day,’ I remarked, ‘and didn’t notice anything out of
-the common.’
-
-‘Mebbe not, mebbe not—yet,’ said he. ‘But the yarns I’ve listened
-to—on the Lachlan, over yander—consarning that ’ere Rainbow claim ’d
-make your ’air stick up stiff.’
-
-During the night, feeling restless and unable to sleep, I got up and
-went outside. The weather was very hot, and, for some time, I sat and
-listened to the faint wash of the sea, longing for a plunge in its
-cool depths. Suddenly, in the great expanse of gloom, my eyes caught
-the glimmer of a light. As nearly as I could guess, it was moving
-slowly towards the shaft we were to descend in the morning.
-
-‘There goes your aged friend,’ said a voice at my shoulder, which made
-me start with the unexpectedness of it.
-
-‘Too hot and close to sleep,’ explained Treloar. ‘Come out for a
-breath of air.’
-
-‘Let’s shepherd the old chap, and see what his little game is. Bring
-the lantern. Needn’t show a light. We know the way well enough. I
-expect he’s after ghosts.’
-
-As, breathless, we arrived at our windlass, Treloar gave a grunt of
-disappointment on seeing that everything was exactly as we had left
-it—rope coiled neatly round the barrel, green-hide bucket hanging over
-the mouth.
-
-‘It must have been a Jack-o’-lantern,’ said he; ‘or perhaps the old
-sinner’s gone down some other shaft. Yes, by Jingo! look there!’ he
-exclaimed, pointing to where, a couple of hundred of yards distant, a
-flash of light was visible for a moment. ‘He’s gone down the Snake
-Shaft! Those ladders are as rotten as pears; and he’ll break his
-wicked old neck if he isn’t careful. I wish him joy of all he’ll find
-there, even if he gets to the bottom safely. What came we out for to
-see? Let’s make back.’
-
-It was my turn down next morning, and when I got to the end of the
-hundred and odd feet of the häänted shaft, I lit my candle, and, at
-random, entered one of the four roomy drives that had been put in so
-many long years ago.
-
-So extensively had it been quarried, that I was only obliged to stoop
-slightly. Not a trace of earthen pillar here. A valuable property
-this, and a clean-swept one. Travelling warily along, I suddenly
-stumbled over a ridge of mullock, into what was evidently another
-drive altogether.
-
-My course, so far, had been downwards. The new tunnel sloped slightly
-upwards.
-
-Evidently both claims had been driving for a ‘gutter.’ One of them had
-got to the end of its tether before reaching it. The surface limits of
-‘golden holes’ are pretty strictly defined; but roguery, as well as
-miscalculation, has been known to produce curious effects in
-adjoining claims. Not that, just then, I bothered myself with any such
-speculations. I was on the look-out for a lump of that rich water-worn
-conglomerate which had made Yamnibar, in the days of its youth, the
-talk of the world. Sitting down to rest a minute, the candlelight fell
-brightly on the shining steel of a pick.
-
-I had noticed how freshly the earth smelled, and wondered thereat. The
-pick was fresh too. One could swear that it had not left its owner’s
-grip five minutes. Without a doubt it had been used to remove the thin
-curtain of earth between the rival drives.
-
-Looking more closely, fresh knee and footprints were plentiful.
-
-What the deuce did it mean?
-
-Crawling along the new drive, which was much smaller than the
-Rainbow’s, I at length emerged into a shaft that struck me as
-familiar.
-
-The ‘Snake,’ or I was a Dutchman!
-
-I knew it by the ladders, for one thing; for another, by a piece of
-timber at the entrance to the opposite drive—the one in which we had
-made our three-ounce rise.
-
-I tried the rungs of the rude ladders. Not half so rotten as we had
-taken them to be. Also covered with fresh earth left by recent boots.
-
-Only fifty feet to the top, and up I went safely enough. Treloar was
-sitting smoking, with his back towards me as I approached.
-
-I startled him finely when I spoke.
-
-‘This is the hole the old man wants,’ he remarked, after hearing my
-story. ‘He knew he couldn’t very well get down our rope and climb up
-it again. But he knew that one of the ‘Snake’ drives ran nearly into
-one of these. I suspect he must once have been employed in one or
-other of the claims. Either that, or he’s been fossicking here before.
-You know we’ve come across plenty of traces of such. Cunning old
-dodger! But what _can_ he be after? I tell you what. We’ll both go
-down and try another of the drives. We’ll leave _Kálee_ on top to
-watch. I’ll bet you she’ll sing out pretty soon.’
-
-I said nothing, for I was beginning to have doubts respecting
-‘Brummy’s’ veracity.
-
-This time I lowered Treloar first. Then, whilst he held the rope taut,
-I slipped comfortably down.
-
-We chose the opposite drive to the one I had explored, and moved in,
-Treloar leading.
-
-‘Hello!’ said he presently, ‘someone’s been here before us. See,
-there’s been a good-sized pillar taken out. Why, here’s some of the
-dirt left yet! And—good God!’ he suddenly exclaimed, ‘what’s this?’
-
-Pushing up alongside him, and holding my candle forward, I saw, lying
-at full length, a human skeleton. And yet it was not a complete
-skeleton. Here and there, rags and tatters of flesh, dry and hard as
-leather, stuck to the frame. A pair of heavy boots, with the ankle
-bones protruding, lay detached, and remnants of clothing were still
-visible. But the head was what fixed our gaze, the first horror of the
-thing over. The fore part of the skull had been smashed completely
-in. Near by lay a small driving-pick, thickly encrusted as with rust.
-
-‘Neither rats, nor mice, nor snakes did that,’ whispered Treloar,
-pointing to the awful fracture.
-
-‘Surely,’ I replied, with a shiver, ‘this can’t be the thing old
-Brummy’s searching for. No wonder he insisted on the place being
-haunted.’
-
-‘Not that poor valueless shell,’ answered my friend, who was now
-kneeling, ‘but this! and this! and this!’ holding up, as he spoke,
-three fine nuggets, whose dull gleam had caught his eye in the heap of
-loose drift on which the skeleton partially lay.
-
-‘Never!’ I exclaimed. ‘He never would have had the pluck to face back
-again if _that_ is some of his work.’
-
-‘If it is,’ said Treloar, quickly springing to his feet, thereby
-bumping the roof with his head, ‘we shall soon hear of it. Back, man!
-Back for your life! Hark! By G—d! there’s _Kálee_ now. Good dog, hold
-him!’ as if it were possible for her to hear at that depth.
-
-Pushing and scrambling along, we got to the entrance of the drive,
-where the muffled sounds resolved themselves in a furious hullaballoo
-of barks and curses. Then, as we paused for a moment, swish, swish,
-down came the windlass rope, falling all of a heap. Just as we were on
-the point of pushing out, what feeble light there was at the bottom
-changed into total darkness, and, with a terrific smash, a heavy mass
-fell at our feet. Then silence, broken only by low groans and hoarse
-fierce growls.
-
-With trembling hands we relit our candles, and saw more distinctly.
-
-Upon the rope coils lay ‘Brummy,’ quite still. Squatted on his breast,
-the great hound watched him narrowly—so narrowly that her lolling red
-tongue nearly touched the face of the prostrate man. Blood oozed
-slowly from his mouth and ears.
-
-With reluctance the dog obeyed her master’s call, and, apparently
-uninjured, crouched in a corner, panting loudly, while we examined
-Brummy.
-
-‘_Habet!_’ said Treloar, as we turned him over. ‘Back’s broken! See
-here’ (producing a loaded revolver from a hip-pocket), ‘the old man
-meant business. It’s only guessing, mind. But he probably thought we
-should attempt to escape up the Snake Shaft, and would have shot us
-off the ladders like magpies. Well done, Goddess _Kálee_. You’ve
-proved yourself worthy of your name for once, anyhow.’
-
-With a good deal of trouble we got the rope through the drive into the
-Snake Shaft and on to our windlass again. It had been cut clean off
-with a tomahawk. We hove the man and the dog up. We let the other
-thing alone for a while. But the one we had thought dead was still
-alive, with a little life. As the cool air blew on his face he opened
-his eyes. It was all he could do. Black, beady eyes, once sharp and
-piercing, now fast dulling with the death-film. And he lay there and
-watched me, staring fixedly. It was a bright sunshiny day, the birds
-were singing cheerily about us, and the wash of the sea was very
-faint. From the expression on his face I thought he was listening to
-it. Presently Treloar returned from the camp with some brandy, and
-poured a spoonful between the clenched teeth.
-
-The spirit revived him a little, and he spoke. He said,—
-
-‘Curse you!’
-
-More brandy, and he spoke again.
-
-‘Is he there yet?’
-
-‘He’s there yet,’ answered Treloar. ‘How long ago was it?’
-
-‘Ten year.’
-
-‘What did you kill him for?’
-
-More brandy; and then, as his eyes brightened, he laughed, actually
-laughed up at us, saying, in a strong voice,—
-
-‘Why, you fool, for the big lump, o’ coorse! A ’underd an’ eighty
-ounces! Too big to share, I reckon. I’d a-smashed a dozen men for it
-in them days, let alone a poor softy like Jim.’
-
-‘There must be thirty or forty ounces down there,’ I remarked. ‘Why
-didn’t you take that too?’
-
-‘Never you mind,’ he said. ‘I come back for it now. And if it hadn’t
-been for that theer infernal dorg I’d ha’ had it.’
-
-‘And how about us?’ asked Treloar, as, obeying the look in his eyes,
-he gave him another drink.
-
- [Illustration: Upon the rope coils lay “Brummy,” quite still.
- (Page 87)]
-
-The dying man smiled significantly, but said nothing. There was a long
-pause, during which Brummy shut his eyes, and breathed stertorously,
-whilst _Kálee_, drawing herself noiselessly along on her belly, came
-closer, and looked into his face, but with no anger in her gaze now.
-
-‘There’s one thing I can’t understand,’ said Treloar, in a low voice,
-‘and that is how he contrived to get up this shaft again with the
-gold.’
-
-Quietly as he spoke, Brummy heard him, and muttered—
-
-‘Would ye like to know?’
-
-‘No, no!’ exclaimed Treloar earnestly. ‘We have wasted far too much
-precious time already in vain talk. Can we do anything to make your
-mind easier? You know you can’t last much longer. In God’s name try
-and prepare yourself to meet Him.’
-
-Very slowly came the reply, in short gasps,—
-
-‘I’m easy enough. If I could choke the pair o’ ye by winkin’ I’d do
-it. I’m gittin’ cold a’ready. But I’m cursin’ ye to mysen all the
-time. If I kin git back I’ll häänt ye.’
-
-Another long silence, and then he murmured,—
-
-‘Take that dorg away, Jim, or I’ll put the pick into yer! There, you
-got it now, ole man! Ah, would yer?’
-
-Then the flickering light in the eyes failed altogether, and, I take
-it, a very defiant, murderous old soul went forth to meet its Maker.
-
-_Kálee_, smelling at the body, sat upon her haunches and wailed loudly
-and dismally after the manner of her kind, answered from the flat by
-Eclipse, marvelling at the disturbance of his friend, with sonorous
-bellowings.
-
-This was the requiem of him as he passed to join the other shades of
-Yamnibar. Slain by a dog and the cunning of his own hand.
-
-As for the gold that ‘Jim’ had lain by so quietly, and watched so
-patiently through the years, we never got any of it.
-
-The three nuggets figured in the police-court inquiry, with other
-things, under the title of ‘Exhibit A.’
-
-That was the last glimpse we had of them.
-
-Departmental red tape enwrapped them so closely that no amount of
-solicitation could render them visible again—to us.
-
-Easier would it be to draw leviathan from the waters with a bit of
-twine and a crooked pin than to draw ‘treasure trove’ from the coffers
-of a treasury—colonial or otherwise.
-
-To this day they are possibly accumulating dust, pigeon-holed with the
-depositions in the case. But I doubt it, I doubt it.
-
-
-
-
-THE PROTECTION OF THE ‘SPARROWHAWK.’
-
-
-Many people have their special antipathies. There are instances on
-record of one fainting at the scent of heliotrope; of another becoming
-hysterical at the mewing of a cat; and so on, and so on, _ad
-infinitum_. The Scotch, as a rule, are anything but a nervously
-susceptible nation, taken either collectively or individually. Nor
-have I heard that those members of it who follow the sea as a calling
-are more so than their shorekeeping compatriots.
-
-Still, to the present day, and probably to the day of his departure,
-John M‘Cracken, retired master mariner, of Aberdeen, becomes signally
-and powerfully moved by the cry of the domestic duck, rendered
-universally and approximately as ‘Quack!’ His red face grows redder,
-his light blue eyes glower menacingly, and his hands open and close
-nervously, as if longing for some missile wherewith to annihilate the
-unconscious fowl—or its human imitator.
-
-The _Sparrowhawk_, barque, M‘Cracken master, was chartered to convey
-returning Chinese passengers from Singapore to Amoy.
-
-I think the regulations as to space, numbers, etc., etc., could not,
-in those days, have been very strict. Be this as it may, Skipper
-M‘Cracken filled up until he could fill no more. The ’tween deck was
-like a freshly-opened sardine tin; on the main deck they lay in double
-tiers. Many roosted in the tops. The boats on the davits and the
-long-boat on the skids swarmed with the home-going children of the
-Flowery Land. The better class, merchants, tradesmen, etc., had
-secured everything aft, from the captain’s cabin to the steward’s
-pantry, for which accommodation fabulous sums found their way into the
-pockets of M‘Cracken and his mates. For’ard, the crew had vacated the
-forecastle in consideration of sundry handfuls per man of dollars,
-which they had subsequently discovered to be ‘chop.’
-
-The mild-eyed heathen in his leisure moments had amused himself by
-punching pellets of good silver out of them, and filling the holes up
-with lead. From taffrail to bowsprit-heel, from waterways to keelson,
-the _Sparrowhawk_ seethed and stank with a sweltering mass of yellow
-humanity. Every soul had a square of matting and a water-jar, also an
-umbrella. They also all had money—more or less. The fellows aft, with
-the flowing silk gowns and long finger-nails, owned chests of it, all
-in silver specie, stowed snugly away in the lazarette. The herd
-carried their little fortunes, hardly earned by years of incessant
-toil as _sampan_ men, porters, or what not, in the great border city
-on the sea, hidden upon their persons.
-
-The vessel looked grotesque to a degree. She was flying light, and
-towered loftily out of the water. Upon her deck, amidships, rose two
-big arrangements after the nature of boilers. These were for cooking
-rice, and were occasionally the scenes of fierce fighting, during
-which the Europeans would clamber into the rigging, leaving a clear
-field, and applaud vociferously. They were a harmless people, and
-fought like sheep-dogs, rarely doing one another much harm.
-
-From the barque’s side protruded curious cage-like structures
-connected with the sanitary affairs of the multitude. This last lay
-everywhere, pervaded everything. If you wanted a rope you had to
-dislodge half-a-dozen grunting, naked bodies. Trimming the yards o’
-nights the watches tripped and fell amongst the prostrate ranks.
-
-The passengers, however, bore it all placidly. They had paid M‘Cracken
-so many dollars per head for a piece of his deck, and the situation of
-it was quite immaterial. Moreover, were they not homeward bound after
-years of separation from wives and little ones with fortunes made
-beyond the sea? Men in such circumstances are apt to be good-tempered.
-A heavy squall would probably have caused the loss of the
-_Sparrowhawk_ and all on board. But Captain M‘Cracken took the
-risk—and the dollars. He slept on an old sail folded across the cuddy
-skylight. His mattress he had leased along with his state-room to one
-of the merchants who, he understood, was a convert to Christianity.
-The wind kept light, with showers at intervals. At the first drop, up
-would go every umbrella; and, looking from aloft, the sight was a
-queer one.
-
-On leaving Singapore the skipper had been warned that pirates were
-still to be met with in Chinese waters, and, short though the passage
-was, advised to arm, at all events in some sort, his ship and crew.
-This he did. At a marine store he bought, second-hand, a couple of
-cannon—three pounders—also several dozen of grape shot. In exchange
-for a worn mizzen-topsail and the fat saved by the cook (of usage the
-latter’s perquisite) on the passage out, he procured some old Tower
-muskets, a few boarding-pikes, and three horse-pistols for his own and
-his officers’ especial use. These last had flintlocks and mouths like
-a bell. Thus equipped, he declared himself ready for any piratical
-attack.
-
-The ship’s agents smiled meaningly, and winked at each other; but,
-knowing their man, forbore further advice, well recognising the
-inutility of it. A Scotchman who owns a full half interest in his
-ship, who hails from Aberdeen, and habitually comes ashore in
-latitude 0 with a Glengarry cap on, no umbrella, and naked feet, is
-not a being to stand argument.
-
-One night the moon rose full, and right aft. She rose, too, with a big
-black spot in her disc that had no right to be there.
-
-There was too much _samshoo_ aboard for a very sharp look-out to be
-kept for’ard. That native spirit gets into men’s eyes and weakens
-them. But aft the skipper caught sight of the object.
-
-‘It’ll be a junk, I’m thinkin’!’ he said presently, after working away
-for a while with his glass; ‘an a muckle ane at that. She’s fetchin’ a
-breezie wi’ her, whilk’s a comfort.’
-
-Some of the long-nailed aristocrats were lounging about the poop. They
-needed no glass to make out the approaching vessel. Gathering in a
-group, they cackled noisily, pointing and gesticulating among
-themselves.
-
-Then, coming up to the captain, one—it was his Christian
-friend—plucked him by the arm and uttered laconically, with extended
-digit, ‘Prat!’
-
-‘Weel, Johnnie,’ replied old M‘Cracken coolly, as he gathered the
-other’s meaning, ‘pireet, or no pireet, gin he come a wee closer,
-we’ll just pepper the hide o’ him wi’ cauld airn.’
-
-Without more ado, the Chinaman dived into his cabin and in a minute or
-two reappeared with a most hideous idol and a bundle of perfumed
-paper. Placing the thing right under the skipper’s nose, he lit a yard
-of paper and began to screech an invocation. As of good Presbyterian
-stock, M‘Cracken was irritated and shocked.
-
-‘Mon, mon,’ he exclaimed, ‘what wad ye be at! Hae ye niver been tauld
-that a’ graven eemages is an abomination in the sicht o’ the Lord? An’
-I thocht ye was a Christian.’ So saying, he seized the joss and flung
-it far overboard into the silvery water, just rippling under the
-coming breeze. The worshipper uttered a yell of dismay. But there was
-no time to lose, and, rushing below, he brought up another god, ten
-times as hideous as the first one, and, descending to the main deck,
-aroused the ship with his devotions.
-
-Then arose the sound of a multitude waking in fear—an impressive sound
-and a catching. Up the open hatchways from the steaming, fœtid ’tween
-decks they streamed in hundreds, like disturbed ants, with cries of
-alarm and grief, and strong callings upon their gods. In a minute the
-ship was alive with lights burning before idols of every description.
-A thousand half-naked figures crouched cowering from the break of the
-poop right for’ard. Aft, a handful of rugged Scotch seamen gazed
-quietly at the black spot over the water. Presently the two little
-guns were crammed half up to the muzzle with powder and grape, and
-placed each in a socket cut out for it after leaving Singapore. The
-remainder of the weapons were, with a stock of ammunition, divided
-amongst the crew. Hot irons were put in the galley fire; and the
-skipper, having thus placed his ship in a thorough state of defence,
-felt complacent, and half-inclined to shorten sail, wait for the
-pirates to come up, and then give them a lesson. Old seaman though he
-was, he was a new hand in these Eastern waters.
-
-Confiding his notion to the second mate, who was also carpenter, also
-sailmaker, a grizzled ancient shellback of much experience and endless
-voyaging, the other laughed aloud, but not mirthfully.
-
-‘If,’ said he, ‘yon’s a “prat,” as Johnnie there ca’s it, we’ll a’ be
-meat for the fishes afore the sun’s risen!’
-
-‘Hoots!’ exclaimed the skipper angrily, ‘whaur’s yer pluck, Davie,
-mon! I didna think ye’d be for showin’ the white feather a’ready, an’
-ye a Newburgh lad as weel’s mysel’! What’s a handfu’ o’ naked salvages
-like yon, in compare wi’ us an’ oor arteelery?’
-
-‘An’ hoo mony men micht she carry yonder, div ye think?’ queried the
-other, taking a squint at the junk, whose huge oblong sails shone
-whitely under the moonbeams.
-
-‘Mebbe a score or sae,’ replied M‘Cracken, ‘airmed maistley wi’
-spears, an’ skeens, sic, as I’ve been tauld, bein’ their usual
-weepons.’
-
-The other chuckled hoarsely as he said, ‘If she’s a pireet, she’ll hae
-at the vera leest a guid twa ’unnered aboord, a’ airmed wi’ muskets
-an’ swords, forbye things they ca’ gingals, takin’ a sax-ounce ball,
-to say nothin’ o’ stinkpots an’ ither deviltries. Mon, I’ve seen ’em
-wi’ guns they cannonies there wadna mak’ rammars for. But if that chap
-has ony, I doubt we sud ha’ heard frae him ere the noo.
-
-‘I was ance,’ continued he, ‘lyin’ in Hongkong Harbour, when they cut
-oot the _Cashmere_, a bouncin’ ocean steamer, in the braid daylicht,
-an’ murthered ivery soul on boord o’ her. Na, na, skipper; let her but
-get a haud on us, and ye’ll see the deil gang o’er Jock Wabster sure
-aneuch.’
-
-The skipper listened silently. Then, wetting his finger and holding it
-up, he said,—
-
-‘Perhaps, after a’, Davie, mon, ye might ’s weel set they t’g’nt
-stun’s’ls, gin ye can get them up, wi’ sic an awfu’ rabble as is aboot
-the deck.’
-
-The breeze had died away again. There was only just enough of it to
-keep the sails full. The fresh canvas, however, sent the _Sparrowhawk_
-through the water half a knot faster, and she was beginning to
-perceptibly leave the junk astern, when suddenly out from her sides
-flashed a long row of sweeps, under whose impulse she recovered her
-lost ground very quickly. If there had been any doubt about the
-character of the stranger, there remained none now; and the uproar,
-which had partially ceased, arose with tenfold vigour.
-
-Some of the passengers went down into the lazarette and commenced to
-stow as many dollars as they could about their clothing. Others
-divided their attention between their idols and the skipper, running
-frantically from one to the other. Curiously enough the junk appeared
-satisfied to maintain her distance, although, had she so desired, she
-could with her sweeps have easily overhauled the barque.
-
-Now, from away on the port hand, where lay the outline of the Chinese
-coast, black beneath the moon, came a gentle mist hanging low and
-thick upon the water. As it gradually enveloped the ship, hiding all
-but close objects from view, she was kept away three or four points.
-But, presently, with the haze, what wind there was left her, the sails
-gave a few ominous flaps, and then hung limply down. At this moment a
-Chinaman, uttering a loud yell of fright, pointed over the starboard
-quarter. There, close aboard, loomed up a dark mass almost, high as
-she was, on a level with the _Sparrowhawk’s_ poop-railing. It was the
-junk.
-
-‘The het poker, quick!’ shouted the captain. Some one brought it and,
-unheeding the skipper, dabbed it straightway on the touch-hole of the
-little cannon pointing directly, as it happened, at the pirate.
-
-The powder being damp, fizzed for a minute, and, just as M‘Cracken
-sung out, ‘More pouther; she’s fluffed ’i the pan!’ with a roar the
-thing went off. Off and up as well, for it sprung six feet in the air,
-and descended with a crash into the binnacle.
-
-‘Fetch the ither ane,’ shouted M‘Cracken, ‘an’ gie ’em anither dose i’
-the wame. Hear till ’em,’ he continued, as a most extraordinary noise
-arose from the junk now just abreast of the mizzen-rigging. ‘Hear till
-’em scraighin’, the thievin’ heathen pireets. They havena muckle
-likin’ for sic a med’cin’. It gives them the mirligoes. Pit yer fut on
-her, Tam Wulson, whiles I send her aff,’ he went on, addressing a
-sailor, as the other gun was brought over and shipped.
-
-‘Pit yer ain fut on her, captain,’ answered the man. ‘I dinna
-a’thegither like the notion. She’ll lat oot like ony cuddy, judgin’
-frae her mate.’ But the skipper was too excited to argue, and,
-applying the hot iron, spit—fizzle—bang, and the piece went up, and,
-this time, clean overboard.
-
-A thousand capering madmen were yelling at the top of their voices on
-board the _Sparrowhawk_; but high and shrill above even that clamour
-could be heard the screech from the junk at that last discharge. The
-fog was still thick around the latter, and the ship’s sails being
-aback, she was making a stern board towards the enemy, to whom
-M‘Cracken, exulting, determined to administer a _coup de grâce_.
-
-‘Noo then, a’thegither,’ he cried, and the old muskets and the
-bell-muzzled pistols roared and kicked and sent a leaden shower
-somewhere, while, amidst an indescribable medley of yells and cheers,
-the defeated pirate vanished into the mist.
-
-Someone cried out that she had sunk. But presently the sound of her
-sweeps could be heard in the distance.
-
-Then the skipper, flushed and elated with victory, snapped his fingers
-in the second mate’s face, as he exclaimed,—
-
-‘That for yer Chinese pireets, Davie M‘Phairson! Whaurs a’ their
-muskets an’ gingals an’ sic-like the noo? Gin they had ony, they were
-ower frichted to make use o’ them I expeck! But,’ growing serious, ‘my
-name’s nae Sandy M‘Cracken gin I dinna chairge Tam Wulson two pun ten
-shillin’—whilk is the price o’ her at cost—for lettin’ the wee bit
-cannonie gang overboord. I tellt him to keep her down wi’ his feet,
-and he wadna.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-Swatow at last; and the _Sparrowhawk_ surrounded with a thousand
-_sampans_ whose occupants welcomed their returned friends and
-relatives by trying to emulate Babel.
-
-M‘Cracken was deified. His cabin could not hold the presents—mostly in
-kind—that he received. Also, his grateful passengers, having set apart
-a day for special rejoicing and thanksgiving, returned, and, willy
-nilly, decorated the _Sparrowhawk_ after the manner of their land with
-banners and lanterns, and had a high old time on board under the
-leadership of the convert, who bewailed his backsliding, and privately
-asked M‘Cracken to baptise him anew.
-
-The story of the fight ran all up and down the seaboard. Hongkong
-heard of it, or a version of it, and the _Gazette_ published a long
-story headed in big caps: ‘Another Piratical Outrage.—The
-_Sparrowhawk_ turns on her Pursuer—Conspicuous Bravery of the Captain
-and Crew—The Pirate Beaten off with Great Loss.’ Singapore heard it,
-and the _Straits Times_ followed suit with ‘Four Junks and Terrible
-Slaughter.’ This latter item, as we shall presently see, being pretty
-near the mark.
-
- * * * * *
-
-But what cripple is this that, in a couple of days, comes staggering
-up to the Swatow anchorage with her mat sails full of holes and her
-decks covered with scarcely dry blood, and whose crew dance and
-screech a wild defiance at the _Sparrowhawk_ as she passes on to the
-inner harbour?
-
-Presently off comes a mandarin and a guard of soldiers and hales
-M‘Cracken ashore, protesting and threatening.
-
-The British Consul is just dead of enteric fever. There is, however, a
-French one, and in his room the complaint of Sum Kum On, master of the
-_Delight of the Foaming Seas_, is heard. The tribunal is a mixed one,
-consisting of two mandarins and the Consul. The first witness called
-is Sum Kum On. He states that his vessel is a coaster, engaged mostly
-in the poultry trade. That, on the present trip, he left Kin Fo, a
-small port four days’ sail from Swatow, laden with a deck cargo of
-ducks for the Swatow and Chee Foo markets. Had on board one passenger,
-a wealthy tea-grower of Honan, who, carrying with him many dollars,
-was naturally nervous, and afraid of pirates. Sighting the big
-vessel, the tea-grower, now in court, and prepared to give evidence,
-prayed him (Sum Kum On) to keep close to it for protection from said
-pirates.
-
-He did so. But in the calm and mist he unwittingly, and without evil
-intent (being, as their Highnesses could see, only a poor trader) came
-too near, when to his amazement showers of bullets and great cannon
-balls tore his sails to pieces; and, but for the coops being piled
-high on deck, assuredly every soul must have perished.
-
-In spite of explanations and shouts for mercy he was repeatedly fired
-into, all his cargo killed, sixty new coops of the best bamboo knocked
-to atoms; one of his crew desperately wounded, his vessel
-irretrievably damaged. His claim was for five hundred dollars; and he
-retired, secure in the knowledge that the Heaven-Born Son of the great
-foreign nation who, that day, with the Twin Lights of Justice,
-occupied the judgment-seat, would mete out compensation with an
-unsparing hand.
-
-The dealer gave evidence much to the same effect. Then the wounded
-sailor, whose scalp had been furrowed by a ball, ghastly with bandages
-and the gore which he had liberally smeared over his features, told
-his tale. To wind up with, the unlucky jumping cannon, which had
-pitched on to the deck of the junk, was produced as evidence of
-identity. Outside, in piles, lay other witnesses—hundreds of fine fat
-ducks, stiff and ‘high.’
-
-Around the building the fickle crowd could be heard raging for the
-blood of the unfortunate M‘Cracken, so lately their hero. The Consul,
-who spoke English well, was obviously ill at ease. The two mandarins
-glared sourly at the poor skipper.
-
-‘I think, captain, you’d better pay at once,’ said the Consul.
-‘Evidently a most unfortunate mistake has been made; and that is the
-only way out of it that I can see.’
-
-‘I’ll see him dom’d afore I do!’ exclaimed the skipper. ‘Five hundred
-dollars! Why, it’s a hundred pun sterlin’ o’ oor money! An’ a’ for a
-wheen dukes an’ a crackit heid! Na, na! Tell the skirlin’ fule I’ll
-gie him fifty dollars, and that’s mair than a’ his gear’s worth. I’ll
-gang to preesin suner than pay as muckle siller as he’s askin’!’
-
-Outside the ‘Children of far Cathay’ could be heard yelling louder
-than ever for the heart, liver, and entrails of the white devil. The
-Consul’s face grew graver as he listened to the wounded sailor, just
-below the open window haranguing the crowd.
-
-‘What’s a’ that claver aboot?’ asked the skipper.
-
-‘They are demanding,’ replied the Consul, ‘that these
-gentlemen’—indicating the mandarins—‘should have you crucified at
-once. And, upon my word, captain, if you don’t soon make up your mind,
-they’ll do it. I am powerless to assist you in any way beyond finding
-you the money.’
-
-M‘Cracken turned blue. It was like parting with his life, the parting
-with that hundred pounds. But he could see no escape. As the Consul
-quickly told him, this was no question of imprisonment, but one of
-cash down. So he paid; and, presently, followed by a coolie carrying
-the little cannon, made his way to the boat between lines of grinning
-soldiery, over whose shoulders the rabble, derisive now, quacked
-itself hoarse. And amongst the noisiest of them he caught sight of his
-Christian passenger.
-
-The _Sparrowhawk_ took no freight from Swatow. She sailed for Rangoon
-speedily; but there it was just as bad. The joke was too good not to
-circulate. In every eastern port she and her people were greeted with
-volleys of ‘quacks’ by the native population both on land and water.
-Legions of imps, black and copper-coloured, and all quacking with
-might and main, formed the skipper’s retinue if he went ashore
-anywhere between Yokohama and Bombay.
-
-Native masters of country _wallahs_, lying within hail, would grin,
-and ask him for the protection of the _Sparrowhawk_ to their next port
-of call. It became unbearable. India, China and Japan seemed to turn
-into duck-pens at his approach.
-
-So he took the _Sparrowhawk_ out of those waters altogether, and
-shortly afterwards gave up the sea. But, although there are no ducks
-within a mile of his house on the Aythen, there are urchins—Scotch
-urchins—and he has not perfect peace. The story is too well known.
-
-As for his crew, even yet, if one should, with intent, imitate the cry
-of that fowl disastrous where two or three of them happen to be
-foregathered, they will come at you with the weapons nearest.
-
-
-
-
-THE DUKE OF SILVERSHEEN.
-
-_Quæ amissa, salva._
-
-
-The parlour of the ‘Woolpack’ was full of men in from their stations
-for ‘Land Court Day.’ A babel of talk was toward—mostly ‘shop.’
-‘Footrot!’ shouted a small energetic looking man, ‘I’ll tell you how I
-cure my sheep! You boil vinegar, and arsenic, and blue-stone up—No,
-Polly, I ordered lager. And then—’ ‘Worms,’ my dear fellow, another
-was saying, ‘You can’t cure ’em! Don’t tell me! You go and make an
-infernal chemist’s shop of your sheep’s stomach, ruin the wool and
-constitution; and, after all your trouble, up bobs the little worm
-serenely as ever.’ ‘Strike,’ came from another corner of the big room.
-‘No fear! No strike this year if we hang together like we mean to do.
-I think we’re pretty right in this district, anyhow. Everybody’s
-joined, bar M‘Pherson, and he’ll come-to presently. By jingo, here he
-is! Touch the bell, Bob, and let’s have ’em again.’ As the speaker
-finished, a burly, grey-whiskered man entered with, in his wake,
-another person who had evidently been closely pressing his companion
-with argument and persuasion, for the latter was saying irritably,—
-
-‘Once for a’, I tell ye, no. I’ll nae join. I’ll just stan’ on my ain
-bottom, an’ employ wha I like. When I want my wool aff, aff it comes;
-an’ wha takes it aff I dinna care a damn, so it’s taken off to my
-satisfaction! Will that do ye?’
-
-‘The gospel of selfishness according to M‘Pherson,’ said a voice from
-out the smoke-clouds. ‘The assessment ’d drive him mad.’ ‘Bang went
-saxpence!’ sang out someone else, as the Scotch squatter turned
-angrily round with a dim idea that he was being baited.
-
-But the older men quietened the youngsters who threatened to break
-bounds.
-
-They still hoped—stubborn and untouchable, except by way of his
-pocket, though he was—to gain M‘Pherson to the cause.
-
-He was the largest sheepowner in the district, and that was saying a
-good deal when the smallest shore 40,000. Palkara shed was one of the
-shearing prizes of the colony, and the A.S.[7] Union officials viewed
-the defection of its owner with joy.
-
- [Footnote 7: Australian Shearers’.]
-
-‘So I hear you bought the “Duke” down at the sales, Mac?’ said one
-presently, as the old man, his wrath subsiding, sipped his whisky and
-water.
-
-‘Ay,’ responded he, ‘it was a stiff price to gie, but I’m no
-regrettin’ it. He’s a wonnerfu’ fine beast.’
-
-They were sitting with their backs to the open windows, which gave on
-to a many-seated crowded verandah, and from this came,—
-
-‘That you may lose him before you’ve had him a week, unless you join
-the Association!’
-
-‘If I do, I’ll join, and ask it to help me find him,’ retorted
-M‘Pherson angrily into the hot outside night, and would fain have
-risen and gone in search of the speaker, but that his friend, whose
-name was Park, a neighbouring squatter, pulled him back, saying,—
-
-‘Never mind these youngsters, Mac. They’re getting a bit sprung, I
-fancy. It’s no use making a row. When’ll the “Duke” be up?’
-
-‘He’s due here on Tuesday,’ replied the other, ‘an’, if ye’ll be in,
-ye can see him. He’s weel worth the lookin’ at. He’ll come by rail to
-Burrtown, an’ then by coach on.
-
-Two bachelor brothers, the Blakes, who owned a run not far from
-Palkara, were close to the window at which the pair sat.
-
-The younger brother it was who had fired the remark inside about
-losing the great ram for which M‘Pherson had just paid 700 guineas.
-
- * * * * *
-
-‘Well, Jack, what passengers to-night?’ asked the overseer of Blake’s
-Tara Station, as Cobb & Co.’s coach drew slowly up in the pouring rain
-close to the homestead door.
-
-‘Nary one, bar a cussed ole brute of a ram,’ replied the driver, as he
-stiffly dismounted, and handed out the mail. ‘I got him at the
-railway, and I’ve bin more cautious with him than if he’d bin a Lord
-Bishop He’s for M‘Pherson up at Palkara. Hold the light please,
-Mr Brown, till I see if the beggar’s all serene.’
-
-‘He’s right enough,’ said the overseer, after a glance at the
-aristocrat, resting luxuriously on pillows, half buried in hay, and
-with his legs tied by silk handkerchiefs. ‘Now,’ he continued, ‘slip
-inside and have a snack and a drop of hot grog. I’ll stand by the
-horses.’
-
-‘You’re a Christian, Mr Brown,’ remarked the driver gratefully, as he
-pulled off his gloves and blew on his numbed fingers. ‘It’s the
-coldest rain for this time o’ the year as ever I felt.’
-
-Scarcely had his dripping figure entered the open kitchen door, when,
-from behind a clump of bushes, came two figures bearing something
-between them. Lifting the ‘Duke’ with scant ceremony out of his couch,
-they deposited their burden in his place, and after a few whispered
-words to Brown, still at the horses’ heads, disappeared. Presently the
-driver returned, and, with a cheery ‘Good-night,’ started the coach
-rolling once more through the forty miles of mud and water between
-Tara and Combington.
-
- * * * * *
-
-‘Coach in, Edwards?’ asked M‘Pherson the next afternoon as he drove up
-to the ‘Woolpack,’ accompanied by his friend Park.
-
-‘Yes, sir. It’s a bit late, though,’ replied the landlord. ‘Roads
-terrible heavy after the rain. I had the ram untied an’ put in the
-stable, an’ gave him some green stuff.’
-
-‘That’s right, Edwards,’ said the squatter. ‘How does he look after
-the trip—pretty well?’
-
-The other hesitated before answering,—
-
-‘Why, yes, sir; he seems hearty enough. But I’m no judge of sheep.’
-
-‘S’pose ye wouldna care about givin’ 700 guineas for him, eh,
-Edwards?’ chuckled M‘Pherson.
-
-‘No, sir,’ replied the landlord with emphasis, ‘I’m damned if I
-would.’
-
-‘Ha, ha!’ laughed the other, as he drove into the yard, ‘and yet, mon,
-I wouldna swap him for the auld “Woolpack.” Come,’ he added
-impatiently, ‘unlock the door an’ let us hae a look at His Grace.’
-
-By this time there was quite a crowd on the scene. A couple of stock
-and station agents, a bank manager, the P.M., some drovers, everybody,
-in fact, who thought they knew a sheep from a goat, had assembled to
-have a look at ‘the big ram.’
-
-‘Keep awa’ frae the door,’ quoth M‘Pherson. ‘Ye’ll all be able to hae
-a good sight o’ him presently. Let him come right out into the yaird,
-Edwards.’
-
-As he finished, up the lane of spectators stalked a nondescript kind
-of animal, at which M‘Pherson just glanced, and then sang out to
-Edwards, appearing in the doorway,—
-
-‘Ye never tauld me there was twa. Whaur’s the ither?’
-
-‘There’s only the one, sir,’ answered the landlord. ‘That’s he.’
-
-‘What!’ and M‘Pherson fairly gasped as he stared at the brute,
-which—from the muleish head, down the sparsely ‘broken woolled’ back,
-and slab-sided flanks, to the bare, kangaroo-like legs—bore the
-impress all over of ‘rank cull.’
-
-Then turning to the grinning landlord, and with accent intensified by
-excitement, he shouted, ‘What’s yon thing? Whaur’s my ram? D’ye think
-I ped my money for sic a brute as that? What ha’ ye done wi’ the
-“Duke”? If this is a wee bit joke o’ yer ain, Mister Edwards, time’s
-up, I do assure ye, sir.’ And he advanced threateningly towards the
-publican, who nimbly retreated into the crowd, whilst protesting,—
-
-‘I can swear to you, sir, that’s the very same sheep Jack Burns
-brought in the coach this mornin’. I helped to take him out, an’ I sez
-to Jack, “Well, he ain’t much to look at, Jack;” and Jack, he sez,
-“No, that he ain’t. I think the trip must have haffected him; he seems
-to have felled away sence we put him in at the railway.”’
-
-‘Tak’ me to the villain,’ groaned M‘Pherson, ‘till I get to the bottom
-of this de’il’s cantrip!’
-
-Followed by quite a procession, they passed to a little room, where
-the driver lay sleeping off the fatigues of the previous night.
-
-‘Hi!’ yelled the squatter, shaking him. ‘What ha’ ye done wi’ my ram,
-ye rascal?’
-
-Jack, sitting up, half awake, replied sulkily,—
-
-‘Damn your ram! He’s in the stable. What d’ye want, rousin’ people
-like this for?’
-
-‘I’ll rouse ye, ye scamp!’ roared the other. ‘Whaur’s my ram—my
-“Duke,” I say? D’ye think that I dinna ken a coo frae a cuddy; an’
-that I’m to be imposed on wi’ a blasted auld cull in place o’ the
-“Duke o’ Silversheen” that I ped 700 guineas guid cash for? D’ye
-imagine I’m daft, ye coach-drivin’ fule, ye? If ye dinna confess wha’s
-led ye astray, I’ll give ye in chairge this vera meenit. I’ll let ye
-ken that I’m Jock M‘Pherson o’ Palkara; an’ I’m goin’ to mak’ it het
-for ye for this wee jobbie!’
-
-This tirade effectually awakened the driver, and said he, with an
-earnestness there was no mistaking,—
-
-‘By G—d, Mr M‘Pherson, I’m on the square. I never took much notice o’
-the ram at the railway. It was dusk, too, when the agent put him in. I
-seen him two or three times along the road, an’ thought he looked fust
-class. Nobody could ha’ touched him without me knowin’ of it. But, at
-the best o’ times, I can’t tell one sheep from t’other, never havin’
-had any truck with ’em. Anyhow, if there’s cross work ’bout this un,
-all I can say is, as I ain’t in it: An’ now you can send for the traps
-if you likes.’
-
-The man’s manner carried conviction with it, and for a few minutes
-M‘Pherson was silent.
-
-At last he said,—
-
-‘Come awa’, some o’ ye, an’ catch the creature till I have a look at
-him.’
-
-But when caught, nothing was ascertainable beyond the one patent fact
-that he was a broken-mouthed, miserable old cull, who ought to have
-gone to market as a wether years ago. Earmarks, out of their own
-district, are of precious little use as a means of identification
-now-a-days.
-
-It will be noticed that Jack forgot all about his twenty minutes’ stay
-and chat with the cook in Tara kitchen. The coach had been very much
-overdue.
-
-‘Surely you’re not going to take the thing home, Mac?’ said his
-friend, as the former lugged the ‘Duke’s’ _locum tenens_ towards the
-buggy. ‘He’s only fit to have his throat cut.’
-
-‘Never mind,’ replied M‘Pherson moodily, ‘he’ll mebbe turn out o’ some
-use yet.’
-
-Not that the old Scotchman was at all inclined to sit down quietly and
-suffer his loss. Very far from it. But he was no favourite, and public
-sympathy was absent. Unfeeling people averred that, at the time of the
-sale, he had been under the influence of hypnotism, etc., etc.; in
-fact, laughed at, and enjoyed the thing as a good joke. Therefore he
-was disinclined to blazon his misadventure throughout the Colonies.
-Also, he thought it would be bad policy to make too much noise.
-
-Nevertheless, he quietly strained every nerve, and spent money freely
-in endeavours to discover the missing animal. Private detectives and
-the local police took the matter in hand, and with exactly the same
-amount of success.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Meanwhile the ‘Duke’ was thriving. At Tara a big underground cellar,
-lit by skylights, had recently been excavated. This was his home.
-There, waited upon by the only three in the secret, the great merino
-lived on the fat of the land. Some nights the Blakes would let him
-out into the garden for a pick, themselves or Brown securing him in
-his quarters again before they turned in.
-
-It was a lot of bother, doubtless. But what of that, if they could
-only ‘bring old Mac to his bearings,’ and secure Palkara for their
-Association!
-
-As for the risk of discovery, they laughed at it. From the minute the
-agent (who was ready to swear to the ‘Duke’s’ identity) put him in the
-coach at the Burrtown terminus, everything seemed vague and
-exceedingly doubtful respecting the spot at which the transfer could
-possibly have been effected.
-
-The coach stopped at some half-dozen stations along the road, besides
-mail stages, and at none of these places could the slightest clue be
-obtained. In common with the rest, Tara was subjected to official
-visits.
-
-‘Certainly, Sergeant, happy to show you through all the paddocks. Like
-to see the rams? Yes, of course. We’ve got some very fine Havilahs
-you’ll be pleased with, I’m sure. Yes; terrible affair about poor
-M‘Pherson’s “Duke”! Have another nip before we start?’
-
-So, sheep galore did the unhappy police inspect, and carefully did
-they compare, stags, wethers, and ancient ‘horny’ ewes with photos of
-the ‘Duke’ until, at length, quite dazed with the apparently endless
-quest, to say nothing of the whisky, they audibly cursed the whole
-ovine race back to the days of the first breeders.
-
-Only once did the brothers feel a doubt. Driving into town, they met
-M‘Pherson and a black-fellow following the old cull, who was steadily
-tramping along the road Tara-ward.
-
-‘What’s all this about, M‘Pherson?’ asked one, as they pulled up.
-‘Have you taken a droving contract?’
-
-‘Ay,’ replied the old fellow, glaring suspiciously at the pair. ‘Just
-thet. I’m wantin’ to see whaur Beelzebub, here, gangs. If he’s gotten
-a hame, which I muckle doot, mebbe he’ll mek back.’
-
-But a couple of miles on, Beelzebub struck a patch of clover, and
-stuck to it.
-
-The darkey watched him for three days, and, after he had finished
-every vestige, the old ram paused irresolutely, scratched his ear with
-his hind foot, and meandered calmly back to the township.
-
-So M‘Pherson returned with him to Palkara. A bit of the garden was
-fenced off, and here he used to sit and smoke and stare for hours at
-Beelzebub, until his friends began to think his loss had affected his
-brain.
-
-Like many of his countrymen, M‘Pherson was superstitious, and, deep
-down in his heart, was a lurking suspicion of _diablerie_ that would
-not be exorcised.
-
-‘It’s no earthly use watching that beast, Mac,’ said Park, riding up
-one day, and finding his neighbour at his usual occupation. ‘Look as
-hard as you like, and that won’t turn him into the Duke. Now, take my
-advice, and I think you stand a show of getting him back again. You
-remember you said that night at the Woolpack, that, if you lost him,
-you’d join the Association and trust it to recover him for you, or
-something to that effect. Well, my notion is that some of the boys
-have had a finger in the pie. And I solemnly believe that, if you
-don’t soon make your mind up, you’ll never see the Duke any more.
-Come, now’s the time! Shearing will start presently. Besides, I know
-you want him badly for those Coonong stud ewes.’
-
-Park, himself a prominent member, used all his powers of persuasion,
-and to such good purpose, that in the next issue of the local paper
-appeared the announcement,—
-
- ‘Palkara will start shearing on —— under Conference rules.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-A morning or so afterwards, M‘Pherson going out for his
-before-breakfast smoke and usual look at Beelzebub, to his
-astonishment saw him not. He had gone. But in his stead stood a
-stately, almost perfect animal, the _beau ideal_ of what a ‘Champion’
-should be. Around his neck he bore a card, on which the old squatter
-presently read,—
-
- ‘I am a fully paid-up member of the Pastoralists’ Association of
- Australasia.
-
- ‘(Signed) Silversheen.’
-
-
-
-
-THE OFFICER IN CHARGE.
-
-A Far Inland Sketch.
-
-
-‘A rising township of some four hundred inhabitants, situated on the
-Trickle Trickle River. Distance from Sydney, north-west, six hundred
-and fifty miles.’
-
-Thus the _Australian Gazetteer_, speaking of the far-inland village of
-Jillibeejee. For days you shall have ridden over bush roads, fetlock
-deep in dust, through monotonous open forest, or over still more
-monotonous plain, ere, far away on a dry brown ridge, you catch the
-glitter of something in the bright, hot sunshine. This proceeds from
-the first roof in Jillibeejee. Then, making your horse stride
-carefully over the Trickle Trickle, whose banks are apt to crumble,
-you breast the ridge and take a bird’s-eye view of the township as it
-lies frying in the sun.
-
-This ridge must be fully fifty feet above the level of the surrounding
-country, and is probably the ‘rising’ referred to by the jocular
-_Gazetteer_.
-
-The first building is deserted; so is the second. As you ride along
-you come to others, dilapidated but, from sounds within, peopled.
-There are altogether forty houses in Jillibeejee, which, by the
-_Gazetteer’s_ reckoning, gives us an average of ten inmates to each
-one.
-
-I am afraid the _Gazetteer_ has never been to Jillibeejee.
-
-In fact, very few people ever do seem to go there. Those that do,
-either depart again very shortly, or stay until theirs makes one
-amongst a collection of rudely-fenced enclosures on the banks of the
-Trickle Trickle, inside which sleep the pioneers of the place.
-
-Perhaps the first emotion that arises in the visitor’s mind is of
-wonder that any pioneer, no matter how hard up he may have been,
-should have thought it worth while to commence pioneering at
-Jillibeejee. The second, that any others should ever join him in such
-a speculation. Neither tree nor any other green thing meets the sight.
-All is brown, barren, desolate—apparently a ‘waste land where no one
-comes, or hath come since the making of the world,’ except that
-intrepid band in possession.
-
-Why do people live here? How do they live? I must discover this, if
-possible, before leaving. Having no time to spare, I begin at once.
-
-He is six feet in his stockings, broad, massive, hirsute, and tanned.
-The insignia of office in such a place would be an absurdity.
-Therefore his raiment is nondescript, and mostly slouch hat. This is
-the man who rules the official destinies of the settlement—the
-‘Officer in Charge.’ To him I propound my conundrum.
-
-‘Ah,’ replies he; ‘ye shud jist come aroun’ whin ut’s a wet saison,
-an’ thin ye’d see the differ av ut.’
-
-‘Yes,’ I remark. ‘And when may that time be due?’
-
-‘God knows,’ says he piously, and with a sigh. ‘I’ve bin here four
-year, an’ I’ve seen ut wanst. Ye cudn’t see the counthry for a week
-bekase av the wather. Thin, afther, comes the grass an’ the clover six
-feet high. Ut’s a great counthry, them times, so it is, sorr.’
-
-It is high noon as I and my friend stroll along the fiery, dusty track
-amongst the iron-roofed ovens large and small.
-
-Everybody seems asleep, save that now and again we catch a glimpse of
-women, wan and prematurely old-looking.
-
-In the sun’s eye a man lies in the brown dust. He is on his back, his
-hat off, and snoring stertorously up at a cloud of mosquitoes,
-sandflies, and other abominations hovering and buzzing about his face.
-
-With a look of solicitude my guide exclaims,—
-
-‘Sure, now, that’s Tim Healy, come in from Out Back, an’ his cheque
-gone already! Lend a hand, will ye, sorr, wid the other ind av him.
-The poor devil ’ll be sthruck intirely here, so he will.’
-
-So, one at each ‘ind,’ we bear the man from Out Back into the
-comparative shade of a verandah, where the constable takes off his
-boots, loosens his shirt collar, and props his head up, saying,—
-
-‘There, the cratur, mebbe he’ll waken wid nothin’ worse nor a sore
-head, an’ a limekiln in the throttle av him.’
-
-A fit man and a proper, this one, I reflect, to be Officer in Charge
-of this half-forgotten fragment of a people.
-
-So, presently, I am not surprised at hearing that, in addition to that
-title, he bears the important ones of Clerk of Petty Sessions,
-Registrar of Small Debts Court and Births, Land Bailiff, Inspector of
-Slaughterhouses, Curator’s Agent, and others equally pertinent to his
-surroundings, but which I have forgotten.
-
-Entering the parlour of the one public-house, silent and deserted but
-for clouds of humming flies, a drowsy landlord, booted and spurred for
-riding, answers our knock.
-
-‘I was goin’ over the river an hour ago,’ he explains, rubbing his
-bleary eyes, ‘to run a beast in; but two or three of the boys wos here
-larst night, an’ they kep’ it up; so I lays down on the sofy an’ drops
-right off. What’ll ye have, gents?’
-
-I ask for beer. My companion smiles and ‘takes’ rum.
-
-‘Lor bless yer!’ exclaims the landlord, ‘there ain’t bin no beer here
-this twelvemonth or more! I got some, somewheres, on the teams. But,
-the way things is, it’ll be another twelvemonth afore they show up.
-Dry time, ye see, sir.’
-
-‘Well, then,’ I say, ‘have you any whisky?’
-
-‘There was a bottle or two, but the boys—’ he commenced, when,—
-
-‘What’s the use av batin’ about the bush that way?’ puts in my
-companion. ‘Why don’t ye tell the gint at wanst that sorra a dhrop’ll
-he get in Jillibeejee, bar the rum utself. I’ve dhrunk worse in Port
-Mackay. Ut’s a wholesome dhrink, in moderation, an’ wid jist a
-suspicion o’ Trickle Trickle at the bottom av the tumbler.’
-
-So rum it is. The Officer in Charge takes his, I notice, very nearly
-pure, and without winking. We help ourselves, and the price is one
-shilling each.
-
-It is still terribly hot.
-
-‘It must be a long way over one hundred degrees in the shade,’ I
-remark.
-
-‘Come acrost to the station,’ says the Officer in Charge, ‘an’ we’ll
-see. There’s no shade whatever in Jillibeejee. But there’s the best
-that is. Sure, ut’s weatherboard an’ lined—the only wan in the town.
-There’s a thermomether there as tells how big a hate’s on.’
-
-So we go over. The place is like a furnace, and the glass registers
-one hundred and twenty-seven degrees.
-
-‘And you’ve been here some years!’ I gasp, sliding off my chair, a
-wet, limp heap, on to the floor, and staying there.
-
-‘I have, indade, sorr,’ replies he. ‘The first summer I was minded to
-blow me head off wid me pistol. The second was near as bad; but I
-don’t fale ’em so much now. Whin the wet do come, ut’s almost as
-thryin’; for the san’-flies an’ miskitties bangs Banagher. Ay, ut’s
-dull an’ lonesome like, sure enough, till the b’ys comes in for a
-change; an’ thin, if ye’ll belave ut, Jillibeejee is as ructious a
-towneen as is on God’s earth.’
-
-‘Come in from where? Where the deuce can anybody come in from? And who
-in the world would come to such a hole as this ‘for a change?’ I ask
-irritably, whilst wringing my pocket handkerchief, as the heat proves
-too trying.
-
-‘Whisht!’ replies my host placidly. ‘Ye’ll mebbe have noticed that
-there’s not many min in Jillibeejee, knockin’ aroun’ like?’
-
-‘Only the fellow,’ I answer, ‘that we put in the verandah.’
-
-‘Ay, he’s iver wan o’ the fust, is Tim Healy,’ says the Officer in
-Charge. ‘Whin the others are comin’ in, he’ll be afther going back,
-stone bruk, so he will, poor divil!’
-
-‘In from _where_? Back to _where_?’ I cry impatiently.
-
-‘To an’ fro the big stations on the border, over yander,’ replies he,
-with a wave of his hand westward. ‘To the back av beyant, where they
-digs dams, an’ sinks wells, an’ fences an’ fights wid the naygurs, an’
-herds cattle, an’ gathers up a cheque, and thin comes back like
-pilicans to their women and children on the edge o’ the wiltherness
-here. Good b’ys, in the main,’ he continues; ‘just a little rough,
-perhaps, when the rum’s in. Ye see, sorr, ye can’t expeck much else
-from the craturs, for, iv this is bad, ut’s Hell utself out yander in
-the new counthry, where there’s no law, no polis, no nothin’. D’ye
-wander at the b’ys, now, wantin’ a change out av ut wanst an’ agin?’
-
-‘Well, perhaps not. But what must that other life be like?’
-
-So, in the gloaming, hot and close, with a hot-looking moon hanging in
-a hazy sky, I depart from Jillibeejee, leaving its Officer in
-Charge—strong man, and a very fit—stroking a great black beard
-meditatively, and possessing his soul in patience for the stirring
-times which herald the advent of his charges from the ‘Back av
-Beyant.’
-
-
-
-
-‘SOJUR JIM.’
-
-
-Brightly blazed the watch-fires into the still night air, brightly
-from within the circle formed by them gleamed thousands of sparkling
-eyes, and fell on the ear a low, continuous sound, like the soft
-distant murmur of some summer sea on a shingly beach, as twelve
-thousand sheep peacefully chewed their cuds after the long day’s
-travel.
-
-The weather was close and sultry. So, feeling indisposed to sleep, I
-had left my hot tent and was walking round the whitish, indistinct
-mass of recumbent figures, when I nearly stumbled against the
-watchman, who, as one of the fires flared up, I saw was the eccentric
-individual known in the camp by the nickname of ‘Sojur Jim’; and, in
-pursuance of an idea I had long borne in mind, first assuring myself
-that all was right with my fleecy charges, I lit my pipe, stretched
-myself out on the short, thick grass and sand, and said, whilst
-looking at my watch,—
-
-‘Now, Jim, spin us a yarn that will help to pass away the time.’
-
-But my companion is well-deserving of a more particular description.
-‘Sojur Jim’ was the only name by which he was called, and this he had
-gained by an extraordinary mania he possessed for destroying those
-small terrors of the Australian bush, familiar to all dwellers therein
-as ‘Soldier’ or ‘Bull-dog’ ants; insects fierce, intractable and
-venomous. These, then, seemed objects of especial aversion to Jim; and
-many a time, whilst travelling along, would one of the men sing out,
-‘Jim, Jim, sojurs!’ The effect was electrical; Jim, leaving his flock,
-would bound away towards the nest, and, dexterously using the long
-stick, flattened at both ends in rude shovel shape, which was his
-constant companion, he would furiously, regardless of innumerable
-stings, uproot and turn over the ‘sojurs’’ stronghold, and, having
-exposed its inmost recesses, complete the work of destruction by
-lighting a great fire upon it, and all this he would do with a set
-stern expression on his grim face, as of one who avenges
-never-to-be-forgiven or forgotten injuries.
-
-He was indeed a remarkable looking man, strong and athletic, and, in
-spite of his snow-white hair, probably not more than fifty years of
-age. Part of his nose, the lobes and cartilages of his ears, and one
-eye were wanting, whilst the rest of his face was scarred and seamed
-as if at one time a cross-cut saw had been roughly drawn to and fro
-over it. And as I watched him sitting there on a fallen log, the
-flickering blaze playing fitfully on the white hair and corrugated,
-mutilated features, I felt more than ever sure that the man had a
-story well worth the hearing could he but be induced to tell it.
-
-Amongst his fellows in the camp he was taciturn and morose, never
-smiling, speaking rarely, apparently always lost in his own gloomy
-reflections. My request, therefore, was made with but faint hopes of
-success; but, to my surprise, after a few minutes silence, he
-replied,—
-
-‘Very well, I’ll tell you a story. I don’t often tell it; but I will
-to-night. If at times you feel disinclined to believe it you have only
-to look at my face. I’m going now to tell you how I got all these
-pretty lumps and scars and ridges, and how I partly paid the men who
-made me what I am. “Sojur Jim” they call me, and think I am mad. God
-knows, I fancy so myself sometimes. Well,’ he went on, in language at
-times rude and unpolished, at others showing signs of more than
-average education, ‘Did you ever hear of Captain Jakes?’
-
-‘Of course,’ I answered, for the notoriously cruel bushranger had,
-after his own fashion, helped to make minor Australian history.
-
-‘Yes,’ muttered Jim abstractedly, ‘he’s accounted for. So is his
-mate—the one who laughed the loudest of any. But there were three of
-them, and there’s still another left somewhere. Not dead yet!’ he
-suddenly exclaimed in a loud voice. ‘Surely not! My God, no! After all
-these years of ceaseless search! That would be too hard!’ And here he
-stood up and gazed excitedly into the outer darkness.
-
-‘But the story, Jim,’ I ventured to remark, after a long pause.
-
-‘Right you are,’ he replied, as he again sat down, and calmly resumed.
-‘Well, it was the year of the big rush, the first one, to the Ovens.
-I was a strapping young fellow then, with all my life hopeful and
-bright before me, as I left the old mother and the girl I loved to try
-my luck on the diggings. Three years went by before I thought of
-returning to the little Victorian township on the Avoca, where we had
-long been settled; but then I struck it pretty rich, and made up my
-mind to go back and marry, and settle down alongside the old farm; for
-a pair of loving hearts were, I knew, growing weary of waiting for the
-return of the wanderer.
-
-‘Like a fool, however, instead of sending down my last lot of gold by
-the escort, I all of a sudden got impatient, and, packing it in my
-saddle-bags, along with a tidy parcel of notes and sovereigns, I set
-off alone. The third night out I camped on a good-sized creek, hobbled
-my horses, and after planting my saddle-bags in a hollow log, I
-started to boil the billy for supper. Presently, up rides three chaps,
-and, before I could get to my swag, I was covered by as many
-revolvers; while one of the men says, “Come along, now, hand over the
-metal. We know you’ve got it, and if you don’t give it quiet, why,
-we’ll take it rough.”
-
-‘“You’ve got hold of the wrong party, this time, mates,” says I, as
-cool as I could. “I’m on the wallaby, looking for shearing, and, worse
-luck, hav’n’t got no gold.”
-
-‘“Gammon,” says the first speaker. “Turn his swag over, mates.”
-
-‘Well, they found nothing, of course. Then they searched all over the
-bush round about, and one fellow actually puts his hand up the hollow
-of the log in which lay hid my treasure; and I thought it was all up
-with it, when he lets a yell out of him and starts cutting all sorts
-of capers, with half-a-dozen big sojurs hanging to his fingers.
-
-‘Jakes (for he was the leader of the gang) now got real savage, and
-putting a pistol to my head, swore that he would blow my brains out
-unless I told where the gold was. Well, I wouldn’t let on, for I
-thought they were trying to bounce me, and that if I held out I might
-get clear off, so I still stuck to it that they’d mistaken their man.
-
-‘Seeing I was pretty firm, they drew off for a while, and, after a
-short talk, they began to laugh like madmen; and one, taking a
-tomahawk, cut down a couple of saplings, whilst another gets ready
-some stout cord; and Jakes himself goes poking about in the saltbush
-as if looking for something he’d lost. Before this they had tied my
-arms and legs together with saddle-straps and greenhide thongs; and
-there I lay, quite helpless, wondering greatly what they were up to.
-
-‘Presently the three came up, and tying me tightly to the saplings—one
-along my back, and one cross-ways—they carried me away a short
-distance to where I had noticed Jakes searching around, and then laid
-me down face uppermost, partly stripping me at the same time. I lay
-there quietly enough, puzzling my brains to try and guess what it was
-all about, and those three devils standing laughing fit to split their
-sides.
-
-‘“Tell us now, will you,” said they, “where that gold’s planted? How
-does your bed feel? Are you warm enough?” and such like chaff, till I
-began to think they must have gone suddenly cranky, for I felt nothing
-at all. Perceiving that was the case, one of them took a stick and
-thrust it under me into the ground; and then—oh, God! it was awful!’
-
-Here Sojur Jim paused suddenly, and a baleful light gleamed from that
-solitary bright eye of his, whilst a spasm shook his whole frame, and
-his scarred features were contorted as if once more undergoing the
-agonies of that terrible torture.
-
-The wind sighed with an eerie sound through the tall forest trees
-around us; the cry of some night-bird came mournfully through the
-darkness, whilst black clouds flitted across the young moon, filling
-the sombre Australian glade with weird shadows—making the scene, all
-at once, dismally in unison with the story, as with a shiver I stirred
-the fire, and patiently waited for its narrator to go on.
-
-‘Yes,’ he continued at length, ‘I dropped down to it quickly enough
-then. I was tied on to a sojur-ants’ nest, and they swarmed about me
-in thousands—into my nose, ears, eyes, mouth, everywhere—sting, sting,
-sting, and tear, tear, tear, till I shrieked and yelled for mercy.
-
-‘“Tell us where the gold is planted,” said one of the laughing
-fiends—I heard him laugh again years afterward over the same
-story—“and we’ll let you go.”
-
-‘“Yes!” I screamed, “I’ll tell you. But for God Almighty’s sake take
-me out of this!” “Not much,” replied he. “Tell us first, and then you
-can jump into the creek and give your little friends a drink.” “Look
-in the big log,” I groaned at last. Then, one of them, remembering the
-sojurs, gets a stick and fossicks about till he felt the bags, when he
-shoves his arm up and drags them out.
-
-‘“A square thing, by G—d!” says Jakes, and turning to me, he said,
-“Mate, you’ve given us a lot of trouble, and as you look as if you
-were comfortably turned in for the night, it would be a pity to
-disturb you. So long, and pleasant dreams!” And, with that, away the
-three of them rode, laughing loudly at my screams for mercy. As you
-may think,’ went on Jim, ‘I was by this time nearly raving mad with
-pain. Thousands of those devil-ants were eating into my flesh, and me
-lying there like a log. Hell! hell will never be as bad as that was!
-
-‘Six months afterward I came to my senses again. It was a sunshiny
-spring morning, and I heard the magpies whistling outside the old
-humpy on the Ovens, as I tried to get up and go down to the claim,
-thinking that I’d had the nightmare terrible bad. But when I got off
-my bunk I fainted clean away on the floor, and there my mates found me
-when they came home to dinner. Good lads they were true men, who had
-nursed me and tended me through all the long months of fever and
-madness that had passed since the Escort, for which I should have
-waited, had by the merest chance come across me and sent me back
-again to die, as everyone thought.
-
-‘But,’ and here, for the first time, Jim’s voice faltered and shook,
-‘there was another and a gentler nurse who—God bless her—helped me
-back to life; the little girl who loved me came up—my mother was
-dead—and would have kept her word to me, too, and taken my half-eaten
-carcase into her keeping wholly, had I been mean enough to let her do
-it. But that was more than I could stand the thought of. So one
-morning I slipped quietly away to begin my man-hunting; for I had
-vowed a merciless retribution upon my undoers if I had to track them
-the wide world over. That’s close on fifteen years ago. I can account
-for two, and live on in hopes of yet meeting with the third.
-
-‘You’ve heard how Jakes pegged out?’ asked Jim abruptly.
-
-‘Yes,’ I answered, ‘Sergeant O’Brien shot him in the Long Swamp.’
-
-‘So most people think,’ was his reply. ‘But I know who was first in at
-the end; and when, crouching up to his neck in the mud and long reeds,
-with my fingers grasping his throat, I think, as he turned his
-bloodshot and protruding eyes on mine, I think, I say, that he knew me
-again, all changed as I was. He never spoke, though, and I let him die
-slowly, for I was sure that the sergeant was a long way behind. I held
-him there, I tell you, and watched him as he tried to blow the bubbles
-of blood and froth from out his pale lips, and at last I told him who
-I was, and how I had tracked him down, and was now about to send his
-vile soul to perdition. Then, as I heard the galloping tramp of the
-trooper’s horse, I smothered him in the stagnant ooze of that foul
-swamp. Truly a dog’s death, but one too good for him! O’Brien, coming
-up soon afterward, found the body, put a couple of pistol bullets into
-it, and received the Government reward and promotion, whilst I set off
-in search of the others.
-
-‘One I came across four years afterwards on the Adelaide side. I had
-taken a job of shepherding up Port Augusta way, when, one night, who
-should come to the hut but Number Two, the one who laughed the longest
-and loudest of the three, as I lay in agony on the sojurs’ nest. I
-knew him in a minute and heartily welcomed him to stop that night.
-“Just put those sheep in the yard, matey,” I says, “while I make some
-bread for our supper.”
-
-‘Well, I makes two smallish johnnycakes, and we had our tea. Then we
-starts smoking and yarning, and at length I turned the talk on to
-ants, saying I couldn’t keep nothing there because of them. With that
-he falls to laughing, and, says he, “My word, mate, I could tell you a
-yarn if I liked ’bout ants—sojurs—that’d make you laugh for a week,
-only you see it ain’t always safe, even in the bush, to talk among
-strangers.”
-
-‘All of a sudden he turned as white as a sheet, and drops off the
-stool, and twists and groans. Then he sings out, “I’m going to die.”
-
-‘You see,’ remarked Jim, with the cold impassiveness which had, almost
-throughout, characterised his manner, ‘the strychnine in the
-johnnycake that had fallen to his share was beginning to work him, and
-as I laughingly reminded him of old times, and asked him to go on with
-his story about the sojur ants, he also knew me, and shrieked and
-prayed for the mercy that I had once so unavailingly implored at his
-hands. He was very soon, however, too far gone to say much. A few more
-struggles and it was all over, and then I dragged the dead carrion out
-of my hut and buried it eight feet deep under the sheep-dung in the
-yard, where, likely enough, it is yet. So much for Number Two!’
-exclaimed Jim, as I sat looking rather doubtfully at him. Not that I
-questioned the truthfulness of his story—that was stamped on every
-word he uttered—but that I began to think him rather a dangerous kind
-of monomaniac to have in a drover’s camp. ‘And now, sir,’ he went on
-presently, ‘you’ve had the story you asked me for, and if ever we meet
-again after this trip, maybe I’ll have something to tell you about
-Number Three; that business it is that brought me down about these
-parts, for I heard he was working at some of the stations on the
-river. And as God made me!’ he exclaimed, with a subdued sort of
-gloomy ferocity in his voice, ‘when we do meet, he shall feel the
-vengeance of the man whose life and love and fortune he helped to ruin
-so utterly. I could pick him out of a thousand, with his great nose
-all of a skew, and his one leg shorter than the other.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-The watch-fires were glimmering dimly. The cool air which heralds the
-Australian dawn was blowing, and the sheep were moving silently out of
-their camp in long strings as I rose to my feet. In the white tents
-all was silence. Thanks to Sojur Jim, their occupants had passed an
-undisturbed night. Absorbed in his gruesome story—that dark tale of
-torture and retribution, with just that one little trait of woman’s
-constancy and devotion shining out like some bright star from a murky
-sky—the time had slipped away unheeded. Sending him to call the cook,
-I put the sheep together, wondering mightily to myself, as the man,
-with his bent-down head and slouching gait, moved away, whether he
-really could be the same creature who through the silent watches of
-the night had unfolded to my view such a concentrated, tireless, and
-as yet unsatiated thirst for revenge, such a fixed and relentless
-purpose of retaliation, unweakened through the years, but burning
-freshly and fiercely to-day, as, when with the scarcely healed scars
-still smarting, disfigured, ruined, hopeless, forsaking all, he went
-forth alone into the world to hunt down his persecutors.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A few days after Sojur Jim had related to me the story told above, one
-evening, at dusk, a swagman entered the camp and asked the cook for a
-piece of meat and some bread. Instead of eating it at once with the
-accompanying offered drink of tea, he turned away, and, a few minutes
-later, we saw his fire burning brightly a little further along the
-lagoon, the banks of which formed our resting-place for the night.
-Evidently, as the men remarked amongst themselves, our visitor was a
-‘hatter.’
-
-Next morning, when Sojur Jim was called out to take his flock, he was
-missing. His blankets and few belongings still lay as he had arranged
-them in the tent the night before, ready for turning in; and I at once
-ordered a search to be made.
-
-It was of very short duration. Just in front of the swagman’s fire, in
-the shallow water of the lagoon, we found the two bodies. The
-stranger’s throat was grasped by Jim’s fingers in a vice-like clutch,
-that, even in death, we long strove in vain to sunder. When parted at
-last, and we had washed the slimy mud from the features of the dead
-traveller, a truly villainous countenance was disclosed to view; the
-huge mouth, low, retreating forehead, and heavy, thick-set jaws, all
-betokened their owner to have belonged to the very lowest order of
-humanity. But what struck me at once was that the nose, which was of
-great size, had, at one time, been knocked completely over to the left
-side of the face, and as we straightened the body out, it could
-plainly be seen that one leg was much shorter than its fellow.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Was this, then, indeed ‘Number Three,’ and had Sojur Jim’s vengeful
-quest, his vow of bitter retaliation, ended at last? I believed so.
-But, as I gazed down upon the poor, scarred dead clay of a wasted and
-ruined life lying there, now so calm and still, all its fierce desires
-and useless repinings, all its feverish passions and longings for
-dread retribution at rest, forcibly came to my mind the words of the
-sacred and solemn injunction—‘Vengeance is Mine, saith the Lord; I
-will repay.’
-
-
-
-
-FAR INLAND FOOTBALL.
-
-
-‘Frightfully dull, isn’t it?’ said the Doctor.
-
-‘Dull’s no name for it,’ said the Clerk of Petty Sessions; ‘this is
-the awfullest hole I ever was in.’
-
-‘Never knew it so bad,’ chimed in the Chemist and the Saddler, who
-were on this frosty night drinking whisky hot in the snug parlour of
-the Shamrock Inn in the little township of Crupperton.
-
-‘I tell you what,’ said the C.P.S. presently; ‘I see by the paper
-they’ve started a football club at Cantleville. Why shouldn’t we do
-the same? It’ll help to pass away the time, anyhow.’
-
-The Doctor pricked up his ears with interest. The Chemist seconded the
-motion enthusiastically.
-
-‘A capital idea,’ said he, ‘and, although I never have played, I’ll go
-in for it. It’s simple enough, I should imagine.’
-
-‘Simple!’ said the C.P.S., who had once seen a match in Sydney. ‘It’s
-as easy as tea-drinking. There’s no expense, except the first one of
-the ball. It’s not like cricket, you know, where you’re always putting
-your hands in your pockets for something or other.’
-
-‘I’ll give ten shillings, Mr Brown,’ said the Doctor softly.
-
-‘Same here,’ said the Chemist.
-
-‘How do you play it?’ asked the Saddler, and the Blacksmith, and the
-Constable, who had just dropped in for a warm and a yarn that chilly
-evening.
-
-‘Well,’ explained the C.P.S., who had ideas, ‘first you get your ball.
-Then you put up a couple of sticks with a cross one on the top of ’em.
-Then you measure a distance, say one hundred yards by, say, fifty, on
-a level bit of ground, and put up another set of sticks. Then you get
-your men, and pick sides, and pop the ball down in the middle, and
-wade in. For instance,’ he continued, ‘s’pose we’re playing
-Saddlestrap. Well, then, d’ye see, we’ve got one goal—that’s what they
-call the sticks—and they’ve got the other. We’ve to try and block ’em
-from kicking the ball over our cross-bar, and do our best, meantime,
-to send it over theirs. It’s just a splendid game for this weather,
-and nothing could well be simpler.’
-
-More men came in, the idea caught; a club was formed, and that very
-night the C.P.S. wrote to the capital for a ball ‘of the best make and
-the latest fashion.’
-
-But it was a very long way to the capital. So, in the interval, the
-C.P.S., who was an enterprising young Native, procured and erected
-goal-posts and cross-bars of barked pine; and very business-like they
-looked with a little pink flag fluttering from the summit of each.
-
-At last the new ball arrived. But, to the secret astonishment of the
-C.P.S., in place of being round it was oval. However, he was not going
-to expose his ignorance and imperil the reputation already earned as
-an exponent of the game, so he only said,—
-
-‘I sent for the very best they had, and I can see we’ve got our
-money’s worth. I’ll take her home and blow her up ready for
-to-morrow.’
-
-For a long time the ball seemed to go in any direction but the right
-one, kick they never so hardly; whilst, as a rule, the strongest and
-most terrific kickers produced the least effect.
-
-They tried the aggravating thing in every position they could think
-of, and, for a considerable period, without much success.
-
-It was a sight worth seeing to watch the Blacksmith, after scooping a
-little hollow in the ground and placing the ball perpendicularly
-therein, retire and prepare for action. Opening his shoulders and
-spitting on his hands, he would come heavily charging down, and
-putting the whole force of fifteen stone into his right foot, deliver
-a tremendous kick; then stand amazed to see the ball, after twirling
-meekly up for a few yards, drop on his head instead of soaring between
-the posts as it should have done.
-
-‘I’m out of practice myself—haven’t played for years, in fact,’ said
-the C.P.S. when explanation as to this erratic behaviour was demanded.
-‘It’s simply a matter of practice, you know, like everything else.’
-
-But all the same for a long time, deep down in his heart, there was a
-horrible misgiving that the thing was not a football at all—that it
-should have been round. At last, by dint of constant perseverance,
-some of the men began to kick fairly well—kick goals even from a good
-distance.
-
-The first difficulty arose from a lack of side-boundaries. Hence, at
-times, a kicking, struggling, shouting mob might be seen half-a-mile
-away, at the far end of the main street, whereas it should have been
-in front of the post-office.
-
-To remedy this state of affairs, the C.P.S. drove in pegs at what was
-voted ‘a fair thing’ to serve as guides. When the ball was sent beyond
-the pegs no one pursued, and little boys stationed there kicked it
-back again. Also, the cows, pigs and goats of Crupperton, who must
-have imagined that a lunatic asylum had taken possession of their
-feeding grounds, returned, and henceforth fed peacefully about the
-grass-grown streets and allotments at the lower end of the township.
-Presently, to vary the monotony, the Cruppertonians got up a match
-amongst themselves for drinks—East _versus_ West was the title of it.
-But it never went beyond the first scrimmage, if that can be called a
-first where all was one big scrimmage, caused by two compact bodies of
-men fighting for the possession of a ball. Out of this quickly emerged
-the Chemist with, as he averred, a fractured wrist. Anyhow, he wore a
-bandage, and played no more.
-
-Then the Blacksmith accused the Saddler of kicking him on the shins,
-wilfully and of malice prepense. For some time past there had been
-bad blood between these two, and the fight that ensued was so gorgeous
-that the game was quite forgotten in the excitement of it.
-
-Presently, the village of Saddlestrap, a little lower down the river,
-in emulation of its larger neighbour, started football also.
-
-The Saddlestraps mostly got their living by tankmaking, were locally
-known as ‘Thicklegs,’ and were a pretty rough lot. So that, when a
-match was arranged between the two places, fun was foretold.
-
-The rules of the Saddlestrap club were, like those of the Crupperton
-one, simplicity itself, consisting, as they did, of the solitary
-axiom—‘Kick whatever or wherever you can, only kick.’
-
-Therefore, as remarked, fun was expected. The C.P.S. chose his team
-carefully, and with an eye to weight and size. Superior fleetness, he
-rightly imagined, would have but little to do with the result of the
-day’s sport.
-
-With the exception of half-a-dozen of the townspeople, the Crupperton
-players consisted of young fellows from a couple of stations
-adjoining. Therefore, the Saddlestraps somewhat contemptuously dubbed
-their opponents ‘Pastorialites.’
-
-The Doctor pleaded exemption on account of his age, and was,
-therefore, appointed ‘Referee.’
-
-For a while the play was somewhat weak and desultory, and lacking in
-effect. The ball was continually being sent outside the pegs, and the
-urchins stationed there were kept busy. But, at length, to the
-delight of the spectators, consisting of the entire population of the
-two townships, there was a hot scrimmage. ‘For all the world like a
-lot o’ dorgs a-worryin’ a ’possum!’ as one excited bystander yelled,
-whilst the crowd surged around the mixed-up heap of humanity, the
-outside ring of which was frantically kicking and shoving at the
-prostrate inner one, serving friend and foe alike.
-
-‘A very manly and interesting game,’ remarked the Doctor, placidly
-ringing his bell for ‘Spell, oh!’ whilst the Chemist ran to his shop
-for plaster and bandage.
-
-Presently, the undermost man of all was dragged out, torn and gory,
-and spitting teeth from a broken jaw.
-
-Him the Doctor caused to be carried to the nearest house, and, after
-attending to his wounds, returned hurriedly to the field, where his
-coadjutor was looking to the minor casualties, and both teams were
-refreshing themselves with rum, and boasting of their prowess.
-
-The Doctor rang his bell, and play was resumed. It was, he explained,
-unhealthy to dawdle about in such weather and after severe exertion.
-
-As the C.P.S. pointed out very eloquently that night at the banquet,
-football was a game in which people must learn to give and take, and
-that, until this had been fully understood and practised, the game
-would never get beyond an initial stage.
-
-This was probably the reason that on a Saddlestrap in full pursuit of
-the ball being deliberately tripped up by a ‘Pastorialite,’ and sent
-headlong to mother earth, which was hard and knobby, in place of
-rising and going on with the game, he began to punch the tripper.
-
-Five minutes afterwards might be seen the curious spectacle of a ball
-lying neglected in the centre of the ground, whilst outside raged a
-big fight of thirty.
-
-For a time the trouble was strictly confined to the two teams. But
-when it was observed that Crupperton was getting the worst of it,
-partisans quickly peeled off and took sides; so that, directly, both
-townships were up to their eyes in fight, and the Doctor seriously
-contemplated sending for professional assistance to Cantleville.
-
-For some time victory hovered in the balance. But men fight well on
-their own ground, and at last the Saddlestraps broke and fled for
-their horses and buggies. Those who stayed behind did so simply
-because there was no doctor in their native village.
-
-A banquet for both teams had been prepared at the leading (and only)
-hotel. But there was only a remnant of one side that felt like
-banqueting, so the gaps were filled by residents who had been
-prominent in the fray.
-
-The C.P.S., with a couple of beautifully blackened eyes, took the
-chair. At the other end of the table presided the Constable, whose
-features presented a curiously intricate study in diachylon, many of
-the Saddlestraps having seized a mean opportunity of wiping off old
-scores.
-
-Speeches and toasts were made and drunk, and football enthusiastically
-voted the king of all games. As the Blacksmith—whose arm was in a
-sling—observed, ‘It was a fair an’ square game. A man know’d what he’d
-got to do at it. There wasn’t no tiddleywinkin’ in the thing.’
-
-The Doctor had been too busy to come early; but he dropped in for a
-minute or so during the evening, and with great fire, and amidst much
-applause, made a splendid speech. In its course he quoted Gordon’s
-well-known lines—‘A game’s not worth a rap for a rational man to
-play,’ etc.; and also adapted that saying of the ‘Iron Duke’s’ about
-the battle of Waterloo being won upon the British football grounds.
-
-It was decidedly the ‘speech of the evening,’ and was greeted with
-hearty cheers as, concluding, he retired to look after his patients.
-
-But Crupperton was very sore next morning; and for a whole week there
-was no more football. Then they looked about them for more victims to
-their prowess. But they found none at all near home.
-
-At last, in despair, and in defiance of the advice of the C.P.S., the
-executive challenged Cantleville itself—agreeing to journey thither.
-In due course, and after the C.F.C. had recovered from its surprise,
-and consulted a ‘Gazetteer,’ it accepted.
-
-Cantleville was a very long distance away. Moreover, it was the ‘City’
-of those inland parts, and the headquarters of the Civil Service
-therein. Therefore the C.P.S. and the Constable discreetly refused to
-accompany their fellows. One of the pair, at least, had doubts as to
-whether Cantleville played the Crupperton game.
-
-So the Blacksmith was elected Captain. ‘You’d better stay at home,’
-said the C.P.S., ‘the chaps over there are regular swells, up to all
-the latest dodges, and they wear uniforms. Besides they may not quite
-understand our rules.’
-
-‘Then we’ll teach ’em,’ said the Blacksmith. But the question of a
-uniform troubled him. So he took counsel with his now fast friend the
-Saddler, and the result was that everyone packed a stiffly-starched
-white shirt and a pair of black trousers into his valise.
-
-‘How about your uniforms now?’ said the Blacksmith, ‘nothin’ can’t be
-neater’n that.’
-
-So they went forth to battle, accompanied by the good wishes of the
-populace; but neither by Doctor nor Chemist. There were plenty of both
-at Cantleville. Also they were wise in their generation, and had
-doubts.
-
-Communication in these days was limited. Cantleville news arrived
-_via_ Sydney, and the newspapers were a week old when delivered. So
-that the team brought its own tidings home. They had not had a good
-time. They had also been heavily fined, and they proposed to go afield
-no more. The Blacksmith and the Saddler, who had ‘taken it out,’ were
-the last to appear.
-
-‘I suppose you play Rugby rules?’ had asked blandly the Secretary of
-the C.F.C., as he curiously surveyed the ‘Bushies’ on their arrival.
-
-‘No, we don’t,’ said the Blacksmith. ‘We plays Crupperton,’ and no
-more questions were asked. But when it was seen what Crupperton rules
-meant, backs, half-backs, forwards, and all the rest of it, struck and
-refused to continue. Instead, they took to chaffing the ‘black and
-white magpies.’
-
-Whereupon, Crupperton, putting the question of football on one side,
-went at its opponents _à la_ Saddlestrap. Their places, however, they
-presently found taken by policemen. These latter every man handled to
-the best of his ability, and had to pay for accordingly.
-
-‘Shoo!’ said the Blacksmith, as he finished. ‘They’re nothin’ but a
-lot o’ tiddleywinkers up there. Let’s have another match with
-Saddlestrap.’
-
-
-
-
-ON THE GRAND STAND.
-
-A Pioneer Sketch.
-
-
-There was a lot of men from up-country staying at the Kamilaroi. One
-could easily tell them by their bronzed hands and faces, and creased
-or brand-new clothes, from the city members of the well-known
-Pastoralists’ Club.
-
-‘Hello,’ suddenly exclaimed a fine-looking man, whose thick moustache
-lay snow-white against the deep tan of his cheek, ‘here’s
-Boorookoorora in the market! H’m, one hundred and sixty thousand sheep
-(so they’ve got the jumbucks on it at last).... Capital homestead ...
-stone-built house ... splendid garden and orchard. How things must
-have changed out there since Wal Neville and Jimmy Carstairs and
-myself took that country up, and lived for months at a time on damper,
-bullock and pigweed in a bark humpy. Stone house and orchard! Well,
-well,’ he concluded, laying down the newspaper with a sigh, ‘I hope
-they haven’t disturbed the boys. I left them there sleeping quietly
-enough side by side over five-and-twenty years ago.’
-
-‘Shouldn’t have gone home and stayed away so long, Standish,’ here
-remarked a friend. ’You’re out of touch altogether with our side now.
-That’s the worst of being rich. D’rectly a fellow gets a pot of money
-left him, off he must go “home.” But here’s Hatton.—Hatton, let me
-introduce Mr Hugh Standish to you. He’s interested in your place.
-First man to take it up; early pioneer, and all that sort of thing.’
-
-‘Yes,’ said Mr Hatton presently, ‘I was the first to put sheep on
-Boorookoorora, and they do well. Yes, the two graves are untouched at
-the old homestead still. Carstairs and Neville! I’ve heard the story,
-or a version of it. Poor fellows! I had their graves freshly fenced in
-a couple of years ago. And so you were the third partner. Will you
-tell us the story of your escape? I should much like to hear it at
-first hand.’
-
-‘Do you know the Grand Stand?’ asked Standish, without replying
-directly.
-
-The other shook his head.
-
-‘What is it?’ he asked.
-
-‘Why, the big rock, close to the Black Waterhole, on your own run,’
-replied Standish.
-
-‘Oh,’ said his new acquaintance, ‘you mean Mount Lookout. That’s just
-at the bottom of the orchard now. You see, we’ve shifted the head
-station from where you and Warner and Adams and the rest had it.’
-
-‘Well, well,’ replied the other, ‘Grand Stand, or Mount Lookout, or
-whatever you like to call it, I had a very rough time on its top.’
-
-‘Ah,’ remarked the owner of Boorookoorora, ‘I’ve had the top levelled
-and an anemometer erected on it; also a flight of steps cut. In fact,
-it is a sort of observatory on a small scale.’
-
-‘The devil it is!’ exclaimed Standish. ‘Well, if you’ll listen, I’ll
-tell you what I observed once from its top.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-‘There were three of us. We were all young and healthy, and each had a
-little money. Foregathering (the first time was in this very room), we
-determined to become partners, and take up country. We would go out in
-person—far out, beyond even, as poor Neville put it, the “furthest
-paling of civilisation.”
-
-‘There we would acquire a territory, expressible not in poor,
-miserable acres, but in square miles—thousands of ’em.
-
-‘There we would breed sheep and cattle, increasing yearly in
-multitude, so that the sands upon the sea-shore shouldn’t be a
-circumstance to them. We would plant in that far country our own vines
-and our own fig-trees, and sit under their shade in the good days to
-come—we and our children, and our children’s children after us—in that
-wide and pleasant heritage of our founding. Alas, the glamour of youth
-and confidence, and health and strength over a bottle or two of good
-wine! Five-and-twenty years ago, gentlemen, in this same old room!
-
-‘So we went. And the days grew into weeks, and the weeks into months,
-as we rode, searching hither and thither, to the right hand or to the
-left, but always with our faces to the falling sun. Over stony ridges
-and over rolling downs; over deserts of cruel spinifex and barren
-sand; through great scrubs, thick and gloomy; along rivers, tortuous
-and muddy. At times drenched with rain, at others suffering from heat
-and hunger and thirst, but ever westward. At length, after many
-disappointments, emerging from a broad stretch of sterile country and
-ascending a range of low hills, our eyes beheld something resembling
-the Canaan of our dreams. Track of horse or beast we had not seen for
-weeks; therefore we knew that the land was, if we so willed it, ours.
-
-‘For a long time we gazed over the timber-clumped, wide expanse,
-emerald-swarded after some recent fire, and through which ran a creek
-whose waterholes shone like polished steel under the mid-day sun.
-
-‘“Here we rest?” said one; and another,—“The Plains of Hope lie before
-us!”
-
-‘So we rested from our wanderings; and one, journeying backwards,
-secured the country, defining its boundaries, not by marked trees, but
-by parallels of latitude.
-
-‘Shortly a homestead arose, rude but sufficient. Mob after mob of
-cattle came up from stations to the south and east, and Boorookoorora
-became itself a station.
-
-‘We got the name from a black fellow. We understood him to signify
-that the word meant “_No place beyond_.” This pleased us, for we were,
-so far, proud of being the “farthest out”—the _Ultima Thule_ of
-settlement. We may have been altogether mistaken, for the fellow was
-wild as a hawk, and, at the first chance, gave us the slip. But I’m
-glad, all the same, that the old name still holds.
-
-‘Of the blacks we had seen very little. They appeared to decline all
-communication with us. Now and again the stockmen would bring one in;
-but he came evidently under strong protest, and refused both food and
-gifts of any description. However, we cared nothing for that, so long
-as our cattle remained unmolested. They were doing splendidly; and we
-soon began to talk about sending a mob to the southern markets, with
-which, in those days, there was little or no communication. We
-intended to pioneer that trade. There was plenty of room as yet. Our
-nearest neighbour was a hundred miles away; the nearest township, five
-hundred. One Sunday morning I went for a ride, leaving Walter and
-Jimmy alone. The two white stockmen and a couple of black boys, who
-made up the head station staff, were away on a round of the
-out-stations.
-
-‘I had intended to be back for the dinner, which I had left the pair
-busily preparing. Unfortunately, when about five miles from the
-homestead on my return, my horse put his foot in a hole, stumbled
-badly, and directly afterwards went dead lame.
-
-‘The day was a roaster for a tramp; but there seemed no help for it.
-So, planting the saddle and bridle, also, in a most unlucky moment, my
-heavy Enfield rifle, I set out through the long, dry grass, which
-reached at times over my head, and made walking hard and disagreeable
-work.
-
-‘As often as I paused to rest and wipe my dripping face did I curse
-our remissness in not having “burnt off” before this, and vow to soon
-have a right royal blaze amongst the thick reed-like grass-stalks
-that hampered my progress towards shade and dinner.
-
-‘I had got about two miles along, and was just thinking of having a
-good drink at the Black Waterhole, which I knew to be close to me,
-when I suddenly came upon the dead body of a fine young heifer.
-
-‘A couple of broken spears stuck out of the carcase—so freshly killed
-that even the crows had not yet found it. It was, indeed, still warm.
-By the tracks I could see that the niggers were in force. They had
-evidently run the beast up from the water, and slain it merely for
-sport, as it was untouched. My first impulse was to return for the
-rifle. Second thoughts determined me to make for home as quickly as
-possible.
-
-‘I had kept my shoulder-belt, to which was attached a heavy metal
-powder-flask. Thinking that I should travel lighter without these
-things, I started to unbuckle, when a tomahawk hurtled past one side
-of my head, whilst a spear went sailing by the other. The grass was
-full of blacks coming at me sideways—that is, between me and the
-station.
-
-‘Turning, I ran for the water, the whole pack, now in full cry, after
-me.
-
-‘Close to the banks of the Black Waterhole stood a tall rock we had
-named (I don’t know why, for it was as much like one as this tumbler
-is) the Grand Stand. I daresay it must have been quite one hundred and
-fifty feet high, if not more—’
-
-‘One hundred and seventy-five six,’ put in Mr Hatton, who, in common
-with, by this time, a small crowd, was listening interestedly.
-
-‘Thanks. You’ve evidently had more leisure than we could manage.
-Anyhow, it was sheer on three sides, only accessible, in one part, on
-the fourth.’ (‘Just where I had the stairway cut,’ murmured Mr Hatton.
-But no one took any notice).
-
-‘Many a time I had climbed it to look for cattle across the plains on
-which it formed such a landmark. If I could do so now, very quickly,
-there might still be a chance.
-
-‘I could tell by the sound of the spears that I was gaining. They
-didn’t come slipping quietly past, but whizzed and sung angrily, a
-sure sign that the throwing sticks were being used; at least I found
-it so. It was wonderful how they missed me. If the grass had been
-burnt I was a dead man fifty times over. Presently, I struck a cattle
-pad, and, at the same moment, caught sight of the Grand Stand. Now
-they saw what I was after, and put on a spurt, yelling harder than
-ever. As they arrived at the foot of the rock I was half-way up the
-narrow, almost perpendicular, track, going like a goat, whilst spears,
-tomahawks and nullahs hit all around me. One spear grazed my leg,
-sticking in the breeches, and a stone tomahawk knocked my hat off. I
-afterwards made use of that spear. It was hot work while it lasted,
-which, luckily, wasn’t long. The top of the Grand Stand measured about
-twenty feet each way, and sloped gently inwards, saucer-shape, to a
-depth of four. There had been rain lately, and a good pool of water
-was collected in the basin, which was strewn with stones and big
-boulders, remains of a former top, which had broken off and lay around
-the base. Being in a hurry, I hadn’t time to pull myself up, so
-tumbled headlong into the water. However, the bath refreshed me much,
-and, everything below having all at once become silent as the grave, I
-peeped over.
-
-‘Well it was I did so!
-
-‘Four big fellows were climbing up, one behind the other.
-
-‘Lifting a stone, just as much as I could manage, I rolled it to the
-edge, and, forgetting to sing out “Stand from under,” let go.
-
-‘It caught the first fellow fair on the chest, and the lot went down
-like skittles.
-
-‘Three picked themselves up and limped off howling. The fourth man—he
-who led—lay quite still, and had to be dragged away. I did not care
-about expending my ammunition or I could have scattered them also.
-
-‘It was terribly hot up there under the sun, but, ripping out the
-lining of my coat, I covered my head with it. If there had been no
-water, though, I should have been done—roasted alive.
-
-‘Now I had a spell, and took a good look at the niggers.
-
-‘They were a wild lot—five-and-twenty of ’em—naked as the day they
-were born, tall and wiry, with woolly hair and long, black beards. One
-side of their faces was painted white, t’other red, ribs and legs to
-match. Half-a-dozen of ’em had some shining stone like a lump of
-crystal either around their necks or tied upon their foreheads. These
-I took to be chiefs.
-
-‘I had never seen any niggers quite like these, and, consequently, was
-rather impressed, not to say scared. They squatted under a shady tree,
-the only one for miles around, evidently holding a council of war,
-whilst I crouched and watched them, and slowly baked on top of my
-rock.
-
-‘Suddenly, all springing to their feet, they ran backwards, then,
-wheeling together, threw their spears. But the height beat ’em. There
-was a strong breeze blowing, too, hot as from a furnace, right against
-them. Quite plainly that game wouldn’t answer, so they squatted again
-and started another consultation.
-
-‘Meanwhile the day grew hotter. The rock was actually blistering my
-skin through the light clothes I wore.
-
-‘Bathing my head and face brought relief.
-
-‘Being quite a new chum with respect to blacks and their ways, I half
-expected that, now, seeing they couldn’t get me down, they would raise
-the siege and be off.
-
-‘Nothing, it appeared, could be further from their intentions. The
-confab over, some lit a fire on a small, clear space close to the
-water, whilst others went off towards the dead heifer, shortly
-returning with great lumps of meat, which they roasted and devoured.
-
-‘After this, they all got up, and coming quite close, one went a
-little apart from the rest and pointed at my head, which was all he
-could see, with outstretched arm.
-
-‘Then his fellows formed a circle and danced and yelled, patting their
-bellies, and going through the motions of eating and drinking.
-Presently the gaunt, black semaphore was altered, pointing towards the
-sun. The dancing and shouting ceased, and, sitting down, the party
-began to display symptoms of the utmost distress.
-
-‘Once more the arm shifted, this time towards the water, whereupon the
-whole crowd stiffened themselves out as if dead.
-
-‘Another dance round and a song, and the semaphore put himself in
-position again and pointed in the direction of the homestead.
-
-‘Instantly all but two sneaked off into the tall grass. The pair left
-behind lay down beside each other, feigning sleep. Suddenly, with
-terrific yells, the rest sprung upon them and went very realistically
-through the motions of beating the sleepers’ brains out and thrusting
-spears into their bodies.
-
-‘The first portion of the pantomime I took to mean that they were
-determined to stay and see how long I could withstand the combined
-effects of heat, hunger, and want of water.
-
-‘The second was only too intelligible, and for the first time made me
-feel a sharp pang of anxiety for those at home, totally unwarned, and
-off their guard.
-
-‘How, as I watched the brutes, did I wish and long for that rifle,
-hidden away back there, or—best of all—that newly-imported
-breech-loader hanging over my stretcher at the station.
-
-‘It was getting late in the afternoon. The rock was casting a long
-shadow, and my dripping body beginning to feel a little cooler as the
-sun lowered. Slight though the scratch upon my leg was, it smarted
-terribly. I was also very hungry, and altogether in anything but a
-happy frame of mind.
-
-‘Foreseeing a night of it, I carried and rolled big stones to the
-edge, placing them so that at a touch they would go crashing down.
-
-‘Darkness fell at last, and with it came the moon, nearly at her full.
-
-‘Lying along the incline, I watched the niggers, and tried to work out
-some plan of giving them the slip.
-
-‘Gorged to repletion, they were stretched about their fire: but two
-upright black forms, motionless as if cut from marble, watched
-steadfastly the pathway, on which the moonbeams fell full of light.
-
-‘Although I had promised to return for dinner, I had no expectation,
-on account of my failure, that the others would come and look for me.
-We were all nothing if not irregular in our habits. Of the blacks we
-had almost ceased to think, so little had we seen of them. Indeed,
-though generally going armed, we carried rifles more for the purpose
-of shooting an odd bull or so than from any other motive. The place,
-you should remember, had been formed now over a couple of years,
-during all which time nothing suspicious had occurred.
-
-‘The two at home would merely think that I had extended my ride as far
-as one of the out-stations, and feel no surprise if I did not turn up
-till the next day.
-
-‘As for them, I knew not what to think. That the blacks were nearly
-all inveterate liars I was aware; but this sudden, strange raid,
-together with their expressive pantomimes and determined attitude
-towards myself, made me fear the worst.
-
-‘If there had been no moon I should certainly have made an effort to
-get away. But it was as bright as day—so bright that I fancied I could
-at times see the glitter in the eyes of the sentinels.
-
-‘I must have been cat-napping, for I awoke with a start to the sound
-of an awful chorus of yells.
-
-‘The moon was low, but still gave enough light to enable me to make
-out that more niggers had arrived.
-
-‘After what appeared to be an enthusiastic greeting of the new-comers,
-the whole mob—about fifty—came up and began to dance at the foot of
-the rock. Presently, to my horror, I caught sight of objects that I
-recognised only too well.
-
-‘One fellow had on a broad-brimmed straw hat belonging to Carstairs;
-another flourished a hunting-knife of my own; yet another waved a
-gaily-striped rug that I had last seen covering poor Neville’s
-stretcher.
-
-‘Evidently the station had been sacked.
-
-‘Neither hearing nor seeing anything, they perhaps imagined me asleep,
-and, just as the dawn was breaking redly, some of them began to
-ascend.
-
-‘A leaping, rattling, boulder, however, soon undeceived and sent them
-to the right-about.
-
-‘Knowing that another day would probably see the end, they were in no
-particular hurry now.
-
-‘The sun rose hot and angry-looking. By its better light I made out a
-whole heap of our traps under the tree, jumbled up anyhow.
-
-‘But, lest I should, by any means, fail to comprehend what had
-happened, they had recourse once more to dumb show.
-
-‘A nigger came forward and arranged three spears, tripod fashion. To
-their apex he hung a nullah-nullah. All the weapons were red with
-blood. Then, pointing alternately to the homestead, myself, and the
-heap of plunder, he made a long speech, beginning quietly enough, but
-working himself into such a rage at the finish that his big black
-beard was speckled with foam.
-
-‘Of course, I didn’t understand a word. There was little need that I
-should—everything was plain enough.
-
-‘But worse was to come!
-
-‘Seeing that I made no sign, and thinking, perhaps, that I was
-difficult to convince, the orator went off to the pile of stuff, and,
-in a minute, returned with some object in a net, which, amidst
-triumphant yells, he fastened to the trophy already erected.
-
-‘For a moment I couldn’t make it out at all. Then, as the sun shone
-fuller on the thing, I saw that it was Neville’s head.
-
-‘All gashed and disfigured though it was, I recognised it by the long
-golden beard which the poor old chap had been so proud of.
-
-‘The sight turned me quite faint and sick. Then I got vicious.
-Slipping to the water, of which there was now very little left, to get
-one good, long, last drink, my eyes fell upon the powder-flask lying
-where I had thrown it off.
-
-‘It was one of the old-fashioned kind, of solid copper, very large,
-and holding nearly a couple of pounds. It was quite full.
-
-‘“Well,” I said to myself, taking the flask up as the idea struck me,
-“you’ve cornered me and killed my mates, but I’ll be hanged if I don’t
-try and scorch some of you before giving in.”
-
-‘Now, sitting down, I tore a strip off my handkerchief, and, with
-moistened gunpowder, made a rough sort of fuse. Then unscrewing the
-measuring cylinder, and taking out the spring-valve, I inserted the
-fuse deeply into the powder, brought the twisted end well up, and
-replaced the long cylinder. Then, binding the flask firmly about five
-feet from the head of the spear that had come up with me, I shouted to
-the niggers, who were busily overhauling their booty.
-
-‘They stared with surprise, and I waved my coat and beckoned to them
-to come nearer.
-
-‘Chattering like anything, a couple of ’em advanced a few steps very
-doubtfully.
-
-‘Stooping down and striking a match I fired the fuse, which caught at
-once and began to burn quietly away inside the cylinder.
-
-‘At this moment I hove the spear well out towards them. To my delight
-it stuck fairly upright in the ground almost at their feet, the shock,
-so far as I could see, shifting nothing.
-
-‘Starting back, they gazed inquisitively at the shining polished
-object it had brought with it.
-
-‘For a minute or two they hesitated, and I despaired. But, seeing the
-rest moving up, curiosity or cupidity prevailed, and one running to
-it, seized the spear and made off back to the mob.
-
-‘At once he was surrounded with an eager, excited, jabbering crowd,
-each man with his chin over his neighbour’s shoulder.
-
-‘The seconds went by like ages. I had reckoned the fuse would last,
-perhaps, seven or eight minutes. They had untied the flask, and it was
-being passed from hand to hand.
-
-‘Still no sound!
-
-‘With a deep sigh of regret I gave the affair up as a failure—had even
-turned away—when an explosion like that of an eighteen pounder made me
-jump.
-
-‘From out of a cloud of dense white smoke came shrieks and screams of
-agony. I could dimly see bodies—some quite still, and others rolling
-over and over.
-
-‘By God! gentlemen,’ exclaimed the speaker, interrupting himself
-emphatically, and with a cruel gleam in his eyes, ‘although
-afterwards I shot the wretches down in dozens, and always with joy in
-my heart, yet never with such a complete sense of satisfaction and
-pleasure as I felt at that moment.
-
-‘As I looked a sharp blaze curled up, spreading broadly, and almost
-instantly, into a curtain of flame and smoke.
-
-‘The grass was on fire!
-
-‘Never a thought had I given to that. For miles and miles the country
-was covered with herbage, tall, and dry as tinder.
-
-‘The top of the Grand Stand was about the only safe place now, bar the
-water, in all that neighbourhood. For a long time I couldn’t see a
-foot for smoke; but, as with the fire, it rolled away before the wind.
-I looked towards the Black Waterhole, thinking, of course, that the
-niggers would have taken to it. To my surprise not one was to be seen.
-There was the blackened ground, smoking yet, bare, and affording not
-the slightest cover.
-
-‘The erstwhile shady and graceful tree was a gnarled and withered
-skeleton.
-
-‘Underneath it, as the haze cleared, I made out four motionless
-bodies, blacker than the burnt black ashes on which they lay.
-
-‘I waited a bit longer before coming down. But at last, pretty certain
-that the niggers had cleared out, or better still, been caught in the
-fire, I crept down the pathway, stiff, sore, and hungry, but with that
-feeling of vengeful joy in my heart trebly intensified as I passed by
-the poor, scorched, singed head lying on the ground.
-
-‘Poking about the heap of blankets, clothing, etc., still smouldering,
-I dropped across a tin of preserved meat—a four pounder.
-
-‘This was luck, if you like. Taking it to the water I finished it to
-the last scrap, and made the most appreciated meal of a life.
-
-‘I hadn’t gone near the bodies. They were charred, and I was certain
-they were dead.
-
-‘But, as I finished eating, to my astonishment one fellow got up and
-staggered straight for me. Snatching up a heavy stick, which happened
-to be handy, I stood ready to receive him.
-
-‘As he came nearer his face frightened me.
-
-‘It wasn’t a face at all, properly speaking; nor, for the matter of
-that, a head even. It was simply a mass of grass-ashes and blood—every
-scrap of hair had been burnt off. From his open mouth protruded a
-blackened tongue. I dropped my stick, for I saw he was stone-blind—in
-fact, he was eyeless altogether.
-
-‘Groping along, in a minute or two he felt the water at his feet,
-when, instead of splashing into it, as you’d naturally think a fellow
-in such an awful predicament would do, he gave a sort of screech, very
-bad to hear, and made out again at a great pace, tripped over a stone,
-and fell headlong.
-
-‘When I got up to him he was as dead as Julius Cæsar, and a great lump
-of jagged copper was sticking out of the back of his skull.
-
-‘Presently I started off towards the homestead, but hadn’t got more
-than half-way before I met our two white stockmen—the black boys had
-cleared on the back track.
-
-‘The buildings, such as they were, and all our things were gone. But
-we didn’t trouble much about that just then.
-
-‘Taking Neville’s head to him, we buried him and Carstairs, who had
-been literally chopped to pieces, and then, getting the outside men
-together, we followed the niggers.
-
-‘They had made for a patch of red ground six miles away. There we
-found ’em—fifty of ’em; and there we left ’em. How they must have
-travelled to have beaten the fire! Must have been touch and go, for
-some of ’em were pretty badly scorched.
-
-‘Well, gentlemen, that’s the story of the Grand Stand, and the first
-settling of Boorookoorora. “Stone house and garden, and splendid
-orchard,” eh? Well, well, I suppose it’s only natural. Yet it sounds
-curiously to me. No; I won’t invest. Shouldn’t care about going back
-to live there now. That’s the dinner gong, isn’t it? Good old
-Kamilaroi! Come along.’
-
-
-
-
-TOO FAR SOUTH.
-
-
-The captain of the _Boadicea_—regular London and Australian trader—had
-long been the owner of a crotchet, or perhaps it would be nearer the
-mark to call it a theory. He was a comparatively young man, and after
-a few trips of eighty-nine, ninety, and ninety-six days respectively,
-he grew impatient; and at last, seeing an opportunity of putting his
-idea to the test, he determined to make the attempt.
-
-It was by no means a new theory; simply an expansion of an old one.
-Years ago the masters of the _Lightning_, _Red Jacket_, and other
-clipper ships of renown, had successfully demonstrated that, instead
-of turning round the Cape of Good Hope as if it were a corner, in the
-old style, vessels bound to the Australian colonies would, if they
-kept on southward, be very likely to pick up a current of strong
-westerly winds which, although twice the distance might have to be
-sailed over, yet would take them to their destination far more quickly
-than by the usual route.
-
-But the master of the _Boadicea_ contended that none of these early
-exponents of ‘Great Circular sailing’ had as yet gone far enough
-south, and that, at a still more distant point, a regular westerly
-wind-current, strong as a good-sized gale and as steady as a trade,
-without its fickleness, was to be met with which would shorten the
-average passage by at least ten days.
-
-Older shipmasters laughed, and, saying that they found the Roaring
-Forties quite strong enough for them, stuck to the regular merchantman
-track, not so old yet, they thought, nor so worn by the marks of their
-keels, as to require a fresh one. However, Captain Stewart had, by
-dint of long persuasion and perseverance, obtained permission from his
-owners to test practically his pet idea; and this was the reason that,
-on the thirty-fifth day out, the _Boadicea_, in place of running her
-easting down amongst the Forties like a Christian ship, with half a
-gale singing in the bellies of her topsails, and mountains of
-dark-blue water roaring rhythmically astern, found herself poking
-about close hauled, with, on every hand as far as vision extended,
-icebergs, varying in size and shape, from a respectable many-peaked
-island to a spireless dissenting chapel.
-
-We were very far indeed to the southward.
-
- And now there came both mist and snow,
- And it grew wondrous cold;
- And ice, mast high, came floating by,
- As green as emerald.
-
-Still our commander’s faith in his strong wind-streak was unshaken;
-albeit, for a week or more, light baffling airs, scarce sufficing to
-fill the stiffened canvas, had been our portion. It was, too, indeed,
-‘wondrous cold,’ and the necessity for keeping a close and unwearied
-look-out became every hour more apparent. Already we had had narrow
-escapes of coming into collision with bergs wandering aimlessly about,
-which, although wonderfully beautiful objects in the daytime, and at a
-distance, with the bright sunlight reflecting a thousand prismatic
-hues from their glistening surfaces, yet of a dark night were liable,
-with a touch almost, to send us in a twinkling to Davy Jones.
-
-The crew growled and shivered, and shivered and growled, making the
-while sarcastic inquiries as to the near vicinity of the South Pole,
-wishing in undertones that their skipper had been perched on the top
-of it before leading them into such cold quarters. As for myself,
-although rated as third mate, I was little more than a lad at the
-time, and thought the whole thing simply magnificent, hoping that we
-might penetrate still further into the unknown ‘regions of
-thick-ribbed ice’ ahead of us, whilst visions of a Southern Continent,
-bears, seals and walruses, floated through my imagination. To be sure
-I was well clothed and comfortably housed, which, perhaps, made all
-the difference. We are very apt to look at things one-sidedly, and
-with regard only to the character of our own particular surroundings.
-Man born of a woman is a more or less selfish animal. Every day the
-‘wandering pearls of the sea,’ as someone has called them, seemed to
-become more plentiful, whilst, to add to our dilemma, a thick
-Antarctic fog, through which the _Boadicea_, with look-outs alow and
-aloft, crept like some great blind monster feeling its way across the
-ocean, arose and hid everything from view.
-
-The only one on board with any experience of such latitudes was our
-chief officer, a rough New Englander, who had taken a couple of
-voyages to the Northern fisheries in a Nantucket whaler. Far, however,
-from giving himself airs on that account, he was probably the most
-anxious man in the ship’s company. He had not a particle of faith in
-the great theory; moreover, he had seen a vessel ‘ripped’ in Davis
-Sound, which none of his companions had.
-
-One evening, as if drawn up by some mighty hand, the fog lifted,
-disclosing the sun, cold, red, and angry-looking, glaring at us out of
-a sombre sky, and flushing the water and the bergs round about with a
-flood of purple light, on which our masts and rigging cast tremulous,
-long, black shadows, crossing and recrossing in a quivering maze, with
-big, shapeless blotches here and there for the sails. Suddenly a
-deeper, darker shadow fell athwart us; and there, not two oars’
-lengths away, between ship and sun, rose an island.
-
-Men rubbed their eyes, and rubbed and looked again, but there it was,
-every stern outline standing in bold relief, a rough, ragged mass of
-barren, desolate rock, its summit covered with snow—still,
-indisputably land. Even as we gazed eagerly, wonderingly, the _mirage_
-faded away in a moment, as it had appeared, and the mist descended
-like a grey, heavy curtain, enveloping all things in its damp folds.
-
-Presently it came on to snow. The standing rigging and running gear
-alike were coated with ice, whilst the canvas took the consistency of
-sheet-iron, and rang like glass when touched.
-
-Roaring fires were lit in oil drums, fore and aft, in forecastle and
-cuddy. Soon the smoke in both places was as thick as the fog on deck;
-a kind of damp, unwholesome warmth was engendered as the impromptu
-stoves grew red-hot; great half-frozen cockroaches, thinking that the
-tropics were at hand, crawled out of nooks and crannies; and it seemed
-at times a toss up whether our end should come by ice or fire.
-
-Most of our crew were Danes or Swedes, hardy and obedient men. If they
-had been British they would probably have attempted to compel the
-captain to alter his course. As it was, they simply put on all their
-available clothing and growled quietly. No matter what their
-nationality, all seamen growl; only some growl and work also.
-
-Now, all the watches and clocks on board stopped, and, refusing to
-start again, they were placed in the cook’s oven with a view to
-warming the works. But, in the excitement consequent upon fending off
-a huge berg, which threatened to crush us, they were done brown, and
-completely ruined. About this time the captain, thinking, perhaps,
-that his experiment had gone far enough, gave the order to square the
-yards. On going to the braces we found that the sheaves of the blocks
-were frozen to their pins and would not travel. Taking them to the
-winch, with much heaving, the yards at last swung, creaking and
-groaning, round, whilst showers of icy fragments fell rattling on
-deck.
-
-It was almost a calm, the ship having barely steerage way upon her;
-but the barometer was falling, and it was judged prudent to shorten
-sail by putting the _Boadicea_ under a couple of lower top-sails and
-fore and mizzen stay-sails.
-
-To stow each of the upper top-sails it took twenty-four men and two
-boys—nearly, in fact, the ship’s company; and, if the courses had not
-already been furled, I do not think we could ever have managed them.
-The foot-ropes were like glass, the reef-points as rigid as bar iron,
-and one’s hands, after a minute aloft, had no more feeling in them
-than the icy canvas they tried to grasp. Through the fog, as we slowly
-descended the slippery ratlines, we imagined we could see great bergs
-looming indistinctly; and in our strained ears echoed the
-ever-impending crash as the wind gradually freshened.
-
-It was a trying experience, even for the best prepared amongst us,
-this comparatively sudden transit from the tropics to twenty degrees
-below freezing point; and I firmly believe that, but for the unlimited
-supply of hot cocoa available day and night, at all hours, some of us
-would have given in. Spirits could be had for the asking, but no one
-seemed to care about them, even those known to be inveterate topers
-declining rum with something akin to disgust; perhaps the reason was
-that it became quite thick, and, when taken into the mouth, burned and
-excoriated both tongue and palate.
-
-The night of the day on which we had snugged the _Boadicea_ down was
-dark as pitch, and you could feel the fog as it hung low and
-clingingly to everything. Some time in the middle watch the breeze
-died away, giving place to light, unsteady airs—catspaws almost—and
-occasional falls of snow.
-
-Imagine, if you can, the big ship creeping timorously and uncertainly
-through the thick Polar darkness and mist, a shapeless mass of yet
-thicker darkness, emitting here and there ruddy flashes of light,
-reflected momentarily back from snow-covered deck or coil of frozen
-rope. No sound breaks the silence except a gentle lap-lapping of water
-under her fore-foot as the canvas just fills enough to draw. Now snow
-falls, not deliberately, but with a soft, fleecy, rushing motion,
-which speedily fills up any inequalities about the decks, and would
-fill them from rail to rail if it lasted long. Presently a dozen bulky
-spectres move noiselessly around the galley door, which, being
-withdrawn, a warm glow streams out upon the watch come for hot cocoa.
-
-Imagine, too, just as the tired men are about to drag their
-half-frozen limbs below, a sudden deeper silence, and a strange
-feeling of warmth and calm pervading the ship; the sails giving one
-mighty creaking flap up there in the gloom; the crash and rattle of
-ice falling from their frozen folds, and a cluster of awe-struck,
-up-turned faces, shining pallidly in the glow of the galley fire, as
-the _Boadicea_, but for a slight roll, lies idle and at rest.
-
-Everyone knows and feels that something unusual has taken place, but
-no man there can say what it is. A muttered order is heard, and in a
-minute a flood of vivid blue fire pours out into the darkness from the
-ship’s quarter, and a great subdued ‘Ah!’ runs fore and aft her, as,
-by its glare, we see tall, jagged cliffs, weird and ghastly in the
-strange light, towering far on high above our mast-heads, which appear
-to touch them.
-
-‘Get the deep-sea lead overboard!’ shouts the captain.
-
-‘Watch, there, watch!’ needlessly cry the men, as the line slips from
-their hands; and no bottom at one hundred fathoms.
-
-‘’Taint land at all,’ says the mate quietly. ‘I kin smell ice; an’ ef
-we don’t mind we may calculate to winter ’mongst it ’stead o’ makin’
-tracks for the Antipodes. Lower the quarter-boat,’ he goes on, ‘an’
-tie the ship up for the night, as, ef I ain’t mistook, we’re pooty
-nigh surrounded.’
-
-More bluelights are burned, and by their help and those of lanterns,
-the _Boadicea_, in a somewhat unnatural plight, is warped alongside a
-kind of ice jetty which stretches out from the main mass, and which,
-as if to save us the trouble of carrying out anchors, also to complete
-the resemblance to a pier, is furnished here and there with great
-knobs, to which we make fast our lines.
-
-If you will try and picture to yourself the scene I have described,
-you will, I think, be willing to admit that ship seldom entered
-stranger harbour in a stranger manner, or that the ‘sweet little
-cherub, sitting up aloft,’ who is supposed to keep a special look-out
-for ‘poor Jack,’ and who on the present occasion—all the more honour
-to him—must have felt colder even than the proverbial upper hank of a
-Greenlandman’s gib, seldom performed his duty better.
-
-Perhaps the all-pervading stillness was the thing that struck us most.
-The fenders, even, between the ship’s side and her novel pier scarcely
-gave a creak. And yet we were conscious that, somewhere, not very far
-away, it was beginning to blow freshly, although the sound fell on our
-ears but as a subdued, faint murmur, serving only to intensify the
-surrounding silence and hush.
-
-‘There’s a fire up there!’ exclaimed one of the men, presently. And,
-sure enough, a tiny, sickly flame appeared far away above us. It grew
-gradually larger and larger, till at length a long, broad streak of
-silver shot down the ice-mountains and fell athwart our decks, as a
-three-quarters-full moon, pale, washed-out and sickly-looking, shone
-for a minute through the low, black clouds hurrying swiftly across her
-face.
-
-A dull, grey dawn, at last, giving us just enough light to see what
-had happened. Ice everywhere!
-
- The ice was here, the ice was there,
- The ice was all around;
-
-and on every side rose huge bergs from one hundred feet to two hundred
-feet in height, and enclosing a space of barely a mile in
-circumference; an ice-bound lake, in fact; and, what struck a chill of
-terror to our hearts as we gazed, a lake without any exit. Look as we
-might, there was not the least sign of an opening. Unwittingly we had
-sailed or drifted into a girdle of conjoined bergs. During the night
-the passage through which we entered had closed, and a cruel and
-stupendous barrier, hard as granite, slippery as glass, lay betwixt us
-and the outer ocean.
-
-Within, the water was as smooth as a mill-pond, the air was quite
-warm, and after breakfast all hands went ‘ashore’ to stretch their
-legs, look wonderingly up at our prison walls, and speculate on the
-chances of getting out.
-
-As I gazed around me at the strange scene—the snow-clad, towering
-peaks, glittering coldly in the yet feeble sun rays, the deep,
-shadow-laden valleys at their bases, and the perpendicular curtains of
-naked, steely-blue ice connecting one berg with the other—there came
-to my mind some long-forgotten lines of Montgomery’s, in which he
-depicts the awful fate of an ice-bound vessel:—
-
- There lies a vessel in that realm of frost,
- Not wrecked, not stranded, but for ever lost;
- Its keel embedded in the solid mass;
- Its glistening sails appear expanded glass;
- The transverse ropes with pearls enormous strung.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Morn shall return, and noon, and eve, and night
- Meet here with interchanging shade and light;
- But from that barque no timber shall decay;
- Of these cold forms no feature pass away.
-
-I had rather enjoyed the first days of our Antarctic experiences, but
-the pleasure began decidedly to pall with such a horrible contingency
-in view, and I was now fully as anxious as anyone for clear water and
-a straight course.
-
-After a while, the gig was manned, and, with the captain and chief
-mate, we pulled round our harbour to a spot where, from the ship, a
-part of the ice-curtain seemed low and pretty accessible. So it had
-appeared; but when we reached it we found fifty feet of perpendicular
-slippery wall between our boat’s gunwale and the summit of the ridge
-we had hoped to mount.
-
-‘We’re in a pooty nice kind o’ a fix,’ said our mate, as we returned.
-‘An’,’ glancing at the lowering sky, ‘I reckon it’s going to blow
-some, presently. Mebbe it’ll blow us out o’ these chunks of ice.’
-
-The captain made no reply, but he was evidently not in a very cheerful
-state of mind.
-
-That evening it did begin to blow very hard. Not that we felt it much,
-but we could hear the storm howling and roaring outside, and the
-thunderous breakers which dashed themselves against our sheltering
-bergs, causing them to tremble and pitch now and again as the mighty
-seas struck their bases. We had shifted the _Boadicea_ out to the
-extreme end of the jetty, double-banked our fenders, and taken every
-other precaution we could think of, in addition to standing-by through
-the night to cast off and sheet home at a minute’s notice.
-
-There was no more silence now; for, although we were all drifting away
-together about E. half S. before the wind, the bergs forming our
-enclosure ground against each other with an incessant rending,
-tearing sound, which now, although seeming to foretell an early
-dissolution of partnership, filled us with terror lest some of them
-should topple over on the ship.
-
-The ship herself, no longer steady, was hove violently up and down
-with every motion of the bergs; whilst the great wooden fenders, cut
-from spare spars, were torn to splinters, and the hawsers surged round
-their icy mooring posts with a curious, screaming, intermittent noise,
-making us think that every moment they were about to part.
-
-Four bells in the morning watch had just struck when we heard a
-terrific crash rising high above the surrounding din, and the next
-instant a great wave came rushing over the _Boadicea_, filling her
-decks, nearly lifting her on to the ice, and then slamming her down
-with such force as to snap the hawsers like threads and smash the
-bulwarks to matchwood the whole length of the port side. Drifting away
-from our friendly jetty, we at once felt that our prison was broken
-up; for, now, the gale from which we had been so long sheltered howled
-and tore through the rigging, whilst cataracts of bitter cold water
-rushed in quick succession over the decks, and lumps of ice bumped up
-against the _Boadicea’s_ bows and sides.
-
-‘Set the lower fore-top-sail and mizzen-stay-sail!’
-
-And now the slatting and banging of canvas, the rattle of iron sheets
-and hanks, the hoarse cries of the men as they staggered about the
-wet, slippery planking, together with the rending and smashing of ice
-all around, made up a scene that defies description; whilst to lend it
-an additional weirdness, a ‘flare-up’ of oakum and tar, which had been
-run up to a lower-stuns’l boom-end, blazed wildly overhead like a
-great fierce eye looking down upon us out of the thick darkness. So
-closely were we beset, however, that, spite of the canvas, we soon
-found that we were simply drifting aimlessly about amidst immense
-fragments of capsized bergs, which threatened every moment to crush
-us. Indeed, we did get one squeeze that made the ship crack again, and
-whose after effect was seen by the fact that the cabin doors for the
-rest of the passage refused to close by a good six inches. Presently,
-grinding and scraping up alongside a small berg—or portion of a larger
-one, we cannot tell which—we make fast to it as well as we are able,
-and direct all our efforts to fending off its companions. As daylight
-approaches, we notice that the ice becomes rarer, and sails by at
-longer intervals; and as it breaks more fully out of a lowering
-yellowish sky a wild sight meets our eyes.
-
-The sea is dotted with bergs—small ones nodding and bobbing along, big
-ones gliding majestically before the wind, till, a pair of these
-latter colliding, down crumble spires and minarets, towers and
-pinnacles, suddenly as a child’s card-built house, sending up tall
-columns of water as they fall.
-
-It is not this spectacle, however, that brings forth a simultaneous
-shout from everyone on board, but the appearance, as one berg gives a
-half-turn, of an object, hardly two hundred yards from our jibboom
-end, standing there, amidst all the wild commotion, steadfast, rugged
-and grim, with tall breakers curling up against its ice-surrounded,
-dark red cliffs, and falling back in showers of foam, showing
-milky-white in the morning gloom.
-
-It is land, surely! And, surely, we have seen those forbidding,
-snow-capped precipices before. It is the island of the _mirage_,
-substantial enough this time, and in another ten minutes we shall be
-dashed to atoms against its surf-encircled base.
-
-The sight had a wondrous effect, and men who seemed incapable a minute
-before of stirring their stiffened limbs now hopped up the rigging
-like goats, and scampered along the deck with the top-sail halliards
-as if racing for a wager, in obedience to the order to cast off and
-make sail.
-
-‘Hard a port!’ and the _Boadicea’s_ poop is splashed with spray from
-rocks and ice as she turns slowly from a jagged, honeycombed
-promontory, whilst her late consort goes headlong to destruction on
-its iron teeth.
-
-It is still blowing hard; but our captain is more than satisfied; and,
-under everything she can carry, the _Boadicea_ rushes, like a
-frightened stag, fast away, northwards and eastwards, out of those
-dismal seas of ice and fog, snow, and unknown islands, a very
-nightmare of navigation, into which one merchant skipper, at least,
-will never willingly venture again.
-
-However, we, after all, perhaps, set our course on a higher parallel
-than anyone had done since Ross in ’41, followed the outline of a
-southern continent, whose volcanoes flamed to heaven from a lifeless,
-desolate land of ice and snow. And, as some compensation for our
-trouble and dangers, till we sighted the south end of Tasmania, we
-never had occasion to touch a rope, so steadily and strongly blew the
-fair wind.
-
-‘Seventy-five days—a rattlin’ good passage!’ exclaimed our Port
-Jackson pilot; and when he asked what had become of our bulwarks, and
-why the cuddy doors wouldn’t shut, we simply told him we had been ‘Too
-far south.’
-
-
-
-
-THE MISSION TO DINGO CREEK.
-
-An Apostolical Sketch.
-
-
-‘Bad work, this!’ exclaimed the Bishop of B—— to one of a recent
-consignment of curates. ‘Bad work this, in the North! That part of the
-diocese evidently wants looking to again. Nice trip for you,
-Greenwell. Give you some idea of the country, too,’ continued the
-Bishop. ‘Yes, decidedly; the very man! Let me see; steamer to R——,
-then overland. Of course, you may have to rough it a little; but that
-will only add a zest to the change.’
-
-The ‘bad work’ that his lordship alluded to was the substance of some
-reports that had just arrived from one of the new gold rushes,
-situated in the extreme north of his immense diocese, reports of a
-terrible state of immorality, drunkenness, and general godlessness
-existing there amongst far-off members of his flock—to wit, rough
-diggers and bushmen, together with a sprinkling of nondescripts,
-characterless vagrants, defaulters, horse-thieves, and worse, who had
-flocked there from the neighbouring colonies as to an Alsatia, where
-they could remain, at least, for the time being, secure from even the
-far-reaching arm of the law.
-
-On such material as this had the good Bishop, shortly after his
-arrival in his new see, from his snug English vicarage, essayed the
-power of his eloquence on his only visit to that part of his charge: a
-visit, be it whispered, he was not in the least anxious to repeat.
-
-The Reverend Spicer Greenwell fairly shuddered at the thought of
-trusting his precious person amongst such a set of savages as his
-imagination at once conjured up. But all his excuses and demurrings
-were without avail, his superior having, by some curious mischance,
-got it into his head that his senior curate was the very man qualified
-for such a mission to the heathen.
-
-Though getting well on towards middle age, Mr Greenwell was a failure.
-He had completely mistaken his vocation; but he did not think so, and
-nobody had, as yet, been rude enough to tell him so.
-
-Mrs Jellyby’s mission was, if we remember aright, to cultivate coffee
-and the natives of Borioboola-Gha. Mr Greenwell’s was to cultivate
-teas—afternoon ones—and at the same time to, if possible, capture a
-fair ‘Native,’ rich in those goods of this world, in which he himself
-was so unhappily deficient.
-
-For the rest, he was a gaunt, waxen-visaged man, who always wore the
-highest waistcoats, longest coats, and whitest neckties obtainable;
-was never seen without a large diamond ring on his little finger; and
-seldom deigned to consort or even converse with the other clergymen of
-the district, unless brought into direct communication with them by
-his position—into which he had partly thrust himself, partly had
-conferred upon him through home influence—of the Bishop’s _chargé
-d’affaires_. He had, he flattered himself, before this untoward affair
-happened, been making rapid progress with the damsels of the Banana
-city; and, indeed, amongst some of the more elderly spinsters of the
-congregation of St Jude’s, he was voted as ‘quite too nice.’
-
-Imagine then, if you can, the horror and disgust of such a man at
-being chosen for such an errand. But the Bishop was adamant; and I
-have many a time thought since that he purposely hardened his heart,
-and that, whilst dilating on his curate’s especial fitness for the
-work, his energy and push—as already illustrated in parish matters—his
-suave and polished manners, alone a vast handicap in his favour
-amongst the rude and illiterate people he was about to visit, the good
-prelate privately hoped within himself that if the shepherd he was
-sending forth did little benefit to the flock, yet, that the latter
-might possibly succeed in some unforeseen way in toning down the
-self-sufficiency, egoism and vanity of the pastor.
-
-Seeing, at length, that there was no help for it, and that go he must,
-the luckless curate, taking a mournful and solemn farewell of his lady
-friends, went forth to preach the Gospel to the heathen of the Dingo
-Creek diggings.
-
-Things went well enough with our traveller till he reached R——, the
-nearest township of any size to Dingo Creek, which last place lay
-still further ahead nearly ninety miles through rough and lonely
-country. At intervals on his route he had held services and preached
-sermons—little marrowless exhortations that he had long known by
-heart, and that, if they did no harm, assuredly did little good. From
-R——, whence he set out on horseback, a road led sixty miles to a bush
-public-house, where he was told he could be accommodated with a buggy,
-and, perhaps, a guide to his destination.
-
-Duly arriving, sore and jaded, at the sign of the ‘Jolly Bushman,’ he
-found the host an obliging sort of a fellow enough, who said he would
-himself have driven the gentleman to Dingo Creek, but that his wife
-was ill. However, his buggy should be at his disposal the next
-morning; and also the publican promised Cooronga Billy should go as
-guide, and, if necessary, bring both buggy and parson back again.
-Early on the following morning the buggy and a pair of good-looking
-ponies put in an appearance at the door of the ‘Jolly Bushman’; so did
-Cooronga Billy.
-
-But now we must for a while drop the thread of the story, and go back
-to the time when, as a baby, Billy lay sound asleep in his black
-mother’s arms under the shadow of the far-away Cooronga ranges—back to
-that fearful morning whose earliest dawn heralded the pitiless swoop
-of the native troopers on to the quiet camp. His tribe ‘dispersed,’
-baby Billy, the sole survivor, was brought to B——, sent, in due
-course, to the best schools, and received a special education, with a
-view to fitting him for the ministry, and a sphere of what, it was
-fervently hoped by many good men, would prove congenial and
-profitable labour amongst his own benighted countrymen.
-
-As he grew towards man’s estate, Billy became quite one of the lions
-of B——, and was proudly exhibited and put through his paces before
-distinguished strangers, as a splendid specimen of ‘what can be done
-with our aborigines.’
-
-Suddenly, and just when all this gratulation was at its height,
-William Cooronga Morris—he was indebted to the white officer who had
-commanded the ‘dispersers’ of his tribe for the first and last of
-these names, duly received at the font of St Jude’s—disappeared
-totally, turning up months afterwards, clad in his native skins, armed
-with his native weapons, at one of the far-out townships; and had ever
-since loafed around the outskirts of Northern Settlement, a degrading
-example of what over-civilisation can do for a black-fellow.
-
-Periodical visits would Billy make far out in the Bush towards the
-wild Coorongas—for some strange instinct had led him at his first
-departure towards the land of his birth—and there, instead of, as had
-been so fondly expected, bending his energies towards the cure of
-souls amongst his dark brethren, it was freely reported that Mr W. C.
-Morris constituted himself their leader in many a fat-cattle spearing
-expedition, if nothing worse.
-
-Billy, at the moment we have chosen to introduce him to the reader,
-had just returned from one of those forays, and a terrible figure he
-appeared to the Reverend Spicer.
-
-Nearly naked, with the exception of a short ’possum cloak, his skin
-plentifully covered with red and white ochre, and his hair decorated
-with cockatoo feathers; whilst across one side of his face ran a long,
-gaping scar, a relic of some recent corrobboree—what wonder that the
-reverend gentleman gazed more than doubtfully at the person introduced
-to him by the publican as his guide. The landlord observed his
-hesitation and the cause of it.
-
-‘Never mind, sir,’ said he, ‘he’s as quiet as a sheep. Dessay his
-’ed’s sore, though. Have a nobbler, Cooronga? It’ll make him lively
-like, you see,’ he concluded, addressing the curate, who evidently
-thought that Billy looked quite lively enough.
-
-At length they started, Billy driving, sulky and taciturn, answering
-questions as shortly as possible, and in the vilest of pigeon English.
-
-Nearly three parts of the journey was accomplished—for Billy drove
-like a very Jehu—when the curate began to feel hungry. So, as they
-came to a deep gully where the rain-water lay in pools amongst the
-rocks, he made his guide pull up, and prepared to comfort the inner
-man.
-
-Taking no notice of his companion, he sat down by the edge of the
-water, and began with immense gusto to demolish a roast fowl and other
-materials for a very fair repast.
-
- [Illustration: Who hath woe? Who hath sorrow? Who hath
- contentions? (Page 186.)]
-
-At R—— the reverend gentleman had provided himself with two bottles of
-port, a wine which he had been told was a first-class specific in
-cases of bush-fever and dysentery. The bottles were by this gone;
-but out of the last one he had filled a large travelling flask, which
-now producing, along with a tumbler, he proceeded—first qualifying his
-liquor with a modicum of water—to wash down his lunch.
-
-Billy’s eyes sparkled. He at once recognised the smell and colour, but
-would have preferred rum.
-
-However, little of anything, solid or fluid, seemed likely to fall to
-his share, for the weather was hot, and our curate thirsty.
-
-Presently, addressing Cooronga, the Reverend Spicer, who had no idea
-of entering the scene of his ministrations, with such a figure as
-Billy for his charioteer, said,—
-
-‘How many miles did you say it was from here to Dingo Creek?’
-
-‘Lebn,’ grunted Billy.
-
-‘Is the road as plain all the way as it is here?’
-
-‘Ess,’ again grunted the tantalised Cooronga.
-
-‘Very well, then,’ replied the curate, ‘you can walk on. I will follow
-with the buggy when it gets a little cooler.’
-
-But this was out of Billy’s programme altogether. Pointing to the
-capacious flask, to which the thirsty divine was paying repeated
-attention, he said abruptly,—
-
-‘You gib it Cooronga. Him dry too!’
-
-‘That is medicine, my friend,’ was the reply, ‘and it would do you no
-good. If, as you seem to imply, you are thirsty, there lies water in
-abundance.’
-
-Billy’s first impulse was to drive his spear through the curate. But,
-restraining himself with a sigh, another idea entered into his
-mischievous head. A large stump stood close by, overlooking the
-unsuspecting Spicer and the _débris_ of his meal. Upon this stump,
-with a bound, Billy sprung, and, letting fall his cloak, disclosing to
-view his whole body, hideously chalked, skeleton-wise, he began, in a
-tone and with an enunciation far superior to that of the reverend
-gentleman himself, to declaim, with pointed spear,—
-
-‘_Who hath woe? Who hath sorrow? Who hath contentions? Who hath
-babbling? Who hath wounds without cause? Who hath redness of eyes?_
-
-‘_They that tarry long at the wine; they that go to seek mixed wine._
-
-‘_Look not thou upon the wine when it is red, when it giveth its
-colour in the cup, when it moveth itself aright._
-
-‘_At the last_—’
-
-But here, poor Spicer, who had risen to his feet, and stood
-horror-stricken at hearing himself, as he imagined, reproved and
-threatened for his bibbing propensities through the mouth of a fiend,
-or even, as his staring eyes took in Billy’s _tout ensemble_, it might
-be the Arch Enemy of mankind himself, uttered a shriek and fled,
-terror lending unwonted speed to his legs, down the gully; whilst
-Billy, with a wild whoop, descending from his perch, took the flask
-and what remained of the provisions to the buggy, and drove off into
-the Bush.
-
-Late that night, a weary, footsore traveller entered the principal
-public-house in Dingo Creek, and began to ask incoherent questions
-about a buggy and a black-fellow, the latter, he averred, an emissary
-of Satan, who had led him into the wilderness, and there deserted
-him—a story that the rough host and his equally rough customers could
-make neither head nor tail of.
-
-‘It’s a rum go altogether,’ said the former to one of his digger
-friends, after poor Spicer had retired, nearly dead beat, to his
-rough-slabbed room, whence he could hear all that went on in the bar.
-
-‘The rummest thing I’ve heard on for some time,’ assented the other.
-‘He looks somethin’ like as a parson should look, right enough. But
-either he’s just off of a rather heavy spree, or else he’s more’n a
-shingle short. Sez he seen Ole Nick back there in the Bush, an’ the
-old ’un shook his buggy.’
-
-’Bin on the bust, down at the “Jolly Bushman’s,” I ’spects,’ put in
-another. ‘You fellers knows as some _do_ see the old chap arter a ’ard
-bust. As for me, I takes it out in snakes mostly. But there’s my mate,
-Bill, he allus has cats. I seen him one time a-huntin’ ’em round the
-tent all night long, arter bein’ on the spree for a week.’
-
-Confidence in the Reverend Spicer was, however, a little restored,
-when, next morning, the buggy was found intact in the public-house
-yard; and his confused appearance and rambling statements of the
-previous night were charitably ascribed by the majority to ‘a touch
-of the sun.’
-
-During the day it was announced throughout the place that the Reverend
-gentleman would address the inhabitants in the ‘dance-room’ of the
-public-house, as being the only one available for such a purpose.
-Figure to yourself a long, low room, on the earthen floor of which
-tree stumps still stood. At the far end, behind a sort of bar formed
-by sheets of galvanised iron, supported on trestles, waits, manuscript
-in hand, still in a rather unsettled state of mind, the Reverend
-Spicer. The place is dimly lit by flaring candles and slush lamps, and
-is crowded by an assembly of as mixed nationalities, customs and
-creeds, as could be found out of, say, Alexandria or Singapore. A
-strong smell of stale spirits and tobacco smoke pervades everything.
-All the men, as our curate sees, are armed with a sheath-knife and
-revolver; and, as he looks, he trembles and handles the address as
-gingerly as if it were a parcel of dynamite, and liable to explode
-at any moment, for it is not one of his own pithless compositions,
-but the work of the Bishop himself, a powerful and emphatic
-remonstrance—penned in his quiet study at Bishopstowe—against the
-sinful and dissolute lives of the Dingo Creekers. But, had the
-frightened curate only known it, the mob, mixed and uncontrolled as
-it was, would have as soon thought of ill-treating a grasshopper as
-himself. And, all roughened and uncivilised as were the best of them,
-there were still men amongst them in whom the mere sight of a
-clergyman awoke memories long forgotten and buried under the combats
-and toils of life—men who had once ‘looked on better days,’ and whom
-Sabbath-bells had once ‘knoll’d to church,’ and this portion it was
-who, after awhile, obtained silence, and set the example of doffing
-their hats and putting away their pipes.
-
-Very picturesque was the scene, with the lights flickering—now on the
-bronzed features of some stalwart European, now on the dark face of a
-negro, or the yellow expressionless countenance of a Chinaman—as the
-motley audience stood or squatted silent and attentive, whilst our
-curate quavered and stammered through the opening sentences of the
-address. And favourable, beyond all hope, would have seemed the
-opportunity to a true soldier of the Cross for softening the hearts of
-the poor heathen of Dingo Creek.
-
-But never, perhaps, since the days when William C. Morris, arrayed in
-black broadcloth, was qualifying as an evangelist, has anyone felt
-himself more of a square peg in a round hole than did poor Spicer
-Greenwell, as he droned away, presently, amidst exclamations of
-disgust and disapproval from his curious congregation.
-
-‘Give it lip, man!’ shouted a gigantic digger, whose beard reached
-almost to his waist. ‘Give it lip, an’ let’s hear what it’s all
-about.’ Then, turning to the publican: ‘Give him a nobbler, Jimmy;
-it’ll keep his pecker up. He’s mighty scared o’ somethin’.’ Declining
-the offered half-tumblerful of rum with a gesture of disgust, the
-curate, intent only on getting to the end of his task, resumed his
-reading.
-
-At this moment Cooronga Billy, who had passed the day in the adjacent
-black’s camp, entered, and was at once warmly greeted by the crowd, to
-all of whom he was well known, and to whom he proceeded, amidst shouts
-of laughter, to relate the story of his escapade at the gully.
-
-The curate, disturbed by the noise, lifted up his head, and, seeing
-Billy now standing just in front of him, he dropped his papers, and
-pointing to the grinning black fellow, shouted,—
-
-‘Men! men! Satan himself is amongst you!’
-
-The truth of the affair, helped out by Billy’s story, now broke on all
-hands, and roars of unrestrained laughter, accompanied by wild
-impromptu dancing and cheers for ‘Cooronga,’ put an end, for the time
-at least, to any hopes that the Reverend Spicer might have once
-entertained as to his being instrumental to even a slight degree in
-the regeneration of Dingo Creek, the dust of which, a sadder and a
-wiser man, he shook without the least delay from off his feet.
-
-Cooronga Billy has long since rejoined his tribe in the happy hunting
-grounds; but stories, many and wonderful, of the effect produced by
-the exercise of his perverted abilities are still told by the pioneers
-of the region in which he flourished.
-
-The Reverend Spicer Greenwell still exists; but, should the reader
-feel inclined to seek him, his quest must lie well within the
-precincts of the highest civilisation to be found in our colonies, and
-he must be careful that no reference, be it ever so remote, to the
-adventure herein described, pass his lips; for, though his life has
-‘fallen into the sere, the yellow leaf,’ still is the reverend
-gentleman strangely susceptible to any allusion to that episode of his
-earlier Australian experience.
-
-
-
-
-BOOKS AT BARRACABOO.
-
-A Sketch.
-
-
-PART I.
-
-They were all very sore at Barracaboo station. From manager to
-horse-boy, from jackaroo to boundary-rider, they felt aggrieved and
-vengeful. First it had been ‘Around the World by Sea and Land,’
-copiously illustrated, and in monthly parts. This was dull—unutterably
-dull—and each instalment turned out duller and heavier than the last.
-Also, the pictures resembled those on the specimen sheets as nearly as
-a mule does a grindstone.
-
-After this came ‘Diseases of All Known Domestic Animals,’ with
-gorgeously coloured pictures. As nothing could be found in the whole
-work relating to horses or cattle or dogs, except the illustrations,
-this was also voted a fraud. However, they cut out the plates, and
-stuck them upon the walls of the huts and cottages, so that it was not
-clear loss altogether.
-
- [Illustration: Started back to Atlanta, pursued for half the
- distance with thunderous whip-crackings. (Page 194.)]
-
-But the last straw was ‘The Universal Biography of Eminent Men—Dead
-and Alive,’ with splendid portraits. When they discovered that the
-notices they had been led to expect of their own ‘Boss,’ ‘Hungry’
-Parkes of Humpalong, the Mayor of Atlanta, etc., etc., were absent,
-and their places filled by paragraphs and woodcuts relating to Nelson,
-Julius Cæsar, Pompey, Scipio Africanus, and such-like characters, they
-one and all bucked, and refused to pay on delivery. Then they were
-hauled to Quarter Sessions, confronted with their signatures, and made
-to pay.
-
-In vain they swore that the thing had never been ordered; that it
-wasn’t up to specification; that their handwriting was a palpable
-forgery. In vain they related how they had never touched it, but had
-left their copies lying on verandahs, stockyard posts, in mud, in
-dust, wherever, in fact, the agent had chanced to bail them up. All in
-vain; they had to pay—costs and all.
-
-Therefore was it that Barracaboo had forsworn literature by sample, or
-in uncertain instalments, and vowed vengeance upon all shabby men with
-indelible pencils, and printed agreements with a space left for
-signature. More especially had they a ‘down’ on people who wore
-goatees and snuffled when they talked.
-
-‘If you see one of ’em at the station,’ said the manager—a rough,
-tough old customer, and disappointed at being ousted by Julius
-Cæsar—‘set the dogs on him. I’ll pay damages. If he don’t take that
-hint, touch him up with stockwhips. It’ll only be justifiable homicide
-at the worst. I know the law: an’ I don’t mind a fiver in such a
-case!’
-
-‘Let us only get a chance, sorr,’ said the sheep-overseer, ‘an’ we’ll
-learn ’em betther manners wid our whups. Doggin’s too good for the
-thrash!’
-
-This state of affairs was pretty well known at Atlanta, the
-neighbouring township; and book-fiends, warned, generally gave
-Barracaboo a wide berth. Once, certainly, a new hand at the game, and
-one who fancied himself too much to bother about collecting local
-information, came boldly into the station-yard just as the bell was
-ringing for dinner, and produced the advance sheets of a sweet and
-lively work, entitled, ‘Hermits, Ancient and Modern: Illustrated with
-Forty-seven Choice Engravings.’
-
-He had got to ‘Now, gentlemen,’ when, hearing the howl of execration
-that went up, he suddenly took in the situation and started back to
-Atlanta, pursued for half the distance with thunderous whip-crackings
-by the sheep-overseer and the butcher, who were the only two who
-happened to have their horses ready.
-
-Chancing to have a capital mount, he distanced them and galloped into
-town, and up the main street, reins on his horse’s neck, and trousers
-over his knees, half dead with fright, only to be promptly summoned
-and fined for furious riding within the municipality.
-
-For weeks afterwards sheets of ‘Hermits’ strewed the ‘cleared line,’
-and he received a merciless chaffing from his fellow-fiends, who could
-have warned him what to expect had he confided his destination to
-them.
-
-About this time came to Atlanta a small, ’cute-looking, clean-shaven,
-elderly man. He was unknown to any present, but modestly admitted
-that he was in the book trade, and had a consignment with him. And he
-listened with interest to the conversation in the ‘Commercial Room.’
-
-‘The district’s petered out,’ remarked a tall American gentleman, with
-the goatee and nasal voice abhorred of Barracaboo. ‘Clean petered out
-since that last “Universal Biography” business. They’re kickin’
-everywhere. Darned if a feller didn’t draw a bead on me yesterday
-afore I’d time almost to explain business. Then he got so mad that I
-left, not wantin’ to become a lead mine.’
-
-‘Been here a week and haven’t cleared exes.,’ said another mournfully.
-‘Off to-morrow. No use trying to work such a desert as this now.’
-
-‘Big place, this station with the funny name, you’re talkin’ about?’
-asked the newcomer, who had introduced himself as ‘Mr Potts, from
-London.’
-
-‘Over a hundred men of one sort or another all the year round,’ was
-the reply. ‘Capital shop for us, once too. But it’s sudden death to
-venture there now. I did real good biz at Barracaboo for the Shuffle
-Litho. Company. It wouldn’t pay, though, to chance back again.’
-
-‘Ah, that was the “Around the World” thing, wasn’t it? Didn’t come up
-to guarantee, eh?’
-
-‘Well, hardly,’ replied the other. ‘However, that wasn’t my fault, you
-know. All I had to do was to get the orders, which I did to the tune
-of a couple of hundred or thereabout.’
-
-‘That’s the worst of those things,’ said Mr Potts. ‘Instalments always
-make a mess of it. Then the agent loses his character, if nothing
-else. I was out delivering in the Western District for Shuffle Litho.,
-and was glad to get away by the skin of my teeth. But it’s not only
-the personal danger I object to,’ continued Mr Potts, after a pause.
-‘It is the, ahem, the moral degradation involved in such a pursuit—you
-know what I mean, sir?’
-
-‘Just so, just so,’ answered the other vaguely, with a hard stare at
-the round, red face looming through cigar smoke.
-
-‘That’s what made me throw the line up,’ went on Mr Potts, ‘more than
-anything else. The money’s not clean, sir! I’d rather carry about a
-ton of print, and risk selling for cash at a fractional advance upon
-cost price.’
-
-‘That’s all right,’ replied his companion with a grin. ‘Only take my
-advice, and don’t trouble Barracaboo with your ton of print, or you’ll
-be very apt to leave it there. They won’t give you time to open your
-mouth. Ask “The Hermit,” if you don’t believe me.’
-
-For a whole day Mr Potts drove around and about with a selection from
-his stock.
-
-But he never was allowed even a chance to exhibit a sample. Farmers,
-selectors, squatters, townsfolk, had all apparently quite made up
-their minds.
-
-Times out of number he was threatened with personal violence, and
-greeted with language quite unprintable here. Once sticks were thrown
-at him; and once an old copy of the ‘Biography’ was hurled into the
-buggy, whilst cattle-dogs were heeling his horses. Clearly it was
-useless to persist. The district was fairly demoralised; and with a
-sigh, Mr Potts drove home to receive the ‘What did I tell you’s’ of
-the other ‘gents.’
-
-But he was a resourceful man was Mr Potts, and he determined, before
-leaving the district for ever, to have one more attempt under
-conditions which should, at all events, give him an opportunity of
-displaying a specimen of his goods. Besides, he thirsted for vengeance
-on the community, and knew that if he could but get an opening it was
-his, full and complete.
-
- * * * * *
-
-‘No objection to my camping here to-night, I s’pose?’ asked a rather
-forlorn-looking traveller of the cook at Barracaboo, shortly after the
-events related above.
-
-‘Chop that heap o’ wood up, an’ you gets your supper an’ breakfus’,’
-said the cook, laconically.
-
-The traveller worked hard for an hour, and finished his task, handling
-the axe as if born to it, and provoking the cook’s admiration to such
-an extent that he went one better than his promise, and proffered a
-pint of tea and a lump of ‘brownie.’
-
-Presently, lighting his pipe, and undoing his swag, the new-comer,
-remarking that there was nothing like a read for passing the time
-away, took out a gorgeously bound volume, sat down at the table, and
-was soon so interested that he let his pipe go out. Save for the cook,
-the long kitchen was empty, all the men being away on the run.
-
-For a time, busy with a batch of bread, the former took no notice of
-the stranger. Then, his work done, he came and looked over his
-shoulder, saying, ‘What you got there, mate?’
-
-‘Finest thing ever you read,’ said the other, carelessly turning over
-some vivid pictures. “The Life and Adventures of Dick Turpin, Claude
-Duval, and Other Eminent Outlaws.” Something like a book this is,’ he
-continued. ‘Six hundred pages full of love and murder; and that
-excitin’ you can’t bear to put it down!’
-
-This was charming; and the cook, and the butcher, and a couple of
-boundary riders dropped in for a yarn, at once became inquisitive, and
-anxious to have a look.
-
-‘See here,’ said the owner of the wonderful volume, pointing to an
-outrageous effort in coloured process, ‘this is the bold Dick Turpin
-on his wonderful mare, Black Bess, taking the ten-foot gate on the
-road to York. See, he’s got the reins in his teeth and a pistol in
-each hand.’
-
-‘By gum, she’s a flyer!’ ‘Twig the long-necked spurs.’ ‘No knee-pads
-to the saddle either!’ ‘Ten foot! there ain’t a horse in Hostralia as
-could do it!’—exclaimed his audience, becoming excited.
-
-‘And here you have,’ went on the traveller, ‘the gentle highwayman,
-Claude Duval, stickin’ up the Duke of York’s coach on ’Oundslow ’Eath.
-And here he is again, dancing under the moon with the Duchess.’ And so
-he continued, setting forth in tempting sequence the glories of the
-work, pausing at intervals to read aloud thrilling bits, and comment
-upon them.
-
-‘Where did you get it, mate?’ at length asked the cook.
-
-‘Bought it in Atlanta,’ replied the other. ‘Fellow there’s got lots of
-’em, and only thirty bob apiece. Cheap at double the price, I reckon,
-considerin’ the amoun’ of readin’ in it.’
-
-‘Ain’t no deliv’rin’ numbers, or signin’ ’greements, or any o’ that
-game?’ asked one suspiciously. ‘’Cause if there is, we’re full.’
-
-‘No,’ was the reply; ‘you pays your money and you takes your bargain.
-But I don’t think you fellows’ll ever get the chance. I heard him say
-he’d as soon face a mad bull as come to this station.’
-
-The men, of whom the hut was now full, laughed; and said one,—
-
-‘The chap as sells, out an’ out, an honest article like that un
-needn’t be scared. It’s them coves as gets you to sign things, and
-keeps sendin’ a lot o’ rotten trash, not a bit like what you seen
-furst; an’ then comes, as flash as you please, summonsin’ of you an’
-a-gettin’ of you bullyragged in Court—them’s the coves as we’ve got a
-derry on. Let’s have another squint at that pitcher o’ Dick Turpin an’
-Black Bess, mates.’
-
-‘Give you five bob on your bargain!’ shouted a tall stockman,
-presently, from the outer edge of the circle, where he had been
-impatiently waiting for a look.
-
-‘Couldn’t part with it,’ said the owner decidedly. ‘But I’ll tell you
-what I will do. I’m going back to the township to-morrow. If the chap
-ain’t gone, I’ll let him know he can sell a few here. He might venture
-if you’ll all give your word not to go for him when he does come. He’s
-got lots of others, too. There’s “The Bloody Robber of the Blue
-Mountains,” and “The Pirate’s Bride,” and “The Boundin’ Outlaws of the
-Backwoods,” and plenty more—all same price, and all pictures and
-covers same as this one is.’
-
-‘Right! Tell him to come! It was pay-day yesterday,’ yelled the crowd
-unanimously.
-
-‘Not a bad night’s work, I do believe,’ muttered the traveller to
-himself, as he reluctantly stretched out on the hard bunk-boards. ‘I
-hope, though, this confounded beard and moustache won’t come off while
-I’m asleep, if I ever do get any on such a bed.’
-
-
-PART II.
-
-‘Is your life insured?’ ‘You’ll get sudden notice to vamose the
-ranche, sir!’ ‘Mind the dogs!’ ‘Look out for whips!’ ‘You’ll lose your
-stock!’
-
-Such were some of the warnings and admonitions dealt out to Mr Potts
-by his friends, as he heavily loaded his buggy preparatory to
-starting for Barracaboo.
-
-‘I’ll chance it!’ said he. ‘Haven’t sold a cent’s worth yet; and it’s
-the only place I haven’t tried. They can’t very well kill a fellow,
-anyhow. I’ll chance it; faint heart never won fair lady!’
-
-‘Give you five pounds to one you don’t deal!’ cried one.
-
-‘Give you five pounds to one you’re hunted!’ shouted ‘The Hermit.’
-
-‘Bet you slap-up feed for the crowd to-night, and wine thrown in, that
-somethin’s broke afore you come back,’ said the American gentleman.
-
-‘Done, and done, and done,’ replied Mr Potts placidly, as he carefully
-booked the wagers and drove off; whilst the bystanders, to a man,
-agreed to delay their departure for the sake of not only eating a
-cheap dinner, but witnessing a return which they were all convinced
-would be ‘as good as a play.’
-
-But they were mistaken. Mr Potts was received at Barracaboo with open
-arms, no one recognising in the clean-shaven features those of the
-bearded, dilapidated swagman who had the other night spied out the lay
-of the land and the leanings of its people. The manager was absent;
-but the overseer, who had already by personal inspection satisfied
-himself of the merits of ‘Bold Dick Turpin,’ etc., was amongst the
-earliest purchasers.
-
-‘Everything went like wildfire. Mr Potts could hardly hand them out
-fast enough. Those present bought for others away on the run, and in
-a very short time there were only three volumes left.
-
-These were of a different calibre to the rest of the rubbish, being
-nothing less than ‘The Adventures of Don Quixote de la Mancha,’ with
-illustrations by Gustave Doré. However, as no one would even look at
-them at the price—five pounds—the dealer, having pretty well cleaned
-out ‘the Hut,’ determined to try his luck at ‘the House.’
-
-Now, it happened that Mrs Morris, the manager’s wife, wished just at
-this time to buy something for her eldest boy, whose birthday was
-approaching. Recognising, as a reading woman, that the work was
-genuine, and not more than a pound or two over price, she bought it.
-It was so much less trouble than sending to the capital, with a chance
-of disappointment.
-
-‘It’ll do very nicely for Master Reginald,’ quoth she; ‘I’m sure he’ll
-be pleased with it. And I’m glad to see that you people are at last
-beginning to carry something better than the usual lot of trash. I
-hope you did well amongst the men with these standard works?’
-
-‘Very nicely indeed, thank you, ma’am,’ replied Mr Potts, smiling, as
-he bowed and withdrew.
-
- * * * * *
-
-John, the waiter, had twice informed the ‘commercial gents’ that
-dinner was ready, before the anxious watchers saw the man who was
-expected to pay for it drive into the yard of the hotel.
-
-‘He looks kinder spry,’ remarked the American gentleman
-disappointedly. ‘Guess he’s got clear off with a caution this once.’
-
-‘Buggy seems to run light,’ chimed in another. ‘Shouldn’t wonder if
-they’d unloaded it into the river.’
-
-‘Never had such a haul since I’ve been in the business, gentlemen!’
-exclaimed Mr Potts, as he presently entered the dining-room with a big
-roll of paper in his hand. ‘There must have been some mistake about
-the place. Why, they’re the mildest crowd you’d see in a day’s march.
-Sellin’ ’em books is like tea-drinkin’. It actually kept me goin’ as
-fast as I could to change their stuff for ’em. Here, you know the
-Barracaboo cheques. Look at this, and count ’em, one of you. Blessed
-if I’ve had time! I hope dinner’s ready. Never let me hear a word
-against Barracaboo after this!’
-
-There was a long silence of utter astonishment, during which the
-American rapidly thumbed strips of green paper, and made mental
-calculations.
-
-‘Eight hundred dollars!’ exclaimed he, at last, in tones of unalloyed
-admiration. ‘Mister Potts, sir, you’re a gifted genius! I ante-up,
-Colonel, to once, an’ allow I’ll take a back seat.’
-
-And so, in their several fashions, said the rest; whilst the lion of
-the evening ate his dinner, sipped his porphyry, and kept his own
-counsel.
-
-‘Cost me four bob, landed in Sydney, averaging the lot,’ said Mr Potts
-confidentially to a friend that evening, as they enjoyed their coffee
-and cigars on the balcony. ‘I’m on my own hook, too, now. I seen that
-the specimen-sheet-monthly-delivery-collection-per-agent game was
-blown—not that I guessed it was near as bad as it really is. So I
-sends straight away to New York for this consignment, specially got up
-and prepared for the Bush. It was a regular bobby-dazzler! You see,
-the boards are only stuck on with glue, type and paper’s as rough as
-they make ’em, and the picturin’s done by a cheap colour patent. I’ve
-got another lot nearly due by this—not for here, though. You fellows
-have ruined this district. Of course the Dorees was genuine. I bought
-the three of ’em a job lot in town for a song. They’re the only books
-I’ve got left now. If I’d had a score more of Turpins and such, I
-could have sold ’em at the station.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-‘There’s old Morris, of Barracaboo, just come in,’ remarked someone
-the next morning. ‘He’s on his way home from Larras Show, I expect.’
-
-‘Which is him?’ asked Mr Potts eagerly (all literary people are not
-necessarily purists).
-
-‘Sorry to disturb you at lunch, sir,’ said Mr Potts presently, as he
-entered, bearing a large book. ‘But Mrs Morris was kind enough to say
-that this would do nicely for Master Reginald’s birthday. ‘Don
-Quixote,’ sir, the most startling work of that celebrated author,
-Gustavus Do-ree, sir. Splendidly illustrated, sir. Your good lady was
-very much pleased with it.’
-
-‘Umph, umph,’ growled the manager. ‘Been out at the station, eh?
-Didn’t they run you, eh? No whips, no dogs! Eh! eh! What?’
-
-‘I am not an advance agent for books I know nothing about, sir,’
-returned the other with dignity, as he took the volume up again. ‘I
-sell a genuine article, sir, for cash on the nail. In transactions of
-that kind there can be no mistake, sir.’
-
-‘Umph!’ growled the squatter doubtfully. ‘Well, as long as the missus
-says it’s all right, I s’pose it is. How much?’
-
-He paid without a murmur. Mrs M. was a lady who stood no trifling.
-
-‘Wrap the thing up and put it in the buggy,’ said he. ‘Gad, it’s as
-big as the station ledger! Look sharp, now, I’m in a hurry!’
-
-‘So am I,’ quoth Mr Potts, as he returned. ‘John, what time does the
-next train start?’
-
- * * * * *
-
-When the manager reached home that afternoon with ‘Don Quixote,’ and
-compared notes and books, there was a row, the upshot of which was
-that he received orders to hurry off at once in pursuit, and avenge
-the trick played upon them.
-
-‘You’re a J.P.,’ stormed the lady, ‘and if you can’t give that oily
-villain three months, what’s the use of you? Besides, isn’t five
-pounds worth recovering?’
-
-Mr Morris would much sooner have let the matter drop quietly. No man
-likes to publicly advertise the fact of his having been duped, least
-of all by a book-fiend.
-
-‘Well, well, my dear,’ said he at last, ‘never mind. I’ll go directly.
-I’ve got some letters to write first But I’ll send M‘Fadyen into town
-to see the fellow doesn’t get away.’
-
-‘Tell him,’ said the manager, as the overseer was preparing to start,
-‘tell him I’m coming in presently, about—um—er—about a book. Oh, and
-if he gives you anything, perhaps you’d better take it. No use,’ he
-muttered to himself, with a side glance to where his wife sat,
-‘letting all hands and the cook know one’s business. The beggar ’ll
-only be too glad to stump up when he finds I’m in earnest. Thought, I
-suppose, that I wouldn’t bother about it, eh, what!’
-
-Inquiring at the ‘Royal,’ the overseer was told that Mr Potts had
-left; although, perhaps, if he hastened, he might yet see him, as the
-train hadn’t started. Sure enough, galloping up to the station and
-searching along the carriages, he found his man just making himself
-comfortable in smoking-cap and slippers.
-
-‘Be jakers, mister,’ he gasped breathlessly, ‘the Boss wants to see ye
-badly! Have ye got anythin’ for him? It’s of a book he was spakin’.
-Tould me to tell ye that he’d be in himself directly.’
-
-‘Too late! Can’t stop! Time’s up!’ replied Mr Potts. ‘But’—rising to
-the occasion, and taking the last copy of ‘Do-ree’ out of his
-portmanteau—‘this is it. It’s for Master Reginald’s birthday. Your
-Boss wouldn’t miss having it for three times the money. Six
-pounds—quick!’
-
-In a desperate flurry, the overseer ransacked his pockets. No; he
-could only muster four.
-
-‘All right, guard, wait a minute!’ he yelled as, borrowing the
-balance, he clutched the book, whilst the train, giving a screech,
-moved away, with Mr Potts nodding and grinning a friendly farewell.
-
-‘Be kicked now!’ exclaimed the overseer, ‘if that wasn’t a close
-shave! The Boss oughter think himself lucky, so he ought!’
-
-So, carrying the book carefully under his arm, he jogged
-Barracaboowards.
-
-Half way he met Mr Morris coming in at full speed.
-
-‘No hurry in loife, sorr!’ cried the overseer, beamingly, and showing
-‘Don Quixote.’ ‘I ped six notes for it, an’ had to borrow two. It was
-just touch an’ go, though, so it was!’
-
-
-
-
-‘BARTON’S JACKAROO.’
-
-
-‘Bother!’ exclaimed Mr Barton, the Manager of Tarnpirr, as he finished
-reading one of his letters on a certain evening.
-
-‘What’s the matter, papa?’ asked his daughter, Daisy, pausing with the
-teapot in her hand.
-
-‘Oh, nothing much, my dear,’ he replied; only we are to have company.
-The firm is sending up the 444th cousin of an Irish Earl to learn
-sheep-farming, and I suppose I’ve got the contract to break him in.
-That’s all.’
-
-‘I wish your mother could be at home, Daisy,’ he continued. ‘I never
-did care much about these colonial-experience fellows. They generally
-give a lot of trouble, especially when they’re well connected. There,
-read the precious letter for yourself. Pity we couldn’t put him into
-the hut, instead of making him one of ourselves—eh, Daisy?’
-
-The girl laughed as she read aloud,—
-
-‘Mr Fortescue is highly connected; and as he not only brings
-introductions from the London office, but also possesses an interest
-in several properties out here, we hope you will do your best to make
-him comfortable, and to give him that insight into the business that
-he seems desirous of acquiring at first hand.’
-
-‘Why, daddy!’ she exclaimed, ‘you ought to think yourself
-honoured—“highly connected,” not merely “well,” remember—by such a
-charge! As for myself, I am all anxiety to see him.’
-
-‘I don’t think anything of the sort, then, Daisy,’ said her father.
-‘And if I could afford to do so, I should like to tell them that I
-consider it a piece of impertinence on their part to ask me to receive
-a perfect stranger, knowing how I am situated alone with you, how
-small the place is, and how roughly we live. But one can’t ride the
-high horse on a hundred and fifty pounds a year!’
-
-And the Manager of Tarnpirr sighed, and stared thoughtfully into his
-cup.
-
-In the general sense of the word, Daisy Barton was not a pretty girl,
-inasmuch as she possessed not one regular feature. But it was such a
-calm, quiet, pleasant face, out of which dark blue eyes looked so
-tenderly and honestly at you, that one forgot to search for details in
-the charm of the whole. Add to this, one of the neatest, trimmest,
-most loveable little figures imaginable, and you may have some faint
-idea of the pleasant picture she made as she sat thinking which of the
-two spare rooms should be got ready for the new inmate. Mrs Barton was
-never at the station. She was a confirmed invalid, and resided
-permanently in a far southern town. Daisy and an old Irishwoman kept
-house.
-
-In due course the ‘highly connected’ one arrived, bringing with him as
-much luggage as sufficed to fill the extra room.
-
-He was a tall, good-looking Englishman, and he gazed around at the
-small bare house with its strip of burnt-up, dusty garden, and
-background of sombre eucalypti; at the squalid ‘hut;’ the sluggish,
-dirty river; and the barren forlornness of everything, with a look on
-his face that caused Mr Barton to chuckle, and think to himself that
-the new-comer’s stay would be short. The manager had expected a
-youngster, not a grown man of five or six and twenty, and he was
-rather puzzled.
-
-This self-possessed, languid sort of gentleman, with well-cut
-features, long moustache, and slow, pleasant-sounding, if rather
-drawling, speech, wasn’t by any means the sort of creature that
-Mr Barton was accustomed to associate with the term ‘jackaroo,’ and
-its natural corollary, ‘licking into shape.’
-
-‘A fellow with lots of money, I expect,’ he said to Daisy that night
-after their guest, pleading fatigue, had retired. ‘One of those chaps
-who just come out to have a look around, and then off home again with
-wonderful stories about the wild Australian Bush.’
-
-‘Yaas; shouldn’t wondah, now, Mistah Barton, if you ah not quaite
-correct,’ laughed Daisy, mischievously. ‘Oh, papa, do all the folk in
-England talk as if they were clean knocked up?’
-
-‘Only the highly-connected ones, my dear,’ replied her father,
-smiling. ‘It’s considered quite fashionable, too, amongst our own
-upper ten. He’ll lose it after he’s been bushed a few times. I
-shouldn’t imagine from his looks, however, that he’s got much
-backbone. He’ll be away again presently—too rough a life.’
-
-And, in fact, poor Fortescue at first often did get bushed.
-
-Luckily for him, perhaps, a camp of blacks settled at Tarnpirr shortly
-after his arrival, and these made a regular income by hunting for and
-bringing him back. And he was very considerate.
-
-Once, when he had been missing for three days, and Mr Barton and Daisy
-were half out of their minds with fright, he made the blacks who were
-bearing him home, tattered and hungry, and faint from exposure, go
-ahead for clean clothes and soap and water before he would put in an
-appearance. This incident only confirmed Mr Barton the more in his
-idea that he had to do with a man lacking strength of character—a
-dandy willing to sacrifice everything to personal outward show. His
-daughter thought quite otherwise.
-
-However, in time, ‘Barton’s Jackaroo,’ as he was called throughout the
-district of the lower rivers, became a favourite, not only at
-Tarnpirr, but on the neighbouring runs. Even old Bridget admitted
-that ‘he was a good sort ov a cratur, barrin’ the want ov a bit more
-life wid him.’
-
-But he was always calm and self-possessed; and the Manager was
-accustomed to swear that a bush fire at his heels wouldn’t make him
-quicken his pace by a step.
-
-And once Daisy, in a moment of irritation, confided to her father that
-she felt inclined to stick a needle into his jackaroo for the sake of
-discovering whether that provoking air of leisurely languor was
-natural or assumed.
-
-‘He’s got no backbone, my dear,’ said the Manager, laughing. ‘But try
-him by all means. I’ll bet you ten to one he only says what he did
-last week, when that old ram made a drive at him in the yard, and
-knocked him down and jumped on him.’
-
-‘And what did he say to that?’ asked Daisy eagerly.
-
-‘Well,’ replied Mr Barton, laughing again, ‘when he’d cleaned the mud
-out of his eyes and mouth, he looked surprised and said “Haw!”’
-
-‘Oh,’ said Daisy, disappointedly. ‘But what ought he to have said to
-show that he had a backbone, papa?’
-
-‘Well,’ replied her father vaguely, ‘you know, Daisy—er—um—well, that
-is—um—a great many people, my dear, your father amongst them, perhaps,
-would be apt to say a good deal on such an occasion.’
-
-‘I have a better opinion than ever of Mr Fortescue,’ cried Daisy
-indignantly at this. ‘Because he keeps his temper, and doesn’t go on
-like Long Jim or Ben the Bullocky when any little thing happens, he’s
-got no pluck or resolution! I own he exasperates one sometimes with
-his calm, dawdling ways. But if he were pushed, I shouldn’t be
-surprised to find more in him than he gets credit for after all!’
-
-‘Umph!’ said Mr Barton glancing kindly, but with rather a troubled
-face, at the flushed cheeks and sparkling eyes upturned to his own.
-And as he rode over the run that day the burden of his thoughts was
-that the sooner his serene-tempered jackaroo got tired of the Bush the
-better it would be for all of them.
-
- * * * * *
-
-‘Ned, if the river ain’t a-risin’, an’ risin’ precious quick, too,
-call me a Dutchman! ’Arf-an-hour ago the water warn’t near them
-bullocks, and now it’s right agin their ’eels!’
-
-‘Well,’ replied his mate, glancing towards the brown stream slowly
-spreading over the flat, ‘we’re safe enough. I’ll forgive it if it
-comes over this. Tell you what, though, you might catch the pony an’
-canter up to the station, an’ tell ole Barton as there’s some water
-a-comin’. He might have some stock he’d like to git out o’ the road.
-An’ you might’s well git a lump o’ meat while you’re there.’
-
-So Ned, of the travelling bullock team, went with the news to
-Tarnpirr, lower down.
-
-But Mr Barton that very morning had been to Warrooga township, and the
-telegraph people had said no word of floods or heavy rain at the head
-of the river. Around Tarnpirr and district the weather had been dry
-for weeks, so the Manager was not in the least uneasy.
-
-‘It’s only a bit of a fresh, Brown,’ said he. ‘It’ll soon go down
-again. Thanks all the same, though. Meat? Yes, of course. And now
-you’d better go over to the kitchen and get your dinner.’
-
-‘Boss reckons it’s nothin’,’ said Ned, returning that evening. ‘No
-rain fall’d up above.’
-
-‘We wouldn’t need shift anyhow,’ replied the other, preparing to cook
-the meat given them by Mr Barton, who little dreamt how welcome it
-would be to some people later on. ‘We’re a lot higher here than they
-are at the station. I saw “Barton’s Jackaroo” just now, out ridin’
-with Miss Daisy. He’s a rum stick, he is.’
-
-‘But ain’t she a little star!’ exclaimed Ned enthusiastically.
-
-‘She are; all that!’ replied his mate. ‘Finest gall on the rivers. Too
-good by sights for any new-chum.’
-
-And so the pair sat and yarned and watched the treacherous water of
-what was to become the biggest flood since ’64 stealthily eating its
-way up amongst the long grass of the sandridge, sneaking quietly into
-little hollows, then pretending to creep back again, then with a rush
-advancing a miniature wave further than ever. Sat and talked and
-watched the brown expanse broaden until the tall oaks that bordered
-the banks were whipping the fierce current with their slender tops,
-sole mark now to show where lay mid-stream.
-
-‘It’s a darned big lump of a fresh!’ quoth Ned doubtfully.
-
-‘It’ll be down afore mornin’,’ replied his mate. ‘And anyhow it can’t
-do us real bad, seein’ what we’ve got in the loadin’. But there’s no
-danger ’ere on this ridge.’
-
-So they turned in under their tarpaulins, and never heard how the
-water hissed at midnight as it crept, little by little, advancing,
-receding, but always gaining, into their carefully covered-up fire.
-
- * * * * *
-
-In the snug sitting-room at Tarnpirr, with lamps burning brightly, and
-curtains drawn against the lowering dusk, sat Herbert Fortescue and
-Daisy Barton, their heads pretty close together over a chessboard.
-
-‘I’m going across to the Back Ridge out-station this afternoon,’ had
-said Mr Barton. ‘I sha’n’t be home before to-morrow; I want to see how
-Macpherson’s getting on with those weaners. Needn’t bother about the
-river. It’s only a fresh, or Warrooga would have sent us word.’
-
-Alas for dependence on Warrooga with its absent trooper, and
-absent-minded operator, who was warned, just after Manager Barton left
-him, that masses of water were coming down three rivers towards
-Tarnpirr!
-
-Had he but taken horse and galloped out the few miles, or sent, things
-might have happened very differently, and this story would never have
-been written. But as it was—
-
-‘There!’ exclaimed Daisy, ‘my king is in trouble again. I feel out of
-sorts to-night. It’s very close. Shall we go on to the verandah?’
-
-‘With pleasure,’ said the young man rising. ‘But it’s as dark as pitch
-outside. Give me your hand, please, for fear you stumble.’
-
-Hesitating for a moment, their eyes met, and with deepening colour she
-placed her hand in his, and they went out through the long window into
-the night. It was very quiet, and the darkness felt woolly and warm.
-No light glimmered anywhere, and the only sound was the cry of a
-solitary mopoke coming from amongst the spectral boles of the box
-trees.
-
-‘The men are in bed, I suppose,’ said Daisy, glancing towards their
-hut.
-
-‘They are away on the run,’ replied Fortescue, ‘drawing fencing stuff
-for the new line. But it’s a wonder we don’t see the blacks’ fire.’
-
-As they stood leaning against the garden fence a soft continuous
-ripple, mingled with a sound like the sighing of wind through tall
-belars fell on their ears.
-
-‘It’s only the river,’ said Daisy, ‘I’ve often heard it making that
-mournful noise when it’s rising over its banks. Shall we walk as far
-as the camp?’
-
-It was a rough track, and more than once, but for the sustaining arm
-of her companion, Daisy would have come to grief over log or tussock.
-
-But they got there at last, guided by a few dim sparks from expiring
-fires.
-
-‘Why, it’s deserted,’ exclaimed Daisy, as they found themselves
-amongst the empty gunyahs. ‘They’re gone, dogs and all.’
-
-‘Off on some hunting expedition, I expect,’ replied Fortescue,
-laughing. ‘They look at me in a comically disgusted manner of late
-since I left off getting bushed so regularly.’
-
-It was too dark to see the water, but they stood for a long time
-listening to the swish of it as it ran full-lipped from one steep high
-bank to the other, telling with eerie mutterings and whisperings, and
-curious little complaining noises, and low hoarse threatenings of what
-it would presently do, and the mischief it would work, but in language
-all untranslatable by its hearers.
-
-‘What a sweet little lady it is,’ said Fortescue to himself as, later,
-he sat on the edge of his bed staring straight before him into a pair
-of tender, steadfast eyes conjured out of the darkness. ‘I wonder if
-she does? I’m nearly sure of it, thank heaven! Why, she is worth
-coming here and roughing it like this, and being called “Barton’s
-Jackaroo” twenty times over for!’ and he laughed gently. ‘Fancy a
-prize like that hidden away amongst these solitudes. I wonder what her
-father will say? Anyhow, I won’t put it off any longer. I’ll ask him
-to-morrow.’
-
-With which resolution he laid down and went to sleep, still thinking
-on Daisy Barton.
-
-He awoke with a start, and lay listening to noises in his room, the
-remnants, as he imagined, of some grotesque dream.
-
-Gurglings there were, and agonised squeakings and scrapings, with,
-now and then, ploppings and splashings as of many small swimmers. Then
-something cold, wet and hairy, crawled over his hand.
-
-Shaking it off with an exclamation, he jumped out of bed, and with the
-shock of it, stood stock still for two minutes up to his knees in
-water.
-
-Then, striking a match, he saw that his room was awash, and that all
-sorts of articles were floating about it, drawn hither and thither by
-the current which swelled and eddied between the old slabs. Up a
-corner of blanket, touching the water, swarmed a great host of ants,
-tarantulas, beetles and crickets, whilst drowning mice, lizards, and
-heaven knows what else, swam wildly round and round and gratefully
-hailed his bare legs as a harbour of refuge. Hastily rubbing them off,
-and getting into some wet clothes, he opened the window and looked
-out. A wan moon shed a feeble light upon one vast sea of turgid water.
-Nothing in sight but water—water, and the tops of the trees quivering
-above the flood! No wonder the river talked to itself last night! The
-scene was enough to make even a man with a backbone quail and feel a
-bit nervous.
-
-As for Barton’s Jackaroo, his first astonishment over, he forgot
-himself so far as first to whistle, and then to swear, but very softly
-and tentatively, as one trying an experiment.
-
-You see, this was a different matter altogether to being butted of
-rams, or even being badly bushed without a drink for three days and
-three nights.
-
-Brushing off his sleeve the head of a column of sugar-ants that had
-effected a lodgment _via_ the window-sill, he waded into the
-sitting-room and lit the lamp. Then, making for Daisy’s room, he
-called and tapped until she answered.
-
-‘It’s me—Fortescue. Don’t be alarmed, Daisy—Miss Barton,’ said he.
-‘The water’s in the house. Get up and dress, and come out as quickly
-as possible.’
-
-As he finished speaking a wild yell rang through the place, and
-Bridget’s voice from near by exclaimed, punctuated by screams,—
-
-‘Howly Mother av Moses! Ow! Blessid Vargin an’ all the saints purtect
-us! Ow! the divvle be wid me! but it’s drowned I am this minnit! an’
-the wather up me legs, an’ niver a soul comin’ next anigh me! Och!
-wirras-thru! it’s a lost woman I am, wid all the mices and bastes
-atin’ away at me! Ow! ow! ow!’
-
-With difficulty suppressing a desire to laugh, Fortescue shouted to
-her to get her clothes on and join him. One little cry of dismay he
-heard from Daisy as she lit her candle, and then he returned to the
-dining-room.
-
-Here he was startled to notice a burst of dull moonlight coming in
-through the front of the house where already were gaps caused by the
-slabs being displaced and carried away by the water.
-
-Clearly the building, old and rotten, was going to pieces.
-
-Presently Daisy, pale, but silent and composed, entered. Taking her in
-his arms, he placed her on a sideboard, grieving the while to see how
-the water poured from her clothes.
-
-‘I am afraid the whole house will go, Daisy,’ he said. ‘It’s shaky and
-decayed. I was thinking of making a stage on the wall-plates up there.
-But I’m sure now that our only hope is in a raft of some kind.’
-
-At this moment in floundered Bridget, clasping a large bottle to her
-breast, and muttering at every stride objurgations, entreaties, and
-fag-ends of prayers.
-
-‘Ochone!’ she cried, ‘may the saints an’ the Howly Mother av all hould
-us in their kapin’ this night!’ Then, uncorking the bottle, ‘Sure,
-Misthur Fortyskeu, sorr, if ye _are_ a haythen, ye might have a thry
-for purgathory itself. It’s better nor the other place, so it is.
-Here’s the howly wather, avick, that Father Dennis give me lasht
-chapel at Warrooga—if ye’ll let me sprinkle a weeshy dhrop—’
-
-‘Come, come, Bridget; stop that nonsense!’ exclaimed Fortescue
-sternly, as he knocked down slabs and pulled them inside. ‘Isn’t there
-water enough about, without any more. Take the candle and get me some
-ropes—clothes-lines, saddlestraps, anything you can find!’
-
-Bridget opened her mouth with astonishment. She had never been spoken
-to in such manner before. Then putting down her precious bottle, she
-waddled off.
-
-Presently Daisy slipped into the water, saying,—
-
-‘I can’t sit there and watch you working away by yourself,’ and she
-helped to hold the slabs, whilst he and Bridget secured them with
-lashings.
-
-Four, ten feet long, tied at the ends, and upon them cross-pieces, and
-upon these the long dining-room table. This was the raft; and while
-Fortescue tied and knotted and fastened, he talked of how he had once
-been cast away in a yacht, and had then learned many things. And the
-pair, listening to his cheery voice, took courage, albeit the water
-now was waist high.
-
-The seasoned pine timber floated like a cork, and to his satisfaction
-Fortescue found that with their combined weight it was still well out
-of the water. He was just considering whether it might be possible to
-secure a few valuables and important papers, when an ominous creaking
-caught his ear, and the house began to quiver bodily.
-
-Hurriedly jumping on board and seizing a long thin slab, he pushed
-off. And what a wild sight it was outside, as the frail craft shot
-clear of everything into the flood!
-
-The water ran like brown oil, swift but waveless, bearing with it
-logs, great trees, posts and rails, planks, heaps of straw, _débris_
-of every description, whilst into the still, warm air ascended a stern
-hum like the sound of some mighty engine. It was like the sound of the
-river purring with satisfaction at the fulfilling of its last night’s
-promises.
-
-Looking back, they saw through the open front the lamp, like some
-welcoming beacon, burning steadily across the waters. Even as they
-gazed, there was a faint crash heard, and the light disappeared. The
-house had gone, and in another moment its fragments drifted by them.
-Round and round they swept, now threatened by some huge uptorn tree
-whose bristling roots came nigh transfixing them, now nearly dashed
-against the topmost limbs of a standing one, taking all Fortescue’s
-strength and skill to avoid a collision.
-
-Presently they saw, on either hand, long strings of sheep swimming
-down the current with plaintive bleatings to their death; heard, too,
-shrill neighings and bellowings of drowning cattle and horses.
-
-Round and round they swept, although they knew it not, towards the
-raging central current, where disaster was inevitable; whilst Daisy
-sat with white face, mute, and almost hopeless, and Bridget crouched,
-one arm around a table leg, mumbling over her beads; and Barton’s
-Jackaroo, the man without a backbone, toiled steadily and watchfully,
-still finding time, at intervals, to throw a word of cheer to his
-helpless companions.
-
-Crash! and a log overtaking them and hitting them end-on, sent the
-raft spinning; whilst to his dismay Fortescue felt the slabs begin to
-loose and spread. Decidedly, a few more knocks like that, and they
-would all find themselves in the water.
-
-‘I’m afraid, Herbert, it’s going to pieces,’ whispered Daisy, who had
-crept close to where he knelt.
-
-It was the first time she had ever used that name when addressing him,
-and her voice sounded so inexpressibly sweet that, without even
-glancing at Bridget, he turned and took the girl in his arms and
-kissed her, a caress which she, thinking her end at hand, and loving
-him, returned.
-
-Smash! and they are amongst the stout upper branches of what must be a
-giant tree. But, in place of pushing off, Fortescue hugs and pulls,
-and calls upon the women to help him, which they do until the raft is
-moored, so to speak, hard and fast between forks and branches, the
-only ones visible now over all that brown, bare waste of water with
-silver patches of moonlight here and there upon it.
-
-It was a grateful thing to be at rest, even so precariously, after all
-the twisting and twirling they had come through; and Bridget, rising
-stiffly and shaking herself, with the fear of present death gone out
-of her soul, said,—
-
-‘Praise the saints! Sure, Misther Fortyskeu, sorr, we oughter to be
-thankful for gettin’ this far wid clane shkins, so we ought! Sorra a
-one ov me ’ll go any furder if I can help it! Is the wather raisin’
-yet, does ye think, sorr?’
-
-‘I’m afraid it is, Bridget,’ said Fortescue, as he sat on a stout limb
-supporting Daisy beside him. ‘I hope, though, it won’t rise over the
-top of this tree.’ But, disquieted by the idea, he presently got into
-the water and tightened the lashings of the raft as well as he was
-able.
-
-It was a long, dreary night, especially after the moon went down.
-Fortunately it was warm and fine. Indeed, throughout that trying time
-of flood, curiously enough, not a single point of rain fell in that
-region. They talked of many things, these two, nestling snugly in a
-great fork of the giant apple-tree, but their chief subject was the
-old, old story; whilst Bridget, just below them, alternately invoked
-heavenly succour and lamented earthly losses.
-
-‘Twinty wan poun’ notes undther me head in the bolsther, an’ me too
-hurried an’ flurried to remimber ’em! Sure, it’s clane roond I am
-afther this noight, bad cess to it! But for Father Dennis’s wather—may
-glory be his bed whin his toime comes—it’s at the bottom wid the sheep
-and craturs I’d be afore now, so it is! May the saints above sind the
-blessed light an’ the masther wid a ship to us! Ochone! Miss Daisy, me
-darlin’, I knows it’s hard on ye too. An’ for ye too, sorr—God forgive
-me thinkin’ ye wasn’t quite so smart as ye moight be!’
-
-And so she rambled on, unheeded by the lovers perched in the big fork
-above her.
-
-Dawn at last, bright and clear, with presently a brilliant sun.
-
-To his relief, Fortescue saw by the marks on the tree that the water
-was falling. By noon the raft was suspended high and dry. But still a
-lamentable procession of sheep and household _débris_, with an
-occasional horse or bullock, hurried along the swift central stream,
-at whose very verge a merciful Providence had arrested the raft.
-Presently Fortescue was lucky enough to secure a pumpkin out of the
-dozens floating about, and the three divided and ate it with an
-appetite. Slowly the shadows lengthened. Other tree tops, dishevelled
-and dirty with driftage, began to appear around them. The water was
-falling rapidly. But were they to pass another night there? Fortescue
-began to fear so, and was even setting about the construction of a
-platform out of the raft, when a loud ‘_Coo-ee-e-e!_’ made him start.
-‘_Coo-ee-e-e!_’ in answer; and then a small boat pulled by two men
-came through the branches of the big tree.
-
-‘Hoorar!’ shouted one. ‘We was afraid it was all up with yees! But
-where’s the Boss?’
-
-‘My father went to the out-station yesterday,’ replied Daisy.
-
-‘Oh, then he’s right enough,’ said the man. ‘Bet your life, miss, he
-ain’t very far away this minute! He’s seed, afore now, what the “bit
-of a fresh” turned to. Hand us down the lady fust, guv’nor.’
-
-But old Bridget, being lowest, and in a hurry, suddenly let herself
-drop fairly on the speaker’s shoulders, fetching him down, and nearly
-capsizing the boat. Then, to his infinite astonishment, she got her
-arms round his neck and hugged him, and would have served his mate the
-same way, but he sprang into the tree and avoided her.
-
-‘Where are your waggons?’ asked Fortescue, as at last they pulled off.
-
-‘Ten foot under water, by this,’ replied the carrier, ‘seein’ it was
-up to the naves afore we left. We knowed nothin’ till we feels it in
-our blankets. Then up we jumps, and, behold you, we’re on a hiland
-about twenty foot round, an’ the flood a-roarin’ like billyho. As luck
-’ll ’ave it, Tom, there, has this boat in his loadin’, takin’ her to a
-storekeeper at Overflow—I expect he’s a-thinkin’ on her just now. So
-we hiked her out, paddles an’ all, gits some tucker, an’ steers for
-Tarnpirr, knowin’ as you was a lot lower ’n we, an’ no boat. Well,
-when we sees nothin’ but water where the house shud ha’ been, we
-reckoned you’d all been swep’ away, so comes along on chance, cooeyin’
-pretty often. By jakers, guv’nor, if you hadn’t ’appened to have savee
-enough to chuck that thing together, you’d all a’ been gone goosers
-sure enough! I don’t b’lieve there’s one single solitary ’oof left on
-the run, not exceptin’ our bullocks an’ saddle ’orses.’
-
-The castaways now made a much-needed meal off damper and some of the
-Tarnpirr mutton, and voted it a wonderful improvement on raw pumpkin,
-even with love for its sauce.
-
-Before they had pulled a mile towards Warrooga, they met Mr Barton
-with some residents in the police boat. He had been nearly frantic
-with anxiety since, on returning home, he encountered the water, and,
-galloping back, had with great difficulty reached the township.
-
- * * * * *
-
-‘What’s the use?’ replied Mr Barton despondently, when, that same
-evening, Fortescue asked him for Daisy. ‘I’m a ruined man, and, like
-most such, selfish, and I want to keep my little girl. So far as I can
-gather, there’s not an animal of any description left alive on
-Tarnpirr. Pastoral firms make no allowances; they’ll say I ought to
-have cleared everything off before the flood came, and they’ll sack me
-at a minute’s notice. Of course, if the people here had done as they
-should, I might have saved most of the sheep, if not all. No; I don’t
-like to disappoint you, after having behaved so nobly and pluckily—and
-I must say now that I never did you justice—but I think, Mr Fortescue,
-you’d better choose a wife elsewhere; I do, indeed.’
-
-Seeing that Barton was irritable, and rather inclined to hug his
-misfortune, Fortescue, perhaps wisely, said no more just then, and
-apparently took his dismissal with a good grace.
-
-But later, before starting for the capital, Daisy and he had a long
-talk, during which a conspiracy was hatched.
-
-Mr Barton bade his jackaroo a kindly good-bye; and if he felt any
-surprise at the non-renewal of his suit, he never showed it.
-
-He was expecting, with almost feverish impatience, a letter from the
-firm in answer to his own report, with details of the disaster at
-Tarnpirr. And when at length it arrived, after what seemed a long
-delay, and he found that, instead of the reproaches and curt dismissal
-he was prepared for, it contained sympathy and an appointment to a
-large station on the Darling Downs, words were wanting to express his
-utter astonishment, and his deep contrition for the bad opinion he had
-formed of his employers.
-
-‘Never mind, Daisy,’ he cried. ‘They say the owner will be there
-himself to receive us on our arrival. I can thank him then in person.’
-
-‘Dear me, how nice that will be!’ replied Daisy, demurely.
-
-‘And, only fancy,’ he went on, ‘they request us to take our
-servant—that’s Bridget, of course—with us! I’m to find out, too, if
-those carriers lost much, and, if so, to compensate them.’
-
-‘How very good and thoughtful they must be,’ answered Daisy—but this
-time with moist eyes.
-
-I will not insult the reader’s penetration by asking him to guess who
-the owner of that Downs station was.
-
-It will be sufficient to remark that Mr and Mrs Fortescue have only
-just returned from their wedding trip to the Continent; and that it
-will be very long indeed ere they forget that memorable night in ’90
-upon which the waters came to Tarnpirr, and caused ‘Barton’s Jackaroo’
-to show what he was made of.
-
-
-
-
-TOLD IN THE ‘CORONA’S’ CABIN.
-
-ON THREE EVENINGS.
-
-
-=The First Evening.=
-
-In the south-east trades, and the big ship moving steadily through the
-water with every sail full. Not a quiver of the tightly-strained
-canvas, not the rattle of a reef-point, broke the stillness aloft.
-
-A glorious evening in the South Atlantic, with the sun setting, as is
-often his wont in those latitudes, in a bed of crimson, gold and
-amethyst. The passengers, who had been watching the many-hued passing
-of the day-king, went below as the cool night breeze began to whistle
-with a shriller note through the top-hamper and the water to swish
-more loudly along the sides, and fall back with a louder plop. Very
-comfortable, snug, and home-like the _Corona’s_ cabin looked. It was a
-cabin, remember, not a ‘saloon.’
-
-There was nothing of the modern curse of varnish and veneer about it.
-Everything was handsome, also substantial, from the dark mahogany
-casing of the mizzen-mast to the highly polished, solid panelling of
-rosewood, relieved with only a narrow gold beading. The cabin might
-aptly have been termed a study in brown and gold, so predominant was
-this combination. Even the curtains in front of each berth door were
-of brown damask, with gold fringe. The general effect, if a little
-sombre, was good.
-
-Especially good it seemed this evening to the passengers as they came
-trooping in with talk and laughter; especially snug and home-like,
-with its three big swinging moderator lamps, its long table covered
-with odds and ends of female work, books, papers, etc., etc., its
-piano, and its comfortable couches scattered here and there.
-
-The _Corona’s_ great beam had been utilised to some purpose, and,
-thus, her cabin was not, like the saloons of so many sailing ships, a
-sort of stage drawing-room, all white paint, gilding, glass,
-spindle-shanked chairs, and turn-over-at-a-touch tables.
-
-The company suited the cabin. There were only a dozen or so of them,
-mostly middle-aged married folk, who had left their grown-up families
-in Australia whilst they took a trip ‘Home,’ and were now returning to
-their adopted country. Amongst them, however, were two or three single
-ladies of uncertain ages, bound to the Land of the Golden Fleece in
-search of fortune, even if it should only come in the shape of a
-husband. There was, also, Miss Amy Hillier, an Australian heiress in
-her own right, returning to her native land with an uncle and an
-aunt. This is another man’s story; so that I am not going to take up
-space by a description of Amy Hillier’s charms; suffice it to say here
-that she was young and pretty, and as good as she was young and
-pretty.
-
-Wonderful to relate, the company of passengers fitted each other. Each
-seemed to have discovered in another his or her affinity, and, up to
-this, there had been none of the usual backbitings, heart-burnings,
-and malicious tittle-tattle usually so inseparable from a sea voyage
-in a sailing ship.
-
-Miss Hillier had seated herself at the piano, and was playing
-something from _Lohengrin_, when a remarkable-looking man, entering
-the cabin, doffed his gold-banded cap, and made his way to her side.
-
-Strongly, yet gracefully built, upright as the royal pole, active in
-all his movements, one would have taken him to be scarce arrived at
-middle-age, but for the fact that his thick, closely-cropped hair
-shone a dead white under the lamplight. His features were regular and
-good, albeit they wore, in general, a rather serious expression.
-Altogether, it was a strong, pleasant face, full of energy,
-confidence, and the power to command.
-
-As he rested one hand on the corner of the instrument, it might be
-noticed that, from wrist to finger tips, it was covered by the white
-cicatrices of long-healed scars. In spite, however, of his grey hair
-and disfigured hands, Captain Marion, of the _Corona_, Australian
-liner, was called by many people a handsome man.
-
-‘Sing me my favourite, please,’ asked the Captain presently.
-
-‘On condition,’ was the reply, ‘that you will tell us a story in
-return.’
-
-‘It’s a bargain,’ said the Captain. ‘I’ll relate the legend of
-Vanderdecken, the Flying Dutchman. Thoroughly appropriate it will be,
-too, as we are just entering his domains.’
-
-‘We don’t want to hear about the Flying Dutchman,’ answered the girl
-promptly.
-
-‘Well, then,’ continued the Captain, ‘what do you say if I tell you
-how I was cast away in ’69, on the coast of—’
-
-‘No, no, Captain Marion,’ interrupted she, smiling shyly up at him,
-‘we don’t want that either.’
-
-‘Ah, I see!’ exclaimed the Captain, after a pause, ‘a conspiracy!
-Well,’ he went on, after a still longer hesitation, ‘I don’t care much
-about it. The telling, I mean, of how I got this’ (touching his hair)
-‘and these’ (spreading out his hands), ‘for, of course, that is what
-you wish to hear. It reminds me of a time I would rather not recall.
-
-‘No, Miss Hillier’—for the girl had risen in dismay and almost tears
-at her thoughtlessness, and was attempting to apologise incoherently
-enough—‘it doesn’t matter a bit. Besides, I somehow feel in the vein
-for story-telling this evening; and as well that as anything else.
-With some passengers, I find that I have to put a stopper on their
-curiosity rather abruptly. But’ (with a grave smile and a bow to the
-group) ‘it being a rare thing, indeed, to meet so well-assorted and
-pleasant a party as we are this trip, I’ll spin you the yarn, such as
-it is. And now, Miss Hillier, my song.’
-
-‘What would you like—the same as usual, I suppose—“The Silent Land?”’
-
-‘Yes,’ answered the Captain; ‘your rendering puts a new interpretation
-on Salis’ words for me, and I seem to bear with me more strongly than
-ever the promise, as I listen, that he
-
- Who in life’s battle firm doth stand
- Shall bear Hope’s tender blossoms
- Into the Silent Land!’
-
- * * * * *
-
-‘It is,’ commenced Captain Marion, the song finished, and taking his
-accustomed seat, whilst the others gathered round him—‘It is nearly
-fourteen years ago that the strange, and what many may deem
-improbable, adventure happened which I am about to relate. I was then
-about twenty-two years of age, an able-bodied seaman on board a ship
-called the _Bucephalus_, belonging to Liverpool. It was my first
-voyage before the mast, for, although I had duly served my
-apprenticeship with the firm who owned her, and also passed my exam.
-as second mate, there was no vacancy just then open. They, indeed,
-offered me a post as third; but, knowing that I should be none the
-worse for a month or two in the fok’s’le, I preferred to ship as an
-A.B. The _Bucephalus_ was an Eastern trader, and on this trip was
-bound for Singapore and China. All went well with us until we entered
-the Straits of Sunda. Then, one afternoon, the ship lying in a dead
-calm off one of the many lovely islands which abound in those narrow
-seas, the passengers, chiefly military officers with their families,
-asked the captain to let them have a boat and a run ashore.
-
-‘He was a good-natured man, and consented. Luckily for me, as it
-afterwards proved, the gig, a very old boat, was full of lumber,
-fruit, fowls, etc., procured at Anjer, and so the life-boat, a stanch,
-nearly new craft, was put into the water instead.
-
-‘At the last moment some one suggested that a cup of tea might be
-acceptable on the island. Not tea alone, but provisions for an ample
-meal were at once handed in, together with a keg of fresh water. This
-also was, as you will discover presently, another lucky or—ought I not
-to say?—providential, chance for me.
-
-‘With myself, three more seamen, and eight or nine ladies and
-gentlemen, we pushed off towards the verdant, cone-shaped island.
-Landing without any difficulty on a shell-strewn beach which ran up
-between two lofty and abrupt headlands, all hands, except myself and
-an elderly seaman known as Tom, jumped ashore and went climbing and
-scampering about like so many schoolboys out for a holiday. For my
-part, I had been on scores of similar islands, or imagined I had, and
-felt no particular wish to explore this one. Neither, apparently, did
-my companion. So, hauling off a little from the shore, we threw the
-grapnel overboard and prepared to take things easy, each in his own
-fashion, he with a pipe, and I with a book lent me by one of the cabin
-passengers.
-
-‘We made a rough sort of awning with the boat’s sail, and I lay in the
-stern-sheets, my companion between the midship thwarts, under its
-grateful shelter. It was a drowsy afternoon and a very hot one. To our
-ears the shouts and laughter of those ashore came at intervals,
-gradually growing fainter as they made their way towards the summit of
-the mountain, for such one might say the island was.
-
-‘Presently, looking up from my book, I saw that old Tom was fast
-asleep, his pipe still in his mouth. Very shortly afterwards I dozed,
-and heard the book drop from my hand on to the grating without making
-any effort to recover it. I fell asleep in the broad sunlit day,
-between ship and land, in the motionless boat, with the voices of my
-kind still in my ears, and awoke in thickest darkness, moving swiftly
-along in utter silence, save for, at times, an oily gurgle of water
-under the bows. Not that I realised even so much all at once. It took
-me some time. I thought I must be still dreaming, and lay there
-staring into the blackness with unbelieving eyes. Then I pinched
-myself and struck my hands sharply against the thwarts. But it was of
-no use. I could not convince myself that I was not the victim of some
-ghastly nightmare. Then the idea came into my mind that, although
-awake, I had suddenly become blind; that Tom had gone ashore for a
-stroll, and that the boat, drifting, had been carried out to sea by
-some current. Under the influence of this notion, I leaped to my feet,
-only to be at once struck down again, as if by a hand of iron.
-Although not completely stunned, I was, for a few minutes, quite
-bewildered. I could feel, too, that my head was bleeding freely.
-Sitting cautiously up, I called “Tom!” I listened intently, but
-nothing was audible save the faint gurgling sound of the water. I
-called repeatedly, but there was no answer. Suddenly I recollected
-that in my pocket was a large metal box full of matches—long wax
-vestas.
-
-‘Striking one, I held it aloft and gazed eagerly about me. I thanked
-God that I was not blind. But, so far as I could see, I was alone.
-
-‘On each side, and a foot or so above my head, barely visible in the
-feeble glimmer, were swiftly passing walls of dripping rock, covered,
-in many places, with huge clusters of shiny weeds. So amazed was I at
-my perfectly inexplicable situation that I stared until the match
-burned my fingers and dropped into the water, whilst I fell back quite
-overcome by astonishment and fright.
-
-‘Then, after a bit, I struck more matches. But things were just the
-same. Always the rocky weed-grown sides, sometimes within touch, at
-others seeming to widen out; always the rocky, dripping roof,
-sometimes at my head, at others out of sight; always the darkness, the
-hurrying boat, and the water like liquid pitch.
-
-‘Unable to see thoroughly over the boat, I presently crawled for’ard,
-feeling, as I went, under the sail which had fallen over the thwarts.
-As I feared, I found no one.
-
-‘Groping about, I picked up Tom’s pipe. And then I feared the worst
-for him.
-
-‘The darkness was horrible. It was so thick that one seemed to swallow
-mouthfuls of it. The atmosphere was close and muggy, with a smell
-reminding me strongly of a tannery. Although lightly clad, I was
-bathed in perspiration as I half sat, half crouched, at the boat’s
-stern, straining my eyes ahead, and now and again lighting one of my
-matches. Time nor distance had any meaning for me, now; and I have no
-idea how long I had been voyaging in this unnatural fashion, when
-there fell on my ears the loud threatening roar of many waters.
-Commending my soul to God, I laid myself in the boat’s bottom. The
-next minute she seemed to stand nearly upright and then shoot downward
-like a flash, whilst thick spray flew in showers over me, and the
-imprisoned waters roared and howled with deafening clamour adown the
-narrow chasm, so narrow that more than once, in her headlong course, I
-heard splinters fly from the boat’s timbers, whilst masses of dank
-weeds detached by the blows fell upon me.
-
-‘I now,’ continued the Captain, after a pause, during which he glanced
-from the ‘tell-tale’ compass overhead to the attentive, wondering
-faces of his audience—‘I now gave myself up for lost, or, at least,
-imagined that I did so. But the love of life is strong indeed within
-us; so that when after shooting this subterranean cataract, or
-whatever it might have been, I found my boat once more steadily
-gliding along, ever with the same dull gurgle of cleft water at her
-bows, a faint ray of hope took the place of despairing calm. I was
-young, remember; healthy, too, powerful and agile beyond the common,
-and I felt it would be hard indeed to die like a rat in that black
-hole. What accentuated the hope I speak of was the fact that the
-lessening roar of the torrent I had just passed sounded as if directly
-overhead. In vain I told myself that it was but a deceptive echo. Hope
-would have her say, and buoyed me up, though ever so little, with the
-idea, incredible as it seemed, that this horrible underground river
-had doubled back beneath itself, and was making for the sea once more.
-It has well been said that drowning men will clutch at straws! This
-one, indeed, was soon to fail me; for presently, to my utter despair,
-the noise of tumultuous waters ahead gave warning of another
-cataract—another, or the same one, for, what with the din and the
-darkness, I became quite confused. The passage was a repetition of the
-last one, only, if anything, rougher; and, crushed in spirit, all
-courage flown, I sank back, listening to the rush of the falling water
-dying away overhead again. Was I, I wondered, descending to even
-lower depths of earth’s bowels in this fashion, or merely driven to
-and fro at the caprice of some remorseless current in what was to
-prove my tomb! I believe that, for a time, under the stress of ideas
-like this, my mind wandered; for I have a vague remembrance of singing
-comic songs, of shouting defiance to fate, the darkness, and things
-generally; behaving, in fact, like the lunatic I must have become.
-Whether I descended any more rapids or not I cannot say. I have no
-recollection whatever of the last part of my strange journey. When,
-however, I came to my sober senses again I was at the end of it. The
-boat was motionless, and I was standing upright in her.’
-
-At this point in the Captain’s story, and while the interest of his
-hearers was at its height, the chief officer came quietly in, and,
-catching his superior’s eye, as quietly made his way out again.
-
-Now, four bells struck, and the Captain exclaimed, ‘What, ten o’clock
-already! My yarn has somewhat spun itself out, and I’m afraid the rest
-must keep for another evening.’
-
-At this there was quite a chorus of remonstrance. ‘It was cruel to
-have excited their curiosity and leave it unsatisfied,’ was the
-general verdict.
-
-‘No sleep for me to-night,’ said Miss Hillier; ‘I shall be wandering
-through that horrid place in my thoughts, and puzzling my brain to
-discover how you got out, unless I know the sequel.’
-
-‘It grieves me to think of your disturbed rest,’ replied the Captain,
-with a bow and a quizzical smile, ‘although honoured by the cause of
-it. I am afraid, however, I must refuse even you. I saw heavy weather
-just now in Mr Santley’s eye; and the ship, you know, before all.’
-
-Then the sound of ropes thrown heavily on deck was heard, together
-with tramp of feet and shouting, the ship heeled over, and the Captain
-went out, and was not again seen that night by his passengers.
-
-
-=The Second Evening.=
-
-Close-reefed top-sails, with a wild, high sea, met on ‘rounding the
-corner,’ did not prevent the _Corona’s_ passengers from putting in an
-appearance the next evening to hear the continuation of the Captain’s
-story.
-
-‘Well,’ he remarked, as he took his seat, ‘this yarn of mine seems to
-bring us luck, judging by the way we exchanged our trades last night
-for this rattling westerly breeze that is now taking us round the Cape
-so nicely. I think I left off my story,’ continued the Captain, ‘as
-the boat came to a stop in her travels, through the darkness.’
-
-‘I had recovered from my temporary fit of madness, and was standing
-up. I was trembling violently, and my limbs felt cramped and stiff. I
-fancy I must have been a long time on the journey, for I was sick and
-faint, principally from want of food. The air, though still heavy and
-warm, was not so oppressive as it had been. But the former silence was
-broken by the most unearthly noises imaginable, sobbings, deep
-cavernous groans, and hoarse whistlings resounded on every side. For a
-long time I did not stir. I just stood listening with all my ears, and
-expecting every moment that something awful was going to take place.
-
-‘After a while, slightly reassured, and feeling the boat’s bows
-scraping some hard substance, I crept into them, and putting out my
-hand, and groping about alongside, felt a mass of smooth honeycombed
-stone. Striking a match, the possession of which, in my confused state
-of mind, I had almost forgotten, I got hold of the painter and took a
-couple of turns around a projecting ledge of rock.
-
-‘Then I scooped up a handful of water and tasted it. It was as bitter
-as gall, also quite lukewarm. Happily that in the breaker was
-unspoiled. Rummaging about, I found the case of eatables also intact;
-and, sitting there in profound darkness, made a meal of cheese and
-white biscuits, listening between the mouthfuls to the mysterious
-noises, whose origin, however, I was now enabled pretty well to guess
-at.
-
-‘It was very warm, and the tannery smell more powerful than ever. A
-sensation of surrounding vastness and space, however, was with me as
-opposed to the confined cramped feeling of being in a narrow channel,
-such as I suppose myself to have emerged from. Now, I could stand
-upright and thrust an oar out and upwards without touching anything;
-and, shouting aloud, the sound went echoing and thundering away over
-the surface of the water with reverberations lasting for minutes.
-
-‘I can take you into that place,’ continued the Captain impressively,
-‘and tell you about it as far as my poor words will serve. But I
-cannot tell you my feelings. At times I almost imagined that I was in
-Hades, and that the ceaseless noises about me were the cries and
-groans of lost souls therein. At others, a wild, forlorn hope would
-seize me, that it might all turn out to be only a horrible dream, and
-that I should presently awake to see God’s dear sun shining brightly
-on the gallant ship and the green island once more. It had all
-happened with such startling rapidity, the transformation had been so
-utter and complete, that to this day I wonder I did not become a
-raving madman, and so perish miserably down there in the depths. But
-God in His infinite mercy took pity upon me, and brought me at the
-last out of such a prison as it is given to few men to see, much less
-escape from.
-
-‘Like the majority of seafarers, I, in those days, seldom troubled my
-head about what is vaguely called “religion.”
-
-‘The careful and pious teachings of my childhood had been forgotten
-almost wholly. But, in that awesome place, in solitude and misery,
-bound with darkness of Scripture, “that might be felt,” many things
-came back to me; and, kneeling down, I clasped my hands and prayed
-fervently that I might be saved out of the valley of the shadow of
-death which encompassed me. Feeling better and stronger, I took my
-sheath-knife, and with it cut away at one of the oars until I had
-quite a respectable pile of chips. Placing this on the rock alongside,
-I set it on fire, and soon had the satisfaction of seeing it blaze
-cheerfully up and, for a few yards, dispel the darkness. I kept adding
-fuel from the same source, with the addition of a couple of
-stretchers, until I had a really good-sized fire. By its light I saw
-that I was on a flat rock some twenty feet in circumference. Round
-about were other islets, shaped most fantastically. One, close to,
-resembled a gigantic horseshoe; another towered up, the perfect
-similitude of a church spire, into the darkness. At their bases were
-holes, into and through which the water, flowing and ebbing, produced
-the sounds that at first had so alarmed me. Look as I might, I could
-not distinguish the way I had come in, although I thought I could hear
-the steady pouring of a volume of water not far away. Breaking off a
-lump of the stone on which I sat, I examined it closely, and felt
-pretty certain that it was lava. I had seen such before at Mauna Loa,
-in the Sandwich Islands.
-
-‘Was I then in the womb of a volcano, extinct just at present,
-doubtless; but, perhaps, even now, taking in water preparatory to
-generating steam and becoming active? Somewhere in my reading I had
-dropped across an article on seismology, and one of the theories put
-forward came to mind as above.
-
-‘The idea made my flesh creep!
-
-‘I seemed to feel the air, the water, and my lump of lava getting
-hotter and hotter.
-
-‘Hopeless as my case appeared, and almost resigned to face the end as
-I had become, even so, I did by no means relish a private view of the
-preliminaries to a volcanic eruption.
-
-‘Strangely inconsistent, you will say, but so it was. When face to
-face, even with the last scene of all, it seems there can yet be
-something of which one may be afraid.
-
-‘Meanwhile, my beacon blazed up brightly, and, peering around, I
-presently made out a pile of stuff apparently floating against the
-base of one of the nearest islets.
-
-‘Taking a flaring fire-stick, I got into the boat and sculled over to
-it. It was a heap of driftwood. Lowering my torch to examine the stuff
-more closely, I nearly pitched overboard, as, out of the reddish-black
-water within the ragged patch of light, a white, dead face gazed up at
-me with wide-open, staring eyes. I recognised it at once as that of my
-old shipmate. Tom, on awaking, had evidently been knocked out of the
-boat and drowned, as so nearly happened to myself. The current had as
-evidently carried him here with me.
-
-‘I leaned over the gunwale as if fascinated. What would I not have
-given for his living companionship now!
-
-‘Lifting, at last, one of the stiff arms, I shook the unresponsive
-hand in silent farewell, and paddled back towards the flame that
-marked my islet, actually feeling envious of the quiet corpse.
-Misfortune makes us sadly selfish, and so little had my thoughts ran
-on the fate of my comrade that the shock of his appearance thus was a
-heavy one.
-
-‘I took it as a bad omen, and what spirit I had nearly left me.
-
-‘After sitting motionless on my rock for a very long time, with my
-head bowed on my knees, and nearly letting my fire go out, I shook
-myself together a little, threw more chips on, and examined my stores.
-
-‘All told, with cheese, biscuits, several tins of potted meat and
-preserves, I reckoned there was enough, on meagre allowance, to last
-me for a week. Water about the same.
-
-‘More than once I felt tempted to throw the lot overboard and follow
-it.
-
-‘But youth and health and strength are indeed wondrous things, and a
-man possessed of them will do and dare much before giving up entirely,
-no matter how drear the outlook, how sharp the arrows of fate which
-transfix him!
-
-‘Feeling weary and fagged, I lay down in the boat and slept, I
-suppose, for hours very soundly.
-
-‘The awaking was bad—worse even than the first time.
-
-‘One thing comforted me somewhat. I found that by the constant
-endeavour to use my eyes in the darkness I was becoming able to
-discern at least the dim outlines of objects.
-
-‘Renewing the fire with a lot of driftwood I picked up at the further
-side of my islet, I proceeded to carry out a plan I had formed. Taking
-the gratings out of the stern-sheets, I arranged them firmly in the
-bows. Then, breaking off projecting lumps and knobs of lava, I beat
-them smaller with an iron pin, which I fortunately found in the boat,
-and spread them thickly over the gratings, thus forming a sort of
-stage. Upon this I built a substantial fire. I was, you see, bound on
-a voyage of exploration.
-
-‘There might, possibly, be some avenue to freedom out of this
-subterranean sea other than the one I had entered it from, exit by
-which was, of course, hopeless.
-
-‘It was, I argued, useless to stay on the rock. I could not be much
-worse off, no matter where I got to.
-
-‘How I yearned and hungered for light no tongue could tell. It seemed
-so hard to wander in the gloom for a brief night of existence. And
-then, the end! Do you, any of you, wonder at my hair turning grey?
-
-‘As I scraped the last embers off the islet on to the tin dish used as
-a baler, in order to throw them on the new fire, the light fell full
-upon the corpse, which, to all appearance, had just floated alongside.
-
-‘My nerves were evidently getting unstrung by what I had gone through,
-for, letting the dish fall, I shouted with terror, and, jumping into
-the boat, pushed wildly away from the poor body. To my unutterable
-dismay it followed me, with one arm extended and raised slightly, as
-if in deprecation of my desertion of it.
-
-‘I have thought at times,’ remarked the Captain parenthetically, ‘of
-what a picture the scene would make—the boat floating in a patch of
-crimson water, with the fire flaring into the blackness on her bows,
-myself standing up grasping an oar, and gazing intently at the nearly
-nude body as it came closer and closer, and everywhere around the
-thick darkness.
-
-‘I think that in another moment I should have leapt overboard, so
-great was my fright, but that I happened to catch sight of a piece of
-rope leading from the boat to the body.
-
-‘Getting hold of it, I pulled, and the corpse came also. Then I
-understood. On my leaving it the first time a portion of the sail
-halliards, which had been towing overhead, had got foul of the body,
-and, unperceived, I had brought it back to my islet with me.
-
-‘My presence of mind returned, and, not caring to run the risk of more
-surprises of the sort, I again landed, and pulled the body on to the
-islet.
-
-‘There must have been some preserving agent in that water, for,
-despite the heat, there was no sign of decomposition, and the features
-were as fresh as in life.
-
-‘Sculling gently along, with my fire blazing bravely and comfortingly
-at the bow, I set off into the unknown.
-
-‘For a time my attention was thoroughly taken up in trying to avoid
-the numerous lava islets, whose presence I could scarcely detect until
-right upon them. Indeed, once or twice we bumped heavily enough to
-send showers of hot ashes hissing into the water.
-
-‘At last, after a long spell of this kind of blind navigation, I
-seemed to get clearer of these provoking islets. The noises also, to
-which I was becoming quite accustomed, nearly ceased.
-
-‘As I sculled warily along, I listened with all my ears for some
-indication of a return current. It was my one hope, and it kept every
-sense on the alert.
-
-‘But the water within the radius of my so limited vision was quiet and
-still as in a covered reservoir—much more so, now, indeed, than at my
-old resting-place. This fact I accounted for by the emptying near
-there of the underground, possibly under-sea river, which had brought
-me into such an awful fix.
-
-‘Presently the boat bumped more violently than ever, and by the
-flame-light which shot up from the disturbed fire, I saw, rising far
-aloft, a solid wall of rock. No lava islet this, but the end of
-all—the boundary, in this direction, of my prison.
-
-‘To right and left stretched the same grim barrier, dropping sheer
-down into the still black water. With a sinking heart I turned the
-boat’s head along the wall to my right hand, keeping a little distance
-out, moving very slowly, with just a turn or two of the oar,
-sufficient only to keep way on her.
-
- [Illustration: The light fell full upon the corpse. (Page 246.)]
-
-‘It may have been minutes, or it may have been hours, when, straight
-ahead, over the somewhat feeble light of my fire, which had proved,
-after all, more help by way of company than use, I imagined the
-darkness looked thinner. Inspired by the mere idea, I sculled
-vigorously along, at the risk of complete wreck from some sunken rock,
-and in a short time the boat shot into an oblong-shaped streak of
-light—light, that is, comparatively, for it was as dim as starlight;
-although, so acclimatised, if I may use the term, had my eyes become
-to the denser medium, that by its aid I could see clearly every
-article in the boat.
-
-‘I will not trouble you with a description of my feelings, nor of all
-the extravagancies I committed in the first flush of delighted hope
-that had visited me. I seemed to be once more in touch with the upper
-world through that column of dim greyness ascending through the
-darkness, and so weak as hardly to be able to conquer it.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-Here the Captain paused. He had told his story well; seldom at a loss
-for a word, and with now and again, but rarely, an appropriate
-gesture.
-
-So successful had he been in gaining the attention of his listeners,
-that, when he ceased, they sat quite silent, gazing at him fixedly,
-and for some minutes no one spoke.
-
-Then four bells, which struck on deck during a lull in the roar of the
-gale, came with such sudden distinctness to their ears, as to make
-some of the ladies start and utter timid little ejaculations.
-
-The spell broken, a chorus of tongues clamoured out. Miss Hillier
-alone was silent. Then some dear foolish female affinity said, ‘Why,
-Amy, love, you’ve been crying!’ This the girl, with flaming cheeks
-denied, only the next minute to affirm, quite inconsequently, that if
-she had wept (which she was certain she had not), was not such a tale
-enough to make one, with any heart at all, shed tears?
-
-
-=The Third Evening.=
-
-East by S-½-South, under fore and main courses and upper and lower
-top-sails, sped the _Corona_ with the wind on her quarter. Aft, rose
-great water-hills, darkly green, with white crests, seeming, as each
-followed each, to hang momentarily suspended over the stern and
-threaten to overwhelm everything; then, as the good ship rose just in
-the nick of time, breaking with a long surge in sheets of milky foam
-away for’ard.
-
-The sun was setting sullenly behind a dense cloud-bank. An albatross
-or two flew screaming from one wave-crest to another right in the
-wake. It was a typical evening in the Southern Ocean, the long wash of
-whose seas reach from the foot of Cape Leuwin to the rugged cliffs of
-Fuego.
-
-‘Well,’ continued the Captain, without any preface, as he took his
-seat facing the waiting and expectant little party.
-
-‘Well, stare as I might aloft, I could not discover to where this
-Jacob’s ladder led. You see, at its best, it was only a column of
-dusky twilight, and the further end, from where I stood, was lost to
-view. As I gazed, it appeared to be gradually fading away. I rubbed my
-eyes; and when I again looked, all around was blacker than the
-blackest midnight, except where my fire still burned. For a while, I
-was puzzled to account for the disappearance of the light. Then the
-thought struck me that it might be caused by the fall of night in the
-upper world. Was I, I wondered, as I turned sadly to my fire, ever
-again to look upon the bright day, the sun, the moon, the stars, and
-all the wonders of that fair earth now grown so dear to me? Truly was
-I one of those unhappy men who, as the Psalmist says, “sit in darkness
-and in the shadow of death, being bound in affliction and iron.”
-
-‘Close to the pillar of light, just on its outside edge, I had noticed
-a long, slender, almost perpendicular pinnacle of lava towering
-upwards like the spire of a church.
-
-‘At the base of this I securely moored my boat. Then, thinking that a
-cup of tea would cheer me up a little, I brewed one, and made a good
-meal. After this, lying down, I pondered many things, gazing always
-aloft.
-
-‘Once I imagined I saw a star; but it disappeared before I could make
-sure.
-
-‘The one question uppermost in my mind was whether or not the glimmer
-would reappear when the morning broke above, or had it been an
-illusion? One thing encouraged me to hope for the best. It was
-perceptibly cooler, a grateful change from the warm mugginess I had
-encountered everywhere else. I had, by this, contracted a habit of
-talking aloud, and I presently caught myself saying that I would climb
-the lava pinnacle in the morning and try to get a better look-out.
-
-‘“In the morning.”
-
-‘The utter vanity of the so familiar phrase as it fell on my ears
-struck me with all the force of some terrible shock, whilst the cold
-deadening thought seized upon me that, for me, in this world, there
-was to be no more morning. Through darkness was I to make the last
-journey towards that dread bourne whence no traveller returns? The
-slow death in the darkness, drifting about on the bitter waters of
-that secret sea—that was the thought that my soul revolted from. And
-strange thoughts, horrible thoughts, a man thinks placed as I was. At
-times his reason leaves him, his whole soul rises in impious revolt,
-and the devil rages freely therein, as if already his victim’s bed
-were made in hell.
-
-‘But, thanks be to God!’ exclaimed the Captain, fervently, ‘that the
-recollections of that hideous time—of the fits of doubt and despair
-and terror and madness, of which I have said but little to you—grow
-dimmer and weaker with the years, leaving only in enduring relief the
-memory of a great mercy!
-
-‘It pleased me, though, unproved as it was, that notion of being able
-to distinguish between night and daylight. The very fact, pure
-conjecture though it might be, of having the power to say, “Night has
-come,” seemed to bring peace to my wearied eyes; so that I presently
-lay down and slept dreamlessly, and on awakening found again, to my
-intense joy, that mild, soft haze falling upon me.
-
-‘Scarcely giving myself time to snatch a mouthful of biscuit and a
-draught of cold tea, I jumped ashore and commenced the ascent of the
-tapering mass of rock. It was, as I have said, nearly perpendicular,
-and there was no lack of foot and hand-holds—projections sharp as
-razors, formed by the drippings of the once molten lava. Thanks to my
-trained vision and the help afforded by the close proximity of the
-light, I could see dimly. Higher up, the projecting spurs and knobs
-grew scarcer, and the surface more smooth and slippery. It was
-terrible work. At home I had had some practice as a cragsman, and this
-stood to me well now. As I climbed, sometimes vertically, at others
-spirally, wherever I could feel the firmest hold, the atmosphere grew
-palpably clearer, and this infused new strength into my aching limbs
-as I crawled upwards, now hanging by one bleeding hand over the abyss
-beneath me, now with both hands breathlessly embracing some sharp spur
-that cut into my flesh, whilst my feet groped convulsively for
-precarious support.
-
-‘When just about spent, I unexpectedly came to the top. I found only
-room enough there to sit down and pant. A wild hope had filled my
-breast that this rocky ladder would lead me to liberty—a hope growing
-stronger with every upward step. As I looked around, these hopes fell,
-and the old leaden weight of despair seemed to settle once more upon
-my soul. Slanting away from me on every side, stretched the rugged
-acclivities of a vast amphitheatre, converging again towards its
-summit, where the blue sky was distinctly visible. Picture to
-yourselves an hour-glass with a long tunnel-like waist. Place a straw,
-the end of which rests on the bottom of the lower section of the glass
-and reaches up through the tunnel until just on a level with the
-sloping-upward portion of the top section, but touching it nowhere.
-Now place a minute insect on the very tip of the straw, and you have
-my situation as nearly as I can explain it to you. And there I
-crouched on my lava straw, stretching out unavailing hands to those
-scarred cliffs of liberty, betwixt me and which spread that dark
-abyss, with the mournful waters of the bitter sea at its foot. The
-distance between where I sat on the top of the pinnacle and the
-sloping walls of the crater all round must have been about twenty
-five feet. I think it was afterwards measured as that. A hundred
-plans darted swiftly into my mind for crossing this little space,
-which meant so much to me, only to be as quickly dismissed as
-impracticable.
-
-‘Although still very far from day, it was yet light enough to let me
-see that the sides of the crater, nearly equi-distant around my perch,
-were cut and ploughed into deep furrows, and that, once there, I
-should have comparatively little trouble in reaching upper air.
-
-‘Would it be possible, I wondered, to splice what remained of the oars
-together, and thus make some kind of a bridge along which to creep?
-But the idea of again facing such a climb with such an unwieldy burden
-made me shudder. Also, I doubted much if there was length enough to
-reach across, supposing I ever got them to where I was. This one
-amongst many other plans. All at once, as I sat gazing alternately at
-the far, far away patch of blue overhead, and the dark rocks opposite,
-there flashed across my thoughts the recollection of the boat’s
-grapnel. I had seen nothing of it. But it might still be hanging under
-her bows. Attached to the stern-post by a short length of chain
-shackled to a ring-bolt, it would have taken a heavy shock to shift
-it. If I could but get a line across and, by help of the grapnel,
-firmly secured to the opposite side, I felt I was saved. Tearing up
-the light dungaree jumper I was wearing, and which, with the remainder
-of my clothing, was little else but a rag, I bound pieces around my
-stiff and wounded hands and feet, and commenced the descent. It was an
-awful journey, worse than the coming up. Then, my skin was whole, at
-the start, anyhow; now, the cuts and tears re-opened and bled and
-stung more than ever. At one time, indeed, I felt that I must give up
-and let go. But the thought of the grapnel appeared to endue me with
-fresh strength, whilst, in my mind’s eye, I kept steadfastly the
-memory of that dear glimpse of blue sky. At length, looking down and
-pausing for a moment, I saw a flicker of light. It was from the dying
-embers of my fire, and, in a few minutes, I was in the boat. Although
-nearly utterly exhausted, crawling for’ard, I felt for the chain. It
-was there; and pulling it rapidly in, what was my delight to find the
-little grapnel still at its end. Replenishing my fire, I made some
-tea, preparatory to having something to eat, for I knew I should want
-all my strength presently. In hauling at the chain my hands had got
-wet, and, to my surprise, the bleeding had ceased, and the pain almost
-departed. I immediately bathed my feet, and felt wonderfully relieved
-thereby. Now, I had my tea, and then considered whether it might not
-be wiser to pass the night where I was, and take a full day for my
-attempt. God knows how eager I was for the moment of trial to arrive!
-Still, I chose the prudent side, and sat and watched the hazy column
-turn first to a dull green, then to ashen grey, then go out suddenly,
-and so I knew, certainly now, that the day was over on the earth.
-
-‘As the darkness, thick and impenetrable, closed me in, I lay down
-thinking to sleep a little, but my rest was disturbed and broken.
-Always, as I dozed off, I was clambering painfully up that terrible
-rock, with bleeding hands and feet, staggering under huge burdens of
-rope and iron. Once I dreamt that my shipmate’s body had floated off
-the islet, and was, even now, with white clammy fingers, striving to
-lift itself into the boat, whilst the ghastly face peered at me over
-the side. This effectually awoke me; but so strong was the impression,
-that I seized a fire-stick, and, making it blaze up, searched sharply
-around. I had my trouble for my pains. But further attempt at sleep
-for me was out of the question.
-
-‘My dawn, such as it was, came at last. I had already detached the
-grapnel from its chain, and unrove the halliards from the mast. These
-last I wound round and round my body, fully thirty feet of line, small
-“Europe” rope, but tough and strong. The disposal of my precious
-grapnel, which, luckily, was one of the smallest of its kind, only
-used, as we had used it, for a temporary holdfast, bothered me a good
-deal.
-
-‘Finally, I placed my head between two of the flukes, one of which
-then rested on each shoulder, whilst the stock hung down my back,
-swinging loosely. To make sure of the flukes not slipping, I passed a
-piece of line from one to the other, and knotted it securely.
-
-‘It was a most uncomfortable fixture altogether, a tight fit for my
-neck into the bargain, but I could think of no other way.
-
-‘I’m not going to inflict upon you a detailed description of how I
-reached the top—I believe it must have been fully five hundred
-feet—carrying that half-hundred weight of iron, to say nothing of the
-rope. Indeed, I hardly know myself. However, get there I did; but, as
-you may guess, in a very evil plight.
-
-‘I recollect, when still some thirty feet from the top, unable to bear
-any longer the horrible chafing of the flukes, which had broken
-through the skin, and were grinding against the bone, that I rested,
-or, rather, balanced myself on a sharp ledge, whilst casting the
-grapnel adrift from my shoulders, and unwinding the rope from my body.
-Then, making one end of the line fast to the ring in the stock, I
-fastened the other round my waist, the grapnel all this time resting
-loosely on the rock.
-
-‘Leaving it there, and paying out the line cautiously into the void
-below me, away I went again, bracing myself at every step to withstand
-the awful jerk should the grapnel slip off, and tighten the rope with
-the momentum of its fall. If such a thing had happened, and the
-chances were many, my fate was certain—a few scrambling clutches and
-annihilation. But where it went I had made up my mind to go also.
-
-‘It was my only and last hope, that bit of crooked four-clawed iron!
-Death was in every step I took, and I believe that it was in those
-last few feet that my hair turned its colour, so terrible was the
-suspense and expectation.
-
-‘But God was very good to me, and I reached the summit with a couple
-of feet of line to spare. Dragging the grapnel up, I crouched down on
-the little flat, table-like top, and fairly sobbed with pain and
-exhaustion.
-
-‘To my alarm, I felt myself growing weaker instead of stronger from my
-rest. The fact was that, with the awful cutting about I had received,
-I had lost a good deal of blood. Many of the deeper cuts on my hands
-and arms were bleeding still. Evidently there was no time to lose.
-Standing up, feeling sick and dizzy, I coiled down my line for a fair
-throw, and, grasping it some three feet or so above the grapnel, swung
-it to and fro until I thought impetus enough was attained, then hove
-with all my remaining strength.
-
-‘I shut my eyes, expecting to hear every second the sound of iron
-clanging far beneath against the sides of the pinnacle. When I opened
-them again, the line was hanging in a slack bight across the chasm.
-The little anchor had fallen directly into one of the deep furrows,
-but perilously close to the edge. With trembling fingers I hauled the
-line in. Tighter, tighter, tighter still, then with all the force I
-could command. Would it support the weight of my body, or would it
-come?
-
-‘Without staying to argue the question, I made it fast afresh to a
-round nob, the only one on the place. Then, saying a short prayer, and
-taking a last glance at the blue sky, I let myself slip gently off the
-rock, hanging with my hands on the thin, hempen line.
-
-‘It sagged terribly. I could plainly hear my heart knocking and
-thumping against my ribs. It sagged and “gave” still more. Imagining
-that I heard the noise of the grapnel scraping and dragging, I looked
-upon myself as lost. But I still continued to drag myself across. It
-was a long, terrible agony, and, more than once, I thought I should
-have to let go. My hands almost refused to close upon the rope. But I
-still, almost as in a dream, worked myself along. Once I caught myself
-wondering if I should fall into or near the boat, and whether the dead
-man would be there to receive me. Then a horrible fancy seized me that
-I was making no progress, but that my hands were glued to the rope
-with blood—ever in the same spot. Then suddenly, in my now mechanical
-motions, my head hit with great violence against rock. This
-effectually aroused me. I was at the threshold of liberty—the edge of
-the crater, where it sloped quickly away below.
-
-‘I hung there whilst one might count twenty, looking up. I was three
-feet beneath the rim. The rope had given that much.
-
-‘I don’t remember in the least pulling myself up and over that
-overhanging ledge. When my senses returned, I was lying in the furrow
-alongside the grapnel, and a rush of cold water was sweeping under me.
-How long I had been there I have no notion. Certainly a great many
-hours. The rain was pouring down in tropical torrents; thunder pealed
-above me, and the lightning flashed and darted in vain endeavour to
-pierce the lower abyss.
-
-‘After many fruitless attempts, I staggered to my feet. I felt so
-dreadfully weak and faint that I thought I was about to die. But a
-glance aloft gave me fresh heart. The dark clouds of the thunderstorm
-were passing over, and full upon my nearly naked body fell the warm
-rays of the glorious sun. I almost at that moment, Parsee-like,
-worshipped him.
-
-‘Painfully, stumbling at every step, I crawled upwards, with many a
-rest and draught of the rain water, caught in rocky hollows, until,
-after a weary time, and feeling as one risen from the tomb, I emerged
-into the full light of day once more.
-
-‘Naked, bleeding, bruised, but free, I stood on the topmost peak of
-that fateful island. At first everything swam before my vision. Trees,
-the ocean, the far horizon, reeled and shook, advanced and receded to
-my dazzled eyes. The sun was low in the heavens. As things gradually
-assumed their natural appearance, I became conscious of a great ship
-lying at anchor, of a cluster of white tents not a hundred yards away
-from me.
-
-‘But of these things, for a space, I took no heed. Sun, air, water and
-sky held my regards in ecstasy. I drank the beauty and the newness of
-them in till my soul was saturated with the tender loveliness of that
-nature to which I had been for so long a stranger. Then, and not till
-then, I tottered towards the clump of tents lying just below me.
-
-‘Men were there, carpenters apparently, hammering at a tall wooden
-structure. Other men—men-o’-war seamen by their rig—were arriving and
-departing with burdens.
-
-‘I was close upon them before they saw me. Some shrank back. One, I
-recollect, picked up a rifle and brought it to his shoulder. A man
-with a gold epaulette on his coat struck it up and spoke to the sailor
-in English.
-
-‘Presently I was taken into a tent, a doctor appeared from somewhere,
-and, whilst he dressed my wounds, they gave me a cordial, and I told
-my story with what seemed to me like the voice of a stranger. I don’t
-remember much afterwards until I awoke, swinging in a hammock under a
-shady tree close to the tents.
-
-‘I was a mass of bandages, but sensible, though terribly weak.
-
-‘“You’ve had a narrow escape of brain fever, my lad,” said the doctor.
-“But we’ve pulled you through all right. Lucky we happened to be here,
-though, wasn’t it? A nice time you must have had down there. We found
-your rope; but our men didn’t care about venturing any further, as
-steam was beginning to come up.”
-
-‘“Four days,” replied the doctor, in answer to my question, “it is
-since you appeared on the scene and scared the camp.
-
-‘“The _Bucephalus_? Yes, curiously enough, we met her just entering
-Singapore Harbour. That’s ten days ago. She spoke us, and asked us to
-keep a look-out for her boat with two seamen. We have one of them, at
-all events. I suppose the other poor beggar will be thrown up
-presently.”
-
-‘I looked at him. “Yes,” he continued, “the old volcano is showing
-every indication of renewed activity. We came here to observe the
-transit of Venus, but shall have probably to pack up and form another
-station if those symptoms don’t subside. See there!”
-
-‘Looking in the direction of his outstretched finger, I saw several
-tall puffs of what seemed like white smoke issuing from the depths of
-the crater.
-
-‘The observers were loth to shift their quarters; but, when some
-red-hot cinders from below set one of the tents on fire, they accepted
-the hint.
-
-‘Still in my hammock, I was presently carried down the mountain and on
-board H.M.S. _Hygeia_, where, with careful and skilled attention, I
-soon recovered.’
-
-The Captain ceased speaking. For a time nothing was heard except the
-steady blast of the ‘Roaring Forties’ overhead.
-
-Asked a passenger presently,—
-
-‘And did the volcano really explode after all?’
-
-‘It did, indeed,’ replied Captain Marion; ‘but not for a month
-afterwards, and then so fiercely as to scatter death and destruction
-throughout those narrow seas, grinding the island of Krakatoa itself
-into cosmic dust—visible, according to scientists, nearly all over the
-world.’
-
- * * * * *
-
-Here ends the story proper as compiled from the notes taken by one of
-the passengers and jotted down in his cabin of a night as the Captain
-finished each section of his narrative.
-
-Lower down on the last pages of these notes is gummed, however, a
-printed paragraph, cut from a Sydney daily newspaper, which runs as
-follows:—
-
- MARION—HILLIER.—On the 29th ultimo, at St James’s Church of
- England, Sydney, by the Rev. R. Garnsey, George Wreford Marion,
- master in the British Mercantile Marine, to Amy Margaret, daughter
- of the late John Hillier, Esq., of Pevensey, Miller’s Point,
- Sydney, and Eurella and Whydah stations, Riverina, N.S.W.
-
-
-
-
-‘DOT’S CLAIM.’
-
-
-It was evening in the German Arms at Schwartzdorf. Great fires blazed
-in all the rooms of that old-fashioned hostelry, welcome enough on
-entering from the chill, wild weather ruling over the mountainland
-outside.
-
-Tired with a heavy day’s work at inspecting the mining claims, which
-were beginning to attract notice to this secluded spot, it was with a
-feeling of satisfaction that, after tea, I drew a chair up to the
-fire, lit my pipe, and made myself comfortable.
-
-Presently there was a knock at the door and, in response to my ‘Come
-in,’ there entered the man who told me this story.
-
-In his hand he carried a canvas bag, whose contents he emptied on the
-table with the remark, ‘I thought perhaps you might like to see
-these.’
-
-Very beautiful they were, without doubt—quartz, ironstone and gold,
-mingled in the most fantastic manner; grotesque attempts by Nature’s
-untrained fingers at crosses, hearts, stars, and other shapes defying
-name.
-
-‘We got these the last shot knocking off to-night,’ said the owner of
-the pretty things as I asked him to sit down. ‘You might remember me
-tellin’ you as I didn’t think we was very far from the main reef. I
-believe we got it now in good earnest. Same lead as is in “Dot’s
-Claim.” Same sort o’ country. Reef runnin’ with the same dip. An’ you
-knows yourself, sir, as they took forty-five pound weight o’ specimens
-richer than them out o’ “Dot’s” this mornin’.’
-
-‘I beg your pardon,’ I said after a hasty glance at my note-book, ‘but
-I don’t remember any such name. I thought, too, that I had seen all
-the most important claims.’
-
-‘Why, of course,’ he replied, ‘I forgot! It’s only a few of us old
-hands as knows the story as calls it Dot’s now. When the big company
-took it from Fairleigh they names it the “El Dorado.” I reckon t’other
-was too short—didn’t sound high enough for ’em. But if it hasn’t the
-best right to the old name I’d like to know the reason why.’
-
-‘El Dorado,’ I remarked; ‘why that’s the original prospector’s claim.’
-
-My visitor nodded, saying, ‘An’ I’m No. 2 South.’
-
-‘Ward and party?’ I inquired, referring again to my memos.
-
-‘That’s it. I’m Ward.’
-
-‘Well, then, Mr Ward, I want to hear that story you hinted at just
-now. Kindly touch that bell at your elbow. Thanks.’
-
-It may have been only fancy, but I thought that between blooming
-Gretchen journeying to and fro with hot water, tumblers, sugar, etc.,
-etc., and my lucky reefer glances passed betokening a more than casual
-acquaintance.
-
-‘Yes, Gretchen, you may as well leave the kettle.’
-
-I am trying to air my German, but fail lamentably, judging from the
-expression on the girl’s full, fresh-coloured features as she
-struggles to avoid laughing. Even my visitor smiles. Everything is
-German here—bar, luckily, the beds. Outside the wind howled and beat
-against the curtained windows, and the rain fell dully on the shingled
-roof, and the roar of the Broken River came to our ears between the
-storm gusts.
-
-Inside, the fire flickered and fell, sending deep shadows over the
-pine-panelled walls and the grave handsome face of my companion, the
-first fruits of whose labour shone sullenly under the shaded
-lamplight. From a distant room rose and died away faintly the chorus
-of some song of the Fatherland.
-
-‘Now,’ said I, as Gretchen finally closed the door, ‘now for the
-story.’
-
-‘Well,’ commenced Ward, after getting his pipe into good going order,
-‘it’s over eight years ago since I came here from the West
-Coast—Hokitika. I’d been diggin’ there. But my luck was clean out, so
-I chucked it up, an’, after a lot of knockin’ about, settles down
-here—would you believe it?—farmin’!
-
-‘Now I know’d as much about farmin’ as a cow does o’ reefin’. Cert’nly
-my mate—for there was a pair of us—had been scarin’ crows for a farmer
-in the Old Country when he was a boy. That wasn’t much. Still, on the
-strength o’ that experience, he used to give himself airs.
-
-‘I think it was two years afore we got a crop o’ anythin’. Then it was
-potaters. When we tried to sell ’em we couldn’t get an offer.
-Everybody had potaters. So we just turned to an’ lived on ’em. They’re
-fillin’, doubtless. But potaters and fish, an’ fish an’ potaters for a
-change, all the year round, gets tiresome in the long run.
-
-‘I often wonder now what could have possessed me an’ Bill to go in for
-such a thing as farmin’. But there, when a chap’s luck’s out diggin’,
-he’s glad to tackle anythin’ for a change!
-
-‘Presently one or two more, men with fam’lies, settles close to us and
-tries to make a livin’. It didn’t amount to much. Then up comes a
-string o’ Germans, trampin’ along from the coast, carryin’ furniture
-an’ tools, beds—ay, even their old women—on their backs. An’ they
-settles, an’ starts the same game—clearin’, an’ ploughin’, an’ sowin’.
-But I couldn’t see as any of ’em was makin’ a pile. They worked like
-bullocks, women an’ all, late an’ early. The harder they worked, the
-poorer they seemed to get. Bill an’ me had a pound or two saved up for
-a rainy day. But they had nothin’; an’ how they lived was a mystery.
-So, you see, takin’ things all round, it was high time somethin’
-turned up. An’ somethin’ did. The next farm to us belonged to a
-married couple. He was a runaway sailor. She’d been a passenger on
-board. They had one child, just turned four year old, an’ they was
-both fair wrapped up in that kid.
-
-‘If Dot’s—Dot was his pet name—finger only ached, the work might go to
-Jericho.
-
-‘An’ indeed he were a most loveable little chap. With regards to him,
-we was all of us ’most as bad as the father an’ mother, the way we
-played with him an’ petted him. There was no denyin’ Dot of anythin’
-once he looked at you out o’ those big blue eyes o’ his. And the
-knowledgeableness of him! No wonder Jim Fairleigh an’ his missis
-thought the sun rose every mornin’ out o’ the back o’ their boy’s
-neck.’
-
-Here Ward paused and queried,—
-
-‘Married man, sir?’
-
-‘No,’ I replied.
-
-‘No more ’m I,’ he continued, ‘or I don’t s’pose I’d be here yarning a
-night like this.’
-
-‘It’s a wonder,’ I said, ‘that none of these jolly-looking _Fräuleins_
-about here have been able to take your fancy.’
-
-‘Well, to tell the truth,’ he replied, with, however, a rather
-conscious expression on his face, ‘I think what those poor Fairleighs
-went through rather scared me of marryin’.
-
-‘But, as I was sayin’, farmin’ didn’t seem to agree with my mate,
-Bill—that’s him you seen at the claim to-day—spite o’ his past
-experience, any more’n it did with me. _He_ done the business,
-by-the-bye, quite lately with a bouncin’ gal—Lieschen Hertzog—an’ now
-stays at home o’ nights.
-
-‘We had a note or two left. We had also a crop o’ potaters an’ some
-punkins. But no one wanted ’em—wouldn’t buy ’em at any price. In fact,
-you couldn’t give ’em away in those times.
-
-‘The Fairleighs an’, I think, all of us, were pretty much in the same
-box. As I said before, it was time somethin’ turned up.
-
-‘It was a wild night. Bill an’ me was lyin’ in our stretchers readin’.
-About ten o’clock, open flies the door, an’ in bolts Fairleigh
-drippin’ wet, no hat on, an’ pale as a ghost, an’ stands there like a
-statue, starin’ at us, without a word.
-
-‘“In God’s name what’s the matter?” I says at last. With that he flaps
-his hands about, so-fashion, an’ sings out, “Dot’s lost in the
-ranges!”
-
-‘You may bet that shook us up a bit! You’ve seen the Broken Ranges for
-yourself, an’ can judge what chance a delicate little kiddy like Dot’d
-have among them rocks an’ scrub on a worse night than this is.
-
-‘That fool of a sailor-man, if you’ll believe me, an’ his wife had
-been out sence dark searchin’ for the child, ’stead o’ rousin’ the
-settlement. Presently, to make matters worse, it appears that he’d
-lost the woman too—got separated in the scrub, an’ couldn’t find her
-again. Just by a fluke, while on the Black Hill yonder, he’d caught
-the glimper o’ sparks from our chimney. He was covered with cuts and
-bruises an’ goin’ cranky fast when he got to the hut.
-
-‘Bill had gone to tell the news; an’ in a very few minutes a whole
-crowd o’ Fritzes, an’ Hanses, an’ Hermans, an Gottliebs was turned out
-an’ ready for a start.
-
-‘They didn’t want no coaxing. All they says was ‘_Ach Gott!_’ an’ they
-was fit for anythin’. By no manner o’ means a bad lot,’ here commented
-Ward, ‘when you comes to get in with ’em an’ know ’em like. Honest as
-the light, an’ as hard-workin’ as a bullock. Slow, maybe, but very
-sure. Full o’ pluck as a soger-ant. Clannish as the Scotties, an’ as
-savin’. I’ve got some real good friends among ’em now. An’ their
-women-folks, too, is amazin’ handy—make you up a square feed out o’ a
-head o’ cabbage an’ a bit o’ greenhide, I do believe, if they was put
-to it.
-
-‘Cert’nly their lingo ’s the dead finish at first, till you gets used
-to it. I can _Deutsch gesprechen_, myself, now, more’n a little.
-
-‘However, that’s neither here nor there.
-
-‘Bill, my mate, as I told you, as much as me, havin’ got full o’
-farmin’, we used to take a prospectin’ trip now and then among the
-ranges. But we never rose the colour. Never found a thing, ’cept scrub
-turkeys’ eggs. Anyhow, we knew the country better’n the Germans, an’
-took the lead.
-
-‘Pitch dark it were, with heavy squalls, an’ the river roarin’ along
-half a banker.
-
-‘Fairleigh, after a stiff nip o’ rum, began to find his senses again
-sufficient to give us the right course.
-
-‘Such scramblin’, an’ _coo-eein’_, an’ slippin’, an’ tearin’ about the
-Bush in the dark never, I should think, happened before. But we
-managed to keep in some sort o’ line an’ cover a goodish track o’
-country.
-
-‘We must ha’ gone fully five miles into the ranges, an’ Bill an’ me
-was gettin’ to the end of our tether in that direction, when we found
-Mrs Fairleigh. Karl Itzig nearly falls over her, lyin’ stretched out
-on a big flat rock.
-
-‘We thought she was dead; but, after a while, she comes to,
-light-headed, though, and not able to tell us anythin’. So we sends
-her home with a couple o’ the chaps carryin’ her.
-
-‘Well, we searched till daylight—rainin’ cats an’ dogs all the time.
-And we searched all the next day without any luck. That evenin’ it
-cleared-up bright at sundown. Then Fairleigh gives in complete, an’
-has to be carried home to his wife.
-
-‘After a camp an’ a snack the moon rose, an’ we at it afresh. But we
-’bouted ship now; for I was sure we’d overrun ourselves. There was
-full fifty of us, an’ we circled, takin’ in all the country we could.
-You see, we was hopin’ for fresh tracks, an’ we went with our noses on
-the groun’ like a lot of dogs on the scent of an old man kangaroo,
-only a sight slower.
-
-‘’Bout midnight I sees somethin’ shinin’. It was the steel buckle on
-the front o’ poor Dot’s shoe. Only one of ’em, an’ all soaked through
-with rain. No tracks; so we reckoned he’d been here last night in the
-heaviest of it.
-
-‘That little bit o’ leather put us in better heart. But it wasn’t to
-be. The sun was just risin’, when, pretty near done up, me an’ Bill
-an’ Wilhelm Reinhardt comes out o’ the scrub on to a small bald knob,
-an’ there, on a bare patch, lies Dot, stone dead, with his blue eyes
-wide open, starin’ at the sky, an’ the long curly hair, as his mother
-used to be so proud of, all matted with sand and rain.
-
-‘Four crows was sittin’ overright him on the limb of a tree. I don’t
-believe the poor little fellow ’d been dead very long—in the chill o’
-the early hours o’ that mornin’ likely. In one hand he had a bit o’
-stick. With the other he held his pinny, gathered up tight, same as
-you’ve seen kiddies do when they’re carryin’ somethin’.
-
-‘A real pitiful sight it were. It was as much as Bill an’ me could
-stand. As for Wilhelm, he just sits down aside the body an’ fair
-blubbers out.
-
-‘Well, with our _coo-ees_, the rest comes up in twos an’ threes. Most
-of the Germans started to keep Wilhelm company. Foreigners, I think,
-must be either softer-hearted than us, or ain’t ashamed o’ showin’
-what they feel. Anyhow, there wasn’t a dry eye among them Germans when
-they gathered round little Dot.
-
-‘Presently we starts to rig a sort o’ stretcher with coats and a
-couple o’ saplin’s.
-
-‘Then Bill lifts the body up, an’ as he does out from the pinny drops
-four o’ the beautifullest specimens you’d ever wish to see—them on the
-table ain’t a patch on ’em.
-
-‘I twigs them at once. So did three or four more old digger chaps.
-
-‘Then we takes a squint around, an’ there, right against our noses, as
-one might say, ran the reef, with bits o’ gold stickin’ out o’ the
-surface-stone an’ glimperin’ in the sun.
-
-‘I don’t believe the Germans tumbled for a while. You see they was all
-new chums. Most likely none of ’em hadn’t ever seen a natural bit o’
-gold afore.
-
-‘But the others did, quick. An’, presently, a rather hot sort o’
-argument begins to rise.
-
-‘For a short time me an’ Bill stands and listens to the wranglin’.
-Then I looks at Bill, and he nods his head, and I shoves my spoke in.
-
-‘“Look here, chaps!” I says, “this may be only a surface leader, as
-some of you appears to think, or it may be a pile. I don’t care a damn
-which it is! It’s Fairleigh’s first say. His kid, as lies there dead,
-found it! An’, by the Lord, his father’s goin’ to be first served! I’m
-goin’ now to peg out what I considers a fair prospectin’ claim for
-him. That’ll be seen to after. When that’s done you can strike in as
-you likes. If you objects to that you ain’t men. Bill, here, ’ll back
-me up, an’, if you don’t like it, we’ll do it in spite o’ you. We’re
-all poor enough, God knows! But none of us ain’t just lost an only
-child, an’ self an’ wife gone half mad with the sorrow of it.”
-
-‘Well, sir, the Germans, who was beginning to drop to how the thing
-lay, set up a big shout o’ “_Hoch! Hoch!_” meanin’ in their lingo,
-“Hooray.” An’ the rest, what was right enough at bottom, an’ only
-wanted showin’ like what was the fair an’ square thing to do, quick
-agreed. All ’cept, that is, one flash sort of a joker from the
-Barossa. But, while I steps the groun’, Bill put such a head on him in
-half-a-dozen rounds that his own mother wouldn’t know him again.
-
-‘It were only a couple o’ miles in a straight line from the
-settlement, through the ranges, to that bit of a bald hill.
-
-‘Exactly, almost, where you stood to-day, lookin’ at the windin’ plant
-o’ the El Dorado, was where we found Dot.
-
-‘When the field was proclaimed the Warden didn’t have much alteration
-to make in the p.c. I’d marked off for Fairleigh.
-
-‘You see it was only one man’s groun’ then. An’ it turned out rich
-from the jump. An’ it’s gettin’ better every foot. None o’ the others,
-as the Company’s bought an’ ’malgamated with it, although joinin’, can
-touch “Dot’s.”
-
-‘But Fairleigh’s never to say held up his head sence that night.
-
-‘A week after we buried the child we carried the mother to rest beside
-him.
-
-‘Fairleigh must be a rich man now. Everythin’ he touches, as the
-sayin’ is, seems to turn to gold. He can’t go wrong. But he seldom
-comes a-nigh the place. One of the first things he done when “Dot’s”
-turned up such trumps, was to put five thousand pounds to mine and
-Bill’s credit in the A—— bank. But we never touched it. Ever sence
-that night our luck’s been right in. First we sells out No. 1 North to
-the Company at a pretty stiff figure. Then we buys out No. 2 South
-an’ seemingly we’ve struck it again, an’ rich.’
-
-‘And, now,’ I remark as my friend, his yarn finished, sits gazing
-meditatively at the glowing logs,—‘and, now, all you want is a wife.
-Follow your mate’s example, and make a home where you’re making your
-money.’
-
-Ward shook his head, smiling doubtfully, and, knocking the ashes out
-of his pipe, rose to go.
-
-Just then Gretchen, buxom, and smiling also, appeared bearing a huge
-back-log in her arms. And when I saw the way my companion sprang up
-and rushed to meet and relieve her of the burden, and heard the
-guttural whispering that took place before the lump of timber reached
-its destination, I thought that, ere very long, all doubts would be
-dissipated, and that, even then, I sat within measurable distance of
-the future Mrs Ward.
-
-
-
-
-A CAPE HORN CHRISTMAS.
-
-
-All hands in Yamba hut had turned in, except a couple at the end of
-the long rough table.
-
-These late birds were playing euchre by the flickering light of an
-evil-smelling slush lamp. The cook had banked up the fire for the
-night, but the myall ashes still glowed redly and cast heat around. On
-the stone hearth stewed a bucket of tea. But for the snores of the men
-in the double tier of bunks ranged ship-fashion along both sides of
-the big hut, the frizzling of the grease in the lamp, and the muttered
-exclamations of the players, everything was very quiet.
-
-‘Pass me!’
-
-‘Make it!’
-
-‘Hearts!’
-
-And both men dropped their hands and sprang up in affright as a wild
-scream rang out from the bunk just above them.
-
-As they gazed, a white face, wet with the sweat of fear, poked out and
-stared down upon them with eyes in which the late terror still lived.
-
-‘What the dickens is up?’ asked one, recovering from his surprise,
-whilst the grumbles of awakened sleepers travelled around the hut.
-
-‘My God! what a dream! what a dream!’ exclaimed the man addressed,
-sticking out a pair of naked legs, and softly alighting on the earthen
-floor, and standing there trembling.
-
-‘Shoo!’ said the station wit, as he turned for a fresh start; ‘it’s
-only Jack the Sailor had the night-horse.’
-
-But the man, crouching close to the players, and wiping his pallid
-face with his loose shirt sleeve, still exclaimed,—
-
-‘What a dream! My God! What a dream!’
-
-‘Tell us what it were all about, Jack,’ asked one of the others,
-handing him a pannikin of tea. ‘It oughter been bad, judgin’ by the
-dashed skreek as you give.’
-
-‘It was,’ said the other—a grizzled, tanned, elderly man—as he warmed
-his legs, and looked rather ashamed of himself. ‘But hardly enough to
-make such a row over as you chaps reckons I did. I was dreamin’,’ he
-continued, speaking slowly, ‘as I was at sea again. It was on
-Christmas Day, an’ the ship was close to Cape Horn. How I knowed that,
-I can’t tell. But the land was in sight quite plain. Me an’ another
-feller—I can see his ugly face yet, and sha’n’t never forget it—was
-makin’ fast one of the jibs. Presen’ly we seemed to ’ave some words
-out there, hot an’ sharp. Then I done a thing, the like o’ which ud
-never come into my mind when awake—not if I lived to the age of
-Methyuseler—I puts my sheath-knife into him right up to the handle.
-
-‘The weather were heavy, an’ the ship a-pitchin’ bowsprit under into a
-head sea. Well, I was just watchin’ his face turn sorter slate colour,
-an’ him clingin’ on to a gasket an’ starin’ hard, when she gives a
-dive fathoms deep.
-
-‘When I comes up again I was in the water, an’ there was the ship
-half-a-mile away.
-
-‘Swimmin’ an’ lookin’ round, I spies the other feller alongside me on
-top of a big comber, with the white spume all red about him.
-
-‘Nex’ minute, down he comes, an’ I feels his two hands a-grippin’ me
-tight by the throat. I expect’s it was then I sung out an’ woke
-myself,’ and the man shivered as he gazed intently into the heart of
-the glowing myall ashes.
-
-‘Well, Jack Ashby,’ said one of his hearers, gathering up the
-scattered cards, ‘it wasn’t a nice dream. If I was you I should take
-it as a warnin’ never to go a-sailorin’ no more. Never was at the game
-myself, and don’t want to be. There can’t be much in it, though, when
-just the very thoughts o’ what’s never ’appened, an’ what’s never
-a-goin’ to ’appen, is able to give a chap such a start as you got.’
-
-‘Ugh!’ exclaimed the sailor, getting up and shaking himself as he
-climbed into his bunk. ‘No, I’ll never go back to sea again!’
-
-But, in course of time, Jack Ashby became tired of station life—became
-tired of the everlasting drudgery of the rouseabout, the burr-cutting,
-lamb-catching, and all the rest of it.
-
-He had no more dreams of the kind. But when o’ nights the wind
-whistled around and shook the crazy old hut, he would turn restlessly
-in his bunk and listen for the hollow thud of the rope-coils on the
-deck above, the call of ‘All hands,’ the wild racket of the gale, and
-the hiss of stormy waters.
-
-So his thoughts irresistibly wandered back again to the tall ships and
-the old shipmates, and all the magic and mystery of the great deep on
-whose bosom he had passed his life. He knew that he was infinitely
-better off where he was—better paid, better fed, better off in every
-respect than he could ever possibly hope to be at sea.
-
-Battling with his longing, he contrasted the weevilly biscuits and
-salt junk of the fo’k’stle with the wholesome damper and fresh mutton
-and beef of the hut.
-
-He thought of the ‘all night in’ of undisturbed rest, contrasting it
-with the ‘Watch ahoy! Now then, you sleepers, turn out!’ of each
-successive four hours.
-
-He thought, too, of tyrannous masters and mates; of drenched decks and
-leaking fo’k’stles, of frozen rigging, of dark wild nights of storm,
-and of swaying foot-ropes and thundrous canvas slatting like iron
-plates about his ears; of hunger, wet, and misery.
-
-Long and carefully he thought of all these things, and weighed the
-balance for and against. Then, one morning, rolling up his swag
-hurriedly, he went straight back to them.
-
-Even the thought of his dream had no power to stay him.
-
-But he made a reservation to himself. Said he,—
-
-‘No more deep water! I’ll try the coast. I’ve heard it’s good. No more
-deep water; and, above all, no Cape Horn!’
-
-He shipped on board a coaster, and went trips to Circular Head for
-potatoes; got bar-bound for weeks in eastern rivers looking for maize
-and fruit; sailed coal-laden, with pumps going clanketty-clank all
-down the land, and finally, after some months of this sort of work,
-found himself in Port Adelaide, penniless, and fresh from a gorgeous
-spree. Here he fell in with an old deep-water shipmate belonging to
-one of the vessels in harbour.
-
-‘Come home with us, Jack,’ said his friend. ‘She ain’t so bad for a
-limejuicer—patent reefs, watch an’ watch, an’ no stun’s’ls for’ard.
-The mate’s a Horse. But the ole man’s right enough; an’ he wants a
-couple o’ A.B.’s.’
-
-‘No,’ said Jack Ashby, firmly, ‘I’ll never go deep water again. The
-coast’s the ticket for this child. I’ve got reasons, Bill.’
-
-And then he told his friend of the dream.
-
-The latter did not appear at all surprised. Nor did he laugh. Sailors
-attach more importance to such things than do landsmen. All he said
-was,—
-
-‘The _Dido’s_ a fine big ship. She’s a-goin’ home by Good Hope. Was
-it a ship or a barque, now, as you was on in that dream?’
-
-‘Can’t say for certain,’ replied Ashby, reflectively; ‘but, by the
-size o’ her spars, I should reckon she’d be full-rigged. Howsomever,
-if ever I clap eyes on his ugly mug again—which the Lord forbid—you
-may bet your bottom dollar, Bill Baker, as I’ll swear to that, with
-its big red beard, an’ the tip o’ the nose sliced clean off.’
-
-‘A-a-a-h!’ said the other, staring for a minute, and then hastily
-finishing his pint of ‘sheoak.’ And he pressed Ashby no more to go to
-England in the _Dido_.
-
-But the latter found it just then anything but easy to get another
-berth in a coaster. Also he was in debt to his boarding-house; and,
-altogether, it seemed as if presently he would have to take the very
-first thing that offered, or be ‘chucked out.’
-
-‘Two A.B.’s wanted for the _Dido_,’ roared the shipping master into a
-knot of seamen at his office door one day shortly after Jack and his
-old shipmate had foregathered at the ‘Lass o’ Gowrie.’ And the former,
-feeling very uncomfortable, and as a man between the Devil and the
-Deep Sea, signed articles.
-
-His one solitary consolation was that the _Dido_ was not bound round
-Cape Horn. He cared for none other of the world’s promontories. Also,
-as he cheered up a little, it came into his mind that it would be
-rather pleasant than otherwise once more to have a run down Ratcliffe
-Highway, a lark with the girls in Tiger Bay, and a look-in at the old
-penny gaff in Whitechapel. But the main point was that there was no
-Cape Horn. Had not Bill Baker told him so? ‘Falmouth and the United
-Kingdom,’ said the Articles. Certainly there was no particular route
-mentioned. But who should know if Bill Baker did not?
-
-But all too surely had the thing that men call Fate laid fast hold on
-the Dreamer. And the boarding-house-keeper cashed his advance
-note—returning nothing—and carted him to the _Dido_, and left him
-stretched out on the fo’k’stle floor, not knowing or caring where he
-was, or who he was, or where he was going, and oblivious of all things
-under the sun.
-
-Nor did he show on deck again until, in the grey of next morning, a
-man with a great red beard and a flat nose looked into his bunk and
-called him obscene names, and bade him jump aloft and loose the
-fore-topsail, or he would let him know what shirking meant on board of
-the _Dido_.
-
-‘This is a bad beginning,’ thought Jack Ashby, as, with trembling body
-and splitting head, he unsteadily climbed the rigging, listening as
-one but yet half awake to the clank of the windlass pawls and the
-roaring chorus of the men at the brakes. ‘That’s the feller, sure
-enough!’ he gasped, as, winded, he dragged himself into the fore-top.
-‘I’d swear to him anywhere. Thank the Lord we ain’t goin’ round the
-Horn! I wonder if he knowed _me_? He’s the mate. An’ Bill was right;
-he _is_ a Horse. Damn deep water!’
-
-‘Now then, fore-top, there, shift your pins or I’ll _haze_ you,’ came
-up in a bellow from the deck, making poor Jack jump again as he
-stared ruefully down at the fierce upturned face, its red beard
-forking out like a new swab.
-
-‘Thank the Lord, we ain’t goin’ round the Horn!’ said Jack Ashby, as,
-with tremulous fingers, he loosened the gaskets and let the stiff
-folds of canvas fall, and sang out to sheet home.
-
-Down the Gulf with a fair wind rattled the _Dido_, through
-Investigator Straits and out into the Southern Ocean, whilst Jack cast
-a regretful look at the lessening line of distant blue, and exclaimed
-once more,—
-
-‘Damn deep water!’
-
-That evening the officers spin a coin, and proceed to pick their
-respective watches.
-
-To his disgust, Jack is the very first man chosen by the fierce chief
-mate, who has won the toss, and who at once says,—
-
-‘Go below the port watch!’—his own.
-
-It is blowing a fresh breeze when he comes on deck again at eight
-bells. It is his wheel. He finds his friend Bill Baker there.
-
-‘East by sowthe,’ says Bill emphatically, giving him a pitying look,
-and walking for’ard.
-
-‘East by sowthe it is,’ replies Jack, mechanically.
-
-Then, as he somewhat nervously, after the long absence, eyes the white
-bobbing disc in the binnacle, and squints aloft at the dark piles of
-canvas, it suddenly bursts upon him. Whilst he has been asleep the
-wind has shifted into the west. It blows now as if it meant to stay
-there. They are bound round Cape Horn after all.
-
-‘Mind your hellum, you booby,’ roars the mate, just come on deck.
-‘Where are you going to with the ship—back to Adelaide? I’ll keep an
-eye on you, my lad,’ lurching aft, and glancing first at Jack’s face
-and then at the compass.
-
-Truth to tell, the latter had been so flustered that he had let the
-_Dido_ come up two or three points off her course. But he soon got her
-nose straight again, with, for the first time, a feeling of hot
-satisfaction at his heart that, upon a day not far distant, he and the
-man with the red beard, and tip off his nose might, if there was any
-truth in dreams, be quits. Be sure that, by this Jack’s story was well
-known for’ard of the foremast. Bill Baker’s tongue had not been idle,
-and, although a few scoffed, more believed, and waited expectantly.
-
-‘There’s more in dreams than most people thinks for,’ remarked an old
-sailor in the starboard watch, shaking his head sagely. ‘The first
-part o’ Jack’s has comed true. If I was Mister Horse I’d go a bit
-easy, an’ not haze the chap about the way he’s a-doing of.’
-
-But the chief officer seemed to have taken an unaccountable dislike to
-Ashby from the moment he had first seen him. And this dislike he
-showed in every conceivable way until he nearly drove the poor chap
-frantic.
-
-At sea an evil-minded man in authority can do things of this sort with
-impunity. The process is called ‘hazing.’ The sufferer gets all the
-dirtiest and most disagreeable of the many such jobs to be found on
-shipboard. He is singled out from his fellows of the watch and sent
-aloft with tarry wads to hang on to a stay by his eyelashes. Or he is
-set to scraping masts, or greasing down, or slung outboard on a stage
-scrubbing paintwork, where every roll submerges him neck high, whilst
-his more fortunate companions are loafing about the decks.
-
-If the hazed one openly rebels, and gives his persecutor a good
-thrashing, he is promptly ‘logged,’ perhaps ironed, and at the end of
-the passage loses his pay, holding himself lucky not to have got six
-months in gaol for ‘mutiny on the high seas.’ There is another thing
-that may and does happen; and every day the crew of the _Dido_ watched
-placidly for the heavy iron-clad block, or marlingspike, sharp-pointed
-and massive, that by pure accident should descend from some lofty nook
-and brain or transfix their first officer—the Horse, as unmindful of
-the qualities of that noble animal, they had named him. But Jack Ashby
-never thought of such a thing. Nor did he take any notice of friendly
-hints from his mates—also sufferers, but in a less degree—that the
-best of spike lanyards would wear out by constant use, and that the
-best-fitted block-strops would at times fail to hold.
-
-Jack’s mind was far too much occupied by the approaching test to which
-his dream was to be subjected to bother about compassing a lesser
-revenge that might only end in maiming.
-
-He, by this, fully believed things were going to turn out exactly as
-he had seen them that night in Yamba men’s hut in the far-away
-Australian Bush. Therefore he looked upon himself and his tyrant as
-lost men.
-
-At times, even, he caught himself regarding the first officer with an
-emotion of curious pity, as one whose doom was so near and yet so
-unexpected. And, by degrees, the men, recognising this attitude of
-his, and sympathising heartily with it in different fashions, and
-different degrees of credulity, forbore further advice, and waited
-with what patience they might.
-
-It was getting well on towards Christmas.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I no more wished to go to London _viâ_ Cape Horn than did John Ashby.
-But my reasons were altogether different.
-
-When I had engaged a saloon passage on the _Dido_ it was an understood
-thing that she would take the other Cape for it. But a short four
-hours’ fight against a westerly wind so sickened the captain that he
-put his helm up, and squared his yards, and shaped a course that would
-bring him closer to Staten Island than to Simon’s Bay.
-
-It was some time before I had any conception of how things stood
-for’ard, with respect at least to the subject of this story.
-
-I saw, of course, that the chief officer was a bully, and that he was
-heartily disliked by the men. But of Jack Ashby and his dream I knew
-nothing. Nor, until my attention was especially drawn to it, did I
-perceive that he was undergoing the hazing process.
-
-As the only passenger, and one who had paid his footing liberally, I
-was often on the fo’k’stle and in other parts of the ship supposed to
-belong peculiarly to the men.
-
-Thus, one night, happening to be having a smoke on the top-gallant
-fo’k’stle, underneath which lay the quarters of the crew, I sat down
-on the anchor stock, and watched the cold-looking seas rolling up from
-the Antarctic Circle, and exchanging at intervals a word with the
-look-out man as he stumped across from rail to rail.
-
-Close beside me was a small scuttle, with the sliding-lid of it pushed
-back.
-
-I had scarcely lit my pipe when up through this, making me nearly drop
-it from my mouth, came a long, sharp scream as one in dire agony.
-
-‘What’s the matter down there?’ shouted my companion, falling on his
-knees and craning his head over the coamings of the hatch.
-
-Without waiting for an answer, we both bolted on to the main deck and
-into the fo’k’stle, where could be heard broken murmurs and growlings
-from the sleepy watch who filled the double tier of open bunks running
-with the sheer of the ship right into the eyes of her.
-
-And on one of these, as I struck a match and lit the swinging slush
-lamp, and glanced around me, I saw a man sitting, his bare legs
-dangling over the side. Down his pale face ran great drops of sweat,
-and his eyes were staring, glassy, and fixed. One or two of his mates
-tumbled out; others poked their heads over the bunk-boards and swore
-that it couldn’t be eight bells already. But the man still gazed over
-and beyond us with that horrible stare in his dilated eyes, and when I
-laid my hand on him he was rigid. Then one who, in place of drinking
-his ‘tot’ of rum that night, had treasured it up for another time,
-produced it; and, laying the man back, and forcing open the clenched
-teeth, we got some of it down his throat; and presently he came to
-himself and sat up.
-
-His first words were,—
-
-‘I’ve had it again! Just the same—the mate an’ me!’ Then, with a look
-around, ‘I’m sorry to have roused ye up, mates. I’m all right now.’
-Then, to myself, ‘How long afore we’re off the Horn, sir?’
-
-‘About a week if the wind holds. Why?’
-
-‘Because,’ replied he, lying back and rolling over in his blankets,
-‘I’ve got a week longer to live.’
-
-‘That was Jack Ashby, an’ he’s had his dream again,’ said the lookout
-man in an awed voice as we hurried on deck, fearful of wandering
-bergs.
-
-Then (his name was Baker) he told me the whole story, and, in spite of
-my utter incredulity, I became interested, and, having little to do,
-watched closely the progress of the expected drama.
-
-Also, after that night, I had many a talk with Ashby. I found him a
-man rather above the average run of his class, and one open to reason
-and argument; nor, on the whole, very superstitious. But on the
-subject of his vision he was immovable.
-
-‘You saw the land in your dreams, did you not?’ I once asked.
-
-‘Yes, sir,’ replied he. ‘Big cliffs, not more ’n a mile away,’ and he
-described its appearance, and the position of the vessel.
-
-‘Well, then,’ I said, ‘it may interest you to know that the skipper
-intends to keep well to the south’ard, and that we’re more likely to
-sight the Shetlands than the Horn.’
-
-But he only shook his head and smiled faintly as he replied,—
-
-‘He was goin’ home by Good Hope, sir. But he didn’t. What the skipper
-means to do, an’ what the Lord wills is two very different things. My
-time’s gettin’ short; but we’ll both go together—_him_ an’ me. I don’t
-reckon as there ’ll be any hazin’ to speak of in the next world.
-P’r’aps it’s best as it is. If I wasn’t sure an’ certain o’ what’s
-comin’, I’d have killed him long ago. But,’ he concluded, ‘I’m ready.
-I’ve been showed how it’s ordained to happen; an’, so long as I’ve the
-company I want, I don’t care.’
-
-During these days, impressed, somehow, by the feeling of intense
-expectation that pervaded all hands for’ard, I took more notice of
-Mr Harris, the mate, than I had hitherto done.
-
-‘He was no favourite of mine, and, beyond passing the time of day, we
-had found very little to say to each other.
-
-And now, although scouting the idea of anything being about to happen
-to the man, I watched him and listened to him with curiosity.
-
-Certainly he was an ill-favoured customer. Besides being plentifully
-pitted with smallpox over what of his face was visible through the
-red tangle of hair and beard, the fleshy tip of his nose had been
-sliced clean off, leaving a nasty-looking, flat, red scar.
-
-This, he said, was the work of a Malay kreese, whilst ashore at
-Samarang on a drunken spree. But the captain once told me
-confidentially that common report around Limehouse and the Docks
-attributed the mishap to Mrs Harris and a carving-knife.
-
-Be this as it may, he was a bad-tempered, overbearing brute, although,
-I believe, a good seaman.
-
-At meal times he rarely spoke, but, gulping his food down, left the
-table as quickly as possible.
-
-The captain, who occupied the whole of his time in making models of a
-new style of condenser, for which he had taken out a patent, but by no
-means could get to work properly, never interfered with his first
-officer, but left the ship entirely in his charge.
-
-No thought of approaching evil appeared to trouble Mr Harris, and he
-became, if possible, more tyrannical in his behaviour towards the
-crew, Ashby in particular. Truly wonderful is it how much hazing
-Mercantile Jack will stand before having recourse to the limited
-amount of comparatively safe reprisal that a heavy object and a high
-altitude endows him with!
-
-But the Jacks of the _Dido_ were waiting, with more or less of faith,
-the fulfilment of their shipmate’s dream.
-
-It was on the 23d of December—which, by the way, was also the extra
-day we gained—that the strong westerlies, after serving us so well,
-began to haul to the south’ard.
-
-‘You’ll see the Horn after all,’ remarked the captain to me that
-morning. ‘Two years ago I was becalmed close to it. But I scarcely
-think that such a thing will happen this time,’ and off he went to his
-condenser.
-
-It was bitterly cold, and the sharp wind from the ice-fields cut like
-a knife. The water was like green glass for the colour and clearness
-of it, the sky speckless, and as bitter looking as the water.
-Gradually freshening, and hauling still to the south, the wind at
-length made it necessary to shorten some of the plain sail the _Dido_
-had carried right across. On the 24th land was sighted, and the
-captain, coming on deck with his pockets full of tools and little tin
-things, told us that it was Cape Horn.
-
-The fo’k’stle-head was crowded with men, one minute all gazing at the
-land, the next staring aft.
-
-‘What the deuce are those fellows garping at?’ growled the mate,
-walking for’ard.
-
-Whereupon the watchers scattered.
-
-Looking behind me, I saw that Jack Ashby was at the wheel.
-
-He smiled as his eye caught mine, and pointed one mittened hand at the
-chief officer’s back. I looked at the land, and began for the first
-time, to feel doubtful.
-
-Coming on deck that Christmas morning, I rubbed my eyes before being
-able to take in the desolation of the scene, and make sure that I was
-indeed on board the _Dido_.
-
-The ship looked as if she had been storm-driven across the whole
-Southern Ocean, and then mopped all over with a heavy rain-squall.
-
-The wet decks, the naked spars, the two top-sails tucked up to a
-treble reef, and seeming mere strips of canvas, grey with damp, the
-raffle of gear lying about, with here and there a man over his knees
-in water slowly coiling it up, hanging on meanwhile by one hand,
-combined, with the lowering sky and leaden sea, to make up a gloomy
-picture indeed. The ship was nearly close-hauled, and a big lump of a
-head-sea on, with which she was doing her level, or rather, most
-unlevel, best to fill her decks fore and aft.
-
-Broad on the port bow loomed the land—great cliffs, stern and
-ragged—at whose base, through the thin mist that was softly drizzling,
-could be seen a broad white belt of broken water.
-
-‘Cape Horn weather!’ quoth the captain at my elbow.
-
-He was swathed in oilskins, and squinting rather anxiously at the sky.
-
-‘The glass is falling,’ he continued; ‘but there’s more southing in
-the wind. Might give us a slant presently through the Straits of Le
-Maire.’
-
-And with that, pulling out a bit of the condenser, and looking
-lovingly at it, he went below. The mate was standing near, staring
-hard at the land. It might have been the shadow of the sou’-wester on
-his face, but I thought he appeared even more surly and forbidding
-than ever.
-
-Of course it was a holiday. During the last four hours both watches
-had been on deck shortening sail. After clearing up the washing raffle
-of ropes, and leaving a man at the wheel and another on the lookout,
-they were free to go into the fo’k’stle, and smoke or sleep, as they
-pleased.
-
-Dinner—a curious acrobatic feat that Christmas day in the _Dido’s_
-cabin—over, I donned waterproofs and sea-boots, and, putting four
-bottles of rum in a handbag, which I slung over my shoulder, I stepped
-across the washboards and made for the fo’k’stle.
-
-Creeping from hold to hold along the weather bulwarks, at times up to
-my waist in water, I wondered how any ship could pitch as the _Dido_
-was doing and yet live.
-
-One moment, looking aft, you would imagine that the man at the wheel
-was about to fall on your head; the next that the jibbooms were a
-fourth mast; whilst incessantly poured such foaming torrents over her
-fo’k’stle that, as I slowly approached, I seriously doubted of getting
-in safely with my precious freight. Luckily, the men were watching me,
-and a couple, running out, caught hold of my hands, roaring in my
-ear,—
-
-‘Run, sir, when she lifts again!’
-
-And, making a dash for it, we got through the doorless entrance just
-in time to escape another avalanche.
-
-I found the fo’k’stle awash, chests and bags lashed into lower bunks,
-and the greater part of both watches sitting on the upper ones,
-smoking, and eyeing the cold sparking water as it rushed to and fro
-their habitation.
-
-My arrival, or rather, perhaps, my cargo, was hailed with acclamation.
-
-The captain certainly had sent them a couple of dozen of porter. But,
-as one explained,—
-
-‘What’s the good of sich rubbishin’ swankey as that when a feller
-wants somethin’ as ’ll warm ’is innards this weather?’
-
-‘Where’s Ashby?’ I asked, hoisting on to a bunk amongst the crowd.
-
-‘Here I am, sir,’ replied a voice close to in the dimness.
-
-‘Well,’ I said, cheerily, ‘what did I tell you? Here’s Christmas Day
-well on for through, everything snug—if damp—and nothing happening.
-Give him a stiff nip, one of you, and let us drink to better times,
-and no more nonsense. Once we’re round the corner, yonder, this trip
-will soon be over.’
-
-‘Thank you kindly, sir,’ replied Ashby, as he emptied the pannikin,
-which was being so carefully passed around by the one appointed, who,
-holding on like grim death, after every poured-out portion, held the
-bottle up to the light to see how the contents were faring. ‘Thank you
-kindly, sir,’ said he. ‘But Christmas Day isn’t done yet.’
-
-Even as he spoke, a form clad in glistening oilskins came through the
-water-curtain that was roaring over the break of the fo’k’stle, and,
-leaning upon the windlass, sang out,—
-
-‘You there, Ashby?’
-
-‘Ay, ay, sir,’ replied the seaman.
-
-‘Lie out, then,’ continued the mate, for he it was, ‘and put another
-gasket around that inner jib! It’s coming adrift! Bear a hand, now!’
-
-The ship for a minute seemed to stand quite still, as if waiting to
-hear the answer, and each man turned to look at his neighbour.
-
-Then Ashby, jumping down, with a curious set expression on his face,
-walked up to the mate and said very loud,—
-
-‘Don’t send a man where you’d be frightened to go yourself.’
-
-‘You infernal soger!’ shouted the other, enraged beyond measure at
-this first sign of rebellion in his victim. ‘Come out here and I’ll
-show you all about that! Come out and crawl after me, and I’ll learn
-you how to do your work!’
-
-He disappeared, and Ashby followed him like a flash. In a trice every
-soul was outside—some clinging to the running gear around the
-foremast, others on the galley, others in the fore rigging.
-
-I could see no sign of any of the head sails being adrift. All, except
-the set fore-topmast stay-sail, lay on their booms, masses of sodden
-canvas, off which poured green cataracts as the _Dido_ lifted her nose
-from a mighty plunge.
-
-For a minute or two, so dense was the smother for’ard of the windlass
-bits, that nothing was visible but foam. But, presently, as the _Dido_
-paused, weaving her head backwards and forwards as if choosing a good
-spot for her next dive, we saw, clear of everything, and high in air
-fronting us, the two men.
-
-One was on the boom, the other on the foot-rope. The topmost man
-seemed to be hitting rapidly at the one below him, who strove with
-uplifted arm to shield himself.
-
-Perhaps for half a minute this lasted. Then the ship gave her headlong
-plunge, the crest of a great wave met the descending bows, and when
-the bitter spray cleared out of our eyes again the lower figure was
-missing.
-
-From the other, overhanging us, a black streak against the sullen sky,
-came what sounded like a faint cheer. There was a rapid throwing
-motion of the arm released from the supporting stay, followed by a
-clink of steel on the roof of the galley. Then came once more the
-roaring plunge, and slow upheaval as of a creature mortally wounded.
-
-But, this time, the booms were vacant, and a man beside me was
-curiously examining a sheath-knife, bloody from point of blade to tip
-of wooden handle.
-
-Louder shrieked the gale through the strained rigging, and more
-heavily beat the thundrous seas against the _Dido’s_ sides, as,
-breathless, drenched and horrified, I staggered into the captain’s
-state-room.
-
-‘I think I’ve got it now,’ said he, smiling, and holding up a thing
-like a tin saucepan.
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Note
-
-
-The text contains a lot of dialect spelling, which has been left as
-printed. Punctuation has been amended where required to clarify the
-sense of the text. A small number of errors that appear to be
-typographical rather than authorial have been corrected; otherwise
-inconsistent spelling and hyphenation (agoin’/a-goin’, anigh/a-nigh,
-apiece/a-piece, ashen grey/ashen-grey, befel/befell, black
-fellow/black-fellow, bulkhead/bulk-head, close hauled/close-hauled,
-dark blue/dark-blue, doorposts/door-posts, enquiries/inquiries, far
-inland/far-inland, fo’c’sle/fo’c’stle, greenhide/green-hide, half
-way/half-way, head sea/head-sea, highly connected/highly-connected,
-lifelike/life-like, lookout/look-out, main deck/main-deck, middle
-age/middle-age, mopoke/mo-poke, native born/native-born, new
-chum/new-chum, newcomer/new-comer, out an’ out/out-an’-out,
-p’raps/p’r’aps, rain water/rain-water, remarkable
-looking/remarkable-looking, rope coils/rope-coils,
-saddlestraps/saddle-straps, soger/sojur, sojur ants/sojur-ants, such
-like/such-like, thundrous/thunderous, topsail/top-sail,
-upturned/up-turned, viâ/via) have been retained as printed.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Steve Brown's Bunyip and other Stories, by
-James Arthur Barry and Rudyard Kipling
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Steve Brown's Bunyip and other Stories, by
-James Arthur Barry and Rudyard Kipling
-
-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: Steve Brown's Bunyip and other Stories
-
-Author: James Arthur Barry
- Rudyard Kipling
-
-Release Date: October 13, 2019 [EBook #60482]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STEVE BROWN'S BUNYIP, OTHER STORIES ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by MWS, David Wilson and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="ww" />
-
-
-<div class="frontcover">
-<a name="cover" id="cover" href="#cover"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>cover<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a><img id="frontcover" src="images/cover.jpg"
- alt="[Cover: Steve Brown’s Bunyip &mdash;
- John Arthur Barry]" />
-
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="halftitle">
-<p><a name="png.001" id="png.001" href="#png.001"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>i<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a><big>STEVE BROWN’S BUNYIP.</big></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="frontispiece">
-<a name="png.004" id="png.004" href="#png.004"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>iv<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a><img id="frontis" src="images/i_frontis.jpg" alt="[Illustration]"
- /><p><span class="ns">    [Illustration: </span>‘Oh! Good Mister Bunyip,’ he quavered, ‘let’s off this oncest.’
-(<a href="#illo_pg6">Page 6</a>.)<span class="ns">]</span></p>
-
-<p class="rt"><small>[<i>Frontispiece</i></small></p>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-<h1 title="Steve Brown’s Bunyip"><a name="png.005" id="png.005" href="#png.005"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>v<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>STEVE BROWN’S BUNYIP<br
- /><small class="oeng"><small>And Other Stories</small></small></h1>
-
-
-<p id="barry"><small>BY</small><br
- /><big>JOHN ARTHUR BARRY</big></p>
-
-
-<p id="kipling"><i>WITH INTRODUCTORY VERSES</i><br
- /><small>BY</small><br
- /><big>RUDYARD KIPLING</big></p>
-
-
-<p><i>NEW EDITION</i></p>
-
-<p><small><small><i id="otherbooks">Author of “In the Great Deep,” “The Luck of the Native Born,”<br
- />“A Son of the Sea,” “Red Lion and Blue Star,”<br
- />“Old and New Sydney,” etc.</i></small></small></p>
-
-
-<p><big>N.S.W. BOOKSTALL CO.</big><br
- /><small>SYDNEY.<br
- />———<br
- />1905</small></p>
-
-<p><small><i>All Rights Reserved</i></small></p>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="verso">
-
-<p><a name="png.006" id="png.006" href="#png.006"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>vi<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a><small><i>John Sands, Printer, Sydney.</i></small></p>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="toc">
-<h2 title="Contents"><a name="png.007" id="png.007" href="#png.007"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>vii<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a><i class="sprd">CONTENT</i><i>S</i>.<br
- /><small class="nosprd"><i>———o———</i></small>
-</h2>
-
-<table summary="Table of Contents">
-<tr><th> </th><th>PAGE</th></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><span class="dotz"><a href="#png.011">Introduction</a></span></td><td class="pg"><a href="#png.011">xi<!-- TN: original reads "x" --></a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><span class="dotz"><a href="#png.015">Steve Brown’s Bunyip</a></span></td><td class="pg"><a href="#png.015">1</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><span class="dotz"><a href="#png.025">Dead Man’s Camp</a></span></td><td class="pg"><a href="#png.025">11</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><span class="dotz"><a href="#png.034">The Shanghai-ing of Peter Barlow</a></span></td><td class="pg"><a href="#png.034">20</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><span class="dotz"><a href="#png.045">‘Ex Sardanapalus’</a></span></td><td class="pg"><a href="#png.045">31</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><span class="dotz"><a href="#png.065">‘Mo-Poke’</a></span></td><td class="pg"><a href="#png.065">51</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><span class="dotz"><a href="#png.074">Keeping School at ‘Dead Finish’</a></span></td><td class="pg"><a href="#png.074">60</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><span class="dotz"><a href="#png.087">‘Number One North Rainbow’</a></span></td><td class="pg"><a href="#png.087">71</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><span class="dotz"><a href="#png.109">The Protection of the ‘Sparrowhawk’</a></span></td><td class="pg"><a href="#png.109">91</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><span class="dotz"><a href="#png.123">The Duke of Silversheen</a></span></td><td class="pg"><a href="#png.123">105</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><span class="dotz"><a href="#png.134">The Officer in Charge</a></span></td><td class="pg"><a href="#png.134">116</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><span class="dotz"><a href="#png.141">‘Sojur Jim’</a></span></td><td class="pg"><a href="#png.141">123</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><span class="dotz"><a name="png.008" id="png.008" href="#png.008"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>viii<span class="ns">]</span></span></a><a
- href="#png.154">Far Inland Football</a></span></td><td class="pg"><a href="#png.154">136</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><span class="dotz"><a href="#png.164">On the Grand Stand</a></span></td><td class="pg"><a href="#png.164">146</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><span class="dotz"><a href="#png.182">Too Far South</a></span></td><td class="pg"><a href="#png.182">164</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><span class="dotz"><a href="#png.197">The Mission to Dingo Creek</a></span></td><td class="pg"><a href="#png.197">179</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><span class="dotz"><a href="#png.212">Books at Barracaboo</a></span></td><td class="pg"><a href="#png.212">192</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><span class="dotz"><a href="#png.230">‘Barton’s Jackaroo<!-- original reads "Jackeroo" but p208ff is consistently "jackaroo" -->’</a></span></td><td class="pg"><a href="#png.230">208</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><span class="dotz"><a href="#png.251">Told in the ‘Corona’s’ Cabin</a></span></td><td class="pg"><a href="#png.251">229</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><span class="dotz"><a href="#png.289">‘Dot’s Claim’</a></span></td><td class="pg"><a href="#png.289">265</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="dots"><span class="dotz"><a href="#png.301">A Cape Horn Christmas</a></span></td><td class="pg"><a href="#png.301">277</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="preface">
-<h2 title="Again"><a name="png.009" id="png.009" href="#png.009"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>ix<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a><span class="sprd">AGAI</span>N.</h2>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smc">There</span> have been occasions when, after long rest as a hulk
-lying in some land-locked cove, with little of its past
-history except the name left in people’s memories, that
-once again the old ship has been brought forth, staunch as
-ever, to perform, it is hoped, faithful service on the outer
-seas.</p>
-
-<p>Something of this kind has happened in the case of
-“Steve Brown’s Bunyip.” The book has been so long out
-of print as to perhaps render any apology for its re-appearance
-needless. All the more so, as from many quarters
-through the years that have elapsed since its retirement,
-there have been frequent and kindly enquiries after its
-welfare. Also, numerous requests have reached the author
-that the book might again be allowed to test the weather
-of popular opinion, and, if possible, hold its own as it did
-aforetime.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, in a new guise, and in a new land, the old
-“Bunyip,” rejuvenated and embellished, with, so to speak,
-colours flying and band playing, leaves its long rest at
-moorings, and once more sets sail in modest confidence
-that age will not have rendered its timbers less seaworthy,
-but rather have preserved and toughened them in such wise
-as may enable the old vessel to successfully compete with
-the modern craft of her class that have since appeared.</p>
-
-<p class="rtindent"><span class="smc">The Author.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="intro">
-<h2 title="Introduction"><a name="png.011" id="png.011" href="#png.011"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>xi<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a><i class="sprd">INTRODUCTIO</i><i>N</i>.</h2>
-<hr class="short" />
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div><span class="smc">There</span> dwells a Wife by the Northern March</div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">    </span>And a wealthy Wife is she.</div>
-<div>She breeds a breed o’ rovin’ men</div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">    </span>And casts them over sea.</div>
-<span class="ns"><br
- /></span></div><!-- stanza -->
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div>And some they drown in deep water,</div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">    </span>And some in sight of shore;</div>
-<div>And word goes back to the carline Wife</div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">    </span>And ever she sends more.</div>
-<span class="ns"><br
- /></span></div><!-- stanza -->
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div>For since that Wife had gate or gear,</div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">    </span>Or hearth or garth or bield,</div>
-<div>She wills her sons to the white harvest,</div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">    </span>And that is a bitter <span class="nw">yield—</span></div>
-<span class="ns"><br
- /></span></div><!-- stanza -->
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div><a name="png.012" id="png.012" href="#png.012"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>xii<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>She wills her sons to the wet ploughing</div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">    </span>To ride the horse o’ tree,</div>
-<div>And syne her sons come home again</div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">    </span>Far spent from out the sea.</div>
-<span class="ns"><br
- /></span></div><!-- stanza -->
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div>The good Wife’s sons come home again</div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">    </span>Wi’ little into their hands</div>
-<div>But the lear o’ men that ha’ dealt wi’ men</div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">    </span>In the new and naked <span class="nw">lands—</span></div>
-<span class="ns"><br
- /></span></div><!-- stanza -->
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div>But the faith o’ men that ha’ proven men</div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">    </span>By more than willing breath,</div>
-<div>And the eyes o’ men that ha’ read wi’ men</div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">    </span>In the open books o’ Death.</div>
-<span class="ns"><br
- /></span></div><!-- stanza -->
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div>Rich are they, rich in wonders seen,</div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">    </span>But poor in the goods o’ men:</div>
-<div>And what they ha’ got by the skin o’ their teeth</div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">    </span>They sell for their teeth again.</div>
-<span class="ns"><br
- /></span></div><!-- stanza -->
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div>Ay, whether they lose to the naked life,</div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">    </span>Or win to their hearts’ desire,</div>
-<div>They tell it all to the carline Wife</div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">    </span>That nods beside the fire.</div>
-<span class="ns"><br
- /></span></div><!-- stanza -->
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div><a name="png.013" id="png.013" href="#png.013"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>xiii<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Her hearth is wide to every gust</div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">    </span>That gars the dead ash <span class="nw">spin—</span></div>
-<div>And tide by tide and ’twixt the tides</div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">    </span>Her sons go out and in.</div>
-<span class="ns"><br
- /></span></div><!-- stanza -->
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div>[Out in great mirth that do desire</div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">    </span>Hazard of trackless ways,</div>
-<div>In wi’ great peace to wait their watch</div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">    </span>And warm before the blaze.]</div>
-<span class="ns"><br
- /></span></div><!-- stanza -->
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div>And some return in broken sleep</div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">    </span>And some in waking dream,</div>
-<div>For she hears the heels o’ the dripping ghosts</div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">    </span>That ride the long roof-beam.</div>
-<span class="ns"><br
- /></span></div><!-- stanza -->
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div>Home—they come home from all the <span class="nw">seas—</span></div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">    </span>The living and the <span class="nw">dead—</span></div>
-<div>The good Wife’s sons come home again</div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">    </span>For her blessing on their head.</div>
-</div><!-- stanza -->
-</div><!-- poetry -->
-
-<p class="rt"><span class="smc">Rudyard Kipling.</span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chap">
-<h2 title="Steve Brown’s Bunyip"><a name="png.015" id="png.015" href="#png.015"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>1<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a><big><i>Steve Brown’s Bunyip.</i></big><br
- /><small class="nosprd"><i>———o———</i></small></h2>
-
-
-
-
-<p class="fakeh2">STEVE BROWN’S BUNYIP.</p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smc">The</span> general opinion of those who felt called upon to
-give it was that Steve Brown, of the Scrubby Corner,
-‘wasn’t any chop.’</p>
-
-<p>Not that, on the surface, there seemed much evidence
-confirmatory of such a verdict—rather, indeed, the contrary.</p>
-
-<p>If a traveller, drover or teamster lost his stock, Steve,
-after a long and arduous search, was invariably the first
-man to come across the missing animals—provided the
-reward was high enough.</p>
-
-<p>Yet, in spite of this useful gift of discovery, its owner
-was neither liked nor trusted. Uncharitable people—especially
-the ones whom he took such trouble to
-oblige—would persist in hinting that none knew so well
-where to find as those that hid.</p>
-
-<p>All sorts of odds and ends, too, from an unbranded
-calf to a sheepskin, from a new tarpaulin to a pair of
-<a name="png.016" id="png.016" href="#png.016"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>2<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>hobbles, had a curious knack of disappearing within a
-circuit of fifty miles of the Browns’ residence.</p>
-
-<p>In appearance, Steve was long, lathy, awkward and
-freckled, also utterly ignorant of all things good for man
-to know.</p>
-
-<p>Suspicious, sly and unscrupulous, just able by a sort of
-instinct to decipher a brand on an animal, he was a
-thorough specimen of the very worst type of far inland
-Australian Bush Native, and only those who have met
-him can possibly imagine what that means.</p>
-
-<p>Years ago, his parents, fresh from the wilds of Connemara,
-had squatted on this forest reserve of Scrubby
-Corner. How they managed to live was a mystery. But
-they were never disturbed; and in time they died, leaving
-Steve, then eighteen, to shift for himself, by virtue of
-acquired knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly after the death of his mother, he took unto
-himself the daughter of an old shepherd on a run adjoining—a
-fit match in every way—and continued to keep
-house in the ramshackle shanty in the heart of the
-Corner.</p>
-
-<p>He had never been known to do a day’s work if he
-could possibly get out of it; much preferring to pick up
-a precarious living by ‘trading’ stock, ‘finding’ stragglers,
-and in other ways even less honest than the last,
-but which nobody, so far, had taken the trouble of bringing
-home to him.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">.        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .</p>
-
-<p>It was Sunday, and the caravan was spelling for the
-day.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.017" id="png.017" href="#png.017"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>3<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Greg, having had his dinner—only a half ration, as
-feed was scarce—and feeling but little inclined for a chat
-with the tiger, or the lion, or the bear, or any other of
-the sulky, brooding creatures behind the iron bars, whom
-he saw every day, and of whose company he was heartily
-tired, took it into his great head to have a look at the
-country.</p>
-
-<p>So, unperceived of Hassan Ali, who was fast asleep in
-the hot sunshine, or any of the rest dozing in the tents,
-Greg, plucking a wattle up by the roots to keep the flies
-off, sauntered quietly away. He was not impressed by inland
-Australia. In the first place it was hot and dusty, also
-the flies were even worse than in his native Ceylon. Nor,
-so far as he could discover, was there anything to chew—that
-is—no tender banana stems, no patches of
-young rice or succulent cane. All that he tried tasted
-bitter, tasted of gum, peppermint, or similar abominations.
-He spat them out with a grunt of disgust, and
-meandered on.</p>
-
-<p>Presently the scrub grew thicker, and, heated more
-than ever by the exertion of pushing his huge body
-through an undergrowth of pine and wattle, he hailed
-with delight the sight of a big waterhole, still and dark,
-in the very heart of it. Descending the slope at the far
-side of the thickly-grassed, open glade, Steve Brown,
-driving a couple of ‘lost’ horses, paused in dismay and
-astonishment at sight of the immense beast, black, shining
-wetly, and sending up thick jets of water into the
-sunlight to an accompaniment of a continuous series of
-grunts and rumbling noises.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.018" id="png.018" href="#png.018"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>4<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘<em>Hrrmp! hrrmp!</em>’ blared Greg, in friendly greeting,
-as he caught sight of the figure staring fascinated.</p>
-
-<p>And then he laughed to himself as he saw how the
-loose horses, snorting with terror, galloped off one way,
-and the horseman another.</p>
-
-<p>But it was getting late; so, coming out of the water,
-and striking a well-beaten pad, he followed it. Supper
-time was approaching, and he kept his ears open for the
-shrill cry of Hassan Ali.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Steve had made a bee-line on the spur for
-home, with some vague idea surging through his dull
-brain of having caught a glimpse of an Avenging Power.
-It is mostly in this way that anything of the sort strikes
-the uneducated conscience.</p>
-
-<p>‘What’s the matter now?’ asked his wife as he entered,
-pale, and with hurried steps. ‘You looks pretty badly
-scared. Did the traps spot yer a-plantin’ them mokes,
-or what?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Traps be hanged!’ replied Steve. ‘I seen somethin’
-wuss nor traps. I seen the bunyip down at the big
-waterhole.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Gam, yer fool!’ exclaimed his wife, who was tall, thin,
-sharp-faced, and freckled, like himself. ‘What are you
-a-givin’ us now? Why, yer gittin’ wuss nor a black fellow
-wi’ yer bunyips!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well,’ said Steve, fanning himself with his old cabbage-tree
-hat, and glancing nervously out of the door, ‘I’ll
-tell yer how it was. Ye knows as how I dropped acrost
-that darkey’s mokes when he was camped at the Ten
-Mile. Well, o’ course, I takes ’em to the water in the
-<a name="png.019" id="png.019" href="#png.019"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>5<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>scrub—you knows the shop—intendin’ to hobble ’em out
-till such time as inquiries come this road. Well, jist as I
-gets in sight o’ the water I seen, right in the middle of it,
-I seen—I seen—’ but here he paused dead for want of a
-vocabulary.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, thick-head, an’ wot was it ye seed—yer own
-hugly shadder, I s’pose?’ said Mrs Brown, as she caught
-up and slapped the baby playing with a pumpkin on the
-floor. ‘Look better on yer, it would, to wind me up a
-turn o’ water, an’ it washin’ day to-morrer, ’stead o’
-comin’ pitchin’ fairy stories.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It warn’t,’ replied Steve, taking no notice of the latter
-part of her speech. ‘But it was as big—ay, an’ a lot
-bigger’n this hut. All black, an’ no hair it was; an’ ’t’ad
-two white tushes’s, long as my leg, only crookt, an’ a
-snout like a big snake, an’ it were a-spoutin’ water forty
-foot high, and soon’s it seen me it bellered agin and
-agin.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You bin over to Walmsley’s shanty to-day?’ asked
-his wife, looking hard at his pale face and staring eyes.</p>
-
-<p>‘No, s’elp me!’ replied Steve; ‘not fer a month or
-more! An’ yer knows, Mariar, as it aint very often I
-touches a drop o’ ennythin’ when I does go over.’
-Which was strictly true, for Steve was an abstemious
-rogue.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, then, you’ve got a stroke o’ the sun,’ said his
-better-half, dogmatically, ‘an’ you’d best take a dose of
-salts at oncest, afore ye goes off yer ’ead wuss.’</p>
-
-<p>‘<em>Hrrmp! hrrmp! hrrmp!</em>’ trumpeted Greg cheerfully,
-as at this moment, interposing his huge bulk before
-<a name="png.020" id="png.020" href="#png.020"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>6<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the setting sun, he looked in at the back door with
-twinkling eyes.</p>
-
-<p>With a scream the woman, snatching up her child,
-bolted into the bedroom, leaving Steve quaking in an
-ecstasy of terror, as Greg, spying the pumpkin, deftly
-reached in with his trunk and asked for it with an
-insinuating grunt.</p>
-
-<p>But Steve, pretty certain that it was himself who was
-wanted, and that his time had come at last, tumbled off
-the stool and grovelled before the Unknown Terror.</p>
-
-<p>Without coming in further, Greg could not get within a
-foot of the coveted article. To come in further would be
-to lift the house on his shoulders, so Greg hesitated.</p>
-
-<p>For ten years—long ago in the days of his youth—he
-had been a member of the Ceylon Civil Service, and had
-learnt discipline and respect for the constituted authorities.
-Also, besides being chief constable of his fellows, he had
-been a favourite at headquarters, had borne royalty itself,
-and was even named after Governor Gregory. Therefore,
-hungry as he was, Greg hesitated about demolishing a
-house for the sake of a pumpkin; but Steve, now on his
-knees in the middle of the floor, with that curling, snakelike
-thing twisting and twitching before his eyes, knew
-less than nothing of all this.</p>
-
-<p>Had he been able, he would doubtless have prayed in
-an orthodox manner to be delivered out of the clutches
-of the Evil One. Being unable to pray, he did the best
-he could, which was indifferent.</p>
-
-<p><a name="illo_pg6" id="illo_pg6">‘Oh good Mister Bunyip,’ he quavered,</a> ‘let’s off this
-oncest, an’ I’ll takes them mokes back to the nigger.
-<a name="png.021" id="png.021" href="#png.021"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>7<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>I’ll give up them two unbranded foals as I shook off the
-carrier larst week, likewise the bag o’ flour off his waggin.
-If yer’ll go away, Mr Bunyip, I’ll never plant nor shake
-nothin’ no more. I won’t<!-- TN: original reads "wont" -->—s’elp me! An’ if yer’ll go
-back quiet’—here the wall-plate began to crack, and
-Steve’s voice to rise into a howl—‘I’ll promise faithful
-never to come next anigh yer waterhole over yonder to
-plant hosses.’</p>
-
-<p>As he concluded, Greg, having at length jammed his
-big head in far enough to just reach the pumpkin with
-his trunk, withdrew, taking both doorposts with him.</p>
-
-<p>‘He’s gone, Mariar,’ said Steve, after a pause, wiping
-his wet face; ‘but it wor the narriest squeak you ever
-seed. Took nothin’, he didn’t, only that punkin as was
-on the floor. Tell you wot,’ as his wife came trembling
-out of the other room, ‘we’re a-goin’ to shift camp.
-Neighbours o’ that sort ain’t ter be played with. Ain’t it
-a wonder, bein’ so handy like, as he never come afore?
-I knows how it was, now!’ he exclaimed, a happy inspiration
-seizing him. ‘It were all through them two larst
-cussed mokes! The feller as owns ’em’s a flash blackfeller
-shearer. I had a pitch with him the night afore
-an’ he reckons as how he’d just cut out ov a big shed on
-the Marthaguy. So I sez to myself, “You’re good enough,
-ole chap, fer a fiver, ennyhow.”’</p>
-
-<p>‘What’s that got to do with it?’ asked his wife
-softly, regarding the crushed doorway with affrighted
-face.</p>
-
-<p>‘Don’t yer see? The bunyip’s the blackfeller’s Devil.
-Ole Billy Barlow tell’d me oncest as he seen the head ov
-<a name="png.022" id="png.022" href="#png.022"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>8<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>one rise up out of a lagoon. I’ll have to fossick up them
-mokes, Mariar, an’ take ’em to that darkey straight away,
-afore wuss ’appens. S-sh, sh-sh! Wot’s that?’</p>
-
-<p>It was Greg, who wanted his supper badly, and was
-soliloquising at the other end of the hut. He had been
-down to a little fenced-in paling paddock on the flat,
-and, looking over, to his delight had seen a crop of
-maize, sweet and juicy and not too ripe, also more
-pumpkins.</p>
-
-<p>But with the love of the law and the memory of discipline
-still strong in him, he had returned to ask permission
-of the owner—the stupid white man who sat in his hut
-and talked nonsense. And now he was holding council
-with himself how best to make the fool understand that
-he was hungry, and wanted for his supper something
-more than a solitary pumpkin.</p>
-
-<p>Hassan Ali, he knew, had but dried hay and the rinds
-of melons to give him. Here, indeed, was a delectable
-change, and Greg’s mouth watered as he gurgled gently
-in at the opening which did duty for a window, and close
-to which the family crouched in terror.</p>
-
-<p>Why could not the stupid fellow understand? Could
-it be that he and his were deaf? A bright idea, and one
-to be acted upon, this last!</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, carefully lifting up and displacing half the
-bark roof, Greg looked benignly down and trumpeted
-mightily until the hut shook as with an earthquake, and
-the whole land seemed to vibrate, whilst his audience
-grovelled speechless. Then, finding no resulting effect,
-and secure in the sense of having done his uttermost to
-<a name="png.023" id="png.023" href="#png.023"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>9<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>make himself understood, he went off with a clear
-conscience to the corn-patch and luxuriated.</p>
-
-<p>‘It ain’t no bunyip, Steve,’ wailed his wife, as they
-heard the retreating steps; ‘it’s the “Destryin’ Hangel”
-as I heerd a parson talk on oncest when I was a kid, an’
-that wor the “Last Tramp”—the noise wot shows as the
-world is comin’ to an ind. It ain’t no use o’ runnin’.
-We’re all agoin’ to git burnt up wi’ fire an’ bremston!
-Look out, Steve, an’ see if there’s a big light ennywheres.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Sha’n’t,’ replied Steve. ‘Wot’s the good? If it’s the
-end o’ the world, wot’s the use o’ lookin’? An’ I b’lieve
-’ere’s yer blasted Hangel a-comin’ agen!’</p>
-
-<p>Sure enough, Greg, having had a snack, was returning
-just to assure the folk that he was doing well; that his
-belly was half full, and that he was enjoying himself
-immensely.</p>
-
-<p>So he <em>hrrmped</em> softly round about in the darkness, and
-scratched his sides against the rough stone fireplace, and
-took off one of the rafters for a toothpick, and rumbled
-and gurgled meditatively, feeling that if he could only
-drop across a couple of quarts of toddy, as in the old
-Island days, his would be perfect bliss.</p>
-
-<p>All through the hot summer night he passed at intervals
-from the paddock to the house and back, and all the
-night those others lay and shivered, and waited for the
-horror of the Unknown.</p>
-
-<p>Then, a little after sunrise, a long, loud, shrill call was
-heard, answered on the instant by a sustained hoarse
-blare, as Greg recognised the cry of his mahout and
-keeper.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.024" id="png.024" href="#png.024"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>10<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>And presently Steve, plucking up courage in the light,
-arose, and, looking out, shouted to his wife <span class="nw">triumphantly,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Now, then, Mariar, who’s right about the bunyip!
-There he goes off home to the waterhole with a black
-nigger on his back!’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="Dead Man’s Camp"><a name="png.025" id="png.025" href="#png.025"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>11<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>DEAD MAN’S CAMP.</h2>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smc">One</span> lurid summer, in 1873, I was crossing over from
-Saint George’s Bridge, on the Balonne, to Mitchell, on
-the Maranoa. I had been to a rush at Malawal, N.S.W.,
-but as it proved a rank duffer, got up by the local storekeepers
-in a last effort to keep the township in existence,
-I made back again by ‘The Bridge,’ on chance of
-getting a job of droving with some of the mobs of sheep
-or cattle always passing through the Border town, bound
-south from the Central and Gulf stations.</p>
-
-<p>Queenslanders will remember that summer, on certain
-days of which men were stricken down in dozens, and
-birds fell dead off the trees in the fierce heat.</p>
-
-<p>There is no drearier track in Australia than the one I
-speak of—all pine-scrub, too thick for a dog to bark in,
-and the rest sand and ant-hills.</p>
-
-<p>There was nothing doing just then in ‘The Bridge,’
-so I pushed on for the Maranoa. It was only the beginning
-of summer, and I reckoned on finding water twenty-five
-miles along the track, at a hole in the Wullumgudgeree
-Creek, known of aforetime.</p>
-
-<p>It was a dismal ride, with nothing but walls of close-set
-scrub on each side, and sand, heavy underfoot, and
-glaring ahead. Even the horses seemed to feel its
-<a name="png.026" id="png.026" href="#png.026"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>12<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>influence as they ploughed along, heads bent down, coats
-black with sweat, and big clusters of flies swarming
-thickly at their leather eye-guards. Even one’s own
-close-knit veil was but poor protection, for the pests
-gathered on it in such numbers as to almost obscure the
-sight. The flies and mosquitoes<!-- TN: original reads "mosquitos" --> were a caution that
-summer. However, shogging steadily on, with a pull at
-the water-bag now and then, I at length reached the
-creek, dry as a bone where it crossed the road. But,
-following it down through the scrub, I found the hole,
-pretty muddy and fast diminishing. Nor was it improved
-by the dog and the pack-horse rushing into it and rolling
-before I could stop them.</p>
-
-<p>The sun was setting, a big red ball, over the tops of the
-pines as I hobbled out, pitched the tent on one side of
-the round open space, lit a fire, and slung the billy.
-There was not bad picking for the horses, and as I belled
-the pack I fervently trusted they would not stray far in
-such a God-forsaken spot.</p>
-
-<p>After supper—damper, mutton and sardines, washed
-down by tea, boiled, skimmed and strained three times
-before coming to table—I felt pretty comfortable, and
-lay down with my head on one of the swags to enjoy a
-smoke and fight the mosquitoes<!-- TN: original reads "mosquitos" -->, who were beginning to
-sample freely. The sun had set, but the moon, big,
-yellow and hot-looking, hung in a hazy sky.</p>
-
-<p>But for the buzzing of the insects and the snoring of
-the dog, fast asleep in a deep hole scratched in the sand,
-everything was very quiet. The thick scrub into which
-the horses had retreated deadened the sound of the bell.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.027" id="png.027" href="#png.027"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>13<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Presently, however, evidently compassionating my
-lonely state, a little bird, after partaking of the remnants
-of my supper, came and perched on the ridge-pole of the
-tent, and piped forth at short intervals in a shrill monotone.
-‘Sweet, pretty creature! Pretty, sweet, little
-creature!’ He was company of a sort, spite of his
-egoism. But there was other toward.</p>
-
-<p>The flies had, ere this, gone to roost, but the mosquitoes
-were troublesome. They had also taken anticipatory
-possession of the tent. Burning some old rags, I cleared
-them out of that, fixed up the netting, and was preparing
-to turn in, when I heard the sound of hoofs coming
-thump, thump, down the dry creek bed. The dog,
-awaking, barked loudly, and in a minute or two a man
-and a woman rode into the bright firelight. They each
-had a big swag in front of them; and at a glance I saw
-that their horses were not only well-bred, but had come
-far and fast.</p>
-
-<p>‘Water!’ exclaimed the man.</p>
-
-<p>I gave him some; and he lifted the woman off and
-handed her the mug.</p>
-
-<p>‘We’re travellin’, mate,’ said he, as I helped him
-to unsaddle. ‘Got bushed atween ’ere an’ the Maranoa.
-A bit o’ damned bad country!’</p>
-
-<p>He had not come from that direction at all; but in
-such a scrub all directions were much alike. And, anyhow,
-it was no business of mine. They had plenty of
-tucker, and I put the billy on again.</p>
-
-<p>As the woman stood at the fire, holding up her riding-dress
-with one hand and with the other hastily fastening
-<a name="png.028" id="png.028" href="#png.028"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>14<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>some stray braids of long hair that had come adrift,
-I saw that she was a fresh-faced, pleasant-featured girl of
-about eighteen or nineteen. As she presently dropped
-her skirt, took off her hat, and used both hands to her
-hair, I noticed by the flickering light a red, angry-looking
-scar extending from the bridge of the nose up to and
-across the left eyebrow.</p>
-
-<p>Her companion was a type I knew well. A cattleman
-all over, from the long, lean, curved legs of him to the
-sharp-eyed, tanned, resolute face. And from the swag I
-saw sticking out the curiously-carved handle of a stockwhip.
-They both seemed weary and thoughtful, and
-after supper I offered them the shelter of the tent. The
-man thanked me.</p>
-
-<p>‘The missus,’ said he, ‘’ll be only too glad of the
-chance. She ain’t much used to campin’ out.’</p>
-
-<p>So they lugged their belongings inside, whilst, making
-up the fire, and throwing some green bushes on it to
-drive the skeeters away, I laid on my blankets, with the
-pack-saddle for a pillow, and the dog at my feet.</p>
-
-<p>Awaking about midnight, as most bushmen do, I saw
-that big clouds were sailing fast across the moon. The
-air had become rather chilly, and, throwing more wood
-on the fire, I stood warming myself and filling my pipe.
-The dog, also getting up, yawned sleepily, and came and
-gazed into the blaze. The little bird from the ridge-pole
-still chirped its eulogistic call, but drowsily, and with
-effort, as of one who nods and winks. From the scrub
-came the faint tinkling of bells, showing that the horses
-were feeding steadily.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.029" id="png.029" href="#png.029"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>15<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Suddenly the silence was broken by the peculiar long,
-rumbling whinny with which a straggling horse greets the
-presence of others. Then I heard the hobble-chains
-clanking as our horses galloped up to inspect the newcomer.
-Then ensued a short pause, followed by the
-sound of a wild snorting stampede as they crashed away,
-their hobbles jingling and bells ringing furiously through
-the scrub.</p>
-
-<p>‘Bother!’ thought I, as the noise grew fainter and
-fainter, ‘that means, most likely, a long walk in the
-morning. Hang all brombees!’</p>
-
-<p>Preparing to lie down again, in not the best of tempers,
-I became aware of at least one horse steadily making
-towards the camp. As the steps approached, the dog,
-growling low, and with every hair bristling, backed
-towards the tent. A cold feeling of disquiet and nervousness
-took possession of me as I saw this.</p>
-
-<p>Turning from watching the animal, my eye caught a
-dark mass between scrub and fire. Just then the moon
-shone out from behind a bank, and, not ten yards away,
-stood a horseman, his head drooping on his chest, his
-body rocking slightly in the saddle.</p>
-
-<p>I gave a sigh of relief. Drunken riders are common
-enough in the Bush. And, with all trepidation vanished,
-I sang out gruffly <span class="nw">enough,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Better get off, mate, before you fall off! Come and
-have a drink of tea!’</p>
-
-<p>He would be a nuisance, of course, with the inevitable
-bottle of rum in his swag, and in his person all the
-loathsome imbecility inseparable from the sobering-up
-<a name="png.030" id="png.030" href="#png.030"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>16<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>process. But, as an institution, he had to be attended
-to.</p>
-
-<p>And I repeated my invitation irritably to him, sitting
-there in the bright moonlight, one hand grasping the
-reins, the other resting on the wither, his chin on his
-breast, staring fixedly at me from under the broad-leafed
-hat.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh,’ I muttered, ‘you drunken brute! I’ve got to
-lift you down, have I! About all you’re fit for is to
-frighten people’s horses away.’</p>
-
-<p>The dog, only his head protruding from under the tent,
-kept up a long, snarling, choking growl, broken by gasps
-for fresh breath.</p>
-
-<p>Advancing, I placed my hand upon the horseman’s.
-It was like ice. Looking up, I saw a black-whiskered
-face, ashen-grey under the hat-leaf, and apparently leaning
-forward to gaze into mine out of wide-open, staring,
-glassy eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, realising the meaning of the thing, I ran to
-one side and shouted hurriedly—I know not what.</p>
-
-<p>Then I heard someone in the tent cursing the dog,
-who yelped, as from a kick, and, presently, the stranger
-came out and walked up to the fire. Standing away, and
-in deep shadow, he did not see me. But, catching sight
-of that dread rider, sitting motionless, he went over and
-peered into its face.</p>
-
-<p>Then with a tremendous oath he sprang back, and I
-could see his sharp-cut features working with emotion as
-he exclaimed, ‘George! What game’s this?’</p>
-
-<p>Advancing again he stroked the horse, and, as I had
-<a name="png.031" id="png.031" href="#png.031"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>17<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>done, placed one of his hands on that other so cold
-one.</p>
-
-<p>Apparently convinced, he ran into the tent, whence
-came in a minute an excited murmur of voices.</p>
-
-<p>A heavy cloud was across the moon, but I could make
-out the pair fumbling for their bridles amongst a heap of
-saddlery at the foot of a sapling.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the horse was making ineffectual tugs at the
-bridle to get its head down to some dry tussocks growing
-near. But all its straining could not relax by one inch
-the steel-like grip of those dead fingers. Only the corpse
-at each jerk nodded in a ghastly cordial sort of fashion.</p>
-
-<p>Presently, moonlight filled the little plain again, and
-the horse, growing impatient, turned and made off towards
-the sound of the distant bells.</p>
-
-<p>Taking heart of grace, I ran up and caught it. As I
-led it back I noticed that the rider’s legs were bound
-tightly to the saddle by straps passed from the front D’s
-over the thighs to the ones on the cantle.</p>
-
-<p>As I began to undo them I saw the man slinging off
-into the scrub with the woman at his heels. I shouted
-to them. But they took no notice.</p>
-
-<p>Working away at the knots and buckles, the chin-strap
-slipped, the jaw fell, and the gleaming teeth showed in
-such an awful grin that I involuntarily stepped back.</p>
-
-<p>Now the hat tumbled off, revealing the features of a
-young man with coal-black hair and moustache, and
-beard flecked with spots of dry white foam.</p>
-
-<p>Even at its best, I should have called it a hard, cruel
-face. It was simply hideous now.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.032" id="png.032" href="#png.032"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>18<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>As I stood irresolutely staring, a voice behind me made
-me jump. It was the woman.</p>
-
-<p>‘Here,’ she said, as with trembling fingers she essayed
-to loosen the dead grasp on the reins, ‘I’ll help you. He
-was a real bad un! But he couldn’t scare me when he
-were alive, an’ I aint goin’ to let him do it now. See’
-(pointing to the cut on her forehead), ‘this is the last
-thing he done. Slip your knife through them reins,’ she
-continued. ‘He’s had a fit, or a stroke o’ the sun, an’
-he’ll never slacken his grip, no more’n he would my
-throat if he could ha’ got hold on it. He was my husband;
-an’ jealous of his own shadder. But I never minded
-much till he took to knockin’ me about. I couldn’t
-stand that. So I cleared with Jim yonder.’</p>
-
-<p>By this, we had undone the saddle and breast-plate
-straps with which the man, feeling himself mortally
-struck, and wishful to avoid falling off and lying there to
-rot in that wild scrub, had, in perhaps his last agony, tied
-himself to the saddle. And between us we let him slide
-gently down on to the sand, whilst the horse shook itself,
-sniffed unconcernedly at the body, and wandered away
-to the others.</p>
-
-<p>For a while she stood gazing on the thing as it lay
-there with stiffly curved legs and upturned glassy
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Then she smiled a little out of a white face, set hard
-with horror and detestation, <span class="nw">saying,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘After all, perhaps, he thought a lot of me!’ And,
-going to the tent, she returned with a blanket, and carefully
-spread it over the corpse.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.033" id="png.033" href="#png.033"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>19<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Then, as the man came up with the horses and began
-to saddle them, she said, holding out her <span class="nw">hand,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘So long! an’ many thanks. You’ve bin a real right
-bower. We’re a-goin’ into the Bridge, an’ we’ll send
-the traps out, all square an’ fair. So long! agen.’</p>
-
-<p>‘So long, mate!’ shouted the man, with a tremor in
-his voice lacking in the woman’s. And then they rode
-away, two dark shapes against the moonlit scrub.</p>
-
-<p>‘Died by the visitation of God,’ said the Coroner’s Jury.</p>
-
-<p>‘Served him damned well right!’ said the district
-generally, who knew the story.</p>
-
-<p>But travellers along the Maranoa track make a point of
-giving ‘Dead Man’s Camp’ a very wide berth.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="The Shanghai-ing of Peter Barlow"><a name="png.034" id="png.034" href="#png.034"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>20<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>THE SHANGHAI-ING OF PETER
-BARLOW.</h2>
-
-
-<p class="noindent">‘<span class="smc">Yes</span>, Peter, no doubt they’re a couple of fine colts, and
-should make good steppers. I hope you’ll have them
-well broken in for the drag by the time I return. Then,
-with the other pair of browns, they ought to turn out
-about the smartest four-in-hand in the district.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Goin’ away, sir?’ asked Peter Barlow, Head Stockman
-and Chief of Horse at Wicklow Downs.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, Peter; I’m thinking of taking a trip to the Old
-Country,’ replied Mr Forrest, owner of the big cattle
-station on the border. ‘I mean to take Mrs Forrest and
-the children, and be away twelve months; so you’ll have
-plenty of time to fix up a team. We start in three weeks
-from to-day.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, sir,’ said Peter, ‘afore you goes I shouldn’t
-mind takin’ a spell down country myself, if you haven’t
-no objection.’</p>
-
-<p>His employer turned sharply round from the horse-yard
-rail, and looked at the young fellow.</p>
-
-<p>Twenty-five, born on the station, an orphan, fairly
-steady, very useful, the best rough-rider in the district,
-<a name="png.035" id="png.035" href="#png.035"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>21<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>never more than fifty miles away from home in his life.
-Such was the record of Peter Barlow, who chewed a
-straw, and smiled as he noticed his master’s surprise.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, what’s bitten you, my lad,’ said the latter, ‘that
-you want to get away amongst the spielers and forties of
-the big smoke? Isn’t Combington large enough for a
-spree?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, sir,’ replied Peter, rather sheepishly, ‘you see,
-they’re always a-poking borack an’ a-chiackin’ o’ me over
-in the hut because I’ve never seed nothin’. There’s
-chaps there as has been everywheres, an’ can talk nineteen
-to the dozen o’ the things they’ve gone through, an’
-me a-settin’ listenin’ like a stuffed dummy.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I see, Peter,’ said Mr Forrest, laughing, ‘you want to
-travel. “Home-keeping youths have ever homely wits,”
-eh, Peter? Believe me, my lad, for all that, you’re
-better off as you are, notwithstanding the gas of those
-other fellows. However, you may take a month if you
-like. I think, though, that you’ll be glad to get back in
-the half of it. But how would it do for you to come
-down with us? I shall be staying in town for a week or
-so, and could often see you, and that you didn’t get into
-any mischief.’</p>
-
-<p>But Peter shook his head sagely, <span class="nw">saying,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘You see, sir, I’d like to git back in about a fortnight
-or so. There’s that lot o’ calves in the heifer paddock
-to be weaned, an’ that last lot o’ foals ’ll want brandin’,
-<span class="nw">an’—’</span></p>
-
-<p>‘All right, Peter, my boy,’ interrupted the squatter,
-laughing again. ‘Put money in thy purse, go forth and
-<a name="png.036" id="png.036" href="#png.036"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>22<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>see the world. Only, when you’re tired, don’t forget the
-track back to the old station.’</p>
-
-<p>So, after a day or two, Peter rode 150 miles to
-the railway terminus, and, leaving his horse in a paddock,
-embarked on a very strange adventure, and one
-that will be handed down with ever-increasing embroidery
-to each generation of Barlows, until, in time,
-the narrative overshadows that of Munchausen. It
-would be tedious to attempt to depict Peter’s astonishment
-at the first sight of steam. As a matter of fact, he
-was not a bit surprised—or, if he was, he didn’t show it.
-It takes more than the first sight of an express train to
-upset the marvellous stoicism, or adaptability—which is
-it?—of the Native-Born. It takes all that subsequently
-befel<!-- TN: a bit old-fashioned but ok by OED --> to do so. Peter arrived in safety at the first large
-inland town. Here he tarried awhile and enjoyed himself
-after the manner of his kind. He stared into shop
-windows; went to a race meeting, and there lost five
-pounds to a monte man. With a dim notion percolating
-under his cabbage-tree that he had been cheated, he
-made a furious attack on both man and table. Sequel—five
-shillings or twenty-four hours. This, now, was something
-like life! Would he not soon be able to ruffle it
-with the loudest of them on his return?</p>
-
-<p>After this exploit Peter decided to proceed on his travels.</p>
-
-<p>His first emotion of expressed surprise was displayed
-at sight of the sea. As the train ran along the embankment,
-and the stretch of water studded with ships’ masts
-caught his eye, he <span class="nw">exclaimed,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘By Jinks! that’s a thunderin’ big lagoon if yer likes.
-<a name="png.037" id="png.037" href="#png.037"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>23<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>But what’s all that dead timber a-stickin’ up in it?
-Must ha’ been a good-sized flood hereabout!’</p>
-
-<p>Then his fellow-travellers laughed; and Peter, abashed,
-withdrew into himself, but stared steadily over that
-wondrous expanse of water whose like so far exceeded
-his imaginings.</p>
-
-<p>At the port Fate led him—of all people in the world—to
-put up at a sailors’ boarding-house. And here, for the
-first time in his life, he found himself an oracle.</p>
-
-<p>Many sailors ‘go up the Bush.’ But those who get so
-far as where Peter hailed from seldom or never return to
-the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, no one criticising, wondrous were the yarns
-he spun to an ever-shifting audience of all nations. Wondrous
-yarns of fierce blacks, of men perishing of thirst and
-hunger in the lonely bush, of wild cattle, of bucking horses,
-of the far inland life. And, in return, they told him tales of
-the stormy seas, and drank heartily at his expense. The
-port was busy, wages high, and men scarce. But Peter’s
-audience never failed him. The fame of the ‘Jolly
-Bushman down at Gallagher’s’ had spread about the
-shipping, and whole crews used to drop in of an evening
-to listen to Peter and drink his beer and rum.</p>
-
-<p>It would have taken a longer purse than Peter’s to
-stand this kind of thing.</p>
-
-<p>He had put aside enough money to take him back, and
-now he resolved to travel no further. He had heard and
-seen sufficient; and, above all, been listened to with
-deference and attention.</p>
-
-<p>Besides, had he not been on board of ships and there
-<a name="png.038" id="png.038" href="#png.038"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>24<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>drank rum of such strength as made his very hair stand
-on end; and eaten biscuits and salt junk.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, once his friends had taken him out and
-away upon the ‘lagoon,’ away so far, than when he
-looked for his native land he beheld it not. Then the
-water, hitherto smooth, gradually began to heave and
-swell into hills as tall as the Wonga Ranges, and,
-presently, he fell deadly sick and lay in the salt water in
-the boat’s bottom, feeling as if the very soul-bolts were
-being wrenched out of him.</p>
-
-<p>Afterwards his friends had apologised, and said something
-about ‘a squall.’ But Peter would venture no more.</p>
-
-<p>These things, and many others, would he have to tell.
-Also the time was approaching for the weaning of calves
-and branding of foals. He had spent nearly all his money.
-But that did not trouble him. For the future he must be a
-bold man who, in the hut, or on the run, could snub Peter
-Barlow. One last jovial evening he and his sea-friends
-would have together, and then, hey for the far-inland
-scrubs and rolling downs.</p>
-
-<p>So far as Peter recollected, it <em>was</em> a jovial evening.
-He had sung his famous ballad of ‘The Wild Australian
-Boy,’ applauded to the echo as he had never been at
-home. He had drunk healths innumerable in divers
-liquors; had accepted as much strong ‘niggerhead’ in
-parting gifts—it was all they possessed—as would have
-stocked a tobacconist’s shop, and seen the last guest
-lurch out into the night.</p>
-
-<p>Then Gallagher had proposed one more drink, ‘for
-luck!’ After that—oblivion.</p>
-
-<p class="tb"><a name="png.039" id="png.039" href="#png.039"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>25<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>.        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .</p>
-
-<p>When Peter awoke, his first thought was that he must
-have fallen asleep in the saddle, as he had done before
-now when camping out with cattle from the back of the run.</p>
-
-<p>But, on this occasion, his throat was hot and dry, and
-his head full of ringing bells. Raising himself, he
-bumped his nose sharply, and fell back to consider.</p>
-
-<p>It was almost dark, and he could hear a noise of wind
-and of rushing waters. Also he felt a rocking motion
-which assuredly was not that of a feeding horse.</p>
-
-<p>He had heard the same sounds and felt the same
-motion recently, but he could not recollect when.
-Presently a door slid open, and a flood of sunshine came
-in, with a black face in the midst of it.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ahi,’ said a voice, as Peter blinked at its owner.
-‘You ’wake now, eh? Copper hot, I ’spect? Have
-drink?’ and the speaker handed up a hook-pot full of
-water.</p>
-
-<p>Peter drank copiously, and made shift to get out.</p>
-
-<p>‘Where the blazes am I?’ he exclaimed, weak and
-trembling all over, as his feet touched the deck.</p>
-
-<p>‘Barque <cite>John F. Harkins</cite>, o’ Boston, State o’ Maine.
-I’m de doctor. Guess you’ve been shanghaied. Best
-come out afore de greaser gets mad.’</p>
-
-<p>This was Greek to poor Peter. But, stumbling over
-the door-sill, he gazed about him with a wildly-amazed
-look, which made the negro cook grin more widely than
-ever.</p>
-
-<p>All around was blue water, blue water from where it
-touched the sky-line to where, close to him, it rushed
-<a name="png.040" id="png.040" href="#png.040"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>26<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>swiftly past, curling, white-tipped. Above his head acres
-of snowy canvas bellied in graceful curves aloft into a
-blue sky; everywhere a maze of ropes and gear, crossed
-and re-crossed like the threads of a spider’s web.</p>
-
-<p>Peter gasped. He was astonished and dismayed too
-deeply for words; and at the expression of his face the
-darkey laughed outright.</p>
-
-<p>The ship giving a sudden lurch, he staggered, slipped
-over to leeward, and clutched a belaying pin. Then he
-heard a bell strike somewhere. Then men came out of a
-hole in the deck near by, and one, staring hard, <span class="nw">exclaimed,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Why, damn my rags, if this ain’t the Jolly Bushman
-come to sea!’</p>
-
-<p>‘What!’ shouted the mate, walking for’ard to meet his
-watch. ‘Isn’t he a sailor-man?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Nary sailor-man,’ replied the other. ‘He’s a fellow
-from the country—a good sort o’ chap—but as green’s
-they make ’em as regards o’ salt water.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Damn that Gallagher!’ exclaimed the officer. ‘He
-brought the coon aboard, an’ got the bounty, swearin’ he
-was a shellback all over—blood Stockholm tar, and every
-hair on his head a rope yarn! If ever we fetch Coalport
-again I’ll skin that Irish thief!’</p>
-
-<p>So also affirmed the captain of the <cite>John F. Harkins</cite>,
-who was out of pocket a month’s advance, besides two
-pounds “head money,” to the crimp who had netted
-poor Peter.</p>
-
-<p>Luckily, very luckily for Peter, he had not fallen into
-the hands of a set of ‘white-washed Americans,’
-half Irish, half anything, proficients in the art of
-<a name="png.041" id="png.041" href="#png.041"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>27<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>sea-bullying, and in the use of revolvers and knuckle-dusters.</p>
-
-<p>The officers and most of the men of the <cite>John F.</cite> were
-genuine Down-Easters, natives of Salem, Martha’s Vineyard,
-and thereabout, shrewd and kindly people; and,
-though all naturally indignant at the trick played upon
-them, too just to visit their wrath on its unfortunate object.</p>
-
-<p>Presently Peter was recognised by the steward, who
-had tasted of his hospitality ashore, and who now, seeing
-the poor fellow still suffering from the effects of the
-narcotic administered in that last ‘for luck’ drink of
-scamp Gallagher’s, put him to bed and brought him
-restoratives. So, in due course, Peter became his own
-man again, and got fine-weather sea-legs upon him, and
-would have been comparatively happy but for thoughts
-of those far-away calves and foals, and the clumsy fingers
-of a certain assistant stockman. They taught him how
-to sweep decks, coil up ropes, and make sinnet. They
-also coaxed him aloft; but he never could get further up
-the rigging than the futtock-shrouds. There he stuck
-helplessly, and over them he never went. He was young
-and light and active; but, somehow, he couldn’t bend his
-body outward into empty air and trust its weight to
-a little bit of rope no thicker than a clothes-line. It
-didn’t seem natural. One cannot make a sailor at
-twenty-five.</p>
-
-<p>The <cite>John F.</cite> was bound for Colombo, thence to Hamburg,
-and, so far, everything had been fine sailing. But
-one day a dead-ahead gale arose and blew fiercely for
-three days.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.042" id="png.042" href="#png.042"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>28<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Then it was that Peter began to realise earnestly what
-he had before but dimly suspected, viz., that on such an
-occasion one foot of dry land is worth ten thousand
-acres of foaming ocean. Easier by far would it have
-been for him to sit the roughest colt that ever
-bucked than to stand a minute erect on the barque’s
-deck.</p>
-
-<p>Of such jumping and rearing, plunging and swerving,
-Peter had possessed no conception before, except in the
-saddle. There, however, he would have been comparatively
-safe. Here he was tossed about apparently at
-the pleasure of the great creature beneath him—one
-minute on to the back of his head, the next in the
-lee-scuppers. When he arose, dripping and grasping
-blindly for support, the rushing past of big seas, the wild,
-stern hum in the strained rigging, the roar of the blast
-in the bellies of the tugging topsails, and the swirling of
-green water round his legs, so bewildered him that he
-was unable to distinguish one end of the ship from the
-other.</p>
-
-<p>Under the circumstances, he did the wisest thing he
-could, and turned into his bunk. There he lay, and
-wondered with all his might why men should go to sea.</p>
-
-<p>On the fourth day, the gale moderating, they made sail
-again. During this operation an unfortunate A.B. fell from
-the main-yard, and broke his leg. The captain did his
-best, but he was, like the rest, quite unskilled, and the
-poor fellow lay in agony. Two days after this, when
-nearly a calm, the mate roused the skipper out of a nap
-<span class="nw">with,—</span></p>
-
-<p><a name="png.043" id="png.043" href="#png.043"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>29<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘Here’s one of them big packet boats a-overhaulin’ us,
-sir.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well,’ replied the skipper sleepily, ‘what about it?
-Let her rip. I don’t want her. Wish we had her wind,
-that’s all.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Poor Bill’s leg, sir,’ answered the other.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, of course; I forgot,’ said the skipper. ‘Stop the
-beggar, by all manner of means. She’ll have a doctor,
-an’ ice, an’ all sorts o’ fixin’s on board. Run the gridiron
-half-mast, Mr Stokes. They packets don’t care much
-about losin’ time for sich a trifle as a broken leg, but thet
-oughter ease her down.’</p>
-
-<p>And so it did. No sooner was the American flag seen
-flying half-way up the signal halliards than the steamer
-kept away, and came thundering down upon the barque.</p>
-
-<p>‘What’s the matter?’ shouted someone, as she slowed
-nearly alongside.</p>
-
-<p>‘A doctor!’ roared the mate. ‘Man very bad with a
-broken leg!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Send him on board, and look smart,’ was the reply.</p>
-
-<p>So a boat was lowered, and amongst its crew was Peter
-Barlow, who, from the first, had been told off to attend
-the injured man, and who assisted to carry him up the
-gangway-ladder of the R.M.S. <cite>Barcelona</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>‘Umph, umph,’ said the surgeon; ‘he’ll have to stay
-here if he wants to save his leg.’ Then to Peter, ‘Off
-you go back, my lad, and get his kit and what money’s
-coming to him. It’ll be many a long day before he sails
-the sea again.’</p>
-
-<p>But Peter, whose eyes had been roving over the
-<a name="png.044" id="png.044" href="#png.044"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>30<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>surrounding crowd, suddenly, to the medico’s astonishment,
-shouting,—‘The boss, by G—d!’ rushed through the
-people, and, regardless of appearances, seized a gentleman’s
-hand and shook it frantically, <span class="nw">exclaiming,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, Mr Forrest, sir, don’t you know me? I’m Peter,
-sir—Peter Barlow, from the ole station. I’ve been
-shanghaied an’ locussed away to sea, an’ I wants to git
-back home again!’</p>
-
-<p>Mr Forrest was more astonished than Peter at such a
-meeting. Matters, however, were soon arranged.</p>
-
-<p>Peter went on to Colombo in the <cite>Barcelona</cite>, and, in a
-fortnight, joining another boat, duly arrived at Wicklow
-Downs, whence he has never since stirred.</p>
-
-<p>And, if the reader chance one day to journey thither,
-he may hear at first hand this story, embellished with
-breezy Bush idioms and phrases that render it infinitely
-more graphic and stirring a version, but which, somehow,
-do not read well in type.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="‘Ex Sardanapalus’"><a name="png.045" id="png.045" href="#png.045"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>31<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘EX SARDANAPALUS.’</h2>
-
-
-<p class="noindent">‘<span class="smc">Make</span> it eight bells! Go below, the starboard watch!’</p>
-
-<p>A few minutes later, and eight men sat on eight sea-chests,
-looking hungrily across at one another. Between
-them lay an empty meat-kid.<a name="fn1" id="fn1"></a><a title="Go to footnote 1"
- href="#Footnote1" class="fnanchor"><span
- class="ns">[Footnote </span>1<span class="ns">]
- </span></a> In a box alongside were
-some biscuits, black and honeycombed with weevil-holes.
-Dinner was over in the <cite>Sardanapalus’</cite> fo’c’stle, but still
-her starboard watch glared hungrily at each other.</p>
-
-<p>‘I’ve lost two good stone since I jined this starvation
-hooker!’ presently growled one. ‘I ain’t never full, and
-I kin feel them cussed worms out o’ the bread a-crawlin’
-about in my stummick like so many snakeses.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Same ’ere, matey,’ chimed in another. ‘A mouthful
-o’ salt horse an’ a bite o’ rotten bread for breakfus, ditto
-for dinner, an’ a soldier’s supper;<a name="fn2" id="fn2"></a><a title="Go to footnote 2"
- href="#Footnote2" class="fnanchor"><span
- class="ns">[Footnote </span>2<span class="ns">]
- </span></a> with lime-juice an’
-winegar chucked in, according to the Hack,<a name="fn3" id="fn3"></a><a title="Go to footnote 3"
- href="#Footnote3" class="fnanchor"><span
- class="ns">[Footnote </span>3<span class="ns">]
- </span></a> ain’t to say
-fattenin’.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That’s wot’s the matter, when the skipper finds the
-ship,’ remarked a third. ‘Yer gets yer whack, an’ ye gits
-nae mair, as the Scotchies has it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘We doesn’t even get that itself,’ put in another, who
-<a name="png.046" id="png.046" href="#png.046"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>32<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>was sitting on the edge of his bunk. ‘That yaller hound
-of a steward gives short weight all round. <!-- TN: superfluous opening single quote -->Lord!’ he
-continued, ‘only to think that, this time last year, I was
-a-smackin’ my chops over mutton uns; an’ full and plenty
-of everythin’ in the Hostralian Bush. What a hass I was
-to leave it! One’d think there was some sort o’ damned
-magic in the sea to be able to draw a feller a thousand
-miles down from good times, good tucker, good pay, an’
-all night in, with a spree whenever you felt fit.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Too good, Billy, altogether,’ piped up a grey-headed
-old chap. ‘An’ that’s what’s the matter. You gets up
-the Bush, you gets as fat as a bacon hog, you lives like a
-gentleman, an’, in the long run, it don’t agree with your
-constitooshun. You gets the boil,<a name="fn4" id="fn4"></a><a title="Go to footnote 4"
- href="#Footnote4" class="fnanchor"><span
- class="ns">[Footnote </span>4<span class="ns">]
- </span></a> an’ your liver turns
-a sort o’ dandy-grey, russet-colour, and you misses the
-gravy-eye<a name="fn5" id="fn5"></a><a title="Go to footnote 5"
- href="#Footnote5" class="fnanchor"><span
- class="ns">[Footnote </span>5<span class="ns">]
- </span></a> trick at the wheel, an’ you misses the jumpin’
-out o’ a wet bunk, all standin’ in wet clothes, and the
-hissle o’ the gale in your ears, an’ the woof o’ the cold
-water over your boot-tops, an’ down the small o’ your
-back as ye comes a-shiverin’ an’ a-shakin’ on deck.
-You’ve bin used to this sort o’ thing all your life, Billy,
-an’ your liver an’ all the other innard parts gives notice
-when they’re a-tired o’ the soft lyin’ an’ the good livin’
-up-country, an’ drives ye back to the old life an’ the old
-ways agin. That’s where the magic comes in, my
-son.’</p>
-
-<p>After this there was silence for a while. Each man’s
-face poked over his bunk with a short clay pipe in its
-<a name="png.047" id="png.047" href="#png.047"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>33<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>mouth. Strong, rank fumes of tobacco filled the
-place.</p>
-
-<p>‘I say, boys,’ suddenly exclaimed one, ‘what’s this
-hooker got in her?’</p>
-
-<p>‘General,’ replied the old man, whose name was
-Nestor. ‘I heerd the customs officer at Gravesend say
-as it was one o’ the walluablest general cargers as ’ad
-ever left the docks.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well then, mates,’ said the other, ‘all I’ve got to remark
-is as we’re the biggest an’ softest set o’ fools as ever
-left the docks, to go a-starvin’ in this fashion, when t’other
-side o’ that there bulkhead’s every sort o’ tucker you can
-mention.’</p>
-
-<p class="tb">.        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .</p>
-
-<p>‘Make it eight bells! Go below, the starboard watch!’</p>
-
-<p>The same eight men sat on their respective sea-chests.</p>
-
-<p>Between them stood their allowance of beef and biscuit.
-But it was untouched. Yet the meal had been in
-progress an hour.</p>
-
-<p>Alongside of him every man had one or more tins of
-some kind of preserved provisions, out of which he was
-keeping his plate supplied to an accompaniment of plain
-and fancy biscuits.</p>
-
-<p>‘Try a little o’ this ’ere fresh herrin’, Jim,’ said one to
-his neighbour very politely; ‘I kin recommend it as
-tasty.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Thank ye, Billy (looking at the label, and passing his
-own tin), and ’ere’s some sheep’s tongues with tomaty
-sauce, which p’raps ’ll remind you on the Bush of Australier.’</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.048" id="png.048" href="#png.048"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>34<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘Ah, if we’d only a drop o’ good stuff now, to wash
-these ’ere tiddlewinks down with,’ exclaimed Nestor, ‘I’d
-feel happy as a king—an’ as full!’</p>
-
-<p>‘All in good time, dad,’ remarked Billy; ‘this ’ere’s
-only what the swells’d call a hinstalment—a triflin’ hinstalment
-o’ what the <cite>Sardinapples</cite> owes us for a whole
-month’s out-an’-out starvin’. Just wait awhile till we
-gets to the bottled ale an’ porter, which’ll likely be in
-the lower tiers, an’ then we’ll begin to live like gentlemen-shellbacks
-oughter.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I votes as how we should let on to the port watch,’
-presently said a man, as he finished off his repast with a
-handful of muscatels and blanched almonds.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ay,’ responded old Nestor. ‘It do seem mean, us
-livin’ high, an’ them a-drawin’ their belts tighter every
-day. Besides,’ added he, meditatively, ‘company is
-pleasing; an’ there’ll be all the more for Pentridge. Not
-that I thinks it needs come to that if we’re careful. But
-(with a doubtful shake of the head) I’m afraid the grog’ll
-be too much for some of us when we gits to it.’</p>
-
-<p>A word here as to the <cite>Sardanapalus</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>She was one of the old-fashioned frigate-built ships—somewhat
-slow, but comfortable.<!-- TN: punctuation invisible --> Carrying, as per
-owner’s advertisement, ‘a first-class milch cow and surgeon,’
-she was rather a favourite with that description of
-passengers who, obeying a doctor’s prescription, were
-obliged to take ‘a long sea voyage.’ The passage money
-was very high. There were no ‘intermediates,’ no subdivisions.
-A very good table was kept, and the ‘dog-basket’
-and ‘menavelings’ from it alone would have
-<a name="png.049" id="png.049" href="#png.049"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>35<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>supplied the fo’c’stle twice over. But for these leavings
-a host of ill-fed, brass-bound apprentices, boys, and
-petty officers were ever on the watch—the former knowing
-as crows, sharp as kites. Foremast Jack had not the
-ghost of a chance with them.</p>
-
-<p>Ever since she slipped along the ways the <cite>Sardanapalus</cite>
-had borne the reputation of being a ‘hungry ship.’
-More than half-a-dozen times had she hauled into dock
-with a collar of clean picked beef bones around her
-figure-head. It was currently understood that the
-skipper ‘found’ the ship. He was an Orkney man,
-owned a part of her; and probably did so. She was a
-regular trader at that time. She is now a custom-house
-hulk in an East Indian harbour.</p>
-
-<p>The chief officer was a native of Vermont, U.S., and,
-with regard to the crew, a bit of a bully. As he was
-wont to often inform them, with the national snuffle
-<span class="nw">intensified,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘I’m a big lump of a horse—a high-bred stepper—an’
-when I kick bones fly.’</p>
-
-<p>He came out a loser by this gift, as will be presently
-seen.</p>
-
-<p>Long before the opening of this yarn the crew had
-remonstrated with their superiors about their food. The
-captain had laughed at them, and the mate inquired
-whether they imagined the <cite>Sardanapalus</cite> had been
-specially fitted out as a cook-shop for their pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps it was this that now made them linger joyfully
-over their stolen meals; and, occasionally, explore with
-naked lights the ‘general’ when they ought to have
-<a name="png.050" id="png.050" href="#png.050"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>36<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>been sleeping on empty stomachs in their watch
-below.</p>
-
-<p>It being an article of faith with the crew that the chief
-mate was responsible for the cargo, they felt a thorough
-pleasure in its total destruction. Nestor, old sea-lawyer
-that he was, had told them that, although a parcel might
-be opened and the contents abstracted, yet, could the
-smallest portion of the case, cask, or whatever it chanced
-to be, be produced, the mate would be held blameless.
-But, on the other hand, if not a vestige of anything were
-to be found to correspond with the item in the manifest,
-then would the chief assuredly be mulcted in the full
-value of the missing article. With this devoutly-wished-for
-end in view, any light package was dragged for’ard,
-handed up, and given a free passage. This was criminal
-and indefensible. But they hated the Yankee with a
-very hearty hatred. Had they not been able to discharge
-some of it in this manner there would have surely been a
-mutiny, and possibly bloodshed, before the termination
-of the passage.</p>
-
-<p>In his character of ‘horse’ the mate had one day
-broken a poor submissive German sailor’s ribs by repeated
-kicks from his heavy sea-boots. Such things
-create antipathies, even on board ship. Consignors and
-consignees alike would have danced with wrath and
-anguish could they have witnessed that night’s jettison.</p>
-
-<p>The forecastle was what is known as a ‘lower’ one.
-A bulkhead separated the two watches. This partition
-was composed of very heavy hardwood planking, on the
-after side of which was the fore-hatchway, filled up to
-<a name="png.051" id="png.051" href="#png.051"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>37<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>within six feet of the deck by a collection of sails, rope,
-water-tanks, bundles of hay for the cow, etc. Aft of
-these, at about the same height, stretched the cargo. It
-will thus be noticed that the <cite>Sardanapalus</cite> was not a
-‘full ship.’</p>
-
-<p>The starboard watch had removed two of the broad
-massive bulk-head planks. The port watch two also.
-At such times as a fresh supply of provisions was needed,
-four men from each watch in turn exploited the cargo.
-The others kept a look-out aft, and stood by the scuttle
-to receive and give things ‘a passage.’ As time passed,
-the crew, under the new regimen, began to grow fat and
-jolly-looking. They worked with a will, and as a pleasure
-to themselves. Also, to the utter astonishment of their
-superiors, they sang and skylarked in the second dog watch.</p>
-
-<p>‘And these,’ exclaimed the captain, ‘are the scoundrels
-who growled about their food!’</p>
-
-<p>He visited the galley, and sniffed and peered into the
-fo’c’sle coppers, and also cross-examined the cook and the
-steward.</p>
-
-<p>‘Give the beggars more rice,’ said he to the latter
-official—a sleek, oily quadroon. ‘Let ’em have “banyan
-day” three times a week. We’ll have enough meat
-left then for the trip home without buying any in
-port.’</p>
-
-<p>The crew grinned, but said nothing. The skipper was
-bothered.</p>
-
-<p>‘Had the fore-hatch off yesterday, didn’t you?’ he
-asked the mate.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yaas, sir,’ snuffled he.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.052" id="png.052" href="#png.052"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>38<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘Everythin’ seem all right? No cargo shifted or
-broached?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Naw,’ replied the mate; ‘seems ’bout the saame as
-when we left dock; an’ I oughter know, for I hed a sight
-o’ trouble fixin’ that deadweight so’s to trim her forrard.
-I wonder, naow,’<!-- TN: original has double quote --> he continued with a chuckle as at some
-joke, ‘how <em>It’s</em> a-gettin’ on down below thar?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Damn <em>It</em>!’ answered the captain shortly, as he turned
-away. He was in a bad temper that night. He hated
-to hear the men jolly; and instead of lying moodily about,
-silent and depressed, as of yore, in the six till eight
-watch, here were both watches on the t’gallant fo’c’stle
-putting all the strength of their united lungs into ‘Marching
-through Georgia.’</p>
-
-<p>Such a thing had never happened to Captain Flett
-before, and he took it as a personal insult. The mate,
-snubbed, went down on the main-deck and put a stopper
-on the singing with a yell of ‘Lee fore-braces there, and
-chuck yourselves about a bit!’ The yards didn’t want
-trimming in the least. So the men, who knew this,
-pulled slowly and silent, each with his mouth full of
-choice sweetmeats discovered the night previous.</p>
-
-<p>As yet they had found no strong liquors. But they
-had found nearly everything else. ‘Dry goods’ of every
-description, jewellery, clocks, firearms, stationery, patent
-medicines, etc. They had commenced operations, in
-the first place, under the main hatch, leaving all the fore
-part of the hold untouched. Without a purposeful
-search, no one would imagine cargo to have been
-broached. The throwing things, except <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">débris</i>—empty
-<a name="png.053" id="png.053" href="#png.053"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>39<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>cases, bottles, baskets, etc.—overboard had been discontinued.
-It took up too much time, and the labour was
-too heavy. Besides, reckoning by Nestor’s calculation,
-the mate’s pay-day was worth already some hundreds of
-pounds less than nothing.</p>
-
-<p>But one night, coming across a case of toilet soaps,
-pomades, scented oils, etc., the temptation proved irresistible,
-and a stock was laid in. The love of personal
-adornment runs strong at all times in Jack’s heart. On
-the following Sunday morning the t’gallant fo’c’sle
-resembled a barber’s shop in a big way of business. Jack
-clipped and shaved and anointed himself until he fairly
-shone and reeked with the produce of Rimmel. Never had
-fore part of ship smelled so sweetly. The passengers staggered
-about with their heads well up, sniffing delightedly.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, captain,’ said one—a gushing widow whose age
-was uncertain, but mourning fresh—‘we really must be
-approaching some tropical climes. These are the lovely
-“spicy breezes,” you know, “blowing soft o’er Ceylon’s
-isle.”’</p>
-
-<p>The skipper didn’t know, but, sniffing also, <span class="nw">answered,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Very likely, ma’am. But there’s no islands nearer ’n
-Tristan da Cunha, an’ I don’t think that there’s much
-spice about that one. I expect,’ he continued, glancing
-for’ard, ‘that it’s some of the hands titivatin’ themselves
-up. You see, ma’am, these scamps get all sorts of
-rubbishy oils and essences on an eastern voyage. One
-of ’em’s evidently found a bottle or two in the locker of
-his chest; and, now, he and his mates are swabbing
-themselves down with it.’</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.054" id="png.054" href="#png.054"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>40<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘Dear me, how very interesting,’ replied the widow
-blandly, with a languishing glance at the skipper. ‘But’<!-- TN: closing quote invisible -->
-(as a burst of hoarse laughter came on the scented wind)
-‘they’re a terribly rough set, are they not, captain? I’m
-sure, but for yourself and your brave officers, I shouldn’t
-feel safe for a minute. I think I heard someone say, too,
-that they actually complained about their food at the
-beginning of the journey.’</p>
-
-<p>This was touching the skipper on a tender spot.</p>
-
-<p>‘At first, ma’am, at first,’<!-- TN: original has double quote --> assented he severely, after a
-sharp suspicious look at the somewhat faded features.
-‘But they’ve found me out, now, ma’am. They know
-John Flett’s up to ’em and their little games. The less
-food you give a sailor, ma’am, the better he works. Full
-an’ plenty’s a mistake. Give ’em a belly full an’ they’ll
-growl from mornin’ till night, an’ all night through.
-They’ll growl, ma’am, I do assure you, at the very best of
-beef and pork, the whitest of biscuits, an’ the plumpest
-of rice. Growl! They’d growl if you gave ’em toasted
-angels!’</p>
-
-<p>‘What horrible wretches!’ exclaimed the widow sympathetically.
-‘And what a lot of worry you must have
-with them, captain!’</p>
-
-<p>‘No one but myself can imagine it, ma’am,’ replied
-the skipper, as he moved off, meditating on the possibility
-of stopping the usual dole of treacle for the Sunday
-duff. That laughter from for’ard annoyed him beyond
-endurance.</p>
-
-<p>Presently the cuddy went to luncheon; and the starboard
-watch to its dinner.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.055" id="png.055" href="#png.055"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>41<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>The lump of dark unleavened dough and hook-pot
-full of molasses were there, but untouched, and awaiting
-the ocean sepulchre which had been their fate for many
-past Sundays.</p>
-
-<p>‘I ralely don’t know what this is,’ said Bill, as he
-helped himself to a <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">paté de foie gras</i> out of a dozen which
-lay on the deck. ‘But whatever it is, it ain’t to be
-sneezed at. Some sorter swell pie, I reckons. Talk
-’bout jelly, lor! What you got there, Ned?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Looks like soup an’ bully ’ithout the bully,’ answered
-the man addressed, who was pouring a steaming mixture
-out of a tin which he had just taken from over the big
-slush lamp—‘But it says on the paper “Ju-li-enne.”
-Sounds as if some woman had a hand in it. It don’t
-go very high,’ he resumed, after a few mouthfuls, ‘seems
-thinnish-like—no body—give us some o’ your meat to
-mix with it, Nestor.’</p>
-
-<p>‘’Taint meat,’ said the old man. ‘It’s what they calls
-jugged ’are, and there’s no bones in it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Pity we couldn’t manage to hot this duff up,’ sighed
-one, cutting a huge slice off a big plum pudding; ‘but
-they’d smell it all over the ship.’</p>
-
-<p>‘The cake for me!’ exclaimed another, attacking one
-of Gunter’s masterpieces. ‘I ain’t seen a three-decker
-like this since I was a kid, an’ used to hang about
-smellin’ at the tip-top cook-shops in the Mile-End Road!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Wade in, my bullies, an’ line yer ribs,’ croaked old
-Nestor. ‘It’s the spiciest Sunday’s feed I’ve ’ad in forty
-year o’ the sea. I kin do three months chokey at the
-end o’ this trip, flyin’; an’ kin live on the smell of an
-<a name="png.056" id="png.056" href="#png.056"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>42<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>oil rag all the time! If we on’y ’ad a few nips a-piece,
-now, it would be parfect!’</p>
-
-<p class="tb">.        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .</p>
-
-<p>Midnight in the hold of the <cite>Sardanapalus</cite>. Four
-red spots moving slowly about in the thick gloom.
-From the irregular, tightly-packed mass proceeds all
-sorts of eerie creakings and groanings. The ship is
-pitching into a head sea and, at times, a wave catching
-her a thunderous slap, makes her seem to fairly stand
-still and shudder all over. The atmosphere is thick,
-and stuffy with an indescribable stuffiness. Presently
-the four points of light clustered together.</p>
-
-<p>‘What is it, I wonder?’ said Billy, sticking his candle
-into a crevice, and pointing to a long, square, narrow
-case embedded in a pile of others.</p>
-
-<p>‘Don’t know,’ replied another, stooping. ‘Got no
-marks, only “<i>Ex Sardinapples</i>—With great care.” Had
-any luck, you two?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Try this,’ answered one, holding out a bottle which
-old Nestor immediately clutched.</p>
-
-<p>‘Wine o’ some sort,’ was his verdict. ‘Poor stuff—got
-no grip o’ the throat—sourish. Let’s see what it sez
-on the bottle. “Chat-oo Mar-goox,” read he, straddling,
-with legs wide apart, and bottle and candle close to his nose.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ay, ay,’ he continued, ‘I thought’s much. Dutch,
-I reckon. Much the same kind o’ tipple as ye gets at
-the dance-houses in Hamburg. We wants a warmer
-drink for these ’ere latichudes—not but what it’s a cut
-above that sarseperiller, an’ ’op bitters, an’ such like slush
-as we bin livin’ on lately.’</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.057" id="png.057" href="#png.057"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>43<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘Well,<!-- TN: original has period -->’ asked Billy, tapping the case, as he spoke,
-with a short iron bar, ‘shall we see what’s in this?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Not worth while,’ replied Nestor, who had finished
-the claret, not without many <span class="nw">grimaces—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘It’s only china crockery, or somethin’ o’ that. They
-always put “With great care,” an’ “This side hup” on
-sich. Blast the old hooker, how she do shove her
-snout into it!’</p>
-
-<p>This last, as a tremendous forward send of the ship
-nearly carried him off his legs.</p>
-
-<p>Billy, however, appeared determined on seeing the
-contents of the case, whose peculiar shape had aroused
-his curiosity, and started to break it out by himself.
-Finally the others came to his assistance, and a quarter-of-an-hour’s
-work hove it up from its nest. To their
-surprise it was locked and hinged. Curiosity took hold
-upon them. They prised and hammered, and strove,
-until, with a crash, the top flew back.</p>
-
-<p>‘Kind o’ cork chips!’ exclaimed Nestor, taking up a
-handful and putting it to his nose. ‘Poof! smells like a
-chemist’s shop, full o’ camphor an’ drugs.’</p>
-
-<p>‘’Ere’s another box inside this un,’ said Bill, who had
-been groping amongst the odoriferous mass. And so it
-proved; another long, narrow case, also locked and
-hinged, made of some polished wood whose surface
-reflected dimly the faces bending over it.</p>
-
-<p>Subjected to similar treatment with its outer shell, it,
-too, soon yielded.</p>
-
-<p>As the lid, which was thickly padded, flew off under
-the pressure of the iron levers, the four men shrank away
-<a name="png.058" id="png.058" href="#png.058"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>44<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>as if they had stumbled on a den of venomous serpents.</p>
-
-<p>On a strip of soft black velvet lay the shrouded corpse
-of a man. The grizzled head rested on a pillow, and
-the hands were crossed on the breast. Thin slats fitting
-athwartships kept the body in position. Although
-the eyes were closed, the features looked unnaturally
-natural. There even seemed to be a tinge of colour in
-the dead cheeks. But the artist had failed with the lips.
-The upper one had shrivelled and curled up over the
-white teeth, imparting a sardonic, grinning semblance to
-the whole face, unutterably ghastly to look upon, especially
-just then.</p>
-
-<p>This it was, and the life-like seeming of <em>It</em>, that frightened
-the cargo broachers so badly. And they <em>were</em>
-terribly frightened. They were too frightened to run,
-even had running been practicable. But the man who
-attempts such tricks in a ship’s hold at night, and with a
-heavy head sea on, comes to rapid grief at the second
-step. So they just stood still, gripping each other’s
-arms, and swearing under their breath, as is the wont of
-the British seaman when badly scared.</p>
-
-<p>The old man, Nestor, was the first to speak. In
-quavering tones he <span class="nw">said,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘It’s only a wax himmidge.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Nothin’ o’ the kind,’ replied Bill, the boldest of the
-group, letting go his hold and coming a little closer.
-‘It’s a ’barmed corpus, that’s wot <em>It</em> is. I was shipmates
-with one on ’em afore. A soger officer he were. He
-were lashed under the mizzen-top, an’ labelled
-<a name="png.059" id="png.059" href="#png.059"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>45<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>“Combustibles; do not touch!” in big black letters. One fine
-mornin’ he come down by the run an’ busted the case.
-He was just the same’s this un, only they hadn’t put that
-howdacious grin on to him. It were in the old <cite>Euryalus</cite>,
-man-o’-war, so we had to suffer him; an’ a most hunlucky
-trip it were. Run her ashore twice. Took the sticks
-out on her twice. Lost four men overboard. No wonder
-<em>we’ve</em> had three weeks o’ head winds. But this joker
-’ll get a free passage without much delay, if I’ve got to
-give it him single-handed.’ So saying, he advanced,
-picked up the lid, and began to fasten it down.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">.        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .</p>
-
-<p>The next morning dawned bright and clear; but the
-head wind still stood, and there was a nasty lump of a
-sea on. For the comparatively high latitude the air was
-warm and comfortable.</p>
-
-<p>Most of the passengers came up on the poop after
-breakfast. Presently, with the assistance of the skipper’s
-arm, the widow began a promenade.</p>
-
-<p>‘What an exhibition she’s making of herself! Her
-husband, if she ever had one, can’t be six months dead
-yet, by her mourning. She ought to be ashamed of herself—the
-sly thing!’</p>
-
-<p>If the widow did not exactly hear all this, she felt it,
-and cast looks of triumphant defiance at her female
-friends, clustered in groups, most of them holding on to
-something unassisted. Elderly unmarried convalescents,
-and very spiteful, the majority.</p>
-
-<p>‘Something—on—the—lee-quarter, sir!’ came down
-from aloft.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.060" id="png.060" href="#png.060"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>46<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>The skipper called for his glass, without quitting his
-companion.</p>
-
-<p>‘Keep her away a couple of points,’ he commanded,
-as he brought the instrument to bear.</p>
-
-<p>‘Can’t make it out at all,’ he went on, after a minute’s
-focussing. ‘Something white, jumping up and down.
-Bit of wreckage, spar, or the like, I expect. Keep her
-away another point. Take a peep, ma’am. Your bright
-eyes ’ll perhaps distinguish it.’</p>
-
-<p>The widow bridled coquettishly and, supported by the
-skipper, put herself in what she fancied an appropriate
-and elegant position.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh!’ she squealed presently, ‘I see it, captain; it’s
-coming this way. How very interesting! “A message
-from the sea,” “Strange tale of the ocean,” and all that
-sort of thing, you know, that one reads about in the
-papers. What an exciting adventure!’ The widow had
-taken the glass from her eye whilst speaking.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly a passenger <span class="nw">cried,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘I see it! Look! On top of that wave!’ But even
-as he spoke it disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>The starboard watch had been called aft by the second
-mate to try and jam the main-yards still further into the
-slack of the lee-rigging. The men now remained together
-with the eager knot of passengers staring over
-the quarter.</p>
-
-<p>All at once, and with startling unexpectedness, there
-bobbed up on a sea almost level with the taffrail, a nude
-figure, nearly upright. One arm, by some eccentric
-working of the water, was jerked backwards and forwards
-<a name="png.061" id="png.061" href="#png.061"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>47<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>from the face with an awfully grotesque motion of throwing
-kisses to the horrified watchers.</p>
-
-<p>The notion was intensified by the grin on the lifelike
-features, startlingly distinct in the sunlight, as the embalmed
-figure, kept erect by the greater weight of its extremities,
-rose up and down, now in a hollow, now on a
-crest, not ten yards away.</p>
-
-<p>‘It’s <span class="allsc">IT</span>, by G—d!’ shouted Nestor, who happened to
-be at the wheel.</p>
-
-<p>But no one took any notice of him in the general
-confusion.</p>
-
-<p>The male passengers stood stock still, fascinated by the
-spectacle. The female ones shrieked, and a couple
-fainted. But louder and higher than any of them
-shrieked the widow, who had got both arms around the
-skipper’s neck, to which she hung, half choking him,
-whilst her feet rattled frantically on the deck.</p>
-
-<p>‘Let go, ma’am!’ he gurgled. ‘Damn it, let go, can’t you?’</p>
-
-<p>‘It’s his ghost!’ she screamed, taking another horrified
-glance at the bobbing, grimacing thing as it travelled
-slowly across the broad wake. ‘What have I done,
-James, that you should appear like this?’ she moaned.
-‘I’m sure I thought you’d be comfortable down there!’
-And here she began to laugh hysterically; and, held
-forcibly on the deck by the sorely-tried skipper, went off
-into a succession of violent fits.</p>
-
-<p>‘Main topsail braces there, some of you!’ roared the
-mate, who, aroused by the cry of ‘Man overboard!’
-uttered by one of the boys, had rushed on deck. ‘Come
-here, four hands, and clear away the life-boat.’</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.062" id="png.062" href="#png.062"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>48<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘Don’t be a fool, Mr Sparkes!’ shouted the skipper,
-still struggling with the widow, who had got one hand in
-his long beard and was pulling it out by the roots.</p>
-
-<p>‘Never mind the boat!’ he panted, for the real state of
-the case had broken upon him. ‘But come and take
-this she-devil away! Let <em>It</em> go to blazes as fast as it
-likes! It’s got a fair wind, seemingly, and that’s more’n
-we have!’</p>
-
-<p class="tb">.        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .</p>
-
-<p>Anchor watch off Geelong, Victoria.</p>
-
-<p>Apparently the whole thing had quietly blown over.
-When the mate, with a terribly long face, had reported
-to the captain, as nearly as he could, the amount of cargo
-missing, and proposed as a set-off, to put one-half of each
-watch in irons until arrival, the skipper had only laughed.</p>
-
-<p>He obviously enjoyed the responsible man’s dismay.</p>
-
-<p>‘Nothing of the sort,’ he replied. ‘We can’t do
-without ’em. We’re bound to get a good blow or two
-’tween here and Port Phillip Heads, and where would we
-be with half the men in irons, and the rest sulking?
-You’re a fool, Sparkes. I’m goin’ to smooth ’em down.
-They’ll have cabin biscuits and plum-duff three times a
-week from this out. And you knock off hazing ’em about
-so much’—chuckling heartily at the other’s stare of
-amazement—‘till we get abreast of Sandridge Pier. Then
-up goes the police flag. I’ll surprise the varmin, or my
-name ain’t John Flett! Meanwhile, let a couple of the
-hard-bargains<a name="fn6" id="fn6"></a><a title="Go to footnote 6"
- href="#Footnote6" class="fnanchor"><span
- class="ns">[Footnote </span>6<span class="ns">]
- </span></a> sling their hammocks in the after-hold.
-<a name="png.063" id="png.063" href="#png.063"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>49<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>That’ll stop any more larks with the cargo. Has she
-been up in your watch since?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Never seen a rag of her,’ answered the mate, who
-knew well to whom the skipper referred. ‘Kept her
-cabin ever since, I do believe.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Damned good job too!’ said his superior, as he
-tenderly felt his face. ‘Who’d have thought that <em>It</em> was
-hers anyhow!’</p>
-
-<p>But ‘hard-bargains’ have long ears. One of them
-overheard the above conversation, and, reporting it to
-the crew, they got ready.</p>
-
-<p>Also, on making the land, everything went wrong.
-Twelve hours vain signalling for a pilot made a big hole
-in the skipper’s temper. So when, at last, one came off,
-and, to his astonishment, got soundly rated, with a
-promise of report, he, in revenge, box-hauled the
-<cite>Sardanapalus</cite> about until dark, and then brought-up
-with every link of hawse out, in a particularly muddy
-spot opposite Geelong.</p>
-
-<p>Anchor watch had been set; and as old Nestor struck
-four bells in the chill morning and croaked hoarsely out
-his ‘All’s well!’ the stars saw a crowd of men in
-stockinged feet, and bearing bundles, slipping silently
-aft.</p>
-
-<p>The gig was hanging at the stern-davits. Noiselessly
-as greased falls could slide over greased sheaves she was
-lowered without a creak or a splash.</p>
-
-<p>The man who had been standing over the cuddy
-companion with a handspike joined his fellows. Fortunately—for
-themselves—no one had shown up. The
-<a name="png.064" id="png.064" href="#png.064"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>50<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>boat pushed off, Bill sculling. The <cite>Sardanapalus</cite> was
-crewless.</p>
-
-<p>Half-an-hour afterwards, the great Australian Bush
-took to itself sixteen hairy-breasted able seamen and
-this story.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<p><small><span class="unjust"><a name="Footnote1" id="Footnote1"><span class="ns">[Footnote </span
- >1<span class="ns">: </span></a> </span>Small wooden tub.<span class="ns">]</span>
- <a title="Return to text" href="#fn1" class="fnreturn"
- ><i>Return to text</i></a></small></p>
-
-<p><small><span class="unjust"><a name="Footnote2" id="Footnote2"><span class="ns">[Footnote </span
- >2<span class="ns">: </span></a> </span>A smoke and a drink of water.<span class="ns">]</span>
- <a title="Return to text" href="#fn2" class="fnreturn"
- ><i>Return to text</i></a></small></p>
-
-<p><small><span class="unjust"><a name="Footnote3" id="Footnote3"><span class="ns">[Footnote </span
- >3<span class="ns">: </span></a> </span>Merchant Seamen’s Act.<span class="ns">]</span>
- <a title="Return to text" href="#fn3" class="fnreturn"
- ><i>Return to text</i></a></small></p>
-
-<p><small><span class="unjust"><a name="Footnote4" id="Footnote4"><span class="ns">[Footnote </span
- >4<span class="ns">: </span></a> </span>Bile.<span class="ns">]</span>
- <a title="Return to text" href="#fn4" class="fnreturn"
- ><i>Return to text</i></a></small></p>
-
-<p><small><span class="unjust"><a name="Footnote5" id="Footnote5"><span class="ns">[Footnote </span
- >5<span class="ns">: </span></a> </span>Four till six a.m.<span class="ns">]</span>
- <a title="Return to text" href="#fn5" class="fnreturn"
- ><i>Return to text</i></a></small></p>
-
-<p><small><span class="unjust"><a name="Footnote6" id="Footnote6"><span class="ns">[Footnote </span
- >6<span class="ns">: </span></a> </span>Apprentices.<span class="ns">]</span>
- <a title="Return to text" href="#fn6" class="fnreturn"
- ><i>Return to text</i></a></small></p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="‘Mo-poke!’"><a name="png.065" id="png.065" href="#png.065"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>51<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘MO-POKE!’</h2>
-
-
-
-<p class="noindent">‘<span class="smc">Yes</span>, I’m from out back,’ said a dark, wiry little man,
-as he dismounted from his horse at a Queensland
-frontier-township hotel, in answer to a question from
-one of a knot of bushmen and drovers assembled in the
-verandah. ‘Out back beyond the Warburton, an’ a
-nice warm time I’ve had of it, too!’</p>
-
-<p>‘My eye!’ exclaimed the first speaker. ‘Been right
-away in that new country we been hearin’ of, eh? What
-like a shop is it, mate?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, the country’s right enough; lots o’ grass an
-water,’ replied the newcomer, as, giving his horse to the
-groom, he strode into the bar, ‘only the mopokes is so
-cussed bad an’ thick in them parts that there’s no livin’<!-- TN: apostrophe invisible -->
-for a quiet man. Roll up, lads, an’ give it a name!
-It’s a long time since I felt so dry!’</p>
-
-<p>‘What did yer mean by “mopokes,” just now, mate?’
-queried an elderly, grizzled overlander, as, lighting their
-pipes, the party sat down on the wide wooden bench.
-‘Was it snakes?’</p>
-
-<p>‘No, friend, it weren’t snakes. Wusser—a heap.<!-- TN: original has ' -->
-Howsomever—I reckon it’s a hour or more till supper,
-so I’ll just tell you how it all happened. Gosh!’<!-- TN: closing quote invisible --> he
-<a name="png.066" id="png.066" href="#png.066"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>52<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>exclaimed emphatically, ‘what a comfort it is to git into
-a Chrischin place agin!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, boys,’ commenced the stranger, ‘last April, I
-’greed with ole Davies—him as owns “Tylunga,” not
-far from this—to go out an’ herd cattle for him on his
-new Adelaide country. Wages was good, three notes a
-week—I reckoned it were worth thirty afore I left—but
-as for the tucker, well, a feller never knows what he can
-live on till he tries it.</p>
-
-<p>‘Howsomever, out we goes—him an’ me an three
-others; an’ in time we gets there all right, an’ musters
-the cattle, which was bein’ tailed at the head station—as
-they calls ’arf-a-dozen bark humpies on a waterhole.
-Then we drafts ’em into four mobs, an’ each on us takes
-one away out to blazes into the bush, where the old
-chap shows us our runs, which was about six or seven
-mile apart.</p>
-
-<p>‘Us herders had each a little hut to himself; so you
-see, mates, a feller warn’t likely to quarrel with his
-neighbours.</p>
-
-<p>‘“Now, Wilson,” sez old Davies, as he gits ready to
-start, arter puttin’ the things out o’ the waggonette at my
-hut—sez he, “Now, Wilson, take good care of them
-cattle in your charge, an’ mind none o’ them black
-rascals come sneakin’ about ’em. If you sees any,
-pepper ’em well. You’ve got a gun, an’ lots of ammunition.”</p>
-
-<p>‘You’ll obsarve, mates, that, like a good many more
-of his sort, he never thinks o’ the man. It’s only the
-dashed stock as troubles ’em.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.067" id="png.067" href="#png.067"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>53<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘Howsomever, off he drives, an’ presently I catches a
-horse, as it was gettin’ close to sundown, an’ roun’s up
-the mob an’ puts ’em on camp, ties the dog up, lights a
-fire, an’ tries to make myself at home ’s well ’s I
-could.</p>
-
-<p>‘So a week or two slips away quiet enough, an’ I was
-gettin’ awful tired of the game. The cattle didn’t hardly
-want any lookin’ after, an’ all I could find to do was
-cuttin’ up green-hide an’ plaiting whips. I thought that
-the month ’d never go by till rations—such as they was—was
-due from the head station on Wild Horse Lagoon,
-nigh on thirty miles away.</p>
-
-<p>‘Up to this I’d never heard a bird singin’ out after
-dark. But one night, as I was just a-fallin’ off to sleep,
-mopokes begins cryin’ like anything in the scrub close to
-the clear patch where the hut was. Suddently the dog
-starts barkin’ like mad, an’ I gets up an’ gives him a cut
-with the whip. Back I goes to the bunk, an’ lies down
-a-listenin’ to them birds, an’ thinkin’ to myself as all the
-mopokes in Australy had got roun’ the hut that night.
-Well, I cussed an’ swore at ’em no end for kickin’ up
-such a shine; an’ Towzer a-growlin’, an’ a-snappin’, an’
-pullin’ at his chain all the time. In a bit, up I gets
-agen, and catches hold of the ole gun, opens the door,
-an’ lets her off, both barrels. It was a moonlight night,
-an’ I could see the backs of a few of the cattle from
-where I stood, as, scared by the row, they gets off their
-camp, an’ I hears the horse-bell just over in the scrub.
-No more mopokes that night. But the next, at it they
-goes agen. Now one’d call, it seemed like close to the
-<a name="png.068" id="png.068" href="#png.068"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>54<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>chimbly, then another, right at the head o’ my stretcher—outside,
-o’ course—“mopoke!” “more-pork!” “mo-po!”
-till I’m blessed if I didn’t get properly on my tail,
-an’ takin’ the gun, I lets Towzer off o’ the chain, and
-runs out an’ bangs away, as fast as I could load her, at
-the scrub, where I reckoned them blasted fowls was
-a-roostin’. An’ Towzer, he tears away into the bushes,
-barkin’ most furious. No more mopokin’ that night, but
-Towzer he never comes back agen. Thinkin’ he’d took
-arter a kangaroo-rat, I goes inside, makes up the fire,
-boils a quart o’ tea, an’ waits for daylight, which I
-know’d couldn’t be long.</p>
-
-<p>‘“I never did hear yet,” I says to myself, “of a feller
-bein’ harnted by a pack o’ birds; but I’m blessed if this
-game don’t ’pear somethin’ like it.”</p>
-
-<p>‘You see, mates, I never dropped to the meanin’ o’ the
-racket; for though I’ve been stock-keepin’ an’ drovin’
-pretty near five-an’-twenty year now, I never had no experience
-afore o’ the kind o’ gutter-snipes as was disturbin’
-me these last two nights.</p>
-
-<p>‘At bird-twitter, out I goes, ’spectin’ to see Towzer
-under his sheet o’ bark. I seen no Towzer; an’, what’s
-more, I seen no cattle neither. They never moved off
-camp afore sunrise; an’, fearin’ les’ they’d made a clean
-break of it, I runs into the hut, collars my bridle, an’ off
-after the mokes.</p>
-
-<p>‘When I gets into the scrub, I hears the bell just
-ahead, an’ I hears, too, a few o’ them cussed birds
-a-strainin’ their throats, callin’ about, as if they hadn’t
-done enough through the night.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.069" id="png.069" href="#png.069"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>55<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘Well, I follers the bell back’ards an’ for’ards, without
-seemin’ to get any nearer to the horses, till I was nigh
-sick o’ stumblin’ over logs; an’ o’ swearin’ what I
-wouldn’t do to ’em when I gets ’em, an’ o’ singin’ out for
-Towzer.</p>
-
-<p>‘All of a suddent, the bell sounds not ten yards away
-in a patch o’ thick dogwood scrub, an’ as I makes off
-full trot, I nearly falls over somethin’ soft. Lookin’
-down, I sees poor ole Towzer lyin’ there with his
-head caved in, and a bit o’ broken spear stickin’ in
-him.</p>
-
-<p>‘My Colonial, mates! I tumbles fast enough then,
-when it were too late. Jumpin’ through the scrub to
-where I last heard the bell, I runs slap up agen six ugly
-black beasts o’ niggers, an’ one on ’em was just a-startin’ to
-shake the dashed bell, which was hangin’ roun’ his neck.
-Close to ’em lies my best horse, ole “Cossack,” dead’s a
-herrin’.</p>
-
-<p>‘I takes it all in in a flash; an’ afore you could say
-“knife” I’d slung the bridle in their faces, and was
-makin’ tracks for the hut at the rate o’ sixty miles a hour—leastways
-it seemed so to me.</p>
-
-<p>‘Whizz, whizz! come the spears; but the scrub was
-too thick, and ne’er a one touches me. Yellin’ like ole
-Nick, after me they tears, full split, but I show’s ’em
-good foot for it till I comes in sight o’ the hut, a-standin’
-there so quiet-like, with the chimbly smokin’ away, an’
-the door wide open.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now, mates, what should make me, insted o’ rushin’
-in an’ gettin’ the gun, an’ lettin’ the darkies know what
-<a name="png.070" id="png.070" href="#png.070"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>56<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>o’clock it was, rip right past the hut an’ shin up a big
-gum tree about twenty yards away? I can’t make out
-what come over me to do sich a thing. But so it were.
-An’ up I swarms to nearly the top limb as the murderin’
-willians comes out on to the open. In another minute
-eight or nine others tumbles out o’ the hut, where they’d
-been waitin’ on chance I might git away from the fust
-gang, an’ they all gathers roun’ the ole gum, a-lookin’ up,
-for all the world like a lot o’ hungry dogs at a
-’possum.</p>
-
-<p>‘“Mo-poke, mo-poke!” sings out one, an’ another lot
-comes runnin’ up from the back scrub, just about where
-I should ha’ hit if the Lord hadn’t put it into my mind
-to take the tree for it.</p>
-
-<p>‘But this pitchin’s terrible dry work, lads,’ suddenly
-broke off the narrator. ‘Come inside, an’ let’s have
-another long-sleever apiece, an’ then I’ll finish the yarn.
-Spite o’ them “mopokes” I’ve got a bit o’ stuff left
-yet.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, mates,’ went on Wilson, as the party resumed
-their seats, ‘the darkies throwed their spears, an’ slings
-their bommerangs, but it weren’t no use, I was too high
-up for ’em, and the nighest spear as come out of a
-couple o’ dozen, sticks in a good six foot below my
-limb. Seein’ this, one beggar gets the axe from the
-wood-heap. But she were old an’ blunt like her owner,
-ole Davies, an’ I soon see by the way they shapes as
-it’d take ’em a couple o’ years to fall me. For a while
-they niggles away at the big butt, turn an’ turn about,
-then jacks the contract, gruntin’ like a lot o’ pigs.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.071" id="png.071" href="#png.071"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>57<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘Next move were, one gets the gun out o’ the hut,
-an’ I scwoushes down into a six-inch heap, till I remembers
-she weren’t loaded; an’ I didn’t give ’em
-credit for knowin’ how to do that.</p>
-
-<p>‘The mopoke as got her points her most careful, with
-the stock agen his belly, an’ with a grin at his mates, as
-much as to reckon, “You watch me pot him,” he
-shouts “Bung!” an’ as true’s I’m sittin’ here, I bursts
-out larfin’ to see them black fools a-starin’ up so
-hard, and wonderin’ why I didn’t fall down dead
-man.</p>
-
-<p>‘Presen’ly, ’bout half way up my tree, they spots
-a good-sized pipe, an’ bringin’ a fire-stick from the hut,
-up one comes like a lamplighter. I knowed the ole
-gum was sound an’ green enough at the butt, but I sees
-by the pipe that some of the top limbs must be holler,
-an’ I didn’ fancy this last move a little bit. So, as he’s
-busy straddled-out, a-blowin’ and a-puffin’ to raise the
-flame, I nips down, pulls out the spear, an’ lets drive at
-him ’s hard ’s I could. You never see such a thing in
-your lives! It hit him just acrost the loins, an’ goes
-more’n half way through him. He just gives a wriggle
-or two and twists over into a fork and lies there, a
-proper stiff ’un.</p>
-
-<p>‘You bet, lads, I was proud’s a dog with a tin tail; an’
-sez I, “One for poor Towzer, you pot-bellied willian!”
-By gosh! didn’t they yell, an’ dance, an’ carry on when
-they sees this, an’ me safe agen back in the ole
-perch.</p>
-
-<p>‘Runnin’ to the hut, they tears out the slabs in a
-<a name="png.072" id="png.072" href="#png.072"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>58<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>wink, piles ’em up at the butt of the ole gum, and sets
-fire to ’em.</p>
-
-<p>‘In a minute or two, I couldn’t see a stem for smoke;
-but, as they was green belar, not a blaze could they get
-out of ’em.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, I was squattin’ up there, a-peepin’ down
-through the smoke for the next feller as wanted to
-show off his climbin’ abilities, when I hears a noise of
-horses gallopin’, an’ men shoutin’, an’ shots a-poppin’ off
-like Billy-ho.</p>
-
-<p>‘Down I comes through the smoke, an’ just clear
-o’ the tree was five darkies a-lyin’<!-- TN: punctuation invisible --> stretched out as would
-never cry “mo-poke!” no more. Not another soul,
-dead or alive, could I see. But presen’ly back canters
-ole Davies, an’ says he, cool as you like, “Hello,
-Wilson,” says he, “is that you? Where’s the rest o’ the
-cattle? There’s eight head short yet!” Darn his ole
-skin, an’ all bosses like him, as thinks more of a few
-head o’ stock than a man’s life!</p>
-
-<p>‘You see, lads, when the cattle, disturbed by poor
-Towzer a-barkin’, and me a-firin’, moves quietly off afore
-daybreak, one lot of nigs follers ’em up, an’ one lot stops
-to ’tend on me.</p>
-
-<p>‘Them with the cattle, after they’d gone a little way,
-starts a-spearin’ ’em, an’ the mob breaks, an’ never stops
-till they gets to the fust seven-mile hut, where the other
-lot was; and the chap there, seein’ some with spears
-stickin’ in ’em, gallops off to the head station, and out
-comes ole Davies an’ all hands.</p>
-
-<p>‘No; no more new country for me—not if I knows it!
-<a name="png.073" id="png.073" href="#png.073"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>59<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>I’m a-gettin’ too old now for such a little game as they
-played on me out there. Is that the supper-bell a-ringin’?
-Well, it’s the finest sound I’ve heard for five
-’underd miles an’ more.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="Keeping School at ‘Dead Finish’"><a name="png.074" id="png.074" href="#png.074"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>60<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>KEEPING SCHOOL AT ‘DEAD FINISH.’</h2>
-
-<p class="subtitle"><span class="smc">A Reminiscence of ‘The Rivers.’</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smc">The</span> people at Dead Finish had never applied for such a
-thing, nor dreamt of, nor wished for it, neither they nor
-their children. These latter were mostly of an age now
-to be of use about the house or in the field. They had
-imagined themselves, these half-a-dozen or so of scattered
-families hidden in the gloomy recesses of coastal scrubs,
-quite secure from any officious interference with their
-offspring by the Government. And, without exception,
-they took it as a most uncalled-for act of tyranny, this
-proposed establishment of a school and a teacher in their
-midst, and well within the two-mile radius from all.</p>
-
-<p>Here was the corn just ready to be pulled and husked,
-and got ready for Tuberville, and who was to do it with
-Tom, Jack and Bill wasting their time at a school?</p>
-
-<p>‘If Mr Gov’ment was here,’ growled ‘Brombee’
-O’Brien, the largest selector of the lot, ‘I’d give ’im a bit
-o’ my mind. Wot bizness he got, comin’ an’ takin’ the
-kids just as they’re a-gittin’ handy? Why didn’t he come
-afore, when they was bits o’ crawlers, an’ no use to no
-one? Anyhow, me an’ the missis niver ’ad no schoolin’;
-<a name="png.075" id="png.075" href="#png.075"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>61<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>an’ why should they? Will learnin’ cut through a two-foot
-log? Will ’rethmetic split palin’s or shingles? Will
-readin’ an’ writin’ run brombees, or drive a team o’
-bullocks, or ’elp to plough or ’arrer? No; it ain’t likely.
-Then wot’s the good of it? Garn? Wot they givin’ us?’</p>
-
-<p>Thus Mr O’Brien, at a meeting of neighbours specially
-convened to confront the unlooked-for emergency, and
-whose own ideas he voices to the letter.</p>
-
-<p>And when, later, the Inspector (taken at first for the
-‘Gov’ment’) puts in an appearance, the case is set
-before him precisely as above. But, instead of listening
-to reason, he only rated them, told them they ought
-to be ashamed of themselves, and dilated largely on the
-beauty and advantage of a State education at only threepence
-per week each child, and one shilling for seven or
-over. A paternal Government, he said, had long
-mourned over their degraded and benighted condition;
-and, at last, having, after much trouble, and at great
-expense, secured a most accomplished gentleman as
-a teacher, resolved that one of his first tasks should be
-that of making Dead Finish an ornament, in place of a
-reproach, to the district.</p>
-
-<p>This was, so the Inspector thought, putting the thing
-neatly indeed. But it was all of no avail. They not
-only unanimously refused to have anything to do with
-the erection of the school, but also to receive the teacher
-when he arrived. They swore, too, that their children
-should not leave work for education, and in the end,
-used language unrecordable here, and such as the Inspector
-had never in all his life heard before. But he
-<a name="png.076" id="png.076" href="#png.076"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>62<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>persevered; and, bringing a couple of men from the
-township fifty miles away, set them to work.</p>
-
-<p>Dead Finish was situated at the extreme head of one
-of those short Australian coastal rivers whose existence
-begins in boggy swamps and ends in a big sand-bar.</p>
-
-<p>The country was mountainous and scrubby, abounding
-in ‘falls,’ springs, morasses, giant timber, dingoes, ticks,
-leeches, and creeks. The wonder was, not that anybody
-should ever have settled on it, but that, once there, they
-should ever manage to get out of it, as they did once
-in six months.</p>
-
-<p>But for these few families on Dead Finish Creek, the
-district was totally uninhabited. It was hard to say
-where they came from originally. They were not a
-communicative people; but they were a hard-working,
-hard-living one, whose only wish was to be left at peace
-on the little patches they had hewn for themselves out of
-the mighty primeval forest that, dark and solemn, walled
-them in on every side. The spot chosen by the Inspector
-as the site of the new school was on the extreme
-edge of one of the lesser falls that ran sloping swiftly
-down three hundred feet or more into a small valley,
-generally full of mist and the noise of running waters.</p>
-
-<p>A mile away lived a settler named Brown, who, after
-an infinity of coaxing and persuasion, and to the utter
-disgust of his neighbours, had consented to receive and
-board the teacher on trial. As with the rest of the Dead
-Finishers, ready money was so rare that the thoughts of
-that proffered twelve shillings a week tempted him, and
-he fell, and became a Judas to his fellows, and a mark
-<a name="png.077" id="png.077" href="#png.077"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>63<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>for the finger of scorn—he and his wife and their ten
-children.</p>
-
-<p>But the Inspector was jubilant; and after a last look
-around the little hut, smelling of fresh-cut wood, with its
-three forms, one stool, and bright, new blackboard, he
-departed, congratulating himself on the satisfactory finish
-of the campaign. Also he indited a minute and two
-memorandums to his Department with the intimation that
-‘Provisional School No. 28,890, Parish of Dead Finish,
-County of Salamanca,’ was completed and ready for
-occupation. Whereupon, an animated correspondence
-took place, which, after lasting six months, was at last
-closed by the announcement that a teacher had been
-appointed. Then both sides rested from their labours,
-and the Inspector, feeling that his annual holiday had
-been well earned, took it.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, the little building perched on the brink of
-the gulf grew bleached and weather-beaten with wind and
-rain and fog, and the Dead Finishers derided ‘ole
-Gov’ment,’ and the Brown family emerged from Coventry<!-- TN: original reads "coventry" -->,
-and all was once more peace along the creek.</p>
-
-<p>The winter passed, and a young man with thin legs
-and body, red hair, and freckled face, appeared in
-Tuberville and remarked to the residents generally
-that he would like to get to Dead Finish. He also
-added that he was the ‘new teacher’ for that place. He
-at once became an object of interest. People stared at
-him in much the same way as did those others, of whom
-we read, at Martin Chuzzlewit and the faithful Mark
-Tapley on their departure for Eden.
-<a name="png.078" id="png.078" href="#png.078"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>64<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>The Tuberville people—the majority of them at least—knew
-of the Dead Finishers only by repute. These
-latter came in but twice a year to exchange corn and
-hardwood for stores, potatoes, and a little cash. At
-these times the programme was invariably the same.
-Their business done, the long-haired, touzly-bearded men
-drove their teams outside the town, and, leaving the
-bullocks in charge of the wild, bare-footed, half-clad
-boys, returned, and, clubbing their money, drank solidly
-as long as it lasted—generally two days.</p>
-
-<p>They kept well together, and no one molested or
-interfered with them. It was not worth while. Their
-especial house was a short distance out, and when, borne
-up on the wind, came the roar of bush revelry, strange
-and uncouth, the townspeople merely remarked one to
-the other that ‘Them Dead Finishers must be in again
-down at Duffy’s.’</p>
-
-<p>Hence the interest taken in Mr Cruppy.</p>
-
-<p>The Dead Finishers all drank ‘rum straight,’ and
-about two gallons was their respective allowance. That
-safely stowed away, they took their long whips out of the
-corner of the bar, called their rough cattle-dogs, lying
-beside them, and made off to the wilderness again for
-another fight with fire and axe against the stubborn
-forest, and to raise corn enough for the next trip to market.</p>
-
-<div class="illo">
-<a name="png.079" id="png.079" href="#png.079"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>64a<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a><img id="i064fp" src="images/i_064fp.jpg" alt="[Illustration]"
- /><p><span class="ns">    [Illustration: </span>But presently there was a report, a cloud of smoke, and a
-flash out of the little window. (<a href="#illo_p68">Page 68</a>.)<span class="ns">]</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>That half-yearly or so excursion was their one treat,
-such as it was; and the toiling, hard-featured women at
-home, who never got away, acquiesced tacitly in the
-liquid wind-up of it. They never looked for any money
-on their men’s return. What was the good of money at
-<a name="png.081" id="png.081" href="#png.081"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>65<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Dead Finish? No wonder the people laughed when the
-Inspector talked to them of ‘school fees.’</p>
-
-<p>At last Mr Cruppy drifted into the ‘Bushman’s Home’
-in search of information. Could Mr Duffy tell him how to
-get to a place called Dead Finish? No; Mr Duffy was
-sorry, but he really couldn’t. All he knew about it was
-that it was up in the mountains, and a rough, long road to
-travel. The new teacher, was he? Well, he was pleased
-to hear it, but opined that he’d find some pretty hard
-cases amongst the kids up there. Did he know Mr Brown at Dead Finish? Yes, he thought he did, and a
-very strong cup of tea he was. Going to stay there, was
-he? Well, he hoped that Mr Brown would make him
-comfortable. But, somehow, he was doubtful. As to
-getting there, he would have to trust to Providence.
-After a little more talk, however, Mr Cruppy discovered
-that Providence, in this case, meant the sum of £4
-sterling, for which the publican expressed his willingness
-to do his best to find the Dead Finish.</p>
-
-<p>They were four days on the road, got bogged twice,
-capsized twice, and broke the pole of the buggy before
-they found Brown, who received them with more surprise
-than cordiality. Foreseeing ostracism again, he wished
-to go back from his agreement, and was surly to a
-degree.</p>
-
-<p>He said he should get his head caved in. If no one
-else did it, ‘Brombee’ O’Brien would. A week’s
-payment in advance mollified him somewhat. But, if
-Mr Cruppy had not been an orphan, friendless, and on
-his first appointment, he would have returned with
-<a name="png.082" id="png.082" href="#png.082"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>66<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Mr Duffy, who, very much to his surprise, had by the time
-he reached home, fairly earned his money.</p>
-
-<p>The teacher’s bedroom was a bark lean-to; his bed
-sacks stuffed with corn husks—and cobs. The food
-was hominy and pork, washed down with coffee made
-from corn roasted and ground. He ventured to remark
-that the accommodation was rough.</p>
-
-<p>‘It are,’ replied Mr Brown. ‘We’s rough. Take it
-or leave it. We niver arst fer no schoolin’. I’ll get
-stoushed over this job yet. Brombee’s got it in for me.
-So’s the Simmses, an’ all the rest ov ’em.’</p>
-
-<p>With much difficulty the teacher got one of the boys
-to show him the way to the school. They had to
-cross Dead Finish Creek fourteen times to get there.
-Regarding the youngster as his first scholar, Mr Cruppy
-endeavoured to detain him, but with a yell he fled
-down the mountain; and, figuratively, the fiery cross
-was sent round.</p>
-
-<p>Each day the teacher went up and waited in vain. No
-one came near the school. Then he essayed a journey
-of remonstrance from farm to farm, got bushed, was out
-for two nights, and would have been left out altogether
-only that Mandy Brown, who pitied him, went away
-and brought him in after running his tracks for a whole
-day. Then he simply sat down and waited despairingly.
-Then the Inspector came back from his holiday and
-visited Dead Finish, expecting to find everything in full
-swing. In his wrath he took out summonses against the
-whole settlement. No notice was taken of these until
-four troopers paid it a visit. Then it went into
-<a name="png.083" id="png.083" href="#png.083"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>67<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Tuberville in a body, and was promptly fined and admonished.
-Returning, it sent its children to school—a horde of
-young barbarians, unkempt, unwashed, almost unclad,
-but stout and sturdy. And it was the time of the pulling
-of the corn! Therefore the elders had to work double
-tides to make up for the lost labour of their offspring,
-stolidly glaring at poor Cruppy as he tried to beat into
-their shock heads the mystery of A B C.</p>
-
-<p>Amanda Brown was eighteen, buxom, bare-footed,
-curly-haired, red-cheeked, could ride as she put it ‘anythin’
-with hair on,’ use an axe like a Canadian, and was
-reckoned the best hand at breaking in a young bullock
-to the team of anyone about. And she, since her finding
-of Cruppy in the ranges, leech-infested and draggled,
-had taken him under her protection. But even she was
-powerless to influence the feeling of public indignation,
-daily growing stronger, against the Inspector, the teacher,
-and the ‘Gov’ment,’ and which ended in Cruppy being
-requested to clear out from Brown’s. As the latter put
-it, ‘Mister,’ said he, ‘it ain’t no good shenaneckin’!<!-- TN: original reads "shenaneckin!'" -->
-I dussent keep you no longer. It’s as much ’s our
-lives is wuth. Brombee an’ them’s gittin’ madder an’
-madder. Ef you won’t slither complete, you’ll ’ave to
-go an’ camp in the schoolhouse up yonder. We’ll sell
-you a pot an’ a bit o’ ration, an’ ye’ll have to do the
-best ye can.’ So Cruppy went, seeing nothing else for
-it, and Mr Brown once more held up his head amongst
-his fellows.</p>
-
-<p>Despite his lack of physique, Cruppy had a certain
-amount of stubborn resistance and endurance within
-<a name="png.084" id="png.084" href="#png.084"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>68<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>him, often observable in red-headed people. He was,
-in short, plucky, and unwilling to give in. And Mandy,
-out of the largeness of her heart, helped him all she
-knew how.</p>
-
-<p>For instance, when Tom O’Brien (eldest son of
-‘Brombee’) made his intention known of scaring the
-teacher out of Dead Finish, from Mandy came the few
-words of warning and the present of the old gun and
-some ammunition. Thus it happened that one night,
-when awakened by eerie yells from his lonely slumber,
-the teacher looked out and saw a wild figure clad in
-skins, and with a pair of bullock’s horns spreading from
-its head, he felt no whit dismayed. Capering and
-shouting round the hut under the dim moonlight went
-the weird thing, enough in that desolate spot to make
-even a brave man shudder with the uncanny grotesqueness
-of it.</p>
-
-<p><a name="illo_p68" id="illo_p68">But presently there was a report—a cloud of smoke</a>,
-and a flash out of the little window, and with a scream
-the thing dropped, then got up again, and ran swiftly
-out of sight.</p>
-
-<p>‘Caught him fair smack, ye did,’ said Mandy, afterwards.
-‘Them pellets o’ coarse salt touched ’im up
-properly. He don’t set down now without lookin’
-fer pillers. Tom won’t try no more gammonin’ to
-be a yahoo. He’s full ’s a tick ov sich sport, he
-is.’</p>
-
-<p>Other attempts were from time to time made to
-frighten Cruppy out of the district, but they were of no
-avail. The holidays were approaching, and he had made
-<a name="png.085" id="png.085" href="#png.085"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>69<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>up his mind to hold out at least until then in hopes of
-getting a shift from Dead Finish.</p>
-
-<p>But one night, in melancholy mood, watching a piece
-of salt beef boil, and leaning over every now and again
-to take the scum off the pot, he heard the tramp of
-horses outside. Opening the door cautiously, he saw
-Mandy riding her own pony <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en cavalier</i>, and leading
-another one ready saddled.</p>
-
-<p>‘Come along,’ she said, without dismounting. ‘They’re
-on their tails proper now. Wanter git the corn shelled
-for Tuberville. No more schoolin’ fer the kids. They’re
-a-goin’ to put the set on ye to-night, hut an’ all. Pap,
-and Brombee, an’ the Simmses, an’ Pringles, an’ the
-whole push is out. They got four teams o’ bullocks an’
-all the ropes an’ chains in the country, an’ they’re a-goin’
-to hyste school an’ you over the sidin’. It’ll be just
-one! two! three! an’ wallop ye all goes! Roll up yer
-swag slippy an’ come along.’</p>
-
-<p>Cruppy, seeing at once that a crisis, not altogether
-unexpected, had arrived, did as he was told.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now,’ said Mandy, leading the way into a dense
-clump of peppermint suckers, ‘le’s wait an’ see the fun.
-They reckoned as how, sleepin’ so sound, you wouldn’t
-know nothin’ till you struck bottom in the crik. But
-they’re euchred agin.’</p>
-
-<p>As the night wore on noises broke its stillness, and
-dark forms moved athwart the little open space, whilst
-from far below in the gully came the faint clank of
-chains and the muffled tramp of cattle.</p>
-
-<p>‘Look,’ whispered Mandy admiringly, ‘ain’t they
-<a name="png.086" id="png.086" href="#png.086"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>70<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>cunnin’? There’s Pap, an’ ole Brombee, an’ young
-Tom, a-sneakin’ the big rope roun’ the hut. You’d
-niver ha’ woke, sleepin’ sound as ye does.’</p>
-
-<p>Even as she spoke a shrill whistle was heard. Then
-from below came a tremendous volleying of whips,
-accompanied by hoarse yells of ‘Gee, Brusher!
-Darling up! Wah Rowdy! Spanker! Redman!’ As
-the noose tightened, the school first cracked, then
-toppled. The din below redoubled, and with a crash
-the building disappeared bodily over the brow of the
-hill.</p>
-
-<p>‘That’s domino!’ remarked Mandy calmly. ‘There
-won’t be no more schoolin’ at Dead Finish. Come
-along; I’ll set ye on the track. Ye kin leave the horse
-an’ saddle at Duffy’s when you gits to the township.
-I shook ’em from ole Brombee. Won’t he bite when
-he finds it out. But you,’ she went on, ‘needn’t be
-scared. You seen him to-night doin’ his best to break
-your neck. Well, so long! Give us a cheeker afore
-ye goes; an’ don’t forget Mandy Brown o’ Dead
-Finish.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="‘Number One North Rainbow’"><a name="png.087" id="png.087" href="#png.087"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>71<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘NUMBER ONE NORTH RAINBOW.’</h2>
-
-
-<p class="noindent">‘<span class="smc">Another</span> duffer!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Rank as ever was bottomed!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Seventy-five feet hard delving, and not a colour!’</p>
-
-<p>The speakers were myself, the teller of this story, and
-my mate, Harry Treloar.</p>
-
-<p>We were sitting on a heap of earth and stones representing
-a month’s fruitless, dreary labour. The last
-remark was Harry’s.</p>
-
-<p>‘That makes, I think,’ continued he, ‘as nearly as I
-can guess, about a dozen of the same species. And
-people have the cheek to call this a poor man’s diggings!’</p>
-
-<p>‘The prospectors are on good gold,’ I hazard.</p>
-
-<p>‘So are the publicans,’ retorts he, ‘and the speculators,
-and the storekeepers, and, apparently, everybody but the
-poor men—ourselves, to wit. This place is evidently for
-capitalists. We’re nearly “dead-brokers,” as they say
-out here. Let’s harness up Eclipse and go over to old
-Yamnibar. We may make a rise there. It’s undignified, I
-allow, scratching amongst the leavings of other men and
-other years; dangerous, also, but that’s nothing. And
-many a good man has had to do the same before us.’</p>
-
-<p>No life can equal that of a digger’s if he be ‘on gold,’
-<a name="png.088" id="png.088" href="#png.088"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>72<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>even moderately so; if not, none so weary and heart-breaking<!-- TN: hyphen retained -->.</p>
-
-<p>It’s all very well to talk, as some street-bred novelists
-do, of ‘hope following every stroke of the pick, making
-the heaviest toil as nought,’ and all that kind of thing;
-but when one has been pick-stroking for months without
-seeing a colour; when one’s boots are sticking together
-by suasion of string or greenhide; when every meal is
-eaten on grudged credit; when one works late and early,
-wet and dry, and all in vain, then hope becomes of that
-description which maketh the heart sick, very sick,
-indeed. Treloar was, in general, a regular Mark Tapley
-and Micawber rolled into one. But for once, fate, so
-adverse, had proved too much for even his serenely
-hopeful temper.</p>
-
-<p>He was an Anglo-Indian. Now he is Assistant Commissioner
-at Bhurtpore, also a C.S.I.; and, when he
-reads this, will recollect and perhaps sigh for the days
-when he possessed a liver and an appetite, and was
-penniless.</p>
-
-<p>Our turnout was rather a curious one. The season
-was dry, and, feed being scarce, Treloar had concluded
-that, at such a time, a bullock would be better able to
-eke out a living than a horse. Therefore, a working
-bullock drew our tilted cart about the country.</p>
-
-<p>‘You see, my boy,’ said Treloar, when deciding on the
-purchase, ‘an ox is a beggar that always seems to have
-something to chew. Turn a horse out where there’s no
-grass, and he’ll probably go to the deuce before morning.
-But your ox, now, after a good look around, seeing he’s
-<a name="png.089" id="png.089" href="#png.089"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>73<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>struck a barren patch, ’ll draw on his reserves, bring up
-something from somewhere, and start chewing away like
-one o’clock. That comforts his owner. I vote for the
-ox. He may be slow, but he generally appears to have
-enough in his stomach to keep his jaws going; and, in a
-dry time, that is a distinct advantage.’</p>
-
-<p>So Eclipse was bought, I merely stipulating that
-Treloar should always drive.</p>
-
-<p>I have an idea, that, after a while, as the old ‘worker’
-sauntered along, regarding the perspiring Harry, and his
-exhortations and exclamations, often in Hindustani, with
-a mild stare of surprise, as he slowly stooped for a dry
-tussock, or reached aloft for an overhanging branch, the
-latter somewhat repented him of his experiment. But
-he never said so. And, to do him justice, Eclipse was
-not a bad ‘ox’; and, when he could get nothing better,
-justified Harry’s expectations by seeming able to chew
-stones. But his motto was decidedly <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">festina lente</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Yamnibar, ‘Old Yamnibar,’ at last. Behind us, on
-the far inland river, we had left a busy scene of activity.
-Hurrying crowds of men, the whirr of a thousand windlasses,
-the swish of countless cradles, and the ceaseless
-pounding by night and by day of the battery stamps.
-And now what a contrast!</p>
-
-<p>A wide, trackless valley, covered with grave-like
-mounds, on which grass grew rankly; with ruined buildings
-and rotting machinery, and, here and there, pools of
-stagnant water, whilst the only thing save the sweep
-of the wind that reached our ears was a distant rhythmical
-moaning, coming very sadly in that desolate place—the
-<a name="png.090" id="png.090" href="#png.090"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>74<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>sounding of the sea on the rock-bound coast not far
-away.</p>
-
-<p>The only signs of life, as Eclipse, pausing now and
-again, and taking a ruminative survey of the valley, drew
-us by degrees down the sloping hills, were the buglings
-of a squad of native companions flying heavily towards
-the setting sun.</p>
-
-<p>‘What a dismal hole!’ I muttered, as the ‘ox,’ spying
-some green rushes, bolted at top speed—about a mile an
-hour—towards them.</p>
-
-<p>‘Let’s try and find a golden one,’ laughed my mercurial
-friend. ‘Here we have a whole gold-field to ourselves.
-Just think of it! “Lords of the fowl and the brute”—Eclipse
-and <i>Kálee</i> and the bralgas. Take the old chap
-out of the <i>gharri</i>, and we’ll pitch our camp.’</p>
-
-<p>I ought to have spoken of <i>Kálee</i> long ago. Indeed,
-when one comes to think of it, I ought to have called
-this story after her. But man is an ungrateful animal—worse
-than most dogs. Not that the great deerhound
-with the faithful eyes, who might have stepped out
-of one of Landseer’s pictures, was forgotten—far from it.
-But for her we should possibly now, both of us, be
-bundles of dry bones, with all sorts of underground
-small deer making merry amongst them.</p>
-
-<p>She ought, according to her merits, to hold pride of
-place here. But she was quiet and unobtrusive as she
-was faithful and affectionate, whereas Eclipse was nothing
-of the kind, only a noisy blusterer, thinking of no
-one but himself. Therefore, as happens so often with
-us, has he stolen a march on a failing memory for prior
-<a name="png.091" id="png.091" href="#png.091"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>75<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>recognition. But the ‘ox’ is grass, and <i>Kálee</i> still lives
-in the great Eastern Empire, and has two servants to
-wait upon her. <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">O Dea certe!</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Behold!’ said Treloar, as we lay and smoked in the
-moonlight, after supper, in front of our tent, which
-we had pitched between the door-posts of what had
-evidently been a building of some size, but of which
-they were the sole remains. ‘Behold, my friend, the
-end of it all! But a few years are passed, and where,
-now, are the busy thousands that toiled and strove and
-jostled each other, below there, in earth’s bowels, in the
-fierce race for gold? Look at it now! Think of the
-great waves of human hopes and disappointments and
-joys that have rolled to and fro across this miserable
-patch of earth! Think of the brave hearts that came
-hot with the excitement of the quest, and departed
-broken with the emptiness of it. Also, of those others,
-who never departed, but lie at rest beneath that yellow
-clay. Just a little while, in the new-born one, is centred
-alike the glow of success and the cold chill of failure;
-all the might of swift fierce endeavour, every passion,
-good and bad, that convulses our wretched souls. And
-then, after a brief season, its pristine form defaced and
-scarred, comes the rotting solitude of the tomb! Why
-’tis, in some sort, the story of our corporal life and
-death!</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div>‘“Over the Mountains of the Moon,</div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">      </span>Down the Vale of Shadow,</div>
-<div class="i1"><span class="ns">   </span>Ride, boldly ride,” the shade replied,</div>
-<div class="i2"><span class="ns">      </span>“For there lies El Dorado.”</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p class="noindent"><a name="png.092" id="png.092" href="#png.092"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>76<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Behold, my friend, the Valley of the Shadow that has
-passed, wherein many a bold soul has gone down to
-Hades, “unhouselled, disappointed, unaneled.” Do
-their ghosts wander yet, I ask?’</p>
-
-<p>‘O, bother!’ I mutter sleepily. ‘I’m tired. Let’s
-turn in.’</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately such outbursts were rare. But when the
-fit came on, I knew too well the uselessness of attempting
-to stop it.</p>
-
-<p>Awakened towards the small hours by the roarings of
-Eclipse, triumphantly apprising the world at large that
-his belly was full, I found the lantern still burning, and
-could see Treloar’s eye ‘in a fine phrenzy rolling,’ as he
-scribbled rapidly. Years afterwards I read in the
-<cite>Bombay Pioneer</cite> ‘How the Night Falls on Yamnibar,’
-and thought it passable.</p>
-
-<p>It was anything but pleasant work, this groping about
-old workings. It was also very dangerous. Many were
-the close shaves we had of being buried, sometimes
-alive, at others flattened out.</p>
-
-<p>The soil, for the first twenty or thirty feet, was of a
-loose, friable description. Thence to the bottom, averaging
-eighty feet, was ‘standing ground,’ <i>i.e.</i>, needed no
-timbering. But, in many cases, the slabbing from the
-upper parts had rotted away and fallen down, followed
-by big masses of earth, which blocked up the entrance
-to the drives where our work lay.</p>
-
-<p>Then after, with great trouble, clearing the bottom,
-generally yellow pipeclay, and exploring the dark,
-cramped passages for pillars, we had, before beginning
-<a name="png.093" id="png.093" href="#png.093"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>77<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>to displace these, to support the roof by artificial ones.
-Timber had at the time of the rush been plentiful; as a
-consequence pillars were scarce. Also, the field, having
-in its prime been a wonderfully rich one, it had been
-repeatedly fossicked over. This made them scarcer
-still.</p>
-
-<p>Often after a heavy job of clearing out and heaving-up
-mullock, water, and slabs, all the time in imminent peril
-of a ‘fall’ from some part of the shaft, would we discover,
-on exploring the drives, that they were simply
-groves of props—not a natural support left standing.</p>
-
-<p>Such a network of holes and burrows as the place
-was! I can compare it to nothing but a Brobdingnagian<!-- TN: original reads "Brobnignagian" -->
-rabbit-warren.</p>
-
-<p>The flat had been undermined, claim breaking into
-claim, until the wonder was that the whole top crust
-didn’t cave in. In some places this had happened, and
-one looked down into a dismal chaos of soil, rotten
-timber, and surface water.</p>
-
-<p>As I have remarked, it was risky work this hunting
-for the few solitary grains amongst the rotten treasure-husks
-left by others, especially without a local knowledge
-of the past, which would have been so invaluable to us.
-But there came to be, nevertheless, a sort of dreary
-fascination in it.</p>
-
-<p>We had heard that, on this same field, years after its
-total abandonment, a two hundred ounce nugget had
-been found by a solitary fossicker in a pillar left in an
-old claim.</p>
-
-<p>Very often, I believe, did the picture of that big lump
-<a name="png.094" id="png.094" href="#png.094"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>78<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>rise before us as we crawled and twisted and wriggled
-about like a pair of great subterranean yellow eels, not
-knowing the moment a few odd tons of earth might fall
-and bury us.</p>
-
-<p>One day an incident rather out of the common befell.
-Lowering Treloar cautiously down an old shaft to, as
-usual, make a preliminary survey, I presently heard a
-splash and a cry of ‘Heave-up!’ Up he came, a regular
-Laocoon, in the close embraces of a thumping, lively
-carpet snake, whose frogging ground he had intruded upon.</p>
-
-<p>He had, by luck, got a firm grip of the reptile round
-the neck, and was not bitten. He was, however, badly
-scared.</p>
-
-<p>Doubtfully he listened as, while releasing him from the
-coils, I assured him that the thing was perfectly harmless.</p>
-
-<p>Was I quite certain on this point? he wished to know.
-Of course I was; and I quoted all the authorities I could
-think of.</p>
-
-<p>Then, before despatching it, would I let it bite me?
-As an ardent ophiologist, he took the utmost interest in
-such a fact, and would like to become as confident as
-myself of it.</p>
-
-<p>But I pointed out earnestly that this was simply trifling,
-and that we had no time to spare. Practical demonstration
-is a very capital thing in many cases. But <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">ver
-non semper viret</i>, and our friend of the curiously-patterned
-skin might not be <em>always</em> innocuous.</p>
-
-<p>We took three ounces out of a pillar in Snake Shaft.<!-- TN: punctuation invisible -->
-That night, on returning to our camp, we found an old
-man there. He was the first person we had seen for a
-<a name="png.095" id="png.095" href="#png.095"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>79<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>month; and so were inclined to be cordial. There was
-nothing particularly remarkable about the new-comer,
-except that he had a habit of tightly shutting one eye as
-he looked at you.</p>
-
-<p>I have called him old because his hair was grey; but
-he was still a very powerful man, and likely to prove a
-tough one at close quarters.</p>
-
-<p>‘Come and have some supper, mate,’ said Treloar.</p>
-
-<p>‘Call me Brummy, an’ keep yer dorg orf,’ replied the
-other, as he poured out a pannikin of tea. ‘I don’t fancy
-a big beast like yon a-breathin’ inter the back o’ a feller’s
-neck.’</p>
-
-<p>And, indeed, <i>Kálee’s</i> attentions were marked. She
-sniffed around and around the new-comer, bristled all her
-hair up, and carried on a monologue which sounded
-unpleasant.</p>
-
-<p>‘No,’ he resumed in answer to a question, as Treloar
-sent <i>Kálee</i> to her kennel. ‘I was never on this here field
-before. Down about the Lachlan’s my <i>towri<!-- TN: aboriginal word, no lang code available --></i>. Everybody
-theer knows Brummy. I’m goin’ to do a bit of
-fossickin’ now I got this far. Ain’t a-thinkin’ o’ interferin’
-wi’ you. Surfiss is my dart—roun’ about the old tailin’s
-and puddlers. Down below’s too risky in a rotten shop
-like this. I leaves that game to the young ’uns. An’’
-(with a sly grin) ‘old Brum does as well as the best on
-’em in the long run.’</p>
-
-<p>Soon after this he went away and pitched a ragged fly
-further along the flat.</p>
-
-<p>Next day, as we were having a smoke and a spell after
-rigging two new windlass standards, he came up to us,
-<a name="png.096" id="png.096" href="#png.096"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>80<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>and in a furtive sort of manner, began to try and discover
-the position of those claims which we had already
-prospected. Having no motive for concealment, we told
-him as well as we could, also pointing out most of them
-from where we sat.</p>
-
-<p>He appeared quite pleased as we finished, and marched
-off with his old tin dish banging and rattling against the
-pick on his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>‘That old man,’ remarked Harry presently, ‘is a
-dangerous old man. Moreover, he is a liar.’</p>
-
-<p>‘How do you know that?’ I asked.</p>
-
-<p>‘The first,’ he replied, ‘I feel—as <i>Kálee</i> did. Now for
-the second count in the indictment. Did you not hear
-him tell us that this was his first visit to Yamnibar?
-Well, when he asked so carelessly if we had tried the big
-shaft over yonder—the one where you can see the remains
-of a horse-whim—and you said that we had not, a
-momentary gleam of satisfaction passed across his face.
-We’ll try that hole to-morrow morning. Luckily, our
-new standards are finished.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Pooh!’ I said. ‘My dear fellow, your legal training
-has made you too suspicious. The poor old beggar may
-have an idea of prospecting that very shaft himself.’</p>
-
-<p>‘He probably has,’ replied Treloar quietly. ‘Only
-don’t forget that he doesn’t like underground work.’</p>
-
-<p>However, my companion had his own way, which,
-except in such matters as that of the snake-test, he
-generally did; and next morning saw us fixing our
-windlass at the summit of the big heap of mullock which
-towered above its fellows.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.097" id="png.097" href="#png.097"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>81<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>We seldom got anything in such claims. They had
-mostly been worked by rich companies, and every ounce
-of wash-dirt removed.</p>
-
-<p>It was pretty late by the time we had removed sufficient
-of the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">débris</i> from the bottom of the shaft—too late to do
-more that night.</p>
-
-<p>As we walked over to our camp, we caught a glimpse
-of ‘Brummy’ following us.</p>
-
-<p>‘He’s been watching,’ said Treloar.</p>
-
-<p>‘Nonsense!’ I replied impatiently. ‘You’re becoming
-a monomaniac.’</p>
-
-<p>That evening our neighbour came over to our fire; and
-in consequence <i>Kálee</i>, in low threatening communion
-with herself, had to be put upon the chain.</p>
-
-<p>‘Goin’ to try the big un?’ he asked presently.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes,’ said Harry; ‘there may be something there.
-One can never tell.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Not much danger!’ he blurted out. ‘The coves as
-worked Number One North Rainbow weren’t the chaps
-to leave much behind ’em. Leastways’—he quickly
-added, seeing his mistake, ‘so I’ve heerd say.’</p>
-
-<p>Treloar gave me a look which meant ‘How now?’ but
-neither of us took further notice.</p>
-
-<p>‘I’ve heard tell, too,’ he continued, ‘as that claim’s
-häänted.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh!’ said Treloar airily, and as if in constant
-association with them, ‘we don’t mind ghosts. It’s the
-living, not the dead, that force us betimes to keep a
-sharp look-out.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, mates,’ retorted Brummy, rather sulkily, ‘I
-<a name="png.098" id="png.098" href="#png.098"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>82<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>ain’t quite cunnin’ enuff yet to chew tacks, but I ain’t
-not altogether a born hidjiot; an’ if anybody was to offer
-me a thousand poun’ to go down that ’ere shaft, where
-you got your win’less rigged, an’ up them drives, I
-wouldn’t do it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I was down it to-day,’ I remarked, ‘and didn’t notice
-anything out of the common.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Mebbe not, mebbe not—yet,’ said he. ‘But the
-yarns I’ve listened to—on the Lachlan, over yander—consarning
-that ’ere Rainbow claim ’d make your ’air
-stick up stiff.’</p>
-
-<p>During the night, feeling restless and unable to sleep,
-I got up and went outside. The weather was very hot,
-and, for some time, I sat and listened to the faint wash
-of the sea, longing for a plunge in its cool depths.
-Suddenly, in the great expanse of gloom, my eyes
-caught the glimmer of a light. As nearly as I could
-guess, it was moving slowly towards the shaft we were to
-descend in the morning.</p>
-
-<p>‘There goes your aged friend,’ said a voice at my
-shoulder, which made me start with the unexpectedness
-of it.</p>
-
-<p>‘Too hot and close to sleep,’ explained Treloar.
-‘Come out for a breath of air.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Let’s shepherd the old chap, and see what his little
-game is. Bring the lantern. Needn’t show a light.
-We know the way well enough. I expect he’s after
-ghosts.’</p>
-
-<p>As, breathless, we arrived at our windlass, Treloar
-gave a grunt of disappointment on seeing that
-<a name="png.099" id="png.099" href="#png.099"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>83<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>everything was exactly as we had left it—rope coiled neatly
-round the barrel, green-hide bucket hanging over the
-mouth.</p>
-
-<p>‘It must have been a Jack-o’-lantern,’ said he; ‘or
-perhaps the old sinner’s gone down some other shaft.
-Yes, by Jingo! look there!’ he exclaimed, pointing to
-where, a couple of hundred of yards distant, a flash of
-light was visible for a moment. ‘He’s gone down the
-Snake Shaft! Those ladders are as rotten as pears;
-and he’ll break his wicked old neck if he isn’t careful.
-I wish him joy of all he’ll find there, even if he gets to
-the bottom safely. What came we out for to see? Let’s
-make back.’</p>
-
-<p>It was my turn down next morning, and when I got
-to the end of the hundred and odd feet of the häänted
-shaft, I lit my candle, and, at random, entered one of
-the four roomy drives that had been put in so many
-long years ago.</p>
-
-<p>So extensively had it been quarried, that I was only
-obliged to stoop slightly. Not a trace of earthen pillar
-here. A valuable property this, and a clean-swept one.
-Travelling warily along, I suddenly stumbled over a
-ridge of mullock, into what was evidently another drive
-altogether.</p>
-
-<p>My course, so far, had been downwards. The new
-tunnel sloped slightly upwards.</p>
-
-<p>Evidently both claims had been driving for a ‘gutter.’
-One of them had got to the end of its tether before
-reaching it. The surface limits of ‘golden holes’ are
-pretty strictly defined; but roguery, as well as miscalculation,
-<a name="png.100" id="png.100" href="#png.100"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>84<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>has been known to produce curious effects in adjoining
-claims. Not that, just then, I bothered myself
-with any such speculations. I was on the look-out for a
-lump of that rich water-worn conglomerate which had
-made Yamnibar, in the days of its youth, the talk of the
-world. Sitting down to rest a minute, the candlelight
-fell brightly on the shining steel of a pick.</p>
-
-<p>I had noticed how freshly the earth smelled, and
-wondered thereat. The pick was fresh too. One could
-swear that it had not left its owner’s grip five minutes.
-Without a doubt it had been used to remove the thin
-curtain of earth between the rival drives.</p>
-
-<p>Looking more closely, fresh knee and footprints were
-plentiful.</p>
-
-<p>What the deuce did it mean?</p>
-
-<p>Crawling along the new drive, which was much
-smaller than the Rainbow’s, I at length emerged into
-a shaft that struck me as familiar.</p>
-
-<p>The ‘Snake,’ or I was a Dutchman!</p>
-
-<p>I knew it by the ladders, for one thing; for another,
-by a piece of timber at the entrance to the opposite
-drive—the one in which we had made our three-ounce
-rise.</p>
-
-<p>I tried the rungs of the rude ladders. Not half so
-rotten as we had taken them to be. Also covered with
-fresh earth left by recent boots.</p>
-
-<p>Only fifty feet to the top, and up I went safely enough.
-Treloar was sitting smoking, with his back towards me
-as I approached.</p>
-
-<p>I startled him finely when I spoke.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.101" id="png.101" href="#png.101"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>85<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘This is the hole the old man wants,’ he remarked,
-after hearing my story. ‘He knew he couldn’t very well
-get down our rope and climb up it again. But he knew
-that one of the ‘Snake’ drives ran nearly into one of
-these. I suspect he must once have been employed in
-one or other of the claims. Either that, or he’s been
-fossicking here before. You know we’ve come across
-plenty of traces of such. Cunning old dodger! But
-what <em>can</em> he be after? I tell you what. We’ll both go
-down and try another of the drives. We’ll leave <i>Kálee</i>
-on top to watch. I’ll bet you she’ll sing out pretty
-soon.’</p>
-
-<p>I said nothing, for I was beginning to have doubts
-respecting ‘Brummy’s’ veracity.</p>
-
-<p>This time I lowered Treloar first. Then, whilst
-he held the rope taut, I slipped comfortably down.</p>
-
-<p>We chose the opposite drive to the one I had explored,
-and moved in, Treloar leading.</p>
-
-<p>‘Hello!’ said he presently, ‘someone’s been here
-before us. See, there’s been a good-sized pillar taken
-out. Why, here’s some of the dirt left yet! And—good
-God!’ he suddenly exclaimed, ‘what’s this?’</p>
-
-<p>Pushing up alongside him, and holding my candle
-forward, I saw, lying at full length, a human skeleton.
-And yet it was not a complete skeleton. Here and
-there, rags and tatters of flesh, dry and hard as leather,
-stuck to the frame. A pair of heavy boots, with the ankle
-bones protruding, lay detached, and remnants of clothing
-were still visible. But the head was what fixed our
-gaze, the first horror of the thing over. The fore part
-<a name="png.102" id="png.102" href="#png.102"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>86<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>of the skull had been smashed completely in. Near by
-lay a small driving-pick, thickly encrusted as with
-rust.</p>
-
-<p>‘Neither rats, nor mice, nor snakes did that,’ whispered
-Treloar, pointing to the awful fracture.</p>
-
-<p>‘Surely,’ I replied, with a shiver, ‘this can’t be the
-thing old Brummy’s searching for. No wonder he
-insisted on the place being haunted.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Not that poor valueless shell,’ answered my friend,
-who was now kneeling, ‘but this! and this! and this!’
-holding up, as he spoke, three fine nuggets, whose dull
-gleam had caught his eye in the heap of loose drift on
-which the skeleton partially lay.</p>
-
-<p>‘Never!’ I exclaimed. ‘He never would have had
-the pluck to face back again if <em>that</em> is some of his
-work.’</p>
-
-<p>‘If it is,’ said Treloar, quickly springing to his
-feet, thereby bumping the roof with his head, ‘we
-shall soon hear of it. Back, man! Back for your life!
-Hark! By G—d! there’s <i>Kálee</i> now. Good dog, hold
-him!’ as if it were possible for her to hear at that
-depth.</p>
-
-<p>Pushing and scrambling along, we got to the entrance
-of the drive, where the muffled sounds resolved themselves
-in a furious hullaballoo of barks and curses.
-Then, as we paused for a moment, swish, swish, down
-came the windlass rope, falling all of a heap. Just as
-we were on the point of pushing out, what feeble light
-there was at the bottom changed into total darkness,
-and, with a terrific smash, a heavy mass fell at our feet.
-<a name="png.103" id="png.103" href="#png.103"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>87<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Then silence, broken only by low groans and hoarse
-fierce growls.</p>
-
-<p>With trembling hands we relit our candles, and saw
-more distinctly.</p>
-
-<p><a name="illo_p87" id="illo_p87">Upon the rope coils lay ‘Brummy,’ quite still</a>.
-Squatted on his breast, the great hound watched him
-narrowly—so narrowly that her lolling red tongue nearly
-touched the face of the prostrate man. Blood oozed
-slowly from his mouth and ears.</p>
-
-<p>With reluctance the dog obeyed her master’s call, and,
-apparently uninjured, crouched in a corner, panting
-loudly, while we examined Brummy.</p>
-
-<p>‘<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Habet!</i>’ said Treloar, as we turned him over. ‘Back’s
-broken! See here’ (producing a loaded revolver from a
-hip-pocket), ‘the old man meant business. It’s only
-guessing, mind. But he probably thought we should
-attempt to escape up the Snake Shaft, and would have
-shot us off the ladders like magpies. Well done,
-Goddess <i>Kálee</i>. You’ve proved yourself worthy of your
-name for once, anyhow.’</p>
-
-<p>With a good deal of trouble we got the rope through
-the drive into the Snake Shaft and on to our windlass
-again. It had been cut clean off with a tomahawk.
-We hove the man and the dog up. We let the other
-thing alone for a while. But the one we had thought
-dead was still alive, with a little life. As the cool air
-blew on his face he opened his eyes. It was all he
-could do. Black, beady eyes, once sharp and piercing,
-now fast dulling with the death-film. And he lay there
-and watched me, staring fixedly. It was a bright
-<a name="png.104" id="png.104" href="#png.104"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>88<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>sunshiny day, the birds were singing cheerily about us, and
-the wash of the sea was very faint. From the expression
-on his face I thought he was listening to it. Presently
-Treloar returned from the camp with some brandy, and
-poured a spoonful between the clenched teeth.</p>
-
-<p>The spirit revived him a little, and he spoke. He
-<span class="nw">said,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Curse you!’</p>
-
-<p>More brandy, and he spoke again.</p>
-
-<p>‘Is he there yet?’</p>
-
-<p>‘He’s there yet,’ answered Treloar. ‘How long ago
-was it?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ten year.’</p>
-
-<p>‘What did you kill him for?’</p>
-
-<p>More brandy; and then, as his eyes brightened, he
-laughed, actually laughed up at us, saying, in a strong
-<span class="nw">voice,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Why, you fool, for the big lump, o’ coorse! A
-’underd an’ eighty ounces! Too big to share, I reckon.
-I’d a-smashed a dozen men for it in them days, let alone
-a poor softy like Jim.’</p>
-
-<p>‘There must be thirty or forty ounces down there,’ I
-remarked. ‘Why didn’t you take that too?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Never you mind,’ he said. ‘I come back for it now.
-And if it hadn’t been for that theer infernal dorg I’d ha’
-had it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And how about us?’ asked Treloar, as, obeying the
-look in his eyes, he gave him another drink.</p>
-
-<div class="illo">
-<a name="png.105" id="png.105" href="#png.105"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>88a<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a><img id="i088fp" src="images/i_088fp.jpg" alt="[Illustration]"
- /><p><span class="ns">    [Illustration: </span>Upon the rope coils lay “Brummy,” quite still. (<a href="#illo_p87">Page 87</a>)<span class="ns">]</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The dying man smiled significantly, but said nothing.
-There was a long pause, during which Brummy shut his
-<a name="png.107" id="png.107" href="#png.107"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>89<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>eyes, and breathed stertorously, whilst <i>Kálee</i>, drawing
-herself noiselessly along on her belly, came closer, and
-looked into his face, but with no anger in her gaze
-now.</p>
-
-<p>‘There’s one thing I can’t understand,’ said Treloar,
-in a low voice, ‘and that is how he contrived to get up
-this shaft again with the gold.’</p>
-
-<p>Quietly as he spoke, Brummy heard him, and <span class="nw">muttered—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Would ye like to know?’</p>
-
-<p>‘No, no!’ exclaimed Treloar earnestly. ‘We have
-wasted far too much precious time already in vain talk.
-Can we do anything to make your mind easier? You
-know you can’t last much longer. In God’s name try
-and prepare yourself to meet Him.’</p>
-
-<p>Very slowly came the reply, in short <span class="nw">gasps,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘I’m easy enough. If I could choke the pair o’ ye by
-winkin’ I’d do it. I’m gittin’ cold a’ready. But I’m
-cursin’ ye to mysen all the time. If I kin git back I’ll
-häänt ye.’</p>
-
-<p>Another long silence, and then he <span class="nw">murmured,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Take that dorg away, Jim, or I’ll put the pick into
-yer! There, you got it now, ole man! Ah, would yer?’</p>
-
-<p>Then the flickering light in the eyes failed altogether,
-and, I take it, a very defiant, murderous old soul went
-forth to meet its Maker.</p>
-
-<p><i>Kálee</i>, smelling at the body, sat upon her haunches
-and wailed loudly and dismally after the manner of her
-kind, answered from the flat by Eclipse, marvelling at
-the disturbance of his friend, with sonorous bellowings.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.108" id="png.108" href="#png.108"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>90<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>This was the requiem of him as he passed to join the
-other shades of Yamnibar. Slain by a dog and the cunning
-of his own hand.</p>
-
-<p>As for the gold that ‘Jim’ had lain by so quietly, and
-watched so patiently through the years, we never got any
-of it.</p>
-
-<p>The three nuggets figured in the police-court inquiry,
-with other things, under the title of ‘Exhibit A.’</p>
-
-<p>That was the last glimpse we had of them.</p>
-
-<p>Departmental red tape enwrapped them so closely that
-no amount of solicitation could render them visible again—to
-us.</p>
-
-<p>Easier would it be to draw leviathan from the waters
-with a bit of twine and a crooked pin than to draw
-‘treasure trove’ from the coffers of a treasury—colonial
-or otherwise.</p>
-
-<p>To this day they are possibly accumulating dust,
-pigeon-holed with the depositions in the case. But
-I doubt it, I doubt it.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="The Protection of the ‘Sparrowhawk’"><a name="png.109" id="png.109" href="#png.109"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>91<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>THE PROTECTION OF THE
-‘SPARROWHAWK.’</h2>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smc">Many</span> people have their special antipathies. There
-are instances on record of one fainting at the scent of
-heliotrope; of another becoming hysterical at the mewing
-of a cat; and so on, and so on, <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">ad infinitum</i>. The
-Scotch, as a rule, are anything but a nervously susceptible
-nation, taken either collectively or individually. Nor
-have I heard that those members of it who follow the
-sea as a calling are more so than their shorekeeping
-compatriots.</p>
-
-<p>Still, to the present day, and probably to the day of his
-departure, John M‘Cracken, retired master mariner, of
-Aberdeen, becomes signally and powerfully moved by
-the cry of the domestic duck, rendered universally and
-approximately as ‘Quack!’ His red face grows redder,
-his light blue eyes glower menacingly, and his hands
-open and close nervously, as if longing for some missile
-wherewith to annihilate the unconscious fowl—or its
-human imitator.</p>
-
-<p>The <cite>Sparrowhawk</cite>, barque, M‘Cracken master, was
-chartered to convey returning Chinese passengers from
-Singapore to Amoy.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.110" id="png.110" href="#png.110"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>92<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>I think the regulations as to space, numbers, etc., etc.,
-could not, in those days, have been very strict. Be this
-as it may, Skipper M‘Cracken filled up until he could fill
-no more. The ’tween deck was like a freshly-opened
-sardine tin; on the main deck they lay in double tiers.
-Many roosted in the tops. The boats on the davits and
-the long-boat on the skids swarmed with the home-going
-children of the Flowery Land. The better class,
-merchants, tradesmen, etc., had secured everything aft,
-from the captain’s cabin to the steward’s pantry, for
-which accommodation fabulous sums found their way
-into the pockets of M‘Cracken and his mates. For’ard,
-the crew had vacated the forecastle in consideration of
-sundry handfuls per man of dollars, which they had
-subsequently discovered to be ‘chop.’</p>
-
-<p>The mild-eyed heathen in his leisure moments had
-amused himself by punching pellets of good silver out of
-them, and filling the holes up with lead. From taffrail
-to bowsprit-heel, from waterways to keelson, the <cite>Sparrowhawk</cite>
-seethed and stank with a sweltering mass of yellow
-humanity. Every soul had a square of matting and a
-water-jar, also an umbrella. They also all had money—more
-or less. The fellows aft, with the flowing silk gowns
-and long finger-nails, owned chests of it, all in silver
-specie, stowed snugly away in the lazarette. The herd
-carried their little fortunes, hardly earned by years of
-incessant toil as <i>sampan</i> men, porters, or what not, in the
-great border city on the sea, hidden upon their persons.</p>
-
-<p>The vessel looked grotesque to a degree. She was
-flying light, and towered loftily out of the water. Upon
-<a name="png.111" id="png.111" href="#png.111"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>93<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>her deck, amidships, rose two big arrangements after the
-nature of boilers. These were for cooking rice, and were
-occasionally the scenes of fierce fighting, during which
-the Europeans would clamber into the rigging, leaving
-a clear field, and applaud vociferously. They were a
-harmless people, and fought like sheep-dogs, rarely
-doing one another much harm.</p>
-
-<p>From the barque’s side protruded curious cage-like
-structures connected with the sanitary affairs of the
-multitude. This last lay everywhere, pervaded everything.
-If you wanted a rope you had to dislodge
-half-a-dozen grunting, naked bodies. Trimming the yards
-o’ nights the watches tripped and fell amongst the
-prostrate ranks.</p>
-
-<p>The passengers, however, bore it all placidly. They
-had paid M‘Cracken so many dollars per head for a piece
-of his deck, and the situation of it was quite immaterial.
-Moreover, were they not homeward bound after years of
-separation from wives and little ones with fortunes made
-beyond the sea? Men in such circumstances are apt to
-be good-tempered. A heavy squall would probably have
-caused the loss of the <cite>Sparrowhawk</cite> and all on board.
-But Captain M‘Cracken took the risk—and the dollars.
-He slept on an old sail folded across the cuddy skylight.
-His mattress he had leased along with his state-room to
-one of the merchants who, he understood, was a convert
-to Christianity. The wind kept light, with showers at
-intervals. At the first drop, up would go every umbrella;
-and, looking from aloft, the sight was a queer one.</p>
-
-<p>On leaving Singapore the skipper had been warned
-<a name="png.112" id="png.112" href="#png.112"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>94<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>that pirates were still to be met with in Chinese waters,
-and, short though the passage was, advised to arm, at all
-events in some sort, his ship and crew. This he did.
-At a marine store he bought, second-hand, a couple of
-cannon—three pounders—also several dozen of grape
-shot. In exchange for a worn mizzen-topsail and the fat
-saved by the cook (of usage the latter’s perquisite) on the
-passage out, he procured some old Tower muskets, a few
-boarding-pikes, and three horse-pistols for his own and
-his officers’ especial use. These last had flintlocks and
-mouths like a bell. Thus equipped, he declared himself
-ready for any piratical attack.</p>
-
-<p>The ship’s agents smiled meaningly, and winked at
-each other; but, knowing their man, forbore further
-advice, well recognising the inutility of it. A Scotchman
-who owns a full half interest in his ship, who hails
-from Aberdeen, and habitually comes ashore in latitude 0 with a Glengarry cap on, no umbrella, and
-naked feet, is not a being to stand argument.</p>
-
-<p>One night the moon rose full, and right aft. She
-rose, too, with a big black spot in her disc that had no
-right to be there.</p>
-
-<p>There was too much <i>samshoo</i> aboard for a very sharp
-look-out to be kept for’ard. That native spirit gets into
-men’s eyes and weakens them. But aft the skipper
-caught sight of the object.</p>
-
-<p>‘It’ll be a junk, I’m thinkin’!’ he said presently, after
-working away for a while with his glass; ‘an a muckle
-ane at that. She’s fetchin’ a breezie wi’ her, whilk’s
-a comfort.’</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.113" id="png.113" href="#png.113"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>95<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Some of the long-nailed aristocrats were lounging
-about the poop. They needed no glass to make out the
-approaching vessel. Gathering in a group, they cackled
-noisily, pointing and gesticulating among themselves.</p>
-
-<p>Then, coming up to the captain, one—it was his
-Christian friend—plucked him by the arm and uttered
-laconically, with extended digit, ‘Prat!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Weel, Johnnie,’ replied old M‘Cracken coolly, as he
-gathered the other’s meaning, ‘pireet, or no pireet, gin
-he come a wee closer, we’ll just pepper the hide o’ him
-wi’ cauld airn.’</p>
-
-<p>Without more ado, the Chinaman dived into his
-cabin and in a minute or two reappeared with a most
-hideous idol and a bundle of perfumed paper. Placing
-the thing right under the skipper’s nose, he lit a yard of
-paper and began to screech an invocation. As of good
-Presbyterian stock, M‘Cracken was irritated and shocked.</p>
-
-<p>‘Mon, mon,’ he exclaimed, ‘what wad ye be at!
-Hae ye niver been tauld that a’ graven eemages is an
-abomination in the sicht o’ the Lord? An’ I thocht
-ye was a Christian.’ So saying, he seized the joss and
-flung it far overboard into the silvery water, just rippling
-under the coming breeze. The worshipper uttered a
-yell of dismay. But there was no time to lose, and,
-rushing below, he brought up another god, ten times as
-hideous as the first one, and, descending to the main
-deck, aroused the ship with his devotions.</p>
-
-<p>Then arose the sound of a multitude waking in fear—an
-impressive sound and a catching. Up the open
-hatchways from the steaming, fœtid ’tween decks they
-<a name="png.114" id="png.114" href="#png.114"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>96<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>streamed in hundreds, like disturbed ants, with cries of
-alarm and grief, and strong callings upon their gods.
-In a minute the ship was alive with lights burning
-before idols of every description. A thousand half-naked
-figures crouched cowering from the break of
-the poop right for’ard. Aft, a handful of rugged Scotch
-seamen gazed quietly at the black spot over the water.
-Presently the two little guns were crammed half up to
-the muzzle with powder and grape, and placed each in a
-socket cut out for it after leaving Singapore. The
-remainder of the weapons were, with a stock of ammunition,
-divided amongst the crew. Hot irons were put in
-the galley fire; and the skipper, having thus placed his
-ship in a thorough state of defence, felt complacent, and
-half-inclined to shorten sail, wait for the pirates to come
-up, and then give them a lesson. Old seaman though
-he was, he was a new hand in these Eastern waters.</p>
-
-<p>Confiding his notion to the second mate, who was also
-carpenter, also sailmaker, a grizzled ancient shellback of
-much experience and endless voyaging, the other laughed
-aloud, but not mirthfully.</p>
-
-<p>‘If,’ said he, ‘yon’s a “prat,” as Johnnie there ca’s it,
-we’ll a’ be meat for the fishes afore the sun’s risen!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Hoots!’ exclaimed the skipper angrily, ‘whaur’s<!-- TN: apostrophe invisible --> yer
-pluck, Davie, mon! I didna think ye’d be for showin’
-the white feather a’ready, an’ ye a Newburgh lad as
-weel’s mysel’! What’s a handfu’ o’ naked salvages like
-yon, in compare wi’ us an’ oor arteelery?’</p>
-
-<p>‘An’ hoo mony men micht she carry yonder, div ye
-think?’ queried the other, taking a squint at the junk,
-<a name="png.115" id="png.115" href="#png.115"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>97<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>whose huge oblong sails shone whitely under the moonbeams.</p>
-
-<p>‘Mebbe a score or sae,’ replied M‘Cracken, ‘airmed
-maistley wi’ spears, an’ skeens, sic, as I’ve been tauld,
-bein’ their usual weepons.’</p>
-
-<p>The other chuckled hoarsely as he said, ‘If she’s
-a pireet, she’ll hae at the vera leest a guid twa ’unnered
-aboord, a’ airmed wi’ muskets an’ swords, forbye things
-they ca’ gingals, takin’ a sax-ounce ball, to say nothin’ o’
-stinkpots an’ ither deviltries. Mon, I’ve seen ’em wi’
-guns they cannonies there wadna mak’ rammars for.
-But if that chap has ony, I doubt we sud ha’ heard frae
-him ere the noo.</p>
-
-<p>‘I was ance,’ continued he, ‘lyin’ in Hongkong
-Harbour, when they cut oot the <cite>Cashmere</cite>, a bouncin’
-ocean steamer, in the braid daylicht, an’ murthered
-ivery soul on boord o’ her. Na, na, skipper; let her
-but get a haud on us, and ye’ll see the deil gang o’er
-Jock Wabster sure aneuch.’</p>
-
-<p>The skipper listened silently. Then, wetting his
-finger and holding it up, he <span class="nw">said,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Perhaps, after a’, Davie, mon, ye might ’s weel set
-they t’g’nt stun’s’ls, gin ye can get them up, wi’ sic
-an awfu’ rabble as is aboot the deck.’</p>
-
-<p>The breeze had died away again. There was only
-just enough of it to keep the sails full. The fresh
-canvas, however, sent the <cite>Sparrowhawk</cite> through the
-water half a knot faster, and she was beginning to perceptibly
-leave the junk astern, when suddenly out
-from her sides flashed a long row of sweeps, under
-<a name="png.116" id="png.116" href="#png.116"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>98<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>whose impulse she recovered her lost ground very
-quickly. If there had been any doubt about the
-character of the stranger, there remained none now;
-and the uproar, which had partially ceased, arose with
-tenfold vigour.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the passengers went down into the lazarette
-and commenced to stow as many dollars as they could
-about their clothing. Others divided their attention
-between their idols and the skipper, running frantically
-from one to the other. Curiously enough the junk
-appeared satisfied to maintain her distance, although,
-had she so desired, she could with her sweeps have
-easily overhauled the barque.</p>
-
-<p>Now, from away on the port hand, where lay the
-outline of the Chinese coast, black beneath the moon,
-came a gentle mist hanging low and thick upon the
-water. As it gradually enveloped the ship, hiding all
-but close objects from view, she was kept away three
-or four points. But, presently, with the haze, what wind
-there was left her, the sails gave a few ominous flaps,
-and then hung limply down. At this moment a Chinaman,
-uttering a loud yell of fright, pointed over the
-starboard quarter. There, close aboard, loomed up
-a dark mass almost, high as she was, on a level with
-the <cite>Sparrowhawk’s</cite> poop-railing. It was the junk.</p>
-
-<p>‘The het poker, quick!’ shouted the captain. Some
-one brought it and, unheeding the skipper, dabbed it
-straightway on the touch-hole of the little cannon pointing
-directly, as it happened, at the pirate.</p>
-
-<p>The powder being damp, fizzed for a minute, and,
-<a name="png.117" id="png.117" href="#png.117"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>99<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>just as M‘Cracken sung out, ‘More pouther; she’s
-fluffed ’i the pan!’ with a roar the thing went off. Off
-and up as well, for it sprung six feet in the air, and
-descended with a crash into the binnacle.</p>
-
-<p>‘Fetch the ither ane,’ shouted M‘Cracken, ‘<!-- TN: opening quote invisible -->an’ gie
-’em anither dose i’ the wame. Hear till ’em,’ he continued,
-as a most extraordinary noise arose from the
-junk now just abreast of the mizzen-rigging. ‘Hear till
-’em scraighin’, the thievin’ heathen pireets. They havena
-muckle likin’ for sic a med’cin’. It gives them the
-mirligoes. Pit yer fut on her, Tam Wulson, whiles I
-send her aff,’ he went on, addressing a sailor, as the other
-gun was brought over and shipped.</p>
-
-<p>‘Pit yer ain fut on her, captain,’ answered the man.
-‘I dinna a’thegither like the notion. She’ll lat oot
-like ony cuddy, judgin’ frae her mate.’ But the skipper
-was too excited to argue, and, applying the hot iron,
-spit—fizzle—bang, and the piece went up, and, this time,
-clean overboard.</p>
-
-<p>A thousand capering madmen were yelling at the
-top of their voices on board the <cite>Sparrowhawk</cite>; but
-high and shrill above even that clamour could be heard
-the screech from the junk at that last discharge. The
-fog was still thick around the latter, and the ship’s sails
-being aback, she was making a stern board towards the
-enemy, to whom M‘Cracken, exulting, determined to
-administer a <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">coup de grâce<!-- TN: original lacks circumflex --></i>.</p>
-
-<p>‘Noo then, a’thegither,’ he cried, and the old muskets
-and the bell-muzzled pistols roared and kicked and
-sent a leaden shower somewhere, while, amidst an
-<a name="png.118" id="png.118" href="#png.118"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>100<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>indescribable medley of yells and cheers, the defeated
-pirate vanished into the mist.</p>
-
-<p>Someone cried out that she had sunk. But presently
-the sound of her sweeps could be heard in the distance.</p>
-
-<p>Then the skipper, flushed and elated with victory,
-snapped his fingers in the second mate’s face, as he
-<span class="nw">exclaimed,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘That for yer Chinese pireets, Davie M‘Phairson!
-Whaurs a’ their muskets an’ gingals an’ sic-like the noo?
-Gin they had ony, they were ower frichted to make use
-o’ them I expeck! But,’ growing serious, ‘my name’s
-nae Sandy M‘Cracken gin I dinna chairge Tam Wulson
-two pun ten shillin’—whilk is the price o’ her at cost—for
-lettin’ the wee bit cannonie gang overboord. I tellt
-him to keep her down wi’ his feet, and he wadna.’</p>
-
-<p class="tb">.        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .</p>
-
-<p>Swatow at last; and the <cite>Sparrowhawk</cite> surrounded
-with a thousand <i>sampans</i> whose occupants welcomed
-their returned friends and relatives by trying to emulate
-Babel.</p>
-
-<p>M‘Cracken was deified. His cabin could not hold
-the presents—mostly in kind—that he received. Also,
-his grateful passengers, having set apart a day for special
-rejoicing and thanksgiving, returned, and, willy nilly, decorated
-the <cite>Sparrowhawk</cite> after the manner of their
-land with banners and lanterns, and had a high old
-time on board under the leadership of the convert, who
-bewailed his backsliding, and privately asked M‘Cracken
-to baptise him anew.</p>
-
-<p>The story of the fight ran all up and down the
-<a name="png.119" id="png.119" href="#png.119"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>101<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>seaboard. Hongkong heard of it, or a version of it, and
-the <cite>Gazette</cite> published a long story headed in big caps:
-‘Another Piratical Outrage.—The <cite>Sparrowhawk</cite> turns
-on her Pursuer—Conspicuous Bravery of the Captain
-and Crew—The Pirate Beaten off with Great Loss.’
-Singapore heard it, and the <cite>Straits Times</cite> followed
-suit with ‘Four Junks and Terrible Slaughter.’ This
-latter item, as we shall presently see, being pretty near
-the mark.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">.        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .</p>
-
-<p>But what cripple is this that, in a couple of days,
-comes staggering up to the Swatow anchorage with
-her mat sails full of holes and her decks covered with
-scarcely dry blood, and whose crew dance and screech
-a wild defiance at the <cite>Sparrowhawk</cite> as she passes on
-to the inner harbour?</p>
-
-<p>Presently off comes a mandarin and a guard of soldiers
-and hales M‘Cracken ashore, protesting and threatening.</p>
-
-<p>The British Consul is just dead of enteric fever. There
-is, however, a French one, and in his room the complaint
-of Sum Kum On, master of the <cite>Delight of the Foaming
-Seas</cite>, is heard. The tribunal is a mixed one, consisting
-of two mandarins and the Consul. The first witness
-called is Sum Kum On. He states that his vessel is a
-coaster, engaged mostly in the poultry trade. That, on
-the present trip, he left Kin Fo, a small port four days’
-sail from Swatow, laden with a deck cargo of ducks for
-the Swatow and Chee Foo markets. Had on board one
-passenger, a wealthy tea-grower of Honan, who, carrying
-with him many dollars, was naturally nervous, and afraid
-<a name="png.120" id="png.120" href="#png.120"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>102<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>of pirates. Sighting the big vessel, the tea-grower, now
-in court, and prepared to give evidence, prayed him
-(Sum Kum On) to keep close to it for protection from
-said pirates.</p>
-
-<p>He did so. But in the calm and mist he unwittingly,
-and without evil intent (being, as their Highnesses could
-see, only a poor trader) came too near, when to his
-amazement showers of bullets and great cannon balls
-tore his sails to pieces; and, but for the coops being
-piled high on deck, assuredly every soul must have
-perished.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of explanations and shouts for mercy he was
-repeatedly fired into, all his cargo killed, sixty new coops
-of the best bamboo knocked to atoms; one of his crew
-desperately wounded, his vessel irretrievably damaged.
-His claim was for five hundred dollars; and he retired,
-secure in the knowledge that the Heaven-Born Son of
-the great foreign nation who, that day, with the Twin
-Lights of Justice, occupied the judgment-seat, would
-mete out compensation with an unsparing hand.</p>
-
-<p>The dealer gave evidence much to the same effect.
-Then the wounded sailor, whose scalp had been furrowed
-by a ball, ghastly with bandages and the gore which he
-had liberally smeared over his features, told his tale. To
-wind up with, the unlucky jumping cannon, which had
-pitched on to the deck of the junk, was produced as
-evidence of identity. Outside, in piles, lay other witnesses—hundreds
-of fine fat ducks, stiff and ‘high.’</p>
-
-<p>Around the building the fickle crowd could be heard
-raging for the blood of the unfortunate M‘Cracken, so
-<a name="png.121" id="png.121" href="#png.121"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>103<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>lately their hero. The Consul, who spoke English well,
-was obviously ill at ease. The two mandarins glared
-sourly at the poor skipper.</p>
-
-<p>‘I think, captain, you’d better pay at once,’ said the
-Consul. ‘Evidently a most unfortunate mistake has
-been made; and that is the only way out of it that I
-can see.<!-- TN: original has comma -->’</p>
-
-<p>‘I’ll see him dom’d afore I do!’ exclaimed the skipper.
-‘Five hundred dollars! Why, it’s a hundred pun sterlin’
-o’ oor money! An’ a’ for a wheen dukes an’ a crackit
-heid! Na, na! Tell the skirlin’ fule I’ll gie him fifty
-dollars, and that’s mair than a’ his gear’s worth. I’ll
-gang to preesin suner than pay as muckle siller as he’s
-askin’!’</p>
-
-<p>Outside the ‘Children of far Cathay’ could be heard
-yelling louder than ever for the heart, liver, and entrails
-of the white devil. The Consul’s face grew graver as he
-listened to the wounded sailor, just below the open
-window haranguing the crowd.</p>
-
-<p>‘What’s a’ that claver aboot?’ asked the skipper.</p>
-
-<p>‘They are demanding,’ replied the Consul, ‘that these
-gentlemen’—indicating the mandarins—‘should have
-you crucified at once. And, upon my word, captain, if
-you don’t soon make up your mind, they’ll do it. I am
-powerless to assist you in any way beyond finding you
-the money.’</p>
-
-<p>M‘Cracken turned blue. It was like parting with his
-life, the parting with that hundred pounds. But he
-could see no escape. As the Consul quickly told him,
-this was no question of imprisonment, but one of cash
-<a name="png.122" id="png.122" href="#png.122"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>104<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>down. So he paid; and, presently, followed by a coolie
-carrying the little cannon, made his way to the boat
-between lines of grinning soldiery, over whose shoulders
-the rabble, derisive now, quacked itself hoarse. And
-amongst the noisiest<!-- TN: original reads "noisest" --> of them he caught sight of his
-Christian passenger.</p>
-
-<p>The <cite>Sparrowhawk</cite> took no freight from Swatow. She
-sailed for Rangoon speedily; but there it was just as bad.
-The joke was too good not to circulate. In every
-eastern port she and her people were greeted with volleys
-of ‘quacks’ by the native population both on land and
-water. Legions of imps, black and copper-coloured, and
-all quacking with might and main, formed the skipper’s
-retinue if he went ashore anywhere between Yokohama
-and Bombay.</p>
-
-<p>Native masters of country <i>wallahs</i>, lying within hail,
-would grin, and ask him for the protection of the
-<cite>Sparrowhawk</cite> to their next port of call. It became
-unbearable. India, China and Japan seemed to turn
-into duck-pens at his approach.</p>
-
-<p>So he took the <cite>Sparrowhawk</cite> out of those waters altogether,
-and shortly afterwards gave up the sea. But,
-although there are no ducks within a mile of his house
-on the Aythen, there are urchins—Scotch urchins—and
-he has not perfect peace. The story is too well
-known.</p>
-
-<p>As for his crew, even yet, if one should, with intent,
-imitate the cry of that fowl disastrous where two or three
-of them happen to be foregathered, they will come at you
-with the weapons nearest.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="The Duke of Silversheen"><a name="png.123" id="png.123" href="#png.123"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>105<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>THE DUKE OF SILVERSHEEN.</h2>
-
-<p class="subtitle"><i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Quæ amissa, salva.</i></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smc">The</span> parlour of the ‘Woolpack’ was full of men in from
-their stations for ‘Land Court Day.’ A babel of talk
-was toward—mostly ‘shop.’ ‘Footrot!’ shouted a
-small energetic looking man, ‘I’ll tell you how I cure
-my sheep! You boil vinegar, and arsenic, and blue-stone
-up—No, Polly, I ordered lager. And then—’
-‘Worms,’ my dear fellow, another was saying, ‘You can’t
-cure ’em! Don’t tell me! You go and make an infernal
-chemist’s shop of your sheep’s stomach, ruin the wool
-and constitution; and, after all your trouble, up bobs
-the little worm serenely as ever.’ ‘Strike,’ came from
-another corner of the big room. ‘No fear! No strike
-this year if we hang together like we mean to do. I
-think we’re pretty right in this district, anyhow. Everybody’s
-joined, bar M‘Pherson, and he’ll come-to presently.
-By jingo, here he is! Touch the bell, Bob, and
-let’s have ’em again.’ As the speaker finished, a burly,
-grey-whiskered man entered with, in his wake, another
-person who had evidently been closely pressing his
-<a name="png.124" id="png.124" href="#png.124"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>106<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>companion with argument and persuasion, for the latter was
-saying <span class="nw">irritably,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Once for a’, I tell ye, no. I’ll nae join. I’ll just
-stan’ on my ain bottom, an’ employ wha I like. When I
-want my wool aff, aff it comes; an’ wha takes it aff I
-dinna care a damn, so it’s taken off to my satisfaction!
-Will that do ye?’</p>
-
-<p>‘The gospel of selfishness according to M‘Pherson,’
-said a voice from out the smoke-clouds. ‘The assessment
-’d drive him mad.’ ‘Bang went saxpence!’
-sang out someone else, as the Scotch squatter turned
-angrily round with a dim idea that he was being
-baited.</p>
-
-<p>But the older men quietened the youngsters who
-threatened to break bounds.</p>
-
-<p>They still hoped—stubborn and untouchable, except
-by way of his pocket, though he was—to gain M‘Pherson
-to the cause.</p>
-
-<p>He was the largest sheepowner in the district, and
-that was saying a good deal when the smallest shore
-40,000. Palkara shed was one of the shearing prizes
-of the colony, and the A.S.<a name="fn7" id="fn7"></a><a title="Go to footnote 7"
- href="#Footnote7" class="fnanchor"><span
- class="ns">[Footnote </span>7<span class="ns">]
- </span></a> Union officials viewed the
-defection of its owner with joy.</p>
-
-<p>‘So I hear you bought the “Duke” down at the sales,
-Mac?’ said one presently, as the old man, his wrath
-subsiding, sipped his whisky and water.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ay,’ responded he, ‘it was a stiff price to gie, but
-I’m no regrettin’ it. He’s a wonnerfu’ fine beast.’</p>
-
-<p>They were sitting with their backs to the open
-<a name="png.125" id="png.125" href="#png.125"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>107<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>windows, which gave on to a many-seated crowded
-verandah, and from this <span class="nw">came,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘That you may lose him before you’ve had him a week,
-unless you join the Association!’</p>
-
-<p>‘If I do, I’ll join, and ask it to help me find him,’
-retorted M‘Pherson angrily into the hot outside night,
-and would fain have risen and gone in search of the
-speaker, but that his friend, whose name was Park, a
-neighbouring squatter, pulled him back, <span class="nw">saying,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Never mind these youngsters, Mac. They’re getting
-a bit sprung, I fancy. It’s no use making a row.
-When’ll the “Duke” be up?’</p>
-
-<p>‘He’s due here on Tuesday,’ replied the other, ‘an’, if
-ye’ll be in, ye can see him. He’s weel worth the lookin’
-at. He’ll come by rail to Burrtown, an’ then by coach on.</p>
-
-<p>Two bachelor brothers, the Blakes, who owned a run
-not far from Palkara, were close to the window at which
-the pair sat.</p>
-
-<p>The younger brother it was who had fired the remark
-inside about losing the great ram for which M‘Pherson
-had just paid 700 guineas.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">.        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, Jack, what passengers to-night?’ asked the
-overseer of Blake’s Tara Station, as Cobb &amp; Co.’s coach
-drew slowly up in the pouring rain close to the homestead
-door.</p>
-
-<p>‘Nary one, bar a cussed ole brute of a ram,’ replied
-the driver, as he stiffly dismounted, and handed
-out the mail. ‘I got him at the railway, and I’ve bin
-more cautious with him than if he’d bin a Lord Bishop
-<a name="png.126" id="png.126" href="#png.126"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>108<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>He’s for M‘Pherson up at Palkara. Hold the light
-please, Mr Brown, till I see if the beggar’s all serene.’</p>
-
-<p>‘He’s right enough,’ said the overseer, after a glance
-at the aristocrat, resting luxuriously on pillows, half
-buried in hay, and with his legs tied by silk handkerchiefs.
-‘Now,’ he continued, ‘slip inside and have a
-snack and a drop of hot grog. I’ll stand by the
-horses.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You’re a Christian, Mr Brown,’ remarked the driver
-gratefully, as he pulled off his gloves and blew on his
-numbed fingers. ‘It’s the coldest rain for this time o’
-the year as ever I felt.’</p>
-
-<p>Scarcely had his dripping figure entered the open
-kitchen door, when, from behind a clump of bushes,
-came two figures bearing something between them.
-Lifting the ‘Duke’ with scant ceremony out of his
-couch, they deposited their burden in his place, and
-after a few whispered words to Brown, still at the horses’
-heads, disappeared. Presently the driver returned, and,
-with a cheery ‘Good-night,’ started the coach rolling
-once more through the forty miles of mud and water
-between Tara and Combington.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">.        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .</p>
-
-<p>‘Coach in, Edwards?’ asked M‘Pherson the next
-afternoon as he drove up to the ‘Woolpack,’ accompanied
-by his friend Park.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, sir. It’s a bit late, though,’ replied the landlord.
-‘Roads terrible heavy after the rain. I had the ram
-untied an’ put in the stable, an’ gave him some green
-stuff.’</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.127" id="png.127" href="#png.127"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>109<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘That’s right, Edwards,’ said the squatter. ‘How does
-he look after the trip—pretty well?’</p>
-
-<p>The other hesitated before <span class="nw">answering,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Why, yes, sir; he seems hearty enough. But I’m
-no judge of sheep.’</p>
-
-<p>‘S’pose ye wouldna care about givin’ 700 guineas for
-him, eh, Edwards?’ chuckled M‘Pherson.</p>
-
-<p>‘No, sir,’ replied the landlord with emphasis, ‘I’m
-damned if I would.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ha, ha!’ laughed the other, as he drove into the
-yard, ‘and yet, mon, I wouldna swap him for the auld
-“Woolpack.” Come,’ he added impatiently, ‘unlock
-the door an’ let us hae a look at His Grace.’</p>
-
-<p>By this time there was quite a crowd on the scene.
-A couple of stock and station agents, a bank manager,
-the P.M., some drovers, everybody, in fact, who thought
-they knew a sheep from a goat, had assembled to have
-a look at ‘the big ram.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Keep awa’ frae the door,’ quoth M‘Pherson. ‘Ye’ll
-all be able to hae a good sight o’ him presently. Let
-him come right out into the yaird, Edwards.’</p>
-
-<p>As he finished, up the lane of spectators stalked a
-nondescript kind of animal, at which M‘Pherson just
-glanced, and then sang out to Edwards, appearing in the
-<span class="nw">doorway,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Ye never tauld me there was twa. Whaur’s the
-ither?’</p>
-
-<p>‘There’s only the one, sir,’ answered the landlord.
-‘That’s he.’</p>
-
-<p>‘What!’ and M‘Pherson fairly gasped as he stared at
-<a name="png.128" id="png.128" href="#png.128"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>110<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the brute, which—from the muleish head, down the
-sparsely ‘broken woolled’ back, and slab-sided flanks, to
-the bare, kangaroo-like legs—bore the impress all over
-of ‘rank cull.’</p>
-
-<p>Then turning to the grinning landlord, and with
-accent intensified by excitement, he shouted, ‘What’s
-yon thing? Whaur’s my ram? D’ye think I ped my
-money for sic a brute as that? What ha’ ye done wi’
-the “Duke”? If this is a wee bit joke o’ yer ain, Mister
-Edwards, time’s up, I do assure ye, sir.’ And he
-advanced threateningly towards the publican, who
-nimbly retreated into the crowd, whilst <span class="nw">protesting,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘I can swear to you, sir, that’s the very same sheep
-Jack Burns brought in the coach this mornin’. I helped
-to take him out, an’ I sez to Jack, “Well, he ain’t much
-to look at, Jack;” and Jack, he sez, “No, that he ain’t.
-I think the trip must have haffected him; he seems to
-have felled away sence we put him in at the railway.”’</p>
-
-<p>‘Tak’ me to the villain,’ groaned M‘Pherson, ‘till I
-get to the bottom of this de’il’s cantrip!’</p>
-
-<p>Followed by quite a procession, they passed to a little
-room, where the driver lay sleeping off the fatigues of
-the previous night.</p>
-
-<p>‘Hi!’ yelled the squatter, shaking him. ‘What ha’
-ye done wi’ my ram, ye rascal?’</p>
-
-<p>Jack, sitting up, half awake, replied <span class="nw">sulkily,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Damn your ram! He’s in the stable. What d’ye
-want, rousin’ people like this for?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I’ll rouse ye, ye scamp!’ roared the other. ‘Whaur’s
-<a name="png.129" id="png.129" href="#png.129"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>111<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>my ram—my “Duke,” I say? D’ye think that I dinna
-ken a coo frae a cuddy; an’ that I’m to be imposed on
-wi’ a blasted auld cull in place o’ the “Duke o’ Silversheen”
-that I ped 700 guineas guid cash for? D’ye
-imagine I’m daft, ye coach-drivin’ fule, ye? If ye dinna
-confess wha’s led ye astray, I’ll give ye in chairge this
-vera meenit. I’ll let ye ken that I’m Jock M‘Pherson o’
-Palkara; an’ I’m goin’ to mak’ it het for ye for this wee
-jobbie!’</p>
-
-<p>This tirade effectually awakened the driver, and said
-he, with an earnestness there was no <span class="nw">mistaking,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘By G—d, Mr M‘Pherson, I’m on the square. I
-never took much notice o’ the ram at the railway. It
-was dusk, too, when the agent put him in. I seen him
-two or three times along the road, an’ thought he looked
-fust class. Nobody could ha’ touched him without me
-knowin’ of it. But, at the best o’ times, I can’t tell one
-sheep from t’other, never havin’ had any truck with ’em.<!-- TN: punctuation invisible -->
-Anyhow, if there’s cross work ’bout this un, all I can
-say is, as I ain’t in it: An’ now you can send for the
-traps if you likes.’</p>
-
-<p>The man’s manner carried conviction with it, and for
-a few minutes M‘Pherson was silent.</p>
-
-<p>At last he <span class="nw">said,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Come awa’, some o’ ye, an’ catch the creature till I
-have a look at him.’</p>
-
-<p>But when caught, nothing was ascertainable beyond
-the one patent fact that he was a broken-mouthed, miserable
-old cull, who ought to have gone to market as a
-wether years ago. Earmarks, out of their own district,
-<a name="png.130" id="png.130" href="#png.130"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>112<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>are of precious little use as a means of identification now-a-days.</p>
-
-<p>It will be noticed that Jack forgot all about his twenty
-minutes’ stay and chat with the cook in Tara kitchen.
-The coach had been very much overdue.</p>
-
-<p>‘Surely you’re not going to take the thing home, Mac?’
-said his friend, as the former lugged the ‘Duke’s’ <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">locum
-tenens</i> towards the buggy. ‘He’s only fit to have his
-throat cut.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Never mind,’ replied M‘Pherson moodily, ‘he’ll
-mebbe turn out o’ some use yet.’</p>
-
-<p>Not that the old Scotchman was at all inclined to sit
-down quietly and suffer his loss. Very far from it. But
-he was no favourite, and public sympathy was absent.
-Unfeeling people averred that, at the time of the sale, he
-had been under the influence of hypnotism, etc., etc.; in
-fact, laughed at, and enjoyed the thing as a good joke.
-Therefore he was disinclined to blazon his misadventure
-throughout the Colonies. Also, he thought it would be
-bad policy to make too much noise.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, he quietly strained every nerve, and
-spent money freely in endeavours to discover the missing
-animal. Private detectives and the local police took the
-matter in hand, and with exactly the same amount of
-success.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">.        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the ‘Duke’ was thriving. At Tara a big
-underground cellar, lit by skylights, had recently been
-excavated. This was his home. There, waited upon by
-the only three in the secret, the great merino lived on
-<a name="png.131" id="png.131" href="#png.131"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>113<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the fat of the land. Some nights the Blakes would let
-him out into the garden for a pick, themselves or Brown
-securing him in his quarters again before they turned
-in.</p>
-
-<p>It was a lot of bother, doubtless. But what of that, if
-they could only ‘bring old Mac to his bearings,’ and
-secure Palkara for their Association!</p>
-
-<p>As for the risk of discovery, they laughed at it. From
-the minute the agent (who was ready to swear to the
-‘Duke’s’ identity) put him in the coach at the Burrtown
-terminus, everything seemed vague and exceedingly
-doubtful respecting the spot at which the transfer could
-possibly have been effected.</p>
-
-<p>The coach stopped at some half-dozen stations along
-the road, besides mail stages, and at none of these places
-could the slightest clue be obtained. In common with
-the rest, Tara was subjected to official visits.</p>
-
-<p>‘Certainly, Sergeant, happy to show you through all
-the paddocks. Like to see the rams? Yes, of course.
-We’ve got some very fine Havilahs you’ll be pleased
-with, I’m sure. Yes; terrible affair about poor M‘Pherson’s
-“Duke”! Have another nip before we start?’</p>
-
-<p>So, sheep galore did the unhappy police inspect, and
-carefully did they compare, stags, wethers, and ancient
-‘horny’ ewes with photos of the ‘Duke’ until, at length,
-quite dazed with the apparently endless quest, to say
-nothing of the whisky, they audibly cursed the whole
-ovine race back to the days of the first breeders.</p>
-
-<p>Only once did the brothers feel a doubt. Driving into
-town, they met M‘Pherson and a black-fellow following
-<a name="png.132" id="png.132" href="#png.132"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>114<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the old cull, who was steadily tramping along the road
-Tara-ward.</p>
-
-<p>‘What’s all this about, M‘Pherson?’ asked one,
-as they pulled up. ‘Have you taken a droving contract?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ay,’ replied the old fellow, glaring suspiciously at the
-pair. ‘Just thet. I’m wantin’ to see whaur Beelzebub,
-here, gangs. If he’s gotten a hame, which I muckle
-doot, mebbe he’ll mek back.’</p>
-
-<p>But a couple of miles on, Beelzebub struck a patch of
-clover, and stuck to it.</p>
-
-<p>The darkey watched him for three days, and, after he
-had finished every vestige, the old ram paused irresolutely,
-scratched his ear with his hind foot, and meandered
-calmly back to the township.</p>
-
-<p>So M‘Pherson returned with him to Palkara. A bit of
-the garden was fenced off, and here he used to sit and
-smoke and stare for hours at Beelzebub, until his friends
-began to think his loss had affected his brain.</p>
-
-<p>Like many of his countrymen, M‘Pherson was superstitious,
-and, deep down in his heart, was a lurking
-suspicion of <i>diablerie</i> that would not be exorcised.</p>
-
-<p>‘It’s no earthly use watching that beast, Mac,’ said
-Park, riding up one day, and finding his neighbour at his
-usual occupation. ‘Look as hard as you like, and that
-won’t turn him into the Duke. Now, take my advice,
-and I think you stand a show of getting him back again.
-You remember you said that night at the Woolpack,
-that, if you lost him, you’d join the Association and trust
-it to recover him for you, or something to that effect.
-<a name="png.133" id="png.133" href="#png.133"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>115<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Well, my notion is that some of the boys have had a
-finger in the pie. And I solemnly believe that, if you
-don’t soon make your mind up, you’ll never see the
-Duke any more. Come, now’s the time! Shearing will
-start presently. Besides, I know you want him badly for
-those Coonong stud ewes.’</p>
-
-<p>Park, himself a prominent member, used all his powers
-of persuasion, and to such good purpose, that in the
-next issue of the local paper appeared the <span class="nw">announcement,—</span></p>
-
-<p class="tbspace">‘Palkara will start shearing on —— under Conference
-rules.’</p>
-
-<p class="tb">.        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .</p>
-
-<p>A morning or so afterwards, M‘Pherson going out for
-his before-breakfast smoke and usual look at Beelzebub,
-to his astonishment saw him not. He had gone. But
-in his stead stood a stately, almost perfect animal, the
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">beau ideal</i> of what a ‘Champion’ should be. Around
-his neck he bore a card, on which the old squatter presently
-<span class="nw">read,—</span></p>
-
-<p class="tbspace">‘I am a fully paid-up member of the Pastoralists’
-Association of Australasia.</p>
-
-<p class="rtindent">‘(Signed)    <span class="smc">Silversheen</span>.’</p>
-
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<p><small><span class="unjust"><a name="Footnote7" id="Footnote7"><span class="ns">[Footnote </span
- >7<span class="ns">: </span></a> </span>Australian Shearers’.<span class="ns">]</span>
-<a title="Return to text" href="#fn7" class="fnreturn"
- ><i>Return to text</i></a></small></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="the Officer in Charge"><a name="png.134" id="png.134" href="#png.134"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>116<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>THE OFFICER IN CHARGE.</h2>
-
-<p class="subtitle"><span class="smc">A Far Inland Sketch.</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent">‘<span class="smc">A rising</span> township of some four hundred inhabitants,
-situated on the Trickle Trickle River. Distance from
-Sydney, north-west, six hundred and fifty miles.’</p>
-
-<p>Thus the <cite>Australian Gazetteer</cite>, speaking of the far-inland
-village of Jillibeejee. For days you shall have
-ridden over bush roads, fetlock deep in dust, through
-monotonous open forest, or over still more monotonous
-plain, ere, far away on a dry brown ridge, you catch the
-glitter of something in the bright, hot sunshine. This
-proceeds from the first roof in Jillibeejee. Then,
-making your horse stride carefully over the Trickle
-Trickle, whose banks are apt to crumble, you breast the
-ridge and take a bird’s-eye view of the township as it lies
-frying in the sun.</p>
-
-<p>This ridge must be fully fifty feet above the level of the
-surrounding country, and is probably the ‘rising’ referred
-to by the jocular <cite>Gazetteer</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>The first building is deserted; so is the second. As
-you ride along you come to others, dilapidated but, from
-<a name="png.135" id="png.135" href="#png.135"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>117<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>sounds within, peopled. There are altogether forty
-houses in Jillibeejee, which, by the <cite>Gazetteer’s</cite> reckoning,
-gives us an average of ten inmates to each one.</p>
-
-<p>I am afraid the <cite>Gazetteer</cite> has never been to Jillibeejee.</p>
-
-<p>In fact, very few people ever do seem to go there.
-Those that do, either depart again very shortly, or stay
-until theirs makes one amongst a collection of rudely-fenced
-enclosures on the banks of the Trickle Trickle,
-inside which sleep the pioneers of the place.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps the first emotion that arises in the visitor’s
-mind is of wonder that any pioneer, no matter how hard
-up he may have been, should have thought it worth
-while to commence pioneering at Jillibeejee. The
-second, that any others should ever join him in such a
-speculation. Neither tree nor any other green thing meets
-the sight. All is brown, barren, desolate—apparently a
-‘waste land where no one comes, or hath come since the
-making of the world,’ except that intrepid band in possession.</p>
-
-<p>Why do people live here? How do they live? I
-must discover this, if possible, before leaving. Having
-no time to spare, I begin at once.</p>
-
-<p>He is six feet in his stockings, broad, massive, hirsute,
-and tanned. The insignia of office in such a place
-would be an absurdity. Therefore his raiment is nondescript,
-and mostly slouch hat. This is the man who
-rules the official destinies of the settlement—the ‘Officer
-in Charge.’ To him I propound my conundrum.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ah,’ replies he; ‘ye shud jist come aroun’ whin ut’s
-a wet saison, an’ thin ye’d see the differ av ut.’</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.136" id="png.136" href="#png.136"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>118<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘<!-- TN: punctuation invisible -->Yes,’ I remark. ‘And when may that time be
-due?’</p>
-
-<p>‘God knows,’ says he piously, and with a sigh. ‘I’ve
-bin here four year, an’ I’ve seen ut wanst. Ye cudn’t
-see the counthry for a week bekase av the wather.
-Thin, afther, comes the grass an’ the clover six feet
-high. Ut’s a great counthry, them times, so it is,
-sorr.’</p>
-
-<p>It is high noon as I and my friend stroll along the
-fiery, dusty track amongst the iron-roofed ovens large
-and small.</p>
-
-<p>Everybody seems asleep, save that now and again we
-catch a glimpse of women, wan and prematurely old-looking.</p>
-
-<p>In the sun’s eye a man lies in the brown dust. He is
-on his back, his hat off, and snoring stertorously up at
-a cloud of mosquitoes, sandflies, and other abominations
-hovering and buzzing about his face.</p>
-
-<p>With a look of solicitude my guide <span class="nw">exclaims,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Sure, now, that’s Tim Healy, come in from Out
-Back, an’ his cheque gone already! Lend a hand, will
-ye, sorr, wid the other ind av him. The poor devil ’ll be
-sthruck intirely here, so he will.’</p>
-
-<p>So, one at each ‘ind,’ we bear the man from Out Back
-into the comparative shade of a verandah, where the
-constable takes off his boots, loosens his shirt collar, and
-props his head up, <span class="nw">saying,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘There, the cratur, mebbe he’ll waken wid nothin’
-worse nor a sore head, an’ a limekiln in the throttle av
-him.’</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.137" id="png.137" href="#png.137"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>119<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>A fit man and a proper, this one, I reflect, to be
-Officer in Charge of this half-forgotten fragment of a
-people.</p>
-
-<p>So, presently, I am not surprised at hearing that, in
-addition to that title, he bears the important ones of
-Clerk of Petty Sessions, Registrar of Small Debts Court
-and Births, Land Bailiff, Inspector of Slaughterhouses,
-Curator’s Agent, and others equally pertinent to his surroundings,
-but which I have forgotten.</p>
-
-<p>Entering the parlour of the one public-house, silent
-and deserted but for clouds of humming flies, a drowsy
-landlord, booted and spurred for riding, answers our
-knock.</p>
-
-<p>‘I was goin’ over the river an hour ago,’ he explains,
-rubbing his bleary eyes, ‘to run a beast in; but two or
-three of the boys wos here larst night, an’ they kep’ it up;
-so I lays down on the sofy an’ drops right off. What’ll
-ye have, gents?’</p>
-
-<p>I ask for beer. My companion smiles and ‘takes’
-rum.</p>
-
-<p>‘Lor bless yer!’ exclaims the landlord, ‘there ain’t bin
-no beer here this twelvemonth or more! I got some,
-somewheres, on the teams. But, the way things is, it’ll
-be another twelvemonth afore they show up. Dry time,
-ye see, sir.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, then,’ I say, ‘have you any whisky?’</p>
-
-<p>‘There was a bottle or two, but the boys—’ he
-commenced, <span class="nw">when,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘What’s the use av batin’ about the bush that way?’
-puts in my companion. ‘Why don’t ye tell the gint at
-<a name="png.138" id="png.138" href="#png.138"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>120<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>wanst that sorra a dhrop’ll he get in Jillibeejee, bar the
-rum utself. I’ve dhrunk worse in Port Mackay. Ut’s a
-wholesome dhrink, in moderation, an’ wid jist a suspicion
-o’ Trickle Trickle at the bottom av the tumbler.’</p>
-
-<p>So rum it is. The Officer in Charge takes his, I notice,
-very nearly pure, and without winking. We help ourselves,
-and the price is one shilling each.</p>
-
-<p>It is still terribly hot.</p>
-
-<p>‘It must be a long way over one hundred degrees in
-the shade,’ I remark.</p>
-
-<p>‘Come acrost to the station,’ says the Officer in Charge,
-‘an’ we’ll see. There’s no shade whatever in Jillibeejee.
-But there’s the best that is. Sure, ut’s weatherboard an’
-lined—the only wan in the town. There’s a thermomether
-there as tells how big a hate’s on.’</p>
-
-<p>So we go over. The place is like a furnace, and the
-glass registers one hundred and twenty-seven degrees.</p>
-
-<p>‘And you’ve been here some years!’ I gasp, sliding
-off my chair, a wet, limp heap, on to the floor, and
-staying there.</p>
-
-<p>‘I have, indade, sorr,’ replies he. ‘The first summer I
-was minded to blow me head off wid me pistol. The
-second was near as bad; but I don’t fale ’em so much
-now. Whin the wet do come, ut’s almost as thryin’; for
-the san’-flies an’ miskitties bangs Banagher. Ay, ut’s dull
-an’ lonesome like, sure enough, till the b’ys comes in for
-a change; an’ thin, if ye’ll belave ut, Jillibeejee is as
-ructious a towneen as is on God’s earth.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Come in from where? Where the deuce can anybody
-come in from? And who in the world would come
-<a name="png.139" id="png.139" href="#png.139"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>121<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>to such a hole as this ‘for a change?’ I ask irritably,
-whilst wringing my pocket handkerchief, as the heat
-proves too trying.</p>
-
-<p>‘Whisht!’ replies my host placidly. ‘Ye’ll mebbe
-have noticed that there’s not many min in Jillibeejee,
-knockin’ aroun’ like?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Only the fellow,’ I answer, ‘that we put in the
-verandah.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ay, he’s iver wan o’ the fust, is Tim Healy,’ says the
-Officer in Charge. ‘Whin the others are comin’ in, he’ll
-be afther going back, stone bruk, so he will, poor
-divil!’</p>
-
-<p>‘In from <em>where</em>? Back to <em>where</em>?’ I cry impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>‘To an’ fro the big stations on the border, over
-yander,’ replies he, with a wave of his hand westward.
-‘To the back av beyant, where they digs dams, an’ sinks
-wells, an’ fences an’ fights wid the naygurs, an’ herds cattle,
-an’ gathers up a cheque, and thin comes back like pilicans
-to their women and children on the edge o’ the
-wiltherness here. Good b’ys, in the main,’ he continues;
-‘just a little rough, perhaps, when the rum’s in. Ye
-see, sorr, ye can’t expeck much else from the craturs, for,
-iv this is bad, ut’s Hell utself out yander in the new
-counthry, where there’s no law, no polis, no nothin’.
-D’ye wander at the b’ys, now, wantin’ a change out av
-ut wanst an’ agin?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, perhaps not. But what must that other life be
-like?’</p>
-
-<p>So, in the gloaming, hot and close, with a hot-looking
-moon hanging in a hazy sky, I depart from Jillibeejee,
-<a name="png.140" id="png.140" href="#png.140"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>122<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>leaving its Officer in Charge—strong man, and a very
-fit—stroking a great black beard meditatively, and
-possessing his soul in patience for the stirring times
-which herald the advent of his charges from the ‘Back
-av Beyant.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="‘Sojur Jim’"><a name="png.141" id="png.141" href="#png.141"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>123<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘SOJUR JIM.’</h2>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smc">Brightly</span> blazed the watch-fires into the still night air,
-brightly from within the circle formed by them gleamed
-thousands of sparkling eyes, and fell on the ear a low,
-continuous sound, like the soft distant murmur of some
-summer sea on a shingly beach, as twelve thousand
-sheep peacefully chewed their cuds after the long day’s
-travel.</p>
-
-<p>The weather was close and sultry. So, feeling indisposed
-to sleep, I had left my hot tent and was walking
-round the whitish, indistinct mass of recumbent figures,
-when I nearly stumbled against the watchman, who, as
-one of the fires flared up, I saw was the eccentric
-individual known in the camp by the nickname of ‘Sojur
-Jim’; and, in pursuance of an idea I had long borne
-in mind, first assuring myself that all was right with my
-fleecy charges, I lit my pipe, stretched myself out on
-the short, thick grass and sand, and said, whilst looking
-at my <span class="nw">watch,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Now, Jim, spin us a yarn that will help to pass
-away the time.’</p>
-
-<p>But my companion is well-deserving of a more particular
-description. ‘Sojur Jim’ was the only name by
-which he was called, and this he had gained by an
-<a name="png.142" id="png.142" href="#png.142"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>124<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>extraordinary mania he possessed for destroying those
-small terrors of the Australian bush, familiar to all
-dwellers therein as ‘Soldier’ or ‘Bull-dog’ ants; insects
-fierce, intractable and venomous. These, then, seemed
-objects of especial aversion to Jim; and many a time,
-whilst travelling along, would one of the men sing out,
-‘Jim, Jim, sojurs!’ The effect was electrical; Jim,
-leaving his flock, would bound away towards the nest,
-and, dexterously using the long stick, flattened at both
-ends in rude shovel shape, which was his constant
-companion, he would furiously, regardless of innumerable
-stings, uproot and turn over the ‘sojurs’’ stronghold,
-and, having exposed its inmost recesses, complete
-the work of destruction by lighting a great fire upon it,
-and all this he would do with a set stern expression on
-his grim face, as of one who avenges never-to-be-forgiven
-or forgotten injuries.</p>
-
-<p>He was indeed a remarkable looking man, strong
-and athletic, and, in spite of his snow-white hair, probably
-not more than fifty years of age. Part of his
-nose, the lobes and cartilages of his ears, and one eye
-were wanting, whilst the rest of his face was scarred
-and seamed as if at one time a cross-cut saw had been
-roughly drawn to and fro over it. And as I watched
-him sitting there on a fallen log, the flickering blaze
-playing fitfully on the white hair and corrugated, mutilated
-features, I felt more than ever sure that the man
-had a story well worth the hearing could he but be
-induced to tell it.</p>
-
-<p>Amongst his fellows in the camp he was taciturn and
-<a name="png.143" id="png.143" href="#png.143"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>125<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>morose, never smiling, speaking rarely, apparently always
-lost in his own gloomy reflections. My request, therefore,
-was made with but faint hopes of success; but, to
-my surprise, after a few minutes silence, he <span class="nw">replied,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Very well, I’ll tell you a story. I don’t often tell it;
-but I will to-night. If at times you feel disinclined to
-believe it you have only to look at my face. I’m going
-now to tell you how I got all these pretty lumps and
-scars and ridges, and how I partly paid the men who
-made me what I am. “Sojur Jim” they call me, and
-think I am mad. God knows, I fancy so myself sometimes.
-Well,’ he went on, in language at times rude
-and unpolished, at others showing signs of more than
-average education, ‘Did you ever hear of Captain
-Jakes?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Of course,’ I answered, for the notoriously cruel
-bushranger had, after his own fashion, helped to make
-minor Australian history.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes,’ muttered Jim abstractedly, ‘he’s accounted
-for. So is his mate—the one who laughed the loudest
-of any. But there were three of them, and there’s still
-another left somewhere. Not dead yet!’ he suddenly
-exclaimed in a loud voice. ‘Surely not! My God, no!
-After all these years of ceaseless search! That would
-be too hard!’ And here he stood up and gazed
-excitedly into the outer darkness.</p>
-
-<p>‘But the story, Jim,’ I ventured to remark, after a long
-pause.</p>
-
-<p>‘Right you are,’ he replied, as he again sat down, and
-calmly resumed. ‘Well, it was the year of the big rush,
-<a name="png.144" id="png.144" href="#png.144"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>126<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the first one, to the Ovens. I was a strapping young
-fellow then, with all my life hopeful and bright before
-me, as I left the old mother and the girl I loved to try
-my luck on the diggings. Three years went by before I
-thought of returning to the little Victorian township on
-the Avoca, where we had long been settled; but then
-I struck it pretty rich, and made up my mind to go back
-and marry, and settle down alongside the old farm; for
-a pair of loving hearts were, I knew, growing weary of
-waiting for the return of the wanderer.</p>
-
-<p>‘Like a fool, however, instead of sending down my
-last lot of gold by the escort, I all of a sudden got
-impatient, and, packing it in my saddle-bags, along with
-a tidy parcel of notes and sovereigns, I set off alone.
-The third night out I camped on a good-sized creek,
-hobbled my horses, and after planting my saddle-bags in<!-- TN: original lacks "in" -->
-a hollow log, I started to boil the billy for supper.
-Presently, up rides three chaps, and, before I could
-get to my swag, I was covered by as many revolvers;
-while one of the men says, “Come along, now, hand
-over the metal. We know you’ve got it, and if you
-don’t give it quiet, why, we’ll take it rough.”</p>
-
-<p>‘“You’ve got hold of the wrong party, this time,
-mates,” says I, as cool as I could. “I’m on the
-wallaby, looking for shearing, and, worse luck, hav’n’t
-got no gold.”</p>
-
-<p>‘“Gammon,” says the first speaker. “Turn his swag
-over, mates.”</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, they found nothing, of course. Then they
-searched all over the bush round about, and one fellow
-<a name="png.145" id="png.145" href="#png.145"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>127<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>actually puts his hand up the hollow of the log in which
-lay hid my treasure; and I thought it was all up with
-it, when he lets a yell out of him and starts cutting
-all sorts of capers, with half-a-dozen big sojurs hanging
-to his fingers.</p>
-
-<p>‘Jakes (for he was the leader of the gang) now got
-real savage, and putting a pistol to my head, swore
-that he would blow my brains out unless I told where
-the gold was. Well, I wouldn’t let on, for I thought
-they were trying to bounce me, and that if I held out
-I might get clear off, so I still stuck to it that they’d
-mistaken their man.</p>
-
-<p>‘Seeing I was pretty firm, they drew off for a while,
-and, after a short talk, they began to laugh like madmen;
-and one, taking a tomahawk, cut down a couple of
-saplings, whilst another gets ready some stout cord;
-and Jakes himself goes poking about in the saltbush
-as if looking for something he’d lost. Before this they
-had tied my arms and legs together with saddle-straps
-and greenhide thongs; and there I lay, quite helpless,
-wondering greatly what they were up to.</p>
-
-<p>‘Presently the three came up, and tying me tightly
-to the saplings—one along my back, and one cross-ways—they
-carried me away a short distance to where
-I had noticed Jakes searching around, and then laid
-me down face uppermost, partly stripping me at the
-same time. I lay there quietly enough, puzzling my
-brains to try and guess what it was all about, and
-those three devils standing laughing fit to split their
-sides.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.146" id="png.146" href="#png.146"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>128<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘“Tell us now, will you,” said they, “where that gold’s
-planted? How does your bed feel? Are you warm
-enough?” and such like chaff, till I began to think they
-must have gone suddenly cranky, for I felt nothing at
-all. Perceiving that was the case, one of them took a
-stick and thrust it under me into the ground; and then—oh,
-God! it was awful!’</p>
-
-<p>Here Sojur Jim paused suddenly, and a baleful light
-gleamed from that solitary bright eye of his, whilst a
-spasm shook his whole frame, and his scarred features
-were contorted as if once more undergoing the agonies
-of that terrible torture.</p>
-
-<p>The wind sighed with an eerie sound through the
-tall forest trees around us; the cry of some night-bird
-came mournfully through the darkness, whilst black
-clouds flitted across the young moon, filling the sombre
-Australian glade with weird shadows—making the scene,
-all at once, dismally in unison with the story, as with
-a shiver I stirred the fire, and patiently waited for its
-narrator to go on.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes,’ he continued at length, ‘I dropped down to it
-quickly enough then. I was tied on to a sojur-ants’
-nest, and they swarmed about me in thousands—into
-my nose, ears, eyes, mouth, everywhere—sting, sting,
-sting, and tear, tear, tear, till I shrieked and yelled for
-mercy.<!-- TN: original has superfluous closing quote --></p>
-
-<p>‘“Tell us where the gold is planted,” said one of the
-laughing fiends—I heard him laugh again years afterward
-over the same story—“and we’ll let you
-go.”</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.147" id="png.147" href="#png.147"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>129<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘“Yes!” I screamed, “I’ll tell you. But for God
-Almighty’s sake take me out of this!” “Not much,”
-replied he. “Tell us first, and then you can jump into
-the creek and give your little friends a drink.” “Look
-in the big log,” I groaned at last. Then, one of them,
-remembering the sojurs, gets a stick and fossicks about
-till he felt the bags, when he shoves his arm up and
-drags them out.</p>
-
-<p>‘“A square thing, by G—d!” says Jakes, and turning
-to me, he said, “Mate, you’ve given us a lot of trouble,
-and as you look as if you were comfortably turned in for
-the night, it would be a pity to disturb you. So long,
-and pleasant dreams!” And, with that, away the three
-of them rode, laughing loudly at my screams for mercy.
-As you may think,’ went on Jim, ‘I was by this time
-nearly raving mad with pain. Thousands of those
-devil-ants were eating into my flesh, and me lying
-there like a log. Hell! hell will never be as bad as
-that was!</p>
-
-<p>‘Six months afterward I came to my senses again.
-It was a sunshiny spring morning, and I heard the
-magpies whistling outside the old humpy on the Ovens,
-as I tried to get up and go down to the claim, thinking
-that I’d had the nightmare terrible bad. But when I
-got off my bunk I fainted clean away on the floor, and
-there my mates found me when they came home to
-dinner. Good lads they were true men, who had
-nursed me and tended me through all the long months
-of fever and madness that had passed since the Escort,
-for which I should have waited, had by the merest
-<a name="png.148" id="png.148" href="#png.148"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>130<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>chance come across me and sent me back again to die,
-as everyone thought.</p>
-
-<p>‘But,’ and here, for the first time, Jim’s voice faltered
-and shook, ‘there was another and a gentler nurse who—God
-bless her—helped me back to life; the little
-girl who loved me came up—my mother was dead—and
-would have kept her word to me, too, and taken my
-half-eaten carcase into her keeping wholly, had I been
-mean enough to let her do it. But that was more than I
-could stand the thought of. So one morning I slipped
-quietly away to begin my man-hunting; for I had vowed
-a merciless retribution upon my undoers if I had to
-track them the wide world over. That’s close on
-fifteen years ago. I can account for two, and live on in
-hopes of yet meeting with the third.</p>
-
-<p>‘You’ve heard how Jakes pegged out?’ asked Jim
-abruptly.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes,’ I answered, ‘Sergeant O’Brien shot him in the
-Long Swamp.’</p>
-
-<p>‘So most people think,’ was his reply. ‘But I know
-who was first in at the end; and when, crouching up to
-his neck in the mud and long reeds, with my fingers
-grasping his throat, I think, as he turned his bloodshot
-and protruding eyes on mine, I think, I say, that he
-knew me again, all changed as I was. He never spoke,
-though, and I let him die slowly, for I was sure that
-the sergeant was a long way behind. I held him there,
-I tell you, and watched him as he tried to blow the
-bubbles of blood and froth from out his pale lips, and at
-last I told him who I was, and how I had tracked him
-<a name="png.149" id="png.149" href="#png.149"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>131<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>down, and was now about to send his vile soul to perdition.
-Then, as I heard the galloping tramp of the
-trooper’s horse, I smothered him in the stagnant ooze
-of that foul swamp. Truly a dog’s death, but one too
-good for him! O’Brien, coming up soon afterward,
-found the body, put a couple of pistol bullets into it,
-and received the Government reward and promotion,
-whilst I set off in search of the others.</p>
-
-<p>‘One I came across four years afterwards on the
-Adelaide side. I had taken a job of shepherding up
-Port Augusta way, when, one night, who should come to
-the hut but Number Two, the one who laughed the longest
-and loudest of the three, as I lay in agony on the sojurs’
-nest. I knew him in a minute and heartily welcomed
-him to stop that night. “Just put those sheep in the
-yard, matey,” I says, “while I make some bread for our
-supper.”</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, I makes two smallish johnnycakes, and we had
-our tea. Then we starts smoking and yarning, and at
-length I turned the talk on to ants, saying I couldn’t
-keep nothing there because of them. With that he falls
-to laughing, and, says he, “My word, mate, I could tell
-you a yarn if I liked ’bout ants—sojurs—that’d make
-you laugh for a week, only you see it ain’t always safe,
-even in the bush, to talk among strangers.”</p>
-
-<p>‘All of a sudden he turned as white as a sheet, and
-drops off the stool, and twists and groans. Then he
-sings out, “I’m going to die.”</p>
-
-<p>‘You see,’ remarked Jim, with the cold impassiveness
-which had, almost throughout, characterised his manner,
-<a name="png.150" id="png.150" href="#png.150"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>132<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>‘the strychnine in the johnnycake that had fallen to his
-share was beginning to work him, and as I laughingly
-reminded him of old times, and asked him to go on with
-his story about the sojur ants, he also knew me, and
-shrieked and prayed for the mercy that I had once so
-unavailingly implored at his hands. He was very soon,
-however, too far gone to say much. A few more
-struggles and it was all over, and then I dragged the
-dead carrion out of my hut and buried it eight feet deep
-under the sheep-dung in the yard, where, likely enough, it
-is yet. So much for Number Two!’ exclaimed Jim, as I
-sat looking rather doubtfully at him. Not that I questioned
-the truthfulness of his story—that was stamped
-on every word he uttered—but that I began to think
-him rather a dangerous kind of monomaniac to have in
-a drover’s camp. ‘And now, sir,’ he went on presently,
-‘you’ve had the story you asked me for, and if ever we
-meet again after this trip, maybe I’ll have something to
-tell you about Number Three; that business it is that
-brought me down about these parts, for I heard he was
-working at some of the stations on the river. And as
-God made me!’ he exclaimed, with a subdued sort of
-gloomy ferocity in his voice, ‘when we do meet,
-he shall feel the vengeance of the man whose life
-and love and fortune he helped to ruin so utterly.
-I could pick him out of a thousand, with his great
-nose all of a skew, and his one leg shorter than the
-other.’</p>
-
-<p class="tb">.        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .</p>
-
-<p>The watch-fires were glimmering dimly. The cool air
-<a name="png.151" id="png.151" href="#png.151"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>133<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>which heralds the Australian dawn was blowing, and the
-sheep were moving silently out of their camp in long
-strings as I rose to my feet. In the white tents all was
-silence. Thanks to Sojur Jim, their occupants had
-passed an undisturbed night. Absorbed in his gruesome
-story—that dark tale of torture and retribution,
-with just that one little trait of woman’s constancy and
-devotion shining out like some bright star from a murky
-sky—the time had slipped away unheeded. Sending
-him to call the cook, I put the sheep together, wondering
-mightily to myself, as the man, with his bent-down
-head and slouching gait, moved away, whether he really
-could be the same creature who through the silent
-watches of the night had unfolded to my view such a
-concentrated, tireless, and as yet unsatiated thirst for
-revenge, such a fixed and relentless purpose of retaliation,
-unweakened through the years, but burning freshly
-and fiercely to-day, as, when with the scarcely healed
-scars still smarting, disfigured, ruined, hopeless, forsaking
-all, he went forth alone into the world to hunt down
-his persecutors.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">.        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .</p>
-
-<p>A few days after Sojur Jim had related to me the
-story told above, one evening, at dusk, a swagman
-entered the camp and asked the cook for a piece of
-meat and some bread. Instead of eating it at once with
-the accompanying offered drink of tea, he turned away,
-and, a few minutes later, we saw his fire burning brightly
-a little further along the lagoon, the banks of which
-formed our resting-place for the night. Evidently, as
-<a name="png.152" id="png.152" href="#png.152"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>134<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the men remarked amongst themselves, our visitor was a
-‘hatter.’</p>
-
-<p>Next morning, when Sojur Jim was called out to take
-his flock, he was missing. His blankets and few belongings
-still lay as he had arranged them in the tent
-the night before, ready for turning in; and I at once
-ordered a search to be made.</p>
-
-<p>It was of very short duration. Just in front of the
-swagman’s fire, in the shallow water of the lagoon,
-we found the two bodies. The stranger’s throat was
-grasped by Jim’s fingers in a vice-like clutch, that, even
-in death, we long strove in vain to sunder. When
-parted at last, and we had washed the slimy mud from the
-features of the dead traveller, a truly villainous countenance
-was disclosed to view; the huge mouth, low,
-retreating forehead, and heavy, thick-set jaws, all betokened
-their owner to have belonged to the very lowest
-order of humanity.<!-- TN: punctuation invisible --> But what struck me at once was
-that the nose, which was of great size, had, at one time,
-been knocked completely over to the left side of the
-face, and as we straightened the body out, it could
-plainly be seen that one leg was much shorter than its
-fellow.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">.        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .</p>
-
-<p>Was this, then, indeed ‘Number Three,’ and had
-Sojur Jim’s vengeful quest, his vow of bitter retaliation,
-ended at last? I believed so. But, as I gazed down
-upon the poor, scarred dead clay of a wasted and ruined
-life lying there, now so calm and still, all its fierce
-desires and useless repinings, all its feverish passions
-<a name="png.153" id="png.153" href="#png.153"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>135<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>and longings for dread retribution at rest, forcibly came
-to my mind the words of the sacred and solemn injunction—‘Vengeance
-is Mine, saith the Lord; I will
-repay.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="Far Inland Football"><a name="png.154" id="png.154" href="#png.154"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>136<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>FAR INLAND FOOTBALL.</h2>
-
-
-<p class="noindent">‘<span class="smc">Frightfully</span> dull, isn’t it?’ said the Doctor.</p>
-
-<p>‘Dull’s no name for it,’ said the Clerk of Petty
-Sessions; ‘this is the awfullest hole I ever was in.’<!-- TN: closing quote invisible --></p>
-
-<p>‘Never knew it so bad,’ chimed in the Chemist
-and the Saddler, who were on this frosty night drinking
-whisky hot in the snug parlour of the Shamrock
-Inn in the little township of Crupperton.</p>
-
-<p>‘I tell you what,’ said the C.P.S. presently; ‘I see
-by the paper they’ve started a football club at Cantleville.
-Why shouldn’t we do the same? It’ll help to
-pass away the time, anyhow.’<!-- TN: closing quote invisible --></p>
-
-<p>The Doctor pricked up his ears with interest. The
-Chemist seconded the motion enthusiastically.</p>
-
-<p>‘A capital idea,’ said he, ‘and, although I never
-have played, I’ll go in for it. It’s simple enough, I
-should imagine.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Simple!’ said the C.P.S., who had once seen a
-match in Sydney. ‘It’s as easy as tea-drinking. There’s
-no expense, except the first one of the ball. It’s not
-like cricket, you know, where you’re<!-- TN: original reads "your" --> always putting your
-hands in your pockets for something or other.’</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.155" id="png.155" href="#png.155"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>137<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘I’ll give ten shillings, Mr Brown,’ said the Doctor
-softly.</p>
-
-<p>‘Same here,’ said the Chemist.</p>
-
-<p>‘How do you play it?’ asked the Saddler, and the
-Blacksmith, and the Constable, who had just dropped
-in for a warm and a yarn that chilly evening.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well,’ explained the C.P.S., who had ideas, ‘first
-you get your ball. Then you put up a couple of
-sticks with a cross one on the top of ’em. Then you
-measure a distance, say one hundred yards by, say, fifty,
-on a level bit of ground, and put up another set of
-sticks. Then you get your men, and pick sides, and
-pop the ball down in the middle, and wade in. For
-instance,’ he continued, ‘s’pose we’re playing Saddlestrap.
-Well, then, d’ye see, we’ve got one goal—that’s
-what they call the sticks—and they’ve got the other.
-We’ve to try and block ’em from kicking the ball
-over our cross-bar, and do our best, meantime, to send
-it over theirs. It’s just a splendid game for this
-weather, and nothing could well be simpler.’</p>
-
-<p>More men came in, the idea caught; a club was
-formed, and that very night the C.P.S. wrote to the
-capital for a ball ‘of the best make and the latest
-fashion.’</p>
-
-<p>But it was a very long way to the capital. So, in
-the interval, the C.P.S., who was an enterprising young
-Native, procured and erected goal-posts and cross-bars
-of barked pine; and very business-like they looked
-with a little pink flag fluttering from the summit of
-each.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.156" id="png.156" href="#png.156"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>138<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>At last the new ball arrived. But, to the secret
-astonishment of the C.P.S., in place of being round it
-was oval. However, he was not going to expose his
-ignorance and imperil the reputation already earned as
-an exponent of the game, so he only <span class="nw">said,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘I sent for the very best they had, and I can see
-we’ve got our money’s worth. I’ll take her home and
-blow her up ready for to-morrow.’</p>
-
-<p>For a long time the ball seemed to go in any
-direction but the right one, kick they never so hardly;
-whilst, as a rule, the strongest and most terrific
-kickers produced the least effect.</p>
-
-<p>They tried the aggravating thing in every position
-they could think of, and, for a considerable period,
-without much success.</p>
-
-<p>It was a sight worth seeing to watch the Blacksmith,
-after scooping a little hollow in the ground and
-placing the ball perpendicularly therein, retire and
-prepare for action. Opening his shoulders and spitting
-on his hands, he would come heavily charging
-down, and putting the whole force of fifteen stone
-into his right foot, deliver a tremendous kick; then
-stand amazed to see the ball, after twirling meekly
-up for a few yards, drop on his head instead of
-soaring between the posts as it should have done.</p>
-
-<p>‘I’m out of practice myself—haven’t played for
-years, in fact,’ said the C.P.S. when explanation as
-to this erratic behaviour was demanded. ‘It’s simply
-a matter of practice, you know, like everything else.’</p>
-
-<p>But all the same for a long time, deep down in
-<a name="png.157" id="png.157" href="#png.157"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>139<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>his heart, there was a horrible misgiving that the thing
-was not a football at all—that it should have been
-round. At last, by dint of constant perseverance,
-some of the men began to kick fairly well—kick
-goals even from a good distance.</p>
-
-<p>The first difficulty arose from a lack of side-boundaries.
-Hence, at times, a kicking, struggling,
-shouting mob might be seen half-a-mile away, at
-the far end of the main street, whereas it should
-have been in front of the post-office.</p>
-
-<p>To remedy this state of affairs, the C.P.S. drove in
-pegs at what was voted ‘a fair thing’ to serve as guides.
-When the ball was sent beyond the pegs no one pursued,
-and little boys stationed there kicked it back
-again.<!-- TN: original has comma --> Also, the cows, pigs and goats of Crupperton,
-who must have imagined that a lunatic asylum had taken
-possession of their feeding grounds, returned, and henceforth
-fed peacefully about the grass-grown streets and
-allotments at the lower end of the township. Presently,
-to vary the monotony, the Cruppertonians got up a
-match amongst themselves for drinks—East <i>versus</i> West
-was the title of it. But it never went beyond the first
-scrimmage, if that can be called a first where all was one
-big scrimmage, caused by two compact bodies of men
-fighting for the possession of a ball. Out of this quickly
-emerged the Chemist with, as he averred, a fractured
-wrist. Anyhow, he wore a bandage, and played no
-more.</p>
-
-<p>Then the Blacksmith accused the Saddler of kicking
-him on the shins, wilfully and of malice prepense. For
-<a name="png.158" id="png.158" href="#png.158"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>140<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>some time past there had been bad blood between
-these two, and the fight that ensued was so gorgeous
-that the game was quite forgotten in the excitement
-of it.</p>
-
-<p>Presently, the village of Saddlestrap, a little lower
-down the river, in emulation of its larger neighbour,
-started football also.</p>
-
-<p>The Saddlestraps mostly got their living by tankmaking,
-were locally known as ‘Thicklegs,’ and were a
-pretty rough lot. So that, when a match was arranged
-between the two places, fun was foretold.</p>
-
-<p>The rules of the Saddlestrap club were, like those of
-the Crupperton one, simplicity itself, consisting, as they
-did, of the solitary axiom—‘Kick whatever or wherever
-you can, only kick.’</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, as remarked, fun was expected. The
-C.P.S. chose his team carefully, and with an eye to
-weight and size. Superior fleetness, he rightly imagined,
-would have but little to do with the result of the
-day’s sport.</p>
-
-<p>With the exception of half-a-dozen of the townspeople,
-the Crupperton players consisted of young fellows from a
-couple of stations adjoining. Therefore, the Saddlestraps
-somewhat contemptuously dubbed their opponents
-‘Pastorialites.’</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor pleaded exemption on account of his age,
-and was, therefore, appointed ‘Referee.’</p>
-
-<p>For a while the play was somewhat weak and desultory,
-and lacking in effect. The ball was continually
-being sent outside the pegs, and the urchins stationed
-<a name="png.159" id="png.159" href="#png.159"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>141<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>there were kept busy. But, at length, to the delight of
-the spectators, consisting of the entire population of the
-two townships, there was a hot scrimmage. ‘For all the
-world like a lot o’ dorgs a-worryin’ a ’possum!’ as one
-excited bystander yelled, whilst the crowd surged around
-the mixed-up heap of humanity, the outside ring of which
-was frantically kicking and shoving at the prostrate inner
-one, serving friend and foe alike.</p>
-
-<p>‘A very manly and interesting game,’ remarked the
-Doctor, placidly ringing his bell for ‘Spell, oh!’ whilst
-the Chemist ran to his shop for plaster and bandage.</p>
-
-<p>Presently, the undermost man of all was dragged
-out, torn and gory, and spitting teeth from a broken
-jaw.</p>
-
-<p>Him the Doctor caused to be carried to the nearest
-house, and, after attending to his wounds, returned
-hurriedly to the field, where his coadjutor was looking to
-the minor casualties, and both teams were refreshing
-themselves with rum, and boasting of their prowess.</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor rang his bell, and play was resumed. It
-was, he explained, unhealthy to dawdle about in such
-weather and after severe exertion.</p>
-
-<p>As the C.P.S. pointed out very eloquently that night
-at the banquet, football was a game in which people
-must learn to give and take, and that, until this had
-been fully understood and practised, the game would
-never get beyond an initial stage.</p>
-
-<p>This was probably the reason that on a Saddlestrap in
-full pursuit of the ball being deliberately tripped up by a
-‘Pastorialite,’ and sent headlong to mother earth, which
-<a name="png.160" id="png.160" href="#png.160"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>142<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>was hard and knobby, in place of rising and going on
-with the game, he began to punch the tripper.</p>
-
-<p>Five minutes afterwards might be seen the curious
-spectacle of a ball lying neglected in the centre of the
-ground, whilst outside raged a big fight of thirty.</p>
-
-<p>For a time the trouble was strictly confined to the
-two teams. But when it was observed that Crupperton
-was getting the worst of it, partisans quickly peeled off
-and took sides; so that, directly, both townships were up
-to their eyes in fight, and the Doctor seriously contemplated
-sending for professional assistance to Cantleville.</p>
-
-<p>For some time victory hovered in the balance. But
-men fight well on their own ground, and at last the
-Saddlestraps broke and fled for their horses and buggies.
-Those who stayed behind did so simply because there
-was no doctor in their native village.</p>
-
-<p>A banquet for both teams had been prepared at the
-leading (and only) hotel. But there was only a
-remnant of one side that felt like banqueting, so the
-gaps were filled by residents who had been prominent
-in the fray.</p>
-
-<p>The C.P.S., with a couple of beautifully blackened
-eyes, took the chair. At the other end of the table
-presided the Constable, whose features presented a
-curiously intricate study in diachylon, many of the
-Saddlestraps having seized a mean opportunity of wiping
-off old scores.</p>
-
-<p>Speeches and toasts were made and drunk, and
-football enthusiastically voted the king of all games.
-<a name="png.161" id="png.161" href="#png.161"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>143<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>As the Blacksmith—whose arm was in a sling—observed,
-‘It was a fair an’ square game. A man know’d what
-he’d got to do at it. There wasn’t no tiddleywinkin’
-in the thing.’</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor had been too busy to come early; but
-he dropped in for a minute or so during the evening,
-and with great fire, and amidst much applause, made
-a splendid speech. In its course he quoted Gordon’s
-well-known lines—‘A game’s not worth a rap for a
-rational man to play,’ etc.; and also adapted that
-saying of the ‘Iron Duke’s’ about the battle of
-Waterloo being won upon the British football
-grounds.</p>
-
-<p>It was decidedly the ‘speech of the evening,’ and
-was greeted with hearty cheers as, concluding, he retired
-to look after his patients.</p>
-
-<p>But Crupperton was very sore next morning; and
-for a whole week there was no more football. Then
-they looked about them for more victims to their
-prowess. But they found none at all near home.</p>
-
-<p>At last, in despair, and in defiance of the advice of
-the C.P.S., the executive challenged Cantleville itself—agreeing
-to journey thither. In due course, and after
-the C.F.C. had recovered from its surprise, and consulted
-a ‘Gazetteer,’ it accepted.</p>
-
-<p>Cantleville was a very long distance away. Moreover,
-it was the ‘City’ of those inland parts, and the headquarters
-of the Civil Service therein. Therefore the
-C.P.S. and the Constable discreetly refused to accompany
-their fellows. One of the pair, at least, had
-<a name="png.162" id="png.162" href="#png.162"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>144<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>doubts as to whether Cantleville played the Crupperton
-game.</p>
-
-<p>So the Blacksmith was elected Captain. ‘You’d
-better stay at home,’ said the C.P.S., ‘the chaps over
-there are regular swells, up to all the latest dodges, and
-they wear uniforms. Besides they may not quite understand
-our rules.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Then we’ll teach ’em,’ said the Blacksmith. But the
-question of a uniform troubled him. So he took counsel
-with his now fast friend the Saddler, and the result
-was that everyone packed a stiffly-starched white shirt
-and a pair of black trousers into his valise.</p>
-
-<p>‘How about your uniforms now?’ said the Blacksmith,
-‘nothin’ can’t be neater’n that.’</p>
-
-<p>So they went forth to battle, accompanied by the
-good wishes of the populace; but neither by Doctor
-nor Chemist. There were plenty of both at Cantleville.
-Also they were wise in their generation, and had
-doubts.</p>
-
-<p>Communication in these days was limited. Cantleville
-news arrived <i>via</i> Sydney, and the newspapers were
-a week old when delivered. So that the team brought
-its own tidings home. They had not had a good time.
-They had also been heavily fined, and they proposed to
-go afield no more. The Blacksmith and the Saddler,
-who had ‘taken it out,’ were the last to appear.</p>
-
-<p>‘I suppose you play Rugby rules?’ had asked blandly
-the Secretary of the C.F.C., as he curiously surveyed
-the ‘Bushies’ on their arrival.</p>
-
-<p>‘No, we don’t,’ said the Blacksmith. ‘We plays
-<a name="png.163" id="png.163" href="#png.163"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>145<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Crupperton,’ and no more questions were asked. But
-when it was seen what Crupperton rules meant, backs,
-half-backs, forwards, and all the rest of it, struck and
-refused to continue. Instead, they took to chaffing the
-‘black and white magpies.’</p>
-
-<p>Whereupon, Crupperton, putting the question of football
-on one side, went at its opponents <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">à la</i> Saddlestrap.
-Their places, however, they presently found taken by
-policemen. These latter every man handled to
-the best of his ability, and had to pay for accordingly.</p>
-
-<p>‘Shoo!’ said the Blacksmith, as he finished. ‘They’re
-nothin’ but a lot o’ tiddleywinkers up there. Let’s
-have another match with Saddlestrap.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="On the Grand Stand"><a name="png.164" id="png.164" href="#png.164"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>146<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>ON THE GRAND STAND.</h2>
-
-<p class="subtitle"><span class="smc">A Pioneer Sketch.</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smc">There</span> was a lot of men from up-country staying at the
-Kamilaroi. One could easily tell them by their bronzed
-hands and faces, and creased or brand-new clothes, from
-the city members of the well-known Pastoralists’ Club.</p>
-
-<p>‘Hello,’ suddenly exclaimed a fine-looking man, whose
-thick moustache lay snow-white against the deep tan of
-his cheek, ‘here’s Boorookoorora in the market! H’m,
-one hundred and sixty thousand sheep (so they’ve got
-the jumbucks on it at last).... Capital homestead ...
-stone-built house ... splendid garden and orchard.
-How things must have changed out there since Wal
-Neville and Jimmy Carstairs and myself took that country
-up, and lived for months at a time on damper, bullock
-and pigweed in a bark humpy. Stone house and orchard!
-Well, well,’ he concluded, laying down the newspaper
-with a sigh, ‘I hope they haven’t disturbed the boys.
-I left them there sleeping quietly enough side by side
-over five-and-twenty years ago.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Shouldn’t have gone home and stayed away so long,
-<a name="png.165" id="png.165" href="#png.165"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>147<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Standish,’ here remarked a friend. ’You’re out of touch
-altogether with our side now. That’s the worst of being
-rich. D’rectly a fellow gets a pot of money left him, off
-he must go “home.” But here’s Hatton.—Hatton, let
-me introduce Mr Hugh Standish to you. He’s interested
-in your place. First man to take it up; early pioneer,
-and all that sort of thing.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes,’ said Mr Hatton presently, ‘I was the first to
-put sheep on Boorookoorora, and they do well. Yes,
-the two graves are untouched at the old homestead still.
-Carstairs and Neville! I’ve heard the story, or a version
-of it. Poor fellows! I had their graves freshly fenced
-in a couple of years ago. And so you were the third
-partner. Will you tell us the story of your escape? I
-should much like to hear it at first hand.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Do you know the Grand Stand?’ asked Standish,
-without replying directly.</p>
-
-<p>The other shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>‘What is it?’ he asked.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, the big rock, close to the Black Waterhole, on
-your own run,’ replied Standish.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh,’ said his new acquaintance, ‘you mean Mount
-Lookout. That’s just at the bottom of the orchard now.
-You see, we’ve shifted the head station from where you
-and Warner and Adams and the rest had it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, well,’ replied the other, ‘Grand Stand, or
-Mount Lookout, or whatever you like to call it, I had a
-very rough time on its top.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ah,’ remarked the owner of Boorookoorora, ‘I’ve
-had the top levelled and an anemometer erected on it;
-<a name="png.166" id="png.166" href="#png.166"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>148<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>also a flight of steps cut. In fact, it is a sort of observatory
-on a small scale.’</p>
-
-<p>‘The devil it is!’ exclaimed Standish. ‘Well, if
-you’ll listen, I’ll tell you what I observed once from its
-top.’</p>
-
-<p class="tb">.        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .</p>
-
-<p>‘There were three of us. We were all young and
-healthy, and each had a little money. Foregathering
-(the first time was in this very room), we determined to
-become partners, and take up country. We would go
-out in person—far out, beyond even, as poor Neville
-put it, the “furthest paling of civilisation.”</p>
-
-<p>‘There we would acquire a territory, expressible not
-in poor, miserable acres, but in square miles—thousands
-of ’em.</p>
-
-<p>‘There we would breed sheep and cattle, increasing
-yearly in multitude, so that the sands upon the sea-shore<!-- TN: OED hyphenates -->
-shouldn’t be a circumstance to them. We would
-plant in that far country our own vines and our own fig-trees,
-and sit under their shade in the good days to
-come—we and our children, and our children’s children
-after us—in that wide and pleasant heritage of our founding.
-Alas, the glamour of youth and confidence, and
-health and strength over a bottle or two of good wine!
-Five-and-twenty years ago, gentlemen, in this same old
-room!</p>
-
-<p>‘So we went. And the days grew into weeks, and
-the weeks into months, as we rode, searching hither and
-thither, to the right hand or to the left, but always with
-our faces to the falling sun. Over stony ridges and over
-<a name="png.167" id="png.167" href="#png.167"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>149<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>rolling downs; over deserts of cruel spinifex and barren
-sand; through great scrubs, thick and gloomy; along
-rivers, tortuous and muddy. At times drenched with
-rain, at others suffering from heat and hunger and thirst,
-but ever westward. At length, after many disappointments,
-emerging from a broad stretch of sterile country
-and ascending a range of low hills, our eyes beheld
-something resembling the Canaan of our dreams. Track
-of horse or beast we had not seen for weeks; therefore
-we knew that the land was, if we so willed it, ours.</p>
-
-<p>‘For a long time we gazed over the timber-clumped,
-wide expanse, emerald-swarded after some recent fire,
-and through which ran a creek whose waterholes shone
-like polished steel under the mid-day sun.</p>
-
-<p>‘“Here we rest?” said one; and another,—“The
-Plains of Hope lie before us!”</p>
-
-<p>‘So we rested from our wanderings; and one, journeying
-backwards, secured the country, defining its boundaries,
-not by marked trees, but by parallels of latitude.</p>
-
-<p>‘Shortly a homestead arose, rude but sufficient. Mob
-after mob of cattle came up from stations to the south
-and east, and Boorookoorora became itself a station.</p>
-
-<p>‘We got the name from a black fellow. We understood
-him to signify that the word meant “<i>No place
-beyond</i>.” This pleased us, for we were, so far, proud of
-being the “farthest out”—the <i>Ultima Thule</i> of settlement.
-We may have been altogether mistaken, for the
-fellow was wild as a hawk, and, at the first chance, gave
-us the slip. But I’m glad, all the same, that the old
-name still holds.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.168" id="png.168" href="#png.168"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>150<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘Of the blacks we had seen very little. They appeared
-to decline all communication with us. Now and again
-the stockmen would bring one in; but he came evidently
-under strong protest, and refused both food and gifts of
-any description. However, we cared nothing for that, so
-long as our cattle remained unmolested. They were
-doing splendidly; and we soon began to talk about
-sending a mob to the southern markets, with which, in
-those days, there was little or no communication. We
-intended to pioneer that trade. There was plenty of
-room as yet. Our nearest neighbour was a hundred
-miles away; the nearest township, five hundred. One
-Sunday morning I went for a ride, leaving Walter and
-Jimmy alone. The two white stockmen and a couple of
-black boys, who made up the head station staff, were
-away on a round of the out-stations.</p>
-
-<p>‘I had intended to be back for the dinner, which I
-had left the pair busily preparing. Unfortunately, when
-about five miles from the homestead on my return, my
-horse put his foot in a hole, stumbled badly, and directly
-afterwards went dead lame.</p>
-
-<p>‘The day was a roaster for a tramp; but there seemed
-no help for it. So, planting the saddle and bridle, also,
-in a most unlucky moment, my heavy Enfield rifle, I set
-out through the long, dry grass, which reached at times
-over my head, and made walking hard and disagreeable
-work.</p>
-
-<p>‘As often as I paused to rest and wipe my dripping
-face did I curse our remissness in not having “burnt
-off” before this, and vow to soon have a right royal
-<a name="png.169" id="png.169" href="#png.169"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>151<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>blaze amongst the thick reed-like grass-stalks that hampered
-my progress towards shade and dinner.</p>
-
-<p>‘I had got about two miles along, and was just
-thinking of having a good drink at the Black
-Waterhole, which I knew to be close to me, when I
-suddenly came upon the dead body of a fine young
-heifer.</p>
-
-<p>‘A couple of broken spears stuck out of the carcase—so
-freshly killed that even the crows had not yet found it.
-It was, indeed, still warm. By the tracks I could see
-that the niggers were in force. They had evidently run
-the beast up from the water, and slain it merely for sport,
-as it was untouched. My first impulse was to return for
-the rifle. Second thoughts determined me to make for
-home as quickly as possible.</p>
-
-<p>‘I had kept my shoulder-belt, to which was attached a
-heavy metal powder-flask. Thinking that I should travel
-lighter without these things, I started to unbuckle, when
-a tomahawk hurtled past one side of my head, whilst a
-spear went sailing by the other. The grass was full
-of blacks coming at me sideways—that is, between me
-and the station.</p>
-
-<p>‘Turning, I ran for the water, the whole pack, now in
-full cry, after me.</p>
-
-<p>‘Close to the banks of the Black Waterhole stood a
-tall rock we had named (I don’t know why, for it was as
-much like one as this tumbler is) the Grand Stand. I
-daresay it must have been quite one hundred and fifty
-feet high, if not <span class="nw">more—’</span></p>
-
-<p>‘One hundred and seventy-five six,’ put in Mr Hatton,
-<a name="png.170" id="png.170" href="#png.170"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>152<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>who, in common with, by this time, a small crowd, was
-listening interestedly.</p>
-
-<p>‘Thanks. You’ve evidently had more leisure than we
-could manage. Anyhow, it was sheer on three sides,
-only accessible, in one part, on the fourth.’ (‘Just where
-I had the stairway cut,’ murmured Mr Hatton. But no
-one took any notice).</p>
-
-<p>‘Many a time I had climbed it to look for cattle
-across the plains on which it formed such a landmark.
-If I could do so now, very quickly, there might still be a
-chance.</p>
-
-<p>‘I could tell by the sound of the spears that I was
-gaining. They didn’t come slipping quietly past, but
-whizzed and sung angrily, a sure sign that the throwing
-sticks were being used; at least I found it so. It was
-wonderful how they missed me. If the grass had been
-burnt I was a dead man fifty times over. Presently, I
-struck a cattle pad, and, at the same moment, caught
-sight of the Grand Stand. Now they saw what I was after,
-and put on a spurt, yelling harder than ever. As they
-arrived at the foot of the rock I was half-way up the narrow,
-almost perpendicular, track, going like a goat, whilst
-spears, tomahawks and nullahs hit all around me. One
-spear grazed my leg, sticking in the breeches, and a stone
-tomahawk knocked my hat off. I afterwards made use
-of that spear. It was hot work while it lasted, which,
-luckily, wasn’t long. The top of the Grand Stand
-measured about twenty feet each way, and sloped gently
-inwards, saucer-shape, to a depth of four. There had
-been rain lately, and a good pool of water was collected
-<a name="png.171" id="png.171" href="#png.171"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>153<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>in the basin, which was strewn with stones and big
-boulders, remains of a former top, which had broken off
-and lay around the base. Being in a hurry, I hadn’t
-time to pull myself up, so tumbled headlong into the
-water. However, the bath refreshed me much, and,
-everything below having all at once become silent as the
-grave, I peeped over.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well it was I did so!</p>
-
-<p>‘Four big fellows were climbing up, one behind the
-other.</p>
-
-<p>‘Lifting a stone, just as much as I could manage, I
-rolled it to the edge, and, forgetting to sing out “Stand
-from under,” let go.</p>
-
-<p>‘It caught the first fellow fair on the chest, and the lot
-went down like skittles.</p>
-
-<p>‘Three picked themselves up and limped off howling.
-The fourth man—he who led—lay quite still, and had
-to be dragged away. I did not care about expending
-my ammunition or I could have scattered them also.</p>
-
-<p>‘It was terribly hot up there under the sun, but,
-ripping out the lining of my coat, I covered my head
-with it. If there had been no water, though, I should
-have been done—roasted alive.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now I had a spell, and took a good look at the
-niggers.</p>
-
-<p>‘They were a wild lot—five-and-twenty of ’em—naked
-as the day they were born, tall and wiry, with
-woolly hair and long, black beards. One side of their
-faces was painted white, t’other red, ribs and legs to
-match. Half-a-dozen of ’em had some shining stone
-<a name="png.172" id="png.172" href="#png.172"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>154<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>like a lump of crystal either around their necks or
-tied upon their foreheads. These I took to be
-chiefs.</p>
-
-<p>‘I had never seen any niggers quite like these, and,
-consequently, was rather impressed, not to say scared.
-They squatted under a shady tree, the only one for
-miles around, evidently holding a council of war, whilst
-I crouched and watched them, and slowly baked on top
-of my rock.</p>
-
-<p>‘Suddenly, all springing to their feet, they ran backwards,
-then, wheeling together, threw their spears.
-But the height beat ’em. There was a strong breeze
-blowing, too, hot as from a furnace, right against them.
-Quite plainly that game wouldn’t answer, so they squatted
-again and started another consultation.</p>
-
-<p>‘Meanwhile the day grew hotter. The rock was
-actually blistering my skin through the light clothes I
-wore.</p>
-
-<p>‘Bathing my head and face brought relief.</p>
-
-<p>‘Being quite a new chum with respect to blacks and
-their ways, I half expected that, now, seeing they
-couldn’t get me down, they would raise the siege and be
-off.</p>
-
-<p>‘Nothing, it appeared, could be further from their intentions.
-The confab over, some lit a fire on a small, clear
-space close to the water, whilst others went off towards the
-dead heifer, shortly returning with great lumps of meat,
-which they roasted and devoured.</p>
-
-<p>‘After this, they all got up, and coming quite close,
-one went a little apart from the rest and pointed at my
-<a name="png.173" id="png.173" href="#png.173"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>155<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>head, which was all he could see, with outstretched
-arm.</p>
-
-<p>‘Then his fellows formed a circle and danced and
-yelled, patting their bellies, and going through the
-motions of eating and drinking. Presently the gaunt,
-black semaphore was altered, pointing towards the sun.
-The dancing and shouting ceased, and, sitting down, the
-party began to display symptoms of the utmost distress.</p>
-
-<p>‘Once more the arm shifted, this time towards the
-water, whereupon the whole crowd stiffened themselves
-out as if dead.</p>
-
-<p>‘Another dance round and a song, and the semaphore
-put himself in position again and pointed in the direction
-of the homestead.</p>
-
-<p>‘Instantly all but two sneaked off into the tall grass.
-The pair left behind lay down beside each other, feigning
-sleep. Suddenly, with terrific yells, the rest sprung
-upon them and went very realistically through the motions
-of beating the sleepers’ brains out and thrusting spears
-into their bodies.</p>
-
-<p>‘The first portion of the pantomime I took to mean
-that they were determined to stay and see how long I
-could withstand the combined effects of heat, hunger,
-and want of water.</p>
-
-<p>‘The second was only too intelligible, and for the
-first time made me feel a sharp pang of anxiety for
-those at home, totally unwarned, and off their
-guard.</p>
-
-<p>‘How, as I watched the brutes, did I wish and long
-<a name="png.174" id="png.174" href="#png.174"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>156<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>for that rifle, hidden away back there, or—best of all—that
-newly-imported breech-loader hanging over my
-stretcher at the station.</p>
-
-<p>‘It was getting late in the afternoon. The rock was
-casting a long shadow, and my dripping body beginning
-to feel a little cooler as the sun lowered. Slight
-though the scratch upon my leg was, it smarted terribly.
-I was also very hungry, and altogether in anything but
-a happy frame of mind.</p>
-
-<p>‘Foreseeing a night of it, I carried and rolled big
-stones to the edge, placing them so that at a touch they
-would go crashing down.</p>
-
-<p>‘Darkness fell at last, and with it came the moon,
-nearly at her full.</p>
-
-<p>‘Lying along the incline, I watched the niggers, and
-tried to work out some plan of giving them the
-slip.</p>
-
-<p>‘Gorged to repletion, they were stretched about their
-fire: but two upright black forms, motionless as if cut
-from marble, watched steadfastly the pathway, on which
-the moonbeams fell full of light.</p>
-
-<p>‘Although I had promised to return for dinner, I had
-no expectation, on account of my failure, that the others
-would come and look for me. We were all nothing
-if not irregular in our habits. Of the blacks we had
-almost ceased to think, so little had we seen of them.
-Indeed, though generally going armed, we carried rifles
-more for the purpose of shooting an odd bull or so
-than from any other motive. The place, you should
-remember, had been formed now over a couple of
-<a name="png.175" id="png.175" href="#png.175"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>157<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>years, during all which time nothing suspicious had
-occurred.</p>
-
-<p>‘The two at home would merely think that I had
-extended my ride as far as one of the out-stations,
-and feel no surprise if I did not turn up till the next
-day.</p>
-
-<p>‘As for them, I knew not what to think. That the
-blacks were nearly all inveterate liars I was aware; but
-this sudden, strange raid, together with their expressive
-pantomimes and determined attitude towards myself,
-made me fear the worst.</p>
-
-<p>‘If there had been no moon I should certainly have
-made an effort to get away. But it was as bright as
-day—so bright that I fancied I could at times see the
-glitter in the eyes of the sentinels.</p>
-
-<p>‘I must have been cat-napping, for I awoke with a
-start to the sound of an awful chorus of yells.</p>
-
-<p>‘The moon was low, but still gave enough light to
-enable me to make out that more niggers had
-arrived.</p>
-
-<p>‘After what appeared to be an enthusiastic greeting
-of the new-comers, the whole mob—about fifty—came up
-and began to dance at the foot of the rock. Presently,
-to my horror, I caught sight of objects that I recognised
-only too well.</p>
-
-<p>‘One fellow had on a broad-brimmed straw hat belonging
-to Carstairs; another flourished a hunting-knife
-of my own; yet another waved a gaily-striped rug that
-I had last seen covering poor Neville’s stretcher.</p>
-
-<p>‘Evidently the station had been sacked.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.176" id="png.176" href="#png.176"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>158<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘Neither hearing nor seeing anything, they perhaps
-imagined me asleep, and, just as the dawn was breaking
-redly, some of them began to ascend.</p>
-
-<p>‘A leaping, rattling, boulder, however, soon undeceived
-and sent them to the right-about.</p>
-
-<p>‘Knowing that another day would probably see the
-end, they were in no particular hurry now.</p>
-
-<p>‘The sun rose hot and angry-looking. By its better
-light I made out a whole heap of our traps under the
-tree, jumbled up anyhow.</p>
-
-<p>‘But, lest I should, by any means, fail to comprehend
-what had happened, they had recourse once more to
-dumb show.</p>
-
-<p>‘A nigger came forward and arranged three spears,
-tripod fashion. To their apex he hung a nullah-nullah.
-All the weapons were red with blood. Then, pointing
-alternately to the homestead, myself, and the heap of
-plunder, he made a long speech, beginning quietly
-enough, but working himself into such a rage at the
-finish that his big black beard was speckled with
-foam.</p>
-
-<p>‘Of course, I didn’t understand a word. There was
-little need that I should—everything was plain
-enough.</p>
-
-<p>‘But worse was to come!</p>
-
-<p>‘Seeing that I made no sign, and thinking, perhaps,
-that I was difficult to convince, the orator went off to the
-pile of stuff, and, in a minute, returned with some object
-in a net, which, amidst triumphant yells, he fastened to
-the trophy already erected.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.177" id="png.177" href="#png.177"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>159<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘For a moment I couldn’t make it out at all. Then,
-as the sun shone fuller on the thing, I saw that it was
-Neville’s head.</p>
-
-<p>‘All gashed and disfigured though it was, I recognised
-it by the long golden beard which the poor old chap had
-been so proud of.</p>
-
-<p>‘The sight turned me quite faint and sick. Then I got
-vicious. Slipping to the water, of which there was now
-very little left, to get one good, long, last drink, my eyes
-fell upon the powder-flask lying where I had thrown it off.</p>
-
-<p>‘<!-- TN: opening quote invisible -->It was one of the old-fashioned kind, of solid copper,
-very large, and holding nearly a couple of pounds. It
-was quite full.</p>
-
-<p>‘“Well,” I said to myself, taking the flask up as the
-idea struck me, “you’ve cornered me and killed my
-mates, but I’ll be hanged if I don’t try and scorch some
-of you before giving in.”</p>
-
-<p>‘Now, sitting down, I tore a strip off my handkerchief,
-and, with moistened gunpowder, made a rough sort of
-fuse. Then unscrewing the measuring cylinder, and
-taking out the spring-valve, I inserted the fuse deeply
-into the powder, brought the twisted end well up,
-and replaced the long cylinder. Then, binding the
-flask firmly about five feet from the head of the spear
-that had come up with me, I shouted to the niggers,
-who were busily overhauling their booty.</p>
-
-<p>‘They stared with surprise, and I waved my coat and
-beckoned to them to come nearer.</p>
-
-<p>‘Chattering like anything, a couple of ’em advanced
-a few steps very doubtfully.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.178" id="png.178" href="#png.178"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>160<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘Stooping down and striking a match I fired the fuse,
-which caught at once and began to burn quietly away
-inside the cylinder.</p>
-
-<p>‘At this moment I hove the spear well out towards
-them. To my delight it stuck fairly upright in the
-ground almost at their feet, the shock, so far as I could
-see, shifting nothing.</p>
-
-<p>‘Starting back, they gazed inquisitively at the shining
-polished object it had brought with it.</p>
-
-<p>‘For a minute or two they hesitated, and I despaired.
-But, seeing the rest moving up, curiosity or cupidity
-prevailed, and one running to it, seized the spear and
-made off back to the mob.</p>
-
-<p>‘At once he was surrounded with an eager, excited,
-jabbering crowd, each man with his chin over his
-neighbour’s shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>‘The seconds went by like ages. I had reckoned the
-fuse would last, perhaps, seven or eight minutes. They
-had untied the flask, and it was being passed from hand
-to hand.</p>
-
-<p>‘Still no sound!</p>
-
-<p>‘With a deep sigh of regret I gave the affair up as a
-failure—had even turned away—when an explosion like
-that of an eighteen pounder made me jump.</p>
-
-<p>‘From out of a cloud of dense white smoke came
-shrieks and screams of agony. I could dimly see
-bodies—some quite still, and others rolling over and
-over.</p>
-
-<p>‘By God! gentlemen,’ exclaimed the speaker, interrupting
-himself emphatically, and with a cruel gleam
-<a name="png.179" id="png.179" href="#png.179"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>161<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>in his eyes, ‘although afterwards I shot the wretches
-down in dozens, and always with joy in my heart, yet
-never with such a complete sense of satisfaction and
-pleasure as I felt at that moment.</p>
-
-<p>‘As I looked a sharp blaze curled up, spreading
-broadly, and almost instantly, into a curtain of flame
-and smoke.</p>
-
-<p>‘The grass was on fire!</p>
-
-<p>‘Never a thought had I given to that. For miles and
-miles the country was covered with herbage, tall, and
-dry as tinder.</p>
-
-<p>‘The top of the Grand Stand was about the only safe
-place now, bar the water, in all that neighbourhood.
-For a long time I couldn’t see a foot for smoke; but,
-as with the fire, it rolled away before the wind. I
-looked towards the Black Waterhole, thinking, of course,
-that the niggers would have taken to it. To my surprise
-not one was to be seen. There was the blackened
-ground, smoking yet, bare, and affording not the slightest
-cover.</p>
-
-<p>‘The erstwhile shady and graceful tree was a gnarled
-and withered skeleton.</p>
-
-<p>‘Underneath it, as the haze cleared, I made out four
-motionless bodies, blacker than the burnt black ashes
-on which they lay.</p>
-
-<p>‘I waited a bit longer before coming down. But at
-last, pretty certain that the niggers had cleared out, or
-better still, been caught in the fire, I crept down the
-pathway, stiff, sore, and hungry, but with that feeling of
-vengeful joy in my heart trebly intensified as I passed
-<a name="png.180" id="png.180" href="#png.180"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>162<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>by the poor, scorched, singed head lying on the
-ground.</p>
-
-<p>‘Poking about the heap of blankets, clothing, etc., still
-smouldering, I dropped across a tin of preserved meat—a
-four pounder.</p>
-
-<p>‘This was luck, if you like. Taking it to the water I
-finished it to the last scrap, and made the most appreciated
-meal of a life.</p>
-
-<p>‘I hadn’t gone near the bodies. They were charred,
-and I was certain they were dead.</p>
-
-<p>‘But, as I finished eating, to my astonishment one
-fellow got up and staggered straight for me. Snatching
-up a heavy stick, which happened to be handy, I stood
-ready to receive him.</p>
-
-<p>‘As he came nearer his face frightened me.</p>
-
-<p>‘It wasn’t a face at all, properly speaking; nor, for
-the matter of that, a head even. It was simply a mass
-of grass-ashes and blood—every scrap of hair had been
-burnt off. From his open mouth protruded a blackened
-tongue. I dropped my stick, for I saw he was stone-blind—in
-fact, he was eyeless altogether.</p>
-
-<p>‘Groping along, in a minute or two he felt the water
-at his feet, when, instead of splashing into it, as you’d
-naturally think a fellow in such an awful predicament
-would do, he gave a sort of screech, very bad to hear,
-and made out again at a great pace, tripped over a
-stone, and fell headlong.</p>
-
-<p>‘When I got up to him he was as dead as Julius
-Cæsar, and a great lump of jagged copper was sticking
-out of the back of his skull.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.181" id="png.181" href="#png.181"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>163<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘Presently I started off towards the homestead, but
-hadn’t got more than half-way before I met our two
-white stockmen—the black boys had cleared on the
-back track.</p>
-
-<p>‘The buildings, such as they were, and all our things
-were gone. But we didn’t trouble much about that
-just then.</p>
-
-<p>‘Taking Neville’s head to him, we buried him and
-Carstairs, who had been literally chopped to pieces, and
-then, getting the outside men together, we followed the
-niggers.</p>
-
-<p>‘They had made for a patch of red ground six miles
-away. There we found ’em—fifty of ’em; and there we
-left ’em. How they must have travelled to have beaten
-the fire! Must have been touch and go, for some of
-’em were pretty badly scorched.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, gentlemen, that’s the story of the Grand Stand,
-and the first settling of Boorookoorora. “Stone house
-and garden, and splendid orchard,” eh? Well, well, I
-suppose it’s only natural. Yet it sounds curiously to
-me. No; I won’t invest. Shouldn’t care about going
-back to live there now. That’s the dinner gong, isn’t<!-- TN: apostrophe invisible -->
-it? Good old Kamilaroi! Come along.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="Too Far South"><a name="png.182" id="png.182" href="#png.182"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>164<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>TOO FAR SOUTH.</h2>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smc">The</span> captain of the <cite>Boadicea</cite>—regular London and
-Australian trader—had long been the owner of a
-crotchet, or perhaps it would be nearer the mark to
-call it a theory. He was a comparatively young man,
-and after a few trips of eighty-nine, ninety, and ninety-six
-days respectively, he grew impatient; and at last,
-seeing an opportunity of putting his idea to the test, he
-determined to make the attempt.</p>
-
-<p>It was by no means a new theory; simply an expansion
-of an old one. Years ago the masters of the <cite>Lightning</cite>,
-<cite>Red Jacket</cite>, and other clipper ships of renown, had
-successfully demonstrated that, instead of turning round
-the Cape of Good Hope as if it were a corner, in the old
-style, vessels bound to the Australian colonies would, if
-they kept on southward, be very likely to pick up a current
-of strong westerly winds which, although twice the
-distance might have to be sailed over, yet would take
-them to their destination far more quickly than by the
-usual route.</p>
-
-<p>But the master of the <cite>Boadicea</cite> contended that none
-of these early exponents of ‘Great Circular sailing’ had
-<a name="png.183" id="png.183" href="#png.183"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>165<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>as yet gone far enough south, and that, at a still more
-distant point, a regular westerly wind-current, strong as
-a good-sized gale and as steady as a trade, without its
-fickleness, was to be met with which would shorten
-the average passage by at least ten days.</p>
-
-<p>Older shipmasters laughed, and, saying that they
-found the Roaring Forties quite strong enough for
-them, stuck to the regular merchantman track, not so
-old yet, they thought, nor so worn by the marks of their
-keels, as to require a fresh one. However, Captain
-Stewart had, by dint of long persuasion and perseverance,
-obtained permission from his owners to test
-practically his pet idea; and this was the reason that,
-on the thirty-fifth day out, the <cite>Boadicea</cite>, in place of
-running her easting down amongst the Forties like a
-Christian ship, with half a gale singing in the bellies of
-her topsails, and mountains of dark-blue water roaring
-rhythmically astern, found herself poking about close
-hauled, with, on every hand as far as vision extended,
-icebergs, varying in size and shape, from a respectable
-many-peaked island to a spireless dissenting chapel.</p>
-
-<p>We were very far indeed to the southward.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div>And now there came both mist and snow,</div>
-<div>And it grew wondrous cold;</div>
-<div>And ice, mast high, came floating by,</div>
-<div class="i1"><span class="ns">    </span>As green as emerald.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Still our commander’s faith in his strong wind-streak was
-unshaken; albeit, for a week or more, light baffling airs,
-scarce sufficing to fill the stiffened canvas, had been our
-portion. It was, too, indeed, ‘wondrous cold,’ and the
-<a name="png.184" id="png.184" href="#png.184"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>166<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>necessity for keeping a close and unwearied look-out
-became every hour more apparent. Already we had had
-narrow escapes of coming into collision with bergs
-wandering aimlessly about, which, although wonderfully
-beautiful objects in the daytime, and at a distance, with
-the bright sunlight reflecting a thousand prismatic hues
-from their glistening surfaces, yet of a dark night were
-liable, with a touch almost, to send us in a twinkling to
-Davy Jones.</p>
-
-<p>The crew growled and shivered, and shivered and
-growled, making the while sarcastic inquiries as to the
-near vicinity of the South Pole, wishing in undertones
-that their skipper had been perched on the top of it
-before leading them into such cold quarters. As for
-myself, although rated as third mate, I was little more
-than a lad at the time, and thought the whole thing
-simply magnificent, hoping that we might penetrate still
-further into the unknown ‘regions of thick-ribbed ice’
-ahead of us, whilst visions of a Southern Continent,
-bears, seals and walruses, floated through my imagination.
-To be sure I was well clothed and comfortably
-housed, which, perhaps, made all the difference. We are
-very apt to look at things one-sidedly, and with regard
-only to the character of our own particular surroundings.
-Man born of a woman is a more or less selfish animal.
-Every day the ‘wandering pearls of the sea,’ as someone
-has called them, seemed to become more plentiful,
-whilst, to add to our dilemma, a thick Antarctic fog,
-through which the <cite>Boadicea</cite>, with look-outs alow and
-aloft, crept like some great blind monster feeling its
-<a name="png.185" id="png.185" href="#png.185"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>167<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>way across the ocean, arose and hid everything from
-view.</p>
-
-<p>The only one on board with any experience of such
-latitudes was our chief officer, a rough New Englander,
-who had taken a couple of voyages to the Northern
-fisheries in a Nantucket whaler. Far, however, from
-giving himself airs on that account, he was probably the
-most anxious man in the ship’s company. He had not
-a particle of faith in the great theory; moreover, he had
-seen a vessel ‘ripped’ in Davis Sound, which none of his
-companions had.</p>
-
-<p>One evening, as if drawn up by some mighty hand,
-the fog lifted, disclosing the sun, cold, red, and angry-looking,
-glaring at us out of a sombre sky, and flushing
-the water and the bergs round about with a flood
-of purple light, on which our masts and rigging cast
-tremulous, long, black shadows, crossing and recrossing
-in a quivering maze, with big, shapeless blotches
-here and there for the sails. Suddenly a deeper,
-darker shadow fell athwart us; and there, not two
-oars’ lengths away, between ship and sun, rose an
-island.</p>
-
-<p>Men rubbed their eyes, and rubbed and looked again,
-but there it was, every stern outline standing in bold
-relief, a rough, ragged mass of barren, desolate rock, its
-summit covered with snow—still, indisputably land.
-Even as we gazed eagerly, wonderingly, the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">mirage</i>
-faded away in a moment, as it had appeared, and the
-mist descended like a grey, heavy curtain, enveloping all
-things in its damp folds.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.186" id="png.186" href="#png.186"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>168<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Presently it came on to snow. The standing rigging
-and running gear alike were coated with ice, whilst the
-canvas took the consistency of sheet-iron, and rang
-like glass when touched.</p>
-
-<p>Roaring fires were lit in oil drums, fore and aft, in
-forecastle and cuddy. Soon the smoke in both places
-was as thick as the fog on deck; a kind of damp,
-unwholesome warmth was engendered as the impromptu
-stoves grew red-hot; great half-frozen cockroaches, thinking
-that the tropics were at hand, crawled out of nooks
-and crannies; and it seemed at times a toss up whether
-our end should come by ice or fire.</p>
-
-<p>Most of our crew were Danes or Swedes, hardy and
-obedient men. If they had been British they would probably
-have attempted to compel the captain to alter his
-course. As it was, they simply put on all their available
-clothing and growled quietly. No matter what their
-nationality, all seamen growl; only some growl and work
-also.</p>
-
-<p>Now, all the watches and clocks on board stopped, and,
-refusing to start again, they were placed in the cook’s
-oven with a view to warming the works. But, in the
-excitement consequent upon fending off a huge berg,
-which threatened to crush us, they were done brown, and
-completely ruined. About this time the captain, thinking,
-perhaps, that his experiment had gone far enough, gave
-the order to square the yards. On going to the braces
-we found that the sheaves of the blocks were frozen to
-their pins and would not travel. Taking them to the
-winch, with much heaving, the yards at last swung,
-<a name="png.187" id="png.187" href="#png.187"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>169<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>creaking and groaning, round, whilst showers of icy
-fragments fell rattling on deck.</p>
-
-<p>It was almost a calm, the ship having barely steerage
-way upon her; but the barometer was falling, and it was
-judged prudent to shorten sail by putting the <cite>Boadicea</cite>
-under a couple of lower top-sails and fore and mizzen
-stay-sails.</p>
-
-<p>To stow each of the upper top-sails it took twenty-four
-men and two boys—nearly, in fact, the ship’s company;
-and, if the courses had not already been furled, I do not
-think we could ever have managed them. The foot-ropes
-were like glass, the reef-points as rigid as bar iron, and
-one’s hands, after a minute aloft, had no more feeling in
-them than the icy canvas they tried to grasp. Through
-the fog, as we slowly descended the slippery ratlines, we
-imagined we could see great bergs looming indistinctly;
-and in our strained ears echoed the ever-impending
-crash as the wind gradually freshened.</p>
-
-<p>It was a trying experience, even for the best prepared
-amongst us, this comparatively sudden transit from the
-tropics to twenty degrees below freezing point; and I
-firmly believe that, but for the unlimited supply of hot
-cocoa available day and night, at all hours, some of us
-would have given in. Spirits could be had for the
-asking, but no one seemed to care about them, even
-those known to be inveterate topers declining rum with
-something akin to disgust; perhaps the reason was that
-it became quite thick, and, when taken into the mouth,
-burned and excoriated both tongue and palate.</p>
-
-<p>The night of the day on which we had snugged the
-<a name="png.188" id="png.188" href="#png.188"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>170<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a><cite>Boadicea</cite> down was dark as pitch, and you could feel the
-fog as it hung low and clingingly to everything. Some
-time in the middle watch the breeze died away, giving
-place to light, unsteady airs—catspaws almost—and
-occasional falls of snow.</p>
-
-<p>Imagine, if you can, the big ship creeping timorously
-and uncertainly through the thick Polar darkness and
-mist, a shapeless mass of yet thicker darkness, emitting
-here and there ruddy flashes of light, reflected momentarily
-back from snow-covered deck or coil of frozen rope.
-No sound breaks the silence except a gentle lap-lapping of
-water under her fore-foot as the canvas just fills enough
-to draw. Now snow falls, not deliberately, but with a
-soft, fleecy, rushing motion, which speedily fills up any
-inequalities about the decks, and would fill them from
-rail to rail if it lasted long. Presently a dozen bulky
-spectres move noiselessly around the galley door, which,
-being withdrawn, a warm glow streams out upon the
-watch come for hot cocoa.</p>
-
-<p>Imagine, too, just as the tired men are about to drag
-their half-frozen limbs below, a sudden deeper silence,
-and a strange feeling of warmth and calm pervading the
-ship; the sails giving one mighty creaking flap up there
-in the gloom; the crash and rattle of ice falling from
-their frozen folds, and a cluster of awe-struck, up-turned
-faces, shining pallidly in the glow of the galley fire, as
-the <cite>Boadicea</cite>, but for a slight roll, lies idle and at
-rest.</p>
-
-<p>Everyone knows and feels that something unusual has
-taken place, but no man there can say what it is. A
-<a name="png.189" id="png.189" href="#png.189"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>171<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>muttered order is heard, and in a minute a flood of vivid
-blue fire pours out into the darkness from the ship’s
-quarter, and a great subdued ‘Ah!’ runs fore and aft
-her, as, by its glare, we see tall, jagged cliffs, weird and
-ghastly in the strange light, towering far on high above
-our mast-heads, which appear to touch them.</p>
-
-<p>‘Get the deep-sea lead overboard!’ shouts the
-captain.</p>
-
-<p>‘Watch, there, watch!’ needlessly cry the men, as the
-line slips from their hands; and no bottom at one
-hundred fathoms.</p>
-
-<p>‘’Taint land at all,’ says the mate quietly. ‘I kin
-smell ice; an’ ef we don’t mind we may calculate to
-winter ’mongst it ’stead o’ makin’ tracks for the Antipodes.
-Lower the quarter-boat,’ he goes on, ‘an’ tie the
-ship up for the night, as, ef I ain’t mistook, we’re pooty
-nigh surrounded.’</p>
-
-<p>More bluelights are burned, and by their help and
-those of lanterns, the <cite>Boadicea</cite>, in a somewhat unnatural
-plight, is warped alongside a kind of ice jetty which
-stretches out from the main mass, and which, as if to
-save us the trouble of carrying out anchors, also to
-complete the resemblance to a pier, is furnished here and
-there with great knobs, to which we make fast our
-lines.</p>
-
-<p>If you will try and picture to yourself the scene
-I have described, you will, I think, be willing to admit
-that ship seldom entered stranger harbour in a stranger
-manner, or that the ‘sweet little cherub, sitting up
-aloft,’ who is supposed to keep a special look-out for
-<a name="png.190" id="png.190" href="#png.190"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>172<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>‘<!-- TN: opening quote invisible -->poor Jack,’ and who on the present occasion—all the
-more honour to him—must have felt colder even than
-the proverbial upper hank of a Greenlandman’s gib<!-- TN: OED gives this as an old spelling of "jib" -->,
-seldom performed his duty better.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps the all-pervading stillness was the thing that
-struck us most. The fenders, even, between the ship’s
-side and her novel pier scarcely gave a creak. And
-yet we were conscious that, somewhere, not very far
-away, it was beginning to blow freshly, although the
-sound fell on our ears but as a subdued, faint murmur,
-serving only to intensify the surrounding silence and
-hush.</p>
-
-<p>‘There’s a fire up there!’ exclaimed one of the men,
-presently. And, sure enough, a tiny, sickly flame appeared
-far away above us. It grew gradually larger and
-larger, till at length a long, broad streak of silver shot
-down the ice-mountains and fell athwart our decks, as
-a three-quarters-full moon, pale, washed-out and sickly-looking,
-shone for a minute through the low, black
-clouds hurrying swiftly across her face.</p>
-
-<p>A dull, grey dawn, at last, giving us just enough light
-to see what had happened. Ice everywhere!</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div>The ice was here, the ice was there,</div>
-<div>The ice was all around;</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">and on every side rose huge bergs from one hundred feet
-to two hundred feet in height, and enclosing a space of
-barely a mile in circumference; an ice-bound lake, in
-fact; and, what struck a chill of terror to our hearts as we
-gazed, a lake without any exit. Look as we might, there
-<a name="png.191" id="png.191" href="#png.191"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>173<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>was not the least sign of an opening. Unwittingly we had
-sailed or drifted into a girdle of conjoined bergs. During
-the night the passage through which we entered had
-closed, and a cruel and stupendous barrier, hard as
-granite, slippery as glass, lay betwixt us and the outer
-ocean.</p>
-
-<p>Within, the water was as smooth as a mill-pond, the
-air was quite warm, and after breakfast all hands went
-‘ashore’ to stretch their legs, look wonderingly up at our
-prison walls, and speculate on the chances of getting out.</p>
-
-<p>As I gazed around me at the strange scene—the snow-clad,
-towering peaks, glittering coldly in the yet feeble
-sun rays, the deep, shadow-laden valleys at their bases,
-and the perpendicular curtains of naked, steely-blue ice
-connecting one berg with the other—there came to my
-mind some long-forgotten lines of Montgomery’s, in
-which he depicts the awful fate of an ice-bound
-<span class="nw">vessel:—</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div>There lies a vessel in that realm of frost,</div>
-<div>Not wrecked, not stranded, but for ever lost;</div>
-<div>Its keel embedded in the solid mass;</div>
-<div>Its glistening sails appear expanded glass;</div>
-<div>The transverse ropes with pearls enormous strung.</div>
-<p class="tb">.        .        .        .        .        .        .</p>
-<div>Morn shall return, and noon, and eve, and night</div>
-<div>Meet here with interchanging shade and light;</div>
-<div>But from that barque no timber shall decay;</div>
-<div>Of these cold forms no feature pass away.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>I had rather enjoyed the first days of our Antarctic
-experiences, but the pleasure began decidedly to pall
-with such a horrible contingency in view, and I was now
-<a name="png.192" id="png.192" href="#png.192"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>174<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>fully as anxious as anyone for clear water and a straight
-course.</p>
-
-<p>After a while, the gig was manned, and, with the
-captain and chief mate, we pulled round our harbour to
-a spot where, from the ship, a part of the ice-curtain
-seemed low and pretty accessible. So it had appeared;
-but when we reached it we found fifty feet of perpendicular
-slippery wall between our boat’s gunwale and the
-summit of the ridge we had hoped to mount.</p>
-
-<p>‘We’re in a pooty nice kind o’ a fix,’ said our mate, as
-we returned. ‘An’,’ glancing at the lowering sky, ‘I
-reckon it’s going to blow some, presently. Mebbe it’ll
-blow us out o’ these chunks of ice.’</p>
-
-<p>The captain made no reply, but he was evidently not
-in a very cheerful state of mind.</p>
-
-<p>That evening it did begin to blow very hard. Not
-that we felt it much, but we could hear the storm
-howling and roaring outside, and the thunderous
-breakers which dashed themselves against our sheltering
-bergs, causing them to tremble and pitch now
-and again as the mighty seas struck their bases.
-We had shifted the <cite>Boadicea</cite> out to the extreme end
-of the jetty, double-banked our fenders, and taken
-every other precaution we could think of, in addition
-to standing-by through the night to cast off and sheet
-home at a minute’s notice.</p>
-
-<p>There was no more silence now; for, although we
-were all drifting away together about E. half S. before
-the wind, the bergs forming our enclosure ground
-against each other with an incessant rending, tearing
-<a name="png.193" id="png.193" href="#png.193"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>175<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>sound, which now, although seeming to foretell an
-early dissolution of partnership, filled us with terror
-lest some of them should topple over on the ship.</p>
-
-<p>The ship herself, no longer steady, was hove
-violently up and down with every motion of the
-bergs; whilst the great wooden fenders, cut from
-spare spars, were torn to splinters, and the hawsers
-surged round their icy mooring posts with a curious,
-screaming, intermittent noise, making us think that
-every moment they were about to part.</p>
-
-<p>Four bells in the morning watch had just struck
-when we heard a terrific crash rising high above the
-surrounding din, and the next instant a great wave
-came rushing over the <cite>Boadicea</cite>, filling her decks,
-nearly lifting her on to the ice, and then slamming
-her down with such force as to snap the hawsers
-like threads and smash the bulwarks to matchwood
-the whole length of the port side. Drifting away
-from our friendly jetty, we at once felt that our
-prison was broken up; for, now, the gale from which
-we had been so long sheltered howled and tore
-through the rigging, whilst cataracts of bitter cold
-water rushed in quick succession over the decks,
-and lumps of ice bumped up against the <cite>Boadicea’s</cite>
-bows and sides.</p>
-
-<p>‘Set the lower fore-top-sail and mizzen-stay-sail!’</p>
-
-<p>And now the slatting and banging of canvas, the
-rattle of iron sheets and hanks, the hoarse cries of
-the men as they staggered about the wet, slippery
-planking, together with the rending and smashing of
-<a name="png.194" id="png.194" href="#png.194"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>176<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>ice all around, made up a scene that defies description;
-whilst to lend it an additional weirdness, a ‘flare-up’
-of oakum and tar, which had been run up to a
-lower-stuns’l boom-end, blazed wildly overhead like
-a great fierce eye looking down upon us out of the
-thick darkness. So closely were we beset, however,
-that, spite of the canvas, we soon found that we
-were simply drifting aimlessly about amidst immense
-fragments of capsized bergs, which threatened every
-moment to crush us. Indeed, we did get one squeeze
-that made the ship crack again, and whose after
-effect was seen by the fact that the cabin doors
-for the rest of the passage refused to close by a
-good six inches. Presently, grinding and scraping
-up alongside a small berg—or portion of a larger
-one, we cannot tell which—we make fast to it as
-well as we are able, and direct all our efforts to
-fending off its companions. As daylight approaches,
-we notice that the ice becomes rarer, and sails by
-at longer intervals; and as it breaks more fully out
-of a lowering yellowish sky a wild sight meets our
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>The sea is dotted with bergs—small ones nodding
-and bobbing along, big ones gliding majestically before
-the wind, till, a pair of these latter colliding, down
-crumble spires and minarets, towers and pinnacles,
-suddenly as a child’s card-built house, sending up
-tall columns of water as they fall.</p>
-
-<p>It is not this spectacle, however, that brings forth
-a simultaneous shout from everyone on board, but
-<a name="png.195" id="png.195" href="#png.195"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>177<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the appearance, as one berg gives a half-turn, of an
-object, hardly two hundred yards from our jibboom end,
-standing there, amidst all the wild commotion, steadfast,
-rugged and grim, with tall breakers curling up
-against its ice-surrounded, dark red cliffs, and falling
-back in showers of foam, showing milky-white in the
-morning gloom.</p>
-
-<p>It is land, surely! And, surely, we have seen those
-forbidding, snow-capped precipices before. It is the
-island of the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">mirage</i>, substantial enough this time,
-and in another ten minutes we shall be dashed to
-atoms against its surf-encircled base.</p>
-
-<p>The sight had a wondrous effect, and men who
-seemed incapable a minute before of stirring their
-stiffened limbs now hopped up the rigging like goats,
-and scampered along the deck with the top-sail halliards
-as if racing for a wager, in obedience to the order
-to cast off and make sail.</p>
-
-<p>‘Hard a port!’ and the <cite>Boadicea’s</cite> poop is splashed
-with spray from rocks and ice as she turns slowly
-from a jagged, honeycombed promontory, whilst her
-late consort goes headlong to destruction on its iron
-teeth.</p>
-
-<p>It is still blowing hard; but our captain is more
-than satisfied; and, under everything she can carry,
-the <cite>Boadicea</cite> rushes, like a frightened stag, fast away,
-northwards and eastwards, out of those dismal seas of ice
-and fog, snow, and unknown islands, a very nightmare
-of navigation, into which one merchant skipper, at
-least, will never willingly venture again.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.196" id="png.196" href="#png.196"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>178<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>However, we, after all, perhaps, set our course on
-a higher parallel than anyone had done since Ross
-in ’41, followed the outline of a southern continent,
-whose volcanoes flamed to heaven from a lifeless,
-desolate land of ice and snow. And, as some compensation
-for our trouble and dangers, till we sighted
-the south end of Tasmania, we never had occasion
-to touch a rope, so steadily and strongly blew the
-fair wind.</p>
-
-<p>‘Seventy-five days—a rattlin’ good passage!’ exclaimed
-our Port Jackson pilot; and when he asked what
-had become of our bulwarks, and why the cuddy
-doors wouldn’t shut, we simply told him we had
-been ‘Too far south.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="The Mission to Dingo Creek"><a name="png.197" id="png.197" href="#png.197"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>179<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>THE MISSION TO DINGO CREEK.</h2>
-
-<p class="subtitle"><span class="smc">An Apostolical Sketch.</span></p>
-
-
-<p class="noindent">‘<span class="smc">Bad</span> work, this!’ exclaimed the Bishop of <span class="nw">B——</span> to one
-of a recent consignment of curates. ‘Bad work this, in
-the North!<!-- TN: original has superfluous closing quote --> That part of the diocese evidently wants
-looking to again. Nice trip for you, Greenwell. Give
-you some idea of the country, too,’ continued the
-Bishop. ‘Yes, decidedly; the very man! Let me see;
-steamer to <span class="nw">R——</span>, then overland. Of course, you may
-have to rough it a little; but that will only add a zest to
-the change.’</p>
-
-<p>The ‘bad work’ that his lordship alluded to was the
-substance of some reports that had just arrived from one
-of the new gold rushes, situated in the extreme north of
-his immense diocese, reports of a terrible state of immorality,
-drunkenness, and general godlessness existing
-there amongst far-off members of his flock—to wit, rough
-diggers and bushmen, together with a sprinkling of
-nondescripts, characterless vagrants, defaulters, horse-thieves,
-and worse, who had flocked there from the
-neighbouring colonies as to an Alsatia, where they
-<a name="png.198" id="png.198" href="#png.198"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>180<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>could remain, at least, for the time being, secure from
-even the far-reaching arm of the law.</p>
-
-<p>On such material as this had the good Bishop, shortly
-after his arrival in his new see, from his snug English
-vicarage, essayed the power of his eloquence on his only
-visit to that part of his charge: a visit, be it whispered,
-he was not in the least anxious to repeat.</p>
-
-<p>The Reverend Spicer Greenwell fairly shuddered at
-the thought of trusting his precious person amongst such
-a set of savages as his imagination at once conjured up.
-But all his excuses and demurrings were without avail,
-his superior having, by some curious mischance, got it
-into his head that his senior curate was the very man
-qualified for such a mission to the heathen.</p>
-
-<p>Though getting well on towards middle age, Mr Greenwell was a failure. He had completely mistaken
-his vocation; but he did not think so, and nobody had,
-as yet, been rude enough to tell him so.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs Jellyby’s mission was, if we remember aright, to
-cultivate coffee and the natives of Borioboola-Gha. Mr Greenwell’s was to cultivate teas—afternoon ones—and
-at the same time to, if possible, capture a fair ‘Native,’
-rich in those goods of this world, in which he himself
-was so unhappily deficient.</p>
-
-<p>For the rest, he was a gaunt, waxen-visaged man, who
-always wore the highest waistcoats, longest coats, and
-whitest neckties obtainable; was never seen without a
-large diamond ring on his little finger; and seldom
-deigned to consort or even converse with the other
-clergymen of the district, unless brought into direct
-<a name="png.199" id="png.199" href="#png.199"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>181<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>communication with them by his position—into which
-he had partly thrust himself, partly had conferred upon
-him through home influence—of the Bishop’s <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">chargé
-d’affaires</i>. He had, he flattered himself, before this untoward
-affair happened, been making rapid progress with
-the damsels of the Banana city; and, indeed, amongst
-some of the more elderly spinsters of the congregation of
-St Jude’s, he was voted as ‘quite too nice.’</p>
-
-<p>Imagine then, if you can, the horror and disgust of
-such a man at being chosen for such an errand. But
-the Bishop was adamant; and I have many a time
-thought since that he purposely hardened his heart, and
-that, whilst dilating on his curate’s especial fitness for the
-work, his energy and push—as already illustrated in
-parish matters—his suave and polished manners, alone
-a vast handicap in his favour amongst the rude and
-illiterate people he was about to visit, the good prelate
-privately hoped within himself that if the shepherd he
-was sending forth did little benefit to the flock, yet,
-that the latter might possibly succeed in some unforeseen
-way in toning down the self-sufficiency, egoism and
-vanity of the pastor.</p>
-
-<p>Seeing, at length, that there was no help for it, and
-that go he must, the luckless curate, taking a mournful
-and solemn farewell of his lady friends, went forth to
-preach the Gospel to the heathen of the Dingo Creek
-diggings.</p>
-
-<p>Things went well enough with our traveller till he
-reached <span class="nw">R——</span>, the nearest township of any size to
-Dingo Creek, which last place lay still further ahead
-<a name="png.200" id="png.200" href="#png.200"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>182<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>nearly ninety miles through rough and lonely country. At
-intervals on his route he had held services and preached
-sermons—little marrowless exhortations that he had long
-known by heart, and that, if they did no harm, assuredly
-did little good. From <span class="nw">R——</span>, whence he set out on
-horseback, a road led sixty miles to a bush public-house,
-where he was told he could be accommodated with a
-buggy, and, perhaps, a guide to his destination.</p>
-
-<p>Duly arriving, sore and jaded, at the sign of the ‘Jolly
-Bushman,’ he found the host an obliging sort of a fellow
-enough, who said he would himself have driven the
-gentleman to Dingo Creek, but that his wife was ill.
-However, his buggy should be at his disposal the next
-morning; and also the publican promised Cooronga
-Billy should go as guide, and, if necessary, bring
-both buggy and parson back again. Early on the
-following morning the buggy and a pair of good-looking
-ponies put in an appearance at the door of the ‘Jolly
-Bushman’; so did Cooronga Billy.</p>
-
-<p>But now we must for a while drop the thread of
-the story, and go back to the time when, as a baby,
-Billy lay sound asleep in his black mother’s arms under
-the shadow of the far-away Cooronga ranges—back to
-that fearful morning whose earliest dawn heralded the
-pitiless swoop of the native troopers on to the quiet
-camp. His tribe ‘dispersed,’ baby Billy, the sole survivor,
-was brought to <span class="nw">B——</span>, sent, in due course, to
-the best schools, and received a special education, with
-a view to fitting him for the ministry, and a sphere of
-what, it was fervently hoped by many good men, would
-<a name="png.201" id="png.201" href="#png.201"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>183<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>prove congenial and profitable labour amongst his own
-benighted countrymen.</p>
-
-<p>As he grew towards man’s estate, Billy became quite
-one of the lions of <span class="nw">B——</span>, and was proudly exhibited
-and put through his paces before distinguished strangers,
-as a splendid specimen of ‘what can be done with our
-aborigines.’</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, and just when all this gratulation was at
-its height, William Cooronga Morris—he was indebted
-to the white officer who had commanded the ‘dispersers’
-of his tribe for the first and last of these names, duly
-received at the font of St Jude’s—disappeared totally,
-turning up months afterwards, clad in his native skins,
-armed with his native weapons, at one of the far-out
-townships; and had ever since loafed around the outskirts
-of Northern Settlement, a degrading example of
-what over-civilisation can do for a black-fellow.</p>
-
-<p>Periodical visits would Billy make far out in the
-Bush towards the wild Coorongas—for some strange
-instinct had led him at his first departure towards the
-land of his birth—and there, instead of, as had been
-so fondly expected, bending his energies towards the
-cure of souls amongst his dark brethren, it was freely
-reported that Mr W. C. Morris constituted himself
-their leader in many a fat-cattle spearing expedition,
-if nothing worse.</p>
-
-<p>Billy, at the moment we have chosen to introduce
-him to the reader, had just returned from one of those
-forays, and a terrible figure he appeared to the Reverend
-Spicer.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.202" id="png.202" href="#png.202"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>184<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Nearly naked, with the exception of a short ’possum
-cloak, his skin plentifully covered with red and white
-ochre, and his hair decorated with cockatoo feathers;
-whilst across one side of his face ran a long, gaping
-scar, a relic of some recent corrobboree—what wonder
-that the reverend gentleman gazed more than doubtfully<!-- TN: hyphen invisible --> at the person introduced to him by the publican
-as his guide. The landlord observed his hesitation and
-the cause of it.</p>
-
-<p>‘Never mind, sir,’ said he, ‘he’s as quiet as a sheep.
-Dessay his ’ed’s sore, though. Have a nobbler, Cooronga?
-It’ll make him lively like, you see,’ he concluded,
-addressing the curate, who evidently thought
-that Billy looked quite lively enough.</p>
-
-<p>At length they started, Billy driving, sulky and taciturn,
-answering questions as shortly as possible, and in
-the vilest of pigeon English.</p>
-
-<p>Nearly three parts of the journey was accomplished—for
-Billy drove like a very Jehu—when the curate
-began to feel hungry. So, as they came to a deep
-gully where the rain-water lay in pools amongst the
-rocks, he made his guide pull up, and prepared to
-comfort the inner man.</p>
-
-<p>Taking no notice of his companion, he sat down
-by the edge of the water, and began with immense
-gusto to demolish a roast fowl and other materials for
-a very fair repast.</p>
-
-<div class="illo">
-<a name="png.203" id="png.203" href="#png.203"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>184a<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a><img id="i184fp" src="images/i_184fp.jpg" alt="[Illustration]"
- /><p><span class="ns">    [Illustration: </span>Who hath woe? Who hath sorrow? Who hath contentions?
-(<a href="#illo_pg186">Page 186</a>.)<span class="ns">]</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>At <span class="nw">R——</span> the reverend gentleman had provided himself
-with two bottles of port, a wine which he had been
-told was a first-class specific in cases of bush-fever and
-<a name="png.205" id="png.205" href="#png.205"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>185<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>dysentery. The bottles were by this gone; but out of
-the last one he had filled a large travelling flask, which
-now producing, along with a tumbler, he proceeded—first
-qualifying his liquor with a modicum of water—to
-wash down his lunch.</p>
-
-<p>Billy’s eyes sparkled. He at once recognised the
-smell and colour, but would have preferred rum.</p>
-
-<p>However, little of anything, solid or fluid, seemed
-likely to fall to his share, for the weather was hot, and
-our curate thirsty.</p>
-
-<p>Presently, addressing Cooronga, the Reverend Spicer,
-who had no idea of entering the scene of his ministrations,
-with such a figure as Billy for his charioteer,
-<span class="nw">said,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘How many miles did you say it was from here to
-Dingo Creek?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Lebn,’ grunted Billy.</p>
-
-<p>‘Is the road as plain all the way as it is here?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ess,’ again grunted the tantalised Cooronga.</p>
-
-<p>‘Very well, then,’ replied the curate, ‘<!-- TN: opening quote invisible -->you can walk
-on. I will follow with the buggy when it gets a little
-cooler.’</p>
-
-<p>But this was out of Billy’s programme altogether.
-Pointing to the capacious flask, to which the thirsty
-divine was paying repeated attention, he said <span class="nw">abruptly,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘You gib it Cooronga. Him dry too!’</p>
-
-<p>‘That is medicine, my friend,’ was the reply, ‘and it
-would do you no good. If, as you seem to imply, you
-are thirsty, there lies water in abundance.’</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.206" id="png.206" href="#png.206"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>186<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Billy’s first impulse was to drive his spear through the
-curate. But, restraining himself with a sigh, another
-idea entered into his mischievous head. A large stump
-stood close by, overlooking the unsuspecting Spicer and
-the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">débris</i> of his meal. Upon this stump, with a bound,
-Billy sprung, and, letting fall his cloak, disclosing to
-view his whole body, hideously chalked, skeleton-wise,
-he began, in a tone and with an enunciation far superior
-to that of the reverend gentleman himself, to declaim,
-with pointed <span class="nw">spear,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘<i><a name="illo_pg186" id="illo_pg186">Who hath woe?</a> Who hath sorrow? Who hath
-contentions? Who hath babbling? Who hath wounds
-without cause? Who hath redness of eyes?</i></p>
-
-<p>‘<i>They that tarry long at the wine; they that go to seek
-mixed wine.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘<i>Look not thou upon the wine when it is red, when
-it giveth its colour in the cup, when it moveth itself
-aright.</i></p>
-
-<p class="nw">‘<i>At the last</i>—’</p>
-
-<p>But here, poor Spicer, who had risen to his feet, and
-stood horror-stricken at hearing himself, as he imagined,
-reproved and threatened for his bibbing propensities
-through the mouth of a fiend, or even, as his staring eyes
-took in Billy’s <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tout ensemble</i>, it might be the Arch Enemy
-of mankind himself, uttered a shriek and fled, terror
-lending unwonted speed to his legs, down the gully;
-whilst Billy, with a wild whoop, descending from
-his perch, took the flask and what remained of the
-provisions to the buggy, and drove off into the
-Bush.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.207" id="png.207" href="#png.207"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>187<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Late that night, a weary, footsore traveller entered
-the principal public-house in Dingo Creek, and
-began to ask incoherent questions about a buggy
-and a black-fellow, the latter, he averred, an emissary
-of Satan, who had led him into the wilderness,
-and there deserted him—a story that the rough host
-and his equally rough customers could make neither
-head nor tail of.</p>
-
-<p>‘It’s a rum go altogether,’ said the former to one of
-his digger friends, after poor Spicer had retired, nearly
-dead beat, to his rough-slabbed room, whence he could
-hear all that went on in the bar.</p>
-
-<p>‘The rummest thing I’ve heard on for some
-time,’ assented the other. ‘He looks somethin’
-like as a parson should look, right enough. But
-either he’s just off of a rather heavy spree, or else
-he’s more’n a shingle short. Sez he seen Ole Nick
-back there in the Bush, an’ the old ’un shook his
-buggy.’</p>
-
-<p>’Bin on the bust, down at the “Jolly Bushman’s,” I
-’spects,’ put in another. ‘You fellers knows as some <em>do</em>
-see the old chap arter a ’ard bust. As for me, I takes it
-out in snakes mostly. But there’s my mate, Bill, he allus
-has cats. I seen him one time a-huntin’ ’em round
-the tent all night long, arter bein’ on the spree for a
-week.’</p>
-
-<p>Confidence in the Reverend Spicer was, however, a
-little restored, when, next morning, the buggy was found
-intact in the public-house yard; and his confused appearance
-and rambling statements of the previous night were
-<a name="png.208" id="png.208" href="#png.208"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>188<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>charitably ascribed by the majority to ‘a touch of the
-sun.’</p>
-
-<p>During the day it was announced throughout the place
-that the Reverend gentleman would address the inhabitants
-in the ‘dance-room’ of the public-house, as being
-the only one available for such a purpose. Figure to
-yourself a long, low room, on the earthen floor of which
-tree stumps still stood. At the far end, behind a sort of
-bar formed by sheets of galvanised iron, supported on
-trestles, waits, manuscript in hand, still in a rather unsettled
-state of mind, the Reverend Spicer. The place
-is dimly lit by flaring candles and slush lamps, and is
-crowded by an assembly of as mixed nationalities,
-customs and creeds, as could be found out of, say,
-Alexandria or Singapore. A strong smell of stale spirits
-and tobacco smoke pervades everything. All the men,
-as our curate sees, are armed with a sheath-knife and
-revolver; and, as he looks, he trembles and handles the
-address as gingerly as if it were a parcel of dynamite, and
-liable to explode at any moment, for it is not one of his
-own pithless compositions, but the work of the Bishop
-himself, a powerful and emphatic remonstrance—penned
-in his quiet study at Bishopstowe—against the sinful and
-dissolute lives of the Dingo Creekers. But, had the
-frightened curate only known it, the mob, mixed and uncontrolled
-as it was, would have as soon thought of ill-treating
-a grasshopper as himself. And, all roughened
-and uncivilised as were the best of them, there were
-still men amongst them in whom the mere sight of a
-clergyman awoke memories long forgotten and buried
-<a name="png.209" id="png.209" href="#png.209"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>189<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>under the combats and toils of life—men who had once
-‘looked on better days,’ and whom Sabbath-bells had
-once ‘knoll’d to church,’ and this portion it was who,
-after awhile, obtained silence, and set the example of
-doffing their hats and putting away their pipes.</p>
-
-<p>Very picturesque was the scene, with the lights flickering—now
-on the bronzed features of some stalwart
-European, now on the dark face of a negro, or the yellow
-expressionless countenance of a Chinaman—as the motley
-audience stood or squatted silent and attentive, whilst
-our curate quavered and stammered through the opening
-sentences of the address. And favourable, beyond all
-hope, would have seemed the opportunity to a true
-soldier of the Cross for softening the hearts of the poor
-heathen of Dingo Creek.</p>
-
-<p>But never, perhaps, since the days when William C.
-Morris, arrayed in black broadcloth, was qualifying as
-an evangelist, has anyone felt himself more of a square
-peg in a round hole than did poor Spicer Greenwell,
-as he droned away, presently, amidst exclamations of
-disgust and disapproval from his curious congregation.</p>
-
-<p>‘Give it lip, man!’ shouted a gigantic digger, whose
-beard reached almost to his waist. ‘Give it lip, an’
-let’s hear what it’s all about.’ Then, turning to the
-publican: ‘Give him a nobbler, Jimmy; it’ll keep his
-pecker up. He’s mighty scared o’ somethin’.’ Declining
-the offered half-tumblerful of rum with a gesture of
-disgust, the curate, intent only on getting to the end
-of his task, resumed his reading.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.210" id="png.210" href="#png.210"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>190<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>At this moment Cooronga Billy, who had passed the
-day in the adjacent black’s camp, entered, and was at
-once warmly greeted by the crowd, to all of whom he
-was well known, and to whom he proceeded, amidst
-shouts of laughter, to relate the story of his escapade
-at the gully.</p>
-
-<p>The curate, disturbed by the noise, lifted up his head,
-and, seeing Billy now standing just in front of him, he
-dropped his papers, and pointing to the grinning black
-fellow, <span class="nw">shouted,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Men! men! Satan himself is amongst you!’</p>
-
-<p>The truth of the affair, helped out by Billy’s story,
-now broke on all hands, and roars of unrestrained
-laughter, accompanied by wild impromptu dancing and
-cheers for ‘Cooronga,’ put an end, for the time at least,
-to any hopes that the Reverend Spicer might have once
-entertained as to his being instrumental to even a
-slight degree in the regeneration of Dingo Creek, the
-dust of which, a sadder and a wiser man, he shook
-without the least delay from off his feet.</p>
-
-<p>Cooronga Billy has long since rejoined his tribe in
-the happy hunting grounds; but stories, many and
-wonderful, of the effect produced by the exercise of
-his perverted abilities are still told by the pioneers of
-the region in which he flourished.</p>
-
-<p>The Reverend Spicer Greenwell still exists; but,
-should the reader feel inclined to seek him, his quest
-must lie well within the precincts of the highest civilisation
-to be found in our colonies, and he must be careful
-that no reference, be it ever so remote, to the
-<a name="png.211" id="png.211" href="#png.211"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>191<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>adventure herein described, pass his lips; for, though
-his life has ‘fallen into the sere, the yellow leaf,’ still
-is the reverend gentleman strangely susceptible to
-any allusion to that episode of his earlier Australian
-experience.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="Books at Barracaboo"><a name="png.212" id="png.212" href="#png.212"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>192<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>BOOKS AT BARRACABOO.</h2>
-
-<p class="subtitle"><span class="smc">A Sketch.</span></p>
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<h3>PART I.</h3>
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smc">They</span> were all very sore at Barracaboo station. From
-manager to horse-boy, from jackaroo to boundary-rider,
-they felt aggrieved and vengeful. First it had been
-‘Around the World by Sea and Land,’ copiously
-illustrated, and in monthly parts. This was dull—unutterably
-dull—and each instalment turned out duller
-and heavier than the last. Also, the pictures resembled
-those on the specimen sheets as nearly as a mule does
-a grindstone.</p>
-
-<p>After this came ‘Diseases of All Known Domestic
-Animals,’ with gorgeously coloured pictures. As nothing
-could be found in the whole work relating to horses or
-cattle or dogs, except the illustrations, this was also
-voted a fraud. However, they cut out the plates, and
-stuck them upon the walls of the huts and cottages, so
-that it was not clear loss altogether.</p>
-
-<div class="illo">
-<a name="png.213" id="png.213" href="#png.213"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>192a<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a><img id="i192fp" src="images/i_192fp.jpg" alt="[Illustration]"
- /><p><span class="ns">    [Illustration: </span>Started back to Atlanta, pursued for half the distance with thunderous whip-crackings. (<a href="#illo_pg194">Page 194</a>.)<span class="ns">]</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>But the last straw was ‘The Universal Biography of
-Eminent Men—Dead and Alive,’ with splendid portraits.
-<a name="png.215" id="png.215" href="#png.215"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>193<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>When they discovered that the notices they had been
-led to expect of their own ‘Boss,’ ‘Hungry’ Parkes of
-Humpalong, the Mayor of Atlanta, etc., etc., were
-absent, and their places filled by paragraphs and woodcuts
-relating to Nelson, Julius Cæsar, Pompey, Scipio
-Africanus, and such-like characters, they one and all
-bucked, and refused to pay on delivery. Then they
-were hauled to Quarter Sessions, confronted with their
-signatures, and made to pay.</p>
-
-<p>In vain they swore that the thing had never been
-ordered; that it wasn’t up to specification; that their
-handwriting was a palpable forgery. In vain they
-related how they had never touched it, but had left
-their copies lying on verandahs, stockyard posts, in
-mud, in dust, wherever, in fact, the agent had chanced
-to bail them up. All in vain; they had to pay—costs
-and all.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore was it that Barracaboo had forsworn literature
-by sample, or in uncertain instalments, and vowed
-vengeance upon all shabby men with indelible pencils,
-and printed agreements with a space left for signature.
-More especially had they a ‘down’ on people who wore
-goatees and snuffled when they talked.</p>
-
-<p>‘If you see one of ’em at the station,’ said the
-manager—a rough, tough old customer, and disappointed
-at being ousted by Julius Cæsar—‘set the
-dogs on him. I’ll pay damages. If he don’t take
-that hint, touch him up with stockwhips. It’ll only
-be justifiable homicide at the worst. I know the law:
-an’ I don’t mind a fiver in such a case!’</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.216" id="png.216" href="#png.216"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>194<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘Let us only get a chance, sorr,’ said the sheep-overseer,
-‘an’ we’ll learn ’em betther manners wid our whups.
-Doggin’s too good for the thrash!’</p>
-
-<p>This state of affairs was pretty well known at Atlanta,
-the neighbouring township; and book-fiends, warned,
-generally gave Barracaboo a wide berth. Once, certainly,
-a new hand at the game, and one who fancied
-himself too much to bother about collecting local
-information, came boldly into the station-yard just
-as the bell was ringing for dinner, and produced the
-advance sheets of a sweet and lively work, entitled,
-‘Hermits, Ancient and Modern: Illustrated with Forty-seven
-Choice Engravings.’</p>
-
-<p>He had got to ‘Now, gentlemen,’ when, hearing the
-howl of execration that went up, he suddenly took in
-the situation and <a name="illo_pg194" id="illo_pg194">started back to Atlanta</a>, pursued for
-half the distance with thunderous whip-crackings by the
-sheep-overseer and the butcher, who were the only
-two who happened to have their horses ready.</p>
-
-<p>Chancing to have a capital mount, he distanced them
-and galloped into town, and up the main street, reins
-on his horse’s neck, and trousers over his knees, half
-dead with fright, only to be promptly summoned and
-fined for furious riding within the municipality.</p>
-
-<p>For weeks afterwards sheets of ‘Hermits’ strewed the
-‘<!-- TN: opening quote invisible -->cleared line,’ and he received a merciless chaffing from
-his fellow-fiends, who could have warned him what to
-expect had he confided his destination to them.</p>
-
-<p>About this time came to Atlanta a small, ’cute-looking,
-clean-shaven, elderly man. He was unknown to any
-<a name="png.217" id="png.217" href="#png.217"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>195<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>present, but modestly admitted that he was in the book
-trade, and had a consignment with him. And he
-listened with interest to the conversation in the ‘Commercial
-Room.’</p>
-
-<p>‘The district’s petered out,’ remarked a tall American
-gentleman, with the goatee and nasal voice abhorred of
-Barracaboo. ‘Clean petered out since that last
-“Universal Biography” business. They’re kickin’
-everywhere. Darned if a feller didn’t draw a bead on
-me yesterday afore I’d time almost to explain business.
-Then he got so mad that I left, not wantin’ to become
-a lead mine.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Been here a week and haven’t cleared exes.,’ said
-another mournfully. ‘Off to-morrow. No use trying to
-work such a desert as this now.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Big place, this station with the funny name, you’re
-talkin’ about?’ asked the newcomer, who had introduced
-himself as ‘Mr Potts, from London.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Over a hundred men of one sort or another all the
-year round,’ was the reply. ‘Capital shop for us, once
-too. But it’s sudden death to venture there now. I
-did real good biz at Barracaboo for the Shuffle Litho.
-Company. It wouldn’t pay, though, to chance back
-again.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ah, that was the “Around the World” thing, wasn’t
-it? Didn’t come up to guarantee, eh?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, hardly,’ replied the other. ‘However, that
-wasn’t my fault, you know. All I had to do was to get
-the orders, which I did to the tune of a couple of hundred
-or thereabout.’</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.218" id="png.218" href="#png.218"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>196<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘That’s the worst of those things,’ said Mr Potts.
-‘Instalments always make a mess of it. Then the agent
-loses his character, if nothing else. I was out delivering
-in the Western District for Shuffle Litho., and was glad
-to get away by the skin of my teeth. But<!-- TN: original reads "But's" --> it’s not
-only the personal danger I object to,’ continued Mr Potts, after a pause. ‘It is the, ahem, the moral
-degradation involved in such a pursuit—you know what
-I mean, sir?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Just so, just so,’ answered the other vaguely, with
-a hard stare at the round, red face looming through
-cigar smoke.</p>
-
-<p>‘That’s what made me throw the line up,’ went on
-Mr Potts, ‘more than anything else. The money’s not
-clean, sir! I’d rather carry about a ton of print, and
-risk selling for cash at a fractional advance upon cost
-price.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That’s all right,’ replied his companion with a grin.
-‘Only take my advice, and don’t trouble Barracaboo
-with your ton of print, or you’ll be very apt to leave it
-there. They won’t give you time to open your mouth.
-Ask “The Hermit,” if you don’t believe me.’</p>
-
-<p>For a whole day Mr Potts drove around and about
-with a selection from his stock.</p>
-
-<p>But he never was allowed even a chance to exhibit a
-sample. Farmers, selectors, squatters, townsfolk, had
-all apparently quite made up their minds.</p>
-
-<p>Times out of number he was threatened with personal
-violence, and greeted with language quite unprintable
-here.<!-- TN: punctuation invisible --> Once sticks were thrown at him; and once an
-<a name="png.219" id="png.219" href="#png.219"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>197<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>old copy of the ‘Biography’ was hurled into the buggy,
-whilst cattle-dogs were heeling his horses. Clearly it
-was useless to persist. The district was fairly demoralised;
-and with a sigh, Mr Potts drove home to
-receive the ‘What did I tell you’s’ of the other
-‘gents.’</p>
-
-<p>But he was a resourceful man was Mr Potts, and he
-determined, before leaving the district for ever, to have
-one more attempt under conditions which should, at all
-events, give him an opportunity of displaying a specimen
-of his goods. Besides, he thirsted for vengeance on
-the community, and knew that if he could but get an
-opening it was his, full and complete.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">.        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .</p>
-
-<p>‘No objection to my camping here to-night, I s’pose?’
-asked a rather forlorn-looking traveller of the cook at
-Barracaboo, shortly after the events related above.</p>
-
-<p>‘Chop that heap o’ wood up, an’ you gets your supper
-an’ breakfus’,’ said the cook, laconically.</p>
-
-<p>The traveller worked hard for an hour, and finished
-his task, handling the axe as if born to it, and provoking
-the cook’s admiration to such an extent that he went
-one better than his promise, and proffered a pint of tea
-and a lump of ‘brownie.’</p>
-
-<p>Presently, lighting his pipe, and undoing his swag, the
-new-comer, remarking that there was nothing like a read
-for passing the time away, took out a gorgeously bound
-volume, sat down at the table, and was soon so interested
-that he let his pipe go out. Save for the cook, the long
-kitchen was empty, all the men being away on the run.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.220" id="png.220" href="#png.220"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>198<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>For a time, busy with a batch of bread, the former
-took no notice of the stranger. Then, his work done,
-he came and looked over his shoulder, saying, ‘What
-you got there, mate?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Finest thing ever you read,’ said the other, carelessly
-turning over some vivid pictures. “The Life and
-Adventures of Dick Turpin, Claude Duval, and Other
-Eminent Outlaws.” Something like a book this is,’
-he continued. ‘Six hundred pages full of love and
-murder; and that excitin’ you can’t bear to put it
-down!’</p>
-
-<p>This was charming; and the cook, and the butcher,
-and a couple of boundary riders dropped in for a yarn,
-at once became inquisitive, and anxious to have a
-look.</p>
-
-<p>‘See here,’ said the owner of the wonderful volume,
-pointing to an outrageous effort in coloured process,
-‘this is the bold Dick Turpin on his wonderful mare,
-Black Bess, taking the ten-foot gate on the road to York.
-See, he’s got the reins in his teeth and a pistol in each
-hand.’</p>
-
-<p>‘By gum, she’s a flyer!’ ‘Twig the long-necked
-spurs.’ ‘No knee-pads to the saddle either!’ ‘Ten
-foot! there ain’t a horse in Hostralia as could do it!’—exclaimed
-his audience, becoming excited.</p>
-
-<p>‘And here you have,’ went on the traveller, ‘<!-- TN: opening quote invisible -->the gentle
-highwayman, Claude Duval, stickin’ up the Duke of
-York’s coach on ’Oundslow ’Eath. And here he is
-again, dancing under the moon with the Duchess.’ And
-so he continued, setting forth in tempting sequence the
-<a name="png.221" id="png.221" href="#png.221"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>199<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>glories of the work, pausing at intervals to read aloud
-thrilling bits, and comment upon them.</p>
-
-<p>‘Where did you get it, mate?’ at length asked the
-cook.</p>
-
-<p>‘Bought it in Atlanta,’ replied the other. ‘Fellow
-there’s got lots of ’em, and only thirty bob apiece.
-Cheap at double the price, I reckon, considerin’ the
-amoun’ of readin’ in it.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ain’t no deliv’rin’ numbers, or signin’ ’greements,
-or any o’ that game?’ asked one suspiciously. ‘’Cause
-if there is, we’re full.’</p>
-
-<p>‘No,’ was the reply; ‘you pays your money and you
-takes your bargain. But I don’t think you fellows’ll
-ever get the chance. I heard him say he’d as soon
-face a mad bull as come to this station.’</p>
-
-<p>The men, of whom the hut was now full, laughed;
-and said <span class="nw">one,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘The chap as sells, out an’ out, an honest article like
-that un needn’t be scared. It’s them coves as gets
-you to sign things, and keeps sendin’ a lot o’ rotten
-trash, not a bit like what you seen furst; an’ then
-comes, as flash as you please, summonsin’ of you an’
-a-gettin’ of you bullyragged in Court—them’s the coves
-as we’ve got a derry on. Let’s have another squint at
-that pitcher o’ Dick Turpin an’ Black Bess, mates.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Give you five bob on your bargain!’ shouted a
-tall stockman, presently, from the outer edge of the
-circle, where he had been impatiently waiting for a
-look.</p>
-
-<p>‘Couldn’t part with it,’ said the owner decidedly.
-<a name="png.222" id="png.222" href="#png.222"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>200<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>‘But I’ll tell you what I will do. I’m going back to
-the township to-morrow. If the chap ain’t gone, I’ll
-let him know he can sell a few here. He might
-venture if you’ll all give your word not to go for him
-when he does come. He’s got lots of others, too.
-There’s “The Bloody Robber of the Blue Mountains,”
-and “The Pirate’s Bride,” and “The Boundin’ Outlaws
-of the Backwoods,” and plenty more—all same
-price, and all pictures and covers same as this
-one is.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Right! Tell him to come! It was pay-day yesterday,’
-yelled the crowd unanimously.</p>
-
-<p>‘Not a bad night’s work, I do believe,’ muttered
-the traveller to himself, as he reluctantly stretched out
-on the hard bunk-boards. ‘I hope, though, this
-confounded beard and moustache won’t come off
-while I’m asleep, if I ever do get any on such a
-bed.’</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<h3>PART II.</h3>
-
-<p class="noindent">‘<span class="smc">Is</span> your life insured?’ ‘You’ll get sudden notice to
-vamose<!-- TN: ok OED --> the ranche<!-- TN: ok OED -->, sir!’ ‘Mind the dogs!’ ‘Look
-out for whips!’ ‘You’ll lose your stock!’</p>
-
-<p>Such were some of the warnings and admonitions
-dealt out to Mr Potts by his friends, as he heavily
-<a name="png.223" id="png.223" href="#png.223"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>201<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>loaded his buggy preparatory to starting for Barracaboo.</p>
-
-<p>‘I’ll chance it!’ said he. ‘Haven’t sold a cent’s
-worth yet; and it’s the only place I haven’t tried.
-They can’t very well kill a fellow, anyhow. I’ll chance
-it; faint heart never won fair lady!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Give you five pounds to one you don’t deal!’ cried
-one.</p>
-
-<p>‘Give you five pounds to one you’re hunted!’
-shouted ‘The Hermit.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Bet you slap-up feed for the crowd to-night, and
-wine thrown in, that somethin’s broke afore you come
-back,’ said the American gentleman.</p>
-
-<p>‘Done, and done, and done,’ replied Mr Potts
-placidly, as he carefully booked the wagers and drove
-off; whilst the bystanders, to a man, agreed to delay
-their departure for the sake of not only eating a cheap
-dinner, but witnessing a return which they were all
-convinced would be ‘as good as a play.’</p>
-
-<p>But they were mistaken. Mr Potts was received at
-Barracaboo with open arms, no one recognising in the
-clean-shaven features those of the bearded, dilapidated
-swagman who had the other night spied out the lay of
-the land and the leanings of its people. The manager
-was absent; but the overseer, who had already by
-personal inspection satisfied himself of the merits of
-‘Bold Dick Turpin,’ etc., was amongst the earliest
-purchasers.</p>
-
-<p>‘Everything went like wildfire. Mr Potts could
-hardly hand them out fast enough. Those present
-<a name="png.224" id="png.224" href="#png.224"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>202<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>bought for others away on the run, and in a very short
-time there were only three volumes left.</p>
-
-<p>These were of a different calibre to the rest of the
-rubbish, being nothing less than ‘The Adventures of
-Don Quixote de la Mancha,’ with illustrations by
-Gustave Doré. However, as no one would even look
-at them at the price—five pounds—the dealer, having
-pretty well cleaned out ‘the Hut,’ determined to try
-his luck at ‘the House.’</p>
-
-<p>Now, it happened that Mrs Morris, the manager’s
-wife, wished just at this time to buy something for
-her eldest boy, whose birthday was approaching.
-Recognising, as a reading woman, that the work was
-genuine, and not more than a pound or two over
-price, she bought it. It was so much less trouble
-than sending to the capital, with a chance of disappointment.</p>
-
-<p>‘It’ll do very nicely for Master Reginald,’ quoth she;
-‘I’m sure he’ll be pleased with it. And I’m glad to
-see that you people are at last beginning to carry
-something better than the usual lot of trash. I hope
-you did well amongst the men with these standard
-works?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Very nicely indeed, thank you, ma’am,’ replied Mr Potts, smiling, as he bowed and withdrew.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">.        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .</p>
-
-<p>John, the waiter, had twice informed the ‘commercial
-gents’ that dinner was ready, before the anxious watchers
-saw the man who was expected to pay for it drive into
-the yard of the hotel.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.225" id="png.225" href="#png.225"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>203<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘He looks kinder spry,’ remarked the American
-gentleman disappointedly. ‘Guess he’s got clear off
-with a caution this once.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Buggy seems to run light,’ chimed in another.
-‘Shouldn’t wonder if they’d unloaded it into the river.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Never had such a haul since I’ve been in the
-business, gentlemen!’ exclaimed Mr Potts, as he
-presently entered the dining-room with a big roll of
-paper in his hand. ‘There must have been some
-mistake about the place. Why, they’re the mildest
-crowd you’d see in a day’s march. Sellin’ ’em books is
-like tea-drinkin’. It actually kept me goin’ as fast as I
-could to change their stuff for ’em. Here, you know
-the Barracaboo cheques. Look at this, and count ’em<!-- TN: original reads "em'" -->,
-one of you. Blessed if I’ve had time! I hope dinner’s
-ready. Never let me hear a word against Barracaboo
-after this!’</p>
-
-<p>There was a long silence of utter astonishment, during
-which the American rapidly thumbed strips of green
-paper, and made mental calculations.</p>
-
-<p>‘Eight hundred dollars!’ exclaimed he, at last, in
-tones of unalloyed admiration. ‘Mister Potts, sir,
-you’re a gifted genius! I ante-up, Colonel, to once,
-an’ allow I’ll take a back seat.’</p>
-
-<p>And so, in their several fashions, said the rest; whilst
-the lion of the evening ate his dinner, sipped his
-porphyry, and kept his own counsel.</p>
-
-<p>‘Cost me four bob, landed in Sydney, averaging
-the lot,’ said Mr Potts confidentially to a friend
-that evening, as they enjoyed their coffee and cigars
-<a name="png.226" id="png.226" href="#png.226"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>204<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>on the balcony. ‘I’m on my own hook, too, now.
-I seen that the specimen-sheet-monthly-delivery-collection-per-agent
-game was blown—not that I guessed it
-was near as bad as it really is. So I sends straight
-away to New York for this consignment, specially
-got up and prepared for the Bush. It was a regular
-bobby-dazzler! You see, the boards are only stuck
-on with glue, type and paper’s as rough as they make
-’em, and the picturin’s done by a cheap colour
-patent. I’ve got another lot nearly due by this—not
-for here, though. You fellows have ruined this
-district. Of course the Dorees was genuine. I
-bought the three of ’em a job lot in town for a
-song. They’re the only books I’ve got left now.
-If I’d had a score more of Turpins and such, I
-could have sold ’em at the station.’</p>
-
-<p class="tb">.        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .</p>
-
-<p>‘There’s old Morris, of Barracaboo, just come
-in,’ remarked someone the next morning. ‘He’s
-on his way home from Larras Show, I expect.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Which is him?’ asked Mr Potts eagerly (all
-literary people are not necessarily purists).</p>
-
-<p>‘Sorry to disturb you at lunch, sir,’ said Mr Potts
-presently, as he entered, bearing a large book. ‘But
-Mrs Morris was kind enough to say that this would
-do nicely for Master Reginald’s birthday. ‘Don
-Quixote,’ sir, the most startling work of that
-celebrated author, Gustavus Do-ree, sir. Splendidly
-illustrated, sir. Your good lady was very much
-pleased with it.’</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.227" id="png.227" href="#png.227"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>205<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘Umph, umph,’ growled the manager. ‘Been out
-at the station, eh? Didn’t they run you, eh? No
-whips, no dogs! Eh! eh! What?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I am not an advance agent for books I know
-nothing about, sir,’ returned the other with dignity,
-as he took the volume up again. ‘I sell a genuine
-article, sir, for cash on the nail. In transactions of
-that kind there can be no mistake, sir.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Umph!’ growled the squatter doubtfully. ‘Well,
-as long as the missus says it’s all right, I s’pose it is.
-How much?’</p>
-
-<p>He paid without a murmur. Mrs M. was a lady
-who stood no trifling.</p>
-
-<p>‘Wrap the thing up and put it in the buggy,’ said
-he. ‘Gad, it’s as big as the station ledger! Look
-sharp, now, I’m in a hurry!’</p>
-
-<p>‘So am I,’ quoth Mr Potts, as he returned. ‘John,
-what time does the next train start?’</p>
-
-<p class="tb">.        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .</p>
-
-<p>When the manager reached home that afternoon
-with ‘Don Quixote,’ and compared notes and books,
-there was a row, the upshot of which was that he
-received orders to hurry off at once in pursuit, and
-avenge the trick played upon them.</p>
-
-<p>‘You’re a J.P.,’ stormed the lady, ‘and if you can’t
-give that oily villain three months, what’s the use
-of you? Besides, isn’t five pounds worth recovering?’</p>
-
-<p>Mr Morris would much sooner have let the matter
-drop quietly. No man likes to publicly advertise
-<a name="png.228" id="png.228" href="#png.228"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>206<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the fact of his having been duped, least of all
-by a book-fiend.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, well, my dear,’ said he at last, ‘never mind.
-I’ll go directly. I’ve got some letters to write first
-But I’ll send M‘Fadyen into town to see the fellow
-doesn’t get away.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Tell him,’ said the manager, as the overseer was
-preparing to start, ‘tell him I’m coming in presently,
-about—um—er—about a book. Oh, and if he gives
-you anything, perhaps you’d better take it. No use,’
-he muttered to himself, with a side glance to where
-his wife sat, ‘letting all hands and the cook know
-one’s business. The beggar ’ll only be too glad to
-stump up when he finds I’m in earnest. Thought,
-I suppose, that I wouldn’t bother about it, eh,
-what!’</p>
-
-<p>Inquiring at the ‘Royal,’ the overseer was told
-that Mr Potts had left; although, perhaps, if he
-hastened, he might yet see him, as the train hadn’t
-started. Sure enough, galloping up to the station
-and searching along the carriages, he found his
-man just making himself comfortable in smoking-cap
-and slippers.</p>
-
-<p>‘Be jakers, mister,’ he gasped breathlessly, ‘the
-Boss wants to see ye badly! Have ye got anythin’
-for him? It’s of a book he was spakin’. Tould me
-to tell ye that he’d be in himself directly.’<!-- TN: closing quote invisible --></p>
-
-<p>‘Too late! Can’t stop! Time’s up!’ replied Mr Potts. ‘But’—rising to the occasion, and taking the
-last copy of ‘Do-ree’ out of his portmanteau—‘this
-<a name="png.229" id="png.229" href="#png.229"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>207<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>is it. It’s for Master Reginald’s birthday. Your Boss
-wouldn’t miss having it for three times the money.
-Six pounds—quick!’</p>
-
-<p>In a desperate flurry, the overseer ransacked his
-pockets. No; he could only muster four.</p>
-
-<p>‘All right, guard, wait a minute!’ he yelled as,
-borrowing the balance, he clutched the book, whilst
-the train, giving a screech, moved away, with Mr Potts nodding and grinning a friendly farewell.</p>
-
-<p>‘Be kicked now!’ exclaimed the overseer, ‘if that
-wasn’t a close shave! The Boss oughter think
-himself lucky, so he ought!’</p>
-
-<p>So, carrying the book carefully under his arm, he
-jogged Barracaboowards.</p>
-
-<p>Half way he met Mr Morris coming in at full
-speed.</p>
-
-<p>‘No hurry in loife, sorr!’ cried the overseer, beamingly,
-and showing ‘Don Quixote.’ ‘I ped six notes
-for it, an’ had to borrow two. It was just touch an’
-go, though, so it was!’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="‘Barton’s Jackaroo’"><a name="png.230" id="png.230" href="#png.230"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>208<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘BARTON’S JACKAROO.’</h2>
-
-
-<p class="noindent">‘<span class="smc">Bother</span>!’ exclaimed Mr Barton, the Manager of Tarnpirr,
-as he finished reading one of his letters on a certain
-evening.</p>
-
-<p>‘What’s the matter, papa?’ asked his daughter, Daisy,
-pausing with the teapot in her hand.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, nothing much, my dear,’ he replied; only we
-are to have company. The firm is sending up the
-444th cousin of an Irish Earl to learn sheep-farming,
-and I suppose I’ve got the contract to break him in.
-That’s all.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I wish your mother could be at home, Daisy,’
-he continued. ‘I never did care much about these
-colonial-experience fellows. They generally give a lot
-of trouble, especially when they’re well connected.
-There, read the precious letter for yourself. Pity we
-couldn’t put him into the hut, instead of making him
-one of ourselves—eh, Daisy?’</p>
-
-<p>The girl laughed as she read <span class="nw">aloud,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Mr Fortescue is highly connected; and as he not
-only brings introductions from the London office, but
-<a name="png.231" id="png.231" href="#png.231"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>209<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>also possesses an interest in several properties out
-here, we hope you will do your best to make him
-comfortable, and to give him that insight into the
-business that he seems desirous of acquiring at first
-hand.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, daddy!’ she exclaimed, ‘you ought to think
-yourself honoured—“highly connected,” not merely
-“well,” remember—by such a charge! As for myself,
-I am all anxiety to see him.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I don’t think anything of the sort, then, Daisy,’<!-- TN: closing quote invisible -->
-said her father. ‘And if I could afford to do so,
-I should like to tell them that I consider it a piece
-of impertinence on their part to ask me to receive
-a perfect stranger, knowing how I am situated alone
-with you, how small the place is, and how roughly we
-live. But one can’t ride the high horse on a hundred
-and fifty pounds a year!’</p>
-
-<p>And the Manager of Tarnpirr sighed, and stared
-thoughtfully into his cup.</p>
-
-<p>In the general sense of the word, Daisy Barton
-was not a pretty girl, inasmuch as she possessed not
-one regular feature. But it was such a calm, quiet,
-pleasant face, out of which dark blue eyes looked so
-tenderly and honestly at you, that one forgot to search
-for details in the charm of the whole. Add to this,
-one of the neatest, trimmest, most loveable little figures
-imaginable, and you may have some faint idea of the
-pleasant picture she made as she sat thinking which
-of the two spare rooms should be got ready for the
-new inmate. Mrs Barton was never at the station.
-<a name="png.232" id="png.232" href="#png.232"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>210<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>She was a confirmed invalid, and resided permanently
-in a far southern town. Daisy and an old Irishwoman
-kept house.</p>
-
-<p>In due course the ‘highly connected’ one arrived,
-bringing with him as much luggage as sufficed to fill
-the extra room.</p>
-
-<p>He was a tall, good-looking Englishman, and he
-gazed around at the small bare house with its strip
-of burnt-up, dusty garden, and background of sombre
-eucalypti; at the squalid ‘hut;’ the sluggish, dirty
-river; and the barren forlornness of everything, with
-a look on his face that caused Mr Barton to chuckle,
-and think to himself that the new-comer’s stay would
-be short. The manager had expected a youngster, not
-a grown man of five or six and twenty, and he was
-rather puzzled.</p>
-
-<p>This self-possessed, languid sort of gentleman, with
-well-cut features, long moustache, and slow, pleasant-sounding,
-if rather drawling, speech, wasn’t by any
-means the sort of creature that Mr Barton was accustomed
-to associate with the term ‘jackaroo,’ and its
-natural corollary, ‘licking into shape.’</p>
-
-<p>‘A fellow with lots of money, I expect,’ he said
-to Daisy that night after their guest, pleading fatigue,
-had retired. ‘One of those chaps who just come
-out to have a look around, and then off home
-again with wonderful stories about the wild Australian
-Bush.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yaas; shouldn’t wondah, now, Mistah Barton, if you
-ah not quaite correct,’ laughed Daisy, mischievously.
-<a name="png.233" id="png.233" href="#png.233"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>211<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>‘Oh, papa, do all the folk in England talk as if they
-were clean knocked up?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Only the highly-connected ones, my dear,’ replied
-her father, smiling. ‘It’s considered quite fashionable,
-too, amongst our own upper ten. He’ll lose
-it after he’s been bushed a few times. I shouldn’t
-imagine from his looks, however, that he’s got much
-backbone. He’ll be away again presently—too rough
-a life.’</p>
-
-<p>And, in fact, poor Fortescue at first often did get
-bushed.</p>
-
-<p>Luckily for him, perhaps, a camp of blacks settled
-at Tarnpirr shortly after his arrival, and these made a
-regular income by hunting for and bringing him back.
-And he was very considerate.</p>
-
-<p>Once, when he had been missing for three days,
-and Mr Barton and Daisy were half out of their
-minds with fright, he made the blacks who were
-bearing him home, tattered and hungry, and faint
-from exposure, go ahead for clean clothes and soap
-and water before he would put in an appearance.
-This incident only confirmed Mr Barton the more in
-his idea that he had to do with a man lacking strength
-of character—a dandy willing to sacrifice everything
-to personal outward show. His daughter thought quite
-otherwise.</p>
-
-<p>However, in time, ‘Barton’s Jackaroo,’ as he was
-called throughout the district of the lower rivers, became
-a favourite, not only at Tarnpirr, but on the
-neighbouring runs. Even old Bridget admitted that
-<a name="png.234" id="png.234" href="#png.234"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>212<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>‘he was a good sort ov a cratur, barrin’ the want ov a
-bit more life wid him.’</p>
-
-<p>But he was always calm and self-possessed; and
-the Manager was accustomed to swear that a bush
-fire at his heels wouldn’t make him quicken his pace
-by a step.</p>
-
-<p>And once Daisy, in a moment of irritation, confided<!-- TN: hyphen invisible -->
-to her father that she felt inclined to stick a
-needle into his jackaroo for the sake of discovering
-whether that provoking air of leisurely languor was
-natural or assumed.</p>
-
-<p>‘He’s got no backbone, my dear,’ said the Manager,
-laughing. ‘But try him by all means. I’ll bet you
-ten to one he only says what he did last week, when
-that old ram made a drive at him in the yard, and
-knocked him down and jumped on him.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And what did he say to that?’ asked Daisy
-eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well,’ replied Mr Barton, laughing again, ‘when
-he’d cleaned the mud out of his eyes and mouth, he
-looked surprised and said “Haw!”’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh,’ said Daisy, disappointedly. ‘But what ought
-he to have said to show that he had a backbone,
-papa?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well,’ replied her father vaguely, ‘you know, Daisy—er—um—well,
-that is—um—a great many people, my
-dear, your father amongst them, perhaps, would be apt
-to say a good deal on such an occasion.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I have a better opinion than ever of Mr Fortescue,’
-cried Daisy indignantly at this. ‘Because he keeps his
-<a name="png.235" id="png.235" href="#png.235"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>213<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>temper, and doesn’t go on like Long Jim or Ben the
-Bullocky when any little thing happens, he’s got no
-pluck or resolution! I own he exasperates one sometimes
-with his calm, dawdling ways. But if he were
-pushed, I shouldn’t be surprised to find more in him
-than he gets credit for after all!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Umph!’ said Mr Barton glancing kindly, but with
-rather a troubled face, at the flushed cheeks and sparkling
-eyes upturned to his own. And as he rode over the
-run that day the burden of his thoughts was that the
-sooner his serene-tempered jackaroo got tired of the Bush
-the better it would be for all of them.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">.        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .</p>
-
-<p>‘Ned, if the river ain’t a-risin’, an’ risin’ precious quick,
-too, call me a Dutchman! ’Arf-an-hour ago the water
-warn’t near them bullocks, and now it’s right agin their
-’eels!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well,’ replied his mate, glancing towards the brown
-stream slowly spreading over the flat, ‘we’re safe enough.
-I’ll forgive it if it comes over this. Tell you what, though,
-you might catch the pony an’ canter up to the station,
-an’ tell ole Barton as there’s some water a-comin’. He
-might have some stock he’d like to git out o’ the road.
-An’ you might’s well git a lump o’ meat while you’re
-there.’</p>
-
-<p>So Ned, of the travelling bullock team, went with the
-news to Tarnpirr, lower down.</p>
-
-<p>But Mr Barton that very morning had been to Warrooga
-township, and the telegraph people had said no
-word of floods or heavy rain at the head of the river.
-<a name="png.236" id="png.236" href="#png.236"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>214<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Around Tarnpirr and district the weather had been
-dry for weeks, so the Manager was not in the least uneasy.</p>
-
-<p>‘It’s only a bit of a fresh, Brown,’ said he. ‘It’ll soon
-go down again. Thanks all the same, though. Meat?
-Yes, of course. And now you’d better go over to the
-kitchen and get your dinner.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Boss reckons it’s nothin’,’ said Ned, returning that
-evening. ‘No rain fall’d up above.’</p>
-
-<p>‘We wouldn’t need shift anyhow,’ replied the other,
-preparing to cook the meat given them by Mr Barton,
-who little dreamt how welcome it would be to some
-people later on. ‘We’re a lot higher here than they
-are at the station. I saw “Barton’s Jackaroo” just
-now, out ridin’ with Miss Daisy. He’s a rum stick, he is.’</p>
-
-<p>‘But ain’t she a little star!’ exclaimed Ned enthusiastically.</p>
-
-<p>‘She are; all that!’ replied his mate. ‘Finest
-gall on the rivers. Too good by sights for any new-chum.’</p>
-
-<p>And so the pair sat and yarned and watched the
-treacherous water of what was to become the biggest
-flood since ’64 stealthily eating its way up amongst the
-long grass of the sandridge, sneaking quietly into little
-hollows, then pretending to creep back again, then with
-a rush advancing a miniature wave further than ever.
-Sat and talked and watched the brown expanse broaden
-until the tall oaks that bordered the banks were whipping
-the fierce current with their slender tops, sole mark now
-to show where lay mid-stream.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.237" id="png.237" href="#png.237"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>215<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘It’s a darned big lump of a fresh!’ quoth Ned doubtfully.</p>
-
-<p>‘It’ll be down afore mornin’,’ replied his mate. ‘And
-anyhow it can’t do us real bad, seein’ what we’ve got in
-the loadin’. But there’s no danger ’ere on this ridge.’</p>
-
-<p>So they turned in under their tarpaulins, and never
-heard how the water hissed at midnight as it crept, little
-by little, advancing, receding, but always gaining, into
-their carefully covered-up fire.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">.        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .</p>
-
-<p>In the snug sitting-room at Tarnpirr, with lamps burning
-brightly, and curtains drawn against the lowering
-dusk, sat Herbert Fortescue and Daisy Barton, their
-heads pretty close together over a chessboard.</p>
-
-<p>‘I’m going across to the Back Ridge out-station this
-afternoon,’ had said Mr Barton. ‘I sha’n’t be home
-before to-morrow; I want to see how Macpherson’s getting
-on with those weaners. Needn’t bother about the
-river. It’s only a fresh, or Warrooga would have sent us
-word.’</p>
-
-<p>Alas for dependence on Warrooga with its absent
-trooper, and absent-minded operator, who was warned,
-just after Manager Barton left him, that masses of
-water were coming down three rivers towards Tarnpirr!</p>
-
-<p>Had he but taken horse and galloped out the few
-miles, or sent, things might have happened very differently,
-and this story would never have been written.
-But as it <span class="nw">was—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘There!’ exclaimed Daisy, ‘my king is in trouble
-<a name="png.238" id="png.238" href="#png.238"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>216<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>again. I feel out of sorts to-night. It’s very close.
-Shall we go on to the verandah?’</p>
-
-<p>‘With pleasure,’ said the young man rising. ‘But it’s
-as dark as pitch outside. Give me your hand, please, for
-fear you stumble.’</p>
-
-<p>Hesitating for a moment, their eyes met, and with
-deepening colour she placed her hand in his, and they
-went out through the long window into the night. It
-was very quiet, and the darkness felt woolly and warm.
-No light glimmered anywhere, and the only sound was
-the cry of a solitary mopoke coming from amongst
-the spectral boles of the box trees.</p>
-
-<p>‘The men are in bed, I suppose,’ said Daisy, glancing
-towards their hut.</p>
-
-<p>‘They are away on the run,’<!-- TN: closing quote invisible --> replied Fortescue, ‘drawing
-fencing stuff for the new line. But it’s a wonder we
-don’t see the blacks’ fire.’</p>
-
-<p>As they stood leaning against the garden fence a
-soft continuous ripple, mingled with a sound like the
-sighing of wind through tall belars fell on their
-ears.</p>
-
-<p>‘It’s only the river,’ said Daisy, ‘I’ve often heard it
-making that mournful noise when it’s rising over its
-banks. Shall we walk as far as the camp?’</p>
-
-<p>It was a rough track, and more than once, but for the
-sustaining arm of her companion, Daisy would have
-come to grief over log or tussock.</p>
-
-<p>But they got there at last, guided by a few dim sparks
-from expiring fires.</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, it’s deserted,’ exclaimed Daisy, as they found
-<a name="png.239" id="png.239" href="#png.239"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>217<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>themselves amongst the empty gunyahs. ‘They’re gone,
-dogs and all.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Off on some hunting expedition, I expect,’ replied
-Fortescue, laughing. ‘They look at me in a comically
-disgusted manner of late since I left off getting bushed
-so regularly.’</p>
-
-<p>It was too dark to see the water, but they stood for a
-long time listening to the swish of it as it ran full-lipped
-from one steep high bank to the other, telling with
-eerie mutterings and whisperings, and curious little
-complaining noises, and low hoarse threatenings of
-what it would presently do, and the mischief it would
-work, but in language all untranslatable by its hearers.</p>
-
-<p>‘What a sweet little lady it is,’ said Fortescue to
-himself as, later, he sat on the edge of his bed staring
-straight before him into a pair of tender, steadfast eyes
-conjured out of the darkness. ‘<!-- TN: opening quote invisible -->I wonder if she does?
-I’m nearly sure of it, thank heaven! Why, she is worth
-coming here and roughing it like this, and being called
-“Barton’s Jackaroo” twenty times over for!’ and he
-laughed gently. ‘Fancy a prize like that hidden away
-amongst these solitudes. I wonder what her father will
-say? Anyhow, I won’t put it off any longer. I’ll ask
-him to-morrow.’</p>
-
-<p>With which resolution he laid down and went to sleep,
-still thinking on Daisy Barton.</p>
-
-<p>He awoke with a start, and lay listening to noises
-in his room, the remnants, as he imagined, of some
-grotesque dream.</p>
-
-<p>Gurglings there were, and agonised squeakings and
-<a name="png.240" id="png.240" href="#png.240"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>218<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>scrapings, with, now and then, ploppings and splashings
-as of many small swimmers. Then something cold, wet
-and hairy, crawled over his hand.</p>
-
-<p>Shaking it off with an exclamation, he jumped out of
-bed, and with the shock of it, stood stock still for two
-minutes up to his knees in water.</p>
-
-<p>Then, striking a match, he saw that his room was
-awash, and that all sorts of articles were floating about
-it, drawn hither and thither by the current which
-swelled and eddied between the old slabs. Up a
-corner of blanket, touching the water, swarmed a great
-host of ants, tarantulas, beetles and crickets, whilst
-drowning mice, lizards, and heaven knows what else,
-swam wildly round and round and gratefully hailed his
-bare legs as a harbour of refuge. Hastily rubbing
-them off, and getting into some wet clothes, he opened
-the window and looked out. A wan moon shed a
-feeble light upon one vast sea of turgid water. Nothing
-in sight but water—water, and the tops of the trees
-quivering above the flood! No wonder the river talked
-to itself last night! The scene was enough to make
-even a man with a backbone quail and feel a bit
-nervous.</p>
-
-<p>As for Barton’s Jackaroo, his first astonishment over,
-he forgot himself so far as first to whistle, and then
-to swear, but very softly and tentatively, as one trying
-an experiment.</p>
-
-<p>You see, this was a different matter altogether to being
-butted of rams, or even being badly bushed without a
-drink for three days and three nights.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.241" id="png.241" href="#png.241"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>219<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Brushing off his sleeve the head of a column of sugar-ants
-that had effected a lodgment <i>via</i> the window-sill, he
-waded into the sitting-room and lit the lamp. Then,
-making for Daisy’s room, he called and tapped until
-she answered.</p>
-
-<p>‘It’s me—Fortescue. Don’t be alarmed, Daisy—Miss
-Barton,’ said he. ‘The water’s in the house. Get up
-and dress, and come out as quickly as possible.’</p>
-
-<p>As he finished speaking a wild yell rang through the
-place, and Bridget’s voice from near by exclaimed,
-punctuated by <span class="nw">screams,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Howly Mother av Moses! Ow! Blessid Vargin an’
-all the saints purtect us! Ow! the divvle be wid me!
-but it’s drowned I am this minnit! an’ the wather up me
-legs, an’ niver a soul comin’ next anigh me! Och! wirras-thru!
-it’s a lost woman I am, wid all the mices and
-bastes atin’ away at me! Ow! ow! ow!’</p>
-
-<p>With difficulty suppressing a desire to laugh, Fortescue
-shouted to her to get her clothes on and join him.
-One little cry of dismay he heard from Daisy as she
-lit her candle, and then he returned to the dining-room.</p>
-
-<p>Here he was startled to notice a burst of dull moonlight
-coming in through the front of the house where
-already were gaps caused by the slabs being displaced
-and carried away by the water.</p>
-
-<p>Clearly the building, old and rotten, was going to
-pieces.</p>
-
-<p>Presently Daisy, pale, but silent and composed,
-entered. Taking her in his arms, he placed her on a
-<a name="png.242" id="png.242" href="#png.242"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>220<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>sideboard, grieving the while to see how the water
-poured from her clothes.</p>
-
-<p>‘I am afraid the whole house will go, Daisy,’ he said.
-‘It’s shaky and decayed. I was thinking of making a
-stage on the wall-plates up there. But I’m sure now
-that our only hope is in a raft of some kind.’</p>
-
-<p>At this moment in floundered Bridget, clasping a large
-bottle to her breast, and muttering at every stride objurgations,
-entreaties, and fag-ends of prayers.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ochone!’ she cried, ‘may the saints an’ the Howly
-Mother av all hould us in their kapin’ this night!’
-Then, uncorking the bottle, ‘Sure, Misthur Fortyskeu,
-sorr, if ye <em>are</em> a haythen, ye might have a thry for
-purgathory itself. It’s better nor the other place, so it
-is. Here’s the howly wather, avick, that Father Dennis
-give me lasht chapel at Warrooga—if ye’ll let me sprinkle
-a weeshy <span class="nw">dhrop—’</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Come, come, Bridget; stop that nonsense!’ exclaimed
-Fortescue sternly, as he knocked down slabs
-and pulled them inside. ‘Isn’t there water enough
-about, without any more. Take the candle and get me
-some ropes—clothes-lines, saddlestraps, anything you can
-find!’</p>
-
-<p>Bridget opened her mouth with astonishment. She
-had never been spoken to in such manner before.
-Then putting down her precious bottle, she waddled off.</p>
-
-<p>Presently Daisy slipped into the water, <span class="nw">saying,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘I can’t sit there and watch you working away by
-yourself,’ and she helped to hold the slabs, whilst he and
-Bridget secured them with lashings.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.243" id="png.243" href="#png.243"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>221<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Four, ten feet long, tied at the ends, and upon them
-cross-pieces, and upon these the long dining-room table.
-This was the raft; and while Fortescue tied and knotted
-and fastened, he talked of how he had once been cast
-away in a yacht, and had then learned many things.
-And the pair, listening to his cheery voice, took courage,
-albeit the water now was waist high.</p>
-
-<p>The seasoned pine timber floated like a cork, and to
-his satisfaction Fortescue found that with their combined
-weight it was still well out of the water. He was just
-considering whether it might be possible to secure a few
-valuables and important papers, when an ominous creaking
-caught his ear, and the house began to quiver
-bodily.</p>
-
-<p>Hurriedly jumping on board and seizing a long thin
-slab, he pushed off. And what a wild sight it was
-outside, as the frail craft shot clear of everything into
-the flood!</p>
-
-<p>The water ran like brown oil, swift but waveless,
-bearing with it logs, great trees, posts and rails, planks,
-heaps of straw, <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">débris<!-- TN: original reads "debris" --></i> of every description, whilst into
-the still, warm air ascended a stern hum like the sound
-of some mighty engine. It was like the sound of the
-river purring with satisfaction at the fulfilling of its last
-night’s promises.</p>
-
-<p>Looking back, they saw through the open front the
-lamp, like some welcoming beacon, burning steadily
-across the waters. Even as they gazed, there was a faint
-crash heard, and the light disappeared. The house had
-gone, and in another moment its fragments drifted by
-<a name="png.244" id="png.244" href="#png.244"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>222<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>them. Round and round they swept, now threatened by
-some huge uptorn tree whose bristling roots came nigh
-transfixing them, now nearly dashed against the topmost
-limbs of a standing one, taking all Fortescue’s strength
-and skill to avoid a collision.</p>
-
-<p>Presently they saw, on either hand, long strings of
-sheep swimming down the current with plaintive bleatings
-to their death; heard, too, shrill neighings and
-bellowings of drowning cattle and horses.</p>
-
-<p>Round and round they swept, although they knew it
-not, towards the raging central current, where disaster
-was inevitable; whilst Daisy sat with white face, mute,
-and almost hopeless, and Bridget crouched, one arm
-around a table leg, mumbling over her beads; and
-Barton’s Jackaroo, the man without a backbone, toiled
-steadily and watchfully, still finding time, at intervals, to
-throw a word of cheer to his helpless companions.</p>
-
-<p>Crash! and a log overtaking them and hitting them
-end-on, sent the raft spinning; whilst to his dismay
-Fortescue felt the slabs begin to loose and spread.
-Decidedly, a few more knocks like that, and they would
-all find themselves in the water.</p>
-
-<p>‘I’m afraid, Herbert, it’s going to pieces,’<!-- TN: original has double quote --> whispered
-Daisy, who had crept close to where he knelt.</p>
-
-<p>It was the first time she had ever used that name
-when addressing him, and her voice sounded so inexpressibly
-sweet that, without even glancing at Bridget, he
-turned and took the girl in his arms and kissed her,
-a caress which she, thinking her end at hand, and loving
-him, returned.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.245" id="png.245" href="#png.245"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>223<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Smash! and they are amongst the stout upper
-branches of what must be a giant tree. But, in place
-of pushing off, Fortescue hugs and pulls, and calls upon
-the women to help him, which they do until the raft
-is moored, so to speak, hard and fast between forks
-and branches, the only ones visible now over all that
-brown, bare waste of water with silver patches of moonlight
-here and there upon it.</p>
-
-<p>It was a grateful thing to be at rest, even so precariously,
-after all the twisting and twirling they had
-come through; and Bridget, rising stiffly and shaking
-herself, with the fear of present death gone out of her
-soul, <span class="nw">said,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Praise the saints! Sure, Misther Fortyskeu, sorr, we
-oughter to be thankful for gettin’ this far wid clane
-shkins, so we ought! Sorra a one ov me ’ll go any
-furder if I can help it! Is the wather raisin’ yet, does
-ye think, sorr?’</p>
-
-<p>‘I’m afraid it is, Bridget,’ said Fortescue, as he sat
-on a stout limb supporting Daisy beside him. ‘I hope,
-though, it won’t rise over the top of this tree.’ But,
-disquieted by the idea, he presently got into the water
-and tightened the lashings of the raft as well as he was
-able.</p>
-
-<p>It was a long, dreary night, especially after the moon
-went down. Fortunately it was warm and fine. Indeed,
-throughout that trying time of flood, curiously enough,
-not a single point of rain fell in that region. They
-talked of many things, these two, nestling snugly in
-a great fork of the giant apple-tree, but their chief
-<a name="png.246" id="png.246" href="#png.246"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>224<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>subject was the old, old story; whilst Bridget, just
-below them, alternately invoked heavenly succour and
-lamented earthly losses.</p>
-
-<p>‘Twinty wan poun’ notes undther me head in the
-bolsther, an’ me too hurried an’ flurried to remimber
-’em! Sure, it’s clane roond I am afther this noight, bad
-cess to it! But for Father Dennis’s wather—may glory
-be his bed whin his toime comes—it’s at the bottom
-wid the sheep and craturs I’d be afore now, so it is!
-May the saints above sind the blessed light an’ the
-masther wid a ship to us! Ochone! Miss Daisy, me
-darlin’, I knows it’s hard on ye too. An’ for ye too,
-sorr—God forgive me thinkin’ ye wasn’t quite so smart
-as ye moight be!’</p>
-
-<p>And so she rambled on, unheeded by the lovers
-perched in the big fork above her.</p>
-
-<p>Dawn at last, bright and clear, with presently a
-brilliant sun.</p>
-
-<p>To his relief, Fortescue saw by the marks on the
-tree that the water was falling. By noon the raft was
-suspended high and dry. But still a lamentable procession
-of sheep and household <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">débris</i>, with an occasional
-horse or bullock, hurried along the swift central stream,
-at whose very verge a merciful Providence had arrested
-the raft. Presently Fortescue was lucky enough to
-secure a pumpkin out of the dozens floating about, and
-the three divided and ate it with an appetite. Slowly
-the shadows lengthened. Other tree tops, dishevelled
-and dirty with driftage, began to appear around them.
-The water was falling rapidly. But were they to pass
-<a name="png.247" id="png.247" href="#png.247"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>225<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>another night there? Fortescue began to fear so, and
-was even setting about the construction of a platform
-out of the raft, when a loud ‘<em>Coo-ee-e-e!</em>’ made him start.
-‘<em>Coo-ee-e-e!</em>’ in answer; and then a small boat pulled
-by two men came through the branches of the big
-tree.</p>
-
-<p>‘Hoorar!’ shouted one. ‘We was afraid it was all
-up with yees! But where’s the Boss?’</p>
-
-<p>‘My father went to the out-station yesterday,’ replied
-Daisy.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, then he’s right enough,’ said the man. ‘Bet your
-life, miss, he ain’t very far away this minute! He’s
-seed, afore now, what the “bit of a fresh” turned to.
-Hand us down the lady fust, guv’nor.’</p>
-
-<p>But old Bridget, being lowest, and in a hurry, suddenly
-let herself drop fairly on the speaker’s shoulders,
-fetching him down, and nearly capsizing the boat.
-Then, to his infinite astonishment, she got her arms
-round his neck and hugged him, and would have served
-his mate the same way, but he sprang into the tree and
-avoided her.</p>
-
-<p>‘Where are your waggons?’ asked Fortescue, as at
-last they pulled off.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ten foot under water, by this,’<!-- TN: closing quote invisible --> replied the carrier,
-‘seein’ it was up to the naves afore we left. We
-knowed nothin’ till we feels it in our blankets. Then
-up we jumps, and, behold you, we’re on a hiland about
-twenty foot round, an’ the flood a-roarin’ like billyho.
-As luck ’ll ’ave it, Tom, there, has this boat in his
-loadin’, takin’ her to a storekeeper at Overflow—I
-<a name="png.248" id="png.248" href="#png.248"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>226<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>expect he’s a-thinkin’ on her just now. So we hiked her
-out, paddles an’ all, gits some tucker, an’ steers for
-Tarnpirr, knowin’ as you was a lot lower ’n we, an’ no
-boat. Well, when we sees nothin’ but water where the
-house shud ha’ been, we reckoned you’d all been swep’
-away, so comes along on chance, cooeyin’ pretty often.
-By jakers, guv’nor, if you hadn’t ’appened to have savee
-enough to chuck that thing together, you’d all a’ been gone
-goosers sure enough! I don’t b’lieve there’s one single
-solitary ’oof left on the run, not exceptin’ our bullocks
-an’ saddle ’orses.’</p>
-
-<p>The castaways now made a much-needed meal off
-damper and some of the Tarnpirr mutton, and voted it
-a wonderful improvement on raw pumpkin, even with
-love for its sauce.</p>
-
-<p>Before they had pulled a mile towards Warrooga,
-they met Mr Barton with some residents in the police
-boat. He had been nearly frantic with anxiety since, on
-returning home, he encountered the water, and, galloping
-back, had with great difficulty reached the township.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">.        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .</p>
-
-<p>‘What’s the use?’ replied Mr Barton despondently,
-when, that same evening, Fortescue asked him for Daisy.
-‘I’m a ruined man, and, like most such, selfish, and I
-want to keep my little girl. So far as I can gather,
-there’s not an animal of any description left alive on
-Tarnpirr. Pastoral firms make no allowances; they’ll
-say I ought to have cleared everything off before the
-flood came, and they’ll sack me at a minute’s notice.
-<a name="png.249" id="png.249" href="#png.249"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>227<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Of course, if the people here had done as they should, I
-might have saved most of the sheep, if not all. No; I
-don’t like to disappoint you, after having behaved so
-nobly and pluckily—and I must say now that I never
-did you justice—but I think, Mr Fortescue, you’d better
-choose a wife elsewhere; I do, indeed.’</p>
-
-<p>Seeing that Barton was irritable, and rather inclined
-to hug his misfortune, Fortescue, perhaps wisely, said no
-more just then, and apparently took his dismissal with a
-good grace.</p>
-
-<p>But later, before starting for the capital, Daisy and he
-had a long talk, during which a conspiracy was hatched.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Barton bade his jackaroo a kindly good-bye; and
-if he felt any surprise at the non-renewal of his suit, he
-never showed it.</p>
-
-<p>He was expecting, with almost feverish impatience, a
-letter from the firm in answer to his own report, with
-details of the disaster at Tarnpirr. And when at length
-it arrived, after what seemed a long delay, and he found
-that, instead of the reproaches and curt dismissal he was
-prepared for, it contained sympathy and an appointment
-to a large station on the Darling Downs, words were
-wanting to express his utter astonishment, and his
-deep contrition for the bad opinion he had formed of his
-employers.</p>
-
-<p>‘Never mind, Daisy,’ he cried. ‘They say the owner
-will be there himself to receive us on our arrival. I can
-thank him then in person.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Dear me, how nice that will be!’ replied Daisy,
-demurely.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.250" id="png.250" href="#png.250"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>228<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘And, only fancy,’ he went on, ‘they request us to
-take our servant—that’s Bridget, of course—with us!
-I’m to find out, too, if those carriers lost much, and, if
-so, to compensate them.’</p>
-
-<p>‘How very good and thoughtful they must be,’
-answered Daisy—but this time with moist eyes.</p>
-
-<p>I will not insult the reader’s penetration by asking
-him to guess who the owner of that Downs station
-was.</p>
-
-<p>It will be sufficient to remark that Mr and Mrs Fortescue have only just returned from their wedding
-trip to the Continent; and that it will be very long
-indeed ere they forget that memorable night in ’90 upon
-which the waters came to Tarnpirr, and caused ‘Barton’s
-Jackaroo’ to show what he was made of.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="Told in the ‘Corona’s’ Cabin"><a name="png.251" id="png.251" href="#png.251"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>229<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>TOLD IN THE ‘CORONA’S’ CABIN.<br
- /><span class="nosprd">————</span><br
- /><small>ON THREE EVENINGS.</small><br
- /><span class="nosprd">————</span></h2>
-
-<h3><span class="smc">The First Evening.</span></h3>
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smc">In</span> the south-east trades, and the big ship moving
-steadily through the water with every sail full. Not a
-quiver of the tightly-strained canvas, not the rattle of a
-reef-point, broke the stillness aloft.</p>
-
-<p>A glorious evening in the South Atlantic, with the
-sun setting, as is often his wont in those latitudes, in a
-bed of crimson, gold and amethyst. The passengers,
-who had been watching the many-hued passing of the
-day-king, went below as the cool night breeze began to
-whistle with a shriller note through the top-hamper
-and the water to swish more loudly along the sides,
-and fall back with a louder plop. Very comfortable,
-snug, and home-like the <cite>Corona’s</cite> cabin looked. It was a
-cabin, remember, not a ‘saloon.’</p>
-
-<p>There was nothing of the modern curse of varnish
-and veneer about it. Everything was handsome,
-also substantial, from the dark mahogany casing of
-<a name="png.252" id="png.252" href="#png.252"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>230<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the mizzen-mast to the highly polished, solid panelling<!-- TN: original reads "pannelling" -->
-of rosewood, relieved with only a narrow gold
-beading. The cabin might aptly have been termed
-a study in brown and gold, so predominant was
-this combination. Even the curtains in front of
-each berth door were of brown damask, with gold
-fringe. The general effect, if a little sombre, was
-good.</p>
-
-<p>Especially good it seemed this evening to the passengers
-as they came trooping in with talk and laughter;
-especially snug and home-like, with its three big
-swinging moderator lamps, its long table covered
-with odds and ends of female work, books, papers,
-etc., etc., its piano, and its comfortable couches
-scattered here and there.</p>
-
-<p>The <cite>Corona’s</cite> great beam had been utilised to
-some purpose, and, thus, her cabin was not, like
-the saloons of so many sailing ships, a sort of stage
-drawing-room, all white paint, gilding, glass, spindle-shanked
-chairs, and turn-over-at-a-touch tables.</p>
-
-<p>The company suited the cabin. There were only
-a dozen or so of them, mostly middle-aged married
-folk, who had left their grown-up families in Australia
-whilst they took a trip ‘Home,’ and were now returning
-to their adopted country. Amongst them, however,
-were two or three single ladies of uncertain ages,
-bound to the Land of the Golden Fleece in search
-of fortune, even if it should only come in the shape
-of a husband. There was, also, Miss Amy Hillier,
-an Australian heiress in her own right, returning to
-<a name="png.253" id="png.253" href="#png.253"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>231<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>her native land with an uncle and an aunt. This is
-another man’s story; so that I am not going to take
-up space by a description of Amy Hillier’s charms;
-suffice it to say here that she was young and pretty,
-and as good as she was young and pretty.</p>
-
-<p>Wonderful to relate, the company of passengers
-fitted each other. Each seemed to have discovered
-in another his or her affinity, and, up to this, there
-had been none of the usual backbitings, heart-burnings,
-and malicious tittle-tattle usually so inseparable
-from a sea voyage in a sailing ship.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Hillier had seated herself at the piano, and
-was playing something from <cite>Lohengrin</cite>, when a remarkable-looking
-man, entering the cabin, doffed
-his gold-banded cap, and made his way to her
-side.</p>
-
-<p>Strongly, yet gracefully built, upright as the royal
-pole, active in all his movements, one would have taken
-him to be scarce arrived at middle-age, but for the
-fact that his thick, closely-cropped hair shone a dead white
-under the lamplight. His features were regular and
-good, albeit they wore, in general, a rather serious
-expression. Altogether, it was a strong, pleasant
-face, full of energy, confidence, and the power to
-command.</p>
-
-<p>As he rested one hand on the corner of the instrument,
-it might be noticed that, from wrist to finger
-tips, it was covered by the white cicatrices of long-healed
-scars. In spite, however, of his grey hair
-and disfigured hands, Captain Marion, of the <cite>Corona</cite>,
-<a name="png.254" id="png.254" href="#png.254"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>232<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Australian liner, was called by many people a handsome
-man.</p>
-
-<p>‘Sing me my favourite, please,’ asked the Captain
-presently.</p>
-
-<p>‘On condition,’ was the reply, ‘that you will tell
-us a story in return.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It’s a bargain,’ said the Captain. ‘I’ll relate
-the legend of Vanderdecken, the Flying Dutchman.
-Thoroughly appropriate it will be, too, as we are
-just entering his domains.’</p>
-
-<p>‘We don’t want to hear about the Flying Dutchman,’
-answered the girl promptly.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, then,’ continued the Captain, ‘what do
-you say if I tell you how I was cast away in ’69, on
-the coast <span class="nw">of—’</span></p>
-
-<p>‘No, no, Captain Marion,’ interrupted she, smiling
-shyly up at him, ‘we don’t want that either.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ah, I see!’ exclaimed the Captain, after a pause, ‘a
-conspiracy! Well,’ he went on, after a still longer
-hesitation, ‘I don’t care much about it. The telling,
-I mean, of how I got this’ (touching his hair) ‘and
-these’ (spreading out his hands), ‘for, of course, that
-is what you wish to hear. It reminds me of a time I
-would rather not recall.</p>
-
-<p>‘No, Miss Hillier’—for the girl had risen in dismay
-and almost tears at her thoughtlessness, and was
-attempting to apologise incoherently enough—‘it
-doesn’t matter a bit. Besides, I somehow feel in the
-vein for story-telling this evening; and as well that as
-anything else. With some passengers, I find that I
-<a name="png.255" id="png.255" href="#png.255"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>233<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>have to put a stopper on their curiosity rather abruptly.
-But’ (with a grave smile and a bow to the group) ‘it
-being a rare thing, indeed, to meet so well-assorted
-and pleasant a party as we are this trip, I’ll spin
-you the yarn, such as it is. And now, Miss Hillier,
-my song.’</p>
-
-<p>‘What would you like—the same as usual, I suppose—“The
-Silent Land?”’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes,’ answered the Captain; ‘your rendering puts
-a new interpretation on Salis’ words for me, and I seem
-to bear with me more strongly than ever the promise, as
-I listen, that he</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div>Who in life’s battle firm doth stand</div>
-<div>Shall bear Hope’s tender blossoms</div>
-<div class="i3"><span class="ns">            </span>Into the Silent Land!’</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="tb">.        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .</p>
-
-<p>‘It is,’ commenced Captain Marion, the song finished,
-and taking his accustomed seat, whilst the others
-gathered round him—‘It is nearly fourteen years ago
-that the strange, and what many may deem improbable,
-adventure happened which I am about to
-relate. I was then about twenty-two years of age, an
-able-bodied seaman on board a ship called the <cite>Bucephalus</cite>,
-belonging to Liverpool. It was my first
-voyage before the mast, for, although I had duly
-served my apprenticeship with the firm who owned
-her, and also passed my exam. as second mate, there
-was no vacancy just then open. They, indeed, offered
-me a post as third; but, knowing that I should be
-none the worse for a month or two in the fok’s’le, I
-<a name="png.256" id="png.256" href="#png.256"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>234<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>preferred to ship as an A.B. The <cite>Bucephalus</cite> was an
-Eastern trader, and on this trip was bound for Singapore
-and China. All went well with us until we entered
-the Straits of Sunda. Then, one afternoon, the ship
-lying in a dead calm off one of the many lovely islands
-which abound in those narrow seas, the passengers,
-chiefly military officers with their families, asked the
-captain to let them have a boat and a run ashore.</p>
-
-<p>‘He was a good-natured man, and consented.
-Luckily for me, as it afterwards proved, the gig, a
-very old boat, was full of lumber, fruit, fowls, etc.,
-procured at Anjer, and so the life-boat, a stanch,
-nearly new craft, was put into the water instead.</p>
-
-<p>‘At the last moment some one suggested that a cup
-of tea might be acceptable on the island. Not tea
-alone, but provisions for an ample meal were at once
-handed in, together with a keg of fresh water. This
-also was, as you will discover presently, another lucky
-or—ought I not to say?—providential, chance for me.</p>
-
-<p>‘With myself, three more seamen, and eight or nine
-ladies and gentlemen, we pushed off towards the verdant,
-cone-shaped island. Landing without any
-difficulty on a shell-strewn beach which ran up between
-two lofty and abrupt headlands, all hands, except
-myself and an elderly seaman known as Tom, jumped
-ashore and went climbing and scampering about like
-so many schoolboys out for a holiday. For my part,
-I had been on scores of similar islands, or imagined I
-had, and felt no particular wish to explore this one.
-Neither, apparently, did my companion. So, hauling
-<a name="png.257" id="png.257" href="#png.257"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>235<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>off a little from the shore, we threw the grapnel overboard
-and prepared to take things easy, each in his
-own fashion, he with a pipe, and I with a book lent me
-by one of the cabin passengers.</p>
-
-<p>‘We made a rough sort of awning with the boat’s sail,
-and I lay in the stern-sheets, my companion between
-the midship thwarts, under its grateful shelter. It was
-a drowsy afternoon and a very hot one. To our ears
-the shouts and laughter of those ashore came at
-intervals, gradually growing fainter as they made their
-way towards the summit of the mountain, for such one
-might say the island was.</p>
-
-<p>‘Presently, looking up from my book, I saw that old
-Tom was fast asleep, his pipe still in his mouth. Very
-shortly afterwards I dozed, and heard the book drop
-from my hand on to the grating without making any
-effort to recover it. I fell asleep in the broad sunlit
-day, between ship and land, in the motionless boat,
-with the voices of my kind still in my ears, and awoke
-in thickest darkness, moving swiftly along in utter
-silence, save for, at times, an oily gurgle of water
-under the bows. Not that I realised even so much all
-at once. It took me some time. I thought I must be
-still dreaming, and lay there staring into the blackness
-with unbelieving eyes. Then I pinched myself and
-struck my hands sharply against the thwarts. But it
-was of no use. I could not convince myself that I was
-not the victim of some ghastly nightmare. Then the
-idea came into my mind that, although awake, I had
-suddenly become blind; that Tom had gone ashore
-<a name="png.258" id="png.258" href="#png.258"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>236<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>for a stroll, and that the boat, drifting, had been
-carried out to sea by some current. Under the influence
-of this notion, I leaped to my feet, only to
-be at once struck down again, as if by a hand of iron.
-Although not completely stunned, I was, for a few
-minutes, quite bewildered. I could feel, too, that my
-head was bleeding freely. Sitting cautiously up, I
-called “Tom!”<!-- TN: original has single quote --> I listened intently, but nothing was
-audible save the faint gurgling sound of the water.
-I called repeatedly, but there was no answer. Suddenly
-I recollected that in my pocket was a large metal box
-full of matches—long wax vestas.</p>
-
-<p>‘Striking one, I held it aloft and gazed eagerly
-about me. I thanked God that I was not blind.
-But, so far as I could see, I was alone.</p>
-
-<p>‘On each side, and a foot or so above my head,
-barely visible in the feeble glimmer, were swiftly
-passing walls of dripping rock, covered, in many
-places, with huge<!-- TN: original reads "hugh" --> clusters of shiny weeds. So
-amazed was I at my perfectly inexplicable situation
-that I stared until the match burned my fingers and
-dropped into the water, whilst I fell back quite
-overcome by astonishment and fright.</p>
-
-<p>‘Then, after a bit, I struck more matches. But
-things were just the same. Always the rocky weed-grown
-sides, sometimes within touch, at others seeming
-to widen out; always the rocky, dripping roof,
-sometimes at my head, at others out of sight; always
-the darkness, the hurrying boat, and the water
-like liquid pitch.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.259" id="png.259" href="#png.259"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>237<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘Unable to see thoroughly over the boat, I presently
-crawled for’ard, feeling, as I went, under the
-sail which had fallen over the thwarts. As I feared,
-I found no one.</p>
-
-<p>‘Groping about, I picked up Tom’s pipe. And
-then I feared the worst for him.</p>
-
-<p>‘The darkness was horrible. It was so thick that
-one seemed to swallow mouthfuls of it. The atmosphere
-was close and muggy, with a smell reminding
-me strongly of a tannery. Although lightly clad,
-I was bathed in perspiration as I half sat, half
-crouched, at the boat’s stern, straining my eyes
-ahead, and now and again lighting one of my
-matches. Time nor distance had any meaning for
-me, now; and I have no idea how long I had
-been voyaging in this unnatural fashion, when there
-fell on my ears the loud threatening roar of many
-waters. Commending my soul to God, I laid myself
-in the boat’s bottom. The next minute she
-seemed to stand nearly upright and then shoot downward
-like a flash, whilst thick spray flew in showers
-over me, and the imprisoned waters roared and howled
-with deafening clamour adown the narrow chasm,
-so narrow that more than once, in her headlong
-course, I heard splinters fly from the boat’s timbers,
-whilst masses of dank weeds detached by the blows
-fell upon me.</p>
-
-<p>‘I now,’ continued the Captain, after a pause,
-during which he glanced from the ‘tell-tale’ compass
-overhead to the attentive, wondering faces of
-<a name="png.260" id="png.260" href="#png.260"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>238<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>his audience—‘I now gave myself up for lost, or,
-at least, imagined that I did so. But the love of
-life is strong indeed within us; so that when after
-shooting this subterranean cataract, or whatever it
-might have been, I found my boat once more
-steadily gliding along, ever with the same dull
-gurgle of cleft water at her bows, a faint ray of
-hope took the place of despairing calm. I was
-young, remember; healthy, too, powerful and agile
-beyond the common, and I felt it would be hard
-indeed to die like a rat in that black hole. What
-accentuated the hope I speak of was the fact that
-the lessening roar of the torrent I had just passed
-sounded as if directly overhead. In vain I told
-myself that it was but a deceptive echo. Hope
-would have her say, and buoyed me up, though
-ever so little, with the idea, incredible as it seemed,
-that this horrible underground river had doubled
-back beneath itself, and was making for the sea
-once more. It has well been said that drowning
-men will clutch at straws! This one, indeed, was
-soon to fail me; for presently, to my utter despair,
-the noise of tumultuous waters ahead gave warning
-of another cataract—another, or the same one, for,
-what with the din and the darkness, I became quite
-confused. The passage was a repetition of the last
-one, only, if anything, rougher; and, crushed in
-spirit, all courage flown, I sank back, listening to
-the rush of the falling water dying away overhead
-again. Was I, I wondered, descending to even
-<a name="png.261" id="png.261" href="#png.261"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>239<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>lower depths of earth’s bowels in this fashion, or
-merely driven to and fro at the caprice of some
-remorseless current in what was to prove my tomb!
-I believe that, for a time, under the stress of ideas
-like this, my mind wandered; for I have a vague
-remembrance of singing comic songs, of shouting
-defiance to fate, the darkness, and things generally;
-behaving, in fact, like the lunatic I must have become.
-Whether I descended any more rapids or
-not I cannot say. I have no recollection whatever
-of the last part of my strange journey. When,
-however, I came to my sober senses again I was
-at the end of it. The boat was motionless, and I
-was standing upright in her.’</p>
-
-<p>At this point in the Captain’s story, and while the
-interest of his hearers was at its height, the chief
-officer came quietly in, and, catching his superior’s
-eye, as quietly made his way out again.</p>
-
-<p>Now, four bells struck, and the Captain exclaimed,
-‘What, ten o’clock already! My yarn has somewhat
-spun itself out, and I’m afraid the rest must keep
-for another evening.’</p>
-
-<p>At this there was quite a chorus of remonstrance.
-‘It was cruel to have excited their curiosity and
-leave it unsatisfied,’ was the general verdict.</p>
-
-<p>‘No sleep for me to-night,’ said Miss Hillier; ‘I
-shall be wandering through that horrid place in my
-thoughts, and puzzling my brain to discover how
-you got out, unless I know the sequel.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It grieves me to think of your disturbed rest,’
-<a name="png.262" id="png.262" href="#png.262"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>240<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>replied the Captain, with a bow and a quizzical
-smile, ‘although honoured by the cause of it. I am
-afraid, however, I must refuse even you. I saw
-heavy weather just now in Mr Santley’s eye; and
-the ship, you know, before all.’</p>
-
-<p>Then the sound of ropes thrown heavily on deck
-was heard, together with tramp of feet and shouting,
-the ship heeled over, and the Captain went out, and
-was not again seen that night by his passengers.</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<h3><span class="smc">The Second Evening.</span></h3>
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smc">Close-reefed</span> top-sails, with a wild, high sea, met on
-‘rounding the corner,’ did not prevent the <cite>Corona’s</cite>
-passengers from putting in an appearance the next
-evening to hear the continuation of the Captain’s
-story.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well,’ he remarked, as he took his seat, ‘this yarn
-of mine seems to bring us luck, judging by the way
-we exchanged our trades last night for this rattling
-westerly breeze that is now taking us round the Cape
-so nicely. I think I left off my story,’ continued the
-Captain, ‘as the boat came to a stop in her travels,
-through the darkness.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I had recovered from my temporary fit of madness,
-and was standing up. I was trembling violently, and
-my limbs felt cramped and stiff. I fancy I must have
-been a long time on the journey, for I was sick and
-<a name="png.263" id="png.263" href="#png.263"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>241<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>faint, principally from want of food. The air, though
-still heavy and warm, was not so oppressive as it had
-been. But the former silence was broken by the most
-unearthly noises imaginable, sobbings, deep cavernous
-groans, and hoarse whistlings resounded on every side.
-For a long time I did not stir. I just stood listening
-with all my ears, and expecting every moment that
-something awful was going to take place.</p>
-
-<p>‘After a while, slightly reassured, and feeling the
-boat’s bows scraping some hard substance, I crept into
-them, and putting out my hand, and groping about
-alongside, felt a mass of smooth honeycombed stone.
-Striking a match, the possession of which, in my confused
-state of mind, I had almost forgotten, I got hold
-of the painter and took a couple of turns around a
-projecting ledge of rock.</p>
-
-<p>‘Then I scooped up a handful of water and tasted it.
-It was as bitter as gall, also quite lukewarm. Happily
-that in the breaker was unspoiled. Rummaging about,
-I found the case of eatables also intact; and, sitting
-there in profound darkness, made a meal of cheese
-and white biscuits, listening between the mouthfuls
-to the mysterious noises, whose origin, however, I
-was now enabled pretty well to guess at.</p>
-
-<p>‘It was very warm, and the tannery smell more
-powerful than ever. A sensation of surrounding
-vastness and space, however, was with me as opposed
-to the confined cramped feeling of being in a narrow
-channel, such as I suppose myself to have emerged
-from. Now, I could stand upright and thrust an oar
-<a name="png.264" id="png.264" href="#png.264"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>242<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>out and upwards without touching anything; and,
-shouting aloud, the sound went echoing and thundering
-away over the surface of the water with reverberations
-lasting for minutes.</p>
-
-<p>‘I can take you into that place,’ continued the
-Captain impressively, ‘and tell you about it as far
-as my poor words will serve. But I cannot tell
-you my feelings. At times I almost imagined that
-I was in Hades, and that the ceaseless noises about
-me were the cries and groans of lost souls therein.
-At others, a wild, forlorn hope would seize me, that
-it might all turn out to be only a horrible dream, and
-that I should presently awake to see God’s dear sun
-shining brightly on the gallant ship and the green
-island once more. It had all happened with such
-startling rapidity, the transformation had been so
-utter and complete, that to this day I wonder I did
-not become a raving madman, and so perish miserably
-down there in the depths. But God in His infinite
-mercy took pity upon me, and brought me at the last
-out of such a prison as it is given to few men to see,
-much less escape from.</p>
-
-<p>‘Like the majority of seafarers, I, in those days,
-seldom troubled my head about what is vaguely called
-“religion.”</p>
-
-<p>‘The careful and pious teachings of my childhood had
-been forgotten almost wholly. But, in that awesome
-place, in solitude and misery, bound with darkness of
-Scripture, “that might be felt,” many things came back
-to me; and, kneeling down, I clasped my hands and
-<a name="png.265" id="png.265" href="#png.265"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>243<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>prayed fervently that I might be saved out of the valley
-of the shadow of death which encompassed me. Feeling
-better and stronger, I took my sheath-knife, and with
-it cut away at one of the oars until I had quite a
-respectable pile of chips. Placing this on the rock
-alongside, I set it on fire, and soon had the satisfaction
-of seeing it blaze cheerfully up and, for a few yards, dispel
-the darkness. I kept adding fuel from the same source,
-with the addition of a couple of stretchers, until I had
-a really good-sized fire. By its light I saw that I was
-on a flat rock some twenty feet in circumference. Round
-about were other islets, shaped most fantastically. One,
-close to, resembled a gigantic horseshoe; another towered
-up, the perfect similitude of a church spire, into the
-darkness. At their bases were holes, into and through
-which the water, flowing and ebbing, produced the
-sounds that at first had so alarmed me. Look as I
-might, I could not distinguish the way I had come in,
-although I thought I could hear the steady pouring of a
-volume of water not far away. Breaking off a lump of
-the stone on which I sat, I examined it closely, and felt
-pretty certain that it was lava. I had seen such before
-at Mauna Loa, in the Sandwich Islands.</p>
-
-<p>‘Was I then in the womb of a volcano, extinct just
-at present, doubtless; but, perhaps, even now, taking
-in water preparatory to generating steam and becoming
-active? Somewhere in my reading I had dropped
-across an article on seismology, and one of the theories
-put forward came to mind as above.</p>
-
-<p>‘The idea made my flesh creep!</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.266" id="png.266" href="#png.266"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>244<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘I seemed to feel the air, the water, and my lump of
-lava getting hotter and hotter.</p>
-
-<p>‘Hopeless as my case appeared, and almost resigned
-to face the end as I had become, even so, I did by no
-means relish a private view of the preliminaries to a
-volcanic eruption.</p>
-
-<p>‘Strangely inconsistent, you will say, but so it was.
-When face to face, even with the last scene of all, it
-seems there can yet be something of which one may be
-afraid.</p>
-
-<p>‘Meanwhile, my beacon blazed up brightly, and,
-peering around, I presently made out a pile of stuff
-apparently floating against the base of one of the
-nearest islets.</p>
-
-<p>‘Taking a flaring fire-stick, I got into the boat and
-sculled over to it. It was a heap of driftwood. Lowering
-my torch to examine the stuff more closely, I nearly
-pitched overboard, as, out of the reddish-black water
-within the ragged patch of light, a white, dead face
-gazed up at me with wide-open, staring eyes. I
-recognised it at once as that of my old shipmate.
-Tom, on awaking, had evidently been knocked out of
-the boat and drowned, as so nearly happened to myself.
-The current had as evidently carried him here with
-me.</p>
-
-<p>‘I leaned over the gunwale as if fascinated. What
-would I not have given for his living companionship
-now!</p>
-
-<p>‘Lifting, at last, one of the stiff arms, I shook the
-unresponsive hand in silent farewell, and paddled back
-<a name="png.267" id="png.267" href="#png.267"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>245<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>towards the flame that marked my islet, actually feeling
-envious of the quiet corpse. Misfortune makes us
-sadly selfish, and so little had my thoughts ran on the
-fate of my comrade that the shock of his appearance
-thus was a heavy one.</p>
-
-<p>‘I took it as a bad omen, and what spirit I had
-nearly left me.</p>
-
-<p>‘After sitting motionless on my rock for a very long
-time, with my head bowed on my knees, and nearly
-letting my fire go out, I shook myself together a little,
-threw more chips on, and examined my stores.</p>
-
-<p>‘All told, with cheese, biscuits, several tins of potted
-meat and preserves, I reckoned there was enough, on
-meagre allowance, to last me for a week. Water about
-the same.</p>
-
-<p>‘More than once I felt tempted to throw the lot
-overboard and follow it.</p>
-
-<p>‘But youth and health and strength are indeed
-wondrous things, and a man possessed of them will do
-and dare much before giving up entirely, no matter how
-drear the outlook, how sharp the arrows of fate which
-transfix him!</p>
-
-<p>‘Feeling weary and fagged, I lay down in the boat
-and slept, I suppose, for hours very soundly.</p>
-
-<p>‘The awaking was bad—worse even than the first
-time.</p>
-
-<p>‘One thing comforted me somewhat. I found that
-by the constant endeavour to use my eyes in the darkness
-I was becoming able to discern at least the dim
-outlines of objects.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.268" id="png.268" href="#png.268"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>246<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘Renewing the fire with a lot of driftwood I picked
-up at the further side of my islet, I proceeded to carry
-out a plan I had formed. Taking the gratings out of
-the stern-sheets, I arranged them firmly in the bows.
-Then, breaking off projecting lumps and knobs of lava,
-I beat them smaller with an iron pin, which I fortunately
-found in the boat, and spread them thickly over
-the gratings, thus forming a sort of stage. Upon this I
-built a substantial fire. I was, you see, bound on a
-voyage of exploration.</p>
-
-<p>‘There might, possibly, be some avenue to freedom
-out of this subterranean sea other than the one I had
-entered it from, exit by which was, of course, hopeless.</p>
-
-<p>‘It was, I argued, useless to stay on the rock. I
-could not be much worse off, no matter where I
-got to.</p>
-
-<p>‘How I yearned and hungered for light no tongue
-could tell. It seemed so hard to wander in the gloom
-for a brief night of existence. And then, the end!
-Do you, any of you, wonder at my hair turning
-grey?</p>
-
-<p>‘As I scraped the last embers off the islet on to the
-tin dish used as a baler, in order to throw them on the
-new fire, <a name="illo_pg246" id="illo_pg246">the light fell full upon the corpse</a>, which, to
-all appearance, had just floated alongside.</p>
-
-<p>‘My nerves were evidently getting unstrung by what
-I had gone through, for, letting the dish fall, I shouted
-with terror, and, jumping into the boat, pushed wildly
-away from the poor body. To my unutterable dismay
-<a name="png.269" id="png.269" href="#png.269"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>247<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>it followed me, with one arm extended and raised
-slightly, as if in deprecation of my desertion
-of it.</p>
-
-<p>‘I have thought at times,’ remarked the Captain
-parenthetically, ‘of what a picture the scene would
-make—the boat floating in a patch of crimson water,
-with the fire flaring into the blackness on her bows,
-myself standing up grasping an oar, and gazing intently
-at the nearly nude body as it came closer and closer,
-and everywhere around the thick darkness.</p>
-
-<p>‘I think that in another moment I should have leapt
-overboard, so great was my fright, but that I happened
-to catch sight of a piece of rope leading from the boat
-to the body.</p>
-
-<p>‘Getting hold of it, I pulled, and the corpse came
-also. Then I understood. On my leaving it the first
-time a portion of the sail halliards, which had been
-towing overhead, had got foul of the body, and,
-unperceived, I had brought it back to my islet with
-me.</p>
-
-<p>‘My presence of mind returned, and, not caring to
-run the risk of more surprises of the sort, I again
-landed, and pulled the body on to the islet.</p>
-
-<p>‘There must have been some preserving agent in that
-water, for, despite the heat, there was no sign of
-decomposition, and the features were as fresh as in
-life.</p>
-
-<p>‘Sculling gently along, with my fire blazing bravely
-and comfortingly at the bow, I set off into the
-unknown.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.270" id="png.270" href="#png.270"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>248<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘For a time my attention was thoroughly taken up in
-trying to avoid the numerous lava islets, whose presence
-I could scarcely detect until right upon them. Indeed,
-once or twice we bumped heavily enough to send
-showers of hot ashes hissing into the water.</p>
-
-<p>‘At last, after a long spell of this kind of blind
-navigation, I seemed to get clearer of these provoking
-islets. The noises also, to which I was becoming
-quite accustomed, nearly ceased.</p>
-
-<p>‘As I sculled warily along, I listened with all my
-ears for some indication of a return current. It
-was my one hope, and it kept every sense on the
-alert.</p>
-
-<p>‘But the water within the radius of my so limited
-vision was quiet and still as in a covered reservoir—much
-more so, now, indeed, than at my old resting-place.
-This fact I accounted for by the emptying
-near there of the underground, possibly under-sea
-river, which had brought me into such an awful fix.</p>
-
-<p>‘Presently the boat bumped more violently than
-ever, and by the flame-light which shot up from the
-disturbed fire, I saw, rising far aloft, a solid wall
-of rock. No lava islet this, but the end of all—the
-boundary, in this direction, of my prison.</p>
-
-<p>‘To right and left stretched the same grim barrier,
-dropping sheer down into the still black water. With
-a sinking heart I turned the boat’s head along the
-wall to my right hand, keeping a little distance out,
-moving very slowly, with just a turn or two of the
-oar, sufficient only to keep way on her.</p>
-
-<div class="illo">
-<a name="png.271" id="png.271" href="#png.271"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>248a<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a><img id="i248fp" src="images/i_248fp.jpg" alt="[Illustration]"
- /><p><span class="ns">    [Illustration: </span>The light fell full upon the corpse. (<a href="#illo_pg246">Page 246</a>.)<span class="ns">]</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p><a name="png.273" id="png.273" href="#png.273"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>249<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘It may have been minutes, or it may have been
-hours, when, straight ahead, over the somewhat feeble
-light of my fire, which had proved, after all, more
-help by way of company than use, I imagined the
-darkness looked thinner. Inspired by the mere idea,
-I sculled vigorously along, at the risk of complete
-wreck from some sunken rock, and in a short time
-the boat shot into an oblong-shaped streak of light—light,
-that is, comparatively, for it was as dim as
-starlight; although, so acclimatised, if I may use the
-term, had my eyes become to the denser medium,
-that by its aid I could see clearly every article in
-the boat.</p>
-
-<p>‘I will not trouble you with a description of my
-feelings, nor of all the extravagancies I committed in the
-first flush of delighted hope that had visited me. I
-seemed to be once more in touch with the upper
-world through that column of dim greyness ascending
-through the darkness, and so weak as hardly to
-be able to conquer it.’</p>
-
-
-<p class="tbspace">Here the Captain paused. He had told his story
-well; seldom at a loss for a word, and with now
-and again, but rarely, an appropriate gesture.</p>
-
-<p>So successful had he been in gaining the attention
-of his listeners, that, when he ceased, they sat quite
-silent, gazing at him fixedly, and for some minutes
-no one spoke.</p>
-
-<p>Then four bells, which struck on deck during a
-lull in the roar of the gale, came with such sudden
-<a name="png.274" id="png.274" href="#png.274"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>250<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>distinctness to their ears, as to make some of the ladies
-start and utter timid little ejaculations.</p>
-
-<p>The spell broken, a chorus of tongues clamoured
-out. Miss Hillier alone was silent. Then some dear
-foolish female affinity said, ‘Why, Amy, love, you’ve
-been crying!’ This the girl, with flaming cheeks
-denied, only the next minute to affirm, quite inconsequently,
-that if she had wept (which she was certain
-she had not), was not such a tale enough to make
-one, with any heart at all, shed tears?</p>
-
-<hr class="short" />
-
-<h3><span class="smc">The Third Evening.</span></h3>
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smc">East</span> by S-½-South, under fore and main courses
-and upper and lower top-sails, sped the <cite>Corona</cite> with
-the wind on her quarter. Aft, rose great water-hills,
-darkly green, with white crests, seeming, as each
-followed each, to hang momentarily suspended over
-the stern and threaten to overwhelm everything; then,
-as the good ship rose just in the nick of time,
-breaking with a long surge in sheets of milky foam
-away for’ard.</p>
-
-<p>The sun was setting sullenly behind a dense cloud-bank<!-- TN: OED hyphenates -->.
-An albatross or two flew screaming from one
-wave-crest to another right in the wake. It was a
-typical evening in the Southern Ocean, the long
-wash of whose seas reach from the foot of Cape
-Leuwin to the rugged cliffs of Fuego.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.275" id="png.275" href="#png.275"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>251<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘Well,’ continued the Captain, without any preface,
-as he took his seat facing the waiting and expectant
-little party.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, stare as I might aloft, I could not discover
-to where this Jacob’s ladder led. You see, at its best,
-it was only a column of dusky twilight, and the
-further end, from where I stood, was lost to view. As
-I gazed, it appeared to be gradually fading away.
-I rubbed my eyes; and when I again looked, all
-around was blacker than the blackest midnight,
-except where my fire still burned. For a while, I
-was puzzled to account for the disappearance of the
-light. Then the thought struck me that it might
-be caused by the fall of night in the upper world.
-Was I, I wondered, as I turned sadly to my fire,
-ever again to look upon the bright day, the sun,
-the moon, the stars, and all the wonders of that fair
-earth now grown so dear to me? Truly was I one
-of those unhappy men who, as the Psalmist says,
-“sit in darkness and in the shadow of death, being
-bound in affliction and iron.”</p>
-
-<p>‘Close to the pillar of light, just on its outside
-edge, I had noticed a long, slender, almost perpendicular
-pinnacle of lava towering upwards like the
-spire of a church.</p>
-
-<p>‘At the base of this I securely moored my boat.
-Then, thinking that a cup of tea would cheer me up
-a little, I brewed one, and made a good meal. After
-this, lying down, I pondered many things, gazing
-always aloft.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.276" id="png.276" href="#png.276"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>252<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘Once I imagined I saw a star; but it disappeared
-before I could make sure.</p>
-
-<p>‘The one question uppermost in my mind was
-whether or not the glimmer would reappear when
-the morning broke above, or had it been an illusion?
-One thing encouraged me to hope for the best. It
-was perceptibly cooler, a grateful change from the
-warm mugginess I had encountered everywhere else.
-I had, by this, contracted a habit of talking aloud,
-and I presently caught myself saying that I would
-climb the lava pinnacle in the morning and try to
-get a better look-out.</p>
-
-<p>‘“In the morning.”</p>
-
-<p>‘The utter vanity of the so familiar phrase as it
-fell on my ears struck me with all the force of
-some terrible shock, whilst the cold deadening thought
-seized upon me that, for me, in this world, there
-was to be no more morning. Through darkness was
-I to make the last journey towards that dread bourne
-whence no traveller returns? The slow death in the
-darkness, drifting about on the bitter waters of that
-secret sea—that was the thought that my soul revolted
-from. And strange thoughts, horrible thoughts, a
-man thinks placed as I was. At times his reason
-leaves him, his whole soul rises in impious revolt,
-and the devil rages freely therein, as if already his
-victim’s bed were made in hell.</p>
-
-<p>‘But, thanks be to God!’ exclaimed the Captain,
-fervently, ‘that the recollections of that hideous time—of
-the fits of doubt and despair and terror and
-<a name="png.277" id="png.277" href="#png.277"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>253<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>madness, of which I have said but little to you—grow
-dimmer and weaker with the years, leaving
-only in enduring relief the memory of a great mercy!</p>
-
-<p>‘It pleased me, though, unproved as it was, that
-notion of being able to distinguish between night
-and daylight. The very fact, pure conjecture though
-it might be, of having the power to say, “Night has
-come,” seemed to bring peace to my wearied eyes;
-so that I presently lay down and slept dreamlessly,
-and on awakening found again, to my intense joy,
-that mild, soft haze falling upon me.</p>
-
-<p>‘Scarcely giving myself time to snatch a mouthful
-of biscuit and a draught of cold tea, I jumped ashore
-and commenced the ascent of the tapering mass of
-rock. It was, as I have said, nearly perpendicular,
-and there was no lack of foot and hand-holds—projections
-sharp as razors, formed by the drippings
-of the once molten lava. Thanks to my trained vision
-and the help afforded by the close proximity of the
-light, I could see dimly. Higher up, the projecting
-spurs and knobs grew scarcer, and the surface more
-smooth and slippery. It was terrible work. At home
-I had had some practice as a cragsman, and this
-stood to me well now. As I climbed, sometimes vertically,
-at others spirally, wherever I could feel the firmest
-hold, the atmosphere grew palpably clearer, and this
-infused new strength into my aching limbs as I
-crawled upwards, now hanging by one bleeding hand
-over the abyss beneath me, now with both hands
-breathlessly embracing some sharp spur that cut into
-<a name="png.278" id="png.278" href="#png.278"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>254<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>my flesh, whilst my feet groped convulsively for
-precarious support.</p>
-
-<p>‘When just about spent, I unexpectedly came to the
-top. I found only room enough there to sit down and
-pant. A wild hope had filled my breast that this rocky
-ladder would lead me to liberty—a hope growing
-stronger with every upward step. As I looked around,
-these hopes fell, and the old leaden weight of despair
-seemed to settle once more upon my soul. Slanting
-away from me on every side, stretched the rugged
-acclivities of a vast amphitheatre, converging again
-towards its summit, where the blue sky was distinctly
-visible. Picture to yourselves an hour-glass with a long
-tunnel-like waist. Place a straw, the end of which rests
-on the bottom of the lower section of the glass and
-reaches up through the tunnel until just on a level
-with the sloping-upward portion of the top section, but
-touching it nowhere. Now place a minute insect
-on the very tip of the straw, and you have my situation
-as nearly as I can explain it to you. And there I
-crouched on my lava straw, stretching out unavailing
-hands to those scarred cliffs of liberty, betwixt me and
-which spread that dark abyss, with the mournful waters
-of the bitter sea at its foot. The distance between
-where I sat on the top of the pinnacle and the sloping
-walls of the crater all round must have been about
-twenty five feet. I think it was afterwards measured as
-that. A hundred plans darted swiftly into my mind for
-crossing this little space, which meant so much to me,
-only to be as quickly dismissed as impracticable.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.279" id="png.279" href="#png.279"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>255<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘Although still very far from day, it was yet light
-enough to let me see that the sides of the crater,
-nearly equi-distant around my perch, were cut and
-ploughed into deep furrows, and that, once there, I
-should have comparatively little trouble in reaching
-upper air.</p>
-
-<p>‘Would it be possible, I wondered, to splice what
-remained of the oars together, and thus make some
-kind of a bridge along which to creep? But the idea
-of again facing such a climb with such an unwieldy
-burden made me shudder. Also, I doubted much if
-there was length enough to reach across, supposing I
-ever got them to where I was. This one amongst
-many other plans. All at once, as I sat gazing alternately
-at the far, far away patch of blue overhead, and
-the dark rocks opposite, there flashed across my thoughts
-the recollection of the boat’s grapnel. I had seen
-nothing of it. But it might still be hanging under her
-bows. Attached to the stern-post by a short length of
-chain shackled to a ring-bolt, it would have taken a
-heavy shock to shift it. If I could but get a line
-across and, by help of the grapnel, firmly secured to
-the opposite side, I felt I was saved. Tearing up the
-light dungaree jumper I was wearing, and which, with
-the remainder of my clothing, was little else but a rag,
-I bound pieces around my stiff and wounded hands
-and feet, and commenced the descent. It was an awful
-journey, worse than the coming up. Then, my skin was
-whole, at the start, anyhow; now, the cuts and tears
-re-opened and bled and stung more than ever. At one
-<a name="png.280" id="png.280" href="#png.280"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>256<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>time, indeed, I felt that I must give up and let go.
-But the thought of the grapnel appeared to endue me
-with fresh strength, whilst, in my mind’s eye, I kept
-steadfastly the memory of that dear glimpse of blue sky.
-At length, looking down and pausing for a moment,
-I saw a flicker of light. It was from the dying embers
-of my fire, and, in a few minutes, I was in the boat.
-Although nearly utterly exhausted, crawling for’ard, I
-felt for the chain. It was there; and pulling it rapidly
-in, what was my delight to find the little grapnel still at
-its end. Replenishing my fire, I made some tea, preparatory
-to having something to eat, for I knew I should
-want all my strength presently. In hauling at the chain
-my hands had got wet, and, to my surprise, the bleeding
-had ceased, and the pain almost departed. I immediately
-bathed my feet, and felt wonderfully relieved
-thereby. Now, I had my tea, and then considered
-whether it might not be wiser to pass the night where I
-was, and take a full day for my attempt. God knows
-how eager I was for the moment of trial to arrive!
-Still, I chose the prudent side, and sat and watched
-the hazy column turn first to a dull green, then to
-ashen grey, then go out suddenly, and so I knew,
-certainly now, that the day was over on the earth.</p>
-
-<p>‘As the darkness, thick and impenetrable, closed me
-in, I lay down thinking to sleep a little, but my rest
-was disturbed and broken. Always, as I dozed off, I
-was clambering painfully up that terrible rock, with
-bleeding hands and feet, staggering under huge burdens
-of rope and iron. Once I dreamt that my shipmate’s
-<a name="png.281" id="png.281" href="#png.281"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>257<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>body had floated off the islet, and was, even now, with
-white clammy fingers, striving to lift itself into the boat,
-whilst the ghastly face peered at me over the side. This
-effectually awoke me; but so strong was the impression,
-that I seized a fire-stick, and, making it blaze up,
-searched sharply around. I had my trouble for my
-pains. But further attempt at sleep for me was out of
-the question.</p>
-
-<p>‘My dawn, such as it was, came at last. I had
-already detached<!-- TN: original reads "detatched" --> the grapnel from its chain, and
-unrove the halliards from the mast. These last I
-wound round and round my body, fully thirty feet of
-line, small “Europe” rope, but tough and strong.
-The disposal of my precious grapnel, which, luckily,
-was one of the smallest of its kind, only used, as we
-had used it, for a temporary holdfast, bothered me
-a good deal.</p>
-
-<p>‘Finally, I placed my head between two of the
-flukes, one of which then rested on each shoulder,
-whilst the stock hung down my back, swinging loosely.
-To make sure of the flukes not slipping, I passed a
-piece of line from one to the other, and knotted it
-securely.</p>
-
-<p>‘It was a most uncomfortable fixture altogether, a
-tight fit for my neck into the bargain, but I could
-think of no other way.</p>
-
-<p>‘I’m not going to inflict upon you a detailed description
-of how I reached the top—I believe it must
-have been fully five hundred feet—carrying that half-hundred
-weight of iron, to say nothing of the rope.
-<a name="png.282" id="png.282" href="#png.282"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>258<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Indeed, I hardly know myself. However, get there
-I did; but, as you may guess, in a very evil plight.</p>
-
-<p>‘I recollect, when still some thirty feet from the
-top, unable to bear any longer the horrible chafing
-of the flukes, which had broken through the skin,
-and were grinding against the bone, that I rested,
-or, rather, balanced myself on a sharp ledge, whilst
-casting the grapnel adrift from my shoulders, and
-unwinding the rope from my body. Then, making
-one end of the line fast to the ring in the stock,
-I fastened the other round my waist, the grapnel all
-this time resting loosely on the rock.</p>
-
-<p>‘Leaving it there, and paying out the line cautiously
-into the void below me, away I went again, bracing
-myself at every step to withstand the awful jerk should
-the grapnel slip off, and tighten the rope with the
-momentum of its fall. If such a thing had happened,
-and the chances were many, my fate was certain—a
-few scrambling clutches and annihilation. But where
-it went I had made up my mind to go also.</p>
-
-<p>‘It was my only and last hope, that bit of crooked
-four-clawed iron! Death was in every step I took,
-and I believe that it was in those last few feet that
-my hair turned its colour, so terrible was the suspense
-and expectation.</p>
-
-<p>‘But God was very good to me, and I reached
-the summit with a couple of feet of line to spare.
-Dragging the grapnel up, I crouched down on the
-little flat, table-like top, and fairly sobbed with pain
-and exhaustion.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.283" id="png.283" href="#png.283"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>259<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘To my alarm, I felt myself growing weaker instead
-of stronger from my rest. The fact was that, with
-the awful cutting about I had received, I had lost
-a good deal of blood. Many of the deeper cuts
-on my hands and arms were bleeding still. Evidently
-there was no time to lose. Standing up, feeling
-sick and dizzy, I coiled down my line for a fair
-throw, and, grasping it some three feet or so above
-the grapnel, swung it to and fro until I thought impetus
-enough was attained, then hove with all my remaining
-strength.</p>
-
-<p>‘I shut my eyes, expecting to hear every second
-the sound of iron clanging far beneath against the
-sides of the pinnacle. When I opened them again, the
-line was hanging in a slack bight across the chasm.
-The little anchor had fallen directly into one of the
-deep furrows, but perilously close to the edge. With
-trembling fingers I hauled the line in. Tighter,
-tighter, tighter still, then with all the force I could
-command. Would it support the weight of my body,
-or would it come?</p>
-
-<p>‘Without staying to argue the question, I made it
-fast afresh to a round nob, the only one on the place.
-Then, saying a short prayer, and taking a last glance
-at the blue sky, I let myself slip gently off the rock,
-hanging with my hands on the thin, hempen line.</p>
-
-<p>‘It sagged terribly. I could plainly hear my heart
-knocking and thumping against my ribs. It sagged
-and “gave” still more. Imagining that I heard the
-noise of the grapnel scraping and dragging, I looked
-<a name="png.284" id="png.284" href="#png.284"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>260<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>upon myself as lost. But I still continued to drag
-myself across. It was a long, terrible agony, and,
-more than once, I thought I should have to let go.
-My hands almost refused to close upon the rope. But
-I still, almost as in a dream, worked myself along.
-Once I caught myself wondering if I should fall into
-or near the boat, and whether the dead man would be
-there to receive me. Then a horrible fancy seized
-me that I was making no progress, but that my
-hands were glued to the rope with blood—ever in
-the same spot. Then suddenly, in my now mechanical
-motions, my head hit with great violence against
-rock. This effectually aroused me. I was at the
-threshold of liberty—the edge of the crater, where it
-sloped quickly away below.</p>
-
-<p>‘I hung there whilst one might count twenty, looking
-up. I was three feet beneath the rim. The rope
-had given that much.</p>
-
-<p>‘I don’t remember in the least pulling myself
-up and over that overhanging ledge. When my
-senses returned, I was lying in the furrow alongside
-the grapnel, and a rush of cold water was sweeping
-under me. How long I had been there I have
-no notion. Certainly a great many hours. The rain
-was pouring down in tropical torrents; thunder pealed
-above me, and the lightning flashed and darted in
-vain endeavour to pierce the lower abyss.</p>
-
-<p>‘After many fruitless attempts, I staggered to my
-feet. I felt so dreadfully weak and faint that I thought
-I was about to die. But a glance aloft gave me fresh
-<a name="png.285" id="png.285" href="#png.285"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>261<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>heart. The dark clouds of the thunderstorm were
-passing over, and full upon my nearly naked body
-fell the warm rays of the glorious sun. I almost
-at that moment, Parsee-like, worshipped him.</p>
-
-<p>‘Painfully, stumbling at every step, I crawled upwards,
-with many a rest and draught of the rain
-water, caught in rocky hollows, until, after a weary
-time, and feeling as one risen from the tomb, I
-emerged into the full light of day once more.</p>
-
-<p>‘Naked, bleeding, bruised, but free, I stood on the
-topmost peak of that fateful island. At first everything
-swam before my vision. Trees, the ocean,
-the far horizon, reeled and shook, advanced and receded
-to my dazzled eyes. The sun was low in
-the heavens. As things gradually assumed their natural
-appearance, I became conscious of a great ship lying
-at anchor, of a cluster of white tents not a hundred
-yards away from me.</p>
-
-<p>‘But of these things, for a space, I took no heed.
-Sun, air, water and sky held my regards in ecstasy.
-I drank the beauty and the newness of them in till
-my soul was saturated with the tender loveliness of
-that nature to which I had been for so long a stranger.
-Then, and not till then, I tottered towards the clump
-of tents lying just below me.</p>
-
-<p>‘Men were there, carpenters apparently, hammering at
-a tall wooden structure. Other men—men-o’-war seamen
-by their rig—were arriving and departing with
-burdens.</p>
-
-<p>‘I was close upon them before they saw me. Some
-<a name="png.286" id="png.286" href="#png.286"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>262<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>shrank back. One, I recollect, picked up a rifle and
-brought it to his shoulder. A man with a gold epaulette
-on his coat struck it up and spoke to the sailor in
-English.</p>
-
-<p>‘Presently I was taken into a tent, a doctor appeared
-from somewhere, and, whilst he dressed my wounds,
-they gave me a cordial, and I told my story with
-what seemed to me like the voice of a stranger. I
-don’t remember much afterwards until I awoke, swinging
-in a hammock under a shady tree close to the
-tents.</p>
-
-<p>‘I was a mass of bandages, but sensible, though
-terribly weak.</p>
-
-<p>‘“You’ve had a narrow escape of brain fever, my lad,”
-said the doctor. “But we’ve pulled you through
-all right. Lucky we happened to be here, though,
-wasn’t it? A nice time you must have had down there.
-We found your rope; but our men didn’t care about
-venturing any further, as steam was beginning to
-come up.”</p>
-
-<p>‘“Four days,” replied the doctor, in answer to my
-question, “it is since you appeared on the scene and
-scared the camp.</p>
-
-<p>‘“The <cite>Bucephalus</cite>? Yes, curiously enough, we met
-her just entering Singapore Harbour. That’s ten days
-ago. She spoke us, and asked us to keep a look-out for
-her boat with two seamen. We have one of them, at all
-events. I suppose the other poor beggar will be thrown
-up presently.”</p>
-
-<p>‘I looked at him. “Yes,” he continued, “the old
-<a name="png.287" id="png.287" href="#png.287"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>263<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>volcano is showing every indication of renewed activity.
-We came here to observe the transit of Venus, but shall
-have probably to pack up and form another station if
-those symptoms don’t subside. See there!”</p>
-
-<p>‘Looking in the direction of his outstretched finger, I
-saw several tall puffs of what seemed like white smoke
-issuing from the depths of the crater.</p>
-
-<p>‘<!-- TN: opening quote invisible -->The observers were loth to shift their quarters; but,
-when some red-hot cinders from below set one of the
-tents on fire, they accepted the hint.</p>
-
-<p>‘Still in my hammock, I was presently carried down
-the mountain and on board H.M.S. <cite>Hygeia</cite>, where, with
-careful and skilled attention, I soon recovered.’</p>
-
-<p>The Captain ceased speaking. For a time nothing
-was heard except the steady blast of the ‘Roaring
-Forties’ overhead.</p>
-
-<p>Asked a passenger <span class="nw">presently,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘And did the volcano really explode after all?’</p>
-
-<p>‘It did, indeed,’ replied Captain Marion; ‘but not
-for a month afterwards, and then so fiercely as to scatter
-death and destruction throughout those narrow seas,
-grinding the island of Krakatoa itself into cosmic dust—visible,
-according to scientists, nearly all over the
-world.’</p>
-
-<p class="tb">.        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .</p>
-
-<p>Here ends the story proper as compiled from the notes
-taken by one of the passengers and jotted down in his
-cabin of a night as the Captain finished each section of
-his narrative.</p>
-
-<p>Lower down on the last pages of these notes is
-<a name="png.288" id="png.288" href="#png.288"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>264<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>gummed, however, a printed paragraph, cut from a
-Sydney daily newspaper, which runs as <span class="nw">follows:—</span></p>
-
-<p><small><span class="smc">Marion—Hillier.</span>—On the 29th ultimo, at St James’s Church
-of England, Sydney, by the Rev. R. Garnsey, George Wreford
-Marion, master in the British Mercantile Marine, to Amy Margaret,
-daughter of the late John Hillier, Esq., of Pevensey, Miller’s
-Point, Sydney, and Eurella and Whydah stations, Riverina,
-N.S.W.</small></p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="Dot’s Claim"><a name="png.289" id="png.289" href="#png.289"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>265<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘DOT’S CLAIM.’</h2>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smc">It</span> was evening in the German Arms at Schwartzdorf.
-Great fires blazed in all the rooms of that old-fashioned
-hostelry, welcome enough on entering from the chill, wild
-weather ruling over the mountainland outside.</p>
-
-<p>Tired with a heavy day’s work at inspecting the mining
-claims, which were beginning to attract notice to this
-secluded spot, it was with a feeling of satisfaction that,
-after tea, I drew a chair up to the fire, lit my pipe, and
-made myself comfortable.</p>
-
-<p>Presently there was a knock at the door and, in response
-to my ‘Come in,’ there entered the man who told
-me this story.</p>
-
-<p>In his hand he carried a canvas bag, whose contents
-he emptied on the table with the remark, ‘I thought
-perhaps you might like to see these.’</p>
-
-<p>Very beautiful they were, without doubt—quartz, ironstone
-and gold, mingled in the most fantastic manner;
-grotesque attempts by Nature’s untrained fingers at
-crosses, hearts, stars, and other shapes defying name.</p>
-
-<p>‘We got these the last shot knocking off to-night,’ said
-<a name="png.290" id="png.290" href="#png.290"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>266<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the owner of the pretty things as I asked him to sit
-down. ‘You might remember me tellin’ you as I didn’t
-think we was very far from the main reef. I believe we
-got it now in good earnest. Same lead as is in “Dot’s
-Claim.” Same sort o’ country. Reef runnin’ with the
-same dip. An’ you knows yourself, sir, as they took
-forty-five pound weight o’ specimens richer than them
-out o’ “Dot’s” this mornin’.’</p>
-
-<p>‘I beg your pardon,’ I said after a hasty glance at my
-note-book, ‘but I don’t remember any such name. I
-thought, too, that I had seen all the most important
-claims.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Why, of course,’ he replied, ‘I forgot! It’s only a
-few of us old hands as knows the story as calls it Dot’s
-now. When the big company took it from Fairleigh
-they names it the “El Dorado.” I reckon t’other was
-too short—didn’t sound high enough for ’em. But if it
-hasn’t the best right to the old name I’d like to know the
-reason why.’</p>
-
-<p>‘El Dorado,’ I remarked; ‘why that’s the original
-prospector’s claim.’</p>
-
-<p>My visitor nodded, saying, ‘An’ I’m No. 2 South.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ward and party?’ I inquired, referring again to my
-memos.</p>
-
-<p>‘That’s it. I’m Ward.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, then, Mr Ward, I want to hear that story you
-hinted at just now. Kindly touch that bell at your
-elbow. Thanks.’</p>
-
-<p>It may have been only fancy, but I thought that
-between blooming Gretchen journeying to and fro with
-<a name="png.291" id="png.291" href="#png.291"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>267<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>hot water, tumblers, sugar, etc., etc., and my lucky
-reefer glances passed betokening a more than casual
-acquaintance.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, Gretchen, you may as well leave the kettle.’</p>
-
-<p>I am trying to air my German, but fail lamentably,
-judging from the expression on the girl’s full, fresh-coloured
-features as she struggles to avoid laughing.
-Even my visitor smiles. Everything is German here—bar,
-luckily, the beds. Outside the wind howled and
-beat against the curtained windows, and the rain fell
-dully on the shingled roof, and the roar of the Broken
-River came to our ears between the storm gusts.</p>
-
-<p>Inside, the fire flickered and fell, sending deep
-shadows over the pine-panelled walls and the grave
-handsome face of my companion, the first fruits of whose
-labour shone sullenly under the shaded lamplight.
-From a distant room rose and died away faintly the
-chorus of some song of the Fatherland.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now,’ said I, as Gretchen finally closed the door,
-‘now for the story.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well,’ commenced Ward, after getting his pipe into
-good going order, ‘it’s over eight years ago since I came
-here from the West Coast—Hokitika. I’d been diggin’
-there. But my luck was clean out, so I chucked it up,
-an’, after a lot of knockin’ about, settles down here—would
-you believe it?—farmin’!</p>
-
-<p>‘Now I know’d as much about farmin’ as a cow does
-o’ reefin’. Cert’nly my mate—for there was a pair of
-us—had been scarin’ crows for a farmer in the Old
-Country when he was a boy. That wasn’t much.
-<a name="png.292" id="png.292" href="#png.292"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>268<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Still, on the strength o’ that experience, he used to give
-himself airs.</p>
-
-<p>‘I think it was two years afore we got a crop o’
-anythin’. Then it was potaters. When we tried
-to sell ’em we couldn’t get an offer. Everybody had
-potaters. So we just turned to an’ lived on ’em.
-They’re fillin’, doubtless. But potaters and fish, an’
-fish an’ potaters for a change, all the year round, gets
-tiresome in the long run.</p>
-
-<p>‘I often wonder now what could have possessed me
-an’ Bill to go in for such a thing as farmin’. But
-there, when a chap’s luck’s out diggin’, he’s glad to
-tackle anythin’ for a change!</p>
-
-<p>‘Presently one or two more, men with fam’lies,
-settles close to us and tries to make a livin’. It
-didn’t amount to much. Then up comes a string
-o’ Germans, trampin’ along from the coast, carryin’
-furniture an’ tools, beds—ay, even their old women—on
-their backs. An’ they settles, an’ starts the
-same game—clearin’, an’ ploughin’, an’ sowin’. But
-I couldn’t see as any of ’em was makin’ a pile.
-They worked like bullocks, women an’ all, late
-an’ early. The harder they worked, the poorer
-they seemed to get. Bill an’ me had a pound
-or two saved up for a rainy day. But they had
-nothin’; an’ how they lived was a mystery. So,
-you see, takin’ things all round, it was high time
-somethin’ turned up. An’ somethin’ did. The next
-farm to us belonged to a married couple. He
-was a runaway sailor. She’d been a passenger
-<a name="png.293" id="png.293" href="#png.293"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>269<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>on board. They had one child, just turned four
-year old, an’ they was both fair wrapped up in
-that kid.</p>
-
-<p>‘If Dot’s—Dot was his pet name—finger only ached,
-the work might go to Jericho.</p>
-
-<p>‘An’ indeed he were a most loveable little chap.
-With regards to him, we was all of us ’most as
-bad as the father an’ mother, the way we played
-with him an’ petted him. There was no denyin’
-Dot of anythin’ once he looked at you out o’ those
-big blue eyes o’ his. And the knowledgeableness of
-him! No wonder Jim Fairleigh an’ his missis thought
-the sun rose every mornin’ out o’ the back o’ their
-boy’s neck.’</p>
-
-<p>Here Ward paused and <span class="nw">queried,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Married man, sir?’</p>
-
-<p>‘No,’ I replied.</p>
-
-<p>‘No more ’m I,’ he continued, ‘or I don’t s’pose I’d
-be here yarning a night like this.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It’s a wonder,’ I said, ‘that none of these jolly-looking
-<i lang="de" xml:lang="de">Fräuleins</i> about here have been able to take
-your fancy.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, to tell the truth,’ he replied, with, however,
-a rather conscious expression on his face, ‘I think
-what those poor Fairleighs went through rather scared
-me of marryin’.</p>
-
-<p>‘But, as I was sayin’, farmin’ didn’t seem to agree
-with my mate, Bill—that’s him you seen at the claim
-to-day—spite o’ his past experience, any more’n it did
-with me. <em>He</em> done the business, by-the-bye, quite
-<a name="png.294" id="png.294" href="#png.294"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>270<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>lately with a bouncin’ gal—Lieschen Hertzog—an’ now
-stays at home o’ nights.</p>
-
-<p>‘We had a note or two left. We had also a crop
-o’ potaters an’ some punkins. But no one wanted ’em—wouldn’t
-buy ’em at any price. In fact, you couldn’t
-give ’em away in those times.</p>
-
-<p>‘The Fairleighs an’, I think, all of us, were pretty
-much in the same box. As I said before, it was time
-somethin’ turned up.</p>
-
-<p>‘It was a wild night. Bill an’ me was lyin’ in our
-stretchers readin’. About ten o’clock, open flies the
-door, an’ in bolts Fairleigh drippin’ wet, no hat on,
-an’ pale as a ghost, an’ stands there like a statue,
-starin’ at us, without a word.</p>
-
-<p>‘“In God’s name what’s the matter?” I says at
-last. With that he flaps his hands about, so-fashion,
-an’ sings out, “Dot’s lost in the ranges!”</p>
-
-<p>‘You may bet that shook us up a bit! You’ve
-seen the Broken Ranges for yourself, an’ can judge
-what chance a delicate little kiddy like Dot’d have
-among them rocks an’ scrub on a worse night than this is.</p>
-
-<p>‘That fool of a sailor-man, if you’ll believe me, an’
-his wife had been out sence dark searchin’ for the
-child, ’stead o’ rousin’ the settlement. Presently, to
-make matters worse, it appears that he’d lost the
-woman too—got separated in the scrub, an’ couldn’t
-find her again. Just by a fluke, while on the Black
-Hill yonder, he’d caught the glimper o’ sparks from
-our chimney. He was covered with cuts and bruises
-an’ goin’ cranky fast when he got to the hut.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.295" id="png.295" href="#png.295"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>271<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘Bill had gone to tell the news; an’ in a very few
-minutes a whole crowd o’ Fritzes, an’ Hanses, an’ Hermans,
-an Gottliebs was turned out an’ ready for a start.</p>
-
-<p>‘They didn’t want no coaxing. All they says was
-‘<i lang="de" xml:lang="de">Ach Gott!</i>’ an’ they was fit for anythin’. By no manner
-o’ means a bad lot,’ here commented Ward, ‘when you
-comes to get in with ’em an’ know ’em like. Honest as
-the light, an’ as hard-workin’ as a bullock. Slow, maybe,
-but very sure. Full o’ pluck as a soger-ant. Clannish
-as the Scotties, an’ as savin’. I’ve got some real good
-friends among ’em now. An’ their women-folks, too,
-is amazin’ handy—make you up a square feed out o’ a
-head o’ cabbage an’ a bit o’ greenhide, I do believe,
-if they was put to it.</p>
-
-<p>‘Cert’nly their lingo ’s the dead finish at first, till you
-gets used to it. I can <i lang="de" xml:lang="de">Deutsch gesprechen</i>, myself, now,
-more’n a little.</p>
-
-<p>‘However, that’s neither here nor there.</p>
-
-<p>‘Bill, my mate, as I told you, as much as me, havin’
-got full o’ farmin’, we used to take a prospectin’ trip
-now and then among the ranges. But we never rose
-the colour. Never found a thing, ’cept scrub turkeys’
-eggs. Anyhow, we knew the country better’n the Germans,
-an’ took the lead.</p>
-
-<p>‘Pitch dark it were, with heavy squalls, an’ the river
-roarin’ along half a banker.</p>
-
-<p>‘Fairleigh, after a stiff nip o’ rum, began to find his
-senses again sufficient to give us the right course.</p>
-
-<p>‘Such scramblin’, an’ <em>coo-eein’</em>, an’ slippin’, an’ tearin’
-about the Bush in the dark never, I should think,
-<a name="png.296" id="png.296" href="#png.296"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>272<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>happened before. But we managed to keep in some
-sort o’ line an’ cover a goodish track o’ country.</p>
-
-<p>‘We must ha’ gone fully five miles into the ranges, an’
-Bill an’ me was gettin’ to the end of our tether in that
-direction, when we found Mrs Fairleigh. Karl Itzig
-nearly falls over her, lyin’ stretched out on a big flat
-rock.</p>
-
-<p>‘We thought she was dead; but, after a while, she
-comes to, light-headed, though, and not able to tell us
-anythin’. So we sends her home with a couple o’ the
-chaps carryin’ her.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, we searched till daylight—rainin’ cats an’ dogs
-all the time. And we searched all the next day without
-any luck. That evenin’ it cleared-up bright at sundown.
-Then Fairleigh gives in complete, an’ has to be carried
-home to his wife.</p>
-
-<p>‘After a camp an’ a snack the moon rose, an’ we
-at it afresh. But we ’bouted ship now; for I was sure
-we’d overrun ourselves. There was full fifty of us, an’
-we circled, takin’ in all the country we could. You
-see, we was hopin’ for fresh tracks, an’ we went with our
-noses on the groun’ like a lot of dogs on the scent
-of an old man kangaroo, only a sight slower.</p>
-
-<p>‘’Bout midnight I sees somethin’ shinin’. It was the
-steel buckle on the front o’ poor Dot’s shoe. Only
-one of ’em, an’ all soaked through with rain. No tracks;
-so we reckoned he’d been here last night in the heaviest
-of it.</p>
-
-<p>‘That little bit o’ leather put us in better heart. But
-it wasn’t to be. The sun was just risin’, when, pretty
-<a name="png.297" id="png.297" href="#png.297"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>273<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>near done up, me an’ Bill an’ Wilhelm Reinhardt comes
-out o’ the scrub on to a small bald knob, an’ there,
-on a bare patch, lies Dot, stone dead, with his blue eyes
-wide open, starin’ at the sky, an’ the long curly hair,
-as his mother used to be so proud of, all matted with
-sand and rain.</p>
-
-<p>‘Four crows was sittin’ overright him on the limb
-of a tree. I don’t believe the poor little fellow ’d been
-dead very long—in the chill o’ the early hours o’ that
-mornin’ likely. In one hand he had a bit o’ stick.
-With the other he held his pinny, gathered up tight,
-same as you’ve seen kiddies do when they’re carryin’
-somethin’.</p>
-
-<p>‘A real pitiful sight it were. It was as much as
-Bill an’ me could stand. As for Wilhelm, he just sits
-down aside the body an’ fair blubbers out.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, with our <em>coo-ees</em>, the rest comes up in twos
-an’ threes. Most of the Germans started to keep
-Wilhelm company. Foreigners, I think, must be either
-softer-hearted than us, or ain’t ashamed o’ showin’ what
-they feel. Anyhow, there wasn’t a dry eye among them
-Germans when they gathered round little Dot.</p>
-
-<p>‘Presently we starts to rig a sort o’ stretcher with
-coats and a couple o’ saplin’s.</p>
-
-<p>‘Then Bill lifts the body up, an’ as he does out from
-the pinny drops four o’ the beautifullest specimens you’d
-ever wish to see—them on the table ain’t a patch on
-’em.</p>
-
-<p>‘I twigs them at once. So did three or four more
-old digger chaps.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.298" id="png.298" href="#png.298"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>274<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘Then we takes a squint around, an’ there, right
-against our noses, as one might say, ran the reef, with
-bits o’ gold stickin’ out o’ the surface-stone an’ glimperin’
-in the sun.</p>
-
-<p>‘I don’t believe the Germans tumbled for a while.
-You see they was all new chums. Most likely none of
-’em hadn’t ever seen a natural bit o’ gold afore.</p>
-
-<p>‘But the others did, quick. An’, presently, a rather
-hot sort o’ argument begins to rise.</p>
-
-<p>‘For a short time me an’ Bill stands and listens to
-the wranglin’. Then I looks at Bill, and he nods his
-head, and I shoves my spoke in.</p>
-
-<p>‘“Look here, chaps!” I says, “this may be only a
-surface leader, as some of you appears to think, or it
-may be a pile. I don’t care a damn which it is! It’s
-Fairleigh’s first say. His kid, as lies there dead, found it!
-An’, by the Lord, his father’s goin’ to be first served!
-I’m goin’ now to peg out what I considers a fair prospectin’
-claim for him. That’ll be seen to after. When
-that’s done you can strike in as you likes. If you
-objects to that you ain’t men. Bill, here, ’ll back me
-up, an’, if you don’t like it, we’ll do it in spite o’ you.
-We’re all poor enough, God knows! But none of us
-ain’t just lost an only child, an’ self an’ wife gone half
-mad with the sorrow of it.”</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, sir, the Germans, who was beginning to drop
-to how the thing lay, set up a big shout o’ “<i lang="de" xml:lang="de">Hoch!
-Hoch!</i>” meanin’ in their lingo, “Hooray.” An’ the
-rest, what was right enough at bottom, an’ only wanted
-showin’ like what was the fair an’ square thing to do,
-<a name="png.299" id="png.299" href="#png.299"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>275<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>quick agreed. All ’cept, that is, one flash sort of a joker
-from the Barossa. But, while I steps the groun’, Bill
-put such a head on him in half-a-dozen rounds that his
-own mother wouldn’t know him again.</p>
-
-<p>‘It were only a couple o’ miles in a straight line from
-the settlement, through the ranges, to that bit of a bald
-hill.</p>
-
-<p>‘Exactly, almost, where you stood to-day, lookin’
-at the windin’ plant o’ the El Dorado, was where we
-found Dot.</p>
-
-<p>‘When the field was proclaimed the Warden didn’t
-have much alteration to make in the p.c. I’d marked
-off for Fairleigh.</p>
-
-<p>‘You see it was only one man’s groun’ then. An’ it
-turned out rich from the jump. An’ it’s gettin’ better
-every foot. None o’ the others, as the Company’s
-bought an’ ’malgamated with it, although joinin’, can
-touch “Dot’s.”</p>
-
-<p>‘But Fairleigh’s never to say held up his head sence
-that night.</p>
-
-<p>‘A week after we buried the child we carried the
-mother to rest beside him.</p>
-
-<p>‘Fairleigh must be a rich man now. Everythin’ he
-touches, as the sayin’ is, seems to turn to gold. He
-can’t go wrong. But he seldom comes a-nigh the place.
-One of the first things he done when “Dot’s” turned
-up such trumps, was to put five thousand pounds to
-mine and Bill’s credit in the <span class="nw">A——</span> bank. But we
-never touched it. Ever sence that night our luck’s been
-right in. First we sells out No. 1 North to the Company
-<a name="png.300" id="png.300" href="#png.300"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>276<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>at a pretty stiff figure. Then we buys out No. 2 South
-an’ seemingly we’ve struck it again, an’ rich.’</p>
-
-<p>‘And, now,’ I remark as my friend, his yarn finished,
-sits gazing meditatively at the glowing logs,—‘and, now,
-all you want is a wife. Follow your mate’s example, and
-make a home where you’re making your money.’</p>
-
-<p>Ward shook his head, smiling doubtfully, and, knocking
-the ashes out of his pipe, rose to go.</p>
-
-<p>Just then Gretchen, buxom, and smiling also, appeared
-bearing a huge back-log in her arms. And when I saw
-the way my companion sprang up and rushed to meet
-and relieve her of the burden, and heard the guttural
-whispering that took place before the lump of timber
-reached its destination, I thought that, ere very long, all
-doubts would be dissipated, and that, even then, I sat
-within measurable distance of the future Mrs Ward.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-<div class="chap">
-
-<h2 title="A Cape Horn Christmas"><a name="png.301" id="png.301" href="#png.301"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>277<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>A CAPE HORN CHRISTMAS.</h2>
-
-
-<p class="noindent"><span class="smc">All</span> hands in Yamba hut had turned in, except a
-couple at the end of the long rough table.</p>
-
-<p>These late birds were playing euchre by the flickering
-light of an evil-smelling slush lamp. The cook
-had banked up the fire for the night, but the myall
-ashes still glowed redly and cast heat around. On
-the stone hearth stewed a bucket of tea. But for
-the snores of the men in the double tier of bunks
-ranged ship-fashion along both sides of the big hut,
-the frizzling of the grease in the lamp, and the
-muttered exclamations of the players, everything was
-very quiet.</p>
-
-<p>‘Pass me!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Make it!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Hearts!’</p>
-
-<p>And both men dropped their hands and sprang up
-in affright as a wild scream rang out from the bunk
-just above them.</p>
-
-<p>As they gazed, a white face, wet with the sweat of
-fear, poked out and stared down upon them with eyes
-in which the late terror still lived.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.302" id="png.302" href="#png.302"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>278<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘What the dickens is up?’ asked one, recovering from
-his surprise, whilst the grumbles of awakened sleepers
-travelled around the hut.</p>
-
-<p>‘My God! what a dream! what a dream!’ exclaimed
-the man addressed, sticking out a pair of naked legs,
-and softly alighting on the earthen floor, and standing
-there trembling.</p>
-
-<p>‘Shoo!’ said the station wit, as he turned for a
-fresh start; ‘it’s only Jack the Sailor had the night-horse.’</p>
-
-<p>But the man, crouching close to the players, and
-wiping his pallid face with his loose shirt sleeve, still
-<span class="nw">exclaimed,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘What a dream! My God! What a dream!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Tell us what it were all about, Jack,’ asked one
-of the others, handing him a pannikin of tea. ‘It
-oughter been bad, judgin’ by the dashed skreek as
-you give.’</p>
-
-<p>‘It was,’ said the other—a grizzled, tanned, elderly
-man—as he warmed his legs, and looked rather
-ashamed of himself. ‘But hardly enough to make
-such a row over as you chaps reckons I did. I
-was dreamin’,’ he continued, speaking slowly, ‘as I
-was at sea again. It was on Christmas Day, an’ the
-ship was close to Cape Horn. How I knowed that,
-I can’t tell. But the land was in sight quite plain.
-Me an’ another feller—I can see his ugly face yet,
-and sha’n’t never forget it—was makin’ fast one of
-the jibs. Presen’ly we seemed to ’ave some words
-out there, hot an’ sharp. Then I done a thing,
-<a name="png.303" id="png.303" href="#png.303"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>279<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>the like o’ which ud never come into my mind
-when awake—not if I lived to the age of Methyuseler—I
-puts my sheath-knife into him right up to the
-handle.</p>
-
-<p>‘The weather were heavy, an’ the ship a-pitchin’
-bowsprit under into a head sea. Well, I was just
-watchin’ his face turn sorter slate colour, an’ him
-clingin’ on to a gasket an’ starin’ hard, when she gives
-a dive fathoms deep.</p>
-
-<p>‘When I comes up again I was in the water, an’ there
-was the ship half-a-mile away.</p>
-
-<p>‘Swimmin’ an’ lookin’ round, I spies the other feller
-alongside me on top of a big comber, with the white
-spume all red about him.</p>
-
-<p>‘Nex’ minute, down he comes, an’ I feels his two
-hands a-grippin’ me tight by the throat. I expect’s it was
-then I sung out an’ woke myself,’ and the man shivered
-as he gazed intently into the heart of the glowing myall
-ashes.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, Jack Ashby,’ said one of his hearers, gathering
-up the scattered cards, ‘it wasn’t a nice dream. If I
-was you I should take it as a warnin’ never to go a-sailorin’
-no more. Never was at the game myself, and
-don’t want to be. There can’t be much in it, though,
-when just the very thoughts o’ what’s never ’appened, an’
-what’s never a-goin’ to ’appen, is able to give a chap such
-a start as you got.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ugh!’ exclaimed the sailor, getting up and shaking
-himself as he climbed into his bunk. ‘No, I’ll never go
-back to sea again!’</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.304" id="png.304" href="#png.304"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>280<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>But, in course of time, Jack Ashby became tired of
-station life—became tired of the everlasting drudgery of
-the rouseabout, the burr-cutting, lamb-catching, and all
-the rest of it.</p>
-
-<p>He had no more dreams of the kind. But when o’
-nights the wind whistled around and shook the crazy old
-hut, he would turn restlessly in his bunk and listen for
-the hollow thud of the rope-coils on the deck above, the
-call of ‘All hands,’ the wild racket of the gale, and the
-hiss of stormy waters.</p>
-
-<p>So his thoughts irresistibly wandered back again to the
-tall ships and the old shipmates, and all the magic and
-mystery of the great deep on whose bosom he had passed
-his life. He knew that he was infinitely better off where
-he was—better paid, better fed, better off in every
-respect than he could ever possibly hope to be at sea.</p>
-
-<p>Battling with his longing, he contrasted the weevilly
-biscuits and salt junk of the fo’k’stle with the wholesome
-damper and fresh mutton and beef of the hut.</p>
-
-<p>He thought of the ‘all night in’ of undisturbed
-rest, contrasting it with the ‘Watch ahoy! Now
-then, you sleepers, turn out!’ of each successive four
-hours.</p>
-
-<p>He thought, too, of tyrannous masters and mates; of
-drenched decks and leaking fo’k’stles, of frozen rigging,
-of dark wild nights of storm, and of swaying foot-ropes
-and thundrous<!-- TN: ok OED --> canvas slatting like iron plates about his
-ears; of hunger, wet, and misery.</p>
-
-<p>Long and carefully he thought of all these things, and
-weighed the balance for and against. Then, one
-<a name="png.305" id="png.305" href="#png.305"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>281<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>morning, rolling up his swag hurriedly, he went straight back
-to them.</p>
-
-<p>Even the thought of his dream had no power to stay
-him.</p>
-
-<p>But he made a reservation to himself. Said <span class="nw">he,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘No more deep water! I’ll try the coast. I’ve heard
-it’s good.<!-- TN: punctuation invisible --> No more deep water; and, above all, no
-Cape Horn!’</p>
-
-<p>He shipped on board a coaster, and went trips to
-Circular Head for potatoes; got bar-bound for weeks in
-eastern rivers looking for maize and fruit; sailed coal-laden,
-with pumps going clanketty-clank all down the
-land, and finally, after some months of this sort of work,
-found himself in Port Adelaide, penniless, and fresh from
-a gorgeous spree. Here he fell in with an old deep-water
-shipmate belonging to one of the vessels in harbour.</p>
-
-<p>‘Come home with us, Jack,’ said his friend. ‘She
-ain’t so bad for a limejuicer—patent reefs, watch an’
-watch, an’ no stun’s’ls for’ard. The mate’s a Horse. But
-the ole man’s right enough; an’ he wants a couple o’
-A.B.’s.’</p>
-
-<p>‘No,’ said Jack Ashby, firmly, ‘I’ll never go deep
-water again. The coast’s the ticket for this child. I’ve
-got reasons, Bill.’</p>
-
-<p>And then he told his friend of the dream.</p>
-
-<p>The latter did not appear at all surprised. Nor did
-he laugh. Sailors attach more importance to such things
-than do landsmen. All he said <span class="nw">was,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘The <cite>Dido’s</cite> a fine big ship. She’s a-goin’ home by
-<a name="png.306" id="png.306" href="#png.306"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>282<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Good Hope. Was it a ship or a barque, now, as you
-was on in that dream?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Can’t say for certain,’ replied Ashby, reflectively;
-‘but, by the size o’ her spars, I should reckon she’d be
-full-rigged. Howsomever, if ever I clap eyes on his
-ugly mug again—which the Lord forbid—you may bet
-your bottom dollar, Bill Baker, as I’ll swear to that,
-with its big red beard, an’ the tip o’ the nose sliced clean
-off.’</p>
-
-<p>‘A-a-a-h!’ said the other, staring for a minute, and
-then hastily finishing his pint of ‘sheoak.’ And he
-pressed Ashby no more to go to England in the <cite>Dido</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>But the latter found it just then anything but easy to
-get another berth in a coaster. Also he was in debt to
-his boarding-house; and, altogether, it seemed as if
-presently he would have to take the very first thing that
-offered, or be ‘chucked out.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Two A.B.’s wanted for the <cite>Dido</cite>,’ roared the shipping
-master into a knot of seamen at his office door one day
-shortly after Jack and his old shipmate had foregathered
-at the ‘Lass o’ Gowrie.’ And the former, feeling very
-uncomfortable, and as a man between the Devil and the
-Deep Sea, signed articles.</p>
-
-<p>His one solitary consolation was that the <cite>Dido</cite> was
-not bound round Cape Horn. He cared for none other
-of the world’s promontories. Also, as he cheered up a
-little, it came into his mind that it would be rather
-pleasant than otherwise once more to have a run down
-Ratcliffe Highway, a lark with the girls in Tiger Bay,
-and a look-in at the old penny gaff in Whitechapel.
-<a name="png.307" id="png.307" href="#png.307"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>283<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>But the main point was that there was no Cape Horn.
-Had not Bill Baker told him so? ‘Falmouth and the
-United Kingdom,’ said the Articles. Certainly there was
-no particular route mentioned. But who should know
-if Bill Baker did not?</p>
-
-<p>But all too surely had the thing that men call Fate
-laid fast hold on the Dreamer. And the boarding-house-keeper<!-- TN: this is (boarding-house)-keeper, not boarding-(housekeeper) hence needs both hyphens -->
-cashed his advance note—returning nothing—and
-carted him to the <cite>Dido</cite>, and left him stretched out
-on the fo’k’stle floor, not knowing or caring where he
-was, or who he was, or where he was going, and oblivious
-of all things under the sun.</p>
-
-<p>Nor did he show on deck again until, in the grey of
-next morning, a man with a great red beard and a flat
-nose looked into his bunk and called him obscene names,
-and bade him jump aloft and loose the fore-topsail, or
-he would let him know what shirking meant on board
-of the <cite>Dido</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>‘This is a bad beginning,’ thought Jack Ashby, as,
-with trembling body and splitting head, he unsteadily
-climbed the rigging, listening as one but yet half awake
-to the clank of the windlass pawls and the roaring chorus
-of the men at the brakes. ‘That’s the feller, sure
-enough!’ he gasped, as, winded, he dragged himself
-into the fore-top. ‘I’d swear to him anywhere. Thank
-the Lord we ain’t goin’ round the Horn! I wonder if
-he knowed <em>me</em>? He’s the mate. An’ Bill was right;
-he <em>is</em> a Horse. Damn deep water!’</p>
-
-<p>‘Now then, fore-top, there, shift your pins or I’ll <em>haze</em>
-you,’ came up in a bellow from the deck, making poor
-<a name="png.308" id="png.308" href="#png.308"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>284<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>Jack jump again as he stared ruefully down at the fierce
-upturned face, its red beard forking out like a new swab.</p>
-
-<p>‘Thank the Lord, we ain’t goin’ round the Horn!’
-said Jack Ashby, as, with tremulous fingers, he loosened
-the gaskets and let the stiff folds of canvas fall, and sang
-out to sheet home.</p>
-
-<p>Down the Gulf with a fair wind rattled the <cite>Dido</cite>,
-through Investigator Straits and out into the Southern
-Ocean, whilst Jack cast a regretful look at the lessening
-line of distant blue, and exclaimed once <span class="nw">more,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Damn deep water!’</p>
-
-<p>That evening the officers spin a coin, and proceed to
-pick their respective watches.</p>
-
-<p>To his disgust, Jack is the very first man chosen by
-the fierce chief mate, who has won the toss, and who
-at once <span class="nw">says,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Go below the port watch!’—his own.</p>
-
-<p>It is blowing a fresh breeze when he comes on deck
-again at eight bells. It is his wheel. He finds his
-friend Bill Baker there.</p>
-
-<p>‘East by sowthe,’ says Bill emphatically, giving him
-a pitying look, and walking for’ard.</p>
-
-<p>‘East by sowthe it is,’ replies Jack, mechanically.</p>
-
-<p>Then, as he somewhat nervously, after the long absence,
-eyes the white bobbing disc in the binnacle, and squints
-aloft at the dark piles of canvas, it suddenly bursts upon
-him. Whilst he has been asleep the wind has shifted
-into the west. It blows now as if it meant to stay there.
-They are bound round Cape Horn after all.</p>
-
-<p>‘<!-- TN: opening quote invisible -->Mind your hellum, you booby,’ roars the mate, just
-<a name="png.309" id="png.309" href="#png.309"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>285<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>come on deck. ‘Where are you going to with the ship—back
-to Adelaide? I’ll keep an eye on you, my lad,’
-lurching aft, and glancing first at Jack’s face and then
-at the compass.</p>
-
-<p>Truth to tell, the latter had been so flustered that he
-had let the <cite>Dido</cite> come up two or three points off her
-course. But he soon got her nose straight again, with,
-for the first time, a feeling of hot satisfaction at his
-heart that, upon a day not far distant, he and the man
-with the red beard, and tip off his nose might, if there
-was any truth in dreams, be quits. Be sure that, by this
-Jack’s story was well known for’ard of the foremast. Bill
-Baker’s tongue had not been idle, and, although a few
-scoffed, more believed, and waited expectantly.</p>
-
-<p>‘There’s more in dreams than most people thinks for,’
-remarked an old sailor in the starboard watch, shaking
-his head sagely. ‘The first part o’ Jack’s has comed
-true. If I was Mister Horse I’d go a bit easy, an’ not
-haze the chap about the way he’s a-doing of.’</p>
-
-<p>But the chief officer seemed to have taken an unaccountable
-dislike to Ashby from the moment he had
-first seen him. And this dislike he showed in every
-conceivable way until he nearly drove the poor chap
-frantic.</p>
-
-<p>At sea an evil-minded man in authority can do things
-of this sort with impunity. The process is called ‘hazing.’
-The sufferer gets all the dirtiest and most disagreeable
-of the many such jobs to be found on shipboard. He
-is singled out from his fellows of the watch and sent
-aloft with tarry wads to hang on to a stay by his
-<a name="png.310" id="png.310" href="#png.310"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>286<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>eyelashes. Or he is set to scraping masts, or greasing down,
-or slung outboard on a stage scrubbing paintwork, where
-every roll submerges him neck high, whilst his more
-fortunate companions are loafing about the decks.</p>
-
-<p>If the hazed one openly rebels, and gives his persecutor
-a good thrashing, he is promptly ‘logged,’ perhaps
-ironed, and at the end of the passage loses his pay,
-holding himself lucky not to have got six months in
-gaol for ‘mutiny on the high seas.’ There is another
-thing that may and does happen; and every day the
-crew of the <cite>Dido</cite> watched placidly for the heavy iron-clad
-block, or marlingspike<!-- TN: ok OED -->, sharp-pointed and massive, that
-by pure accident should descend from some lofty nook
-and brain or transfix their first officer—the Horse, as
-unmindful of the qualities of that noble animal, they
-had named him. But Jack Ashby never thought of
-such a thing. Nor did he take any notice of friendly
-hints from his mates—also sufferers, but in a less degree—that
-the best of spike lanyards would wear out by
-constant use, and that the best-fitted block-strops would
-at times fail to hold.</p>
-
-<p>Jack’s mind was far too much occupied by the approaching
-test to which his dream was to be subjected
-to bother about compassing a lesser revenge that might
-only end in maiming.</p>
-
-<p>He, by this, fully believed things were going to turn
-out exactly as he had seen them that night in Yamba
-men’s hut in the far-away Australian Bush. Therefore
-he looked upon himself and his tyrant as lost men.</p>
-
-<p>At times, even, he caught himself regarding the first
-<a name="png.311" id="png.311" href="#png.311"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>287<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>officer with an emotion of curious pity, as one whose
-doom was so near and yet so unexpected. And, by
-degrees, the men, recognising this attitude of his, and
-sympathising heartily with it in different fashions, and
-different degrees of credulity, forbore further advice, and
-waited with what patience they might.</p>
-
-<p>It was getting well on towards Christmas.</p>
-
-<p class="tb">.        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .        .</p>
-
-<p>I no more wished to go to London <i>viâ</i> Cape Horn
-than did John Ashby. But my reasons were altogether
-different.</p>
-
-<p>When I had engaged a saloon passage on the <cite>Dido</cite> it
-was an understood thing that she would take the other
-Cape for it. But a short four hours’ fight against a
-westerly wind so sickened the captain that he put his
-helm up, and squared his yards, and shaped a course
-that would bring him closer to Staten Island than to
-Simon’s Bay.</p>
-
-<p>It was some time before I had any conception of
-how things stood for’ard, with respect at least to the
-subject of this story.</p>
-
-<p>I saw, of course, that the chief officer was a bully,
-and that he was heartily disliked by the men. But of
-Jack Ashby and his dream I knew nothing. Nor, until
-my attention was especially drawn to it, did I perceive
-that he was undergoing the hazing process.</p>
-
-<p>As the only passenger, and one who had paid his
-footing liberally, I was often on the fo’k’stle and in other
-parts of the ship supposed to belong peculiarly to the
-men.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.312" id="png.312" href="#png.312"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>288<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Thus, one night, happening to be having a smoke
-on the top-gallant fo’k’stle, underneath which lay the
-quarters of the crew, I sat down on the anchor stock,
-and watched the cold-looking seas rolling up from the
-Antarctic Circle, and exchanging at intervals a word
-with the look-out man as he stumped across from rail
-to rail.</p>
-
-<p>Close beside me was a small scuttle, with the sliding-lid
-of it pushed back.</p>
-
-<p>I had scarcely lit my pipe when up through this,
-making me nearly drop it from my mouth, came a long,
-sharp scream as one in dire agony.</p>
-
-<p>‘What’s the matter down there?’ shouted my companion,
-falling on his knees and craning his head over
-the coamings of the hatch.</p>
-
-<p>Without waiting for an answer, we both bolted on to
-the main deck and into the fo’k’stle, where could be
-heard broken murmurs and growlings from the sleepy
-watch who filled the double tier of open bunks running
-with the sheer of the ship right into the eyes of her.</p>
-
-<p>And on one of these, as I struck a match and lit
-the swinging slush lamp, and glanced around me,
-I saw a man sitting, his bare legs dangling over
-the side. Down his pale face ran great drops of
-sweat, and his eyes were staring, glassy, and fixed.
-One or two of his mates tumbled out; others poked
-their heads over the bunk-boards and swore that it
-couldn’t be eight bells already. But the man still
-gazed over and beyond us with that horrible stare in
-his dilated eyes, and when I laid my hand on him
-<a name="png.313" id="png.313" href="#png.313"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>289<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>he was rigid. Then one who, in place of drinking
-his ‘tot’ of rum that night, had treasured it up for
-another time, produced it; and, laying the man back,
-and forcing open the clenched teeth, we got some of
-it down his throat; and presently he came to himself
-and sat up.</p>
-
-<p>His first words <span class="nw">were,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘I’ve had it again! Just the same—the mate an’<!-- TN: apostrophe invisible -->
-me!’ Then, with a look around, ‘I’m sorry to
-have roused ye up, mates. I’m all right now.’ Then,
-to myself, ‘How long afore we’re off the Horn,
-sir?’</p>
-
-<p>‘About a week if the wind holds. Why?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Because,’ replied he, lying back and rolling over in
-his blankets, ‘I’ve got a week longer to live.’</p>
-
-<p>‘That was Jack Ashby, an’ he’s had his dream again,’
-said the lookout man in an awed voice as we hurried
-on deck, fearful of wandering bergs.</p>
-
-<p>Then (his name was Baker) he told me the whole
-story, and, in spite of my utter incredulity, I became
-interested, and, having little to do, watched closely the
-progress of the expected drama.</p>
-
-<p>Also, after that night, I had many a talk with Ashby.<!-- TN: punctuation invisible -->
-I found him a man rather above the average run of
-his class, and one open to reason and argument; nor,
-on the whole, very superstitious. But on the subject
-of his vision he was immovable.</p>
-
-<p>‘You saw the land in your dreams, did you not?’ I
-once asked.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, sir,’ replied he. ‘Big cliffs, not more ’n a mile
-<a name="png.314" id="png.314" href="#png.314"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>290<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>away,’ and he described its appearance, and the position
-of the vessel.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, then,’ I said, ‘it may interest you to know
-that the skipper intends to keep well to the south’ard,
-and that we’re more likely to sight the Shetlands than
-the Horn.’</p>
-
-<p>But he only shook his head and smiled faintly as
-he <span class="nw">replied,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘He was goin’ home by Good Hope, sir. But he
-didn’t. What the skipper means to do, an’ what the
-Lord wills is two very different things. My time’s
-gettin’ short; but we’ll both go together—<em>him</em> an’ me.
-I don’t reckon as there ’ll be any hazin’ to speak of
-in the next world. P’r’aps it’s best as it is. If I
-wasn’t sure an’ certain o’ what’s comin’, I’d have killed
-him long ago. But,’ he concluded, ‘I’m ready. I’ve
-been showed how it’s ordained to happen; an’, so long
-as I’ve the company I want, I don’t care.’</p>
-
-<p>During these days, impressed, somehow, by the feeling
-of intense expectation that pervaded all hands for’ard,
-I took more notice of Mr Harris, the mate, than I had
-hitherto done.</p>
-
-<p>‘He was no favourite of mine, and, beyond passing
-the time of day, we had found very little to say to
-each other.</p>
-
-<p>And now, although scouting the idea of anything
-being about to happen to the man, I watched him and
-listened to him with curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>Certainly he was an ill-favoured customer. Besides
-being plentifully pitted with smallpox over what of his
-<a name="png.315" id="png.315" href="#png.315"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>291<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>face was visible through the red tangle of hair and
-beard, the fleshy tip of his nose had been sliced clean
-off, leaving a nasty-looking, flat, red scar.</p>
-
-<p>This, he said, was the work of a Malay kreese, whilst
-ashore at Samarang on a drunken spree. But the
-captain once told me confidentially that common report
-around Limehouse and the Docks attributed the mishap
-to Mrs Harris and a carving-knife.</p>
-
-<p>Be this as it may, he was a bad-tempered, overbearing
-brute, although, I believe, a good seaman.</p>
-
-<p>At meal times he rarely spoke, but, gulping his food
-down, left the table as quickly as possible.</p>
-
-<p>The captain, who occupied the whole of his time in
-making models of a new style of condenser, for which
-he had taken out a patent, but by no means could get
-to work properly, never interfered with his first officer,
-but left the ship entirely in his charge.</p>
-
-<p>No thought of approaching evil appeared to trouble
-Mr Harris, and he became, if possible, more tyrannical
-in his behaviour towards the crew, Ashby in particular.
-Truly wonderful is it how much hazing Mercantile Jack
-will stand before having recourse to the limited amount
-of comparatively safe reprisal that a heavy object and
-a high altitude endows him with!</p>
-
-<p>But the Jacks of the <cite>Dido</cite> were waiting, with more
-or less of faith, the fulfilment of their shipmate’s dream.</p>
-
-<p>It was on the 23d of December—which, by the way,
-was also the extra day we gained—that the strong
-westerlies, after serving us so well, began to haul to
-the south’ard.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.316" id="png.316" href="#png.316"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>292<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘You’ll see the Horn after all,’ remarked the captain
-to me that morning. ‘Two years ago I was
-becalmed close to it. But I scarcely think that such
-a thing will happen this time,’ and off he went to his
-condenser.</p>
-
-<p>It was bitterly cold, and the sharp wind from the
-ice-fields cut like a knife. The water was like green
-glass for the colour and clearness of it, the sky speckless,
-and as bitter looking as the water. Gradually
-freshening, and hauling still to the south, the wind at
-length made it necessary to shorten some of the plain
-sail the <cite>Dido</cite> had carried right across. On the 24th
-land was sighted, and the captain, coming on deck with
-his pockets full of tools and little tin things, told us that
-it was Cape Horn.</p>
-
-<p>The fo’k’stle-head was crowded with men, one minute
-all gazing at the land, the next staring aft.</p>
-
-<p>‘What the deuce are those fellows garping at?’ growled
-the mate, walking for’ard.</p>
-
-<p>Whereupon the watchers scattered.</p>
-
-<p>Looking behind me, I saw that Jack Ashby was at
-the wheel.</p>
-
-<p>He smiled as his eye caught mine, and pointed one
-mittened hand at the chief officer’s back. I looked
-at the land, and began for the first time, to feel
-doubtful.</p>
-
-<p>Coming on deck that Christmas morning, I rubbed
-my eyes before being able to take in the desolation
-of the scene, and make sure that I was indeed on board
-the <cite>Dido</cite>.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.317" id="png.317" href="#png.317"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>293<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>The ship looked as if she had been storm-driven
-across the whole Southern Ocean, and then mopped all
-over with a heavy rain-squall.</p>
-
-<p>The wet decks, the naked spars, the two top-sails
-tucked up to a treble reef, and seeming mere strips
-of canvas, grey with damp, the raffle of gear lying
-about, with here and there a man over his knees
-in water slowly coiling it up, hanging on meanwhile
-by one hand, combined, with the lowering sky and
-leaden sea, to make up a gloomy picture indeed.
-The ship was nearly close-hauled, and a big lump
-of a head-sea on, with which she was doing her level,
-or rather, most unlevel, best to fill her decks fore
-and aft.</p>
-
-<p>Broad on the port bow loomed the land—great cliffs,
-stern and ragged—at whose base, through the thin mist
-that was softly drizzling, could be seen a broad white
-belt of broken water.</p>
-
-<p>‘Cape Horn weather!’ quoth the captain at my elbow.</p>
-
-<p>He was swathed in oilskins, and squinting rather
-anxiously at the sky.</p>
-
-<p>‘The glass is falling,’ he continued; ‘but there’s more
-southing in the wind. Might give us a slant presently
-through the Straits of Le Maire.’</p>
-
-<p>And with that, pulling out a bit of the condenser, and
-looking lovingly at it, he went below. The mate was
-standing near, staring hard at the land. It might have
-been the shadow of the sou’-wester on his face, but I
-thought he appeared even more surly and forbidding
-than ever.</p>
-
-<p><a name="png.318" id="png.318" href="#png.318"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>294<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>Of course it was a holiday. During the last four hours
-both watches had been on deck shortening sail. After
-clearing up the washing raffle of ropes, and leaving a
-man at the wheel and another on the lookout, they were
-free to go into the fo’k’stle, and smoke or sleep, as they
-pleased.</p>
-
-<p>Dinner—a curious acrobatic feat that Christmas day
-in the <cite>Dido’s</cite> cabin—over, I donned waterproofs and
-sea-boots, and, putting four bottles of rum in a handbag,
-which I slung over my shoulder, I stepped across the
-washboards and made for the fo’k’stle.</p>
-
-<p>Creeping from hold to hold along the weather bulwarks,
-at times up to my waist in water, I wondered how
-any ship could pitch as the <cite>Dido</cite> was doing and yet
-live.</p>
-
-<p>One moment, looking aft, you would imagine that the
-man at the wheel was about to fall on your head; the
-next that the jibbooms were a fourth mast; whilst incessantly
-poured such foaming torrents over her fo’k’stle
-that, as I slowly approached, I seriously doubted of
-getting in safely with my precious freight. Luckily, the
-men were watching me, and a couple, running out,
-caught hold of my hands, roaring in my <span class="nw">ear,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Run, sir, when she lifts again!’</p>
-
-<p>And, making a dash for it, we got through the
-doorless entrance just in time to escape another avalanche.</p>
-
-<p>I found the fo’k’stle awash, chests and bags lashed into
-lower bunks, and the greater part of both watches
-sitting on the upper ones, smoking, and eyeing the
-<a name="png.319" id="png.319" href="#png.319"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>295<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>cold sparking water as it rushed to and fro their habitation.</p>
-
-<p>My arrival, or rather, perhaps, my cargo, was hailed
-with acclamation.</p>
-
-<p>The captain certainly had sent them a couple of
-dozen of porter. But, as one <span class="nw">explained,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘What’s the good of sich rubbishin’ swankey as that
-when a feller wants somethin’ as ’ll warm ’is innards this
-weather?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Where’s Ashby?’ I asked, hoisting on to a bunk
-amongst the crowd.</p>
-
-<p>‘Here I am, sir,’ replied a voice close to in the dimness.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well,’ I said, cheerily, ‘what did I tell you? Here’s
-Christmas Day well on for through, everything snug—if
-damp—and nothing happening. Give him a stiff nip,
-one of you, and let us drink to better times, and no
-more nonsense. Once we’re round the corner, yonder,
-this trip will soon be over.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Thank you kindly, sir,’ replied Ashby, as he emptied
-the pannikin, which was being so carefully passed around
-by the one appointed, who, holding on like grim death,
-after every poured-out portion, held the bottle up to the
-light to see how the contents were faring. ‘Thank you
-kindly, sir,’ said he. ‘But Christmas Day isn’t done
-yet.’</p>
-
-<p>Even as he spoke, a form clad in glistening oilskins
-came through the water-curtain that was roaring over the
-break of the fo’k’stle, and, leaning upon the windlass,
-sang <span class="nw">out,—</span></p>
-
-<p><a name="png.320" id="png.320" href="#png.320"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>296<span class="ns">]<br
- /></span></span></a>‘You there, Ashby?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ay, ay, sir,’ replied the seaman.</p>
-
-<p>‘Lie out, then,’ continued the mate, for he it was,
-‘and put another gasket around that inner jib! It’s
-coming adrift! Bear a hand, now!’</p>
-
-<p>The ship for a minute seemed to stand quite still, as
-if waiting to hear the answer, and each man turned to
-look at his neighbour.</p>
-
-<p>Then Ashby, jumping down, with a curious set expression
-on his face, walked up to the mate and said very
-<span class="nw">loud,—</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Don’t send a man where you’d be frightened to go
-yourself.’</p>
-
-<p>‘You infernal soger!’ shouted the other, enraged
-beyond measure at this first sign of rebellion in his
-victim. ‘Come out here and I’ll show you all about
-that! Come out and crawl after me, and I’ll learn you
-how to do your work!’</p>
-
-<p>He disappeared, and Ashby followed him like a flash.
-In a trice every soul was outside—some clinging to the
-running gear around the foremast, others on the galley,
-others in the fore rigging.</p>
-
-<p>I could see no sign of any of the head sails being
-adrift. All, except the set fore-topmast stay-sail, lay on
-their booms, masses of sodden canvas, off which poured
-green cataracts as the <cite>Dido</cite> lifted her nose from a mighty
-plunge.</p>
-
-<p>For a minute or two, so dense was the smother for’ard
-of the windlass bits, that nothing was visible but foam.
-But, presently, as the <cite>Dido</cite> paused, weaving her head
-<a name="png.321" id="png.321" href="#png.321"><span class="pagenum"><span
- class="ns">[</span>297<span class="ns">]
- </span></span></a>backwards and forwards as if choosing a good spot for
-her next dive, we saw, clear of everything, and high in air
-fronting us, the two men.</p>
-
-<p>One was on the boom, the other on the foot-rope.
-The topmost man seemed to be hitting rapidly at the
-one below him, who strove with uplifted arm to shield
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps for half a minute this lasted. Then the ship
-gave her headlong plunge, the crest of a great wave met
-the descending bows, and when the bitter spray cleared
-out of our eyes again the lower figure was missing.</p>
-
-<p>From the other, overhanging us, a black streak against
-the sullen sky, came what sounded like a faint cheer.
-There was a rapid throwing motion of the arm released
-from the supporting stay, followed by a clink of steel on
-the roof of the galley. Then came once more the
-roaring plunge, and slow upheaval as of a creature
-mortally wounded.</p>
-
-<p>But, this time, the booms were vacant, and a man
-beside me was curiously examining a sheath-knife,
-bloody from point of blade to tip of wooden handle.</p>
-
-<p>Louder shrieked the gale through the strained rigging,
-and more heavily beat the thundrous seas against the
-<cite>Dido’s</cite> sides, as, breathless, drenched and horrified, I
-staggered into the captain’s state-room.</p>
-
-<p>‘I think I’ve got it now,’ said he, smiling, and holding
-up a thing like a tin saucepan.</p>
-
-
-<p class="finis">THE END.</p>
-
-
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="tnote">
-<h2>Transcriber’s Note</h2>
-
-<p>The text contains a lot of dialect spelling, which has been left as printed. Punctuation has been amended where required to clarify the sense of the text. A small number of errors that appear to be typographical rather than authorial have been corrected; otherwise inconsistent spelling and hyphenation
-(agoin’/a-goin’,
-anigh/a-nigh,
-apiece/a-piece,
-ashen grey/ashen-grey,
-befel/befell,
-black fellow/black-fellow,
-bulkhead/bulk-head,
-close hauled/close-hauled,
-dark blue/dark-blue,
-doorposts/door-posts,
-enquiries/inquiries,
-far inland/far-inland,
-fo’c’sle/fo’c’stle,
-greenhide/green-hide,
-half way/half-way,
-head sea/head-sea,
-highly connected/highly-connected,
-lifelike/life-like,
-lookout/look-out,
-main deck/main-deck,
-middle age/middle-age,
-mopoke/mo-poke,
-native born/native-born,
-new chum/new-chum,
-newcomer/new-comer,
-out an’ out/out-an’-out,
-p’raps/p’r’aps,
-rain water/rain-water,
-remarkable looking/remarkable-looking,
-rope coils/rope-coils,
-saddlestraps/saddle-straps,
-soger/sojur,
-sojur ants/sojur-ants,
-such like/such-like,
-thundrous/thunderous,
-topsail/top-sail,
-upturned/up-turned,
-viâ/via)
-have been retained as printed.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-<hr class="ww" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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