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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of In search of fortune, by Gordon
-Stables
-
-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
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: In search of fortune
- A tale of the old land and the new
-
-Author: Gordon Stables
-
-Release Date: November 8, 2022 [eBook #69315]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Al Haines
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK IN SEARCH OF FORTUNE ***
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Cover art]
-
-
-
-[Frontispiece: "John Gilpin's ride was nothing to it. Scallowa
-stopped short at the gate, but the boy flew over." _p._ 68.]
-
-
-
- _In Search of Fortune._
-
- A TALE OF THE OLD LAND AND THE NEW.
-
-
- BY
-
- GORDON STABLES, M.D., C.M.
- (_Surgeon Royal Navy_),
-
- AUTHOR OF "IN THE DASHING DAYS OF OLD;" "EXILES OF FORTUNE;"
- "FOR ENGLAND, HOME, AND BEAUTY;"
- ETC. ETC.
-
-
- NEW EDITION.
-
-
- _LONDON:_
- JOHN F. SHAW AND CO.,
- 48, PATERNOSTER ROW, E.C.
-
-
-
-
- UNIFORM WITH THIS VOLUME.
-
-
- HEARTS OF OAK .. .. .. By Dr. Gordon-Stables.
- FOR, ENGLAND, HOME, AND BEAUTY .. .. .. Dr. Gordon Stables.
- EXILES OF FORTUNE .. .. .. Dr. Gordon Stables.
- IN SEARCH OF FORTUNE .. .. .. Dr. Gordon Stables.
- TWO SAILOR LADS .. .. .. Dr. Gordon Stables.
- IN THE DASHING DAYS OF OLD .. .. .. Dr. Gordon Stables.
- FACING FEARFUL ODDS .. .. .. Dr. Gordon Stables.
- GRAHAM'S VICTORY .. .. .. G. Stebbing.
- THE TWO CASTAWAYS .. .. .. Lady F. Dixie.
- HONOURS DIVIDED .. .. .. W. C. Metcalfe.
- ON TO THE RESCUE .. .. .. Dr. Gordon Stables.
- BEL-MARJORY. A Tale of Conquest .. .. .. L. T. Meade.
- EUSTACE MARCHMONT .. .. .. E. Everett-Green.
- A TRUE GENTLEWOMAN .. .. .. Emma Marshall.
- THE END CROWNS ALL. A Story of Life .. .. .. Emma Marshall.
- BISHOP'S CRANWORTH .. .. .. Emma Marshall.
- FIGHTING FOR FREEDOM .. .. .. Andrew Reed.
- CITY SNOWDROPS .. .. .. M. E. Winchester.
- COUNTESS MAUD .. .. .. Emily S. Holt.
- HER HUSBAND'S HOME. A Tale .. .. .. E. Everett-Green.
- IDA VANE. A Tale of the Restoration .. .. .. Andrew Reed.
- ONE SNOWY NIGHT .. .. .. Emily S. Holt.
- FOR HONOUR NOT HONOURS .. .. .. Dr. Gordon Stables.
- WINNING AN EMPIRE .. .. .. G. Stebbing.
- A REAL HERO .. .. .. G. Stebbing.
- A TANGLED WEB .. .. .. Emily S. Holt.
- DOROTHY'S STORY .. .. .. L. T. Meade.
- BEATING THE RECORD .. .. .. G. Stebbing.
- BRITAIN'S QUEEN .. .. .. T. Paul.
- THE FOSTER-SISTERS .. .. .. L. E. Guernsey.
- A KNIGHT OF TO-DAY .. .. .. L. T. Meade.
- NEVER GIVE IN .. .. .. G. Stebbing.
- EDGAR NELTHORPE .. .. .. Andrew Reed.
- MARION SCATTERTHWAITE .. .. .. M. Symington.
-
- LONDON: JOHN F. SHAW & CO., 48, PATERNOSTER ROW, E.C.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
-Book I.
-
-_AT BURLEY OLD FARM._
-
-CHAPTER
-
- I. "Ten To-morrow, Archie"
- II. A Chip of the Old Block
- III. A Day of Adventure
- IV. In the Old Castle Tower
- V. "Boys will be Boys"
- VI. "Johnnie's got the Grit in Him"
- VII. "They're up to some Black Work to-night"
- VIII. In the Widow's Lonely Hut
- IX. The whole Yard was ablaze and burning fiercely
- X. "After all, it doesn't take much to make a Man Happy"
-
-
-Book II.
-
-_AT THE GOLDEN GATES._
-
- I. Spoken like his Father's Son
- II. "Keep on your Cap. I was once a Poor Man myself"
- III. "Something in Soap"
- IV. "The King may come in the Cadger's Way"
- V. Bob's Story: Wild Life at the Diggings
- VI. A Miner's Marriage
- VII. Mr. Winslow in a different Light
-
-
-Book III
-
-_IN THE WILD INTERIOR._
-
- I. "In this New Land of Ours"
- II. Burley New Farm
- III. Runaway Stock--Bivouac in the Bush--Night Scene
- IV. A Wild Adventure--Archie's Pride receives a Fall
- V. Round the Log-fire--Hurricane Bill and the
- 'Tiger' Snake--Gentleman Craig's Resolve
- VI. At Findlayson's Farm--The great Kangaroo Hunt--A
- Dinner and Concert
- VII. A New Arrival
- VIII. The Stream of Life flows quietly on
- IX. "I'll write a letter Home"
- X. Rumours of War
- XI. The Massacre at Findlayson's Farm
- XII. On the War Trail
- XIII. Chest to Chest with Savages--How it all ended
-
-
-
-
-IN SEARCH OF FORTUNE.
-
-
-
-Book I.
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-"_TEN TO-MORROW, ARCHIE._"
-
-"So you'll be ten years old to-morrow, Archie?"
-
-"Yes, father; ten to-morrow. Quite old, isn't it? I'll soon be a
-man, dad. Won't it be fun, just?"
-
-His father laughed, simply because Archie laughed.
-
-"I don't know about the fun of it," he said; "for, Archie lad, your
-growing a man will result in my getting old. Don't you see?"
-
-Archie turned his handsome brown face towards the fire, and gazed at
-it--or rather into it--for a few moments thoughtfully. Then he gave
-his head a little negative kind of a shake, and, still looking
-towards the fire as if addressing it, replied:
-
-"No, no, no; I don't see it. Other boys' fathers may grow old; mine
-won't, mine couldn't, never, never."
-
-"Dad," said a voice from the corner. It was a very weary, rather
-feeble, voice. The owner of it occupied a kind of invalid couch, on
-which he half sat and half reclined--a lad of only nine years, with a
-thin, pale, old-fashioned face, and big, dark, dreamy eyes that
-seemed to look you through and through as you talked to him.
-
-"Dad."
-
-"Yes, my dear."
-
-"Wouldn't you like to be old really?"
-
-"Well----," the father was beginning.
-
-"Oh," the boy went on, "I should dearly love to be old, very old, and
-very wise, like one of these!" Here his glance reverted to a
-story-book he had been reading, and which now lay on his lap.
-
-His father and mother were used to the boy's odd remarks. Both
-parents sat here to-night, and both looked at him with a sort of fond
-pity; but the child's eyes had half closed, and presently he dropped
-out of the conversation, and to all intents and purposes out of the
-company.
-
-"Yes," said Archie, "ten is terribly old, I know; but is it quite a
-man though? Because mummie there said, that when Solomon became a
-man, he thought, and spoke, and did everything manly, and put away
-all his boy's things. I shouldn't like to put away my bow and
-arrow--what say, mum? I shan't be altogether quite a man to-morrow,
-shall I?"
-
-"No, child. Who put that in your head?"
-
-"Oh, Rupert, of course! Rupert tells me everything, and dreams such
-strange dreams for me."
-
-"You're a strange boy yourself, Archie."
-
-His mother had been leaning back in her chair. She now slowly
-resumed her knitting. The firelight fell on her face: it was still
-young, still beautiful--for the lady was but little over thirty--yet
-a shade of melancholy had overspread it to-night.
-
-The firelight came from huge logs of wood, mingled with large pieces
-of blazing coals and masses of half-incandescent peat. A more
-cheerful fire surely never before burned on a hearth. It seemed to
-take a pride in being cheerful, and in making all sorts of pleasant
-noises and splutterings. There had been bark on those logs when
-first heaped on, and long white bunches of lichen, that looked like
-old men's beards; but tongues of fire from the bubbling, caking coals
-had soon licked those off, so that both sticks and peat were soon
-aglow, and the whole looked as glorious as an autumn sunset.
-
-And firelight surely never before fell on cosier room, nor on cosier
-old-world furniture. Dark pictures, in great gilt frames, hung on
-the walls, almost hiding it; dark pictures, but with bright colours
-standing out in them, which Time himself had not been able to dim;
-albeit he had cracked the varnish. Pictures you could look
-into--look in through almost--and imagine figures that perhaps were
-not in them at all; pictures of old-fashioned places, with quaint,
-old-fashioned people and animals; pictures in which every creature or
-human being looked contented and happy. Pictures from masters' hands
-many of them, and worth far more than their weight in solid gold.
-
-And the firelight fell on curious brackets, and on a tall
-corner-cabinet filled with old delf and china; fell on high,
-narrow-backed chairs, and on one huge carved-oak chest that took your
-mind away back to centuries long gone by and made you half believe
-that there must have been "giants in those days."
-
-The firelight fell and was reflected from silver cups, and goblets,
-and candlesticks, and a glittering shield that stood on a sideboard,
-their presence giving relief to the eye. Heavy, cosy-looking
-curtains depended from the window cornices, and the door itself was
-darkly draped.
-
-"Ten to-morrow. How time does fly!"
-
-It was the father who now spoke, and as he did so his hand was
-stretched out as if instinctively, till it lay on the mother's lap.
-Their eyes met, and there seemed something of sadness in the smile of
-each.
-
-"How time does fly!"
-
-"Dad!"
-
-The voice came once more from the corner.
-
-"Dad! For years and years I've noticed that you always take mummie's
-hand and just look like that on the night before Archie's birthday.
-Father, why----"
-
-But at that very moment the firelight found something else to fall
-upon--something brighter and fairer by far than anything it had lit
-up to-night. For the door-curtain was drawn back, and a little, wee,
-girlish figure advanced on tiptoe and stood smiling in the middle of
-the room, looking from one to the other. This was Elsie, Rupert's
-twin-sister. His "beautiful sister" the boy called her, and she was
-well worthy of the compliment. Only for a moment did she stand
-there, but as she did so, with her bonnie bright face, she seemed the
-one thing that had been needed to complete the picture, the centre
-figure against the sombre, almost solemn, background.
-
-The fire blazed more merrily now; a jet of white smoke, that had been
-spinning forth from a little mound of melting coal, jumped suddenly
-into flame; while the biggest log cracked like a popgun, and threw
-off a great red spark, which flew halfway across the room.
-
-Next instant a wealth of dark-brown hair fell on Archie's shoulder,
-and soft lips were pressed to his sun-dyed cheek, then bright,
-laughing eyes looked into his.
-
-"Ten to-morrow, Archie! Aren't you proud?"
-
-Elsie now took a footstool, and sat down close beside her invalid
-brother, stretching one arm across his chest protectingly; but she
-shook her head at Archie from her corner.
-
-"Ten to-morrow, you great big, big brother Archie," she said.
-
-Archie laughed right merrily.
-
-"What are you going to do all?"
-
-"Oh, such a lot of things! First of all, if it snows----"
-
-"It is snowing now, Archie, fast."
-
-"Well then I'm going to shoot the fox that stole poor Cock Jock. Oh,
-my poor Cock Jock! We'll never see him again."
-
-"Shooting foxes isn't sport, Archie."
-
-"No, dad; it's revenge."
-
-The father shook his head.
-
-"Well, I mean something else."
-
-"Justice?"
-
-"Yes, that is it. Justice, dad. Oh, I did love that cock so! He
-was so gentlemanly and gallant, father. Oh, so kind! And the fox
-seized him just as poor Jock was carrying a crust of bread to the old
-hen Ann. He threw my bonnie bird over his shoulder and ran off,
-looking so sly and wicked. But I mean to kill him!
-
-"Last time I fired off Branson's gun was at a magpie, a nasty,
-chattering, unlucky magpie. Old Kate says they're unlucky."
-
-"Did you kill the magpie, Archie?"
-
-"No, I don't think I hurt the magpie. The gun must have gone off
-when I wasn't looking; but it knocked me down, and blackened all my
-shoulder, because it pushed so. Branson said I didn't grasp it tight
-enough. But I will to-morrow, when I'm killing the fox. Rupert,
-you'll stuff the head, and we'll hang it in the hall. Won't you,
-Roup?"
-
-Rupert smiled and nodded.
-
-"And I'm sure," he continued, "the Ann hen was so sorry when she saw
-poor Cock Jock carried away."
-
-"Did the Ann hen eat the crust?"
-
-"What, father? Oh, yes, she did eat the crust! But I think that was
-only out of politeness. I'm sure it nearly choked her."
-
-"Well, Archie, what will you do else to-morrow?"
-
-"Oh, then, you know, Elsie, the fun will only just be beginning,
-because we're going to open the north tower of the castle. It's
-already furnished."
-
-"And you're going to be installed as King of the North Tower?" said
-his father.
-
-"Installed, father? Rupert, what does that mean?
-
-"Led in with honours, I suppose."
-
-"Oh, father, I'll instal myself; or Sissie there will; or old Kate;
-or Branson, the keeper, will instal me. That's easy. The fun will
-all come after that."
-
-* * * * * *
-
-Burley Old Farm, as it was called--and sometimes Burley Castle--was,
-at the time our story opens, in the heyday of its glory and beauty.
-Squire Broadbent, Archie's father, had been on it for a dozen years
-and over. It was all his own, and had belonged to a bachelor uncle
-before his time. This uncle had never made the slightest attempt to
-cause two blades of grass to grow where only one had grown before.
-Not he. He was well content to live on the little estate, as his
-father had done before him, so long as things paid their way; so long
-as plenty of sleek beasts were seen in the fields in summer, or
-wading knee-deep in the straw-yard in winter; so long as pigs, and
-poultry, and feather stock of every conceivable sort, made plenty of
-noise about the farm-steading, and there was plenty of human life
-about, the old Squire had been content. And why shouldn't he have
-been? What does a North-country farmer need, or what has he any
-right to long for, if his larder and coffers are both well filled,
-and he can have a day on the stubble or moor, and ride to the hounds
-when the crops are in?
-
-But his nephew was more ambitious. The truth is he came from the
-South, and brought with him what the honest farmer-folks of the
-Northumbrian borders call a deal of new-fangled notions. He had come
-from the South himself, and he had not been a year in the place
-before he went back, and in due time returned to Burley Old Farm with
-a bonnie young bride. Of course there were people in the
-neighbourhood who did not hesitate to say, that the Squire might have
-married nearer home, and that there was no accounting for taste. For
-all this and all that, both the Squire and his wife were not long in
-making themselves universal favourites all round the country-side;
-for they went everywhere, and did everything; and the neighbours were
-all welcome to call at Burley when they liked, and had to call when
-Mrs. Broadbent issued invitations.
-
-Well, the Squire's dinners were truly excellent, and when afterwards
-the men-folk joined the ladies in the big drawing-room, the evenings
-flew away so quickly that, as carriage time came, nobody could ever
-believe it was anything like so late.
-
-The question of what the Squire had been previously to his coming to
-Burley was sometimes asked by comparative strangers, but as nobody
-could or cared to answer explicitly, it was let drop. Something in
-the South, in or about London, or Deal, or Dover, but what did it
-matter? he was "a jolly good fellow--aye, and a gentleman every
-inch." Such was the verdict.
-
-A gentleman the Squire undoubtedly was, though not quite the type of
-build, either in body or mind, of the tall, bony, and burly men of
-the North--men descended from a race of ever-unconquered soldiers,
-and probably more akin to the Scotch than the English.
-
-Sitting here in the green parlour to-night, with the firelight
-playing on his smiling face as he talked to or teased his eldest boy,
-Squire Broadbent was seen to advantage. Not big in body, and rather
-round than angular, inclining even to the portly, with a frank, rosy
-face and a bold blue eye, you could not have been in his company ten
-minutes without feeling sorry you had not known him all his life.
-
-Amiability was the chief characteristic of Mrs. Broadbent. She was a
-refined and genuine English lady. There is little more to say after
-that.
-
-But what about the Squire's new fangled notions? Well, they were
-really what they call "fads" now-a-days, or, taken collectively, they
-were one gigantic fad. Although he had never been in the
-agricultural interest before he became Squire, even while in city
-chambers theoretical farming had been his pet study, and he made no
-secret of it to his fellow-men.
-
-"This uncle of mine," he would say, "whom I go to see every
-Christmas, is pretty old, and I'm his heir. Mind," he would add, "he
-is a genuine, good man, and I'll be genuinely sorry for him when he
-goes under. But that is the way of the world, and then I'll have my
-fling. My uncle hasn't done the best for his land; he has been
-content to go--not run; there is little running about the dear old
-boy--in the same groove as his fathers, but I'm going to cut out a
-new one."
-
-The week that the then Mr. Broadbent was in the habit of spending
-with his uncle, in the festive season, was not the only holiday he
-took in the year. No; for regularly as the month of April came
-round, he started for the States of America, and England saw no more
-of him till well on in June, by which time the hot weather had driven
-him home.
-
-But he swore by the Yankees; that is, he would have sworn by them,
-had he sworn at all. The Yankees in Mr. Broadbent's opinion were far
-ahead of the English in everything pertaining to the economy of life,
-and the best manner of living. He was too much of a John Bull to
-admit that the Americans possessed any superiority over this tight
-little isle, in the matter of either politics or knowledge of
-warfare. England always had been, and always would be, mistress of
-the seas, and master of and over every country with a foreshore on
-it. "But," he would say, "look at the Yanks as inventors. Why, sir,
-they beat us in everything from button-hook----Look at them as
-farmers, especially as wheat growers and fruit raisers. They are as
-far above Englishmen, with their insular prejudices, and insular
-dread of taking a step forward for fear of going into a hole, as a
-Berkshire steam ploughman is ahead of a Skyeman with his wooden
-turf-turner. And look at them at home round their own firesides, or
-look at their houses outside and in, and you will have some faint
-notion of what comfort combined with luxury really means."
-
-It will be observed that Mr. Broadbent had a bold, straightforward
-way of talking to his peers. He really had, and it will be seen
-presently that he had, "the courage of his own convictions," to use a
-hackneyed phrase.
-
-He brought those convictions with him to Burley, and the courage also.
-
-Why, in a single year--and a busy, bustling one it had been--the new
-Squire had worked a revolution about the place. Lucky for him, he
-had a well-lined purse to begin with, or he could hardly have come to
-the root of things, or made such radical reforms as he did.
-
-When he first took a look round the farm-steading, he felt puzzled
-where to begin first. But he went to work steadily, and kept it up,
-and it is truly wonderful what an amount of solid usefulness can be
-effected by either man or boy, if he has the courage to adopt such a
-plan.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-_A CHIP OF THE OLD BLOCK._
-
-It was no part of Squire Broadbent's plan to turn away old and
-faithful servants. He had to weed them though, and this meant
-thinning out to such an extent that not over many were left.
-
-The young and healthy creatures of inutility had to shift; but the
-very old, the decrepit--those who had become stiff and grey in his
-uncle's service--were pensioned off. They were to stay for the rest
-of their lives in the rural village adown the glen--bask in the sun
-in summer, sit by the fire of a winter, and talk of the times when "t
-'old Squire was aboot."
-
-The servants settled with, and fresh ones with suitable "go" in them
-established in their place, the live stock came in for reformation.
-
-"St. Mary! what a medley!" exclaimed the Squire, as he walked through
-the byres and stables, and past the styes. "Everything bred anyhow.
-No method in my uncle's madness. No rules followed, no type. Why
-the quickest plan will be to put them all to the hammer."
-
-This was cutting the Gordian-knot with a vengeance, but it was
-perhaps best in the long run.
-
-Next came renovation of the farm-steading itself; pulling down and
-building, enlarging, and what not, and while this was going on, the
-land itself was not being forgotten. Fences were levelled and carted
-away, and newer and airier ones put up, and for the most part three
-and sometimes even five fields were opened into one. There were
-woods also to be seen to. The new Squire liked woods, but the trees
-in some of these were positively poisoning each other. Here was a
-larch-wood, for instance--those logs with the long, grey lichens on
-them are part of some of the trees. So closely do the larches grow
-together, so white with moss, so stunted and old-looking, that it
-would have made a merry-andrew melancholy to walk among them. What
-good were they? Down they must come, and down they had come; and
-after the ground had been stirred up a bit, and left for a summer to
-let the sunshine and air into it, all the hill was replanted with
-young, green, smiling pines, larches, and spruces, and that was
-assuredly an improvement. In a few years the trees were well
-advanced; grass and primroses grew where the moss had crept about,
-and the wood in spring was alive with the song of birds.
-
-The mansion-house had been left intact. Nothing could have added
-much to the beauty of that. It stood high up on a knoll, with rising
-park-like fields behind, and at some considerable distance the blue
-slate roofs of the farm-steading peeping up through the greenery of
-the trees. A solid yellow-grey house, with sturdy porch before the
-hall-door, and sturdy mullioned windows, one wing ivy-clad, a broad
-sweep of gravel in front, and beyond that, lawns and terraces, and
-flower and rose-gardens. And the whole overlooked a river or stream,
-that went winding away clear and silvery till it lost itself in
-wooded glens.
-
-The scenery was really beautiful all round, and in some parts even
-wild; while the distant views of the Cheviot Hills lent a charm to
-everything.
-
-There was something else held sacred by the Squire as well as the
-habitable mansion, and that was Burley Old Castle. Undoubtedly a
-fortress of considerable strength it had been in bygone days, when
-the wild Scots used to come raiding here, but there was no name for
-it now save that of a "ruin." The great north tower still stood firm
-and bold, and three walls of the lordly hall, its floor green with
-long, rank grass; the walls themselves partly covered with ivy, with
-broom growing on the top, which was broad enough for the half-wild
-goats to scamper along.
-
-There was also the donjon keep, and the remains of a _fosse_; but all
-the rest of this feudal castle had been unceremoniously carted away,
-to erect cowsheds and pigstyes with it.
-
- "So sinks the pride of former days,
- When glory's thrill is o'er."
-
-
-No, Squire Broadbent did not interfere with the castle; he left it to
-the goats and to Archie, who took to it as a favourite resort from
-the time he could crawl.
-
-But these--all these--new-fangled notions the neighbouring squires
-and farmers bold could easily have forgiven, had Broadbent not
-carried his craze for machinery to the very verge of folly. So they
-thought. Such things might be all very well in America, but they
-were not called for here. Extraordinary mills driven by steam, no
-less wonderful-looking harrows, uncanny-like drags and drilling
-machines, sowing and reaping machines that were fearfully and
-wonderfully made, and ploughs that, like the mills, were worked by
-steam.
-
-Terrible inventions these; and even the men that were connected with
-them had to be brought from the far South, and did not talk a homely,
-wholesome _lingua_, nor live in a homely, wholesome way.
-
-His neighbours confessed that his crops were heavier, and the cereals
-and roots finer; but they said to each other knowingly, "What about
-the expense of down-put?" And as far as their own fields went, the
-plough-boy still whistled to and from his work.
-
-Then the new live stock, why, type was followed; type was everything
-in the Squire's eye and opinion. No matter what they were, horses,
-cattle, pigs, sheep, and feather-stock, even the dogs and birds were
-the best and purest of the sort to be had.
-
-But for all the head-shaking there had been at first, things really
-appeared to prosper with the Squire; his big, yellow-painted wagons,
-with their fine Clydesdale horses, were as well known in the district
-and town of B---- as the brewer's dray itself. The "nags" were
-capitally harnessed. What with jet-black, shining leather,
-brass-work that shone like burnished gold, and crimson-flashing
-fringes, it was no wonder that the men who drove them were proud, and
-that they were favourites at every house of call. Even the bailiff
-himself, on his spirited hunter, looked imposing with his whip in his
-hand, and in his spotless cords.
-
-Breakfast at Burley was a favourite meal, and a pretty early one, and
-the capital habit of inviting friends thereto was kept up. Mrs.
-Broadbent's tea was something to taste and remember; while the cold
-beef, or that early spring lamb on the sideboard, would have
-converted the veriest vegetarian as soon as he clapped eyes on it.
-
-On his spring lamb the Squire rather prided himself, and he liked his
-due meed of praise for having reared it. To be sure he got it;
-though some of the straight-forward Northumbrians would occasionally
-quizzingly enquire what it cost him to put on the table.
-
-Squire Broadbent would not get out of temper whatever was said, and
-really, to do the man justice, it must be allowed that there was a
-glorious halo of self-reliance around his head; and altogether such
-spirit, dash, and independence with all he said and did, that those
-who breakfasted with him seemed to catch the infection. Their farms
-and they themselves appeared quite behind the times, when viewed in
-comparison with Broadbent's and with Broadbent himself.
-
-If ever a father was loved and admired by a son, the Squire was that
-man, and Archie was that particular son. His father was Archie's
-_beau ideal_ indeed of all that was worth being, or saying, or
-knowing, in this world; and Rupert's as well.
-
-He really was his boys' hero, but behaved more to them as if he had
-been just a big brother. It was a great grief to both of them that
-Rupert could not join in their games out on the lawn in summer--the
-little cricket matches, the tennis tournaments, the jumping, and
-romping, and racing. The tutor was younger than the Squire by many
-years, but he could not beat him in any manly game you could mention.
-
-Yes, it was sad about Rupert, but with all the little lad's suffering
-and weariness, he was such a sunny-faced chap. He never complained,
-and when sturdy, great, brown-faced Archie carried him out as if he
-had been a baby, and laid him on the couch where he could witness the
-games, he was delighted beyond description.
-
-I'm quite sure that the Squire often and often kept on playing longer
-than he would otherwise have done just to please the child, as he was
-generally called. As for Elsie, she did all her brother did, and a
-good deal more besides, and yet no one could have called her a tom
-girl.
-
-As the Squire was Archie's hero, I suppose the boy could not help
-taking after his hero to some extent; but it was not only surprising
-but even amusing to notice how like to his "dad" in all his ways
-Archie had at the age of ten become. The same in walk, the same in
-talk, the same in giving his opinion, and the same in bright,
-determined looks. Archie really was what his father's friends called
-him, "a chip of the old block."
-
-He was a kind of a lad, too, that grown-up men folks could not help
-having a good, romping lark with. Not a young farmer that ever came
-to the place could have beaten Archie at a race; but when some of
-them did get hold of him out on the lawn of an evening, then there
-would be a bit of fun, and Archie was in it.
-
-These burly Northumbrians would positively play a kind of pitch and
-toss with him, standing in a square or triangle and throwing him hack
-and fore as if he had been a cricket ball. And there was one very
-tall, wiry young fellow who treated Archie as if he had been a sort
-of dumb-bell, and took any amount of exercise out of him; holding him
-high aloft with one hand, swaying him round and round and up and
-down, changing hands, and, in a word, going through as many motions
-with the laughing boy as if he had been inanimate.
-
-* * * * * *
-
-I do not think that Archie ever dressed more quickly in his life,
-than he did on the morning of that auspicious day which saw him ten
-years old. To tell the truth, he had never been very much struck
-over the benefits of early rising, especially on mornings in winter.
-The parting between the boy and his warm bed was often of a most
-affecting character. The servant would knock, and the gong would go,
-and sometimes he would even hear his father's voice in the hall
-before he made up his mind to tear himself away.
-
-But on this particular morning, no sooner had he rubbed his eyes and
-began to remember things, than he sprang nimbly to the floor. The
-bath was never a terrible ordeal to Archie, as it is to some lads.
-He liked it because it made him feel light and buoyant, and made him
-sing like the happy birds in spring time; but to-day he did think it
-would be a saving of time to omit it. Yes, but it would be cowardly,
-and on this morning of all mornings; so in he plunged, and plied the
-sponge manfully. He did not draw up the blinds till well-nigh
-dressed. For all he could see when he did do so, he might as well
-have left them down. The windows--the month was January--were hard
-frozen; had it been any other day, he would have paused to admire the
-beautiful frost foliage and frost ferns that nature had etched on the
-panes. He blew his breath on the glass instead, and made a clean
-round hole thereon.
-
-Glorious! It had been snowing pretty heavily, but now the sky was
-clear. The footprints of the wily fox could be tracked. Archie
-would follow him to his den in the wild woods, and his Skye terriers
-would unearth him. Then----the boy knelt to pray, just reviewing the
-past for a short time before he did so, and thinking what a deal he
-had to be thankful for; how kind the good Father was to have given
-him such parents, such a beautiful home, and such health, and
-thinking too what a deal he had to be sorry for in the year that was
-gone; then he gave thanks, and prayer for strength to resist
-temptation in the time to come; and, it is needless to say, he prayed
-for poor invalid Rupert.
-
-When he got up from his knees he heard the great gong sounded, and
-smiled to himself to think how early he was. Then he blew on the
-pane and looked out again. The sky was blue and clear, and there was
-not a breath of wind; the trees on the lawn, laden with their weight
-of powdery snow, their branches bending earthwards, especially the
-larches and spruces, were a sight to see. And the snow-covered lawn
-itself, oh, how beautiful! Archie wondered if the streets of heaven
-even could be more pure, more dazzlingly white.
-
-Whick, whick, whick, whir--r--r--r--r!
-
-It was a big yellow-billed blackbird, that flew out with startled cry
-from a small Austrian pine tree. As it did so, a cloud of powdery
-snow rose in the air, showing how hard the frost was.
-
-Early though it was--only a little past eight--Archie found his
-father and mother in the breakfast-room, and greetings and blessings
-fell on his head; brief but tender.
-
-By-and-bye the tutor came in, looking tired; and Archie exulted over
-him, as cocks crow over a fallen foe, because he was down first.
-
-Mr. Walton was a young man of five or six and twenty, and had been in
-the family for over three years, so he was quite an old friend.
-Moreover, he was a man after the Squire's own heart; he was manly,
-and taught Archie manliness, and had a quiet way of helping him out
-of every difficulty of thought or action. Besides, Archie and Rupert
-liked him.
-
-After breakfast Archie went up to see his brother, then downstairs,
-and straight away out through the servants' hall to the barn-yards.
-He had showers of blessings, and not a few gifts from the servants;
-but old Scotch Kate was most sincere, for this somewhat aged spinster
-really loved the lad.
-
-At the farm-steading he had many friends to see, both hairy and
-feathered. He found some oats, which he scattered among the last,
-and laughed to see them scramble, and to hear them talk. Well,
-Archie at all events believed firmly that fowls can converse. One
-very lovely red game bird, came boldly up and pecked his oats from
-Archie's palm. This was the new Cock Jock, a son of the old bird,
-which the fox had taken. The Ann hen was there too. She was bold,
-and bonnie, and saucy, and seemed quite to have given up mourning for
-her lost lord. Ann came at Archie's call, flew on to his wrist, and
-after steadying herself and grumbling a little because Archie moved
-his arm too much, she shoved her head and neck into the boy's pocket,
-and found oats in abundance. That was Ann's way of doing business,
-and she preferred it.
-
-The ducks were insolent and noisy; the geese, instead of taking
-higher views of life, as they are wont to do, bent down their stately
-necks, and went in for the scramble with the rest. The hen turkeys
-grumbled a great deal, but got their share nevertheless; while the
-great gobbler strutted around doing attitudes, and rustling himself,
-his neck and head blood-red and blue, and every feather as stiff as
-an oyster-shell. He looked like some Indian chief arrayed for the
-war-path. Having hurriedly fed his feathered favourites, Archie went
-bounding off to let out a few dogs. He opened the door and went
-right into their house, and the consequence was that one of the
-Newfoundlands threw him over in the straw, and licked his face; and
-the Skye terriers came trooping round, and they also paid their
-addresses to him, some of the young ones jumping over his head, while
-Archie could do nothing for laughing. When he got up he sang out
-"Attention!" and lo and behold the dogs, every one looking wiser than
-another, some with their considering-caps on apparently, and their
-heads held knowingly to one side.
-
-"Attention!" cried the boy. "I am going to-day to shoot the fox that
-ran off with the hen Ann's husband. I shall want some of you. You
-Bounder, and you little Fuss, and you Tackler, come."
-
-And come those three dogs did, while the rest, with lowered tails and
-pitiful looks, slunk away to their straw. Bounder was an enormous
-Newfoundland, and Fuss and Tackler were terriers, the former a Skye,
-the latter a very tiny but exceedingly game Yorkie.
-
-Yonder, gun on shoulder, came tall, stately Branson, the keeper, clad
-in velveteen, with gaiters on. Branson was a Northumbrian, and a
-grand specimen too. He might have been somewhat slow of speech, but
-he was not slow to act whenever it came to a scuffle with poachers
-and this last was not an unfrequent occurrence.
-
-"My gun, Branson?"
-
-"It's in the kitchen, Master Archie, clean and ready; and old Kate
-has put a couple of corks in it, for fear it should go off."
-
-"Oh, it is loaded then--really loaded!"
-
-"Aye, lad; and I've got to teach you how to carry it. This is your
-first day on the hill, mind, and a rough one it is."
-
-Archie soon got his leggings on, and his shot-belt and shooting-cap
-and everything else, in true sportsman fashion.
-
-"What!" he said at the hall door, when he met Mr. Walton, "am I to
-have my tutor with me _to-day_?"
-
-He put strong emphasis on the last word.
-
-"You know, Mr. Walton, that I am ten to-day. I suppose I am
-conceited, but I almost feel a man."
-
-His tutor laughed, but by no means offensively.
-
-"My dear Archie, I _am_ going to the hill; but don't imagine I'm
-going as your tutor, or to look after you. Oh, no! I want to go as
-your friend."
-
-This certainly put a different complexion on the matter.
-
-Archie considered for a moment, then replied, with charming
-condescension:
-
-"Oh, yes, of course, Mr. Walton! You are welcome, I'm sure, to come
-_as a friend_."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-_A DAY OF ADVENTURE._
-
-If we have any tears all ready to flow, it is satisfactory to know
-that they will not be required at present. If we have poetic fire
-and genius, even these gifts may for the time being be held in
-reservation. No "Ode to a Dying Fox" or "Elegy on the Death and
-Burial of Reynard" will be necessary. For Reynard did not die; nor
-was he shot; at least, not sufficiently shot.
-
-In one sense this was a pity. It resulted in mingled humiliation and
-bitterness for Archie and for the dogs. He had pictured to himself a
-brief moment of triumph when he should return from the chase, bearing
-in his hand the head of his enemy--the murderer of the Ann hen's
-husband--and having the brush sticking out of his jacket pocket;
-return to be crowned, figuratively speaking, with festive laurel by
-Elsie, his sister, and looked upon by all the servants with a feeling
-of awe as a future Nimrod.
-
-In another sense it was not a pity; that is, for the fox. This sable
-gentleman had enjoyed a good run, which made him hungry, and as happy
-as only a fox can be who knows the road through the woods and wilds
-to a distant burrow, where a bed of withered weeds awaits him, and
-where a nice fat hen is hidden. When Reynard had eaten his dinner
-and licked his chops, he laid down to sleep, no doubt laughing in his
-paw at the boy's futile efforts to capture or kill him, and promising
-himself the pleasure of a future moonlight visit to Burley Old Farm,
-from which he should return with the Ann hen herself on his shoulder.
-
-Yes, Archie's hunt had been unsuccessful, though the day had not
-ended without adventure, and he had enjoyed the pleasures of the
-chase.
-
-Bounder, the big Newfoundland, first took up the scent, and away he
-went with Fuss and Tackler at his heels, the others following as well
-as they could, restraining the dogs by voice and gesture. Through
-the spruce woods, through a patch of pine forest, through a wild
-tangle of tall, snow-laden furze, out into the open, over a stream,
-and across a wide stretch of heathery moorland, round quarries and
-rocks, and once more into a wood. This time it was stunted larch,
-and in the very centre of it, close by a cairn of stones, Bounder
-said--and both Fuss and Tackler acquiesced--that Reynard had his den.
-But how to get him out?
-
-"You two little chaps get inside," Bounder seemed to say. "I'll
-stand here; and as soon as he bolts, I shall make the sawdust fly out
-of him, you see!"
-
-Escape for the fox seemed an impossibility. He had more than one
-entrance to his den, but all were carefully blocked up by the keeper
-except his back and front door. Bounder guarded the latter, Archie
-went to watch by the former.
-
-"Keep quiet and cool now, and aim right behind the shoulder."
-
-Quiet and cool indeed! how could he? Under such exciting
-circumstances, his heart was thumping like a frightened pigeon's, and
-his cheeks burning with the rush of blood to them.
-
-He knelt down with his gun ready, and kept his eyes on the hole. He
-prayed that Reynard might not bolt by the front door, for that would
-spoil his sport.
-
-The terrier made it very warm for the fox in his den. Small though
-the little Yorkie was, his valour was wonderful. Out in the open
-Reynard could have killed them one by one, but here the battle was
-unfair, so after a few minutes of a terrible scrimmage the fox
-concluded to bolt.
-
-Archie saw his head at the hole, half protruded then drawn back, and
-his heart thumped now almost audibly.
-
-Would he come? Would he dare it?
-
-Yes, the fox dared it, and came. He dashed out with a wild rush,
-like a little hairy hurricane. "Aim behind the shoulder!" Where was
-the shoulder? Where was anything but a long sable stream of
-something feathering through the snow?
-
-Bang! bang! both barrels. And down rolled the fox. Yes, no. Oh
-dear, it was poor Fuss! The fox was half a mile away in a minute.
-
-Fuss lost blood that stained the snow brown as it fell on it. And
-Archie shed bitter tears of sorrow and humiliation.
-
-"Oh, Fuss, my dear, dear doggie!" he cried, "I didn't mean to hurt
-you."
-
-The Skye terrier was lying on the keeper's knees and having a snow
-styptic.
-
-Soon the blood ceased to flow, and Fuss licked his young master's
-hands, and presently got down and ran around and wanted to go to
-earth again; and though Archie felt he could never forgive himself
-for his awkwardness, he was so happy to see that Fuss was not much
-the worse after all.
-
-But there would be no triumphant home-returning; he even began to
-doubt if ever he would be a sportsman. Then Branson consoled him,
-and told him he himself didn't do any better when he first took to
-the hill.
-
-"It is well," said Mr. Walton, laughing, "that you didn't shoot me
-instead."
-
-"Ye--es," said Archie slowly, looking at Fuss. It was evident he was
-not quite convinced that Mr. Walton was right.
-
-"Fuss is none the worse," cried Branson. "Oh, I can tell you it does
-these Scotch dogs good to have a drop or two of lead in them! It
-makes them all the steadier, you know."
-
-About an hour after, to his exceeding delight, Archie shot a hare.
-Oh joy! Oh day of days! His first hare! He felt a man now, from
-the top of his Astrachan cap to the toe caps of his shooting-boots.
-
-Bounder picked it up, and brought it and laid it at Archie's feet.
-
-"Good dog! you shall carry it."
-
-Bounder did so most delightedly.
-
-They stopped at an outlying cottage on their way home. It was a
-long, low, thatched building, close by a wood, a very humble dwelling
-indeed.
-
-A gentle-faced widow woman opened to their knock. She looked scared
-when she saw them, and drew back.
-
-"Oh!" she said, "I hope Robert hasn't got into trouble again?"
-
-"No, no, Mrs. Cooper, keep your mind easy, Bob's a' right at present.
-We just want to eat our bit o' bread and cheese in your sheeling."
-
-"And right welcome ye are, sirs. Come in to the fire. Here's a
-broom to brush the snow fra your leggins."
-
-Bounder marched in with the rest, with as much swagger and
-independence as if the cottage belonged to him. Mrs. Cooper's cat
-determined to defend her hearth and home against such intrusion, and
-when Bounder approached the former, she stood on her dignity, back
-arched, tail erect, hair on end from stem to stern, with her ears
-back, and green fire lurking in her eyes. Bounder stood patiently
-looking at her. He would not put down the hare, and he could not
-defend himself with it in his mouth; so he was puzzled. Pussy,
-however, brought matters to a crisis. She slapped his face, then
-bolted right up the chimney. Bounder put down the hare now, and gave
-a big sigh as he lay down beside it.
-
-"No, Mrs. Cooper, Bob hasn't been at his wicked work for some time.
-He's been gi'en someone else a turn I s'pose, eh?"
-
-"Oh, sirs," said the widow, "it's no wi' my will he goes poachin'!
-If his father's heid were above the sod he daren't do it. But, poor
-Bob, he's all I have in the world, and he works hard--sometimes."
-
-Branson laughed. It was a somewhat sarcastic laugh; and young Archie
-felt sorry for Bob's mother, she looked so unhappy.
-
-"Aye, Mrs. Cooper, Bob works hard sometimes, especially when settin'
-girns for game. Ha! ha! Hullo!" he added, "speak of angels and they
-appear. Here comes Bob himself!"
-
-Bob entered, looked defiantly at the keeper, but doffed his cap and
-bowed to Mr. Walton and Archie. "Mother," he said, "I'm going out."
-
-"Not far, Bob, lad; denner's nearly ready."
-
-Bob had turned to leave, but he wheeled round again almost fiercely.
-He was a splendid young specimen of a Borderer, six feet if an inch,
-and well-made to boot. No extra flesh, but hard and tough as copper
-bolts. "Denner!" he growled. "Aye, denner to be sure--taties and
-salt! Ha! and gentry live on the fat o' the land! If I snare a
-rabbit, if I dare to catch one o' God's own cattle on God's own
-hills, I'm a felon; I'm to be taken and put in gaol--shot even if I
-dare resist! Yas, mother, I'll be in to denner," and away he strode.
-
-"Potatoes and salt!" Archie could not help thinking about that. And
-he was going away to his own bright home and to happiness. He
-glanced round him. at the bare, clay walls, with their few bits of
-daubs of pictures, and up at the blackened rafters, where a cheese
-stood--one poor, hard cheese--and on which hung some bacon and
-onions. He could not repress a sigh, almost as heartfelt as that
-which Bounder gave when he lay down beside the hare.
-
-When the keeper and tutor rose to go, Archie stopped behind with
-Bounder just a moment. When they came out, Bounder had no hare.
-
-Yet that hare was the first Archie had shot, and--well, he had meant
-to astonish Elsie with this proof of his prowess; but the hare was
-better to be left where it was--he had earned a blessing.
-
-The party were in the wood when Bob Cooper, the poacher, sprang up as
-if from the earth and confronted them.
-
-"I came here a purpose," he said to Branson. "This is not your wood;
-even if it was I wouldn't mind. What did you want at my mother's
-hoose?"
-
-"Nothing; and I've nothing to say to ye."
-
-"Haven't ye? But ye were in our cottage. It's no for nought the
-glaud whistles."
-
-"I don't want to quarrel," said Branson, "especially after speakin'
-to your mother; she's a kindly soul, and I'm sorry for her and for
-you yoursel', Bob."
-
-Bob was taken aback. He had expected defiance, exasperation, and he
-was prepared to fight.
-
-Archie stood trembling as these two athletes looked each other in the
-eyes.
-
-But gradually Bob's face softened; he bit his lip and moved
-impatiently. The allusion to his mother had touched his heart.
-
-"I didn't want sich words, Branson. I--may be I don't deserve 'em.
-I--hang it all, give me a grip o' your hand!"
-
-Then away went Bob as quickly as he had come.
-
-Branson glanced at his retreating figure one moment.
-
-"Well," he said, "I never thought I'd shake hands wi' Bob Cooper! No
-matter; better please a fool than fecht 'im."
-
-"Branson!"
-
-"Yes, Master Archie."
-
-"I don't think Bob's a fool; and I'm sure that, bad as he is, he
-loves his mother."
-
-"Quite right, Archie," said Mr. Walton.
-
-Archie met his father at the gate, and ran towards him to tell him
-all his adventures about the fox and the hare. But Bob Cooper and
-everybody else was forgotten when he noticed what and whom he had
-behind him. The "whom" was Branson's little boy, Peter; the "what"
-was one of the wildest-looking--and, for that matter, one of the
-wickedest-looking--Shetland ponies it is possible to imagine.
-Long-haired, shaggy, droll, and daft; but these adjectives do not
-half describe him.
-
-"Why, father, wherever----"
-
-"He's your birthday present, Archie."
-
-The boy actually flushed red with joy. His eyes sparkled as he
-glanced from his father to the pony and back at his father again.
-
-"Dad," he said at last, "I know now what old Kate means about 'her
-cup being full.' Father, my cup overflows!"
-
-Well, Archie's eyes were pretty nearly overflowing anyhow.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-_IN THE OLD CASTLE TOWER._
-
-They were all together that evening in the green parlour as usual,
-and everybody was happy and merry. Even Rupert was sitting up and
-laughing as much as Elsie.
-
-The clatter of tongues prevented them hearing Mary's tapping at the
-door; and the carpet being so thick and soft, she was not seen until
-right in the centre of the room.
-
-"Why, Mary," cried Elsie, "I got such a start, I thought you were a
-ghost!"
-
-Mary looks uneasily around her.
-
-"There be one ghost, Miss Elsie, comes out o' nights, and walks about
-the old castle."
-
-"Was that what you came in to tell us, Mary?"
-
-"Oh, no, sir! If ye please, Bob Cooper is in the yard, and he wants
-to speak to Master Archie. I wouldn't let him go if I were you,
-ma'am."
-
-Archie's mother smiled. Mary was a privileged little parlour maiden,
-and ventured at times to make suggestions.
-
-"Go and see what he wants, dear," said his mother to Archie.
-
-It was a beautiful clear moonlight night, with just a few white
-snow-laden clouds lying over the woods, no wind and never a hush save
-the distant and occasional yelp of a dog.
-
-"Bob Cooper!"
-
-"That's me, Master Archie. I couldn't rest till I'd seen ye the
-night. The hare----"
-
-"Oh! that's really nothing, Bob Cooper!"
-
-"But allow me to differ. It's no' the hare altogether. I know where
-to find fifty. It was the way it was given. Look here, lad, and
-this is what I come to say, Branson and you have been too much for
-Bob Cooper. The day I went to that wood to thrash him, and I'd hae
-killed him, an I could. Ha! ha! I shook hands with him! Archie
-Broadbent, your father's a gentleman, and they say you're a chip o'
-t' old block. I believe 'em, and look, see, lad, I'll never be seen
-in your preserves again. Tell Branson so. There's my hand on't.
-Nay, never be afear'd to touch it. Good-night. I feel better now."
-
-And away strode the poacher, and Archie could hear the sound of his
-heavy tread crunching through the snow long after he was out of sight.
-
-"You seem to have made a friend, Archie," said his father, when the
-boy reported the interview.
-
-"A friend," added Mr. Walton with a quiet smile, "that I wouldn't be
-too proud of."
-
-"Well," said the Squire, "certainly Bob Cooper is a rough nut, but
-who knows what his heart may be like?"
-
-Archie's room in the tower was opened in state next day. Old Kate
-herself had lit fires in it every night for a week before, though she
-never would go up the long dark stair without Peter. Peter was only
-a mite of a boy, but wherever he went, Fuss, the Skye terrier,
-accompanied him, and it was universally admitted that no ghost in its
-right senses would dare to face Fuss.
-
-Elsie was there of course, and Rupert too, though he had to be almost
-carried up by stalwart Branson. But what a glorious little room it
-was when you were in it! A more complete boy's own room could
-scarcely be imagined. It was a _beau ideal_; at least Rupert and
-Archie and Elsie thought so, and even Mr. Walton and Branson said the
-same.
-
-Let me see now, I may as well try to describe it, but much must be
-left to imagination. It was not a very big room, only about twelve
-feet square; for although the tower appeared very large from outside,
-the abnormal thickness of its walls detracted from available space
-inside it. There was one long window on each side, and a chair and
-small table could be placed on the sill of either. But this was
-curtained off at night, when light came from a huge lamp that
-depended from the ceiling, and the rays from which fought for
-preference with those from the roaring fire on the stone hearth. The
-room was square. A door, also curtained, gave entrance from the
-stairway at one corner, and at each of two other corners were two
-other doors leading into turret chambers, and these tiny, wee rooms
-were very delightful, because you were out beyond the great tower
-when you sat in them, and their slits of windows granted you a grand
-view of the charming scenery everywhere about.
-
-The furniture was rustic in the extreme--studiously so. There was a
-tall rocking-chair, a great daïs or sofa, and a recline for
-Rupert--"poor Rupert" as he was always called--the big chair was the
-guest's seat.
-
-The ornaments on the walls had been principally supplied by Branson.
-Stuffed heads of foxes, badgers, and wild cats, with any number of
-birds' and beasts' skins, artistically mounted. There were also
-heads of horned deer, bows and arrows--these last were Archie's
-own--and shields and spears that Uncle Ramsey had brought home from
-savage wars in Africa and Australia. The daïs was covered with bear
-skins, and there was quite a quantity of skins on the floor instead
-of a carpet. So the whole place looked primeval and romantic.
-
-The bookshelf was well supplied with readable tales, and a harp stood
-in a corner, and on this, young though she was, Elsie could already
-play.
-
-The guest to-night was old Kate. She sat in the tall chair in a
-corner opposite the door, Branson occupied a seat near her, Rupert
-was on his recline, and Archie and Elsie on a skin, with little Peter
-nursing wounded Fuss in a corner.
-
-That was the party. But Archie had made tea, and handed it round;
-and sitting there with her cup in her lap, old Kate really looked a
-strange, weird figure. Her face was lean and haggard, her eyes
-almost wild, and some half-grey hair peeped from under an
-uncanny-looking cap of black crape, with long depending strings of
-the same material.
-
-Old Kate was housekeeper and general female factotum. She was really
-a distant relation of the Squire, and so had it very much her own way
-at Burley Old Farm.
-
-She came originally from "just ayant the Border," and had a wealth of
-old-world stories to tell, and could sing queer old bits of ballads
-too, when in the humour.
-
-Old Kate, however, said she could not sing to-night, for she felt as
-yet unused to the place; and whether they (the boys) believed in
-ghosts or not she (Kate) did, and so, she said, had her father before
-her. But she told stories--stories of the bloody raids of long, long
-ago, when Northumbria and the Scottish Borders were constantly at
-war--stories that kept her hearers enthralled while they listened,
-and to which the weird looks and strange voice of the narrator lent a
-peculiar charm.
-
-Old Kate was just in the very midst of one of these when, twang! one
-of the strings of Elsie's harp broke. It was a very startling sound
-indeed; for as it went off it seemed to emit a groan that rang
-through the chamber, and died away in the vaulted roof. Elsie crept
-closer to Archie, and Peter with Fuss drew nearer the fire.
-
-The ancient dame, after being convinced that the sound was nothing
-uncanny, proceeded with her narrative. It was a long one, with an
-old house in it by the banks of a winding river in the midst of woods
-and wilds--a house that, if its walls had been able to speak, could
-have told many a marrow-freezing story of bygone times.
-
-There was a room in this house that was haunted. Old Kate was just
-coming to this, and to the part of her tale on which the ghosts on a
-certain night of the year always appeared in this room, and stood
-over a dark stain in the centre of the floor.
-
-"And ne'er a ane," she was saying, "could wash that stain awa'.
-Weel, bairns, one moonlicht nicht, and at the deadest hoor o' the
-nicht, nothing would please the auld laird but he maun leave his
-chaimber and go straight along the damp, dreary, long corridor to the
-door o' the hauntid room. It was half open, and the moon's licht
-danced in on the fleer. He was listening--he was looking----"
-
-But at this very moment, when old Kate had lowered her voice to a
-whisper, and the tension at her listeners' heart-strings was the
-greatest, a soft, heavy footstep was heard coming slowly, painfully
-as it might be, up the turret stairs.
-
-To say that every one was alarmed would but poorly describe their
-feelings. Old Kate's eyes seemed as big as watch-glasses. Elsie
-screamed, and clung to Archie.
-
-"Who--oo--'s-- Who's there?" cried Branson, and his voice sounded
-fearful and far away.
-
-No answer; but the steps drew nearer and nearer. Then the curtain
-was pushed aside, and in dashed--what? a ghost?--no, only honest
-great Bounder.
-
-Bounder had found out there was something going on, and that Fuss was
-up there, and he didn't see why he should be left out in the cold.
-That was all; but the feeling of relief when he did appear was
-unprecedented.
-
-Old Kate required another cup of tea after that. Then Branson got
-out his fiddle from a green baize bag; and if he had not played those
-merry airs, I do not believe that old Kate would have had the courage
-to go downstairs that night at all.
-
-Archie's pony was great fun at first. The best of it was that he had
-never been broken in. The Squire, or rather his bailiff, had bought
-him out of a drove; so he was, literally speaking, as wild as the
-hills, and as mad as a March hare. But he soon knew Archie and
-Elsie, and, under Branson's supervision, Scallowa was put into
-training on the lawn. He was led, he was walked, he was galloped.
-But he reared, and kicked, and rolled whenever he thought of it, and
-yet there was not a bit of vice about him.
-
-Spring had come, and early summer itself, before Scallowa permitted
-Archie to ride him, and a week or two after this the difficulty would
-have been to have told which of the two was the wilder and dafter,
-Archie or Scallowa. They certainly had managed to establish the most
-amicable relations. Whatever Scallowa thought, Archie agreed to, and
-_vice versa_, and the pair were never out of mischief. Of course
-Archie was pitched off now and then, but he told Elsie he did not
-mind it, and in fact preferred it to constant uprightness: it was a
-change. But the pony never ran away, because Archie always had a bit
-of carrot in his pocket to give him when he got up off the ground.
-
-Mr. Walton assured Archie that these carrots accounted for his many
-tumbles. And there really did seem to be a foundation of truth about
-this statement. For of course the pony had soon come to know that it
-was to his interest to throw his rider, and acted accordingly. So
-after a time Archie gave the carrot-payment up, and matters were
-mended.
-
-It was only when school was over that Archie went for a canter,
-unless he happened to get up very early in the morning for the
-purpose of riding. And this he frequently did, so that, before the
-summer was done, Scallowa and Archie were as well known over all the
-countryside as the postman himself.
-
-Archie's pony was certainly not very long in the legs, but
-nevertheless the leaps he could take were quite surprising.
-
-On the second summer after Archie got this pony both horse and rider
-were about perfect in their training, and in the following winter he
-appeared in the hunting-field with the greatest _sang-froid_,
-although many of the farmers, on their weight-carrying hunters, could
-have jumped over Archie, Scallowa, and all. The boy had a long way
-to ride to the hounds, and he used to start off the night before. He
-really did not care where he slept. Old Kate used to make up a
-packet of sandwiches for him, and this would be his dinner and
-breakfast. Scallowa he used to tie up in some byre, and as often as
-not Archie would turn in beside him among the straw. In the morning
-he would finish the remainder of Kate's sandwiches, make his toilet
-in some running stream or lake, and be as fresh as a daisy when the
-meet took place.
-
-Both he and Scallowa were somewhat uncouth-looking. Elsie, his
-sister, had proposed that he should ride in scarlet, it would look so
-romantic and pretty; but Archie only laughed, and said he would not
-feel at home in such finery, and his "Eider Duck"-as he sometimes
-called the pony--would not know him. "Besides, Elsie," he said,
-"lying down among straw with scarlets on wouldn't improve them."
-
-But old Kate had given him a birthday present of a little Scotch
-Glengarry cap with a real eagle's feather, and he always wore this in
-the hunting-field. He did so for two reasons; first, it pleased old
-Kate; and, secondly, the cap stuck to his head; no breeze could blow
-it off.
-
-It was not long before Archie was known in the field as the "Little
-Demon Huntsman." And, really, had you seen Scallowa and he
-feathering across a moor, his bonnet on the back of his head, and the
-pony's immense mane blowing straight back in the wind, you. would
-have thought the title well earned. In a straight run the pony could
-not keep up with the long-legged horses; but Archie and he could dash
-through a wood, and even swim streams, and take all manner of short
-cuts, so that he was always in at the death.
-
-The most remarkable trait in Archie's riding was that he could take
-flying leaps from heights: only a Shetland pony could have done this.
-Archie knew every yard of country, and he rather liked heading his
-Lilliputian nag right away for a knoll or precipice, and bounding off
-it like a roebuck or Scottish deerhound. The first time he was
-observed going straight for a bank of this kind he created quite a
-sensation. "The boy will be killed!" was the cry, and every lady
-then drew rein and held her breath.
-
-Away went Scallowa, and they were on the bank in the air, and landed
-safely, and away again in less time that it takes me to tell of the
-exploit.
-
-The secret of the lad's splendid management of the pony was this: he
-loved Scallowa, and Scallowa knew it. He not only loved the little
-horse, but studied his ways, so he was able to train him to do quite
-a number of tricks, such as lying down "dead" to command, kneeling to
-ladies--for Archie was a gallant lad--trotting round and round
-circus-fashion, and ending every performance by coming and kissing
-his master. Between you and me, reader, a bit of carrot had a good
-deal to do with the last trick, if not with the others also.
-
-It occurred to this bold boy once that he might be able to take
-Scallowa up the dark tower stairs to the boy's own room. The
-staircase was unusually wide, and the broken stones in it had been
-repaired with logs of wood. He determined to try; but he practised
-riding him blindfolded first. Then one day he put him at the stairs;
-he himself went first with the bridle in his hand.
-
-What should he do if he failed? That is a question he did not stop
-to answer. One thing was quite certain, Scallowa could not turn and
-go down again. On they went, the two of them, all in the dark,
-except that now and then a slit in the wall gave them a little light
-and, far beneath, a pretty view of the country. On and on, and up
-and up, till within ten feet of the top.
-
-Here Scallowa came to a dead stop, and the conversation between
-Archie and his steed, although the latter did not speak English,
-might have been as follows:
-
-"Come on, 'Eider Duck'!"
-
-"Not a step farther, thank you."
-
-"Come on, old horsie! You can't turn, you know."
-
-"No; not another step if I stay here till doomsday in the afternoon.
-Going upstairs becomes monotonous after a time. No; I'll be shot if
-I budge!"
-
-"You'll be shot if you don't. Gee up, I say; gee up!"
-
-"Gee up yourself; I'm going to sleep."
-
-"I say, Scallowa, look here."
-
-"What's that, eh? a bit of carrot? Oh, here goes!"
-
-And in a few seconds more Scallowa was in the room, and had all he
-could eat of cakes and carrots.
-
-Archie was so delighted with his success that he must go to the
-castle turret, and halloo for Branson and old Kate to come and see
-what he had got in the tower.
-
-Old Kate's astonishment knew no bounds, and Branson laughed till his
-sides were sore. Bounder, the Newfoundland, appeared also to
-appreciate the joke, and smiled from lug to lug.
-
-"How will you get him down?"
-
-"Carrots," said Archie; "carrots, Branson. The 'Duck' will do
-anything for carrots."
-
-The "Duck," however, was somewhat nervous at first, and half-way
-downstairs even the carrots appeared to have lost their charm.
-
-While Archie was wondering what he should do now, a loud explosion
-seemed to shake the old tower to its very foundation. It was only
-Bounder barking in the rear of the pony. But the sound had the
-desired effect, and down came the "Duck," and away went Archie, so
-that in a few minutes both were out on the grass.
-
-And here Scallowa must needs relieve his feelings by lying down and
-rolling; while great Bounder, as if he had quite appreciated all the
-fun of the affair, and must do something to allay his excitement,
-went tearing round in a circle, as big dogs do, so fast that it was
-almost impossible to see anything of him distinctly. He was a dark
-shape _et preterea nihil_.
-
-But after a time Scallowa got near to the stair, which only proves
-that there is nothing in reason you cannot teach a Shetland pony, if
-you love him and understand him.
-
-The secret lies in the motto, "Fondly and firmly." But, as already
-hinted, a morsel of carrot comes in handy at times.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-"_BOYS WILL BE BOYS._"
-
-Bob Cooper was as good as his word, which he had pledged to Archie on
-that night at Burley Old Farm, and Branson never saw him again in the
-Squire's preserves.
-
-Nor had he ever been obliged to compeer before the Squire
-himself--who was now a magistrate--to account for any acts of
-trespass in pursuit of game on the lands of other lairds. But this
-does not prove that Bob had given up poaching. He was discreetly
-silent about this matter whenever he met Archie.
-
-He had grown exceedingly fond of the lad, and used to be delighted
-when he called at his mother's cottage on his "Eider Duck." There
-was always a welcome waiting Archie here, and whey to drink, which,
-it must be admitted, is very refreshing on a warm summer's day.
-
-Well, Bob on these occasions used to show Archie how to make flies,
-or busk hooks, and gave him a vast deal of information about outdoor
-life and sport generally.
-
-The subject of poaching was hardly ever broached; only once, when he
-and Archie were talking together in the little cottage, Bob himself
-volunteered the following information:
-
-"The gentry folks, Master Archie, think me a terrible man; and they
-wonder I don't go and plough, or something. La! they little know
-I've been brought up in the hills. Sport I must hae. I couldna live
-away from nature. But I'm never cruel. Heigho! I suppose I must
-leave the country, and seek for sport in wilder lands, where the man
-o' money doesn't trample on the poor. Only one thing keeps me here."
-
-He glanced out of the window as he spoke to where his old mother was
-cooking dinner _al fresco_--boiling a pot as the gipsy does, hung
-from a tripod.
-
-"I know, I know," said Archie.
-
-"How old are you now, Master Archie?"
-
-"Going on for fourteen."
-
-"Is that all? Why ye're big eno' for a lad o' seventeen!"
-
-This was true. Archie was wondrous tall, and wondrous brown and
-handsome. His hardy upbringing and constant out-door exercise, in
-summer's shine or winter's snow, fully accounted for his stature and
-looks.
-
-"I'm almost getting too big for my pony."
-
-"Ah! no, lad; Shetlands'll carry most anything."
-
-"Well, I must be going, Bob Cooper. Good-bye."
-
-"Good-bye, Master Archie. Ah! lad, if there were more o' your kind
-and your father's in the country, there would be fewer bad men
-like--like me."
-
-"I don't like to hear you saying that, Bob. Couldn't you be a good
-man if you liked? You're big enough."
-
-The poacher laughed.
-
-"Yes," he replied, "I'm big enough; but, somehow, goodness don't
-strike right home to me like. It don't come natural--that's it."
-
-"My brother Rupert says it is so easy to be good, if you read and
-pray God to teach and help you."
-
-"Ah, Master Archie, your brother is good himself, but he doesn't know
-all."
-
-"My brother Rupert bade me tell you that; but, oh, Bob, how nice he
-can speak. I can't. I can fish and shoot, and ride 'Eider Duck;'
-but I can't say things so pretty as he can. Well, good-bye again."
-
-"Good-bye again, and tell your brother that I can't be good all at
-one jump like, but I'll begin to try mebbe. So long."
-
-* * * * * *
-
-Archie Broadbent might have been said to have two kinds of home
-education; one was thoroughly scholastic, the other very practical
-indeed. The Squire was one in a hundred perhaps. He was devoted to
-his farm, and busied himself in the field, manually as well as
-orally. I mean to say that he was of such an active disposition
-that, while superintending and giving advice and orders, he put his
-hand to the wheel himself. So did Mr. Walton, and whether it was
-harvest-time or haymaking, you would have found Squire Broadbent, the
-tutor, and Archie hard at it, and even little Elsie doing a little.
-
-I would not like to say that the Squire was a radical, but he
-certainly was no believer in the benefits of too much class
-distinction. He thought Burns was right when he said--
-
- "A man's a man for a' that."
-
-
-Was he any the less liked or less respected by his servants, because
-he and his boy tossed hay in the same field with them? I do not
-think so, and I know that the work always went more merrily on when
-they were there; and that laughing and even singing could be heard
-all day long. Moreover, there was less beer drank, and more tea.
-The Squire supplied both liberally, and any man might have which he
-chose. Consequently there was less, far less, tired-headedness and
-languor in the evening. Why, it was nothing uncommon for the lads
-and lasses of Burley Old Farm to meet together on the lawn, after a
-hard day's toil, and dance for hours to the merry notes of Branson's
-fiddle.
-
-We have heard of model farms; this Squire's was one; but the
-servants, wonderful to say, were contented. There was never such a
-thing as grumbling heard from one year's end to the other.
-
-Christmas too was always kept in the good, grand old style. Even a
-yule log, drawn from the wood, was considered a property of the
-performances; and as for good cheer, why there was "lashins" of it,
-as an Irishman would say, and fun "galore," to borrow a word from
-beyond the Border.
-
-Mr. Walton was a scholarly person, though you might not have thought
-so, had you seen him mowing turnips with his coat off. He, however,
-taught nothing to Archie or Rupert that might not have some practical
-bearing on his after life. Such studies as mathematics and algebra
-were dull, in a manner of speaking; Latin was taught because no one
-can understand English without it; French and German
-conversationally; geography not by rote, but thoroughly; and
-everything else was either very practical and useful, or very
-pleasant.
-
-Music Archie loved, but did not care to play; his father did not
-force him; but poor Rupert played the zither. He loved it, and took
-to it naturally.
-
-Rupert got stronger as he grew older, and when Archie was fourteen
-and he thirteen, the physician gave good hopes; and he was even able
-to walk by himself a little. But to some extent he would be "Poor
-Rupert" as long as he lived.
-
-He read and thought far more than Archie, and--let me whisper it--he
-prayed more fervently.
-
-"Oh, Roup," Archie would say, "I should like to be as good as you!
-Somehow, I don't feel to need to pray so much, and to have the Lord
-Jesus so close to me."
-
-It was a strange conceit this, but Rupert's answer was a good one.
-
-"Yes, Archie, I need comfort more; but mind you, brother, the day may
-come when you'll want comfort of this kind too."
-
-* * * * * *
-
-Old Kate really was a queer old witch of a creature, superstitious to
-a degree. Here is an example: One day she came rushing--without
-taking time to knock even--into the breakfast parlour.
-
-"Oh, Mistress Broadbent, what a ghast I've gotten!"
-
-"Dear me!" said the Squire's wife; "sit down and tell us. What is
-it, poor Kate?"
-
-"Oh! Oh!" she sighed. "Nae wonder my puir legs ached. Oh! sirs!
-sirs!
-
-"Ye ken my little pantry? Well, there's been a board doon on the
-fleer for ages o' man, and to-day it was taken out to be scrubbit,
-and what think ye was reveeled?"
-
-"I couldn't guess."
-
-"Words, 'oman; words, printed and painted on the timmer--'_Sacred to
-the Memory of Dinah Brown, Aged 99._' A tombstone, 'oman--a wooden
-gravestone, and me standin' on't a' these years."
-
-Here the Squire was forced to burst out into a hearty laugh, for
-which his wife reprimanded him, by a look.
-
-There was no mistake about the "wooden tombstone," but that this was
-the cause of old Kate's rheumatism one might take the liberty to
-doubt.
-
-Kate was a staunch believer in ghosts, goblins, fairies, kelpies,
-brownies, spunkies, and all the rest of the supernatural family; and
-I have something to relate in connection with this, though it is not
-altogether to the credit of my hero, Archie.
-
-Old Kate and young Peter were frequent visitors to the room in the
-tower, for the tea Archie made, and the fires he kept on, were both
-most excellent in their way.
-
-"Boys will be boys," and Archie was a little inclined to practical
-joking. It made him laugh, so he said, and laughing made one fat.
-
-It happened that, one dark winter's evening, old Kate was invited up
-into the tower, and Branson with Peter came also. Archie volunteered
-a song, and Branson played many a fine old air on his fiddle, so that
-the first part of the evening passed away pleasantly and even merrily
-enough. Old Kate drank cup after cup of tea as she sat in that weird
-old chair, and, by-and-by, Archie, the naughty boy that he was, led
-the conversation round to ghosts. The ancient dame was in her
-element now; she launched forth into story after story, and each was
-more hair-stirring than its predecessor.
-
-Elsie and Archie occupied their favourite place on a bear's skin in
-front of the low fire; and while Kate still droned on, and Branson
-listened with eyes and mouth wide open, the boy might have been
-noticed to stoop down, and whisper something in his sister's ear.
-
-Almost immediately after a rattling of chains could be heard in one
-of the turrets. Both Kate and Branson started, and the former could
-not be prevailed upon to resume her story till Archie lit a candle
-and walked all round the room, drawing back the turret curtains to
-show no one was there.
-
-Once again old Kate began, and once again chains were heard to
-rattle, and a still more awesome sound followed--a long, low,
-deep-bass groan, while at the same time, strange to say, the candle
-in Archie's hand burnt blue. To add to the fearsomeness of the
-situation, while the chain continued to rattle, and the groaning now
-and then, there was a very appreciable odour of sulphur in the
-apartment. This was the climax. Old Kate screamed, and the big
-keeper, Branson, fell on his knees in terror. Even Elsie, though she
-had an inkling of what was to happen, began to feel afraid.
-
-"There now, granny," cried Archie, having carried the joke far
-enough, "here is the groaning ghost." As he spoke he produced a pair
-of kitchen bellows, with a musical reed in the pipe, which he
-proceeded to sound in old Kate's very face, looking a very
-mischievous imp while he did so.
-
-"Oh," said old Kate, "what a scare the laddie has given me. But the
-chain?"
-
-Archie pulled a string, and the chain rattled again.
-
-"And the candle? That was na canny."
-
-"A dust of sulphur in the wick, granny."
-
-Big Branson looked ashamed of himself, and old Kate herself began to
-smile once more.
-
-"But how could ye hae the heart to scare an old wife sae, Master
-Archie?"
-
-"Oh, granny, we got up the fun just to show you there were no such
-things as ghosts. Rupert says--and he should know, because he's
-always reading--that ghosts are always rats or something."
-
-"Ye maunna frichten me again, laddie. Will ye promise?"
-
-"Yes, granny, there's my hand on it. Now sit down and have another
-cup of tea, and Elsie will play and sing."
-
-Elsie could sing now, and sweet young voice she had, that seemed to
-carry you to happier lands. Branson always said it made him feel a
-boy again, wandering through the woods in summer, or chasing the
-butterflies over flowery beds.
-
-And so, albeit Archie had carried his practical joke out to his own
-satisfaction, if not to that of every one else, this evening, like
-many others that had come before it, and came after it, passed away
-pleasantly enough.
-
-* * * * * *
-
-It was in the spring of the same year, and during the Easter
-holidays, that a little London boy came down to reside with his aunt,
-who lived in one of Archie's father's cottages.
-
-Young Harry Brown had been sent to the country for the express
-purpose of enjoying himself, and set about this business forthwith.
-He made up to Archie; in fact, he took so many liberties, and talked
-to him so glibly, and with so little respect, that, although Archie
-had imbued much of his father's principles as regards liberalism, he
-did not half like it.
-
-Perhaps, after all, it was only the boy's manner, for he had never
-been to the country at all before, and looked upon every one--Archie
-included--who did not know London, as jolly green. But Archie did
-not appreciate it, and, like the traditional worm, he turned, and
-once again his love for practical joking got the better of his
-common-sense.
-
-"Teach us somefink," said Harry one day, turning his white face up.
-He was older, perhaps, than Archie, but decidedly smaller. "Teach us
-somefink, and when you comes to Vitechapel to wisit me, I'll teach
-you summut. My eye, won't yer stare!"
-
-The idea of this white-chafted, unwholesome-looking cad, expecting
-that _he_, Squire Broadbent's son, would visit him in Whitechapel!
-But Archie managed to swallow his wrath and pocket his pride for the
-time being.
-
-"What shall I teach you, eh? I suppose you know that potatoes don't
-grow on trees, nor geese upon gooseberry-bushes?"
-
-"Yes; I know that taters is dug out of the hearth. I'm pretty fly
-for a young un."
-
-"Can you ride?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Well, meet me here to-morrow at the same time, and I'll bring my
-'Duck.'"
-
-"Look 'ere, Johnnie Raw, ye said '_ride_,' not '_swim_.' A duck
-teaches swimmin', not ridin'. None o' yer larks now!"
-
-Next day Archie swept down upon the Cockney in fine form, meaning to
-impress him.
-
-The Cockney was not much impressed; I fear he was not very
-impressionable.
-
-"My heye, Johnnie Raw," he roared, "vere did yer steal the moke?"
-
-"Look you here, young Whitechapel, you'll have to guard that tongue
-of yours a little, else communications will be cut. Do you see?"
-
-"It _is_ a donkey, ain't it, Johnnie?"
-
-"Come on to the field and have a ride."
-
-Five minutes afterwards the young Cockney on the "Eider Duck's" back
-was tearing along the field at railway speed. John Gilpin's ride was
-nothing to it, nor Tam O'Shanter's on his grey mare, Meg! Both these
-worthies had stuck to the saddle, but this horseman rode upon the
-neck of the steed. Scallowa stopped short at the gate, but the boy
-flew over.
-
-Archie found his friend rubbing himself, and looking very serious,
-and he felt happier now.
-
-"Call that 'ere donkey a heider duck? H'm? I allers thought heider
-ducks was soft!
-
-"One to you, Johnnie. I don't want to ride hany more."
-
-"What else shall I teach you?"
-
-"Hey?"
-
-"Come, I'll show you over the farm."
-
-"Honour bright? No larks!"
-
-"Yes; no larks!"
-
-"Say honour."
-
-"Honour."
-
-Young Whitechapel had not very much faith in his guide, however; but
-he saw more country wonders that day than ever he could have dreamt
-of; while his strange remarks kept Archie continually laughing.
-
-Next day the two boys went bird-nesting, and really Archie was very
-mischievous. He showed him a hoody-crow's nest, which he represented
-as a green plover's or lapwing's; and a blackbird's nest in a
-furze-bush, which he told Harry was a magpie's; and so on, and so
-forth, till at last he got tired of the cheeky Cockney, and sent him
-off on a mile walk to a cairn of stones, on which he told him crows
-sometimes sat and "might have a nest."
-
-Then Archie threw himself on the moss, took out a book, and began to
-read. He was just beginning to repent of his conduct to Harry Brown,
-and meant to go up to him like a man when he returned, and crave his
-forgiveness.
-
-But somehow, when Harry came back he had so long a face, that wicked
-Archie burst out laughing, and forgot all about his good resolve.
-
-"What shall I teach you next?" said Archie.
-
-"Draw it mild, Johnnie; it's 'Arry's turn. It's the boy's turn to
-teach you summut. Shall we 'ave it hout now wi' the raw uns?
-Bunches o' fives I means. Hey?"
-
-"I really don't understand you."
-
-"Ha! ha! ha! I knowed yer was a green 'un, Johnnie. Can yer fight?
-Hey? 'Cause I'm spoilin' for a row."
-
-And Harry Brown threw off his jacket, and began to dance about in
-terribly knowing attitudes.
-
-"You had better put on your clothes again," said Archie. "Fight
-_you_? Why I could fling you over the fishpond."
-
-"Ah! I dessay; but flingin' ain't fightin', Johnnie. Come, there's
-no getting hout of it. It ain't the first young haristocrat I've
-frightened; an' now you're afraid."
-
-That was enough for Archie. And the next moment the lads were at it.
-
-But Archie had met his match; he went down a dozen times. He
-remained down the last time.
-
-"It is wonderful," he said. "I quite admire you. But I've had
-enough; I'm beaten."
-
-"Spoken like a plucked 'un. Haven't swallowed yer teeth, hey?"
-
-"No; but I'll have a horrid black-eye."
-
-"Raw beef, my boy; raw beef."
-
-"Well; I confess I've caught a tartar."
-
-"An' I caught a crab yesterday. Wot about your eider duck? My heye!
-Johnnie, I ain't been able to sit down conweniently since. I say,
-Johnnie?"
-
-"Well."
-
-"Friends, hey?"
-
-"All right."
-
-Then the two shook hands, and young Whitechapel said if Archie would
-buy two pairs of gloves he would show him how it was done. So Archie
-did, and became an apt pupil in the noble art of self-defence; which
-may be used at times, but never abused.
-
-However, Archie Broadbent never forgot that lesson in the wood.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-"_JOHNNIE'S GOT THE GRIT IN HIM._"
-
-On the day of his fight with young Harry in the wood, Archie returned
-home to find both his father and Mr. Walton in the drawing-room alone.
-
-His father caught the lad by the arm.
-
-"Been tumbling again off that pony of yours?"
-
-"No, father, worse. I'm sure I've done wrong."
-
-He then told them all about the practical joking, and the _finale_.
-
-"Well," said the Squire, "there is only one verdict. What do you
-say, Walton?"
-
-"Serve him right!"
-
-"Oh, I know that," said Archie; "but isn't it lowering our name to
-keep such company?"
-
-"It isn't raising our name, nor growing fresh laurels either, for you
-to play practical jokes on this poor London lad. But as to being in
-his company, Archie, you may have to be in worse yet. But listen! I
-want my son to behave as a gentleman, even in low company. Remember
-that boy, and despise no one, whatever be his rank in life. Now, go
-and beg your mother's and sister's forgiveness for having to appear
-before them with a black-eye."
-
-"Archie!" his father called after him, as he was leaving the room.
-
-"Yes, dad?"
-
-"How long do you think it will be before you get into another scrape?"
-
-"I couldn't say for certain, father. I'm sure I don't want to get
-into any. They just seem to come."
-
-"There's no doubt about one thing, Mr. Broadbent," said the tutor
-smiling, when Archie had left.
-
-"And that is?"
-
-"He's what everybody says he is, a chip of the old block.
-Headstrong, and all that; doesn't look before he leaps."
-
-"Don't _I_, Walton?"
-
-"Squire, I'm not going to flatter you. You know you don't."
-
-"Well, my worthy secretary," said the Squire, "I'm glad you speak so
-plainly. I can always come to you for advice when----"
-
-"When you want to," said Walton, laughing. "All right, mind you do.
-I'm proud to be your factor, as well as tutor to your boys. Now what
-about that Chillingham bull? You won't turn him into the west field?"
-
-"Why not? The field is well fenced. All our picturesque beasts are
-there. He is only a show animal, and he is really only a baby."
-
-"True, the bull is not much more than a baby, but----"
-
-The baby in question was the gift of a noble friend to Squire
-Broadbent; and so beautiful and picturesque did he consider him, that
-he would have permitted him to roam about the lawns, if there did not
-exist the considerable probability that he would play battledore and
-shuttlecock with the visitors, and perhaps toss old Kate herself over
-the garden wall.
-
-So he was relegated to the west field. This really was a park to all
-appearance. A few pet cattle grazed in it, a flock of sheep, and a
-little herd of deer. They all lived amicably together, and sought
-shelter under the same spreading trees from the summer's sun. The
-cattle were often changed, so were the sheep, but the deer were as
-much fixtures as the trees themselves.
-
-The changing of sheep or cattle meant fine fun for Archie. He would
-be there in all his glory, doing the work that was properly that of
-herdsmen and collie dogs. There really was not a great deal of need
-for collies when Archie was there, mounted on his wild Shetland pony,
-his darling "Eider Duck" Scallowa; and it was admittedly a fine sight
-to see the pair of them--they seemed made for each other--feathering
-away across the field, heading and turning the drove. At such times
-he would be armed with a long whip, and occasionally a beast more
-rampageous than the rest would separate itself from the herd, and,
-with tail erect and head down, dash madly over the grass. This would
-be just the test for Archie's skill that he longed for. Away he
-would go at a glorious gallop; sometimes riding neck and neck with
-the runaway and plying the whip, at other times getting round and
-well ahead across the beast's bows with shout and yell, but taking
-care to manoeuvre so as to steer clear of an ugly rush.
-
-In this field always dwelt one particular sheep. It had, like the
-pony, been a birthday present, and, like the pony, it hailed from the
-_Ultima Thule_ of the British North. If ever there was a demon sheep
-in existence, surely this was the identical quadruped. Tall and
-lank, and daft-looking, it possessed almost the speed of a red deer,
-and was as full of mischief as ever sheep could be. The worst of the
-beast was, that he led all the other woolly-backs into mischief; and
-whether it proposed a stampede round the park, ending with a charge
-through the ranks of the deer, or a well-planned attempt at escape
-from the field altogether, the other sheep were always willing to
-join, and sometimes the deer themselves.
-
-Archie loved that sheep next to the pony, and there were times when
-he held a meet of his own. Mousa, as he called him, would be carted,
-after the fashion of the Queen's deer, to a part of the estate, miles
-from home; but it was always for home that Mousa headed, though not
-in a true line. No, this wonderful sheep would take to the woods as
-often as not, and scamper over the hills and far away, so that Archie
-had many a fine run; and the only wonder is that Scallowa and he did
-not break their necks.
-
-The young Chillingham bull was as beautiful as a dream--a nightmare
-for instance. He was not very large, but sturdy, active, and strong.
-Milk-white, or nearly so, with black muzzle and crimson ears inside,
-and, you might say, eyes as well. Pure white black-tipped horns,
-erect almost, and a bit of a mane which added to his picturesqueness
-and wild beauty. His name was Lord Glendale, and his pedigree longer
-than the Laird o' Cockpen's.
-
-Now, had his lordship behaved himself, he certainly would have been
-an ornament to the society of Westfield. But he wouldn't or
-couldn't. Baby though he was, he attempted several times to vivisect
-his companions; and one day, thinking perhaps that Mousa did not pay
-him sufficient respect, his lordship made a bold attempt to throw him
-over the moon. So it was determined that Lord Glendale should be
-removed from Westfield. At one end of the park was a large, strong
-fence, and Branson and others came to the conclusion that Glendale
-would be best penned, and have a ring put in his nose.
-
-Yes, true; but penning a Chillingham wild baby-bull is not so simple
-as penning a letter. There is more _present_ risk about the former
-operation, if not _future_.
-
-"Well, it's got to be done," said Branson.
-
-"Yes," said Archie, who was not far off, "it's got to be done."
-
-"Oh, Master Archie, you can't be in this business!"
-
-"Can't I, Branson? You'll see."
-
-And Branson did see. He saw Archie ride into the west field on
-Scallowa, both of them looking in splendid form. Men with poles and
-ropes and dogs followed, some of the former appearing not to relish
-the business by any means.
-
-However, it would probably be an easier job than they thought. The
-plan would be to get the baby-bull in the centre of the other cattle,
-manoeuvre so as to keep him there, and so pen all together.
-
-This might have been done had Archie kept away, but it so happened
-that his lordship was on particularly good terms with himself this
-morning. Moreover, he had never seen a Shetland pony before. What
-more natural, therefore, than a longing on the part of Lord Glendale
-to examine the little horse _inside_ as well as out?
-
-"Go gently now, lads," cried Branson. "Keep the dogs back, Peter, we
-must na' alarm them."
-
-Lord Glendale did not condescend to look at Branson. He detached
-himself quietly from the herd, and began to eat up towards the spot
-where Archie and his "Duck" were standing like some pretty statue.
-Eating up towards him is the correct expression, as everyone who
-knows bulls will admit; for his lordship did not want to alarm Archie
-till he was near enough for the grand rush. Then the fun would
-commence, and Lord Glendale would see what the pony was made of.
-While he kept eating, or rather pretending to eat, his sly red eyes
-were fastened on Archie.
-
-Now, had it been Harry Brown, the Whitechapel boy, this ruse on the
-part of the baby-bull might have been successful. But Archie
-Broadbent was too old for his lordship. He pretended, however, to
-take no notice; but just as the bull was preparing for the rush he
-laughed derisively, flicked Lord Glendale with the whip, and started.
-
-Lord Glendale roared with anger and disappointment.
-
-"Oh, Master Archie," cried Branson, "you shouldn't have done that!"
-
-Now the play began in earnest. Away went Archie on Scallowa, and
-after him tore the bull. Archie's notion was to tire the brute out,
-and there was some very pretty riding and manoeuvring between the two
-belligerents. Perhaps the bull was all too young to be easily tired,
-for the charges he made seemed to increase in fierceness each time,
-but Archie easily eluded him.
-
-Branson drove the cattle towards the pen, and got them inside, then
-he and his men concentrated all their attention on the combatants.
-
-"The boy'll be killed as sure as a gun!" cried the keeper. Archie
-did not think so, evidently; and it is certain he had his wits about
-him, for presently he rode near enough to shout:
-
-"Ease up a hurdle from the back of the pen, and stand by to open it
-as I ride through."
-
-The plan was a bold one, and Branson saw through it at once.
-
-Down he ran with his men, and a back hurdle was loosened.
-
-"All right!" he shouted.
-
-And now down thundered Scallowa and Archie, the bull making a
-beautiful second.
-
-In a minute or less he had entered the pen, but this very moment the
-style of the fight changed somewhat; for had not the attention of
-everyone been riveted on the race, they might have seen the great
-Newfoundland dashing over the field, and just as Lord Glendale was
-entering the pen, Bounder pinned him short by the tail.
-
-The brute roared with pain and wheeled round. Meanwhile Archie had
-escaped on the pony, and the back hurdle was put up again. But how
-about the new phase the fight had taken?
-
-Once more the boy's quick-wittedness came to the front. He leapt off
-the pony and back into the pen, calling aloud, "Bounder! Bounder!
-Bounder!"
-
-In rushed the obedient dog, and after him came the bull; up went the
-hurdle, and off went Archie! But, alas! for the unlucky Bounder. He
-was tossed right over into the field a moment afterwards, bleeding
-frightfully from a wound in his side.
-
-To all appearance Bounder was dead. In an agony of mind the boy
-tried to staunch the blood with his handkerchief; and when at last
-the poor dog lifted his head, and licked his young master's face, the
-relief to his feelings was so great that he burst into tears. Archie
-was only a boy after all, though a bold and somewhat mischievous one.
-
-Bounder now drank water brought from a stream in a hat. He tried to
-get up, but was too weak to walk so he was lifted on to Scallowa's
-broad back and held there, and thus they all returned to Burley Old
-Farm.
-
-So ended the adventure with the baby-bull of Chillingham. The ring
-was put in his nose next day, and I hope it did not hurt much. But
-old Kate had Bounder as a patient in the kitchen corner for three
-whole weeks.
-
-* * * * * *
-
-A day or two after the above adventure, and just as the Squire was
-putting on his coat in the hall, who should march up to the door and
-knock but Harry Brown himself.
-
-Most boys would have gone to the backdoor, but shyness was not one of
-Harry's failings.
-
-"'Ullo!" he said; for the door opened almost on the instant he
-knocked, "Yer don't take long to hopen to a chap then."
-
-"No," said Squire Broadbent, smiling down on the lad; "fact is, boy,
-I was just going out."
-
-"Going for a little houting, hey? I s'pose now you're Johnnie's
-guv'nor?"
-
-"I think I know whom you refer to. Master Archie, isn't it? and
-you're the little London lad?"
-
-"I don't know nuffink about no Harchies. P'r'aps it is Harchibald.
-But I allers calls my friends wot they looks like. He looks like
-Johnnie. Kinsevently, guv'nor, he _is_ Johnnie to me. D' ye twig?"
-
-"I think I do," said Squire Broadbent, laughing; "and you want to see
-my boy?"
-
-"Vot I vants is this 'ere. Johnnie is a rare game un. 'Scuse me,
-guv'nor, but Johnnie's got the grit in him, and I vant to say
-good-bye; nuffink else, guv'nor."
-
-Here Harry actually condescended to point a finger at his lip by way
-of salute, and just at the same moment Archie himself came round the
-corner. He looked a little put out, but his father only laughed, and
-he saw it was all right.
-
-These were Harry's last words:
-
-"Good-bye, then. You've got the grit in ye, Johnnie. And if hever
-ye vants a friend, telegraph to 'Arry Brown, Esq., of Vitechapel,
-'cos ye know, Johnnie, the king may come in the cadger's vay. Adoo.
-So long, Blue-lights, and hoff we goes."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-"_THEY'RE UP TO SOME BLACK WORK TO-NIGHT._"
-
-Another summer flew all too fast away at Burley Old Farm and Castle
-Tower. The song of birds was hushed in the wild woods, even the
-corn-crake had ceased its ventriloquistic notes, and the plaintive
-wee lilt of the yellow-hammer was heard no more. The corn grew ripe
-on braeland and field, was cut down, gathered, stocked, and finally
-carted away. The swallows flew southwards, but the peewits remained
-in droves, and the starlings took up their abode with the sheep.
-Squires and sturdy farmers might now have been met tramping, gun in
-hand, over the stubble, through the dark green turnip-fields, and
-over the distant moorlands, where the crimson heather still bloomed
-so bonnie.
-
-Anon, the crisp leaves, through which the wind now swept with harsher
-moan, began to change to yellows, crimsons, and all the hues of
-sunset, and by-and-by it was hunting-time again.
-
-Archie was unusually thoughtful one night while the family sat, as of
-yore, round the low fire in the green parlour, Elsie and Rupert being
-busy in their corner over a game of chess.
-
-"In a brown study, Archie?" said his mother.
-
-"No, mummie; that is, Yes, I was thinking----"
-
-"Wonders will never cease," said Rupert, without looking up. Archie
-looked towards him, but his brother only smiled at the chessmen. The
-boy was well enough now to joke and laugh. Best of signs and most
-hopeful.
-
-"I was thinking that my legs are almost too long now to go to the
-meet on poor Scallowa. Not that Scallowa would mind. But don't you
-think, mummie dear, that a long boy on a short pony looks odd?"
-
-"A little, Archie."
-
-"Well, why couldn't father let me have Tell to-morrow? He is not
-going out himself."
-
-His father was reading the newspaper, but he looked at Archie over
-it. Though only his eyes were visible, the boy knew he was smiling.
-
-"If you think you won't break your neck," he said, "you may take
-Tell."
-
-"Oh," Archie replied, "I'm quite sure I won't break my neck!"
-
-The Squire laughed now outright.
-
-"You mean you _might_ break Tell's, eh?"
-
-"Well, dad, I didn't _say_ that."
-
-"No, Archie, but you _thought_ it."
-
-"I'm afraid, dad, the emphasis fell on the wrong word."
-
-"Never mind, Archie, where the emphasis falls; but if you let Tell
-fall the emphasis will fall where you won't like it."
-
-"All right, dad, I'll chance the emphasis. Hurrah!"
-
-The Squire and Mr. Walton went off early next day to a distant town,
-and Branson had orders to bring Tell round to the hall door at nine
-sharp; which he did. The keeper was not groom, but he was the
-tallest man about, and Archie thought he would want a leg up.
-
-Archie's mother was there, and Elsie, and Rupert, and did Kate, and
-little Peter, to say nothing of Bounder and Fuss, all to see "t'
-young Squire mount." But no one expected the sight they did see when
-Archie appeared; for the lad's sense of fun and the ridiculous was
-quite irrepressible. And the young rascal had dressed himself from
-top to toe in his father's hunting-rig--boots, cords, red coat, hat,
-and all complete. Well, as the boots were a mile and a half too big
-for him--more or less, and the breeches and coat would have held at
-least three Archie Broadbents, while the hat nearly buried his head,
-you may guess what sort of a guy he looked. Bounder drew back and
-barked at him. Old Kate turned her old eyes cloudwards, and held up
-her palms. Branson for politeness' sake tried not to laugh; but it
-was too much, he went off at last like a soda-water cork, and the
-merriment rippled round the ring like wild-fire. Even poor Rupert
-laughed till the tears came. Then back into the house ran Archie,
-and presently re-appeared dressed in his own velvet suit.
-
-But Archie had not altogether cooled down yet. He had come to the
-conclusion that having an actual leg up, was not an impressive way of
-getting on to his hunter; so after kissing his mother, and asking
-Rupert to kiss Elsie for him, he bounded at one spring to Branson's
-shoulder, and from this elevation bowed and said "good morning," then
-let himself neatly down to the saddle.
-
-"Tally ho! Yoi--cks!" he shouted. Then clattered down the avenue,
-cleared the low, white gate, and speedily disappeared across the
-fields.
-
-Archie had promised himself a rare day's run, and he was not
-disappointed. The fox was an old one and a wily one--and, I might
-add, a very gentlemanly old fox--and he led the field one of the
-prettiest dances that Dawson, the greyest-headed huntsman in the
-North, ever remembered; but there was no kill. No; Master Reynard
-knew precisely where he was going, and got home all right, and went
-quietly to sleep as soon as the pack drew off.
-
-The consequence was that Archie found himself still ten miles from
-home as gloaming was deepening into night. Another hour he thought
-would find him at Burley Old Farm. But people never know what is
-before them, especially hunting people.
-
-It had been observed by old Kate, that after Archie left in the
-morning, Bounder seemed unusually sad. He refused his breakfast, and
-behaved so strangely that the superstitious dame was quite alarmed.
-
-"I'll say naething to the ladies," she told one of the servants,
-"but, woe is me! I fear that something awfu' is gain tae happen. I
-houp the young laddie winna brak his neck. He rode awa' sae
-daft-like. He is just his faither a' ower again."
-
-Bounder really had something on his mind; for dogs do think far more
-than we give them credit for. Well, the Squire was off, and also Mr.
-Walton, and now his young master had flown. What did it mean? Why
-he would find out before he was many hours older. So ran Bounder's
-cogitations.
-
-To think was to act with Bounder; so up he jumped, and off he
-trotted. He followed the scent for miles; then he met an errant
-collie, and forgetting for a time all about his master, he went off
-with him. There were many things to be done, and Bounder was not in
-a hurry. They chased cows and sheep together merely for mischief's
-sake; they gave chase to some rabbits, and when the bunnies took to
-their holes, they spent hours in a vain attempt to dig them out. The
-rabbits knew they could never succeed, so they quietly washed their
-faces and laughed at them.
-
-They tired at last, and with their heads and paws covered with mould,
-commenced to look for mice among the moss. They came upon a wild
-bees' home in a bank, and tore this up, killing the inmates bee by
-bee as they scrambled out wondering what the racket meant. They
-snapped at the bees who were returning home, and when both had their
-lips well stung they concluded to leave the hive alone. Honey wasn't
-very nice after all, they said. At sunset they bathed in a mill-dam
-and swam about till nearly dusk, because the miller's boy was
-obliging enough to throw in sticks for them. Then the miller's boy
-fell in himself, and Bounder took him out and laid him on the bank to
-drip, neither knowing nor caring that he had saved a precious life.
-But the miller's boy's mother appeared on the scene and took the
-weeping lad away, inviting the dogs to follow. She showered
-blessings on their heads, especially on "the big black one's," as the
-urchin called Bounder, and she put bread and milk before them and
-bade them eat. The dogs required no second bidding, and just as
-Bounder was finishing his meal the sound of hoofs was heard on the
-road, and out bounced Bounder, the horse swerved, the rider was
-thrown, and the dog began to wildly lick his face.
-
-"So it's you, is it, Bounder?" said Archie. "A nice trick. And now
-I'll have to walk home a good five miles."
-
-Bounder backed off and barked. Why did his master go off and leave
-him then? That is what the dog was saying.
-
-"Come on, boy," said Archie. "There's no help for it; but I do feel
-stiff."
-
-They could go straight over the hill, and through the fields and the
-wood, that was one consolation.
-
-So off they set, and Archie soon forgot his stiffness and warmed to
-his work.
-
-Bounder followed close to his heels, as if he were a very old and a
-very wise dog indeed; and harrying bees' hives, or playing with
-millers' boys, could find no place in his thoughts.
-
-Archie lost his way once or twice, and it grew quite dark. He was
-wondering what he should do when he noticed a light spring up not far
-away, and commenced walking towards it. It came from the little
-window of a rustic cottage, and the boy knew at once now in which way
-to steer.
-
-Curiosity, however, impelled him to draw near to the window. He gave
-just one glance in, but very quickly drew back. Sitting round a
-table was a gang of half a dozen poachers. He knew them as the worst
-and most notorious evil-doers in all the country round. They were
-eating and drinking, and guns stood in the corners, while the men
-themselves seemed ready to be off somewhere.
-
-Away went Archie. He wanted no nearer acquaintance with a gang like
-that.
-
-In his way home he had to pass Bob Cooper's cottage, and thought he
-might just look in, because Bob had a whole book of new flies getting
-ready for him, and perhaps they were done.
-
-Bob was out, and his mother was sitting reading the good Book by the
-light of a little black oil lamp. She looked very anxious, and said
-she felt so. Her laddie had "never said where he was going. Only
-just went away out, and hadn't come back."
-
-It was Archie's turn now to be anxious, when he thought of the gang,
-and the dark work they might be after. Bob was not among them, but
-who could tell that he would not join afterwards?
-
-He bade the widow "Good-night," and went slowly homewards thinking.
-
-He found everyone in a state of extreme anxiety. Hours ago Tell had
-galloped to his stable door, and if there be anything more calculated
-to raise alarm than another, it is the arrival at his master's place
-of a riderless horse.
-
-But Archie's appearance, alive and intact, dispelled the cloud, and
-dinner was soon announced.
-
-"Oh, by the way," said Archie's tutor, as they were going towards the
-dining-room, "your old friend Bob Cooper has been here, and wants to
-see you! I think he is in the kitchen now."
-
-Away rushed Archie, and sure enough there was Bob eating supper in
-old Kate's private room.
-
-He got up as Archie's entered, and looked shy, as people of his class
-do at times.
-
-Archie was delighted.
-
-"I brought the flies, and some new sorts that I think will do for the
-Kelpie burn," he said.
-
-"Well, I'm going to dine, Bob; you do the same. Don't go till I see
-you. How long have you been here?"
-
-"Two hours, anyhow."
-
-When Archie returned he invited Bob to the room in the Castle Tower.
-Kate must come too, and Branson with his fiddle.
-
-Away went Archie and his rough friend, and were just finishing a long
-debate about flies and fishing when Kate and Peter, and Branson and
-Bounder, came up the turret stairs and entered the room.
-
-Archie then told them all of what he had seen that night at the
-cottage.
-
-"Mark my words for it," said Bob, shaking his head, "they're up to
-some black work to-night."
-
-"You mustn't go yet awhile, Bob," Archie said. "We'll have some fun,
-and you're as well where you are."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-_IN THE WIDOW'S LONELY HUT._
-
-Bob Cooper bade Archie and Branson good-bye that night at the bend of
-the road, some half mile from his own home, and trudged sturdily on
-in the starlight. There was sufficient light "to see men as trees
-walking."
-
-"My mother'll think I'm out in th' woods," Bob said to himself.
-"Well, she'll be glad when she knows she's wrong this time."
-
-Once or twice he started, and looked cautiously, half-fearfully,
-round him; for he felt certain he saw dark shadows in the field close
-by, and heard the stealthy tread of footsteps.
-
-He grasped the stout stick he carried all the firmer, for the poacher
-had made enemies of late by separating himself from a well-known gang
-of his old associates--men who, like the robbers in the ancient
-ballad--
-
- "Slept all day and waked all night,
- And kept the country round in fright."
-
-
-On he went; and the strange, uncomfortable feeling at his heart was
-dispelled as, on rounding a corner of the road, he saw the light
-glinting cheerfully from his mother's cottage.
-
-"Poor old creature," he murmured half aloud, "many a sore heart I've
-given her. But I'll be a better boy now. I'll----"
-
-"Now, lads," shouted a voice, "have at him!"
-
-"Back!" cried Bob Cooper, brandishing his cudgel. "Back, or it'll be
-worse for you!"
-
-The dark shadows made a rush. Bob struck out with all his force, and
-one after another fell beneath his arm. But a blow from behind
-disabled him at last, and down he went, just as his distracted mother
-came rushing, lantern in hand, from her hut. There was the sharp
-click of the handcuffs, and Bob Cooper was a prisoner. The
-lantern-light fell on the uniforms of policemen.
-
-"What is it? Oh, what has my laddie been doin'?"
-
-"Murder, missus, or something very like it! There has been dark
-doin's in th' hill to-night!"
-
-Bob grasped the nearest policeman by the arm with his manacled hands.
-
-"When--when did ye say it had happened?"
-
-"You know too well, lad. Not two hours ago. Don't sham innocence;
-it sits but ill on a face like yours."
-
-"Mother," cried Bob bewilderingly, "I know nothing of it! I'm
-innocent!"
-
-But his mother heard not his words. She had fainted, and with rough
-kindness was carried into the hut and laid upon the bed. When she
-revived some what they left her.
-
-It was a long, dismal ride the unhappy man had that night; and indeed
-it was well on in the morning before the party with their prisoner
-reached the town of B----.
-
-Bob's appearance before a magistrate was followed almost instantly by
-his dismissal to the cells again. The magistrate knew him. The
-police had caught him "red-handed," so they said, and had only
-succeeded in making him prisoner "after a fierce resistance."
-
-"Remanded for a week," without being allowed to say one word in his
-own defence.
-
-The policeman's hint to Bob's mother about "dark doin's in th' hill"
-was founded on fearful facts. A keeper had been killed after a
-terrible melée with the gang of poachers, and several men had been
-severely wounded on both sides.
-
-The snow-storm that came on early on the morning after poor Bob
-Cooper's capture was one of the severest ever remembered in
-Northumbria. The frost was hard too all day long. The snow fell
-incessantly, and lay in drifts like cliffs, fully seven feet high,
-across the roads.
-
-The wind blew high, sweeping the powdery snow hither and thither in
-gusts. It felt for all the world like going into a cold shower-bath
-to put one's head even beyond the threshold of the door. Nor did the
-storm abate even at nightfall; but next day the wind died down, and
-the face of the sky became clear, only along the southern horizon the
-white clouds were still massed like hills and cliffs.
-
-It was not until the afternoon that news reached Burley Old Farm of
-the fight in the woods and death of the keeper. It was a sturdy old
-postman who had brought the tidings. He had fought his way through
-the snow with the letters, and his account of the battle had
-well-nigh caused old Kate to swoon away. When Mary, the little
-parlour-maid, carried the mail in to her master she did not hesitate
-to relate what she had heard.
-
-Squire Broadbent himself with Archie repaired to the kitchen, and
-found the postman surrounded by the startled servants, who were
-drinking in every word he said.
-
-"One man killed, you say, Allan?"
-
-"Ay, sir, killed dead enough. And it's a providence they caught the
-murderer. Took him up, sir, just as he was a-goin' into his mother's
-house, as cool as a frosted turnip, sir."
-
-"Well, Allan, that is satisfactory. And what is his name?"
-
-"Bob Cooper, sir, known all over the----"
-
-"Bob Cooper!" cried Archie aghast. "Why, father, he was in our room
-in the turret at the time."
-
-"So he was," said the Squire. "Taken on suspicion I suppose. But
-this must be seen to at once. Bad as we know Bob to have been, there
-is evidence enough that he has reformed of late. At all events, he
-shall not remain an hour in gaol on such a charge longer than we can
-help."
-
-Night came on very soon that evening. The clouds banked up again,
-the snow began to fall, and the wind moaned round the old house and
-castle in a way that made one feel cold to the marrow even to listen
-to.
-
-Morning broke slowly at last, and Archie was early astir. Tell, with
-the Shetland pony and a huge great hunter, were brought to the door,
-and shortly after breakfast the party started for B----.
-
-Branson bestrode the big hunter--he took the lead--and after him came
-the Squire on Tell, and Archie on Scallowa. This daft little horse
-was in fine form this morning, having been in stall for several days.
-He kept up well with the hunters, though there were times that both
-he and his rider were all but buried in the gigantic wreaths that lay
-across the road. Luckily the wind was not high, else no living thing
-could long have faced that storm.
-
-* * * * * *
-
-The cottage in which widow Cooper had lived ever since the death of
-her husband was a very primitive and a very poor one. It consisted
-only of two rooms, what are called in Scotland "a butt and a ben."
-Bob had been only a little barefooted boy when his father died, and
-probably hardly missed him. He had been sent regularly to school
-before then, but not since, for his mother had been unable to give
-him further education. All their support was the morsel of garden, a
-pig or two, and the fowls, coupled with whatever the widow could make
-by knitting ribbed stockings for the farmer folks around. Bob grew
-up wild, just as the birds and beasts of the hills and woods do.
-While, however, he was still a little mite of a chap, the keepers
-even seldom molested him. It was only natural, they thought, for a
-boy to act the part of a squirrel or polecat, and to be acquainted
-with every bird's nest and rabbit's burrow within a radius of miles.
-When he grew a little older and a trifle bigger they began to warn
-him off, and when one day he was met marching away with a cap full of
-pheasant's eggs, he received as severe a drubbing as ever a lad got
-at the hands of a gamekeeper.
-
-Bob had grown worse instead of better after this. The keepers became
-his sworn enemies, and there was a spice of danger and adventure in
-vexing and outwitting them.
-
-Unfortunately, in spite of all his mother said to the contrary, Bob
-was firmly impressed with the notion that game of every kind, whether
-fur or feather, belonged as much to him as to the gentry who tried to
-preserve them. The fresh air was free; nobody dared to claim the
-sunshine. Then why the wild birds, and the hares and rabbits?
-
-Evil company corrupts good manners. That is what his copy-book used
-to tell him. But Bob soon learned to laugh at that, and it is no
-wonder that as he reached manhood his doings and daring as a poacher
-became noted far and near.
-
-He was beyond the control of his mother. She could only advise him,
-read to him, pray for him; but I fear in vain. Only be it known that
-Bob Cooper really loved this mother of his, anomalous though it may
-seem.
-
-Well, the keepers had been very harsh with him, and the gentry were
-harsh with him, and eke the law itself. Law indeed! Why Bob was all
-but an outlaw, so intense was his hatred to, and so great his
-defiance of the powers that be.
-
-It was strange that what force could not effect, a few soft words
-from Branson, and Archie's gift of the hare he had shot on his
-birthday, brought about. Bob Cooper's heart could not have been
-wholly adamantine, therefore he began to believe that after all a
-game-keeper might be a good fellow, and that there might even exist
-gentlefolks whose chief delight was not the oppression of the poor.
-He began after that to seek for honest work; but, alas! people looked
-askance at him, and he found that the path of virtue was one not
-easily regained when once deviated from.
-
-His quondam enemy, however, Branson, spoke many a good word for him,
-and Bob was getting on, much to his mother's delight and
-thankfulness, when the final and crashing blow fell.
-
-Poor old widow Cooper! For years and years she had but two comforts
-in this world; one was her Bible, and the other--do not smile when I
-tell you--was her pipie.
-
-Oh! you know, the poor have not much to make them happy and to cheer
-their loneliness, so why begrudge the widow her morsel of tobacco?
-
-In the former she learned to look forward to another and a better
-world, far beyond that bit of blue sky she could see at the top of
-her chimney on a summer's night--a world where everything would be
-bright and joyful, where there would be no vexatious rheumatism, no
-age, and neither cold nor care. From the latter she drew sweet
-forgetfulness of present trouble, and happy recollections of bygone
-years.
-
-Sitting there by the hearth all alone--her son perhaps away on the
-hill--her thoughts used often-times to run away with her. Once more
-she would be young, once again her hair was a bonnie brown, her form
-little and graceful, roses mantling in her cheeks, soft light in her
-eyes. And she is wandering through the tasselled broom with David by
-her side. "David! Heigho!" she would sigh as she shook the ashes
-from her pipie. "Poor David! it seems a long, long time since he
-left me for the better land," and the sunlight would stream down the
-big, open chimney and fall upon her skinny hands--fall upon the
-elfin-like locks that escaped from beneath her cap--fall, too, on the
-glittering pages of the Book on her lap like a promise of better
-things to come.
-
-Before that sad night, when, while sitting up waiting for her son,
-she was startled by the sudden noise of the struggle that commenced
-at her door, she thought she had reason to be glad and thankful for
-the softening of her hoy's heart.
-
-Then all her joy collapsed, her hopes collapsed--fell around her like
-a house of cards. It was a cruel, a terrible blow.
-
-The policeman had carried her in, laid her on the bed with a rough
-sort of kindness, made up the fire, then gone out and thought no more
-about her.
-
-How she had spent the night need hardly be said; it is better
-imagined. She had dropped asleep at last, and when she awoke from
-fevered dreams it was daylight out of doors, but darkness in the hut.
-The window and door were snowed up, and only a faint pale light
-shimmered in through the chimney, falling on the fireless hearth--a
-dismal sight.
-
-Many times that day she had tried to rise, but all in vain. The cold
-grew more intense as night drew on, and it did its work on the poor
-widow's weakened frame. Her dreams grew more bright and happy
-though, as her body became numbed and insensible. It was as though
-the spirit were rejoicing in its coming freedom. But dreams left her
-at last. Then all was still in the house, save the ticking of the
-old clock that hung against the wall.
-
-The Squire speedily effected Bob Cooper's freedom, and he felt he had
-really done a good thing.
-
-"Now, Robert," he told him, "you have had a sad experience. Let it
-be a lesson to you. I'll give you a chance. Come to Burley, and
-Branson will find you honest work as long as you like to do it."
-
-"Lord love you, sir!" cried Bob. "There are few gentry like you."
-
-"I don't know so much about that, Robert. You are not acquainted
-with all the good qualities of gentlefolks yet. But now, Branson,
-how are we all to get home?"
-
-"Oh, I know!" said Archie. "Scallowa can easily bear Branson's
-weight, and I will ride the big hunter along with Bob."
-
-So this was arranged.
-
-It was getting gloamed ere they neared the widow's lonesome hut. The
-Squire with Branson had left Archie and Bob, and cut across the
-frozen moor by themselves.
-
-"How glad my mother will be!" said Bob.
-
-And now they came in sight of the cottage, and Bob rubbed his eyes
-and looked again and again, for no smoke came from the chimney, no
-signs of life was about.
-
-The icicles hung long and strong from the eaves, one side of the hut
-was entirely overblown with drift, and the door in the other looked
-more like the entrance to some cave in Greenland north. Bad enough
-this was; but ah, in the inside of the poor little house the driven
-snow met them as they pushed open the door! It had blown down the
-wide chimney, covered the hearth, formed a wreath like a sea-wave on
-the floor, and even o'er-canopied the bed itself. And the widow, the
-mother, lay underneath. No, not dead; she breathed, at least.
-
-[Illustration: "The icicles hung long and strong from the eaves; and
-the door looked more like the entrance to some cave in Greenland
-north. Bad enough this was; but ah, in the inside of the poor little
-house the driven snow met them as they pushed open the door!"]
-
-When the room had been cleared and swept of snow; when a roaring fire
-had been built on the hearth, and a little warm tea poured gently
-down her throat, she came gradually back again to life, and in a
-short time was able to be lifted into a sitting position, and then
-she recognized her son and Archie.
-
-"Oh, mother, mother!" cried Bob, the tears streaming over his
-sun-browned face, "the Maker'll never forgive me for all the ill I've
-done ye."
-
-"Hush! Bobbie, hush! What, lad, the Maker no' forgive ye! Eh, ye
-little know the grip o' His goodness! But you're here, you're
-innocent. Thank Him for that."
-
-"Ye'll soon get better, mother, and I'll be so good. The Squire is
-to give me work too."
-
-"It's o'er late for me," she said. "I'd like to live to see it, but
-His will be done."
-
-Archie rode home the giant hunter, but in two hours he was once more
-mounted on Scallowa, and feathering back through the snow towards the
-little cottage. The moon had risen now, and the night was starry and
-fine. He tied Scallowa up in the peat shed, and went in unannounced.
-
-He found Bob Cooper sitting before the dying embers of the fire, with
-his face buried in his hands, and rocking himself to and fro.
-
-"She--just blessed me and wore away."
-
-That was all he said or could say. And what words of comfort could
-Archie speak? None. He sat silently beside him all that livelong
-night, only getting up now and then to replenish the fire. But the
-poacher scarcely ever changed his position, only now and then he
-stretched out one of his great hands and patted Archie's knee as one
-would pet a dog.
-
-A week passed away, and the widow was laid to rest beneath the frozen
-ground in the little churchyard by the banks of the river. Archie
-went slowly back with Bob towards the cottage. On their way thither,
-the poacher--poacher now no more though--entered a plantation, and
-with his hunting-knife cut and fashioned a rough ash stick.
-
-"We'll say good-bye here, Master Archie."
-
-"What! You are not going back with me to Burley Old Farm?"
-
-Bob took a small parcel from his pocket, and opening it exposed the
-contents.
-
-"Do you know them, Master Archie?"
-
-"Yes, your poor mother's glasses."
-
-"Ay, lad, and as long as I live I'll keep them. And till my dying
-day, Archie, I'll think on you, and your kindness to poor poacher
-Bob. No, I'm not goin' back to Burley, and I'm not going to the
-cottage again. I'm going away. Where? I couldn't say. Here,
-quick, shake hands, friend. Let it be over. Good-bye."
-
-"Good-bye."
-
-And away went Bob. He stopped when a little way off, and turned as
-if he had forgotten something.
-
-"Archie!" he cried.
-
-"Yes, Bob."
-
-"Take care of my mother's cat."
-
-Next minute he leapt a fence, and disappeared in the pine wood.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-_THE WHOLE YARD WAS ABLAZE AND BURNING FIERCELY._
-
-One year is but a brief span in the history of a family, yet it may
-bring many changes. It did to Burley Old Farm, and some of them were
-sad enough, though some were glad. A glad change took place for
-instance in the early spring, after Bob's departure; for Rupert
-appeared to wax stronger and stronger with the lengthening days; and
-when Uncle Ramsay, in a letter received one morning, announced his
-intention of coming from London, and making quite a long stay at
-Burley, Rupert declared his intention of mounting Scallowa, and
-riding over to the station to meet him. And the boy was as good as
-his word. In order that they might be both cavaliers together, Uncle
-Ramsay hired a horse at D----, and the two rode joyfully home side by
-side.
-
-His mother did not like to see that carmine flush on Rupert's cheeks,
-however, nor the extra dark sparkle in his eyes when he entered the
-parlour to announce his uncle's arrival, but she said nothing.
-
-Uncle Ramsay Broadbent was a brother of the Squire, and, though
-considerably older, a good deal like him in all his ways. There was
-the same dash and go in him, and the same smiling front, unlikely to
-be dismayed by any amount of misfortune.
-
-"There are a deal of ups and downs in the ocean of life," Archie
-heard him say one day; "we're on the top of a big wave one hour, and
-in the trough of the sea next, so we must take things as they come."
-
-Yes, this uncle was a seafarer; the skipper of a sturdy merchantman
-that he had sailed in for ten long years. He did not care to be
-called captain by anyone. He was a master mariner, and had an
-opinion, which he often expressed, that plain "Mr." was a gentleman's
-prefix.
-
-"I shan't go back to sea again," he said next morning at breakfast.
-
-"Fact is, brother, my owners think I'm getting too old. And maybe
-they're right. I've had a fair innings, and it is only fair to give
-the young ones a chance."
-
-Uncle Ramsay seemed to give new life and soul to the old place. He
-settled completely down to the Burley style of life long before the
-summer was half over. He joined the servants in the fields, and
-worked with them as did the Squire, Walton, and Archie. And though
-more merriment went on in consequence, there was nevertheless more
-work done. He took an interest in all the boys' "fads," spent hours
-with them in their workshop, and made one in every game that was
-played on the grass. He was dreadfully awkward at cricket and tennis
-however; for such games as these are but little practised by sailors.
-Only he was right willing to learn.
-
-There was a youthfulness and breeziness about Uncle Ramsay's every
-action, that few save seafarers possess when hair is turning white.
-Of course, the skipper spent many a jolly hour up in the room of the
-Castle Tower, and he did not object either to the presence of old
-Kate in the chair. He listened like a boy when she told her weird
-stories; and he listened more like a baby than anything else when
-Branson played his fiddle.
-
-Then he himself would spin them a yarn, and hold them all enthralled,
-especially big-eyed Elsie, with the sterling reality and graphicness
-of the narrative.
-
-When Uncle Ramsay spoke you could see the waves in motion, hear the
-scream of the birds around the stern, or the wind roaring through the
-rigging. He spoke as he thought; he painted from life.
-
-Well, the arrival of Uncle Ramsay and Rupert's getting strong were
-two of the pleasant changes that took place at Burley in this
-eventful year. Alas! I have to chronicle the sad ones also. Yet
-why sigh? To use Uncle Ramsay's own words, "You never know what a
-ship is made of until stormy seas are around you."
-
-First then came a bad harvest--a terribly bad harvest. It was not
-that the crops themselves were so very light, but the weather was
-cold and wet; the grain took long to ripen. The task of cutting it
-down was unfortunately an easy one, but the getting it stored was
-almost an impossibility. At the very time when it was ripe, and
-after a single fiercely hot day, a thunder-storm came on, and with it
-such hail as the oldest inhabitant in the parish could not remember
-having seen equalled. This resulted in the total loss of far more of
-the precious seed, than would have sown all the land of Burley twice
-over.
-
-The wet continued. It rained and rained every day and when it rained
-it poured.
-
-The Squire had heard of a Yankee invention for drying wheat under
-cover, and rashly set about a rude but most expensive imitation
-thereof. He first mentioned the matter to Uncle Ramsay at the
-breakfast-table. The Squire seemed in excellent spirits that
-morning. He was walking briskly up and down the room rubbing his
-hands, as if in deep but pleasant thought, when his brother came
-quietly in.
-
-"Hullo! you lazy old sea-dog. Why you'd lie in your bed till the sun
-burned a hole in the blanket. Now just look at me."
-
-"I'm just looking at you."
-
-"Well, I've been up for hours. I'm as hungry as a Caithness
-Highlander. And I've got an idea."
-
-"I thought there was something in the wind."
-
-"Guess."
-
-"Guess, indeed! Goodness forbid I should try. But I say, brother,"
-continued Uncle Ramsay, laughing, "couldn't you manage to fall asleep
-somewhere out of doors, like the man in the story, and wake up and
-find yourself a king? My stars, wouldn't we have reforms as long as
-your reign lasted! The breakfast, Mary? Ah, that's the style!"
-
-"You won't be serious and listen, I suppose, Ramsay."
-
-"Oh, yes; I will."
-
-"Well, the Americans----"
-
-"The Americans again; but go on."
-
-"The Americans, in some parts where I've been, wouldn't lose a straw
-in a bad season. It is all done by means of great fanners and heated
-air, you know. Now, I'm going to show these honest Northumbrian
-farmers a thing or two. I----"
-
-"I say, brother, hadn't you better trust to Providence, and wait for
-a fair wind?"
-
-"Now, Ramsay, that's where you and I differ. You're a slow Moses. I
-want to move ahead a trifle in front of the times. I've been looking
-all over the dictionary of my daily life, and I can't find such a
-word as 'wait' in it."
-
-"Let me give you some of this steak, brother."
-
-"My plan of operations, Ramsay, is----"
-
-"Why," said Mrs. Broadbent, "you haven't eaten anything yet!"
-
-"I thought," said Uncle Ramsay, "you were as hungry as a Tipperary
-Highlander, or some such animal."
-
-"My plan, Ramsay, is----" &c. &c.
-
-The two "&c. &c.'s" in the last line stand for all the rest of the
-honest Squire's speech, which, as his sailor brother said, was as
-long as the logline. But for all his hunger he made but a poor
-breakfast, and immediately after he jumped up and hurried away to the
-barn-yards.
-
-It was a busy time for the next two weeks at Burley Old Farm, but, to
-the Squire's credit be it said, he was pretty successful with his
-strange operation of drying wheat independent of the sun. His ricks
-were built, and he was happy--happy as long as he thought nothing
-about the expense. But he did take an hour or two one evening to run
-through accounts, as he called it. Uncle Ramsay was with him.
-
-"Why, brother," said Ramsay, looking very serious now indeed, "you
-are terribly down to leeward--awfully out of pocket!"
-
-"Ah! never mind, Ramsay. One can't keep ahead of the times
-now-a-days, you know, without spending a little."
-
-"Spending a little! Where are your other books? Mr. Walton and I
-will have a look through them to-night, if you don't mind."
-
-"Not a bit, brother, not a bit. We're going to give a dance
-to-morrow night to the servants, so if you like to bother with the
-book-work I'll attend to the terpsichorean kick up."
-
-Mr. Walton and Uncle Ramsay had a snack in the office that evening
-instead of coming up to supper, and when Mrs. Broadbent looked in to
-say good-night she found them both quiet and hard at work.
-
-"I say, Walton," said Uncle Ramsay some time after, "this is serious.
-Draw near the fire and let us have a talk."
-
-"It is sad as well as serious," said Walton.
-
-"Had you any idea of it?"
-
-"Not the slightest. In fact I'm to blame, I think, for not seeing to
-the books before. But the Squire----"
-
-Walton hesitated.
-
-"I know my brother well," said Ramsay. "As good a fellow as ever
-lived, but as headstrong as a nor'-easter. And now he has been
-spending money on machinery to the tune of some ten thousand pounds.
-He has been growing crop after crop of wheat as if he lived on the
-prairies and the land was new; and he has really been putting as much
-down in seed, labour, and fashionable manures as he has taken off."
-
-"Yet," said Walton, "he is no fool."
-
-"No, not he; he is clever, too much so. But heaven send his pride,
-honest though it be, does not result in a fall."
-
-The two sat till long past twelve talking and planning, then they
-opened the casement and walked out on to the lawn. It was a lovely
-autumn night. The broad, round moon was high in the heavens,
-fighting its way through a sky of curdling clouds which greatly
-detracted from its radiance.
-
-"Look, Walton," said the sailor, "to windward; yonder it is all blue
-sky, by-and-by it will be a bright and lovely night."
-
-"By-and-by. Yes," sighed Walton.
-
-"But see! What is that down yonder rising white over the trees?
-Smoke! Why, Walton, the barnyards are all on fire!"
-
-Almost at the same moment Branson rushed upon the scene.
-
-"Glad you're up, gentlemen," he gasped. "Wake the Squire. The
-servants are all astir. We must save the beasts, come of everything
-else what will."
-
-The farm-steading of Burley was built in the usual square formation
-round a centre straw-yard, which even in winter was always kept so
-well filled that beasts might lie out all night. To the north were
-the stacks, and it was here the fire originated, and unluckily the
-wind blew from that direction. It was by no means high; but fire
-makes its own wind, and in less than half an hour the whole yard was
-ablaze and burning fiercely, while the byres, stables, and barns had
-all caught. From the very first these latter had been enveloped in
-dense rolling clouds of smoke, and sparks as thick as falling
-snowflakes, so that to save any of the live stock seemed almost an
-impossibility.
-
-With all his mania for machinery, and for improvements of every kind
-possible to apply to agriculture, it is indeed a wonder that the
-Squire had not established a fire brigade on his farm. But fire was
-an eventuality which he had entirely left out of his reckoning, and
-now there was really no means of checking the terrible conflagration.
-
-As soon as the alarm was given every one did what he could to save
-the live stock; but the smoke was blinding, maddening, and little
-could be done save taking the doors off their hinges.
-
-Who knows what prodigies of valour were performed that night by the
-humble cowmen even, in their attempts to drive the oxen and cows out,
-and away to a place of safety? In some instances, when they had
-nearly succeeded, the cattle blocked the doorways, or, having got out
-to the straw-yard, charged madly back again, and prevented the exit
-of their fellows. Thus several servants ran terrible risks to their
-lives.
-
-They were more successful in saving the horses, and this was greatly
-owing to Archie's presence of mind. He had dashed madly into the
-stable for his pet Scallowa. The Shetland pony had never looked more
-wild before. He sniffed the danger, he snorted and reared. All at
-once it occurred to Archie to mount and ride him out. No sooner had
-he got on his back than he came forth like a lamb. He took him to a
-field and let him free, and as he was hurrying back he met little
-Peter.
-
-"Come, Peter, come," he cried; "we can save the horses."
-
-The two of them rushed to the stable, and horse after horse was
-bridled and mounted by little Peter and ridden out.
-
-But a fearful hitch occurred. Tell, the Squire's hunter, backed
-against the stable door and closed it, thus imprisoning Archie, who
-found it impossible to open the door.
-
-The roof had already caught. The horses were screaming in terror,
-and rearing wildly against the walls.
-
-Peter rushed away to seek assistance. He met Branson, and in a word
-or two told him what had happened.
-
-Luckily axes were at hand, and sturdy volunteers speedily smashed the
-door in, and poor Archie, more dead than alive, with torn clothes and
-bleeding face, was dragged through.
-
-The scene after this must be left to imagination. But the Squire
-reverently and fervently thanked God when the shrieks of those
-fire-imprisoned cattle were hushed in death, and nothing was to be
-heard save the crackle and roar of the flames.
-
-The fire had lit up the countryside for miles around. The moonlight
-itself was bright, but within a certain radius the blazing farm cast
-shadows against it.
-
-Next morning stackyards, barnyards, farm-steading, machinery-house,
-and everything pertaining to Burley Old Farm, presented but a
-smouldering, blackened heap of ruins.
-
-Squire Broadbent entertained his poor, frightened people to an early
-breakfast in the servants' hall, and the most cheerful face there was
-that of the Squire. Here is his little speech:
-
-"My good folks, sit down and eat; and let us be thankful we're all
-here, and that no human lives are lost. My good kinswoman Kate here
-will tell you that there never yet was an ill but there might be a
-worse. Let us pray the worse may never come."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-"_AFTER ALL, IT DOESN'T TAKE MUCH TO MAKE A MAN HAPPY._"
-
-For weeks to come neither Uncle Ramsay nor Walton had the heart to
-add another sorrow to the Squire's cup of misery. They knew that the
-fire had but brought on a little sooner a catastrophe which was
-already falling; they knew that Squire Broadbent was virtually a
-ruined man.
-
-All the machinery had been rendered useless; the most of the cattle
-were dead; the stacks were gone; and yet, strange to say, the Squire
-hoped on. Those horses and cattle which had been saved were housed
-now in rudely-built sheds, among the fire-blackened ruins of their
-former wholesome stables and byres.
-
-One day Branson, who had always been a confidential servant, sent
-Mary in to say he wished to speak to the Squire. His master came out
-at once.
-
-"Nothing else, Branson," he said. "You carry a long face, man."
-
-"The wet weather and the cold have done their work, sir. Will you
-walk down with me to the cattle-sheds?"
-
-Arrived there, he pointed to a splendid fat ox, who stood in his
-stall before his untouched turnips with hanging head and dry, parched
-nose. His hot breath was visible when he threw his head now and then
-uneasily round towards his loin, as if in pain. There was a visible
-swelling on the rump. Branson placed a hand on it, and the Squire
-could hear it "bog" and crackle.
-
-"What is that, Branson? Has he been hurt?"
-
-"No, sir, worse. I'll show you."
-
-He took out his sharp hunting-knife.
-
-"It won't hurt the poor beast," he said.
-
-Then he cut deep into the swelling. The animal never moved. No
-blood followed the incision, but the gaping wound was black, and
-filled with air-bubbles.
-
-"The quarter-ill," said the cowman, who stood mournfully by.
-
-That ox was dead in a few hours. Another died next day, two the
-next, and so on, though not in an increasing ratio; but in a month
-there was hardly an animal alive about the place except the horses.
-
-It was time now the Squire should know all, and he did. He looked a
-chastened man when he came out from that interview with his brother
-and Walton. But he put a right cheery face on matters when he told
-his wife.
-
-"We'll have to retrench," he said. "It'll be a struggle for a time,
-but we'll get over it right enough."
-
-Present money, however, was wanted, and raised it must be.
-
-And now came the hardest blow the Squire had yet received. It was a
-staggering one, though he met it boldly. There was then at Burley
-Old Mansion a long picture gallery. It was a room in an upper story,
-and extended the whole length of the house--a hall in fact, and one
-that more than one Squire Broadbent had entertained his friends right
-royally in. From the walls not only did portraits of ancestors bold
-and gay, smile or frown down, but there hung there also many a
-splendid landscape and seascape by old masters.
-
-Most of the latter had to be sold, and the gallery was closed, for
-the simple reason that Squire Broadbent, courageous though he was,
-could not look upon its bare and desecrated walls without a feeling
-of sorrow.
-
-Pictures even from the drawing-room had to go also, and that room too
-was closed. But the breakfast-room, which opened to the lawn and
-rose gardens, where the wild birds sang so sweetly in summer, was
-left intact; so was the dining-room, and that cosy, wee green parlour
-in which the family delighted to assemble around the fire in the
-winter's evenings.
-
-Squire Broadbent had been always a favourite in the county--somewhat
-of an upstart and iconoclast though he was--so the sympathy he
-received was universal.
-
-Iconoclast? Yes, he had delighted in shivering the humble idols of
-others, and now his own were cast down. Nobody, however, deserted
-him. Farmers and Squires might have said among themselves that they
-always knew Broadbent was "going the pace," and that his new-fangled
-American notions were poorly suited to England, but in his presence
-they did all they could to cheer him.
-
-When the ploughing time came round they gave him what is called in
-the far North "a love-darg." Men with teams of horses came from
-every farm for miles around and tilled his ground. They had luncheon
-in a marquee, but they would not hear of stopping to dinner. They
-were indeed thoughtful and kind.
-
-The parson of the parish and the doctor were particular friends of
-the Squire. They often dropped in of an evening to talk of old times
-with the family by the fireside.
-
-"I'm right glad," the doctor said one evening, "to see that you don't
-lose heart, Squire."
-
-"Bless me, sir, why should I? To be sure we're poor now, but God has
-left us a deal of comfort, doctor, and, after all, it doesn't take
-much to make a man happy."
-
-* * * * * *
-
-Boys will be boys. Yes, we all know that. But there comes a time in
-the life of every right-thinking lad when another truth strikes home
-to him, that boys will be men.
-
-I rather think that the sooner a boy becomes cognisant of this fact
-the better. Life is not all a dream; it must sooner or later become
-a stern reality, life is not all pleasant parade and show, like a
-field-day at Aldershot; no, for sooner or later pomp and panoply have
-to be exchanged for camp-life and action, and bright uniforms are
-either rolled in blood and dust, or come triumphant, though
-tarnished, from the field of glory. Life is not all plain sailing
-over sunlit seas, for by-and-by the clouds bank up, storms come on,
-and the good ship has to do battle with wind and wave.
-
-But who would have it otherwise? No one would who possesses the
-slightest ray of honest ambition, or a single spark of that pride of
-self which we need not blush to own.
-
-One day, about the beginning of autumn, Rupert and Archie, and their
-sister Elsie, were in the room in the tower. They sat together in a
-turret chamber, Elsie gazing dreamily from the window at the
-beautiful scenery spread out beneath. The woods and wilds, the
-rolling hills, the silvery stream, the half-ripe grain moving in the
-wind, as waves at sea move, and the silvery sunshine over al. She
-was in a kind of a daydream, her fingers listlessly touching a chord
-on the harp now and then. A pretty picture she looked, too, with her
-bonnie brown hair, and her bonnie blue eyes, and thorough English
-face, thorough English beauty. Perhaps Archie had been thinking
-something of this sort as he sat there looking at her, while Rupert
-half-lay in the rocking-chair, which his brother had made for him,
-engrossed as usual in a book.
-
-Whether Archie did think thus or not, certain it is that presently he
-drew his chair close to his sister's, and laying one arm fondly on
-her shoulder.
-
-"What is sissie looking at?" he asked.
-
-"Oh, Archie," she replied, "I don't think I've been looking at
-anything; but I've been seeing everything and wishing!"
-
-"Wishing, Elsie? Well, you don't look merry. What were you wishing?"
-
-"I was wishing the old days were back again, when--when father was
-rich; before the awful fire came, and the plague, and everything. It
-has made us all old, I think. Wouldn't you like father was rich
-again?"
-
-"I am not certain; but wishes are not horses, you know."
-
-"No," said Elsie; "only if it could even be always like this, and if
-you and Rupert and I could be always as we are now. I think that,
-poor though we are, everything just now is so pretty and so pleasant.
-But you are going away to the university, and the place won't be the
-same. I shall get older faster than ever then."
-
-"Well, Elsie," said Archie, laughing, "I am so old that I am going to
-make my will."
-
-Rupert put down his book with a quiet smile.
-
-"What are you going to leave me, old man? Scallowa?"
-
-"No, Rupert, you're too long in the legs for Scallowa, you have no
-idea what a bodkin of a boy you are growing. Scallowa I will and
-bequeath to my pretty sister here, and I'll buy her a side-saddle,
-and two pennyworth of carrot seed. Elsie will also have Bounder, and
-you, Rupert, shall have Fuss."
-
-"Anything else for me?"
-
-"Don't be greedy. But I'll tell you. You shall have my tool-house,
-and all my tools, and my gun besides. Well, this room is to be
-sister's own, and she shall also have my fishing-rod, and the book of
-flies that poor Bob Cooper made for me. Oh, don't despise them, they
-are all wonders!"
-
-"Well really, Archie," said Elsie, "you talk as earnestly as if you
-actually were going to die."
-
-"Who said I was going to die? No, I don't mean to die till I've done
-much more mischief."
-
-"Hush! Archie."
-
-"Well, I'm hushed."
-
-"Why do you want to make your will?"
-
-"Oh, it isn't wanting to make my will! I am--I've done it. And the
-'why' is this, I'm going away."
-
-"To Oxford?"
-
-"No, Elsie, not to Oxford. I've got quite enough Latin and Greek out
-of Walton to last me all my life. I couldn't be a doctor; besides
-father is hardly rich enough to make me one at present. I couldn't
-be a doctor, and I'm not good enough to be a parson."
-
-"Archie, how you talk."
-
-There were tears in Elsie's eyes now.
-
-"I can't help it. I'm going away to enter life in a new land. Uncle
-Ramsay has told me all about Australia. He says the old country is
-used up, and fortunes can be made in a few years on the other side of
-the globe."
-
-There was silence in the turret for long minutes; the whispering of
-the wind in the elm trees beneath could be heard, the murmuring of
-the river, and far away in the woods the cawing of rooks.
-
-"Don't you cry, Elsie," said Archie. "I've been thinking about all
-this for some time, and my mind is made up. I'm going, Elsie, and I
-know it is for the best. You don't imagine for a single moment, do
-you, that I'll forget the dear old times, and you all? No, no, no.
-I'll think about you every night, and all day long, and I'll come
-back rich. You don't think that I won't make my fortune, do you?
-Because I mean to, and will. So there. Don't cry, Elsie."
-
-"I'm not going to cry, Archie," said Rupert.
-
-"Right, Rupert, you're a brick, as Branson says."
-
-"I'm not old enough," continued Rupert, "to give you my blessing,
-though I suppose Kate would give you hers; but----we'll all pray for
-you."
-
-"Well," said Archie thoughtfully, "that will help some."
-
-"Why, you silly boy, it will help a lot."
-
-"I wish I were as good as you, Rupert. But I'm just going to try
-hard to do my best, and I feel certain I'll be all right."
-
-"You know, Roup, how well I can play cricket, and how I often easily
-bowl father out. Well, that is because I've just tried my very
-hardest to become a good player; and I'm going to try my very hardest
-again in another way. Oh, I shall win! I'm cocksure I shall. Come,
-Elsie, dry your eyes. Here's my handkie. Don't be a little old
-wife."
-
-"You won't get killed, or anything, Archie?"
-
-"No; I won't get killed, or eaten either."
-
-"They do tell me," said Elsie--"that is, old Kate told me--that the
-streets in Australia are all paved with gold, and that the roofs of
-the houses are all solid silver."
-
-"Well, I don't think she is quite right," said Archie, laughing.
-"Anyhow, uncle says there is a fortune to be made, and I'm going to
-make it. That's all."
-
-* * * * * *
-
-Archie went straight away down from that boy's room feeling every
-inch a man, and had an interview with his father and uncle.
-
-It is needless to relate what took place there, or to report the
-conversation which the older folks had that evening in the little
-green parlour. Both father and uncle looked upon Archie's request as
-something only natural. For both these men, singular to say, had
-been boys once themselves; and, in the Squire's own words, Archie was
-a son to be proud of.
-
-"We can't keep the lad always with us, mother," said Squire
-Broadbent; "and the wide world is the best of schools. I feel
-certain that, go where he will, he won't lose heart. If he does, I
-should be ashamed to own him as a son. So there! My only regret is,
-Ramsay, that I cannot send the lad away with a better lined pocket."
-
-"My dear silly old brother, he will be better as he is. And I'm
-really not sure that he would not be better still if he went away, as
-many have gone before him, with only a stick and a bundle over his
-shoulder. You have a deal too much of the Broadbent pride; and
-Archie had better leave that all behind at home, or be careful to
-conceal it when he gets to the land of his adoption."
-
-The following is a brief list of Archie's stock-in-trade when he
-sailed away in the good ship _Dugong_ to begin the world alone: 1. A
-good stock of clothes. 2. A good stock of assurance. 3. Plenty of
-hope. 4. Good health and abundance of strength. 5. A little nest
-egg at an Australian bank to keep him partly independent till he
-should be able to establish a footing. 6. Letters of introduction,
-blessings, and a little pocket Bible.
-
-His uncle chose his ship, and sent him away round the Cape in a good
-old-fashioned sailing vessel. And his uncle went to Glasgow to see
-him off, his last words being, "Keep up your heart, boy, whatever
-happens; and keep calm in every difficulty. Good-bye."
-
-Away sailed the ship, and away went Archie to see the cities that are
-paved with gold, and whose houses have roofs of solid silver.
-
-
-
-
-Book II.
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-"_SPOKEN LIKE HIS FATHER'S SON._"
-
- "Cheer, boys, cheer, no more of idle sorrow,
- Courage, true hearts shall bear us on our way;
- Hope flies before, and points the bright to-morrow,
- Let us forget the dangers of to-day."
-
-
-That dear old song! How many a time and oft it has helped to raise
-the drooping spirits of emigrants sailing away from these loved
-islands, never again to return!
-
-The melody itself too is such a manly one. Inez dear, bring my
-fiddle. Not a bit of bravado in that ringing air, bold and all
-though it is. Yet every line tells of British ardour and
-determination--ardour that no thoughts of home or love can cool,
-determination that no danger can daunt.
-
-"Cheer, boys, cheer." The last rays of the setting sun were lighting
-up the Cornish cliffs, on which so few in that good ship would ever
-again set eyes, when those around the forecastle-head took up the
-song.
-
-"Cheer, boys, cheer." Listen! Those on the quarterdeck join in the
-chorus, sinking in song all difference of class and rank. And they
-join, too, in that rattling "Three times three" that bids farewell to
-England.
-
-Then the crimson clouds high up in the west change to purple and
-brown, the sea grows grey, and the distant shore becomes slaty blue.
-Soon the stars peep out, and the passengers cease to tramp about, and
-find their way below to the cosily-lighted saloon.
-
-Archie is sitting on a sofa quite apart from all the others. The
-song is still ringing in his head, and, if the whole truth must be
-told, he feels just a trifle down-hearted. He cannot quite account
-for this, though he tries to, and his thoughts are upon the whole
-somewhat rambling. They would no doubt be quite connected if it were
-not for the distracting novelty of all his present surroundings,
-which are as utterly different from anything he has hitherto become
-acquainted with as if he had suddenly been transported to another
-planet.
-
-No, he cannot account for being dull. Perhaps the motion of the ship
-has something to do with it, though this is not a very romantic way
-of putting it. Archie has plenty of moral courage; and as the ship
-encountered head winds, and made a long and most difficult passage
-down through the Irish Sea, he braced himself to get over his morsel
-of _mal de mer_, and has succeeded.
-
-He is quite cross with himself for permitting his mind to be tinged
-with melancholy. That song ought to have set him up.
-
-"Why should we weep to sail in search of fortune?"
-
-Oh, Archie is not weeping; catch him doing anything so girlish and
-peevish! He would not cry in his cabin where he could do so without
-being seen, and it is not likely he would permit moisture to appear
-in his eyes in the saloon here. Yet his home never did seem to him
-so delightful, so cosy, so happy, as the thoughts of it do now. Why
-had he not loved it even more than he did when it was yet all around
-him? The dear little green parlour, his gentle lady mother that used
-to knit so quietly by the fire in the winter's evenings, listening
-with pleasure to his father's daring schemes and hopeful plans. His
-bonnie sister, Elsie, so proud of him--Archie; Rupert, with his pale,
-classical face and gentle smile; matter-of-fact Walton; jolly old
-Uncle Ramsay. They all rose up before his mind's eye as they had
-been; nay but as they might be even at that very moment. And the
-room in the tower, the evenings spent there in summer when daylight
-was fading over the hills and woods, and the rooks flying wearily
-home to their nests in the swaying elm trees; or in winter when the
-fire burned brightly on the hearth, and weird old Kate sat in her
-high-hacked chair, telling her strange old-world stories, with
-Branson, wide-eyed, fiddle in hand, on a seat near her, and
-Bounder--poor Bounder--on the bear's skin. Then the big kitchen, or
-servants' hall--the servants that all loved "master Archie" so
-dearly, and laughed and enjoyed every prank he used to play.
-
-Dear old Burley! should he ever see it again? A week has not passed
-since he left it, and yet it seems and feels a lifetime.
-
-He was young a week ago; now he is old, very old--nearly a man.
-Nearly? Well, nearly in years; in thoughts, and feelings, and
-circumstances even--quite a man. But then he should not feel
-down-hearted for this simple reason; he had left home under such
-bright auspices. Many boys run away to sea. The difference between
-their lot and his is indeed a wide one. Yes, that must be very sad.
-No home-life to look back upon, no friends to think of or love, no
-pleasant present, no hopeful future.
-
-Then Archie, instead of letting his thoughts dwell any longer on the
-past, began at once to bridge over for himself the long period of
-time that must elapse ere he should return to Burley Old Farm. Of
-course there would be changes. He dared say Walton would be away;
-but Elsie and Rupert would still be there, and his father and mother,
-looking perhaps a little older, but still as happy. And the burned
-farm-steading would be restored, or if it were not, it soon should be
-after he came back; for he would be rich, rolling in wealth in fact,
-if half the stories he had heard of Australia were true, even
-allowing that _all_ the streets were not paved with gold, and _all_
-the houses not roofed with sparkling silver.
-
-So engrossed was he with these pleasant thoughts, that he had not
-observed the advent of a passenger who had entered the saloon, and
-sat quietly down on a camp-stool near him. A man of about forty,
-dressed in a rough pilot suit of clothes, with a rosy weather-beaten
-but pleasant face, and a few grey hairs in his short black beard.
-
-He was looking at Archie intently when their eyes met, and the boy
-felt somewhat abashed. The passenger, however, did not remove his
-glance instantly; he spoke instead.
-
-"You've never been to sea before, have you?"
-
-"No, sir; never been off the land till a week ago."
-
-"Going to seek your fortune?"
-
-"Yes; I'm going to make my fortune."
-
-"Bravo! I hope you will."
-
-"What's to hinder me?"
-
-"Nothing; oh, nothing much! Everybody doesn't though. But you seem
-to have a bit of go in you."
-
-"Are you going to make yours?" said Archie.
-
-The stranger laughed.
-
-"No," he replied. "Unluckily, perhaps, mine was made for me. I've
-been out before too, and I'm going again to see things."
-
-"You're going in quest of adventure?"
-
-"I suppose that is really it. That is how the story books put it,
-anyhow. But I don't expect to meet with adventures like Sinbad the
-Sailor, you know; and I don't think I would like to have a little old
-man of the sea with his little old legs round my neck."
-
-"Australia is a very wonderful place, isn't it?"
-
-"Yes; wonderfully wonderful. Everything is upside-down there, you
-know. To begin with, the people walk with their heads downwards.
-Some of the trees are as tall as the moon, and at certain seasons of
-the year the bark comes tumbling off them like rolls of shoeleather.
-Others are shaped like bottles, others again have heads of waving
-grass, and others have ferns for tops. There are trees, too, that
-drop all their leaves to give the flowers a chance; and these are so
-brilliantly red, and so numerous, that the forest where they grow
-looks all on fire. Well, many of the animals walk or jump on two
-legs, instead of running on four. Does that interest you?"
-
-"Yes. Tell me something more about birds."
-
-"Well, ducks are everywhere in Australia, and many kinds are as big
-as geese. They seem to thrive. And ages ago, it is said by the
-natives, the moles in Australia got tired of living in the dark, and
-held a meeting above-ground, and determined to live a different mode
-of life. So they grew longer claws, and short, broad, flat tails,
-and bills like ducks, and took to the water, and have been happy ever
-since.
-
-"Well, there are black swans in abundance; and though it is two or
-three years since I was out last, I cannot forget a beautiful bird,
-something betwixt a pheasant and peacock, and the cock's tail is his
-especial delight. It is something really to be proud of, and at a
-distance looks like a beautiful lyre, strings and all. The cockatoos
-swarm around the trees, and scream and laugh at the lyre-bird giving
-himself airs, but I daresay this is all envy. The hen bird is not a
-beauty, but her chief delight is to watch the antics and attitudes of
-her lord and master as he struts about making love and fun to her
-time about, at one moment singing a kind of low, sweet song, at
-another mocking every sound that is heard in the forest, every noise
-made by man or bird or beast. No wonder the female lyre-bird thinks
-her lord the cleverest and most beautiful creature in the world!
-
-"Then there is a daft-looking kingfisher, all head and bill, and
-wondering eyes, who laughs like a jackass, and makes you laugh to
-hear him laugh. So loud does he laugh at times that his voice drowns
-every other sound in the forest.
-
-"There is a bird eight feet high, partly cassowary partly ostrich,
-that when attacked kicks like a horse or more like a cow, because it
-kicks sideways. But if I were to sit here till our good ship reached
-the Cape, I could not tell you about half the curious, beautiful, and
-ridiculous creatures and things you will find in Australia if you
-move much about. I do think that that country beats all creation for
-the gorgeousness of its wild birds and wild flowers; and if things do
-seem a bit higgledy-piggledy at first, you soon settle down to it,
-and soon tire wondering at anything.
-
-"But," continued the stranger, "with all their peculiarities, the
-birds and beasts are satisfied with their get-up, and pleased with
-their surroundings, although all day long in the forests the
-cockatoos, and parrots, and piping crows, and lyre-birds do little
-else but joke and chaff one another because they all look so comical.
-
-"Yes, lad, Australia you will find is a country of contrarieties, and
-the only wonder to me is that the rivers don't all run up-hill
-instead of running down; and mind, they are sometimes broader at
-their sources than they are at their ends."
-
-"There is plenty of gold there?" asked Archie.
-
-"Oh, yes, any amount; but----"
-
-"But what, sir?"
-
-"The real difficulty--in fact, the only difficulty--is the finding of
-it."
-
-"But that, I suppose, can be got over."
-
-"Come along with me up on deck, and we'll talk matters over. It is
-hot and stuffy down here; besides, they are going to lay the cloth."
-
-Arrived at the quarter-deck, the stranger took hold of Archie's arm,
-as if he had known him all his life.
-
-"Now," he said, "my name is Vesey, generally called Captain Vesey,
-because I never did anything that I know of to merit the title. I've
-been in an army or two in different parts of the globe as a free
-lance, you know."
-
-"How nice!"
-
-"Oh, delightful!" said Captain Vesey, though from the tone of his
-voice Archie was doubtful as to his meaning. "Well," he added, "I
-own a yacht, now waiting for me, I believe, at the Cape of Good Hope,
-if she isn't sunk, or burned, or something. And your tally?"
-
-"My what, sir?"
-
-"Your tally, your name, and the rest of it?"
-
-"Archie Broadbent, son of Squire Broadbent, of Burley Old Farm,
-Northumberland."
-
-"What! you a son of Charlie Broadbent? Yankee Charlie, as we used to
-call him at the club. Well, well, well, wonders will never cease;
-and it only shows how small the world is, after all."
-
-"And you used to know my father, sir?"
-
-"My dear boy, I promised myself the pleasure of calling on him at
-Burley. I've only been home for two months, however; and I
-heard--well, boy, I needn't mince matters--I heard your father had
-been unfortunate, and had left his place, and gone nobody could tell
-me whither."
-
-"No," said Archie, laughing, "it isn't quite so bad as all that; and
-it is bound to come right in the end."
-
-"You are talking very hopefully, lad. I could trace a resemblance in
-your face to someone I knew the very moment I sat down. And there is
-something like the same cheerful ring in your voice there used to be
-in his. You really are a chip of the old block."
-
-"So they say." And Archie laughed again, pleased by this time.
-
-"But, you know, lad, you are very young to be going away to seek your
-fortune."
-
-"I'll get over that, sir."
-
-"I hope so. Of course, you won't go pottering after gold!"
-
-"I don't know. If I thought I would find lots, I would go like a
-shot."
-
-"Well, take my advice, and don't. There, I do not want to discourage
-you; but you better turn your mind to farming--to squatting."
-
-"That wouldn't be very genteel, would it?"
-
-"Genteel! Why, lad, if you're going to go in for genteelity, you'd
-best have stayed at home."
-
-"Well, but I have an excellent education. I can write like
-copper-plate. I am a fair hand at figures, and well up in Latin and
-Greek; and----"
-
-"Ha! ha! ha!" Captain Vesey laughed aloud. "Latin and Greek, eh?
-You must keep that to yourself, boy."
-
-"And," continued Archie boldly, "I have a whole lot of capital
-introductions. I'm sure to get into a good office in Sydney; and in
-a few years----"
-
-Archie stopped short, because by the light that streamed from the
-skylight he could see that Captain Vesey was looking at him
-half-wonderingly, but evidently amused.
-
-"Go on," said the captain.
-
-"Not a word more," said Archie doggedly.
-
-"Finish your sentence, lad."
-
-"I shan't. There!"
-
-"Well, I'll do it for you. You'll get into a delightful office, with
-mahogany writing-desks and stained glass windows, Turkey carpet and
-an easy-chair. Your employer will take you out in his buggy every
-Sunday to dine with him; and after a few years, as you say, he'll
-make you a co-partner; and you'll end by marrying his daughter, and
-live happy ever after."
-
-"You're laughing at me, sir. I'll go down below."
-
-"Yes, I'm laughing at you, because you're only a greenhorn; and it is
-as well that I should squeeze a little of the lime-juice out of you
-as anyone else. No, don't go below. Mind, I was your father's
-friend."
-
-"Yes," pouted poor Archie; "but you don't appear to be mine. You are
-throwing cold water over my hopes; you are smashing my idols."
-
-"A very pretty speech, Archie Broadbent. But mind you this--a hut on
-solid ground is better far than a castle in the air. And it is
-better that I should storm and capsize your cloud-castle, than that
-an absolute stranger did so."
-
-"Well, I suppose you are right. Forgive me for being cross."
-
-"Spoken like his father's son," said Captain Vesey, grasping and
-shaking the hand that Archie extended to him. "Now we know each
-other. Ding! ding! ding! there goes the dinner-bell. Sit next to
-me."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-"_KEEP ON YOUR CAP. I WAS ONCE A POOR MAN MYSELF._"
-
-The voyage out was a long, even tedious one; but as it has but little
-bearing on the story I forbear to describe it at length.
-
-The ship had a passenger for Madeira, parcels for Ascension and St.
-Helena, and she lay in at the Cape for a whole week.
-
-Here Captain Vesey left the vessel, bidding Archie a kind farewell,
-after dining with him at the Fountain, and roaming with him all over
-the charming Botanical Gardens.
-
-"I've an idea we'll meet again," he said as he bade him adieu. "If
-God spares me, I'll be sure to visit Sydney in a year or two, and I
-hope to find you doing well. You'll know if my little yacht, the
-_Barracouta_, comes in, and I know you'll come off and see me. I
-hope to find you with as good a coat on your back as you have now."
-
-Then the _Dugong_ sailed away again; but the time now seemed longer
-to Archie than ever, for in Captain Vesey he really had lost a good
-friend--a friend who was all the more valuable because he spoke the
-plain, unvarnished truth; and if in doing so one or two of the young
-man's cherished idols were brought tumbling down to the ground, it
-was all the better for the young man. It showed those idols had feet
-of clay, else a little cold water thrown over them would hardly have
-had such an effect. I am sorry to say, however, that no sooner had
-the captain left the ship, than Archie set about carefully collecting
-the pieces of those said idols and patching them up again.
-
-"After all," he thought to himself, "this Captain Vesey, jolly fellow
-as he is, never had to struggle with fortune as I shall do; and I
-don't think he has the same pluck in him that my father has, and that
-people say I have. We'll see, anyhow. Other fellows have been
-fortunate in a few years, why shouldn't I? 'In a few years?' Yes,
-these are the very words Captain Vesey laughed at me for. 'In a few
-years?' To be sure. And why not? What is the good of a fortune to
-a fellow after he gets old, and all worn down with gout and
-rheumatism? 'Cheer, boys, cheer;' I'm going in to win."
-
-How slow the ship sailed now, apparently; and when it did blow it
-usually blew the wrong way, and she would have to stand off and on,
-or go tack and half-tack against it, like a man with one long leg and
-one short. But she was becalmed more than once, and this did seem
-dreadful. It put Archie in mind of a man going to sleep in the
-middle of his work, which is not at all the correct thing to do.
-
-Well, there is nothing like a sailing ship after all for teaching one
-the virtue of patience; and at last Archie settled down to his sea
-life. He was becoming quite a sailor--as hard as the wheel-spokes,
-as brown as the binnacle. He was quite a favourite with the captain
-and officers, and with all hands fore and aft. Indeed he was very
-often in the forecastle or galley of an evening listening to the
-men's yarns or songs, and sometimes singing a verse or two himself.
-
-He was just beginning to think the _Dugong_ was Vanderdecken's ship,
-and that she never would make port at all, when one day at dinner he
-noticed that the captain was unusually cheerful.
-
-"In four or five days more, please God," said he, "we'll be safe in
-Sydney."
-
-Archie almost wished he had not known this, for these four or five
-days were the longest of any he had yet passed. He had commenced to
-worship his patched-up idols again, and felt happier now, and more
-full of hope and certainty of fortune than he had done during the
-whole voyage.
-
-Sometimes they sighted land. Once or twice birds flew on board--such
-bright, pretty birds too they looked. And birds also went wheeling
-and whirring about the ship--gulls, the like of which he had never
-seen before. They were more elegant in shape and purer in colour
-than ours, and their voices were clear and ringing.
-
-Dick Whittington construed words out of the sound of the chiming
-bells. Therefore it is not at all wonderful that Archie was pleased
-to believe that some of these beautiful birds were screaming him a
-welcome to the land of gold.
-
-Just at or near the end of the voyage half a gale of wind blew the
-ship considerably out of her course. Then the breeze went round to
-fair again, the sea went down, and the birds came back; and one
-afternoon a shout was heard from the foretop that made Archie's heart
-jump for very joy.
-
-"Land ho!"
-
-That same evening, as the sun was setting behind the Blue Mountains,
-leaving a gorgeous splendour of cloud-scenery that may be equalled,
-but is never surpassed in any country, the _Dugong_ sailed slowly
-into Sydney harbour, and cast anchor.
-
-At last! Yes, at last. Here were the golden gates of the El Dorado
-that were to lead the ambitious boy to fortune, and all the pleasures
-fortune is capable of bestowing.
-
-Archie had fancied that Sydney would prove to be a very beautiful
-place; but not in his wildest imaginings had he conjured up a scene
-of such surpassing loveliness as that which now lay before him, and
-around him as well.
-
-On the town itself his eye naturally first rested. There it lay,
-miles upon miles of houses, towers, and steeples, spread out along
-the coast, and rising inland. The mountains and hills beyond, their
-rugged grandeur softened and subdued in the purple haze of the day's
-dying glory; the sky above, with its shades of orange, saffron,
-crimson, opal, and grey; and the rocks, to right and left in the
-nearer distance, with their dreamy clouds of foliage, from which
-peeped many a lordly mansion, many a fairy-like palace. He hardly
-noticed the forests of masts; he was done with ships, done with
-masts, for a time at least; but his inmost heart responded to the
-distant hum of city life, that came gently stealing over the waters,
-mingling with the chime of evening bells, and the music of the happy
-sea-gulls.
-
-Would he, could he, get on shore to-night? "No," the first officer
-replied, "not before another day."
-
-So he stood on deck, or walked about, never thinking of food--what,
-is food or drink to a youth who lives on hope?--till the gloaming
-shades gave place to night, till the southern stars shone over the
-hills and harbour, and strings upon strings of lamps and lights were
-hung everywhere across the city above and below.
-
-* * * * * *
-
-Now the fairy scene is changed. Archie is on shore. It is the
-forenoon of another day, and the sun is warm though not uncomfortably
-hot. There is so much that is bracing and invigorating in the very
-air, that he longs to be doing something at once. Longs to commence
-laying the foundation-stone of that temple of fortune which--let
-Captain Vesey say what he likes--he, Archie Broadbent, is bent upon
-building.
-
-He has dressed himself in his very English best. His clothes are new
-and creaseless, his gloves are spotless, his black silk hat
-immaculate, the cambric handkerchief that peeps coyly from his
-breast-pocket is whiter than the snow, his boots fit like gloves, and
-shine as softly black as his hat itself, and his cane even must be
-the envy of every young man he meets.
-
-Strange to say, however, no one appears to take a very great deal of
-notice of him, though, as he glances towards the shop-windows, he can
-see as if in a mirror that one or two passengers have looked back and
-smiled. But it couldn't surely have been at him? Impossible!
-
-The people, however, are apparently all very active and very busy,
-though cool, with a self-possession that he cannot help envying, and
-which he tries to imitate without any marked degree of success.
-
-There is an air of luxury and refinement about many of the buildings
-that quite impresses the young man, but he cannot help noticing that
-there is also a sort of business air about the streets which he
-hardly expected to find, and which reminds him forcibly of Glasgow
-and Manchester. He almost wishes it had been otherwise.
-
-He marches on boldly enough.
-
-Archie feels as if on a prospecting tour--prospecting for gold. Of
-course he is going to make his fortune, but how is he going to begin?
-That is the awkward part of the business. If he could once get in
-the thin end of the wedge he would quickly drive it home.
-
- "There is nothing like ambition
- If we steer a steady course."
-
-
-Of course there isn't. But staring into a china-shop window will do
-him little good. I do not believe he saw anything in that window
-however. Only, on turning away from it, his foot goes splash into a
-pool of dirty water on the pavement, or rather on what ought to be a
-pavement. That boot is ruined for the day, and this reminds him that
-Sydney streets are not paved with gold, but with very unromantic
-matter-of-fact mud. Happy thought! he will dine.
-
-The waiters are very polite, but not obsequious, and he makes a
-hearty meal, and feels more at home.
-
-Shall he tip this waiter fellow? Is it the correct thing to tip
-waiters? Will the waiter think him green if he does, or green if he
-doesn't?
-
-These questions, trifling though they may appear, really annoyed
-Archie; but he erred on the right side, and did tip the waiter--well
-too. And the waiter brightened up, and asked him if he would like to
-see a playbill.
-
-Then this reminded Archie that he might as well call on some of the
-people to whom he had introductions. So he pulled out a small bundle
-of letters, and he asked the waiter where this, that, and t'other
-street was; and the waiter brought a map, and gave him so many hints,
-that when he found himself on the street again he did not feel half
-so foreign. He had something to do now, something in view. Besides
-he had dined.
-
-"Yes, he'd better drive," he said to himself, "it would look better."
-He lifted a finger, and a hansom rattled along, and drew up by the
-kerb. He had not expected to find cabs in Sydney. His card-case was
-handy, and his first letter also.
-
-He might have taken a 'bus or tram. There were plenty passing, and
-very like Glasgow 'buses they were too; from the John with the
-ribbons to the cad at the rear. But a hansom certainly looked more
-aristocratic. Aristocratic? Yes. But were there any aristocrats in
-Sydney? Was there any real blue blood in the place? He had not
-answered those questions to his satisfaction, when the hansom stopped
-so suddenly that he fell forward.
-
-"Wait," he said to the driver haughtily.
-
-"Certainly, sir."
-
-Archie did not observe, however, the grimace the Jehu made to another
-cabman, as he pointed over his shoulder with his thumb, else he would
-hardly have been pleased.
-
-There was quite a business air about the office into which the young
-man ushered himself, but no one took much notice of him. If he had
-had an older face under that brand-new hat, they might have been more
-struck with his appearance.
-
-"Ahem! Aw!----" Archie began.
-
-"One minute, sir," said the clerk nearest him. "Fives in forty
-thousand? Fives in forty are eight--eight thousand."
-
-The clerk advanced pen in mouth.
-
-"Do you come from Jenkins's about those bills?"
-
-"No, I come from England; and I've a letter of introduction to your
-_master_." Archie brought the last word out with a bang.
-
-"Mr. Berry isn't in. Will you leave a message?"
-
-"No, thank you."
-
-"As you please."
-
-Archie was going off, when the clerk called after him, "Here is Mr.
-Berry himself, sir."
-
-A tall, brown-faced, elderly gentleman, with very white hair and
-pleasant smile. He took Archie into the office, bade him be seated,
-and slowly read the letter; then he approached the young man and
-shook hands. The hand felt like a dead fish's tail in Archie's, and
-somehow the smile had vanished.
-
-"I'm really glad to see your father's son," he said. "Sorry though
-to hear that he has had a run of bad luck. Very bad luck it must be,
-too," he added, "to let you come out here."
-
-"Indeed, sir; but I mean to make my for----that is, I want to make my
-living."
-
-"Ay, young man, living's more like it; and I wish I could help you.
-There's a wave of depression over this side of our little island at
-present, and I don't know that any office in town has a genteel
-situation to offer you."
-
-Archie's soul-heat sank a degree or two.
-
-"You think, sir, that----"
-
-"I think that you would have done better at home. It would be cruel
-of me not to tell you the truth. Now I'll give you an example. We
-advertised for a clerk just a week since----"
-
-"I wish I'd been here."
-
-"My young friend, you wouldn't have had the ghost of a chance. We
-had five-and-thirty to pick and choose from, and we took the
-likeliest. I'm really sorry. If anything should turn up, where
-shall I communicate?"
-
-Where should he communicate? And this was his father's best friend,
-from whom the too sanguine father expected Archie would have an
-invitation to dinner at once, and a general introduction to Sydney
-society.
-
-"Oh, it is no great matter about communicating, Mr. Berry; aw!--no
-matter at all! I can afford to wait a bit and look round me.
-I--aw!--good morning, sir."
-
-Away stalked the young Northumbrian, like a prince of the blood.
-
-"A chip of the old block," muttered Mr. Berry, as he resumed his desk
-work. "Poor lad, he'll have to come down a peg though."
-
-The cabby sprang towards the young nob.
-
-"Where next, sir?"
-
-"Grindlay's."
-
-Archie was not more successful here, nor anywhere else.
-
-But at the end of a week, during which time he had tried as hard as
-any young man had ever tried before in Sydney or any other city to
-find some genteel employment, he made a wise resolve; viz., to go
-into lodgings.
-
-He found that living in a hotel, though very cheerful, made a
-terrible hole in his purse; so he brought himself "down a peg" by the
-simple process of "going up" nearer the sky.
-
-Here is the explanation of this paradox. It was Archie's custom to
-spend his forenoons looking for something to do, and his evenings
-walking in the suburbs.
-
-Poor, lonely lad, that never a soul in the city cared for, any more
-than if he had been a stray cat, he found it wearisome,
-heart-breaking work wandering about the narrow, twisting streets and
-getting civilly snubbed. He felt more of a gentleman when dining.
-Afterwards his tiredness quite left him, and hope swelled his heart
-once more. So out he would go and away--somewhere, anywhere; it did
-not matter so long as he could see woods, and water, and houses. Oh,
-such lovely suburban villas, with cool verandahs, round which
-flowering creepers twined, and lawns shaded by dark green waving
-banana trees, beneath which he could ofttimes hear the voices of
-merry children, or the tinkle of the light guitar. He would give
-reins to his fancy then, and imagine things--such sweet things!
-
-Yes, he would own one of the biggest and most delightful of these
-mansions; he should keep fleet horses, a beautiful carriage, a
-boat--he must have a boat, or should it be a gondola? Yes, that
-would be nicer and newer. In this boat, when the moonlight silvered
-the water, he would glide over the bay, returning early to his happy
-home. His bonnie sister should be there, his brother Rupert--the
-student--his mother, and his hero, that honest, bluff, old father of
-his. What a dear, delightful dream! No wonder he did not care to
-return to the realities of his city life till long after the sun had
-set over the hills, and the stars were twinkling down brighter and
-lovelier far than those lights he had so admired the night his ship
-arrived.
-
-He was returning slowly one evening and was close to the city, but in
-a rather lonely place, when he noticed something dark under the shade
-of a tree, and heard a girl's voice say:
-
-"Dearie me! as missus says; but ain't I jolly tired just!"
-
-"Who is that?" said Archie.
-
-"On'y me, sir; on'y Sarah. Don't be afear'd. I ain't a larrikin.
-Help this 'ere box on my back like a good chummie."
-
-"It's too heavy for your slight shoulders," quoth gallant Archie. "I
-don't mind carrying it a bit."
-
-"What, a gent like you! Why, sir, you're greener than they make 'em
-round here!"
-
-"I'm from England."
-
-"Ho, ho! Well, that accounts for the milk. So 'm I from Hengland.
-This way, chummie."
-
-They hadn't far to go.
-
-"My missus lives two story up, top of a ware'us, and I've been to the
-station for that 'ere box. She do take it out o' me for all the
-wage. She do."
-
-Archie carried the box up the steep stairs, and Sarah's mistress
-herself opened the door and held a candle. A thin, weary-looking
-body, with whom Sarah seemed to be on the best and most friendly
-terms.
-
-"Brought my young man," said Sarah. "Ain't he a smartie? But,
-heigho! so green! You never!"
-
-"Come in a minute, sir, and rest you. Never mind this silly girl."
-
-Archie did go in a minute; five, ten, ay fifteen, and by that time he
-had not only heard all this ex-policeman's wife's story, but taken a
-semi-attic belonging to her.
-
-And he felt downright independent and happy when next day he took
-possession.
-
-For now he would have time to really look round, and it was a relief
-to his mind that he would not be spending much money.
-
-Archie could write home cheerfully now. He was sure that something
-would soon turn up, something he could accept, and which would not be
-derogatory to the son of a Northumbrian squire. More than one
-influential member of commercial society had promised "to communicate
-with him at the very earliest moment."
-
-But, alas! weeks flew by, and weeks went into months, and no more
-signs of the something were apparent than he had seen on the second
-day of his arrival.
-
-Archie was undoubtedly "a game un," as Sarah called him; but his
-heart began to feel very heavy indeed.
-
-Living as cheaply as he could, his money would go done at last. What
-then? Write home for more? He shuddered to think of such a thing.
-If his first friend, Captain Vesey, had only turned up now, he would
-have gone and asked to be taken as a hand before the mast. But
-Captain Vesey did not.
-
-A young man cannot be long in Sydney without getting into a set.
-Archie did, and who could blame him. They were not a rich set, nor a
-very fast set; but they had a morsel of a club-room of their own.
-They formed friendships, took strolls together, went occasionally to
-the play, and often had little "adventures" about town, the
-narratives of which, when retailed in the club, found ready
-listeners, and of course were stretched to the fullest extent of
-importance.
-
-They really were not bad fellows, and would have done Archie a good
-turn if they could. But they could not. They laughed a deal at
-first at his English notions and ideas; but gradually Archie got over
-his greenness, and began to settle down to colonial life, and would
-have liked Sydney very much indeed if he had only had something to do.
-
-The ex-policeman's wife was very kind to her lodger. So was Sarah;
-though she took too many freedoms of speech with him, which tended to
-lower his English squirearchical dignity very much. But, to do her
-justice, Sarah did not mean any harm.
-
-Only once did Archie venture to ask about the ex-policeman. "What
-did he do?"
-
-"Oh, he drinks!" said Sarah, as quietly as if drinking were a trade
-of some kind. Archie asked no more.
-
-Rummaging in a box one day, Archie found his last letter of
-introduction. It had been given him by Uncle Ramsay.
-
-"You'll find him a rough and right sort of a stick," his uncle had
-said. "He was my steward, now he is a wealthy man, and can knock
-down his cheque for many thousands."
-
-Archie dressed in his best and walked right away that afternoon to
-find the address.
-
-It was one of the very villas he had often passed, in a beautiful
-place close by the water-side.
-
-What would be his reception here?
-
-This question was soon put at rest.
-
-He rang the bell, and was ushered into a luxuriously-furnished room;
-a room that displayed more richness than taste.
-
-A very beautiful girl--some thirteen years of age perhaps--got up
-from a grand piano, and stood before him.
-
-Archie was somewhat taken aback, but bowed as composedly as he could.
-
-"Surely," he thought, "she cannot be the daughter of the rough and
-right sort of a stick who had been steward to his uncle. He had
-never seen so sweet a face, such dreamy blue eyes, or such wealth of
-hair before.
-
-"Did you want to see papa? Sit down. I'll go and find him."
-
-"Will you take this letter to him?" said Archie.
-
-And the girl left, letter in hand.
-
-Ten minutes after the "rough stick" entered whistling "Sally come up."
-
-"Hullo! hullo!" he cried, "so here we are."
-
-There he was without doubt--a big, red, jolly face, like a full moon
-orient, a loose merino jacket, no waistcoat or necktie, but a
-cricketer's cap on the very back of his bushy head. He struck Archie
-a friendly slap on the back.
-
-"Keep on yer cap," he shouted, "I was once a poor man myself."
-
-Archie was too surprised and indignant to speak.
-
-"Well, well, well," said Mr. Winslow, "they do tell me wonders won't
-never cease. What a whirligig of a world it is. One day I'm
-cleanin' a gent's boots. Gent is a capting of a ship. Next day
-gent's nephew comes to me to beg for a job. Say, young man, what'll
-ye drink?"
-
-"I didn't come to _drink_, Mr. Winslow, neither did I come to _beg_."
-
-"Whew--ew--ew," whistled the quondam steward, "here's pride; here's a
-touch o' the old country. Why, young un, I might have made you my
-under-gardener."
-
-The girl at this moment entered the room. She had heard the last
-sentence.
-
-"Papa!" she remonstrated. Then she glided out by the casement window.
-
-Burning blushes suffused Archie's cheeks as he hurried over the lawn
-soon after; angry tears were in his eyes. His hand was on the
-gate-latch when he felt a light touch on his arm. It was the girl.
-
-"Don't be angry with poor papa," she said, almost beseechingly.
-
-"No, no," Archie cried, hardly knowing what he did say. "What is
-your name?"
-
-"Etheldene."
-
-"What a beautiful name! I--I will never forget it. Good-bye."
-
-He ran home with the image of the child in his mind--on his brain.
-
-Sarah--plain Sarah--met him at the top of the stairs. He brushed
-past her.
-
-"La! but ye does look glum," said Sarah.
-
-Archie locked his door. He did not want to see even Sarah--homely
-Sarah--that night.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-"_SOMETHING IN SOAP._"
-
-It was a still, sultry night in November. Archie's balcony window
-was wide open, and if there had been a breath of air anywhere he
-would have had the benefit of it. That was one advantage of having a
-room high up above the town, and there were several others. For
-instance, it was quieter, more retired, and his companions did not
-often take him by storm, because they objected to climb so many
-stairs. Dingy, small, and dismal some might have called it, but
-Archie always felt at home up in his semi-attic. It even reminded
-him of his room in the dear old tower at Burley. Then his morsel of
-balcony, why that was worth all the money he paid for the room
-itself; and as for the view from this charming, though
-non-aristocratic elevation, it was simply unsurpassed,
-unsurpassable--looking far away over a rich and fertile country to
-the grand old hills beyond--a landscape that, like the sea, was still
-the same, but ever changing; sometimes smiling and green, sometimes
-bathed in tints of purple and blue, sometimes grey as a sky o'ercast
-with rain clouds. Yes, he loved it, and he would take a chair out
-here on a moonlight evening and sit and think and dream.
-
-But on this particular night sleep, usually so kind to the young man,
-absolutely refused to visit his pillow. He tried to woo the goddess
-on his right side, on his left, on his back; it was all in vain.
-Finally, he sat bolt upright in his little truckle bed in silent
-defiance.
-
-"I don't care," he said aloud, "whether I sleep or not. What does it
-matter? I've nothing to do to-morrow. Heigho!"
-
-Nothing to do to-morrow! How sad! And he so young too. Were all
-his dreams of future fortune to fade and pass away like this--nothing
-to do? Why he envied the very boys who drove the mill wagons that
-went lazily rolling past his place every day. They seemed happy, and
-so contented; while he--why his very life--had come to be all one
-continued fever.
-
-"Nothing to do yet, sir?" It was the ordinary salutation of his
-hard-working mite of a landlady when he came home to his meal in the
-afternoon. "I knows by the weary way ye walks upstairs, sir, you
-aren't successful yet, sir."
-
-"Nothink to do yet, sir?" They were the usual words that the slavey
-used when she dragged upstairs of an evening with his tea-things.
-
-"Nothink to do," she would say, as she deposited the tray on the
-table, and sank _sans ceremonie_ into the easy-chair. "Nothink to
-do. What a 'appy life to lead! Now 'ere's me a draggin' up and down
-stairs, and a carryin' of coals and a sweepin', and a dustin' and a
-hanswering of the door, till, what wi' the 'eat and the dust and the
-fleas, my poor little life's well-nigh worrited out o' me. Heigho!
-hif I was honly back again in merrie England, catch me ever goin' to
-any Australia any more. But you looks a borned gent, sir. Nothink
-to do! My eye and Betty Martin, ye oughter to be 'appy, if you
-ain't."
-
-Archie got up to-night, enrobed himself in his dressing-gown, and
-went and sat on his balcony. This soothed him. The stars were very
-bright, and seemed very near. He did not care for other
-companionship than these and his own all-too-busy thoughts. There
-was hardly a sound to be heard, except now and then the hum of a
-distant railway train increasing to a harsh roar as it crossed the
-bridge, then becoming subdued again and muffled as it entered woods,
-or went rolling over a soft and open country.
-
-Nothing to do! But he must and would do something. Why should he
-starve in a city of plenty? He had arms and hands, if he hadn't a
-head. Indeed, he had begun of late to believe that his head, which
-he used to think so much of, was the least important part of his
-body. He caught himself feeling his forearm and his biceps. Why
-this latter had got smaller and beautifully less of late. He had to
-shut his fist hard to make it perceptible to touch. This was worse
-and worse, he thought. He would not be able to lift a fifty-six if
-he wanted to before long, or have strength enough left to wield a
-stable broom if he should be obliged to go as gardener to Winslow.
-
-"What next, I wonder?" he said to himself. "First I lose my brains,
-if ever I had any, and now I have lost my biceps; the worst loss
-last."
-
-He lit his candle, and took up the newspaper. "I'll pocket my pride,
-and take a porter's situation," he murmured. "Let us see now.
-Hullo! what is this? 'APPRENTICE WANTED--the drug trade--splendid
-opening to a pushing youngster.' Well, I am a pushing youngster.
-'Premium required.' I don't care, I have a bit of money left, and
-I'll pay it like a man if there is enough. Why the drug trade is
-grand. Sydney drug-stores beat Glasgow's all to pieces. Druggists
-and drysalters have their carriages and mansions, their town and
-country houses. Hurrah! I'll be something yet!"
-
-He blew out the candle, and jumped into bed. The gentle goddess
-required no further wooing. She took him in her lap, and he went off
-at once like a baby.
-
-Rap--rap--rap--rap!
-
-"Hullo! Yes; coming, Sarah; coming."
-
-It was broad daylight; and when he admitted Sarah at last, with the
-breakfast-tray, she told him she had been up and down fifty times,
-trying to make him hear. Sarah was given to a little exaggeration at
-times.
-
-"It was all very well for a gent like he," she said, "but there was
-her a-slavin' and a-toilin', and all the rest of it."
-
-"Well, well, my dear," he cut in, "I'm awfully sorry, I assure you."
-
-Sarah stopped right in the centre of the room, still holding the
-tray, and looked at him.
-
-"What!" she cried. "Ye ain't a-going to marry me then, young man!
-What are ye my-dearing me for?"
-
-"No, Sarah," replied Archie, laughing; "I'm not going to marry you;
-but I've hopes of a good situation, and----"
-
-"Is that all?" Sarah dumped down the tray, and tripped away singing.
-
-Archie's interview with the advertiser was of a most satisfactory
-character. He did not like the street, it was too new and out of the
-way; but then it would be a beginning.
-
-He did not like his would-be employer, but he dared say he would
-improve on acquaintance. There was plenty in the shop, though the
-place was dingy and dirty, and the windows small. The spiders
-evidently had fine times of it here, and did not object to the smell
-of drugs. He was received by Mr. Glorie himself in a little back
-sanctum off the little back shop.
-
-The premium for apprenticing Archie was rather more than the young
-man could give; but this being explained to the proprietor of these
-beautiful premises, and owner of all the spiders, he graciously
-condescended to take half. Archie's salary--a wretched pittance--was
-to commence at once after articles were signed; and Mr. Glorie
-promised to give him a perfect insight into the drug business, and
-make a man of him, and "something else besides," he added, nodding to
-Archie in a mysterious manner.
-
-The possessor of the strange name was a queer-looking man; there did
-not appear much glory about him. He was very tall, very lanky, and
-thin, his shoulders sloping downwards like a well-pointed pencil,
-while his face was solemn and elongated, like your own, reader, if
-you look at it in a spoon held lengthways.
-
-The articles were signed, and Archie walked home on feathers
-apparently. He went upstairs singing. His landlady ran to the door.
-
-"Work at last?"
-
-Archie nodded and smiled.
-
-When Sarah came in with the dinner things she danced across the room,
-bobbing her queer, old-fashioned face and crying--
-
- "Lawk-a-daisy, diddle-um-doo,
- Missus says you've got work to do!"
-
-
-"Yes, Sarah, at long last, and I'm so happy."
-
-"'Appy, indeed!" sang Sarah. "Why, ye won't be the gent no longer!"
-
-Archie certainly had got work to do. For a time his employer kept
-him in the shop. There was only one other lad, and he went home with
-the physic, and what with studying hard to make himself _au fait_ in
-prescribing and selling seidlitz powders and gum drops, Archie was
-pretty busy.
-
-So months flew by. Then his long-faced employer took him into the
-back premises, and proceeded to initiate him into the mysteries of
-the something else that was to make a man of him.
-
-"There's a fortune in it," said Mr. Glorie, pointing to a bubbling
-grease-pot. "Yes, young sir, a vast fortune."
-
-"What is the speciality?" Archie ventured to enquire.
-
-"The speciality, young sir?" replied Mr. Glorie, his face relaxing
-into something as near a smile as it would permit of. "The
-speciality, sir, is SOAP. A transparent soap. A soap, young sir,
-that is destined to revolutionise the world of commerce, and bring my
-star to the ascendant after struggling for two long decades with the
-dark clouds of adversity."
-
-So this was the mystery. Archie was henceforward, so it appeared, to
-live in an atmosphere of scented soap; his hope must centre in
-bubbles. He was to assist this Mr. Glorie's star to rise to the
-zenith, while his own fortune might sink to nadir. And he had paid
-his premium. It was swallowed up and simmering in that ugly old
-grease-pot, and except for the miserable salary he received from Mr.
-Glorie he might starve.
-
-Poor Archie! He certainly did not share his employer's enthusiasm,
-and on this particular evening he did not walk home on feathers, and
-when he sat down to supper his face must have appeared to Sarah quite
-as long and lugubrious as Mr. Glorie's; for she raised her hands and
-said:
-
-"Lawk-a-doodle, sir! What's the matter? Have ye killed anybody?"
-
-"Not yet," answered Archie; "but I almost feel I could."
-
-He stuck to his work, however, like a man; but that work became more
-and more allied to soap, and the front shop hardly knew him any more.
-
-He had informed the fellows at the club-room that he was employed at
-last; that he was apprenticed to the drug trade. But the soap
-somehow leaked out, and more than once, when he was introduced to
-some new-comer, he was styled--
-
-"Mr. Broadbent," and "something in soap."
-
-This used to make him bite his lips in anger.
-
-He would not have cared half so much had he not joined this very
-club, with a little flourish of trumpets, as young Broadbent, son of
-Squire Broadbent, of Burley Old Castle, England.
-
-And now he was "something in soap."
-
-He wrote home to his sister in the bitterness of his soul, telling
-her that all his visions of greatness had ended in bubbles of rainbow
-hue, and that he was "something in soap." He felt sorry for having
-done so as soon as the letter was posted.
-
-He met old Winslow one day in the street, and this gentleman grasped
-Archie's small aristocratic hand in his great brown bear's paw, and
-congratulated him on having got on his feet at last.
-
-"Yes," said Archie with a sneer and a laugh, "I'm 'something in
-soap.'"
-
-"And soap's a good thing I can tell you. Soap's not to be despised.
-There's a fortune in soap. I had an uncle in soap. Stick to it, my
-lad, and it'll stick to you."
-
-But when a new apprentice came to the shop one day, and was installed
-in the front-door drug department, while he himself was relegated to
-the slums at the back, his cup of misery seemed full, and he
-proceeded forthwith to tell this Mr. Glorie what he thought of him.
-Mr. Glorie's face got longer and longer and longer, and he finally
-brought his clenched fist down with such a bang on the counter, that
-every bottle and glass in the place rang like bells.
-
-"I'll have the law on you," he shouted.
-
-"I don't care; I've done with you. I'm sick of you and your soap."
-
-He really did not mean to do it; but just at that moment his foot
-kicked against a huge earthenware jar full of oil, and shivered it in
-pieces.
-
-"You've broke your indenture! You--you----"
-
-"I've broken your jar, anyhow," cried Archie.
-
-He picked up his hat, and rushing out, ran recklessly off to his club.
-
-He was "something in soap" no more.
-
-He was beggared, but he was free, unless indeed Mr. Glorie should put
-him in gaol.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-_THE KING MAY COME IN THE CADGER'S WAY._
-
-Mr. Glorie did not put his runaway apprentice in gaol. He simply
-advertised for another--with a premium.
-
-Poor Archie! His condition in life was certainly not to be envied
-now. He had but very few pounds between him and actual want.
-
-He was rich in one thing alone--pride. He would sooner starve than
-write home for a penny. No, he could die in a gutter, but he could
-not bear to think they should know of it at Burley Old Farm.
-
-Long ago, in the bonnie woods around Burley, he used to wonder to
-find dead birds in dark crannies of the rocks. He could understand
-it now. They had crawled into the crannies to die, out of sight and
-alone.
-
-His club friends tried to rally him. They tried to cheer him up in
-more ways than one. Be it whispered, they tried to make him seek
-solace in gambling and in the wine-cup.
-
-I do not think that I have held up my hero as a paragon. On the
-contrary, I have but represented him as he was--a bold, determined
-lad, with many and many a fault; but now I am glad to say this one
-thing in his favour: he was not such a fool as to try to drown his
-wits in wine, nor to seek to make money questionably by betting and
-by cards.
-
-After Archie's letter home, in which he told Elsie that he was
-"something in soap," he had written another, and a more cheerful one.
-It was one which cost him a good deal of trouble to write; for he
-really could not get over the notion that he was telling white lies
-when he spoke of "his prospects in life, and his hopes being on the
-ascendant;" and as he dropped it into the receiver, he felt mean,
-demoralized; and he came slowly along George Street, trying to make
-himself believe that any letter was better than no letter, and that
-he would hardly have been justified in telling the whole truth.
-
-Well, at Burley Old Farm things had rather improved, simply for this
-reason: Squire Broadbent had gone in heavily for retrenchment.
-
-He had proved the truth of his own statement: "It does not take much
-in this world to make a man happy." The Squire was happy when he saw
-his wife and children happy. The former was always quietly cheerful,
-and the latter did all they could to keep up each other's hearts.
-They spent much of their spare time in the beautiful and romantic
-tower-room, and in walking about the woods, the grounds, and farm;
-for Rupert was well now, and was his father's right hand, not in the
-rough-and-tumble dashing way that Archie would have been, but in a
-thoughtful, considering way.
-
-Mr. Walton had gone away, but Branson and old Kate were still to the
-fore. The Squire could not have spared these.
-
-I think that Rupert's religion was a very pretty thing. He had lost
-none of his simple faith, his abiding trust in God's goodness, though
-he had regained his health. His devotions were quite as sincere, his
-thankfulness for mercies received greater even than before, and he
-had the most unbounded faith in the efficacy of prayer.
-
-So his sister and he lived in hope, and the Squire used to build
-castles in the green parlour of an evening, and of course the absent
-Archie was one of the kings of these castles.
-
-After a certain number of years of retrenchment, Burley was going to
-rise from its ashes hike the fabled phoenix--machinery and all. The
-Squire was even yet determined to show these old-fashioned farmer
-folks of Northumbria "a thing or two."
-
-That was his ambition; and we must not blame him; for a man without
-ambition of some kind is a very humble sort of a clod--a clod of very
-poor clay.
-
-But to return to Sydney.
-
-Archie had received several rough invitations to go and visit Mr.
-Winslow. He had accepted two of these, and, singular to say,
-Etheldene's father was absent each time. Now, I refuse to be
-misunderstood. Archie did not "manage" to call when the ex-miner was
-out; but Archie was not displeased. He had taken a very great fancy
-for the child, and did not hesitate to tell her that from the first
-day he had met her he had loved her like his sister Elsie.
-
-Of course Etheldene wanted to know all about Elsie, and hours were
-spent in telling her about this one darling sister of his, and about
-Rupert and all the grand old life at Burley.
-
-"I should laugh," cried Archie, "if some day when you grew up, you
-should find yourself in England, and fall in love with Rupert, and
-marry him."
-
-The child smiled, but looked wonderfully sad and beautiful the next
-moment. She had a way like this with her. For if Etheldene had been
-taken to represent any month of our English year, it would have been
-April--sunshine, flowers, and showers.
-
-But one evening Archie happened to be later out in the suburbs than
-he ought to have been. The day had been hot, and the night was
-delightfully cool and pleasant. He was returning home when a tall,
-rough-looking, bearded man stopped him, and asked "for a light, old
-chum." Archie had a match, which he handed him, and as the light
-fell on the man's face, it revealed a very handsome one indeed, and
-one that somehow seemed not unfamiliar to him.
-
-Archie went on. There was the noise of singing farther down the
-street, a merry band of youths who had been to a race meeting that
-day, and were up to mischief.
-
-The tall man hid under the shadow of a wall.
-
-"They're larrikins," he said to himself, and "he's a greenhorn." He
-spat in his fist, and kept his eye on the advancing figures.
-
-Archie met them. They were arm-in-arm, five in all, and instead of
-making way for him, rushed him, and down he went, his head catching
-the kerb with frightful force. They at once proceeded to rifle him.
-But perhaps "larrikins" had never gone to ground so quickly and so
-unexpectedly before. It was the bearded man who was "having his
-fling" among them, and he ended by grabbing one in each hand till a
-policeman came up.
-
-[Illustration: "Down went Archie, his head catching the kerb with
-frightful force. They at once proceeded to rifle him. But larrikins
-had never gone to ground so quickly before. It was the bearded man
-who ended by grabbing one in each hand till a policeman came up."]
-
-Archie remembered nothing more then.
-
-When he became sensible he was in bed with a bandaged head, and
-feeling as weak all over as a kitten. Sarah was in the room with the
-landlady.
-
-"Hush, my dear," said the latter; "you've been very ill for more than
-a week. You're not to get up, nor even to speak."
-
-Archie certainly did not feel inclined to do either. He just closed
-his eyes and dozed off again, and his soul flew right away back to
-Burley.
-
-"Oh, yes; he's out of danger!" It was the doctor's voice. "He'll do
-first-rate with careful nursing."
-
-"He won't want for that, sir. Sarah here has been like a little
-mother to him."
-
-Archie dozed for days. Only, whenever he was sensible, he could
-notice that Sarah was far better dressed, and far older-looking and
-nicer-looking than ever she had been. And now and then the
-big-bearded man came and sat by his bed, looking sometimes at him,
-some times at Sarah.
-
-One day Archie was able to sit up; he felt quite well almost, though
-of course he was not really so.
-
-"I have you to thank for helping me that night," he said.
-
-"Ay, ay, Master Archie; but don't you know me?"
-
-"No--no. I don't think so."
-
-The big-bearded man took out a little case from his pocket, and
-pulled therefrom a pair of horn-bound spectacles.
-
-"Why!" cried Archie, "you're not----"
-
-"I am, really."
-
-"Oh, Bob Cooper, I'm pleased to see you! Tell me all your story."
-
-"Not yet, chummie; it is too long, or rather you're too weak. Why,
-you're crying!"
-
-"It's tears of joy!"
-
-"Well, well; I would join you, lad, but tears ain't in my line. But
-somebody else will want to see you to-morrow."
-
-"Who?"
-
-"Just wait and see."
-
-Archie did wait. Indeed he had to; for the doctor left express
-orders that he was not to be disturbed.
-
-The evening sun was streaming over the hills when Sarah entered next
-day and gave a look towards the bed.
-
-"I'm awake, Sarah."
-
-"It's Bob," said Sarah, "and t'other little gent. They be both
-a-comin' upstairs athout their boots."
-
-Archie was just wondering what right Sarah had to call Bob Cooper by
-his Christian name, when Bob himself came quietly in.
-
-"Ah!" he said, as he approached the bed, "you're beginning to look
-your old self already. Now who is this, think you?"
-
-Archie extended a feeble white hand.
-
-"Why, Whitechapel!" he exclaimed joyfully. "Wonders will never
-cease!"
-
-"Well, Johnnie, and how are ye? I told ye, ye know, that 'the king
-might come in the cadger's way.'"
-
-"Not much king about me now, Harry; but sit down. Why I've come
-through such a lot since I saw you, that I begin to feel quite aged.
-Well, it is just like old times seeing you. But you're not a bit
-altered. No beard, or moustache, or anything, and just as
-cheeky-looking as when you gave me that thrashing in the wood at
-Burley. But you don't talk so Cockneyfied."
-
-"No, Johnnie; ye see I've roughed it a bit, and learned better
-English in the bush and scrub. But I say, Johnnie, I wouldn't mind
-being back for a day or two at Burley. I think I could ride your
-buck-jumping 'Eider-Duck' now. Ah, I won't forget that first ride,
-though; I've got to rub myself yet whenever I think of it."
-
-"But how on earth did you get here at all, the pair of you?"
-
-"Well," said Harry, "that ain't my story 'alf so much as it is Bob's.
-I reckon he better tell it."
-
-"Oh, but I haven't the gift of the gab like you, Harry! I'm a slow
-coach. I am a duffer at a story."
-
-"Stop telling both," cried Archie. "I don't want any story about the
-matter. Just a little conversational yarn; you can help each other
-out, and what I don't understand, why I'll ask, that's all."
-
-"But wait a bit," he continued. "Touch that bell, Harry. Pull hard;
-it doesn't ring else. My diggins are not much account. Here comes
-Sarah, singing. Bless her old soul! I'd been dead many a day if it
-hadn't been for Sarah."
-
-"Look here, Sarah."
-
-"I'm looking nowheres else, Mister Broadbent; but mind you this, if
-there's too much talking, I'm to show both these gents downstairs.
-Them's the doctor's orders, and they've got to be obeyed. Now,
-what's your will, sir?"
-
-"Tea, Sarah."
-
-"That's right. One or two words at a time and all goes easy. Tea
-you shall have in the twinkling of a bedpost. Tea and etceteras."
-
-Sarah was as good as her word. In ten minutes she had laid a little
-table and spread it with good things; a big teapot, cups and saucers,
-and a steaming urn.
-
-Then off she went singing again.
-
-Archie wondered what made her so happy, and meant to ask her when his
-guests were gone.
-
-"Now, young Squire," said Harry, "I'll be the lady; and if your tea
-isn't to your taste, why just holler."
-
-"But don't call me Squire, Harry; I left that title at home. We're
-all equal here. No kings and no cadgers.
-
-"Well, Bob, when last I saw you in old England, there was a sorrowful
-face above your shoulders, and I'll never forget the way you turned
-round and asked me to look after your mother's cat."
-
-"Ah, poor mother! I wish I'd been better to her when I had her.
-However, I reckon we'll meet some day up-bye yonder."
-
-"Yes, Bob, and you jumped the fence and disappeared in the wood!
-Where did you go?"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-_BOB'S STORY: WILD LIFE AT THE DIGGINGS._
-
-"Well, it all came about like this, Archie: 'England,' I said to
-myself, says I, 'ain't no place for a poor man.' Your gentry people,
-most o' them anyhow, are just like dogs in the manger. The dog
-couldn't eat the straw, but he wouldn't let the poor hungry cow have
-a bite. Your landed proprietors are just the same; they got their
-land as the dog got his manger. They took it, and though they can't
-live on it all, they won't let anybody else do it."
-
-"You're rather hard on the gentry, Bob."
-
-"Well, maybe, Archie; but they ain't many o' them like Squire
-Broadbent. Never mind, there didn't seem to be room for me in
-England, and I couldn't help noticing that all the best people, and
-the freest, and kindest, were men like your Uncle Ramsay, who had
-been away abroad, and had gotten all their dirty little meannesses
-squeezed out of them. So when I left you, after cutting that bit o'
-stick, I made tracks for London. I hadn't much money, so I tramped
-all the way to York, and then took train. When I got to London, why
-I felt worse off than ever. Not a soul to speak to; not a face I
-knew; even the bobbies looking sour when I asked them a civil
-question; and starvation staring me in the face."
-
-"Starvation, Bob?"
-
-"Ay, Archie, and money in my pocket. Plenty o' shilling dinners;
-but, lo! what was one, London shilling dinner to the like o' me?
-Why, I could have bolted three! Then I thought of Harry here, and
-made tracks for Whitechapel. I found the youngster--I'd known him at
-Burley--and he was glad to see me again. His granny was dead, or
-somebody; anyhow, he was all alone in the world. But he made me
-welcome--downright happy and welcome. I'll tell you what it is,
-Archie lad, Harry is a little gentleman, Cockney here or Cockney
-there; and deep down below that white, thin face o' his, which three
-years and over of Australian sunshine hasn't made much browner, Harry
-carries a heart, look, see! that wouldn't disgrace an English Squire."
-
-"Bravo, Bob! I like to hear you speak in that way about our friend."
-
-"Well, that night I said to Harry, 'Isn't it hard, Harry,' I says,
-'that in this free and enlightened land a man is put into gaol if he
-snares a rabbit?'
-
-"'Free and enlightened fiddlestick!' that was Harry's words. 'I tell
-ye what it is, Bob,' says he, 'this country is played out. But I
-knows where there are lots o' rabbits for the catching.'
-
-"'Where's that?' I says.
-
-"'Australia O!' says Harry.
-
-"'Harry,' says I, 'let us pool up, and set sail for the land of
-rabbits--for Australia O!'
-
-"'Right you are,' says Harry; and we pooled up on the spot; and from
-that day we haven't had more'n one purse between the two of us, have
-we, Harry?"
-
-"Only one," said Harry; "and one's enough between such old, old
-chums."
-
-"He may well say old, old chums, Archie; he may well put the two olds
-to it; for it isn't so much the time we've been together, it's what
-we've come through together; and shoulder to shoulder has always been
-our motto. We've shared our bed, we've shared our blanket, our
-damper and our water also, when there wasn't much between the two of
-us.
-
-"We got helped out by the emigration folks, and we've paid them
-since, and a bit of interest thrown in for luck like; but when we
-stood together in Port Jackson for the first time, the contents of
-our purse wouldn't have kept us living long, I can assure you."
-
-"'Cities aren't for the like of us, Harry,'" says I.
-
-"'Not now,'" says Harry.
-
-"So we joined a gang going west. There was a rush away to some place
-where somebody had found gold, and Harry and I thought we might do as
-well as any o' them.
-
-"Ay, Archie, that was a rush. 'Tinklers, tailors, sodjers, sailors.'
-I declare we thought ourselves the best o' the whole gang, and I
-think so still.
-
-"We were lucky enough to meet an old digger, and he told us just
-exactly what to take and what to leave. One thing we _did_ take was
-steamboat and train, as far as they would go, and this helped us to
-leave the mob a bit in the rear.
-
-"Well, we got high up country at long last----"
-
-"Hold!" cried Harry. "He's missing the best of it. Is that fair,
-Johnnie?"
-
-"No, it isn't fair."
-
-"Why, Johnnie, we hadn't got fifty miles beyond civilization when,
-what with the heat and the rough food and bad water, Johnnie, my
-London legs and my London heart failed me, and down I must lie. We
-were near a bit of a cockatoo farmer's shanty."
-
-"Does it pay to breed cockatoos?" said Archie innocently.
-
-"Don't be the death o' me, Johnnie. A cockatoo farmer is just a
-crofter. Well, in there Bob helped me, and I could go no farther.
-How long was I ill, Bob?"
-
-"The best part o' two months, Harry."
-
-"Ay, Johnnie, and all that time Bob there helped the farmer--dug for
-him, trenched and fenced, and all for my sake, and to keep the life
-in my Cockney skin."
-
-"Well, Harry," said Bob, "you proved your worth after we got up. You
-hardened down fine after that fever."
-
-Harry turned towards Archie.
-
-"You mustn't believe all Bob says, Johnnie, when he speaks about me.
-Bob is a good-natured, silly sort of a chap; and though he has a
-beard now, he ain't got more 'n 'alf the lime-juice squeezed out of
-him yet."
-
-"Never mind, Bob," said Archie, "even limes and lemons should not be
-squeezed dry. You and I are country lads, and we would rather retain
-a shade of greenness than otherwise; but go on, Bob."
-
-"Well, now," continued Bob, "I don't know that Harry's fever didn't
-do us both good in the long run; for when we started at last for the
-interior, we met a good lot of the rush coming back. There was no
-fear of losing the tracks. That was one good thing that came o'
-Harry's fever. Another was, that it kind o' tightened his
-constitution. La! he could come through anything after that--get wet
-to the skin and dry again; lie out under a tree or under the dews o'
-heaven, and never complain of stiffness; and eat corn beef and damper
-as much as you'd like to put before him; and he never seemed to tire.
-As for me, you know, Archie, I'm an old bush bird. I was brought up
-in the woods and wilds; and, faith, I'm never so much at home as I am
-in the forests. Not but what we found the march inland wearisome
-enough. Worst of it was, we had no horses, and we had to do a lot of
-what you might call good honest begging; but if the squatters did
-give us food going up, we were willing to work for it."
-
-"If they'd let us, Bob."
-
-"Which they didn't. Hospitality and religion go hand in hand with
-the squatter. When I and Harry here set out on that terribly long
-march, I confess to both of ye now I didn't feel at all certain as to
-how anything at all would turn out. I was just as bad as the young
-bear when its mother put it down and told it to walk. The bear said,
-'All right, mother; but how is it done?' And as the mother only
-answered by a grunt, the young bear had to do the best it could; and
-so did we.
-
-"'How is it going to end?' I often said to Harry.
-
-"'We can't lose anything, Bob,' Harry would say, laughing, 'except
-our lives, and they ain't worth much to anybody but ourselves; so I'm
-thinkin' we're safe.'"
-
-Here Bob paused a moment to stir his tea, and look thoughtfully into
-the cup, as if there might be some kind of inspiration to be had from
-that.
-
-He laughed lightly as he proceeded:
-
-"I'm a bad hand at a yarn; better wi' the gun and the 'girn,' Harry.
-But I'm laughing now because I remember what droll notions I had
-about what the Bush, as they call it, would be like when we got
-there."
-
-"But, Johnnie," Harry put in, "the curious thing is, that we never
-did get there, according to the settlers."
-
-"No?"
-
-"No; because they would always say to us, 'You're going Bush way,
-aren't ye, boys?' And we would answer, 'Why, ain't we there now?'
-And they would laugh."
-
-"That's true," said Bob. "The country never seemed to be Bush enough
-for anybody. Soon's they settled down in a place the Bush'd be
-farther west."
-
-"Then the Bush, when one is going west," said Archie, "must be like
-to-morrow, always one day ahead."
-
-"That's it; and always keeping one day ahead. But it was Bush enough
-for us almost anywhere. And though I feel ashamed like to own it
-now, there was more than once that I wished I hadn't gone there at
-all. But I had taken the jump, you see, and there was no going back.
-Well, I used to think at first that the heat would kill us, but it
-didn't. Then I made sure the want of water would. That didn't
-either, because, one way or another, we always came across some. But
-I'll tell you what nearly killed us, and that was the lonesomeness of
-those forests. Talk of trees! La! Archie, you'd think of Jack and
-the beanstalk if you saw some we saw. And why didn't the birds sing
-sometimes? But no, only the constant bicker, bicker of something in
-the grass. There were sounds though that did alarm us. We know now
-that they were made by birds and harmless beasts, but we were all in
-the dark then.
-
-"Often and often, when we were just dropping, and thought it would be
-a comfort to lie down and die, we would come out of a forest all at
-once, and feel in a kind of heaven because we saw smoke, or maybe
-heard the bleating o' sheep. Heaven? Indeed, Archie, it seemed to
-be; for we had many a kindly welcome from the roughest-looking chaps
-you could possibly imagine. And the luxury of bathing our poor feet,
-with the certainty of a pair of dry, clean socks in the mornin', made
-us as happy as a couple of kings. A lump of salt junk, a dab of
-damper, and a bed in a corner made us feel so jolly we could hardly
-go to sleep for laughing.
-
-"But the poor beggars we met, how they did carry on to be sure about
-their bad luck, and about being sold, and this, that, and t'other.
-Ay, and they didn't all go back. We saw dead bodies under trees that
-nobody had stopped to bury; and it was sad enough to notice that a
-good many of these were women, and such pinched and ragged corpses!
-It isn't nice to think back about it.
-
-"Had anybody found gold in this rush? Yes, a few got good working
-claims, but most of the others stopped till they couldn't stop any
-longer, and had to get away east again, crawling, and cursing their
-fate and folly.
-
-"But I'll tell you, Archie, what ruined most o' them. Just drink.
-It is funny that drink will find its way farther into the bush at
-times than bread will.
-
-"Well, coming in at the tail o' the day, like, as Harry and I did, we
-could spot how matters stood at a glance, and we determined to keep
-clear of bush hotels. Ah! they call them all hotels. Well, I'm a
-rough un, Archie, but the scenes I've witnessed in some of those
-drinking houffs has turned my stomach. Maudlin, drunken miners,
-singing, and blethering, and boasting; fighting and rioting worse
-than poachers, Archie, and among them--heaven help us!--poor women
-folks that would melt your heart to look on.
-
-"'Can we settle down here a bit?' I said to Harry, when we got to the
-diggings.
-
-"'We'll try our little best, old chum,' was Harry's reply.
-
-"And we did try. It was hard even to live at first. The food, such
-as it was in the new stores, was at famine price, and there was not
-much to be got from the rivers and woods. But after a few months
-things mended; our station grew into a kind o' working town. We had
-even a graveyard, and all the worst of us got weeded out, and found a
-place there.
-
-"Harry and I got a claim after no end of prospecting that we weren't
-up to. We bought our claim, and bought it cheap; and the chap we got
-it from died in a week. Drink? Ay, Archie, drink. I'll never
-forget, and Harry I don't think will, the last time we saw him. We
-had left him in a neighbour's hut down the gully dying to all
-appearance, too weak hardly to speak. We bade him 'good-bye' for the
-last time as we thought, and were just sitting and talking like in
-our slab-hut before turning in, and late it must have been, when the
-door opened, and in came Glutz, that was his name. La! what a sight!
-His face looked like the face of a skeleton with some parchment drawn
-tight over it, his hollow eyes glittered like wildfire, his lips were
-dry and drawn, his voice husky.
-
-"He pointed at us with his shining fingers, and uttered a low cry
-like some beast in pain; then, in a horrid whisper, he got out these
-words:
-
-"'Give me drink, drink, I'm burning.'
-
-"I've seen many a sight, but never such a one as that, Archie. We
-carried him back. Yes, we did let him have a mouthful. What
-mattered it. Next day he was in a shallow grave. I suppose the
-dingoes had him. They had most of those that died.
-
-"Well, by-and-by things got better with Harry and me; our claim began
-to yield, we got dust and nuggets. We said nothing to anybody. We
-built a better sort of shanty, and laid out a morsel of garden, we
-fished and hunted, and soon learned to live better than we'd done
-before, and as we were making a bit of money we were as happy as
-sandboys.
-
-"No, we didn't keep away from the hotel--they soon got one up--it
-wouldn't have done not to be free and easy. But we knew exactly what
-to do when we did go there. We could spin our bits o' yarns, and
-smoke our pipes, without losing our heads. Sometimes shindies got up
-though, and revolvers were used freely enough, but as a rule it was
-pretty quiet."
-
-"Only once, when that Little fellow told you to 'bail up.'"
-
-"What was that, Harry?" asked Archie.
-
-"Nothing much," said Bob shyly.
-
-"He caught him short round the waist, Johnnie, and smashed everything
-on the counter with him, then flung him straight and clear through
-the doorway. When he had finished he quietly asked what was to pay,
-and Bob was a favourite after that. I reckon no one ever thought of
-challenging him again."
-
-"Where did you keep your gold?"
-
-"We hid it in the earth in the tent. There was a black fellow came
-to look after us every day. We kept him well in his place, for we
-never could trust him; and it was a good thing we did, as I'm going
-to tell you.
-
-"We had been, maybe, a year and a half in the gully, and had got
-together a gay bit o' swag, when our claim gave out all at once as 't
-were--some shift o' the ground or lode. Had we had machinery we
-might have made a round fortune, but there was no use crying about
-it. We quietly determined to make tracks. We had sent some away to
-Brisbane already--that we knew was safe, but we had a good bit more
-to take about us. However, we wouldn't have to walk all the way
-back, for though the place was half-deserted, there were horses to be
-had, and farther along we'd manage to get drags.
-
-"Two of the worst hats about the place were a man called Vance, and a
-kind of broken-down surgeon of the name of Williams. They lived by
-their wits, and the wonder is they hadn't been hanged long ago.
-
-"It was about three nights before we started, and we were coming home
-up the gully. The moon was shining as bright as ever I'd seen it.
-The dew was falling too, and we weren't sorry when we got inside.
-Our tame dingo came to meet us. He had been a pup that we found in
-the bush and brought up by hand, and a more faithful fellow never
-lived. We lit our fat-lamp and sat down to talk, and a good hour, or
-maybe more, went by. Then we lay down, for there was lots to be done
-in the morning.
-
-"There was a little hole in the hut at one end where Wango, as we
-called the wild dog, could crawl through; and just as we were dozing
-off I heard a slight noise, and opened my eyes enough to see poor
-Wango creeping out. We felt sure he wouldn't go far, and would rush
-in and alarm us if there were the slightest danger. So in a minute
-more I was sleeping as soundly as only a miner can sleep, Archie.
-How long I may have slept, or how late or early it was, I couldn't
-say, but I awoke all at once with a start. There was a man in the
-hut. Next minute a shot was fired. I fell back, and don't remember
-any more. Harry there will tell you the rest."
-
-"It was the shot that wakened me, Archie, but I felt stupid. I
-groped round for my revolver, and couldn't find it. Then, Johnnie, I
-just let them have it Tom Sayers's fashion--like I did you in the
-wood, if you remember."
-
-"There were two of them?"
-
-"Aye, Vance and the doctor. I could see their faces by the light of
-their firing. They didn't aim well the first time, Johnnie, so I
-settled them. I threw the doctor over my head. His nut must have
-come against something hard, because it stilled him. I got the door
-opened and had my other man out. Ha! ha! It strikes me, Johnnie,
-that I must have wanted some exercise, for I never punished a bloke
-before as I punished that Vance. He had no more strength in him than
-a bandicoot by the time I was quite done with him, and looked as limp
-all over and just as lively as 'alf a pound of London tripe.
-
-"I just went to the bluff-top after that, and coo-eed for help, and
-three or four right good friends were with us in as many minutes,
-Johnnie.
-
-"We thought Bob was dead, but he soon spoke up and told us he wasn't,
-and didn't mean to die.
-
-"Our chums would have lynched the ruffians that night. The black
-fellow was foremost among those that wanted to. But I didn't like
-that, no more did Bob. They were put in a tent, tied hand and foot,
-and our black fellow made sentry over them. Next day they were all
-gone. Then we knew it was a put-up job. Poor old Wango was found
-with his throat cut. The black fellow had enticed him out and taken
-him off, then the others had gone for us."
-
-"But our swag was safe," said Bob, "though I lay ill for months
-after. And now it was Harry's turn to nurse; and I can tell you,
-Archie, that my dear old dead-and-gone mother couldn't have been
-kinder to me than he was. A whole party of us took the road back
-east, and many is the pleasant evening we spent around our camp-fire.
-
-[Illustration: "A whole party of us took the road back east, and many
-is the pleasant evening we spent around our camp fire."]
-
-"We got safe to Brisbane, and we got safe here; but somehow we're a
-kind o' sick of mining."
-
-"Ever hear more of your assailants?" asked Archie.
-
-"What, the chaps who tried to bail us up? Yes. We did hear they'd
-taken to bushranging, and are likely to come to grief at that."
-
-"Well, Bob Cooper, I think you've told your story pretty tidily, with
-Harry's assistance; and I don't wonder now that you've only got one
-purse between you."
-
-"Ah!" said Bob, "it would take weeks to tell you one half of our
-adventures. We may tell you some more when we're all together in the
-Bush doing a bit of farming."
-
-"All together?"
-
-"To be sure! D'ye reckon we'll leave you here, now we've found you?
-We'll have one purse between three."
-
-"Indeed, Bob, we will not. If I go to the Bush--and now I've half a
-mind to--I'll work like a New Hollander."
-
-"Bravo! You're a chip o' the old block. Well, we can arrange that.
-We'll hire you. Will that do, my proud young son of a proud old
-sire?"
-
-"Yes; you can hire me."
-
-"Well, we'll pay so much for your hands, and so much for your head
-and brains."
-
-Archie laughed.
-
-"And," continued Bob, "I'm sure that Sarah will do the very best for
-the three of us."
-
-"Sarah! Why, what do you mean, Bob?"
-
-"Only this, lad: Sarah has promised to become my little wife."
-
-The girl had just entered.
-
-"Haven't you, Sarah?"
-
-"Hain't I what?"
-
-"Promised to marry me."
-
-"Well, Mister Archie Broadbent, now I comes to think on't, I believes
-I 'ave. You know, mister, you wouldn't never 'ave married me."
-
-"No, Sarah."
-
-"Well, and I'm perfectly sick o' toilin' up and down these stairs.
-That's 'ow it is, sir."
-
-"Well, Sarah," said Archie, "bring us some more nice tea, and I'll
-forgive you for this once, but you mustn't do it any more."
-
-It was late ere Bob and Harry went away. Archie lay back at once,
-and when, a few minutes after, the ex-policeman's wife came in to see
-how he was, she found him sound and fast.
-
-Archie was back again at Burley Old Farm, that is why he smiled in
-his dreams.
-
-"So I'm going to be a hired man in the bush," he said to himself next
-morning. "That's a turn in the kaleidoscope of fortune."
-
-However, as the reader will see, it did not quite come to this with
-Archie Broadbent.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-_MINER'S MARRIAGE._
-
-It was the cool season in Sydney. In other words, it was winter just
-commencing; so, what with balmy air and beauty everywhere around, no
-wonder Archie soon got well. He had the kindest treatment too, and
-he had youth and hope.
-
-He could now write home to his parents and Elsie a long, cheerful
-letter without any twinge of conscience. He was going to begin work
-soon in downright earnest, and get straight away from city life, and
-all its allurements; he wondered, he said, it had not occurred to him
-to do this before, only it was not too late to mend even yet. He
-hated city life now quite as much as he had previously loved it, and
-been enamoured of it.
-
-It never rains but it pours, and on the very day after he posted his
-packet to Burley he received a registered letter from his uncle. It
-contained a bill of exchange for fifty pounds. Archie blushed
-scarlet when he saw it.
-
-Now had this letter and its contents been from his father, knowing
-all he did of the straits at home, he would have sent the money back.
-But his uncle evidently knew whom he had to deal with; for he assured
-Archie in his letter that it was a loan, not a gift. He might want
-it he said, and he really would be obliging him by accepting it.
-He--Uncle Ramsay--knew what the world was, and so on and so forth,
-and the letter ended by requesting Archie to say nothing about it to
-his parents at present.
-
-"Dear old boy," said Archie half aloud, and tears of gratitude sprang
-to his eyes. "How thoughtful and kind! Well, it'll be a loan, and
-I'll pray every night that God may spare him till I get home to shake
-his honest brown paw, and thrust the fifty pounds back into it. No,
-it would be really unkind to refuse it."
-
-He went straight away--walking on feathers--to Bob's hotel. He found
-him and Harry sitting out on the balcony drinking sherbet. He took a
-seat beside them.
-
-"I'm in clover, boys," he cried exultingly, as he handed the cash to
-Bob to look at.
-
-"So you are," said Bob, reading the figures. "Well, this is what my
-old mother would call a God-send. I always said your Uncle Ramsay
-was as good as they make 'em."
-
-"It looks a lot of money to me at present," said Archie. "I'll have
-all that to begin life with; for I have still a few pounds left to
-pay my landlady, and to buy a blanket or two."
-
-"Well, as to what you'll buy, Archie," said Bob Cooper, "if you don't
-mind leaving that to us, we will manage all, cheaper and better than
-you could; for we're old on the job."
-
-"Oh! I will with pleasure, only----"
-
-"I know all about that. You'll settle up. Well, we're all going to
-be settlers. Eh? See the joke?"
-
-"Bob doesn't often say funny things," said Harry; "so it must be a
-fine thing to be going to get married."
-
-"Ay, lad, and I'm going to do it properly. Worst of it is, Archie, I
-don't know anybody to invite. Oh, we must have a dinner! Bother
-breakfasts, and hang honeymoons. No, no; a run round Sydney will
-suit Sarah better than a year o' honeymooning nonsense. Then we'll
-all go off in the boat to Brisbane. That'll be a honeymoon and a
-half in itself. Hurrah! Won't we all be so happy! I feel sure
-Sarah's a jewel."
-
-"How long did you know her, Bob, before you asked her the momentous
-question?"
-
-"Asked her _what_?"
-
-"To marry you."
-
-"Oh, only a week! La! that's long enough. I could see she was true
-blue, and as soft as rain. Bless her heart! I say, Archie, who'll
-we ask?"
-
-"Well, I know a few good fellows----"
-
-"Right. Let us have them. What's their names?"
-
-Out came Bob's notebook, and down went a dozen names.
-
-"That'll be ample," said Archie.
-
-"Well," Bob acquiesced with a sigh, "I suppose it must. Now we're
-going to be spliced by special license, Sarah and I. None of your
-doing things by half. And Harry there is going to order the cabs and
-carriages, and favours and music, and the parson, and everything
-firstchop."
-
-The idea of "ordering the parson" struck Archie as somewhat
-incongruous; but Bob had his own way of saying things, and it was
-evident he would have his own way in doing things too for once.
-
-"And," continued Bob, "the ex-policeman's wife and I are going to buy
-the bonnie things to-morrow. And as for the 'bobby' himself, we'll
-have to send him away for the day. He is too fond of one thing, and
-would spoil the splore."
-
-Next day sure enough Bob did start off with the "bobby's" wife to buy
-the bonnie things. A tall, handsome fellow Bob looked too; and the
-tailor having dona his best, he was altogether a dandy. He would
-persist in giving his mother, as he called her, his arm on the
-street, and the appearance of the pair of them caused a good many
-people to look after them and smile.
-
-However, the "bonnie things" were bought, and it was well he had
-someone to look after him, else he would have spent money uselessly
-as well as freely. Only, as Bob said, "It was but one day in his
-life, why shouldn't he make the best of it?"
-
-He insisted on making his mother a present of a nice little gold
-watch. No, he _wouldn't_ let her have a silver one, and it _should_
-be "set with blue stones." He would have that one, and no other.
-
-"Too expensive? No, indeed!" he cried. "Make out the bill, master,
-and I'll knock down my cheque. Hurrah! one doesn't get married every
-morning, and it isn't everybody who gets a girl like Sarah when he
-does get spliced! So there!"
-
-Archie had told Bob and Harry of his first dinner at the hotel, and
-how kind and considerate in every way the waiter had been, and how he
-had often gone back there to have a talk.
-
-"It is there then, and nowhere else," said Bob, "we'll have our
-wedding dinner."
-
-Archie would not gainsay this; and nothing would satisfy the lucky
-miner but chartering a whole flat for a week.
-
-"That's the way we'll do it," he said; "and now look here, as long as
-the week lasts, any of your friends can drop into breakfast, dinner,
-or supper. We are going to do the thing proper, if we sell our best
-jackets to help to pay the bill. What say, old chummie?"
-
-"Certainly," said Harry; "and if ever I'm fool enough to get married,
-I'll do the same kind o' thing."
-
-A happy thought occurred to Archie the day before the marriage.
-
-"How much loose cash have you, Bob?"
-
-"I dunno," said Bob, diving his hands into both his capacious
-pockets--each were big enough to hold a rabbit--and making a
-wonderful rattling.
-
-"I reckon I've enough for to-morrow. It seems deep enough."
-
-"Well, my friend, hand over."
-
-"What!" cried Bob, "you want me to bail up?"
-
-"Bail up!"
-
-"You're a downright bushranger, Archie. However, I suppose I must
-obey."
-
-Then he emptied his pockets into a pile on the table--gold, silver,
-copper, all in the same heap. Archie counted and made a note of all,
-put part away in a box, locked it, gave Bob back a few coins, mostly
-silver, and stowed the rest in his purse.
-
-"Now," said Archie, "be a good old boy, Bob; and if you want any more
-money, just ask nicely, and perhaps you'll have it."
-
-There was a rattling thunder-storm that night, which died away at
-last far beyond the hills, and next morning broke bright, and cool,
-and clear.
-
-A more lovely marriage morning surely never yet was seen.
-
-And in due time the carriages rolled up to the church door, horses
-and men bedecked in favours, and right merry was the peal that rang
-forth from St. James's.
-
-Sarah did not make by any means an uninteresting bride. She had not
-over-dressed, so that showed she possessed good taste.
-
-As for the stalwart Northumbrian, big-bearded Bob, he really was
-splendid. He was all a man, I can assure you, and bore himself as
-such in spite of the fact that his black broadcloth coat was rather
-wrinkly in places, and that his white kid gloves had burst at the
-sides.
-
-There was a glorious glitter of love and pride in his dark blue eyes
-as he towered beside Sarah at the altar, and he made the responses in
-tones that rang through all the church.
-
-After the ceremony and vestry business Bob gave a sigh of relief, and
-squeezed Sarah's hand till she blushed.
-
-The carriage was waiting, and a pretty bit of a mob too. And before
-Bob jumped in he said, "Now, Harry, for the bag."
-
-As he spoke he gave a look of triumph towards Archie, as much as to
-say, "See how I have sold you."
-
-Harry handed him a bag of silver coins.
-
-"Stand by, you boys, for a scramble," shouted Bob in a voice that
-almost brought down the church.
-
-"Coo--ee!"
-
-And out flew handful after handful, here, there, and everywhere, till
-the sack was empty.
-
-When the carriages got clear away at last, there was a ringing cheer
-went up from the crowd that really did everybody's heart good to hear.
-
-Of course the bridegroom stood up and waved his hat back, and when at
-last he subsided:
-
-"Och!" he sighed, "that is the correct way to get married. I've got
-all their good wishes, and they're worth their weight in gold, let
-alone silver."
-
-The carriages all headed away for the heights of North Shore, and on
-to the top of the bay, from whence such a glorious panorama was
-spread out before them as one seldom witnesses. The city itself was
-a sight; but there were the hills, and rocks, and woods, and the
-grand coast line, and last, though not least, the blue sea itself.
-
-The breakfast was _al fresco_. It really was a luncheon, and it
-would have done credit to the wedding of a Highland laird or lord,
-let alone a miner and quondam poacher. But Australia is a queer
-place. Bob's money at all events had been honestly come by, and
-everybody hailed him king of the day. He knew he was king, and
-simply did as he pleased. Here is one example of his abounding
-liberality. Before starting back for town that day he turned to
-Archie, as a prince might turn:
-
-"Archie, chummie," he said.
-
-"You see those boys?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Well, they all look cheeky."
-
-"Very much so, Bob."
-
-"And I dearly love a cheeky boy. Scatter a handful of coins among
-them, and see that there be one or two yellow ones in the lot."
-
-"What nonsense!" cried Archie; "what extravagant folly, Bob!"
-
-"All right," said Bob quietly. "I've no money, but----" He pulled
-out his splendid gold hunter.
-
-"What are you going to do?"
-
-"Why, let them scramble for the watch."
-
-"No, no, Bob; I'll throw the coins."
-
-"You have to," said Bob, sitting down, laughing.
-
-The dinner, and the dance afterwards, were completely successful.
-There was no over-crowding, and no stuckupness, as Bob called it.
-Everybody did what he pleased, and all were as happy and jolly as the
-night was long.
-
-Bob did not go away on any particular honeymoon. He told Sarah they
-would have their honeymoon out when they went to the Bush.
-
-Meanwhile, day after day, for a week, the miner bridegroom kept open
-house for Archie's friends; and every morning some delightful trip
-was arranged, which, faithfully carried out, brought everyone hungry
-and happy back to dinner.
-
-There is more beauty of scenery to be seen around Sydney in winter
-than would take volumes to describe by pen, and acres of canvas to
-depict; and, after all, both author and artist would have to admit
-that they had not done justice to their subject.
-
-Now that he had really found friends--humble though they might be
-considered in England--life to Archie, which before his accident was
-very grey and hopeless, became bright and clear again. He had a
-present, and he believed he had a future. He saw new beauties
-everywhere around him, even in the city; and the people themselves,
-who in his lonely days seemed to him so grasping, grim, and
-heartless, began to look pleasant in his eyes. This only proves that
-we have happiness within our reach if we only let it come to us, and
-it never will while we sit and sulk, or walk around and growl.
-
-Bob, with his young wife and Archie and Harry, made many a pilgrimage
-all round the city, and up and through the sternly rugged and grand
-scenery among the Blue Mountains. Nor was it all wild and stern, for
-valleys were visited, whose beauty far excelled anything else Archie
-had ever seen on earth, or could have dreamt of even. Sky, wood,
-hill, water, and wild flowers all combined to form scenes of
-loveliness that were entrancing at this sweet season of the year.
-
-Twenty times a day at least Archie was heard saying to himself, "Oh,
-how I wish sister and Rupert were here!"
-
-Then there were delightful afternoons spent in rowing about the bay.
-
-I really think Bob was taking the proper way to enjoy himself after
-all. He had made up his mind to spend a certain sum of money on
-seeing all that was worth seeing, and he set himself to do so in a
-thoroughly business way. Well, if a person has got to do nothing,
-the best plan is to do it pleasantly.
-
-So he would hire one of the biggest, broadest-beamed boats he could
-find, with two men to row. They would land here and there in the
-course of the afternoon, and towards sunset get well out into the
-centre of the bay. This was the time for enjoyment. The lovely
-chain of houses, the woods, and mansions half hid in a cloudland of
-soft greens and hazy blues; the far-off hills, the red setting sun,
-the painted sky, and the water itself casting reflections of all
-above.
-
-Then slowly homewards, the chains of lights springing up here, there,
-and everywhere as the gloaming began to deepen into night.
-
-If seeing and enjoying such scenes as these with a contented mind, a
-good appetite, and the certainty of an excellent dinner on their
-return, did not constitute genuine happiness, then I do not know from
-personal experience what that feeling is.
-
-But the time flew by. Preparations had to be made to leave this
-fascinating city, and one day Archie proposed that Bob and he should
-visit Winslow in his suburban villa.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-_MR. WINSLOW IN A DIFFERENT LIGHT._
-
-"You'll find him a rough stick," said Archie.
-
-"What, rougher than me or Harry?" said Bob.
-
-"Well, as you've put the question I'll answer you pat. I don't
-consider either you or Harry particularly rough. If you're rough
-you're right, Bob, and it is really wonderful what a difference
-mixing with the world has done for both of you; and if you knew a
-little more of the rudiments of English grammar, you would pass at a
-pinch."
-
-"Thank ye," said Bob.
-
-"You've got a bit of the bur-r-r of Northumbria in your brogue, but I
-do believe people like it, and Harry isn't half the Cockney he used
-to be. But, Bob, this man--I wish I could say gentleman--Winslow
-never was, and never could be, anything but a shell-back. He puts me
-in mind of the warty old lobsters one sees crawling in and out among
-the rocks away down at the point yonder.
-
-"But, oh!" added Archie, "what a little angel the daughter is! Of
-course she is only a baby. And what a lovely name--Etheldene! Isn't
-it sweet, Bob?"
-
-"I don't know about the sweetness; there is a good mouthful of it,
-anyhow."
-
-"Off you go, Bob, and dress. Have you darned those holes in your
-gloves?"
-
-"No; bought a new pair."
-
-"Just like your extravagance. Be off!"
-
-Bob Cooper took extra pains with his dressing to-day, and when he
-appeared at last before his little wife Sarah, she turned him round
-and round and round three times, partly for luck, and partly to look
-at him with genuine pride up and down.
-
-"My eye," she said at last, "you does look stunning! Not a pin in
-sight, nor a string sticking out anywheres. You're going to see a
-young lady, I suppose; but Sarah ain't jealous of her little man.
-She likes to see him admired."
-
-"Yes," said Bob, laughing; "you've hit the nail straight on the head;
-I am going to see a young lady. She is fourteen year old, I think.
-But bless your little bobbing bit o' a heart, lass, it isn't for her
-I'm dressed. No; I'm going with t' young Squire. He may be all the
-same as us out here, and lets me call him Archie. But what are they
-out here, after all? Why, only a set o' whitewashed heathens. No, I
-must dress for the company I'm in."
-
-"And the very young lady?----"
-
-"Is a Miss Winslow. I think t' young Squire is kind o' gone on her,
-though she is only a baby. Well, good-bye, lass."
-
-"Good-bye, little man."
-
-Etheldene ran with smiles and outstretched arms to meet Archie, but
-drew back when she noticed the immense bearded stranger.
-
-"It's only Bob," said Archie. "Is your father in?"
-
-"Yes, and we're all going to have tea out here under the trees."
-
-The "all" was not a very large number; only Etheldene's governess and
-father, herself, and a girl playmate.
-
-Poor Etheldene's mother had died in the Bush when she was little more
-than a baby. The rough life had hardly suited her. And this child
-had been such a little bushranger from her earliest days that her
-present appearance, her extreme beauty and gentleness, made another
-of those wonderful puzzles for which Australia is notorious.
-
-Probably Etheldene knew more about the blacks, with their strange
-customs and manners, their curious rites and superstitions, and more
-about the home life of wallabies, kangaroos, dingoes, birds, insects,
-and every thing that grew wild, than many a professed naturalist; but
-she had her own names, or names given by blacks, to the trees and to
-the wild flowers.
-
-While Etheldene, somewhat timidly it must be confessed, was leading
-big Bob round the gardens and lawns by the hand as if he were a kind
-of exaggerated schoolboy, and showing him all her pets--animate and
-inanimate--her ferns and flowers and birds, Winslow himself came upon
-the scene with the _Morning Herald_ in his hand. He was dressed--if
-dressing it could be called--in the same careless manner Archie had
-last seen him. It must be confessed, however, that this
-semi-negligent style seemed to suit him. Archie wondered if ever he
-had worn a necktie in his life, and how he would look in a dress
-suit. He lounged up with careless ease, and stuck out his great
-spade of a hand.
-
-Archie remembered he was Etheldene's father, and shook it.
-
-"Well, youngster, how are you? Bobbish, eh? Ah, I see Ethie has got
-in tow with a new chum. Your friend? Is he now? Well, that's the
-sort of man I like. He's bound to do well in this country. You
-ain't a bad sort yourself, lad; but nothing to that, no more than a
-young turkey is to an emu. Well, sit down."
-
-Mr. Winslow flung himself on the grass. It might be rather damp, but
-he dared not trust his weight and bulk on a lawn-chair.
-
-"So your friend's going to the Bush, and going to take you with him,
-eh?"
-
-Archie's proud soul rebelled against this way of talking, but he said
-nothing. It was evident that Mr. Winslow looked upon him as a boy.
-
-"Well, I hope you'll do right both of you. What prospects have you?"
-
-Archie told him how high his hopes were, and how exalted his notions.
-
-"Them's your sentiments, eh? Then my advice is this: Pitch 'em all
-overboard--the whole jing-bang of them. Your high-flown notions sink
-you English greenhorns. Now, when I all but offered you a position
-under me----"
-
-"Under your gardener," said Archie, smiling.
-
-"Well, it's all the same. I didn't mean to insult your father's son.
-I wanted to know if you had the grit and the go in you."
-
-"I think I've both, sir. Father--Squire Broadbent----"
-
-"Squire Fiddlestick!"
-
-"Sir!"
-
-"Go on, lad, never mind me. Your father----"
-
-"My father brought me up to work."
-
-"Tossing hay, I suppose, raking flower-beds and such. Well, you'll
-find all this different in Australian Bush life; it is sink or swim
-there."
-
-"Well, I'm going to swim."
-
-"Bravo, boy!"
-
-"And now, sir, do you mean to tell me that brains go for nothing in
-this land of contrariety?"
-
-"No," cried Winslow, "no, lad. Goodness forbid I should give you
-that impression. If I had only the gift of the gab, and were a good
-writer, I'd send stuff to this paper" (here he struck the sheet that
-lay on the grass) "that would show men how I felt, and I'd be a
-member of the legislature in a year's time. But this is what I say,
-lad, _Brains without legs and arms, and a healthy stomach, are no
-good here_, or very little. We want the two combined; but if either
-are to be left out, why leave out the brains. There is many an
-English youth of gentle birth and good education that would make
-wealth and honour too in this new land of ours, if he could pocket
-his pride, don a workman's jacket, and put his shoulder to the wheel.
-That's it, d' ye see?"
-
-"I think I do."
-
-"That's right. Now tell me about your uncle. Dear old man! We
-never had a cross word all the time I sailed with him."
-
-Archie did tell him all, everything, and even gave him his last
-letter to read.
-
-By-and-by Etheldene came back, still leading her exaggerated
-schoolboy.
-
-"Sit down, Mr. Cooper, on the grass. That's the style."
-
-"Well," cried Archie, laughing, "if everybody is going to squat on
-the grass, so shall I."
-
-Even Etheldene laughed at this; and when the governess came, and
-servants with the tea, they found a very happy family indeed.
-
-After due introductions, Winslow continued talking to Bob.
-
-"That's it, you see, Mr. Cooper; and I'm right glad you've come to me
-for advice. What I don't know about settling in Bushland isn't worth
-knowing, though I say it myself. There are plenty long-headed
-fellows that have risen to riches very quickly, but I believe, lad,
-the same men would have made money in their own country. They are
-the geniuses of finance; fellows with four eyes in their head, and
-that can look two ways at once. But they are the exception, and the
-ordinary man needn't expect such luck, because he won't get it.
-
-"Now there's yourself, Mr. Cooper, and your friend that I haven't
-seen; you've made a lucky dive at the fields, and you're tired of
-gold-digging. I don't blame you. You want to turn farmer in
-earnest. On a small scale you are a capitalist. Well, mind, you're
-going to play a game, in which the very first movement may settle you
-for good or evil.
-
-"Go to Brisbane. Don't believe the chaps here. Go straight away up,
-and take time a bit, and look round. Don't buy a pig in a poke.
-Hundreds do. There's a lot of people whose interest is to sell A1
-claims, and a shoal of greenhorns with capital who want to buy. Now
-listen. Maybe not one of these have any experience. They see
-speculation in each other's eyes; and if one makes a grab, the other
-will try to be before him, and very likely the one that lays hold is
-hoisted. Let me put it in another way. Hang a hook, with a nice
-piece of pork on it, overboard where there are sharks. Everyone
-would like the pork, but everyone is shy and suspicious. Suddenly a
-shark, with more speculation in his eye than the others, prepares for
-a rush, and rather than he shall have it all the rest do just the
-same, and the lucky one gets hoisted. It's that way with catching
-capitalists. So I say again, Look before you leap. Don't run after
-bargains. They may be good, but---- This young fellow here has some
-knowledge of English farming. Well, that is good in its way, very
-good; and he has plenty of muscle, and is willing to work, that is
-better. If he were all alone, I'd tell him to go away to the Bush
-and shear sheep, build fences, and drive cattle for eighteen months,
-and keep his eyes wide open, and his ears too, and he'd get some
-insight into business. As it is, you're all going together, and
-you'll all have a look at things. You'll see what sort of stock the
-country is suited for--sheep, or cattle, or both; if it is exposed,
-or wet, or day, or forest, or all together. And you'll find out if
-it be healthy for men and stock, and not 'sour' for either; and also
-you'll consider what markets are open to you. For there'd be small
-use in rearing stock you couldn't sell. See?"
-
-"Yes," said Bob; "I see a lot of difficulties in the way I hadn't
-thought of."
-
-"Go warily then, and the difficulties will vanish. I think I'll go
-with you to Brisbane," added Winslow, after a pause. "I'm getting
-sick already of civilized life."
-
-Etheldene threw her arms round her father's neck.
-
-"Well, birdie, what is it? 'Fraid I go and leave you too long?"
-
-"You mustn't leave me at all, father. I'm sometimes sick of
-civilized life. I'm going with you wherever you go."
-
-That same evening after dinner, while Etheldene was away somewhere
-with her new friend--showing him, I think, how to throw the
-boomerang--Winslow and Archie sat out in the verandah looking at the
-stars while they sipped their coffee.
-
-Winslow had been silent for a time, suddenly he spoke.
-
-"I'm going to ask you a strange question, youngster," he said.
-
-"Well, sir?" said Archie.
-
-"Suppose I were in a difficulty, from what you have seen of me would
-you help me out if you could?"
-
-"You needn't ask, sir," said Archie. "My uncle's friend."
-
-"Well, a fifty-pound note would do it."
-
-Archie had his uncle's draft still with him. He never said a word
-till he had handed it to Winslow, and till this eccentric individual
-had crumpled it up, and thrust it unceremoniously, and with only a
-grunt of thanks, into one of his capacious pockets.
-
-"But," said Archie, "I would rather you would not look upon it as a
-loan. In fact, I am doubting the evidence of my senses. You--with
-all the show of wealth I see around me--to be in temporary need of a
-poor, paltry fifty pounds! Verily, sir, this is the land of
-contrarieties."
-
-Winslow simply laughed.
-
-"You have a lot to learn yet," he said, "my young friend; but I
-admire your courage, and your generous-heartedness, though not your
-business habits."
-
-Archie and Bob paid many a visit to Wistaria Grove--the name of
-Winslow's place--during the three weeks previous to the start from
-Sydney.
-
-One day, when alone with Archie, Winslow thrust an envelope into his
-hands.
-
-"That's your fifty pounds," he said. "Why, count it, lad; don't stow
-it away like that. It ain't business."
-
-"Why," said Archie, "here are three hundred pounds, not fifty pounds!"
-
-"It's all yours, lad, every penny; and if you don't put it up I'll
-put it in the fire."
-
-"But explain."
-
-"Yes, nothing more easy. You mustn't be angry. No? Well, then, I
-knew, from all accounts, you were a chip o' the old block, and there
-was no use offending your silly pride by offering to lend you money
-to buy a morsel of claim, so I simply borrowed yours and put it out
-for you."
-
-"Put it out for me?"
-
-"Yes, that's it; and the money is honestly increased. Bless your
-innocence! I could double it in a week. It is making the first
-thousand pounds that is the difficulty in this country of
-contrarieties, as you call it."
-
-When Archie told Bob the story that evening, Bob's answer was:
-
-"Well, lad, I knew Winslow was a good-hearted fellow the very first
-day I saw him. Never you judge a man by his clothes, Archie."
-
-"First impressions certainly are deceiving," said Archie; "and I'm
-learning something new every day of my life."
-
-* * * * * *
-
-"I am going round to Melbourne for a week or two, boys," said Winslow
-one day. "Which of you will come with me?"
-
-"I'll stop here," said Bob, "and stick to business. You had better
-go, Archie."
-
-"I would like to, if--if I could afford it."
-
-"Now, just look here, young man, you stick that eternal English pride
-of yours in your pocket. I ask you to come with me as a guest, and
-if you refuse I'll throw you overboard. And if, during our journey,
-I catch you taking your pride, or your purse either, out of your
-pocket, I'll never speak another word to you as long as I live."
-
-"All right," said Archie, laughing; "that settles it. Is Etheldene
-going too?"
-
-"Yes, the child is going. She won't stay away from her old dad. She
-hasn't a mother, poor thing."
-
-Regarding Archie's visit to Victoria, we must let him speak himself
-another time; for the scene of our story must now shift.
-
-
-
-
-Book III.
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-"_IN THIS NEW LAND OF OURS._"
-
-There was something in the glorious lonesomeness of Bush-life that
-accorded most completely with Archie's notions of true happiness and
-independence. His life now, and the lives of all the three, would be
-simply what they chose to make them. To use the figurative language
-of the New Testament, they had "taken hold of the plough," and they
-certainly had no intention of "looking back."
-
-Archie felt (this too is figurative) as the mariner may be supposed
-to feel just leaving his native shore to sail away over the broad,
-the boundless ocean to far-off lands. His hand is on the tiller; the
-shore is receding; his eye is aloft, where the sails are bellying out
-before the wind. There is hardly a sound, save the creaking of the
-blocks, or rattle of the rudder chains, the joyous ripple of the
-water, and the screaming of the sea-birds, that seem, to sing their
-farewells. Away ahead is the blue horizon and the heaving sea, but
-he has faith in his good barque, and faith in his own skill and
-judgment, and for the time being he is a Viking; he is "monarch of
-all he surveys."
-
-"Monarch of all he surveys?" Yes; these words are borrowed from the
-poem on Robinson Crusoe, you remember; that stirring story that so
-appeals to the heart of every genuine boy.
-
-There was something of the Robinson Crusoe element in Archie's
-present mode of living, for he and his friends had to rough it in the
-same delightfully primitive fashion. They had to know and to
-practise a little of almost every trade under the sun; and while life
-to the boy--he was really little more--was very real and very
-earnest, it felt all the time like playing at being a man.
-
-But how am I to account for the happiness--nay, even joyfulness--that
-appeared to be infused in the young man's very blood and soul? Nay,
-not appeared to be only, but that actually was--a joyfulness whose
-effects could at times be actually felt in his very frame and muscle
-like a proud thrill, that made his steps and tread elastic, and
-caused him to gaily sing to himself as he went about at his work.
-May I try to explain this by a little homely experiment, which you
-yourself may also perform? See, here then I have a small disc of
-zinc, no larger than a coat button, and I have also a shilling-piece.
-I place the former on my tongue, and the latter between my lower lip
-and gum, and lo! the moment I permit the two metallic edges to touch
-I feel a tingling thrill, and if my eyes be shut I perceive a flash
-as well. It is electricity pissing through the bodily medium--my
-tongue. The one coin becomes _en rapport_, so to speak, with the
-other. So in like manner was Archie's soul within him _en rapport_
-with all the light, the life, the love he saw around him, his body
-being but the wholesome, healthy, solid medium.
-
-_En rapport_ with the light. Why, by day this was everywhere--in the
-sky during its mid-day blue brightness; in the clouds so gorgeously
-painted that lay over the hills at early morning, or over the wooded
-horizon near eventide. _En rapport_ with the light dancing and
-shimmering in the pool down yonder; playing among the wild flowers
-that grew everywhere in wanton luxuriance; flickering through the
-tree-tops, despite the trailing creepers; gleaming through the tender
-greens of fern fronds in cool places; sporting with the strange
-fantastic, but brightly-coloured orchids; turning greys to white, and
-browns to bronze; warming, wooing, beautifying all things--the light,
-the lovely light. _En rapport_ with the life. Ay, there it was.
-Where was it not? In the air, where myriads of insects dance and
-buzz and sing and poise hawk-like above flowers, as if inhaling their
-sweetness, or dart hither and thither in their zigzag course, and
-almost with the speed of lightning; where monster beetles go droning
-lazily round, as if uncertain where to alight; where moths, like
-painted fans, hover in the sunshine, or fold their wings and go to
-sleep on flower-tops. In the forests, where birds, like animated
-blossoms, living chips of dazzling colours, hop from boughs, climb
-stems, run along silvery bark on trees, hopping, jumping, tapping,
-talking, chattering, screaming, with bills that move and throats that
-heave even when their voices cannot be heard in the feathered babel.
-Life on the ground, where thousands of busy beetles creep, or play
-hide-and-seek among the stems of tall grass, and where ants
-innumerable go in search of what they somehow never seem to find.
-Life on the water slowly sailing round, or in and out among the
-reeds, in the form of bonnie velvet ducks and pretty spangled teal.
-Life in the water, where shoals of fish dart hither and thither, or
-rest for a moment in shallows to bask in the sun, their bodies all
-a-quiver with enjoyment. Life in the sky itself, high up. Behold
-that splendid flock of wonga-wonga pigeons, with bronzen wings, that
-seem to shake the sunshine off them in showers of silver and gold,
-or, lower down, that mob of snowy-breasted cockatoos, going somewhere
-to do something, no doubt, and making a dreadful din about it, but
-quite a sight, if only from the glints of lily and rose that appear
-in the white of their outstretched wings and tails. Life everywhere.
-
-_En rapport_ with all the love around him. Yes, for it is spring
-here, though the autumn tints are on the trees in groves and woods at
-Burley. Deep down in the forest yonder, if you could penetrate
-without your clothes being torn from your back, you might listen to
-the soft murmur of the doves that stand by their nests in the green
-gloom of fig trees; you would linger long to note the love passages
-taking place among the cosy wee, bright, and bonnie parrakeets; you
-would observe the hawk flying silently, sullenly, home to his castle
-in the inaccessible heights of the gum trees, but you would go
-quickly past the forest dens of lively cockatoos. For everywhere it
-is spring with birds and beasts. They have dressed in their gayest;
-they have assumed their fondest notes and cries; they live and
-breathe and buzz in an atmosphere of happiness and love.
-
-Well, it was spring with Nature, and it was spring in Archie's heart.
-
-Work was a pleasure to him.
-
-That last sentence really deserves a line to itself. Without the
-ghost of an intention to moralise, I must be permitted to say, that
-the youth who finds an undoubted pleasure in working is sure to get
-on in Australia. There is that in the clear, pure, dry air of the
-back Bush which renders inactivity an impossibility to anyone except
-ne'er-do-wells and born idiots. This is putting it strongly, but it
-is also putting it truthfully.
-
-Archie felt he had done with Sydney, for a time at all events, when
-he left. He was not sorry to shake the dust of the city from his
-half-wellingtons as he embarked on the _Canny Scotia_, bound for
-Brisbane.
-
-If the Winslows had not been among the passengers he certainly would
-have given vent to a sigh or two.
-
-All for the sake of sweet little Etheldene? Yes, for her sake. Was
-she not going to be Rupert's wife, and his own second sister? Oh, he
-had it all nicely arranged, all cut and dry, I can assure you!
-
-Here is a funny thing, but it is also a fact. The very day that the
-_Canny Scotia_ was to sail, Archie took Harry with him, and the two
-started through the city, and bore up for the shop of Mr. Glorie.
-
-They entered. It was like entering a gloomy vault. Nothing was
-altered. There stood the rows on rows of dusty bottles, with their
-dingy gilt labels; the dusty mahogany drawers; the morsel of
-railinged desk with its curtain of dirty red; there were the murky
-windows with their bottles of crusted yellows and reds; and up there
-the identical spider still working away at his dismal web, still
-living in hopes apparently of some day being able to catch a fly.
-
-The melancholy-looking new apprentice, who had doubtless paid the new
-premium, a long lantern-jawed lad with great eyes in hollow sockets,
-and a blue-grey face, stood looking at the pair of them.
-
-"Where is your master, Mr.----?"
-
-"Mr. Myers, sir. Myers is my name."
-
-"Where is Mr. Glorie, Mr. Myers?"
-
-"D' ye wish to see 'm, sir?"
-
-"Don't it seem like it?" cried Harry, who for the life of him "could
-not help putting his oar in."
-
-"Master's at the back, among--the soap."
-
-He droned out the last words in such a lugubrious tone that Archie
-felt sorry for him.
-
-Just then, thinking perhaps he scented a customer, Mr. Glorie himself
-entered, all apron from the jaws to the knees.
-
-"Ah! Mr. Glorie," cried Archie. "I really couldn't leave Sydney
-without saying ta-ta, and expressing iny sorrow for breaking----"
-
-"Your indenture, young sir?"
-
-"No; I'm glad I broke that. I mean the oil-jar. Here is a sovereign
-towards it, and I hope there's no bad feeling."
-
-"Oh, no, not in the least, and thank you, sir, kindly!"
-
-"Well, good-bye. Good-bye, Mr. Myers. If ever I return from the
-Bush I'll come back and see you."
-
-And away they went, and away went Archie's feeling; of gloom as soon
-as he got to the sunny side of the street.
-
-"I say," said Harry, "that's a lively coon behind the counter. Looks
-to me like a love-sick bandicoot, or a consumptive kangaroo. But
-don't you know there is such a thing as being too honest? Now that
-old death-and-glory chap robbed you, and had it been me, and I'd
-called again, it would have been to kick him. But you're still the
-old Johnnie."
-
-* * * * * *
-
-Now if I were writing all this tale from imagination, instead of
-sketching the life and struggles of a real live laddie, I should have
-ascended into the realms of romance, and made a kind of hero of him
-thus: he should have gone straight away to the bank when he received
-that £50 from his uncle, and sent it back, and then gone off to the
-bush with twopence halfpenny in his pocket, engaged himself to a
-squatter as under-man, and worked his way right up to the pinnacle of
-fortune.
-
-But Archie had not done that; and between you and me and the
-binnacle, not to let it go any further, I think he did an extremely
-sensible thing in sticking to the money.
-
-Oh, but plenty of young men who do not have uncles to send them
-fifty-pound notes to help them over their first failures, do very
-well without such assistance! So let no intending emigrant be
-disheartened.
-
-Again, as to Winslow's wild way of borrowing said £50, and changing
-it into £300, that was another "fluke," and a sort of thing that
-might never happen again in a hundred years.
-
-Pride did come in again, however, with a jump--with a gay
-Northumbrian bound--when Bob and Harry seriously proposed that
-Johnnie, as the latter still called him, should put his money in the
-pool, and share and share alike with them.
-
-"No, no, no," said the young Squire, "don't rile me; that would be so
-obviously unfair to you, that it would be unfair to myself."
-
-When asked to explain this seeming paradox, he added:
-
-"Because it would rob me of my feeling of independence."
-
-So the matter ended.
-
-But through the long-headed kindness and business tact of Winslow,
-all three succeeded in getting farms that adjoined, though Archie's
-was but a patch compared to the united great farms of his chums, that
-stretched to a goodly two thousand acres and more, with land beyond
-to take up as pasture.
-
-But then there was stock to buy, and tools, and all kinds of things,
-to say nothing of men's and boys' wages to be paid, and arms and
-ammunition to help to fill the larder.
-
-At this time the railway did not go sweeping away so far west as it
-does now, the colony being very much younger, and considerably
-rougher; and the farms lay on the edge of the Darling Downs.
-
-This was a great advantage, as it gave them the run of the markets
-without having to pay nearly as much in transit and freight as the
-stock was worth.
-
-They had another advantage in their selection--thanks once more to
-Winslow--they had Bush still farther to the west of them. Not
-adjacent, to be sure, but near enough to make a shift of stock to
-grass lands, that could be had for an old song, as the saying is.
-
-The selection was procured under better conditions than I believe it
-is to be had to-day; for the rent was only about ninepence an acre,
-and that for twenty years, the whole payable at any time in order to
-obtain complete possession.*
-
-
-* At present agricultural farms may be selected of not more than 1280
-acres, and the rent is fixed by the Land Board, not being less than
-threepence per acre per annum. A license is issued to the selector,
-who must, within five years, fence in the land or make permanent
-improvements of a value equal to the cost of the fence, and must also
-live on the selection. If at the end of that time he can prove that
-he has performed the above conditions, he will be entitled to a
-transferable lease for fifty years. The rent for the first ten years
-will be the amount as at first fixed, and the rent for every
-subsequent period of five years will be determined by the Land Board,
-but the greatest increase that can be made at any re-assessment is
-fifty per cent.
-
-
-It must not be imagined that this new home of theirs was a land
-flowing with milk and honey, or that they had nothing earthly to do
-but till the ground, sow seed, and live happy ever after. Indeed the
-work to be performed was all earthly, and the milk and honey had all
-to come.
-
-A deal of the very best land in Australia is covered with woods and
-forests, and clearing has to be done.
-
-Bob wished his busy little body of a wife to stay behind in Brisbane
-till he had some kind of a decent crib, as he called it, ready to
-invite her to.
-
-But Sarah said, "No! Where you go I go. Your crib shall be my crib,
-Bob, and I shall bake the damper." This was not very poetical
-language, but there was a good deal of sound sense about Sarah, even
-if there was but little poetry.
-
-Well, it did seem at first a disheartening kind of wilderness they
-had come to, but the site for the homesteads had been previously
-selected, and after a night's rest in their rude tents and waggons,
-work was commenced. Right joyfully too.
-
- "Down with, them! Down
- With the lords of the forests."
-
-
-This was the song of our pioneers. Men shouted and talked, and
-laughed and joked, saws rasped and axes rang, and all the while duty
-went merrily on. Birds and beasts, never disturbed before in the
-solitude of their homes, except by wandering blacks, crowded
-round--only keeping a safe distance away--and wondered whatever the
-matter could be. The musical magpies, or laughing jackasses, said
-they would soon settle the business; they would frighten those new
-chums out of their wits, and out of the woods. So they started to do
-it. They laughed in such loud, discordant, daft tones that at times
-Archie was obliged to put his fingers in his ears, and guns had to be
-fired to stop the row. So they were not successful. The cockatoos
-tried the same game; they cackled and skraighed like a million mad
-hens, and rustled and ruffled their plumage, and flapped their wings
-and flew, but all to no purpose--the work went on.
-
-The beautiful lorries, parrakeets, and budgerigars took little notice
-of the intruders, but went farther away, deserting half-built nests
-to build new ones. The bonnie little long-tailed opossum peeped down
-from his perch on the gums, looking exceedingly wise, and told his
-wife that not in all his experience had there been such goings on in
-the forest lands, and that something was sure to follow it; his wife
-might mark his words for that. The wongawongas grumbled dreadfully;
-but great hawks flew high in the air, swooping round and round
-against the sun, as they have a habit of doing, and now and then gave
-vent to a shrill cry which was more of exultation than anything else.
-"There will be dead bones to pick before long." That is what the
-hawks thought. Snakes now and then got angrily up, puffed and blew a
-bit, but immediately decamped into the denser cover.
-
-The dingoes kept their minds to themselves until night fell, and the
-stars came out; the constellation called the Southern Cross spangled
-the heaven's dark-blue, then the dingoes lifted up their voices and
-wept; and, oh, such weeping! Whoso has never heard a concert of
-Australian wild dogs can have no conception of the noise these
-animals are capable of. Whoso has once heard it, and gone to sleep
-towards the end of it, will never afterwards complain of the harmless
-musical reunions of our London cats.
-
-But sleep is often impossible. You have got just to lie in bed and
-wonder what in the name of mystery they do it for. They seem to
-quarrel over the key-note, and lose it, and try for it, and get it
-again, and again go off into a chorus that would "ding doon"
-Tantallan Castle. And when you do doze off at last, as likely as
-not, you will dream of howling winds and hungry wolves till it is
-grey daylight in the morning.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-_BURLEY NEW FARM._
-
-There was so much to be done before things could be got "straight" on
-the new station, that the days and weeks flew by at a wonderful pace.
-I pity the man or boy who is reduced to the expedient of killing
-time. Why if one is only pleasantly and usefully occupied, or
-engaged in interesting pursuits, time kills itself, and we wonder
-where it has gone to.
-
-If I were to enter into a minute description of the setting-up of the
-stock and agricultural farm, chapter after chapter would have to be
-written, and still I should not have finished. I do not think it
-would be unprofitable reading either, nor such as one would feel
-inclined to skip. But as there are a deal of different ways of
-building and furnishing new places the plan adopted by the three
-friends might not be considered the best after all. Besides,
-improvements are taking place every day even in Bush-life. However,
-in the free-and-easy life one leads in the Bush one soon learns to
-feel quite independent of the finer arts of the upholsterer.
-
-In that last sentence I have used the adjective "easy;" but please to
-observe it is adjoined to another hyphenically, and becomes one with
-it--"free-and-easy." There is really very little ease in the Bush.
-Nor does a man want it or care for it--he goes there to work.
-Loafers had best keep to cities and to city life, and look for their
-_little_ enjoyments in parks and gardens by day, in smoke-filled
-billiard-rooms or glaringly-lighted music-halls by night, go to bed
-at midnight, and make a late breakfast on rusks and soda-water. We
-citizens of the woods and wilds do not envy them. We go to bed with
-the birds, or soon after. We go to sleep, no matter how hard our
-couches may be; and we do sleep too, and wake with clear heads and
-clean tongues, and after breakfast feel that nothing in the world
-will be a comfort to us but work. Yes, men work in the Bush; and,
-strange to say, though they go there young, they do not appear to
-grow quickly old. Grey hairs may come, and Nature may do a bit of
-etching on their brows and around their eyes with the pencil of time,
-but this does not make an atom of difference to their brains and
-hearts. These get a trifle tougher, that is all, but no older.
-
-Well, of the three friends I think Archie made the best Bushman,
-though Bob came next, then Harry, who really had developed his powers
-of mind and body wonderfully, which only just proves that there is
-nothing after all, even for a Cockney, like rubbing shoulders against
-a rough world.
-
-A dozen times a week at least Archie mentally thanked his father for
-having taught him to work at home, and for the training he had
-received in riding to hounds, in tramping over the fields and moors
-with Branson, in gaining practical knowledge at the barnyards, and
-last, though not least, in the good, honest, useful groundwork of
-education received from his tutor Walton.
-
-There was something else that Archie never failed to feel thankful to
-heaven for, and that was the education his mother had given him.
-
-Remember this: Archie was but a rough, harum-scarum kind of a British
-boy at best, and religious teaching might have fallen on his soul as
-water falls on a duck's back, to use a homely phrase. But as a boy
-he had lived in an atmosphere of refinement. He constantly breathed
-it till he became imbued with it; and he received the influence also
-second-hand, or by reflection, from his brother Rupert and his sister.
-
-Often and often in the Bush, around the log-fire of an evening, did
-Archie speak proudly of that beloved twain to his companions. His
-language really had, at times, a smack of real, downright innocence
-about it, as when he said to Bob once: "Mind you, Bob, I never was
-what you might call good. I said, and do say, my prayers, and all
-the like of that; but Roup and Elsie were so high above me that,
-after coming in from a day's work or a day on the hill, it used to be
-like going into church on a week-day to enter the green parlour. I
-felt my own mental weakness, and I tried to put off my soul's
-roughness with my dirty boots in the kitchen."
-
-But Archie was now an excellent superintendent of work. He knew when
-things were being well done, and he determined they should be.
-Nothing riled him more than an attempt on the part of any of the men
-to take advantage of him.
-
-They soon came to know him; not as a tyrant, but simply as one who
-would have things rightly done, and who knew when they were being
-rightly done, even if it were only so apparently simple a matter as
-planting a fence-post; for there is a right way and a wrong way of
-doing that.
-
-The men spoke of him as the young Boss. Harry being ignored in all
-matters that required field-knowledge.
-
-"We don't want nary a plumbline," said a man once, "when the young
-Boss's around. He carries a plumbline in his eye."
-
-Archie never let any man know when he was angry; but they knew
-afterwards, however, that he had been so from the consequences. Yet
-with all his strictness he was kind-hearted, and very just. He had
-the happy gift of being able to put himself in the servant's place
-while judging betwixt man and master.
-
-Communications were constantly kept up between the station and the
-railway, by means of waggons, or drays and saddle-horses. Among the
-servants were several young blacks. These were useful in many ways,
-and faithful enough; but required keeping in their places. To be in
-any way familiar with them was to lose their respect, and they were
-not of much consequence after that. When completed, the homestead
-itself was certainly not devoid of comfort, though everything was of
-the homeliest construction; for no large amount of money was spent in
-getting it up. A Scotchman would describe it as consisting of "twa
-butts and a ben," with a wing at the back. The capital letter L,
-laid down longways thus will give you some notion of its shape.
-There were two doors in front, and four windows, and a backdoor in
-the after wing, also having windows. The wing portion of the house
-contained the kitchen and general sitting-room; the right hand
-portion the best rooms, ladies' room included, but a door and passage
-communicated with these and the kitchen.
-
-This house was wholly built of sawn wood, but finished inside with
-lath and plaster, and harled outside, so that when roofed over with
-those slabs of wood, such as we see some old-English church steeples
-made of, called "shingles," the building was almost picturesque. All
-the more so because it was built on high ground, and trees were left
-around and near it.
-
-The kitchen and wing were _par excellence_ the bachelor apartments,
-of an evening at all events.
-
-Every thing that was necessary in the way of furnishing found its way
-into the homestead of Burley New Farm; but nothing else, with the
-exception of that of the guests'-room. Of this more anon.
-
-The living-house was completed first; but all the time that this was
-being built men were very busy on the clearings, and the sites were
-mapped out for the large wool-shed, with huge adjoining yards, where
-the sheep at shearing-time would be received and seen to.
-
-There were also the whole paraphernalia and buildings constituting
-the cattle and horse-yards, a killing and milking-yard; and behind
-these were slab huts, roofed with huge pieces of bark, rudely but
-most artistically fixed, for the men.
-
-These last had fire-places, and though wholly built of wood, there
-was no danger of fire, the chimneys being of stone.
-
-Most of the yards and outhouses were separate from each other, and
-the whole steading was built on elevated ground, the store-hut being
-not far from the main or dwelling-house.
-
-I hardly know what to liken the contents of this store, or the inside
-of the place itself, to. Not unlike perhaps the half-deck or
-fore-cabin of a Greenland ship on the day when stores are being doled
-out to the men. Or, to come nearer home, if ever the reader has been
-in a remote and rough part of our own country, say Wales or Scotland,
-where gangs of navvies have been encamped for a time, at a spot where
-a new line of railway is being pushed through a gully or glen.
-
-Just take a peep inside. There is a short counter of the rudest
-description, on which stand scales and weights, measures and knives.
-Larger scales stand on the floor, and everywhere around you are heaps
-of stores, of every useful kind you could possibly name or imagine,
-and these are best divided into four classes--eatables, wearables,
-luxuries, and tools.
-
-Harry is at home here, and he has managed to infuse a kind of
-regularity into the place, and takes a sort of pride in knowing where
-all his wares are stored. The various departments are kept separate.
-Yonder, for instance, stand the tea, coffee, and cocoa-nibs, and near
-them the sugar of two kinds, the bags of flour, the cheeses (in
-boxes), the salt (in casks), soda, soap, and last, but not least, the
-tobacco and spirits; this last in a place by vtself, and well out of
-harm's way. Then there is oil and candles--by-and-bye they will make
-these on the farm--matches--and this brings us to the
-luxuries--mustard, pepper of various sorts, vinegar, pickles, curry,
-potted salmon, and meats of many lands, and bags of rice. Next there
-is a small store of medicines of the simplest, not to say roughest,
-sorts, both for man and beast, and rough bandages of flannel and
-cotton, with a bundle of splints.
-
-Then comes clothing of all kinds--hats, shirts, jackets, boots,
-shoes, &c. Then tools and cooking utensils; and in a private
-cupboard, quite away in a corner, the ammunition.
-
-It is unnecessary to add that harness and horse-shoes found a place
-in this store, or that a desk stood in one corner where account-books
-were kept, for the men did not invariably pay down on the nail.
-
-I think it said a good deal for Sarah's courage that she came right
-away down into the Bush with her "little man," and took charge of the
-cooking department on the station, when it was little, if any, better
-than simply a camp, with waggons for bedrooms, and a morsel of canvas
-for gentility's sake.
-
-But please to pop your head inside the kitchen, now that the
-dwelling-house has been up for some little time. Before you reach
-the door you will have to do a bit of stepping, for outside nothing
-is tidied up as yet. Heaps of chips, heaps of stones and sticks and
-builders' rubbish, are everywhere. Even when you get inside there is
-a new smell--a limy odour--to greet you in the passage, but in the
-kitchen itself all is order and neatness. A huge dresser stands
-against the wall just under the window. The legs of it are a bit
-rough to be sure, but nobody here is likely to be hypercritical; and
-when the dinner-hour arrives, instead of the vegetables, meat, and
-odds-and-ends that now stand thereon, plates, and even knives and
-forks, will be neatly placed in a row, and Sarah herself, her cooking
-apron replaced by a neater and nattier one, will take the head of the
-table, one of the boys will say a shy kind of grace, and the meal
-will go merrily on.
-
-On a shelf, slightly raised above the floor, stand rows of clean
-saucepans, stewpans, and a big, family-looking business of a
-frying-pan; and on the wall hang bright, shining dish-covers, and a
-couple of racks and shelves laden with delf.
-
-A good fire of logs burns on the low hearth, and there, among ashes
-pulled on one side for the purpose, a genuine "damper" is baking,
-while from a movable "sway" depends a chain and crook, on which
-latter hangs a pot. This contains corned beef--very well, call it
-salt if you please. Anyhow, when Sarah lifts the lid to stick a fork
-into the boiling mess an odour escapes and pervades the kitchen quite
-appetizing enough to make the teeth of a Bushman water, if he had
-done anything like a morning's work. There is another pot close by
-the fire, and in this sweet potatoes are boiling.
-
-It is a warm spring day, and the big window is open to admit the air,
-else poor Sarah would be feeling rather uncomfortable.
-
-What is "damper"? It is simply a huge, thick cake or loaf, made from
-extremely well-kneaded dough, and baked in the hot ashes of the
-hearth. Like making good oat cakes, before a person can manufacture
-a "damper" properly, he must be in a measure to the manner born.
-There is a deal in the mixing of the dough, and much in the method of
-firing, and, after all, some people do not care for the article at
-all, most useful and handy and even edible though it be. But I
-daresay there are individuals to be found in the world who would turn
-up their noses at good oat cake. Ah, well, it is really surprising
-what the air of the Australian Bush does in the way of increasing
-one's appetite and destroying fastidiousness.
-
-But it is near the dinner-hour, and right nimbly Sarah serves it up;
-and she has just time to lave her face and hands, and change her
-apron, when in comes Bob, followed by Archie and Harry. Before he
-sits down Bob catches hold of Sarah by both hands, and looks
-admiringly into her face, and ends by giving her rosy cheek a kiss,
-which resounds through the kitchen rafters like the sound of a
-cattle-man's whip.
-
-"I declare, Sarah lass," he says heartily, "you are getting prettier
-and prettier every day. Now at this very moment your lips and cheeks
-are as red as peonies, and your eyes sparkle as brightly as a young
-kangaroo's; and if any man a stone heavier than myself will make bold
-to say that I did wrong to marry you on a week's courtship, I'll kick
-him over the river and across the creek. 'For what we are about to
-receive, the Lord make us truly thankful. Amen.' Sit in, boys, and
-fire away. This beef is delightful. I like to see the red juice
-following the knife; and the sweet potatoes taste well, if they don't
-look pretty. What, Sarah, too much done? Not a bit o' them."
-
-* * * * * *
-
-The creek that Bob talked about kicking somebody across was a kind of
-strath or glen not very far from the steading, and lying below it,
-green and luxuriant at present. It wound away up and down the
-country for miles, and in the centre of it was a stream or river or
-burn, well clothed on its banks with bush, and opening out here and
-there into little lakes or pools. This stream was--so old Bushmen
-said--never known to run dry.
-
-[Illustration: "In the centre of the glen was a stream, well clothed
-on its banks with bush, and opening out here and there into little
-lakes or pools."]
-
-In the winter time it would at times well merit the name of river,
-especially when after a storm a "spate" came down, with a bore
-perhaps feet high, carrying along in its dreadful rush tree-trunks,
-rocks, pieces of bank--everything, in fact, that came in its way, or
-attempted to withstand its giant power. "Spates," however, our
-heroes hoped would come but seldom; for it is sad to see the ruin
-they make, and to notice afterwards the carcases of sheep and cattle,
-and even horses, that bestrew the haughs, or banks, and give food to
-prowling dingoes and birds of the air, especially the ubiquitous crow.
-
-The ordinary state of the water, however, is best described by the
-word stream or rivulet, while in droughty summers it might dwindle
-down to a mere burn meandering from pool to pool.
-
-The country all around was plain and forest and rolling hills. It
-was splendidly situated for grazing of a mixed kind. But our three
-friends were not to be content with this, and told off the best part
-of it for future agricultural purposes. Even this was to be but a
-nucleus, and at this moment much of the land then untilled is
-yielding abundance of grain.
-
-Not until the place was well prepared for them were cattle bought and
-brought home. Sheep were not to be thought of for a year or two.
-
-With the cattle, when they began to arrive, Winslow, who was soon to
-pay the new settlement a visit, sent up a few really good stockmen.
-And now Archie was to see something of Bush-life in reality.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-_RUNAWAY STOCK--BIVOUAC IN THE BUSH--NIGHT SCENE._
-
-Australian cattle have one characteristic in common with some breeds
-of pigeons, notably with those we call "homers." They have extremely
-good memories as to localities, and a habit of "making back," as it
-is termed, to the pastures from which they have been driven. This
-comes to be very awkward at times, especially if a whole herd decamps
-or takes "a moonlight flitting."
-
-It would be mere digression to pause to enquire what God-given
-instinct it is, that enables half-wild cattle to find their way back
-to their old homes in as straight a line as possible, even when they
-have been driven to a new station by circuitous routes. Many other
-animals have this same homing power; dogs for example, and, to a
-greater extent, cats. Swallows and sea-birds, such as the Arctic
-gull, and the albatross, possess it in a very high degree; but it is
-still more wonderfully displayed in fur seals that, although
-dispersed to regions thousands and thousands of miles away during
-winter, invariably and unerringly find their road back to a tiny
-group of wave and wind-swept islands, four in number, called the
-Prybilov group, in the midst of the fog-shrouded sea of Behring. The
-whole question wants a deal of thinking out, and life is far too
-short to do it in.
-
-* * * * * *
-
-One morning, shortly after the arrival of the first great herd of
-stock, word was brought to head-quarters that the cattle had escaped
-by stampede, and were doubtless on their way to the distant station
-whence they had been bought.
-
-It was no time to ask the question, Who was in fault? Early action
-was necessary, and was provided for without a moment's hesitation.
-
-I rather think that Archie was glad to have an opportunity of doing a
-bit of rough riding, and showing off his skill in horse management.
-He owned what Bob termed a clipper. Not a very handsome horse to
-look at, perhaps, but fleet enough and strong enough for anything.
-As sure-footed as a mule was this steed, and as regards wisdom, a
-perfect equine Solomon.
-
-At a suggestion of Bob's he had been named Tell, in memory of the
-Tell of other days. Tell had been ridden by Archie for many weeks,
-so that master and horse knew each other well. Indeed Archie had
-received a lesson or two from the animal that he was not likely to
-forget; for one day he had so far forgotten himself as to dig the
-rowel into Tell's sides, when there was really no occasion to do
-anything of the sort. This was more than the horse could stand, and,
-though he was not an out-and-out buck-jumper, nevertheless, a moment
-after the stirrup performance, Archie found himself making a voyage
-of discovery, towards the moon apparently. He descended as quickly
-almost as he had gone up, and took the ground on his shoulder and
-cheek, which latter was well skinned. Tell had stood quietly by
-looking at him, and as Archie patted him kindly, he forgave him on
-the spot, and permitted a remount.
-
-Archie and Bob hardly permitted themselves to swallow breakfast, so
-anxious were they to join the stockmen and be off.
-
-As there was no saying when they might return, they did not go
-unprovided for a night or two out. In front of their saddles were
-strapped their opossum rugs, and they carried also a tin billy each,
-and provisions, in the shape of tea, damper, and cooked corned beef;
-nothing else, save a change of socks and their arms.
-
-Bob bade his wife a hurried adieu, Archie waved his hand, and next
-minute they were over the paddocks and through the clearings and the
-woods, in which the trees had been ring-barked, to permit the grass
-to grow. And such tall grass Archie had never before seen as that
-which grew in some parts of the open.
-
-"Is it going to be a long job, think you, Bob?"
-
-"I hardly know, Archie. But Craig is here."
-
-"Oh, yes, Gentleman Craig, as Mr. Winslow insists on calling him!
-You have seen him."
-
-"Yes; I met him at Brisbane. And a handsome chap he is. Looks like
-a prince."
-
-"Isn't it strange he doesn't rise from the ranks, as one might say;
-that he doesn't get on?"
-
-"I'll tell you what keeps him back," said Bob, reining his horse up
-to a dead stop, that Archie might hear him all the easier.
-
-"I'll tell you what keeps him back now, before you see him. I
-mustn't talk loud, for the very birds might go and tell the fellow,
-and he doesn't like to be 'minded about it. He drinks!"
-
-"But he can't get drink in the Bush."
-
-"Not so easily, though he has been known before now to ride thirty
-miles to visit a hotel."
-
-"A shanty, you mean."
-
-"Well, they call 'em all hotels over here, you must remember."
-
-"And would he just take a drink and come back?"
-
-Bob laughed.
-
-"Heaven help him, no. It isn't one drink, nor ten, nor fifty he
-takes, for he makes a week or two of it."
-
-"I hope he won't take any such long rides while he is with us."
-
-"No. Winslow says we are sure of him for six months, anyhow. Then
-he'll go to town and knock his cheque down. But come on, Craig and
-his lads will be waiting for us."
-
-At the most southerly and easterly end of the selection they met
-Gentleman Craig himself.
-
-He rode forward to meet them, lifting his broad hat, and reining up
-when near enough. He did this in a beautifully urbane fashion, that
-showed he had quite as much respect for himself as for his employers.
-He was indeed a handsome fellow, and his rough Garibaldian costume
-fitted him, and set him out as if he had been some great actor.
-
-"This is an awkward business," he began, with an easy smile; "but I
-think we'll soon catch the runaways up."
-
-"I hope so," Bob said.
-
-"Oh, it was all my fault, because I'm boss of my gang, you know. I
-ought to have known better, but a small mob of stray beasts got among
-ours, and by-and-by there was a stampede. It was dirty-dark last
-night, and looked like a storm, so there wouldn't have been an ounce
-of use in following them up."
-
-He flicked his long whip half saucily, half angrily, as he spoke.
-
-"Well, never mind," Bob replied, "we'll have better luck next, I've
-no doubt."
-
-Away they went now at a swinging trot, and on crossing the creek they
-met Craig's fellows.
-
-They laid their horses harder at it now, Bob and Archie keeping a bit
-in the rear, though the latter declared that Tell was pulling like a
-young steam-engine.
-
-"Why," cried Archie at last, "this beast means to pull my arms out at
-the shoulders. I always thought I knew how to hold the reins till
-now."
-
-"They have a queer way with them, those bush-ranging horses," said
-Bob; "but I reckon you'll get up to them at last."
-
-"If I were to give Tell his head, he would soon be in the van."
-
-"In the van? Oh, I see, in the front!"
-
-"Yes; and then I'd be lost. Why these chaps appear to know every
-inch of the ground. To me it is simply marvellous."
-
-"Well, the trees are blazed."
-
-"I've seen no blazed trees. Have you?"
-
-"Never a one. I say, Craig."
-
-"Hullo!" cried the head stockman, glancing over his shoulder.
-
-"Are you steering by blazed trees?"
-
-"No," he laughed; "by tracks. Cattle don't mind blazed trees much."
-
-Perhaps Bob felt green now, for he said no more. Archie looked about
-him, but never a trail nor track could he decipher.
-
-Yet on they rode, helter-skelter apparently, but cautiously enough
-for all that. Tell was full of fire and fun; for, like Verdant
-Green's horse, when put at a tiny tree trunk in his way, he took a
-leap that would have carried him over a five-bar-gate.
-
-There was many a storm-felled tree in the way also and many a dead
-trunk, half buried in ferns; there were steep stone-clad hills,
-difficult to climb, but worse to descend, and many a little rivulet
-to cross; but nothing coidd interfere with the progress of these
-hardy horses.
-
-Although the sun was blazing hot, no one seemed to feel it much. The
-landscape was very wild, and very beautiful; but Archie got weary at
-last of its very loveliness, and was not one whit sorry when the
-afternoon halt was called under the pleasant shade of trees, and
-close by the banks of a rippling stream.
-
-The horses were glad to drink as well as the men, then they were
-hobbled, and allowed to browse while all hands sat down to eat.
-
-Only damper and beef, washed down by a billyful of the clear water,
-which, strange to say, was wonderfully cool.
-
-When the sun was sinking low on the forest-clad horizon, there was a
-joyful but half-suppressed shout from Craig and his men. Part of the
-herd was in sight, quietly browsing up a creek.
-
-Gentleman Craig pointed them out to Archie; but he had to gaze a
-considerable time before he could really distinguish anything that
-had the faintest resemblance to cattle.
-
-"Your eye is young yet to the Bush," said Craig, laughing, but not in
-any unmannerly way.
-
-"And now," he continued, "we must go cautiously or we spoil all."
-
-The horsemen made a wide detour, and got between the bush and the
-mob; and the ground being favourable, here it was determined to camp
-for the night. The object of the stockmen was not to alarm the herd,
-but to prevent them from getting any farther off till morning, when
-the march homewards would commence. With this intent, log fires were
-built here and there around the herd; and once these were well alight
-the mob was considered pretty safe. All, however, had been done very
-quietly; and during the live-long night, until grey dawn broke over
-the hills, the fellows would have to keep those fires burning.
-
-Supper was a more pleasing meal, for there was the addition of tea;
-after which, with their feet to the log fire--Bob and Craig enjoying
-a whiff of tobacco--they lay as much at their ease, and feeling every
-whit as comfortable, as if at home by the "ingleside." Gentleman
-Craig had many stories and anecdotes to relate of the wild life he
-had had, that both Archie and Bob listened to with delight.
-
-"I'll take one more walk around," said Craig, "then stretch myself on
-my downy bed. Will you come with me, Mr. Broadbent?"
-
-"With pleasure," said Archie.
-
-"Mind how you step then. Keep your whip in your hand, but on no
-account crack it. We have to use our intellect versus brute force.
-If the brute force became alarmed and combined, then our intellect
-would go to the wall, there would be another stampede, and another
-long ride to-morrow."
-
-Up and down in the starlight, or by the fitful gleams of the log
-fires, they could see the men moving like uneasy ghosts. Craig spoke
-a word or two kindly and quietly as he passed, and having made his
-inspection, and satisfied himself that all was comparatively safe, he
-returned with Archie to the fire.
-
-Bob was already fast asleep, rolled snugly in his blanket, with his
-head in the hollow of his upturned saddle; and Archie and Craig made
-speed to follow his example.
-
-As for Craig, he was soon in the land of Nod. He was a true Bushman,
-and could go off sound as a bell the moment he stretched himself on
-his "downy bed," as he called it.
-
-But Archie felt the situation far too new to permit of slumber all at
-once. He had never lain out thus before; and the experience was so
-delightful to him that he felt justified in lying awake a bit, and
-looking at the stars. The distant dingoes began to howl, and more
-than once some great dark bird flew over the camp, high overhead, but
-on silent wings.
-
-His thoughts wandered away over the thousands and thousands of miles
-that intervened between him and home, and he began to wonder what
-they were all doing at Burley; for it would be broad daylight there,
-and very likely his father was trudging over the moors, or through
-the stubbles. But dreams came and mingled with his waking thoughts
-at last, and were just usurping them all when he became conscious of
-the approach of stealthy footsteps.
-
-He lay perfectly still, though his hand sought his ready revolver;
-for stories of black fellows stealing on out-sleeping travellers
-began to crowd through his mind, and being young to the Bush, he
-could not prevent that heart of his from throbbing uneasily and
-painfully against his ribs.
-
-How did they brain people, he was wondering, with a boomerang or
-nullah? or was it not more common to spear them?
-
-But, greatly to his relief, the figure immediately afterwards
-revealed itself in the person of one of the men, silently placing an
-armful of wood on the half-dying embers. Then he silently glided
-away again, and next minute Archie was wrapt in the elysium of
-forgetfulness.
-
-The dews lay all about, glittering in the first beams of the sun,
-when he awoke, feeling somewhat cold and considerably stiff; but warm
-tea and a breakfast of wondrous solidity soon put him all to rights
-again.
-
-Two nights after this the new stock was safe in the yards; and every
-evening before sundown, for many a day to come, they had to be
-"tailed," and brought within the strong bars of the rendezvous.
-
-Branding was the next business. This is no trifling matter with old
-cattle. With the calves indeed it is a bit troublesome at times, but
-the grown-up ones resent the adding of insult to injury. It is no
-uncommon thing for men to be severely injured during the operation.
-Nevertheless the agility displayed by the stockmen and their
-excessive coolness is marvellous to behold.
-
-Most of those cattle were branded with a "B.H.," which stood for Bob
-and Harry; but some were marked with the letters "A.B.," for
-Archibald Broadbent, and--I need not hide the truth--Archie was a
-proud young man when he saw these marks. He realized now fully that
-he had commenced life in earnest, and was a squatter, not only in
-name, but in reality.
-
-The fencing work and improvements still went gaily on, the ground
-being divided into immense paddocks, many of which our young farmers
-trusted to see ere long covered with waving grain.
-
-The new herds soon got used to the country, and settled down on it,
-dividing themselves quietly into herds of their own making, that were
-found browsing together mornings and evenings in the best pastures,
-or gathered in mobs during the fierce heat of the middle-day.
-
-Archie quickly enough acquired the craft of a cunning and bold
-stockman, and never seemed happier than when riding neck and neck
-with some runaway semi-wild bull, or riding in the midst of a mob,
-selecting the beast that was wanted. And at a job like the latter
-Tell and he appeared to be only one individual betwixt the two of
-them, like the fabled Centaur. He came to grief though once, while
-engaged heading a bull in as ugly a bit of country as any stockman
-ever rode over. It happened---- Next chapter, please.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-_A WILD ADVENTURE--ARCHIE'S PRIDE RECEIVES A FALL._
-
-It happened--I was going to say at the end of the other page--that in
-a few weeks' time Mr. Winslow paid his promised visit to Burley New
-Farm, as the three friends called it.
-
-Great preparations had been made beforehand because Etheldene was
-coming with her father, and was accompanied by a black maid. Both
-Etheldene and her maid had been accommodated with a dray, and when
-Sarah, with her cheeks like ripe cherries, and her eyes like sloes,
-showed the young lady to her bedroom, Etheldene was pleased to
-express her delight in no measured terms. She had not expected
-anything like this. Real mattresses, with real curtains, a real
-sofa, and real lace round the looking-glass.
-
-"It is almost too good for Bush-life," said Etheldene; "but I am so
-pleased, Mrs. Cooper; and everything is as clean and tidy as my own
-rooms in Sydney. Father, do come and see all this, and thank Mrs.
-Cooper prettily."
-
-Somewhat to Archie's astonishment a horse was led round next morning
-for Etheldene, and she appeared in a pretty dark habit, and was
-helped into the saddle, and gathered up the reins, and looked as calm
-and self-possessed as a princess could have done.
-
-It was Gentleman Craig who was the groom, and a gallant one he made.
-For the life of him Archie could not help envying the man for his
-excessive coolness, and would have given half of his cattle--those
-vith the bold "A.B.'s" on them--to have been only half as handsome.
-
-Never mind. Archie is soon mounted, and cantering away by the young
-lady's side, and feeling so buoyant and happy all over that he would
-not have exchanged places with a king on a throne.
-
-"Oh, yes," said Etheldene, laughing, as she replied to a question of
-Archie's, "I know nearly everything about cattle, and sheep too!
-But," she added, "I'm sure you are clever among them already."
-
-Archie felt the blood mount to his forehead; but he took off his
-broad hat and bowed for the compliment, almost as prettily as
-Gentleman Craig could have done himself.
-
-Now, there is such a thing as being too clever, and it was trying to
-be clever that led poor Archie to grief that day.
-
-The young man was both proud and pleased to have an opportunity of
-showing Etheldene round the settlement, all the more so that there
-was to be a muster of the herds that day, and neighbour-squatters had
-come on horseback to assist. This was a kind of a love-darg which
-was very common in Queensland a few years ago, and probably is to
-this day.
-
-Archie pointed laughingly towards the stock-whip Etheldene carried.
-He never for a moment imagined it was in the girl's power to use or
-manage such an instrument.
-
-"That is a pretty toy, Miss Winslow," he said.
-
-"Toy, do you call it, sir?" said this young Diana, pouting prettily.
-"It is only a lady's whip, for the thong is but ten feet long. But
-listen."
-
-It flew from her hands as she spoke, and the sound made every animal
-within hearing raise head and sniff the air.
-
-"Well," said Archie, "I hope you won't run into any danger."
-
-"Oh," she exclaimed, "danger is fun!" And she laughed right merrily,
-and looked as full of life and beauty as a bird in spring-time.
-
-Etheldene was tall and well-developed for her age, for girls in this
-strange land very soon grow out of their childhood.
-
-Archie had called her Diana in his own mind, and before the day was
-over she certainly had given proof that she well merited the title.
-
-New herds had arrived, and had for one purpose or another to be
-headed into the stock yards. This is a task of no little difficulty,
-and to-day being warm these cattle appeared unusually fidgety. Twos
-and threes frequently stampeded from the mob, and went determinedly
-dashing back towards the creek and forest, so there was plenty of
-opportunities for anyone to show off his horsemanship. Once during a
-chase like this Archie was surprised to see Etheldene riding neck and
-neck for a time with a furious bull. He trembled for her safety as
-he dashed onwards to her assistance. But crack, crack, crack went
-the brave girl's whip; she punished the runaway most unmercifully,
-and had succeeded in turning him ere her Northumbrian cavalier rode
-up. A moment more and the bull was tearing back towards the herd he
-had left, a stockman or two following close behind.
-
-"I was frightened for you," said Archie.
-
-"Pray, don't be so, Mr. Broadbent. I don't want to think myself a
-child, and I should not like you to think me one. Mind, I've been in
-the Bush all my life."
-
-But there was more and greater occasion to be frightened for
-Etheldene ere the day was done. In fact, she ran so madly into
-danger, that the wonder is she escaped. She had a gallant,
-soft-mouthed horse--that was one thing to her advantage--and the girl
-had a gentle hand.
-
-But Archie drew rein himself, and held his breath with fear, to see a
-maddened animal, that she was pressing hard, turn wildly round and
-charge back on horse and rider with all the fury imaginable. A turn
-of the wrist of the bridle hand, one slight jerk of the fingers, and
-Etheldene's horse had turned on a pivot, we might almost say, and the
-danger was over.
-
-So on the whole, instead of Archie having had a very grand
-opportunity for showing off his powers before this young Diana, it
-was rather the other way.
-
-The hunt ended satisfactory to both parties; and while Sarah was
-getting an extra good dinner ready, Archie proposed a canter "to give
-them an appetite."
-
-"Have you got an appetite, Mr. Broadbent? I have."
-
-It was evident Etheldene was not too fine a lady to deny the
-possession of good health.
-
-"Yes," said Archie; "to tell you the plain truth, I'm as hungry as a
-hunter. But it'll do the nags good to stretch their legs after so
-much wheeling and swivelling."
-
-So away they rode again, side by side, taking the blazed path towards
-the plains.
-
-"You are sure you can find your way back, I suppose?" said Etheldene.
-
-"I think so."
-
-"It would be good fun to be lost."
-
-"Would you really like to be?"
-
-"Oh, we would not be altogether, you know! We would find our way to
-some hut and eat damper, or to some grand hotel, I suppose, in the
-Bush, and father and Craig would soon find us."
-
-"Father and you have known Craig long?"
-
-"Yes, many, many years. Poor fellow, it is quite a pity for him.
-Father says he was very clever at college, and is a Master of Arts of
-Cambridge."
-
-"Well, he has taken his hogs to a nice market."
-
-"But father would do a deal for him if he could trust him. He has
-told father over and over again that plenty of people would trust him
-if he could only trust himself."
-
-"Poor man! So nice-looking too! They may well call him Gentleman
-Craig."
-
-"But is it not time we were returning?"
-
-"Look! look!" she cried, before Archie could answer. "Yonder is a
-bull-fight. Whom does the little herd belong to?"
-
-"Not to us. We are far beyond even our pastures. We have cut away
-from them. This is a kind of no-man's land, where we go shooting at
-times; and I daresay they are trespassers or wild cattle. Pity they
-cannot be tamed."
-
-"They are of no use to anyone, I have heard father say, except to
-shoot. If they be introduced into a herd of stock cattle, they teach
-all the others mischief. But see how they fight! Is it not awful?"
-
-"Yes. Had we not better return? I do not think your father would
-like you to witness such sights as that."
-
-The girl laughed lightly.
-
-"Oh," she cried, "you don't half know father yet! He trusts me
-everywhere. He is very, very good, though not so refined as some
-would have him to be."
-
-The cows of this herd stood quietly by chewing their cuds, under the
-shade of a huge gum tree, while two red-eyed giant bulls struggled
-for mastery in the open.
-
-It was a curious fight, and a furious fight. At the time Archie and
-his companion came in sight of the conflict, they had closed, and
-were fencing with their horns with as much skill, apparently, as any
-two men armed with foils could have displayed. The main points to be
-gained appeared to be to unlock or get out of touch of each other's
-horns long enough to stab in neck and shoulder, and during the time
-of being in touch to force back and gain ground. Once during this
-fight the younger bull backed his opponent right to the top of a
-slight hill. It was a supreme effort, and evidently made in the hope
-that he would hurl him from a height at the other side. But in this
-he was disappointed; for the top was level, and the older one,
-regaining strength, hurled his enemy down the hill again far more
-quickly than he had come up. Round and round, and from side to side,
-the battle raged, till at long last the courage and strength of one
-failed completely. He suffered himself to be backed, and it was
-evident was only waiting an opportunity to escape uncut and
-unscathed. This came at length, and he turned and, with a cry of
-rage, dashed madly away to the forest. The battle now became a
-chase, and the whole herd, holloaing good luck to the victor, joined
-in it.
-
-As there was no more to be seen, Archie and Etheldene turned their
-horses' heads homewards.
-
-They had not ridden far, however, before the vanquished bull himself
-hove in sight. He was alone now, though still tearing off in a
-panic, and moaning low and angrily to himself.
-
-It was at this moment that what Archie considered a happy inspiration
-took possession of our impulsive hero. "Let us wait till he passes,"
-he said, "and drive him before us to camp."
-
-Easily said. But how was it to be done? They drew back within the
-shadow of a tree, and the bull rushed past. Then out pranced knight
-Archie, cracking his stock whip.
-
-The monster paused, and wheeling round tore up the ground with his
-hoofs in a perfect agony of anger.
-
-"What next?" he seemed to say to himself. "It is bad enough to be
-beaten before the herd; but I will have my revenge now."
-
-The brute's roaring now was like the sound of a gong, hollow and
-ringing, but dreadful to listen to.
-
-Archie met him boldly enough, intending to cut him in the face as he
-dashed past. In his excitement he dug his spurs into Tell, and next
-minute he was on the ground. The bull rushed by, but speedily
-wheeled, and came tearing back, sure now of blood in which to dip his
-ugly hoofs.
-
-Archie had scrambled up, and was near a tree when the infuriated
-beast came down on the charge. Even at this moment of supreme danger
-Archie--he remembered this afterwards--could not help admiring the
-excessively business-like way the animal came at him to break him up.
-There was a terrible earnestness and a terrible satisfaction in his
-face or eyes; call it what you like, there it was.
-
-Near as Archie was to the tree, to reach and get round it was
-impossible. He made a movement to get at his revolver; but it was
-too late to draw and fire, so at once he threw himself flat on the
-ground. The bull rushed over him, and came into collision with the
-tree-trunk. This confused him for a second or two, and Axchie had
-time to regain his feet. He looked wildly about for his horse. Tell
-was quietly looking on; he seemed to be waiting for his young master.
-But Archie never would have reached the horse alive had not brave
-Etheldene's whip not been flicked with painful force across the
-bull's eyes. That blow saved Archie, though the girl's horse was
-wounded on the flank.
-
-[Illustration: "Archie never would have reached the horse alive had
-not brave Etheldene's whip been flicked with painful force across the
-bull's eyes. That blow saved Archie, though the girl's horse was
-wounded on the flank."]
-
-A minute after both were galloping speedily across the plain, all
-danger over; for the bull was still rooting around the tree,
-apparently thinking that his tormentors had vanished through the
-earth.
-
-"How best can I thank you?" Archie was saying.
-
-"By saying nothing about it," was Etheldene's answer.
-
-"But you have saved my life, child."
-
-"A mere bagatelle, as father says," said this saucy Queensland
-maiden, with an arch look at her companion. But Archie did not look
-arch as he put the next question.
-
-"Which do you mean is the bagatelle, Etheldene, my life, or the
-saving of it?"
-
-"Yes, you may call me Etheldene--father's friends do--but don't,
-please, call me child again."
-
-"I beg your pardon, Etheldene."
-
-"It is granted, sir."
-
-"But now you haven't answered my question."
-
-"What was it? I'm so stupid!"
-
-"Which did you mean was the bagatelle--my life, or the saving of it?"
-
-"Oh, both!"
-
-"Thank you."
-
-"I wish I could save Gentleman Craig's life," she added, looking
-thoughtful and earnest all in a moment.
-
-"Bother Gentleman Craig!" thought Archie; but he was not rude enough
-to say so.
-
-"Why?" he asked.
-
-"Because he once saved mine. That was when I was lost in the Bush,
-you know. He will tell you some day--I will ask him to. He is very
-proud though, and does not Like to talk very much about himself."
-
-Archie was silent for a short time. Why, he was wondering to
-himself, did it make him wretched--as it certainly had done--to have
-Etheldene look upon his life and the saving of it as a mere
-bagatelle. Why should she not? Still the thought was far from
-pleasant. Perhaps, if he had been killed outright, she would have
-ridden home and reported his death in the freest and easiest manner,
-and the accident would not have spoiled her dinner. The girl could
-have no feeling; and yet he had destined her, in his own mind, to be
-Rupert's wife. She was unworthy of so great an honour. It should
-never happen if he could prevent it. Suddenly it occurred to him to
-ask her what a bagatelle was.
-
-"A bagatelle?" she replied. "Oh, about a thousand pounds. Father
-always speaks of a thousand pounds as a mere bagatelle."
-
-Archie laughed aloud--he could not help it; but Etheldene looked
-merrily at him as she remarked quietly, "You wouldn't laugh if you
-knew what I know."
-
-"Indeed! What is it?"
-
-"We are both lost!"
-
-"Goodness forbid!"
-
-"You won't have grace to say to-day--there will be no dinner; that's
-always the worst of being lost."
-
-Archie looked around him. There was not a blazed tree to be seen,
-and he never remembered having been in the country before in which
-they now rode.
-
-"We cannot be far out," he said, "and I believe we are riding
-straight for the creek."
-
-"So do I, and that is one reason why we are both sure to be wrong.
-It's great fun, isn't it?"
-
-"I don't think so. We're in an ugly fix. I really thought I was a
-better Bushman than I am."
-
-Poor Archie! His pride had received quite a series of ugly falls
-since morning, but this was the worst come last. He felt a very
-crestfallen cavalier indeed.
-
-It did not tend to raise his spirits a bit to be told that if
-Gentleman Craig were here, he would find the blazed-tree line in a
-very short time.
-
-But things took a more cheerful aspect when out from a clump of trees
-rode a rough-looking stockman, mounted on a sackful of bones in the
-shape of an aged white horse.
-
-He stopped right in front of them.
-
-"Hillo, younkers! Whither away? Can't be sun-downers, sure--ly!"
-
-"No," said Archie; "we are not sundowners. We are riding straight
-home to Burley New Farm."
-
-"'Xcuse me for contradicting you flat, my boy. It strikes me ye
-ain't boss o' the sitivation. Feel a kind o' bushed, don't ye?"
-
-Archie was fain to confess it.
-
-"Well, I know the tracks, and if ye stump it along o' me, ye won't
-have to play at babes o' the wood to-night."
-
-They did "stump it along o' him," and before very long found
-themselves in the farm pasture lands.
-
-They met Craig coming, tearing along on his big horse, and glad he
-was to see them.
-
-"Oh, Craig," cried Etheldene, "we've been having such fun, and been
-bushed, and everything!"
-
-"I found this 'ere young gent a-bolting with this 'ere young lady,"
-said their guide, whom Craig knew and addressed by the name of
-Hurricane Bill.
-
-"A runaway match, eh? Now, who was in the fault? But I think I
-know. Let me give you a bit of advice, sir. Never trust yourself
-far in the Bush with Miss Ethie. She doesn't mind a bit being lost,
-and I can't be always after her. Well, dinner is getting cold."
-
-"Did you wait for us?" said Etheldene.
-
-"Not quite unanimously, Miss Ethie. It was like this: Mr. Cooper and
-Mr. Harry waited for you, and your father waited for Mr. Broadbent.
-It comes to the same thing in the end, you know."
-
-"Yes," said Etheldene, "and it's funny."
-
-"What did you come for, Bill? Your horse looks a bit jaded."
-
-"To invite you all to the hunt. Findlayson's compliments, and all
-that genteel nonsense; and come as many as can. Why, the kangaroos,
-drat 'em, are eating us up. What with them and the dingoes we've
-been having fine times, I can tell ye!"
-
-"Well, it seems to me, Bill, your master is always in trouble. Last
-year it was the blacks, the year before he was visited by
-bushrangers, wasn't he?"
-
-"Ye--es. Fact is we're a bit too far north, and a little too much
-out west, and so everything gets at us like."
-
-"And when is the hunt?"
-
-"Soon's we can gather."
-
-"I'm going for one," said Etheldene.
-
-"What you, Miss?" said Hurricane Bill. "You're most too young, ain't
-ye?"
-
-The girl did not condescend to answer him.
-
-"Come, sir, we'll ride on," she said to Archie.
-
-And away they flew.
-
-"Depend upon it, Bill, if she says she is going, go she will, and
-there's an end of it."
-
-"Humph!" That was Bill's reply. He always admitted he had "no great
-fancy for womenfolks."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
- _ROUND THE LOG-FIRE--HURRICANE BILL AND THE
- TIGER-SNAKE--GENTLEMAN CRAIG'S RESOLVE._
-
-Kangaroo driving or hunting is one of the wild sports of Australia,
-though I have heard it doubted whether there was any real sport in
-it. It is extremely exciting, and never much more dangerous than a
-ride after the hounds at home in a rough country.
-
-It really does seem little short of murder, however, to surround the
-animals and slay them wholesale; only, be it remembered, they are
-extremely hard upon the herbage. It has been said that a kangaroo
-will eat as much as two sheep; whether this be true or not, these
-animals must be kept down, or they will keep the squatter down.
-Every other species of wild animal disappears before man, but
-kangaroos appear to imagine that human beings were sent into the bush
-to make two blades of grass grow where only one grew before, and that
-both blades belong to them.
-
-The only people from Burley New Farm who went to the Findlayson
-kangaroo drive were Harry, Archie, and Etheldene, and Craig to look
-after her. Mr. Winslow stopped at home with Bob, to give him advice
-and suggest improvements; for he well knew his daughter would be safe
-with Gentleman Craig.
-
-It was a long ride, however, and one night was to be spent in camp;
-but as there was nothing to do, and nothing in the shape of cattle or
-sheep to look after, it was rather jolly than otherwise. They found
-a delightful spot near a clear pool and close by the forest to make
-their pitch on for the night.
-
-Hurricane Bill was the active party on this occasion; he found wood
-with the help of Harry, and enough of it to last till the morning.
-The beauty, or one of the beauties, of the climate in this part of
-Australia is, that with the sun the thermometer sinks, and the later
-spring and even summer nights are very pleasant indeed.
-
-When supper was finished, and tea, that safest and best of
-stimulants, had been discussed, talking became general; everybody was
-in good spirits in the expectation of some fun on the morrow; for a
-longish ride through the depth of that gloomy forest would bring them
-to the plain and to Findlayson's in time for a second breakfast.
-
-Hurricane Bill told many a strange story of Australian life, but all
-in the way of conversation; for Bill was a shy kind of man, and
-wanted a good deal of drawing-out, as the dog said about the badger.
-
-Archie gave his experiences of hunting in England, and of shooting
-and fishing and country adventure generally in that far-off land, and
-he had no more earnest listener than Etheldene. To her England was
-the land of romance. Young though she was, she had read the most of
-Walter Scott's novels, and had an idea that England and Scotland were
-still peopled as we find these countries described by the great
-wizard, and she did not wish to be disillusioned. The very mention
-of the word "castle," or "ruin," or "coat of mail," brought fancies
-and pictures into her mind that she would not have had blotted out on
-any account.
-
-Over and over again, many a day and many a time, she had made Archie
-describe to her every room in the old farm; and his turret-chamber
-high up above the tall-spreading elm trees, where the rooks built and
-cawed in spring, and through which the wild winds of winter moaned
-and soughed when the leaves had fallen, was to Etheldene a veritable
-room in fairy-land.
-
-"Oh," she said to-night, "how I should love it all! I do want to go
-to England, and I'll make father take me just once before I die."
-
-"Before ye die, miss!" said Hurricane Bill. "Why it is funny to hear
-the likes o' you, with all the world before ye, talkin' about dying."
-
-Well, by-and-by London was mentioned, and then it was Harry's turn.
-He was by no means sorry to have something to say.
-
-"Shall I describe to you, Miss Winslow," he said, "some of the wild
-sights of Whitechapel?"
-
-"Is it a dreadfully wild place, Mr. Brown?"
-
-"It is rather; eh, Johnnie?"
-
-"I don't know much about it, Harry."
-
-"Well, there are slums near by there, miss, that no man with a black
-coat and an umbrella dare enter in daylight owing to the wild beasts.
-Then there are peelers."
-
-"What are peelers? Monkeys?"
-
-"Yes, miss; they are a sort of monkeys--blue monkeys--and carry
-sticks same as the real African ourangoutangs do. And can't they use
-them too!"
-
-"Are they very ugly?"
-
-"Awful, and venomous too; and at night they have one eye that shines
-in the dark like a wild cat's, and you've got to stand clear when
-that eye's on you."
-
-"Well," said Etheldene, "I wouldn't like to be lost in a place like
-that. I'd rather be bushed where I am. But I think, Mr. Brown, you
-are laughing at me. Are there any snakes in Whitechapel?"
-
-"No, thank goodness; no, miss. I can't stand snakes much."
-
-"There was a pretty tiger crept past you just as I was talking
-though," she said with great coolness.
-
-Harry jumped and shook himself. Etheldene laughed.
-
-"It is far enough away by this time," she remarked. "I saw something
-ripple past you, Harry, like a whip-thong. I thought my eyes had
-made it."
-
-"You brought it along with the wood perhaps," said Craig quietly.
-
-"'Pon my word," cried Harry, "you're a lot of Job's comforters, all
-of you. D'ye know I won't sleep one blessed wink to-night. I'll
-fancy every moment there is a snake in my blanket or under the
-saddle."
-
-"They won't come near you, Mr. Brown," said Craig. "They keep as far
-away from Englishmen as possible."
-
-"Not always," said Bill. "Maybe ye wouldn't believe it, but I was
-bitten and well-nigh dead, and it was a tiger as done it. And if I
-ain't English, then there ain't an Englishman 'twist 'ere and
-Melbourne. See that, miss?" He held up a hand in the firelight as
-he spoke.
-
-"Why," said Etheldene, "you don't mean to say the snake bit off half
-your little finger?"
-
-"Not much I don't; but he bit me on the finger, miss. I was a
-swagsman then, and was gathering wood, as we were to-night, when I
-got nipped, and my chum tightened a morsel of string round it to keep
-the poison away from the heart, then he laid the finger on a stone
-and chopped it off with his spade. Fact what I'm telling you. But
-the poison got in the blood somehow all the same. They half carried
-me to Irish Charlie's hotel. Lucky, that wasn't far off. Then they
-stuck the whiskey into me."
-
-"Did the whiskey kill the poison?" said Archie.
-
-"Whiskey kill the poison! Why, young sir, Charlie's whiskey would
-have killed a kangaroo! But nothing warmed me that night; my blood
-felt frozen. Well, sleep came at last, and, oh, the dreams! 'Twere
-worse ten thousand times than being wi' Daniel in the den o' lions.
-Next day nobody hardly knew me; I was blue and wrinkled. I had aged
-ten years in a single night."
-
-"I say," said Harry, "suppose we change the subject."
-
-"And I say," said Craig, "suppose we make the beds."
-
-He got up as he spoke, and began to busy himself in preparations for
-Etheldene's couch. It was easily and simply arranged, but the
-arrangement nevertheless showed considerable forethought.
-
-He disappeared for a few minutes, and returned laden with all the
-necessary paraphernalia. A seven-foot pole was fastened to a tree;
-the other end supported by a forked stick, which he sharpened and
-drove into the ground. Some grass was spread beneath the pole, a
-blanket thrown carefully over it, the upturned saddle put down for a
-pillow, and a tent formed by throwing over the pole a loose piece of
-canvas that he had taken from his saddle-bow, weighted down by some
-stones, and the whole was complete.
-
-"Now, Baby," said Craig, handing Etheldene a warm rug, "will you be
-pleased to retire?"
-
-"Where is my flat candlestick?" she answered.
-
-Gentleman Craig pointed to the Southern Cross.
-
-"Yonder," he said. "Is it not a lovely one?"
-
-"It puts me in mind of old, old times," said Etheldene with a sigh.
-"And you're calling me 'Baby' too. Do you remember, ever so long ago
-in the Bush, when I was a baby in downright earnest, how you used to
-sing a lullaby to me outside my wee tent?"
-
-"If you go to bed, and don't speak any more, I may do so again."
-
-"Good-night then. Sound sleep to everybody. What fun!" Then Baby
-disappeared.
-
-Craig sat himself down near the tent, after replenishing the fire--he
-was to keep the first watch, then Bill would come on duty--and at
-once began to sing, or rather 'croon' over, an old, old song. His
-voice was rich and sweet, and though he sang low it could be heard
-distinctly enough by all, and it mingled almost mournfully with the
-soughing of the wind through the tall trees.
-
-"My song is rather a sorrowful ditty," he had half-whispered to
-Archie before he began; "but it is poor Miss Ethie's favourite." But
-long before Craig had finished no one around the log fire was awake
-but himself.
-
-He looked to his rifle and revolvers, placed them handy in case of an
-attack by blacks, then once more sat down, leaning his back against a
-tree and giving way to thought.
-
-Not over pleasant thoughts were those of Gentleman Craig's, as might
-have been guessed from his frequent sighs as he gazed earnestly into
-the fire.
-
-What did he see in the fire? _Tableaux_ of his past life? Perhaps
-or perhaps not. At all events they could not have been very
-inspiriting ones. No one could have started in life with better
-prospects than he had done; but he carried with him wherever he went;
-his own fearful enemy, something that would not leave him alone, but
-was ever, ever urging him to drink. Even as a student he had been
-what was called "a jolly fellow," and his friendship was appreciated
-by scores who knew him. He loved to be considered the life and soul
-of a company. It was an honour dearer to him than anything else; but
-deeply, dearly had he paid for it.
-
-By this time he might have been honoured and respected in his own
-country, for he was undoubtedly clever; but he had lost himself, and
-lost all that made life dear--his beautiful, queenly mother. He
-would never see her more. She was dead, yet the memory of the love
-she bore him was still the one, the only ray of sunshine left in his
-soul.
-
-And he had come out here to Australia determined to turn over a new
-leaf. Alas! he had not done so.
-
-"Oh, what a fool I have been!" he said in his thoughts, clenching his
-fists until the nails almost cut the palms.
-
-He started up now and went wandering away towards the trees. There
-was nothing that could hurt him there. He felt powerful enough to
-grapple with a dozen blacks, but none were in his thoughts; and,
-indeed, none were in the forest.
-
-He could talk aloud now, as he walked rapidly up and down past the
-weird grey trunks of the gum trees.
-
-"My foolish pride has been my curse," he said bitterly. "But should
-I allow it to be so? The thing lies in a nutshell. I have never yet
-had the courage to say, 'I will not touch the hateful firewater,
-because I cannot control myself if I do.' If I take but one glass I
-arouse within me the dormant fiend, and he takes possession of my
-soul, and rules all my actions until sickness ends my carousal, and I
-am left weak as a child in soul and body. If I were not too proud to
-say those words to my fellow-beings, if I were not afraid of being
-laughed at as a coward! Ah, that's it! It is too hard to bear!
-Shall I face it? Shall I own myself a coward in this one thing? I
-seem compelled to answer myself, to answer my own soul. Or is it my
-dead mother's spirit speaking through my heart? Oh, if I thought so
-I--I----"
-
-Here the strong man broke down. He knelt beside a tree-trunk and
-sobbed like a boy. Then he prayed; and when he got up from his knees
-he was calm. He extended one hand towards the stars.
-
-"Mother," he said, "by God's help I shall be free."
-
-* * * * * *
-
-When the morning broke pale and golden over the eastern hills, and
-the laughing jackasses came round to smile terribly loud and terribly
-chaffingly at the white men's preparation for their simple breakfast,
-Craig moved about without a single trace of his last night's sorrow.
-He was busy looking after the horses when Etheldene came bounding
-towards him with both hands extended, so frank and free and beautiful
-that as he took hold of them he could not help saying:
-
-"You look as fresh as a fern this morning, Baby."
-
-"Not so green, Craig. Say 'Not so green.'"
-
-"No, not so green. But really to look at you brings a great big wave
-of joy surging all over my heart. But to descend from romance to
-common-sense. I hope you are hungry? I have just been seeing to
-your horse. Where do you think I found him?"
-
-"I couldn't guess."
-
-"Why in the water down yonder. Lying down and wallowing."
-
-"The naughty horse! Ah, here come the others! Good morning all."
-
-"We have been bathing," said Archie. "Oh, how delicious!"
-
-"Yes," said Harry; "Johnnie and I were bathing down under the trees,
-and it really was a treat to see how quickly he came to bank when I
-told him there was an alligator taking stock."
-
-"We scared the ducks though. Pity we didn't bring our guns and bag a
-few."
-
-"I believe we'll have a right good breakfast at Findlayson's," said
-Craig; "so I propose we now have a mouthful of something and start."
-
-The gloom of that deep forest became irksome at last; though some of
-its trees were wondrous to behold in their stately straightness and
-immensity of size, the trunks of others were bent and crooked into
-such weird forms of contortion, that they positively looked uncanny.
-
-Referring to these, Archie remarked to Craig, who was riding by his
-side:
-
-"Are they not grotesquely beautiful?"
-
-Craig laughed lightly.
-
-"Their grotesqueness is apparent anyhow," he replied. "But would you
-believe it, in this very forest I was a week mad?"
-
-"Mad!"
-
-"Yes; worse than mad--delirious. Oh, I did not run about, I was too
-feeble! but a black woman or girl found me, and built a kind of bark
-gunja over me, for it rained part of the time and dripped the rest.
-And those trees with their bent and gnarled stems walked about me,
-and gibbered and laughed, and pointed crooked fingers at me. I can
-afford to smile at it now but it was very dreadful then; and the
-worst of it was I had brought it all on myself."
-
-Archie was silent.
-
-"You know in what way?" added Craig.
-
-"I have been told," Archie said, simply and sadly.
-
-"For weeks, Mr. Broadbent, after I was able to walk, I remained among
-the blacks doing nothing, just wandering aimlessly from place to
-place; but the woods and the trees looked no longer weird and awful
-to me then, for I was in my right mind. It was spring--nay, but
-early summer--and I could feel and drink in all the gorgeous beauty
-of foliage, of tree flowers and wild flowers, nodding palms and
-feathery ferns; but, oh! I left and went south again; I met once
-more the white man, and forgot all the religion of Nature in which my
-soul had for a time been steeped. So that is all a kind of
-confession. I feel the better for having made it. We are all poor,
-weak mortals at the best; only I made a resolve last night."
-
-"You did?"
-
-"Yes; and I am going to keep it. I am going to have help."
-
-"Help!"
-
-"Yes, from Him who made those stately giants of the forest and
-changed their stems to silvery white. He can change all things."
-
-"Amen!" said Archie solemnly.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
- _AT FINDLAYSON'S FARM--THE GREAT KANGAROO
- HUNT--A DINNER AND CONCERT._
-
-Gentleman Craig was certainly a strange mortal; but after all he was
-only the type of a class of men to be found at most of our great
-universities. Admirable Crichtons in a small way, in the estimation
-of their friends--bold, handsome, careless, and dashing, not to say
-clever--they may go through the course with flying colours. But too
-often they strike the rocks of sin and sink, going out like the
-splendid meteors of a November night, or sometimes--if they continue
-to float--they are sent off to Australia, with the hopes of giving
-them one more chance. Alas! they seldom get farther than the cities.
-It is only the very best and boldest of them that reach the Bush, and
-there you may find them building fences or shearing sheep. If any
-kind of labour at all is going to make men of them, it is this.
-
-Two minutes after Craig had been talking to Archie, the sweet, clear,
-ringing notes of his manly voice were awaking echoes far a-down the
-dark forest.
-
-Parrots and parrakeets, of lovely plumage, fluttered nearer, holding
-low their wise, old-fashioned heads to look and listen. Lyre-birds
-hopped out from under green fern-bushes, raising their tails and
-glancing at their figures in the clear pool. They listened too, and
-ran back to where their nests were to tell their wives men-people
-were passing through the forest singing; but that they, the cock
-lyre-birds, could sing infinitely better if they tried.
-
-On and on and on went the cavalcade, till sylvan beauty itself began
-to pall at last, and no one was a bit sorry when all at once the
-forest ended, and they were out on a plain, out in the scrub, with,
-away beyond, gently-rising hills, on which trees were scattered.
-
-The bleating of sheep now made them forget all about the gloom of the
-forest. They passed one or two rude huts, and then saw a bigger
-smoke in the distance, which Bill told Archie was Findlayson's.
-
-Findlayson came out to meet them. A Scot every inch of him, you
-could tell that at a glance. A Scot from the soles of his rough
-shoes to the rim of his hat; brown as to beard and hands, and with a
-good-natured face the colour of a badly-burned brick.
-
-He bade them welcome in a right hearty way, and helped "the lassie"
-to dismount.
-
-He had met "the lassie" before.
-
-"But," he said, "I wadna hae kent ye; you were but a bit gilpie then.
-Losh! but ye have grown. Your father's weel, I suppose? Ah, it'll
-be a while afore anybody makes such a sudden haul at the diggin' o'
-gowd as he did! But come in. It's goin' to be anither warm day, I
-fear.
-
-"Breakfast is a' ready. You'll have a thistle fu' o' whiskey first,
-you men folks. Rin butt the hoose, my dear, and see my sister. Tell
-her to boil the eggs, and lift the bacon and the roast ducks."
-
-He brought out the bottle as he spoke. Both Harry and Archie tasted
-to please him. But Craig went boldly into battle.
-
-"I'm done with it, Findlayson," he said. "It has been my ruin. I'm
-done. I'm a weak fool."
-
-"But a wee drap wadna hurt you, man. Just to put the dust out o'
-your wizzen."
-
-Craig smiled.
-
-"It is the wee draps," he replied, "that do the mischief."
-
-"Well, I winna try to force you. Here comes the gude wife wi' the
-teapot."
-
-"Bill," he continued, "as soon as you've satisfied the cravins o'
-Nature, mount the grey colt, and ride down the Creek, and tell them
-the new chums and I will be wi' them in half an hour."
-
-And in little over that specified time they had all joined the hunt.
-
-Black folks and "orra men," as Findlayson called them, were already
-detouring around a wide track of country to beat up the kangaroos.
-
-There were nearly a score of mounted men, but only one lady besides
-Etheldene, a squatter's bold sister.
-
-The dogs were a sight to look at. They would have puzzled some
-Englishmen what to make of them. Partly greyhounds, but larger,
-sturdier, and stronger, as if they had received at one time a cross
-of mastiff. They looked eminently fit, however, and were with
-difficulty kept back. Every now and then a distant shout was heard,
-and at such times the hounds seemed burning to be off.
-
-But soon the kangaroos themselves began to appear thick and fast.
-They came from one part or another in little groups, meeting and
-hopping about in wonder and fright. They seemed only looking for a
-means of escape; and at times, as a few rushing from one direction
-met others, they appeared to consult. Many stood high up, as if on
-tiptoe, gazing eagerly around, with a curious mixture of bewilderment
-and fright displayed on their simple but gentle faces.
-
-They got small time to think now, however, for men and dogs were on
-them, and the flight and the murder commenced with a vengeance.
-There were black fellows there, who appeared to spring suddenly from
-the earth, spear-armed, to deal terrible destruction right and left
-among the innocent animals. And black women too, who seemed to revel
-in the bloody sight. If the whites were excited and thirsty for
-carnage, those aborigines were doubly so.
-
-Meanwhile the men had dismounted, Archie and Harry among the rest,
-and were firing away as quickly as possible. There is one thing to
-be said in favour of the gunners; they took good aim, and there was
-little after-motion in the body of the kangaroo in which a bullet had
-found a billet.
-
-After all Archie was neither content with the sport, nor had it come
-up as yet to his _beau ideal_ of adventure from all he had heard and
-read of it. The scene was altogether noisy, wild, and confusing.
-The blacks gloated in the bloodshed, and Archie did not love them any
-the more for it. It was the first time he had seen those fellows
-using their spears, and he could guess from the way they handled or
-hurled them that they would be pretty dangerous enemies to meet face
-to face in the plain or scrub.
-
-"Harry," he said after a time, "I'm getting tired of all this; let us
-go to our horses."
-
-"I'm tired too. Hallo! where is the chick-a-biddy?"
-
-"You mean Miss Winslow, Harry."
-
-"Ay, Johnnie."
-
-"I have not seen her for some time."
-
-They soon found her though, near a bit of scrub, where their own
-horses were tied.
-
-She was sitting on her saddle, looking as steady and demure as an
-equestrian statue. The sunshine was so blinding that they did not at
-first notice her in the shade there until they were close upon her.
-
-"What, Etheldene!" cried Archie; "we hardly expected you here."
-
-"Where, then?"
-
-"Following the hounds."
-
-"What! into that mob? No, that is not what I came for."
-
-At that moment Craig rode up.
-
-"So glad," he said, "to find you all here. Mount, gentlemen. Are
-you ready, Baby?"
-
-"Ready, yes, an hour ago, Craig."
-
-They met horsemen and hounds not far away, and taking a bold detour
-over a rough and broken country, at the edge of a wood, the hounds
-found a "forester," or old man kangaroo. The beast had a good start
-if he had taken the best advantage of it; but he failed to do so. He
-had hesitated several times; but the run was a fine one. A wilder,
-rougher, more dangerous ride Archie had never taken.
-
-The beast was at bay before very long, and his resistance to the
-death was extraordinary.
-
-They had many more rides before the day was over; and when they
-re-assembled in farmer Findlayson's hospitable parlour, Archie was
-fain for once to own himself not only tired, but "dead beat."
-
-The dinner was what Harry called a splendid spread. Old Findlayson
-had been a gardener in his younger days in England, and his wife was
-a cook; and one of the results of this amalgamation was, dinners or
-breakfasts either, that had already made the Scotchman famous.
-
-Here was soup that an epicure would not have despised, fish to tempt
-a dying man, besides game of different kinds, pies, and last, if not
-least, steak of kangaroo.
-
-The soup itself was made from the tail of the kangaroo, and I know
-nothing more wholesome and nourishing, though some may think it a
-little strong.
-
-While the white folks were having dinner in-doors, the black fellows
-were doing ample justice to theirs _al fresco_, only they had their
-own cuisine and menu, of which the least said the better.
-
-"You're sure, Mr. Craig, you winna tak' a wee drappie?"
-
-If the honest squatter put this question once in the course of the
-evening, he put it twenty times.
-
-"No, really," said Craig at last; "I will not tak' a wee drappie.
-I've sworn off; I have, really. Besides, your wife has made me some
-delightful tea."
-
-"Weel, man, tak' a wee drappie in your last cup. It'll cheer ye up."
-
-"Take down your fiddle, Findlayson, and play a rattling strathspey or
-reel, that'll cheer me up more wholesomely than any amount of 'wee
-drappies.'"
-
-"Come out o' doors then."
-
-It was cool now out there in Findlayson's garden--it was a real
-garden too. His garden and his fiddle were Findlayson's two fads;
-and that he was master of both, their present surroundings of fern
-and flower, and delicious scent of wattle-blossom, and the charming
-strains that floated from the corner where the squatter stood were
-proof enough. The fiddle in his hands talked and sang, now bold or
-merrily, now in sad and wailing notes that brought tears to even
-Archie's eyes. Then, at a suggestion of Craig's, Etheldene's sweet
-young voice was raised in song, and this was only the beginning of
-the concert. Conversation filled up the gaps, so that the evening
-passed away all too soon.
-
-Just as Findlayson had concluded that plaintive and feeling air "Auld
-Robin Gray," a little black girl came stealthily, silently up to
-Etheldene, and placed a little creature like a rabbit in her lap,
-uttering a few words of Bush-English, which seemed to Archie's ear
-utterly devoid of sense. Then the black girl ran; she went away to
-her own camp to tell her people that the white folks were holding a
-corroboree.
-
-The gift was a motherless kangaroo, that at once commenced to make
-itself at home by hiding its innocent head under Etheldene's arm.
-
-The party soon after broke up for the night, and next day but one,
-early in the morning, the return journey was commenced, and finished
-that night; but the sun had gone down, and the moon was shining high
-and full over the forest, before they once more reached the clearing.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-_A NEW ARRIVAL._
-
-Winslow made months of a stay in the Bush, and his services were of
-great value to the young squatters. The improvements he suggested
-were many and various, and he was careful to see them carried out.
-
-Dams were made, and huge reservoirs were dug; for, as Winslow said,
-their trials were all before them, and a droughty season might mean
-financial ruin to them.
-
-"Nevertheless," he added one day, addressing Bob, "I feel sure of
-you; and to prove this I don't mind knocking down a cheque or two to
-the tune of a thou or three or five if you want them.
-
-"I'll take bank interest," he added, "not a penny more."
-
-Bob thanked him, and consulted the others that evening. True,
-Archie's aristocratic pride popped up every now and then, but it was
-kept well under by the others.
-
-"Besides, don't you see, Johnnie," said Harry, "this isn't a gift.
-Winslow is a business man, and he knows well what he is about."
-
-"And," added Bob, "the fencing isn't finished yet. We have all those
-workmen's mouths to fill, and the sooner the work is done the better."
-
-"Then the sheep are to come in a year or so, and it all runs away
-with money, Johnnie. Our fortunes are to be made. There is money on
-the ground to be gathered up, and all that Winslow proposes is
-holding the candle to us till we fill our pockets."
-
-"It is very kind of him," said Archie, "but----"
-
-"Well," said Bob, "I know where your 'buts' will end if you are not
-careful. You will give offence to Mr. Winslow, and he'll just turn
-on his heel and never see us again."
-
-"Do you think so?"
-
-"Think so? Yes, Archie, I'm sure of it. A better-hearted man
-doesn't live, rough and all as he is; and he has set his mind to
-doing the right thing for us all for your sake, lad, and so I say,
-think twice before you throw cold water over that big, warm heart of
-his."
-
-"Well," said Archie, "when you put it in that light, I can see
-matters clearly. I wouldn't offend my good old Uncle Ramsay's friend
-for all the world. I'm sorry I ever appeared bluff with him. So you
-can let him do as he pleases."
-
-And so Winslow did to a great extent.
-
-Nor do I blame Bob and Harry for accepting his friendly assistance.
-Better far to be beholden to a private individual, who is both
-earnest and sincere, than to a money-lending company, who will charge
-double interest, and make you feel that your soul is not your own.
-
-Better still, I grant you, to wait and work and plod; but this life
-is almost too short for much waiting, and after all, one half of the
-world hangs on to the skirts of the other half, and that other half
-is all the more evenly balanced in consequence.
-
-I would not, however, have my young readers misunderstand me. What I
-maintain is this, that although a poor man cannot leave this country
-in the expectation that anybody or any company will be found to
-advance the needful to set him up in the business of a squatter,
-still, when he has worked hard for a time, beginning at the lowermost
-ring of the ladder, and saved enough to get a selection, and a few
-cattle and sheep, then, if he needs assistance to heave a-head a bit,
-he will--if everything is right and square--have no difficulty in
-finding it.
-
-So things went cheerily on at Burley New Farm. And at last Winslow
-and Etheldene took their departure, promising to come again.
-
-"So far, lads," said Winslow, as he mounted his horse, "there hasn't
-been a hitch nowheres. But mind keep two hands at the wheel."
-
-Mr. Winslow's grammar was not of the best, and his sentences
-generally had a smack of the briny about them, which, however, did
-not detract from their graphicness.
-
-"Tip us your flippers, boys," he added, "and let us be off. But I'm
-just as happy as if I were a father to the lot of you."
-
-Gentleman Craig shook hands with Mr. Winslow. He had already helped
-Etheldene into her saddle.
-
-Archie was standing by her, the bridle of his own nag Tell thrown
-carelessly over his arm; for good-byes were being said quite a mile
-from the farm.
-
-"I'll count the days, Etheldene, till you come again," said Archie.
-"The place will not seem the same without you."
-
-Craig stood respectfully aside till Archie had bade her adieu, then,
-with his broad hat down by his side, he advanced. He took her hand
-and kissed it.
-
-"Good-bye, Baby," he said.
-
-There were tears in Etheldene's eyes as she rode away. Big Winslow
-took off his hat, waved it over his head, and gave voice to a
-splendid specimen of a British cheer, which, I daresay, relieved his
-feelings as much as it startled the lories. The "boys" were not slow
-in returning that cheer. Then away rode the Winslows, and presently
-the grey-stemmed gum trees swallowed them up.
-
-* * * * * *
-
-Two whole years passed by. So quickly, too, because they had not
-been idle years. Quite the reverse of that, for every day brought
-its own duties with it, and there was always something new to be
-thought about or done.
-
-One event had taken place which, in Bob's eyes, eclipsed all the
-others--a little baby squatter saw the light of day. But I should
-not have used the word eclipsed. Little "Putty-face," as Harry most
-irreverently called her, did not eclipse anything; on the contrary,
-everything grew brighter on her arrival, and she was hailed queen of
-the station. The news spread abroad like wildfire, and people came
-from far and near to look at the wee thing, just as if a baby had
-never been born in the Bush before.
-
-Findlayson dug the child with his forefinger in the cheek, and nodded
-and "a-goo-ed" to it, and it smiled back, and slobbered and grinned
-and jumped. Findlayson then declared it to be the wisest "wee vision
-o' a thing the warld ever saw." Sarah was delighted, so was the
-nurse--a young sonsy Scotch lass brought to the station on purpose to
-attend to baby.
-
-"But," said Findlayson, "what about bapteezin' the blessed wee
-vision."
-
-"Oh," said Bob, "I've thought of that! Craig and I are going to
-Brisbane with stock, and we'll import a parson."
-
-It so happened that a young missionary was on his way to spread the
-glad tidings among the blacks, and it did not need much coaxing on
-Bob's part to get him to make a detour, and spend a week at Burley
-New Farm. So this was the imported parson.
-
-But being in Brisbane, Bob thought he must import something else,
-which showed what a mindful father he was.
-
-He had a look round, and a glance in at all the shop windows in Queen
-Street, finally he entered an emporium that took his fancy.
-
-"Ahem!" said Bob. "I want a few toys."
-
-"Yes, sir. About what age, sir?"
-
-"The newest and best you have."
-
-"I didn't refer to the age of the toys," said the urbane shopkeeper,
-with the ghost of a smile in his eye. "I should have said, Toys
-suitable for what age?"
-
-"For every age," replied Bob boldly.
-
-The shopkeeper then took the liberty of remarking that his visitor
-must surely be blessed with a quiverful.
-
-"I've only the one little girl," said Bob. "She fills the book as
-yet. But, you see, we're far away in the Bush, and baby will grow
-out of gum-rings and rattles, won't she, into dolls and dung-carts?
-D' ye see? D' ye understand?"
-
-"Perfectly."
-
-It ended in Bob importing not only the parson in a dray, but a box of
-toys as big as a sea-chest, and only Bob himself could have told you
-all that was in it. That box would have stocked a toyshop itself and
-Harry and Archie had the grandest of fun unpacking it, and both
-laughed till they had to elevate their arms in the air to get the
-stitches out of their sides.
-
-The amusing part of it was that innocent Bob had bought such a lot of
-each species.
-
-A brown paper parcel, for example, was marked "1 gross: gum-rings."
-
-"That was a job lot," said Bob, explaining. "I got them at a
-reduction, as the fellow said. Besides, if she has one in each hand,
-and another in her mouth, it will keep her out of mischief for a
-month or two to begin with."
-
-There was no mistake about it, baby was set up; for a time, at all
-events.
-
-Not only did visitors--rough and smooth, but mostly rough--come from
-afar, but letters of congratulation also. Winslow said in a letter
-that Etheldene was dying to come and see "the vision," and so was he,
-though not quite so bad. "Only," he added, "as soon Eth is finished
-we'll both run up. Eth is going to Melbourne to be finished, and I
-think a year will do the job."
-
-"Whatever does he mean," said stalwart Bob, "by finishing Eth, and
-doing the job?"
-
-"Why, you great big brush turkey," said Sarah, "he means finishing
-her edication, in coorse!"
-
-"Oh, I see now!" said Bob. "To be sure; quite right. I say, Sarah,
-we'll have to send "the vision" to a slap-up lady's school one of
-these days, won't us?"
-
-"Bob," replied Sarah severely, "tell that lazy black chap, Jumper, to
-dig some potatoes."
-
-"I'm off, Sarah! I'm off!"
-
-Both Harry and Archie had by this time become perfect in all a
-squatter's art.
-
-Both had grown hard and hardy, and I am not sure that Harry was not
-now quite as bold a rider as Archie himself, albeit he was a Cockney
-born, albeit he had had to rub himself after that first ride of his
-on Scallowa, the "Eider Duck."
-
-Well, then, both he and Archie were perfectly _au fait_ at cattle
-work in all its branches, and only those who have lived on and had
-some interest in farming have an idea what a vast amount of practical
-work breeding cattle includes. One has really to be
-Jack-of-all-trades, and a veterinary surgeon into the bargain.
-
-Moreover, if he be master, and not merely foreman, there are books to
-be kept; so he must be a good accountant, and a good caterer, and
-always have his weather eye lifting, and keeping a long look-out for
-probable changes in the markets.
-
-But things had prospered well at Burley New Station. One chief
-reason of this was that the seasons had been good, and that there was
-every prospect that the colony of Queensland was to be one of the
-most respected and favourite in the little island.
-
-For most of his information on the management of sheep, Archie and
-his companions were indebted to the head stockman, Gentleman Craig.
-He had indeed been a Godsend, and proved himself a blessing to the
-station. It is but fair to add that he had sacredly and sternly kept
-the vow he had registered that night.
-
-He did not deny that it had been difficult for him to do so; in fact
-he often referred to his own weakness when talking to Archie, whose
-education made him a great favourite and the constant companion of
-Craig.
-
-"But you don't feel any the worse for having completely changed your
-habits, do you?" said Archie one day.
-
-Craig's reply was a remarkable one, and one that should be borne in
-mind by those teetotallers who look upon inebriety as simply a
-species of moral aberration, and utterly ignore the physiology of the
-disease.
-
-"To tell you the truth, Mr. Broadbent, I am both better and worse. I
-am better physically; I am in harder, more robust, muscular health;
-I'm as strong in the arms as a kicking kangaroo. I eat well, I sleep
-fairly well, and am fit in every way. But I feel as if I had passed
-through the vale of the shadow of death, and it had left some of its
-darkness on and in my soul. I feel as if the cure had mentally taken
-a deal out of me; and when I meet, at Brisbane or other towns, men
-who offer me drink I feel mean and downcast, because I have to refuse
-it, and because I dared not even take it as food and medicine. No
-one can give up habits of life that have become second nature without
-mental injury, if not bodily. And I'm more and more convinced every
-month that intemperance is a disease of periodicity, just like gout
-and rheumatism."
-
-"You have cravings at certain times, then?"
-
-"Yes; but that isn't the worst. The worst is that periodically in my
-dreams I have gone back to my old ways, and think I am living once
-again in the fool's paradise of the inebriate; singing wild songs,
-drinking recklessly, talking recklessly, and looking upon life as but
-a brief unreality, and upon time as a thing only to be drowned in the
-wine-cup. Yes, but when I awake from these pleasantly-dreadful
-dreams, I thank God fervidly I have been but dreaming."
-
-Archie sighed, and no more was said on the subject.
-
-Letters came from home about once a mouth, but they came to Archie
-only. Yet, though Bob had never a friend to write to him from
-Northumbria, nor Harry one in Whitechapel, the advent of a packet
-from home gave genuine joy to all hands.
-
-Archie's letters from home were read first by Archie himself, away
-out under the shade of a tree as likely as not. Then they were read
-to his chums, including Sarah and Diana.
-
-Diana was the baby.
-
-But they were not finished with even then. No; for they were hauled
-out and perused night after night for maybe a week, and then
-periodically for perhaps another fortnight. There was something new
-to talk about found in them each time; something suggesting pleasant
-conversation.
-
-Archie was often even amused at "his dear old dad's" remarks and
-advice. He gave as many hints, and planned as many improvements, as
-though he had been a settler all his life, and knew everything there
-was any need to know about the soil and the climate.
-
-He believed--_i.e._, the old Squire believed--that if he were only
-out among them, he would show even the natives* a thing or two.
-
-
-* Natives = White men born in the Bush.
-
-
-Yes, it was amusing; and after filling about ten or twelve
-closely-written pages on suggested improvements, he was sure to
-finish up somewhat as follows in the postscript:
-
-"But after all, Archie, my dear boy, you must be very careful in all
-you do. Never go like a bull at a gate, lad. Don't forget that
-_I_--even _I_--was not altogether successful at Burley Old Farm."
-
-"Bless that postscript," Archie would say; "mother comes in there."
-
-"Does she now?" Sarah would remark, looking interested.
-
-"Aye, that she does. You see father just writes all he likes
-first--blows off steam as it were; and mother reads it, and quietly
-dictates a postscript."
-
-Then there were Elsie's letters and Rupert's, to say nothing of a
-note from old Kate and a crumpled little enclosure from Branson.
-Well, in addition to letters, there was always a bundle of papers,
-every inch of which was read--even the advertisements, and every
-paragraph of which brought back to Archie and Bob memories of the
-dear old land they were never likely to forget.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-_THE STREAM OF LIFE FLOWS QUIETLY ON._
-
-One day a grand gift arrived from England, being nothing less than a
-couple of splendid Scotch collies and a pair of Skye terriers. They
-had borne the journey wonderfully well, and set about taking stock,
-and settling themselves in their new home, at once.
-
-Archie's pet kangaroo was an object of great curiosity to the Skyes
-at first. On the very second day of their arrival Bobie and Roup, as
-they were called, marched up to the kangaroo, and thus addressed him:
-
-"We have both come to the conclusion that you are something that
-shouldn't be."
-
-"Indeed!" said the kangaroo.
-
-"Yes; so we're going to let the sawdust out of you."
-
-"Take that then to begin with!" said Mr. Kangaroo; and one of the
-dogs was kicked clean and clear over a fern bush.
-
-They drew off after that with their tails well down. They thought
-they had made a mistake somehow. A rabbit that could kick like a
-young colt was best left to his own devices.
-
-The collies never attempted to attack the kangaroo; but when they saw
-the droll creature hopping solemnly after Archie, one looked at the
-other, and both seemed to laugh inwardly.
-
-The collies were placed under the charge of Craig to be broken to
-use, for both were young, and the Skyes became the vermin-killers.
-They worked in couple, and kept down the rats far more effectually
-than ever the cats had done. They used to put dingoes to the rout
-whenever or wherever they saw them; and as sometimes both these game
-little animals would return of a morning severely bitten about the
-face and ears, it was evident enough they had gone in for sharp
-service during the night.
-
-One curious thing about the Skyes was, that they killed snakes, and
-always came dragging home with the loathsome things. This was very
-clever and very plucky; nevertheless, a tame laughing-jackass that
-Harry had in a huge cage was to them a pet aversion. Perhaps the
-bird knew that; for as soon as he saw them he used to give vent to a
-series of wild, defiant "ha-ha-ha's" and "hee-hee-hee's" that would
-have laid a ghost.
-
-The improvements on that portion of Burley New Farm more immediately
-adjoining the steading had gone merrily on, and in a year or two,
-after fencing and clearing the land, a rough style of agriculture was
-commenced. The ploughs were not very first-class, and the horses
-were oxen--if I may make an Irish bull. They did the work slowly but
-well. They had a notion that every now and then they ought to be
-allowed to go to sleep for five minutes. However, they were easily
-roused, and just went on again in a dreamy kind of way.
-
-The land did not require much coaxing to send up crops of splendid
-wheat. It was a new-born joy to Bob and Archie to ride along their
-paddocks, and see the wind waving over the growing grain, making the
-whole field look like an inland sea.
-
-"What would your father say to a sight like that?" said Bob one
-morning while the two were on their rounds.
-
-"He would start subsoiling ploughs and improve it."
-
-"I don't know about the improvement, Archie, but I've no doubt he
-would try. But new land needs little improving."
-
-"Maybe no; but mind you, Bob, father is precious clever, though I
-don't hold with all his ways. He'd have steam-ploughs here, and
-steam-harrows too. He'd cut down the grain to the roots by
-steam-machines, or he'd have steam-strippers."
-
-"But you don't think we should go any faster?"
-
-"Bob, I must confess I like to take big jumps myself. I take after
-my father in some things, but after my Scottish ancestors in others.
-For instance, I like to know what lies at the other side of the hedge
-before I put my horse at it."
-
-The first crops of wheat that were taken off the lands of Burley New
-Farm were gathered without much straw. It seemed a waste to burn the
-latter; but the distance from the railway, and still more from a
-market-town, made its destruction a necessity.
-
-Nor was it altogether destruction either; for the ashes served as a
-fertilizer for future crops.
-
-As things got more settled down, and years flew by, the system of
-working the whole station was greatly improved. Bob and Harry had
-become quite the home-farmers and agriculturists, while the cattle
-partially, and the sheep almost wholly, became the care of Archie,
-with Gentleman Craig as his first officer.
-
-Craig certainly had a long head on his broad shoulders. He did not
-hesitate from the first to give his opinions as to the management of
-the station. One thing he assured the three friends of: namely, that
-the sheep must be sent farther north and west if they were to do well.
-
-"They want higher and dryer ground," he said; "but you may try them
-here."
-
-I think at this time neither Bob nor Archie knew there was anything
-more deadly to be dreaded than foot-rot, which the constant attention
-of the shepherds and a due allowance of blue-stone, served out from
-Harry's stores, kept well under.
-
-They gained other and sadder experience before very long, however.
-
-At first all went as merrily as marriage bells. The first
-sheep-shearing was a never-to-be-forgotten event in the life of our
-Bushmen.
-
-The season was October--a spring month in Australia--and the fleeces
-were in fine form, albeit some were rather full of grass seed. They
-were mostly open, however, and everyone augured a good clip.
-
-Sarah was very busy indoors superintending everything; for there was
-extra cooking to be done now. Wee Diana, who had developed into
-quite a Bush child, though a pretty one, toddled about here, there,
-and everywhere; the only wonder is--as an Irishman might say--that
-she did not get killed three or four times a day. Diana had long
-since abjured gumrings and rattles, and taken to hoops and whips.
-One of the collie dogs, and the pet kangaroo, were her constant
-companions. As previously stated, both collies had been sent to
-Craig to be trained; but as Bounce had a difference of opinion with
-one of the shepherds, he concluded he would make a change by the way
-of bettering himself, so he had taken French leave and come home to
-the steading. He would have been sent off again, sure enough, if he
-had not--collie-like--enlisted Sarah herself on his behalf. This he
-had done by lying down beside little Diana on the kitchen floor. The
-two kissed each other and fell asleep. Bounce's position was assured
-after that.
-
-Findlayson, who did not mean to commence operations among his own
-fleeces for another month, paid a visit to Burley, and brought with
-him a few spare hands. Harry had plenty to do both out of doors and
-in his stores; for many men were now about the place, and they must
-all eat and smoke.
-
-"As sure as a gun," said Findlayson the first morning, "that
-Joukie-daidles o' yours 'ill get killed."
-
-He said this just after about three hundred sheep had rushed the
-child, and run over her. It was the fault of the kangaroo on one
-hand, and the collie, Bounce, on the other. Findlayson had picked
-her off the ground, out of a cloud of dust, very dirty, but smiling.
-
-"What is to be done with her?" said Bob, scratching his head.
-
-"Fauld her," said Findlayson.
-
-"What does that mean?"
-
-Findlayson showed him what "faulding" meant. He speedily put up a
-little enclosure on an eminence, from which Diana could see all
-without the possibility of escaping. So every day she, with her dog
-and the pet kangaroo, to say nothing of a barrow-load of toys,
-including a huge Noah's ark, found herself happy and out of harm's
-way. Diana could be seen at times leaning over the hurdle, and
-waving a hand exultingly in the air, and it was presumed she was
-loudly cheering the men's performance; but as to hearing anything,
-that seemed utterly out of the question, with the baa-ing and maa-ing
-of the sheep.
-
-When the work was in full blast it certainly was a strange sight, and
-quite colonial. Archie had been at sheep-shearings before at home
-among the Cheviot Hills, but nothing to compare to this.
-
-There was, first and foremost, the sheep to be brought up in batches
-or flocks from the distant stations, men and dogs also having plenty
-to do to keep them together, then the enclosing them near the
-washing-ground. The dam in which the washing took place was lucidly
-well filled, for rain had fallen not long before. Sheep-washing is
-hard work, as anyone will testify who has tried his hand at it for
-even half a day. Sheep are sometimes exceedingly stupid, more
-particularly, I think, about a time like this. The whole business is
-objected to, and they appear imbued with the idea that you mean to
-drown them, and put every obstacle in your way a stubborn nature can
-invent.
-
-The sheep, after being well scrubbed, were allowed a day to get dry
-and soft and nice. Then came the clipping. Gentleman Craig was
-stationed at a platform to count the fleeces and see them ready for
-pressing, and Archie's work was cut out in seeing that the fellows at
-the clipping did their duty properly.
-
-It was a busy, steaming time, on the whole, for everybody, but merry
-enough nevertheless. There was "lashins" of eating and drinking.
-Findlayson himself took charge of the grog, which was mostly rum,
-only he had a small store of mountain dew for his own special
-consumption.
-
-Harry was quite the Whitechapel tradesman all over, though you could
-not have told whether the grocer or butcher most predominated in his
-appearance.
-
-The clipping went on with marvellous speed, a rivalry existing
-between the hands apparently; but as they were paid by the number of
-fleeces, there was evident desire on the part of several to sacrifice
-perfection to rapidity.
-
-When it was all over there was still a deal to be done in clearing up
-and getting the whole station resettled, one part of the resettling,
-and the chief too, being the re-establishing of the sheep on their
-pasturage after marking them.
-
-The wool was pressed into bales, and loaded on huge bullock-waggons,
-which are in appearance something between an ordinary country
-wood-cart and a brewer's dray. The road to the distant station was
-indeed a rough one, and at the slow rate travelled by the bullock
-teams the journey would occupy days.
-
-Craig himself was going with the last lot of these, and Archie had
-started early and ridden on all alone to see to business in Brisbane.
-
-He had only been twice at the town in the course of three years, so
-it is no wonder that now he was impressed with the notion that the
-well-dressed city folks must stare at him, to see if he had any
-hay-seed in his hair.
-
-Winslow was coming round by boat, and Etheldene as well; she had been
-at home for some time on a holiday.
-
-Why was it, I wonder, that Archie paid a visit to several outfitters'
-shops in Brisbane, and made so many purchases? He really was well
-enough dressed when he entered the town; at all events, he had looked
-a smart young farmer all over. But when he left his bedroom on the
-morning of Winslow's arrival, he had considerably more of the English
-Squire than the Australian Squatter about his _tout ensemble_. But
-he really looked a handsome, happy, careless young fellow, and that
-bit of a sprouting moustache showed off his good looks to perfection.
-He could not help feeling it sometimes as he sat reading a paper in
-the hotel hall, and waiting for his friends, and was fool enough to
-wonder if Etheldene would think him improved in appearance.
-
-But Archie was neither "masher" nor dandy at heart. He was simply a
-young man, and I would not value any young man who did not take pains
-with his personal appearance, even at the risk of being thought proud.
-
-Archie had not long to wait for Winslow. He burst in like a fresh
-sea-breeze--hale, hearty, and bonnie. He was also a trifle better
-dressed than usual. But who was that young lady close by his left
-hand? That couldn't be--yes, it was Etheldene, and next moment
-Archie was grasping a hand of each.
-
-Etheldene's beauty had matured; she had been but a girl, a child,
-when Archie had met her before. Now she was a bewitching young lady,
-modest and lovely, but, on the whole, so self-possessed that if our
-hero had harboured any desire to appear before her at his very best,
-and keep up the good impression by every means in his power, he had
-the good sense to give it up and remain his own natural honest self.
-
-But he could not help saying to himself, "What a wife she will make
-for Rupert! And how Elsie will love and adore her! And I--yes, I
-will be content to remain the big bachelor brother."
-
-There was such a deal to ask of each other, such a deal to do and to
-say, that days flew by before they knew where they were, as Winslow
-expressed it.
-
-On the fifth day Gentleman Craig arrived to give an account of his
-stewardship.
-
-Etheldene almost bounded towards him.
-
-But she looked a little shy at his stare of astonishment as he took
-her gloved hand.
-
-"Baby," he exclaimed, "I would hardly have known you! How you have
-improved!"
-
-Then the conversation became general.
-
-When accounts were squared, it was discovered that, by the spring
-wool, and last year's crops and bullocks, the young squatters had
-done wonderfully well, and were really on a fair way to wealth.
-
-"Now, Archie Broadbent," said Winslow that night, "I am going to put
-you on to a good thing or two. You are a gentleman, and have a
-gentleman's education. You have brains, and can do a bit of
-speculation; and it is just here where brains come in."
-
-Winslow then unfolded his proposals, which were of such an inviting
-kind that Archie at once saw his way to benefit by them. He thanked
-Winslow over and over again for all he had done for him, and merely
-stipulated that in this case he should be allowed to share his plans
-with Bob and Harry.
-
-To this, of course, Winslow made no objection.
-
-"As to thanking me for having given ye a tip or two," said Winslow,
-"don't flatter yourself it is for your sake. It is all to the memory
-of the days I spent as steward at sea with your good old uncle. Did
-you send him back his fifty pounds?"
-
-"I did, and interest with it."
-
-"That is right. That is proper pride."
-
-Archie and the Winslows spent a whole fortnight in Brisbane, and they
-went away promising that ere long they would once more visit the
-station.
-
-The touch of Etheldene's soft hand lingered long in Archie's. The
-last look from her bonnie eyes haunted him even in his dreams, as
-well as in his waking thoughts. The former he could not command, so
-they played him all kinds of pranks. But over his thoughts he still
-had sway; and whenever he found himself thinking much about
-Etheldene's beauty, or winning ways, or soft, sweet voice, he always
-ended up by saying to himself, "What a love of a little wife she will
-make for Rupert!"
-
-One day, while Archie was taking a farewell walk along Queen Street,
-glancing in here and there at the windows, and now and then entering
-to buy something pretty for Sarah, something red--dazzling--for her
-black servant-maid, and toys for Di, he received a slap on the back
-that made him think for a moment a kangaroo had kicked him.
-
-"What!" he cried, "Captain Vesey?"
-
-"Aye, lad, didn't I say we would meet again?"
-
-"Well, wonders will never cease! Where have you been? and what have
-you been doing?"
-
-"Why I've gone in for trade a bit. I've been among the South Sea
-Islands, shipping blacks for the interior here; and, to tell you the
-truth, my boy, I am pretty well sick of the job from all I've seen.
-It is more like buying slaves, and that is the honest truth."
-
-"And I suppose you are going to give it up?"
-
-The captain laughed--a laugh that Archie did not quite like.
-
-"Yes," he said, "I'll give it up after--another turn or two. But
-come and have something cooling, the weather is quite summery
-already. What a great man you have grown! When I saw you first you
-were just a----"
-
-"A hobbledehoy?"
-
-"Something like that--very lime-juicy, but very ardent and sanguine.
-I say, you didn't find the streets of Sydney paved with gold, eh?"
-
-"Not quite," replied Archie, laughing as he thought of all his misery
-and struggles in the capital of New South Wales.
-
-"But," he added, "though I did not find the streets paved with gold,
-I found the genuine ore on a house-top, or near it, in a girl called
-Sarah."
-
-"What, Archie Broadbent, you don't mean to say you're married?"
-
-"No; but Bob is."
-
-"What Bob? Here, waiter, bring us drinks--the best and coolest you
-have in the house. Now, lad, you've got to begin at the beginning of
-your story, and run right through to the end. Spin it off like a
-man. I'll put my legs on a chair, smoke, and listen."
-
-So Archie did as he was told, and very much interested was Captain
-Vesey.
-
-"And now, captain, you must promise to run down, and see us all in
-the Bush. We're a jolly nice family party, I can assure you."
-
-"I promise, my boy, right heartily. I hope to be back in Brisbane in
-six months. Expect to see me then."
-
-They dined together, and spent the evening talking of old times, and
-planning all that they would do when they met.
-
-Next day they parted.
-
-* * * * * *
-
-The end of this spring was remarkable for floods. Never before had
-our heroes seen such storms of ram, often accompanied with thunder
-and lightning. Archie happened to be out in the forest when it first
-came on.
-
-It had been a hot, still, sulphurous morning, which caused even the
-pet kangaroo to lie panting on his side. Then a wind came puffing
-and roaring through the trees in uncertain gusts, shaking the hanging
-curtains of climbing plants, rustling and rasping among the side-long
-leaved giant gums, tearing down tree ferns and lovely orchids, and
-scattering the scented bloom of the wattle in every direction.
-
-With the wind came the clouds, and a darkness that could be felt.
-
-Then down died the fitful breeze, and loud and long roared and
-rattled the thunder, while the blinding lightning seemed everywhere.
-It rushed down the darkness in rivers like blood, it glanced and
-glimmered on the pools of water, and zigzagged through the trees.
-From the awful hurtling of the thunder one would have thought every
-trunk and stem were being rent and riven in pieces.
-
-Tell--the horse--seemed uneasy, so Archie made for home. The rain
-had come on long before he reached the creek, but the stream was
-still fordable.
-
-But see! He is but half-way across when, in the interval between the
-thunder peals, he can hear a steady rumbling roar away up the creek
-and gulley, but coming closer and closer every moment.
-
-On, on, on, good Tell! Splash through that stream quicker than ever
-you went before, or far down the country to-morrow morning two
-swollen corpses will be seen floating on the floods!
-
-Bewildered by the dashing rain, and the mist that rose on every side,
-Archie and his trusty steed had but reached high ground when down
-came the bore.
-
-A terrible sight, though but dimly seen. Fully five feet high, it
-seemed to carry everything before it. Alas! for flocks and herds.
-Archie could see white bodies and black, tumbling and trundling along
-in the rolling "spate."
-
-The floods continued for days. And when they abated then losses
-could be reckoned. Though dead cattle and sheep now lay in dozens
-about the flat lands near the creek, only a small percentage of them
-belonged to Burley.
-
-Higher up Findlayson had suffered, and many wild cattle helped to
-swell the death bill.
-
-But it was bad enough.
-
-However, our young squatters were not the men to sit down to cry over
-spilt milk.
-
-The damage was repaired, and the broken dams were made new again.
-And these last were sadly wanted before the summer went past. For it
-was unusually hot, the sun rising in a cloudless sky, blazing down
-all day steadily, and setting without even a ray being intercepted by
-a cloud.
-
-[Illustration: "Bush fires were not now infrequent. One of the
-strangest sights in connection with it was the wild stampede of the
-panic-stricken kangaroos and bush horses."]
-
-Bush fires were not now infrequent. While travelling in a distant
-part of the selection, far to the west, in company with Craig, whom
-he had come to visit, they were witnesses to a fire of this sort that
-had caught a distant forest. Neither pen nor pencil could do justice
-to such a scene. Luckily it was separated from the Burley estate by
-a deep ravine. One of the strangest sights in connection with it was
-the wild stampede of the panic-stricken kangaroos and bush horses.
-
-To work in the fields was now to work indeed. Bob's complexion and
-Archie's were "improved" to a kind of brick-red hue, and even Harry
-got wondrously tanned. There was certainly a great saving in clothes
-that year, for excepting light, broad-brimmed hats, and shirts and
-trousers, nothing else was worn by the men.
-
-But the gardens were cool in the evening, in spite of the midday
-glare of the sun, and it was delightful to sit out in the open for an
-hour or two and think and talk of the old country; while the rich
-perfume of flowers hung warm in the air, and the holy stars shimmered
-and blinked in the dark blue of the sky.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-"_I'LL WRITE A LETTER HOME._"
-
-The summer wore away, autumn came, the harvest was made good, and in
-spite of the drought it turned out well; for the paddocks chosen for
-agricultural produce seldom lacked moisture, lying as they did on the
-low lands near the creek, and on rich ground reclaimed from the scrub.
-
-Our Bushmen were congratulating themselves on the success of their
-farming; for the banking account of all three was building itself, so
-to speak, slowly, but surely.
-
-Archie was now quite as wealthy as either of his companions; for his
-speculations, instigated by his friend Winslow, had turned out well;
-so his stock had increased tenfold, and he had taken more pasture to
-the westward and north, near where Bob's and Harry's sheep now were;
-for Craig's advice had been acted on.
-
-None too soon though; for early in the winter an old shepherd arrived
-in haste at the homesteading to report an outbreak of inflammatory
-catarrh among the flocks still left on the lower pastures.
-
-The events that quickly followed put Archie in mind of the "dark
-days" at Burley Old Farm, when fat beasts were dying in twos and
-threes day after day. Sheep affected with this strange ailment lived
-but a day or two, and the only thing to do was to kill them on the
-very first symptoms of the ailment appearing. They were then just
-worth the price of their hides and tallow.
-
-Considering the amount of extra work entailed, and the number of
-extra hands to be hired, and the bustle and stir and anxiety caused
-by the outbreak, it is doubtful if it would not have been better to
-bury them as they fell, skin and all.
-
-This was one of the calamities which Winslow had pointed out to
-Archie as likely to occur. But it was stamped out at last. The
-sheep that remained were sent away to far-off pastures; being kept
-quite separate, however, from the other flocks. So the cloud passed
-away, and the squatters could breathe freely again, and hope for a
-good lambing season, when winter passed away, and spring-time came
-once more.
-
-"Bob," said Archie one evening, as they all sat round the hearth
-before retiring to bed, "that fire looks awfully cosy, doesn't it?
-And all the house is clean and quiet--oh, so quiet and delightful
-that I really wonder anyone could live in a city or anywhere near the
-roar and din of railway trains! Then our farm is thriving far beyond
-anything we could have dared to expect. We are positively getting
-rich quickly, if, indeed, we are not rich already. And whether it be
-winter or summer, the weather is fine, glorious sometimes. Indeed,
-it is like a foretaste of heaven, Bob, in my humble opinion, to get
-up early and wander out of doors."
-
-"Well," said Bob, "small reason to be ashamed to say that, my boy."
-
-"Hold on, Bob, I'm coming to the part I'm ashamed of; just you smoke
-your pipe and keep quiet. Well, so much in love am I with the new
-country that I'm beginning to forget the old. Of course I'll
-always--always be a true Englishman, and I'd go back to-morrow to lay
-down my life for the dear old land if it was in danger. But it
-isn't, it doesn't want us, it doesn't need us; it is full to
-overflowing, and I daresay they can do without any of us. But, Bob,
-there is my dear old father, mother, Elsie, and Rupert. Now, if it
-were only possible to have them here. But I know my father is wedded
-to Burley, and his life's dream is to show his neighbours a thing or
-two. I know too that if he starts machinery again he will be
-irretrievably lost."
-
-Archie paused, and the kangaroo looked up into his face as much as to
-say, "Go on, I'm all attention."
-
-"Well, Bob, if I make a pile here and go home, I'll just get as fond
-of Burley as I was when a boy, and I may lose my pile too. It seems
-selfish to speak so, but there is no necessity for it. So I mean to
-try to get father to emigrate. Do you think such a thing is
-possible, Bob?"
-
-"It's the same with men as with trees, Archie. You must loosen the
-ground about them, root by root must be carefully taken up if you
-want to transplant them and you must take so much of the old earth
-with them that they hardly know they are being moved. Sarah, bring
-the coffee. As for my own part, Archie, I am going back; but it is
-only just to see the old cottage, the dear old woods, and--and my
-mother's grave."
-
-"Yes," said Archie, thoughtfully. "Well, root by root you said,
-didn't you?"
-
-"Aye, root by root."
-
-"Then I'm going to begin. Rupert and Elsie will be the first roots.
-Roup isn't over strong yet. This country will make a man of him.
-Bob and you, Harry, can go to bed as soon as you like. I'm going out
-to think and walk about a bit. Stick another log or two on the fire,
-and as soon as you have all turned in I'll write a letter home. I'll
-begin the uprooting, though it does seem cruel to snap old ties."
-
-"Well," said Harry, "thank goodness, I've got no ties to snap. And I
-think with you, Archie, that the old country isn't a patch on the
-new. Just think o' the London fogs. You mind them, Sarah."
-
-"I does, 'Arry."
-
-"And the snow."
-
-"And the slush, 'Arry."
-
-"And the drizzle."
-
-"And the kitchen beetles, boy. It would take a fat little lot to
-make me go back out o' the sunshine. Here's the coffee."
-
-"Keep mine hot, Sarah."
-
-Away went Archie out into the night, out under the stars, out in the
-falling dew, and his kangaroo went jumping and hopping after him.
-
-The sky was very bright and clear to-night, though fleece-shaped,
-snow-white clouds lay low on the horizon, and the moon was rising
-through the distant woods, giving the appearance of some gigantic
-fire as its beams glared red among the topmost branches.
-
-There was the distant howling or yelling of dingoes, and the low,
-half-frightened bleat of sheep, and there was the rippling murmur of
-the stream not far off, but all else was still.
-
-It was two hours before Archie found his way back. The kangaroo saw
-him to the door, then went off to curl up in the shed till the hot
-beams of the morning sun should lure him forth to breakfast.
-
-And all alone sat Archie, by the kitchen table, writing a letter home
-by the light of candles made on the steading.
-
-It was very still now in the house--only the ticking of the clock,
-the occasional whirr of some insect flying against the window,
-anxious to come into the light and warmth and scratching of the young
-man's pen.
-
-Surely the dog knew that Archie was writing home, for presently he
-got slowly up from his corner and came and leant his head on his
-master's knee, in that wise and kindly way collies have of showing
-their thoughts and feelings. Archie must leave off writing for a
-moment to smooth and pet the honest "bawsent" head.
-
-Now it would be very easy for us to peep over Archie's shoulder and
-read what he was writing, but that would be rude; anything rather
-than rudeness and impoliteness. Rather, for instance, let us take a
-voyage across the wide, terribly wide ocean, to pay a visit to Burley
-Old Farm, and wait till the letter comes.
-
-* * * * * *
-
-"I wonder," said Elsie with a gentle sigh, and a long look at the
-fire, "when we may expect to hear from Archie again. Dear me, what a
-long, long time it is since he went away! Let me see, Rupert, it is
-going on for six years, isn't it?"
-
-"Yes. Archie must be quite a man by now."
-
-"He's all right," said the Squire.
-
-"That he is, I know," said Uncle Ramsay.
-
-"He's in God's good hands," said the mother, but her glasses were so
-moist she had to take them off to wipe them; "he is in God's good
-hands, and all we can do now is to pray for him."
-
-Two little taps at the green-parlour door and enter the maid, not
-looking much older, and not less smart, than when last we saw her.
-
-"If you please, sir, there's a gentleman in the study as would like
-to see you."
-
-"Oh," she added, with a little start, "here he comes!"
-
-And there he came certainly.
-
-"God bless all here!" he cried heartily.
-
-"What," exclaimed the Squire, jumping up and holding out his hand,
-"my dear old friend Venturesome Vesey!"
-
-"Yes, Yankee Charlie, and right glad I am to see you."
-
-"My wife and children, Vesey. Though you and I have often met in
-town since my marriage, you've never seen them before. My brother,
-whom you know."
-
-Vesey was not long in making himself one of the family circle, and he
-gave his promise to stay at Burley Old Farm for a week at least.
-
-Rupert and Elsie took to him at once. How could they help it? a
-sailor and gentleman, and a man of the world to boot. Besides,
-coming directly from Archie.
-
-"I just popped into the house the very morning after he had written
-the letter I now hand to you," said Captain Vesey. "He had an idea
-it would be safer for me to bring it. Well, here it is; and I'm
-going straight away out to the garden to smoke a pipe under the moon
-while you read it. Friend as I am of Archie's, you must have the
-letter all to yourselves;" and away went Vesey.
-
-"Send for old Kate and Branson," cried the Squire, and they
-accordingly marched in all expectancy.
-
-Then the father unfolded the letter with as much reverence almost as
-if it had been Foxe's Book of Martyrs.
-
-Every eye was fixed upon him as he slowly read it. Even Bounder, the
-great Newfoundland, knew something unusual was up, and sat by Elsie
-all the time.
-
-
-ARCHIE'S LETTER HOME.
-
-"MY DEAREST MOTHER,--It is to you I write first, because I know that
-a proposal I have to make will 'take you aback,' as my friend Winslow
-would say. I may as well tell you what it is at once, because, if I
-don't, your beloved impatience will cause you to skip all the other
-parts of the letter till you come to it. Now then, my own old mummy,
-wipe your spectacles all ready, catch hold of the arm of your chair
-firmly, and tell Elsie to 'stand by'--another expression of
-Winslow's--the smelling-salts bottle. Are you all ready? Heave oh!
-then. I'm going to ask you to let Rupert and Elsie come out to me
-here.
-
-"Have you fainted, mummy? Not a bit of it; you're my own brave
-mother! And don't you see that this will be only the beginning of
-the end? And a bright, happy end, mother, I'm looking forward to its
-being. It will be the reunion of us all once more; and if we do not
-live quite under one roof, as in the dear old days at Burley Old
-Farm, we will live in happy juxtaposition.
-
-"'What!' you cry, 'deprive me of my children?' It is for your
-children's good, mummy. Take Rupert first. He is not strong now,
-but he is young. If he comes at once to this glorious land of ours,
-on which I am quite enthusiastic, he will get as hardy as a New
-Hollander in six months' time. Wouldn't you like to see him with
-roses on his face, mother, and a brow as brown as a postage stamp?
-Send him out. Would you like him to have a frame of iron, with
-muscles as tough as a mainstay? Send him out. Would you like him to
-be as full of health as an egg is full of meat? and so happy that he
-would have to get up at nights to sing? Then send him here.
-
-"Take poor me next. You've no notion how homesick I am; I'm dying to
-see some of you. I am making money fast, and I love my dear, free,
-jolly life; but for all that, there are times that I would give up
-everything I possess--health, and hopes of wealth--for sake of one
-glance at your dear faces, and one run round Burley Old Farm with
-father."
-
-This part of Archie's letter told home. There were tears in Mrs.
-Broadbent's motherly eyes; and old Kate was heard to murmur, "Dear,
-bonnie laddie!" and put her apron to her face.
-
-"Then," the letter continued, "there is Elsie. It would do her good
-to come too, because--bless the lassie!--she takes her happiness at
-second-hand; and knowing that she was a comfort to us boys, and made
-everything cheery and nice, would cause her to be as jolly as the
-summer's day is long or a gum tree high. Then, mother, we three
-should work together with only one intent--that of getting you and
-father both out, and old Kate and Branson too.
-
-"As for you, dad, I know you will do what is right; and see how good
-it would be for us all to let Roup and Elsie come. Then you must
-remember that when we got things a bit straighter, we would expect
-you and mother to follow. You, dear dad, would have full scope here
-for your inventive genius, and improvements that are thrown away in
-England could be turned to profit out here.
-
-"We would not go like a bull at a gate at anything, father; but what
-we do want here is machinery, easily worked, for cutting up and
-dealing with wood; for cutting up ground, and for destroying tree
-stumps; and last, but not least, we want wells, and a complete system
-of irrigation for some lands, that shall make us independent to a
-great extent of the sparsely-failing rains of some seasons. Of
-course you could tell us something about sheep disease and cattle
-plague, and I'm not sure you couldn't help us to turn the wild horses
-to account, with which some parts of the interior swarm."
-
-Squire Broadbent paused here to exclaim, as he slapped his thigh with
-his open palm:
-
-"By St. Andrews, brother, Archie is a chip of the old block! He's a
-true Broadbent, I can tell you. He appreciates the brains of his
-father too. Heads are what are wanted out there; genius to set the
-mill a-going. As for this country--pah! it's played out. Yes, my
-children, you shall go, and your father will follow."
-
-"My dear Elsie and Rupert," the letter went on, "how I should love to
-have you both out here. I have not asked you before, because I
-wanted to have everything in a thriving condition first; but now that
-everything is so, it wants but you two to help me on, and in a year
-or two---- Hurrah! for dad and the mum!
-
-"Yes, Elsie, your house is all prepared. I said nothing about this
-before. I've been, like the duck-bill, working silently out of
-sight--out of your sight I mean. But there it is, the finest house
-in all the district, a perfect mansion; walls as thick as Burley Old
-Tower--that's for coolness in summer. Lined inside with
-cedar--that's for cosiness in winter. Big hall in it, and all the
-rooms just _fac-simile_ of our own house at home, or as near to them
-as the climate will admit.
-
-"But mind you, Elsie, I'm not going to have you banished to the Bush
-wilds altogether. No, lassie, no; we will have a mansion--a real
-mansion--in Sydney or Brisbane as well, and the house at Burley New
-Farm will be our country residence.
-
-"I know I'll have your answer by another mail, and it will put new
-life into us all to know you are coming. Then I will start right
-away to furnish our house. Our walls shall be polished, pictures
-shall be hung, and mirrors everywhere; the floors shall glitter like
-beetles' wings, and couches and skins be all about. I'm rather lame
-at house description, but you, Elsie, shall finish the furnishing,
-and put in the nicknacks yourself.
-
-"I'm writing here in the stillness of night, with our doggie's head
-upon my knee. All have gone to bed--black and white--in the house
-and round the Station. But I've just come in from a long walk in the
-moonlight. I went out to be alone and think about you; and what a
-glorious night, Rupert! We have no such nights in England. Though
-it is winter, it is warm and balmy. It is a delight to walk at night
-either in summer or winter. Oh, I do wish I could describe to you my
-garden as it is in spring and early summer! That is you know, our
-garden that is going to be. I had the garden laid out and planted
-long before the house was put up, and now my chief delight is to keep
-it up. You know, as I told you before, I went to Melbourne with the
-Winslows. Well, we went round everywhere, and saw everything; we
-sailed on the lovely river, and I was struck with the wonderful
-beauty of the gardens, and determined ours should be something like
-it. And when the orange blossom is out, and the fragrant verbenas,
-and a thousand other half-wild flowers, with ferns, ferns, ferns
-everywhere, and a fountain playing in the shadiest nook--this was an
-idea of Harry's--you would think you were in fairyland or dreamland,
-or 'through the looking-glass,' or somewhere; anyhow, you would be
-entranced.
-
-"But to-night, when I walked there, the house--our house you
-know--looked desolate and dreary, and my heart gave a big
-superstitious thud when I heard what I thought was a footstep on the
-verandah, but it was only a frog as big as your hat.
-
-"That verandah cost me and Harry many a ramble into the scrub and
-forest, but now it is something worth seeing, with its wealth of
-climbing flowering plants, its hanging ferns, and its clustering
-marvellous orchids.
-
-"Yes, the house looks lonely; looks haunted almost; only, of course,
-ghosts never come near a new house. But, dear Elsie, how lovely it
-will look when we are living in it! when light streams out from the
-open casement windows! when warmth and music are there! Oh, come
-soon, come _soon_! You see I'm still impulsive.
-
-"You, Elsie, love pets. I daresay Bounder will come with you. Poor
-Scallowa! I was sorry to hear of his sad death. But we can have all
-kinds of pets here. We have many. To begin with, there is little
-Diana, she is queen of the station, and likely to be; she is
-everybody's favourite. Then there are the collies, and the kangaroo.
-He is quite a darling fellow, and goes everywhere with me.
-
-"Our laughing jackass is improving every day. He looks excessively
-wise when you talk to him, and if touched up with the end of a brush
-of turkey's feathers, which we keep for the purpose, he goes off into
-such fits of mad hilarious, mocking, ringing laughter that somebody
-has got to pick him up, cage and all, and make all haste out of the
-house with him.
-
-"We have also a pet bear; that is Harry's. But don't jump. It is no
-bigger than a cat, and far tamer. It is a most wonderful little
-rascal to climb ever you saw. Koala we call him, which is his native
-name, and he is never tired of exploring the roof and rafters; but
-when he wants to go to sleep, he will tie himself round Sarah's
-waist, with his back downwards, and go off as sound as a top.
-
-"We have lots of cats and a cockatoo, who is an exceedingly
-mischievous one, and who spends most of his life in the garden. He
-can talk, and dance, and sing as well. And he is a caution to
-snakes, I can tell you. I don't want to frighten you though. We
-never see the 'tiger' snake, or hardly ever, and I think the rest are
-harmless. I know the swagsmen, and the sundowners too, often kill
-the carpet snake, and roast and eat it when they have no other sort
-of fresh meat. I have tasted it, and I can tell you, Rupert, it is
-better than roasted rabbit.
-
-"I'm going to have a flying squirrel. The first time I saw these
-creatures was at night among the trees, and they startled me--great
-shadowy things sailing like black kites from bough to bough.
-
-"Kangaroos are cautions. We spend many and many a good day hunting
-them. If we did not kill them they would eat us up, or eat the
-sheep's fodder up, and that would be all the same.
-
-"Gentleman Craig has strange views about most things; he believes in
-Darwin, and a deal that isn't Darwin; but he says kangaroos first got
-or acquired their monster hindlegs, and their sturdy tails, from
-sitting up looking over the high grass, and cropping the leaves of
-bushes. He says that Australia is two millions of years old at the
-very least.
-
-"I must say I like Craig very much. He is so noble and handsome.
-What a splendid soldier he would have made! But with all his
-grandeur of looks--I cannot call it anything else--there is an air of
-pensiveness and melancholy about him that is never absent. Even when
-he smiles it is a sad smile. Ah! Rupert, his story is a very
-strange one; but he is young yet, only twenty-six, and he is now
-doing well. He lives by himself, with just one shepherd under him,
-on the very confines of civilisation. I often fear the blacks will
-bail up his hut some day, and mumkill him, and we should all be
-sorry. Craig is saving money, and I believe will be a squatter
-himself one of these days. Etheldene is very fond of him. Sometimes
-I am downright jealous and nasty about it, because I would like you,
-Rupert, to have Etheldene for a wife. And she knows all about the
-black fellows, and can speak their language. Well, you see, Rupert,
-you could go and preach to and convert them; for they are not half so
-bad as they are painted. The white men often use them most cruelly,
-and think no more of shooting them than I should of killing an old
-man kangaroo.
-
-"When I began this letter, dearest Elsie and old Roup, I meant to
-tell you such a lot I find I shall have no chance of doing--all about
-the grand trees, the wild and beautiful scenery, the birds and beasts
-and insects, but I should have to write for a week to do it. So pray
-forgive my rambling letter, and come and see it all for yourself.
-
-"Come you must, else--let me see now what I shall threaten. Oh, I
-have it; I won't ever return! But if you do come, then in a few
-years we'll all go back together, and bring out dad and the dear
-mummy.
-
-"I can't see to write any more. No, the lights are just as bright as
-when I commenced; but when I think of dad and the mum, my eyes will
-get filled with moisture. So there!
-
-"God bless you all, all, from the mum and dad all the way down to
-Kate, Branson, and Bounder.
-
-"ARCHIE BROADBENT, C.O.B.
-
-"p.s.--Do you know what C.O.B. means? It means Chip of the Old
-Block. Hurrah!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-_RUMOURS OF WAR._
-
-As soon as Squire Broadbent read his son's letter he carefully folded
-it up, and with a smile on his face handed it to Rupert. And
-by-and-bye, when Captain Vesey returned, and settled into the family
-circle with the rest, and had told them all he could remember about
-Archie and Burley New Farm in Australia, the brother and sister,
-followed by Bounder, slipped quietly out and told old Kate they were
-going to the tower. Would she come? That she would. And so for
-hours they all sat up there before the fire talking of Archie, and
-all he had done and had been, and laying plans and dreaming dreams,
-and building castles in the air, just in the same way that young
-folks always have done in this world, and will, I daresay, continue
-to do till the end of time.
-
-But that letter bore fruit, as we shall see.
-
-Things went on much as usual in the Bush. Winter passed away, spring
-came round and lambing season, and the shepherds were busy once more.
-Gentleman Craig made several visits to the home farm, and always
-brought good news. It was a glorious time in every way; a more
-prosperous spring among the sheep no one could wish to have.
-
-On his last visit to the house Craig stayed a day or two, and Archie
-went back with him, accompanied by a man on horseback, with medicines
-and some extra stores--clothing and groceries, &c., I mean, for in
-those days live stock was sometimes called stores.
-
-They made Findlayson's the first night, though it was late. They
-found that the honest Scot had been so busy all day he had scarcely
-sat down to a meal. Archie and Craig were "in clipping-time"
-therefore, for there was roast duck on the table, and delightful
-potatoes all steaming hot, and, as usual, the black bottle of
-mountain dew, a "wee drappie" of which he tried in vain to get either
-Craig or Archie to swallow.
-
-"Oh, by-the-bye, men," said Findlayson, in the course of the
-evening--that is, about twelve o'clock--"I hear bad news up the hills
-way."
-
-"Indeed," said Craig.
-
-"Aye, lad. You better ha'e your gun loaded. The blacks, they say,
-are out in force. They've been killing sheep and bullocks too, and
-picking the best."
-
-"Well, I don't blame them either. Mind, we white men began the
-trouble; but, nevertheless, I'll defend my flock."
-
-Little more was said on the subject. But next morning another and an
-uglier rumour came. A black fellow or two had been shot, and the
-tribe had sworn vengeance and held a corroboree.
-
-"There's a cloud rising," said Findlayson. "I hope it winna brak
-o'er the district."
-
-"I hope not, Findlayson. Anyhow, I know the black fellows well. I'm
-not sure I won't ride over after I get back and try to get to the
-bottom of the difference."
-
-The out-station, under the immediate charge of Gentleman Craig, was
-fully thirty miles more to the north and west than Findlayson's, and
-on capital sheep-pasture land, being not very far from the hills--a
-branch ridge that broke off from the main range, and lay almost due
-east and west.
-
-Many a splendidly-wooded glen and gully was here; but at the time of
-our story these were still inhabited by blacks innumerable. Savage,
-fierce, and vindictive they were in all conscience, but surely not so
-brave as we sometimes hear them spoken of, else could they have swept
-the country for miles of the intruding white man. In days gone by
-they had indeed committed some appallingly-shocking massacres; but of
-late years they had seemed contented to either retire before the
-whites or to become their servants, and receive at their hands that
-moral death--temptation to drink--which has worked such woe among
-savages in every quarter of the inhabitable globe.
-
-As Archie and his companion came upon the plain where--near the top
-of the creek on a bit of table-land--Craig's "castle," as he called
-it, was situated, the owner looked anxiously towards it. At first
-they could see no signs of life; but as they rode farther on, and
-nearer, the shepherd himself came out to meet them, Roup, the collie,
-bounding joyfully on in front, and barking in the exuberance of his
-glee.
-
-"All right and safe, shepherd?"
-
-"All right and safe, sir," the man returned; "but the blacks have
-been here to-day."
-
-"Then I'll go there to-morrow."
-
-"I don't think that's a good plan."
-
-"Oh! isn't it? Well, I'll chance it. Will you come, Mr. Broadbent?"
-
-"I will with pleasure."
-
-"Anything for dinner, George?"
-
-"Yes, sir. I expected you; and I've got a grilled pheasant, and fish
-besides."
-
-"Ah, capital! But what made you expect me to-day?"
-
-"The dog Roup, sir. He was constantly going to the door to look out,
-so I could have sworn you would come."
-
-The evening passed away quietly enough.
-
-Dwelling in this remote region, and liable at any time to be
-attacked, Gentleman Craig had thought it right to almost make a fort
-of his little slab-hut. He had two black fellows who worked for him,
-and with their assistance a rampart of stones, earth, and wood was
-thrown up, although these men had often assured him that "he," Craig,
-"was 'corton budgery,' and that there was no fear of the black
-fellows 'mumkill' him."
-
-"I'm not so very sure about it," thought Craig; "and it is best to be
-on the safe side."
-
-They retired to-night early, having seen to the sheep and set a black
-to watch, for the dingoes were very destructive.
-
-Both Craig and Archie slept in the same room, and they hardly
-undressed, merely taking off their coats, and lying down on the rough
-bed of sacking, with collie near the door to do sentry.
-
-They had not long turned in when the dog began to growl low.
-
-"Down charge, Roup," said Craig.
-
-Instead of obeying, the dog sprang to the door, barking fiercely.
-
-Both Archie and Craig were out of bed in a moment, and handling their
-revolvers. Craig managed to quieten Roup, and then listened
-attentively.
-
-The wind was rising and moaning round the chimney, but above this
-sound they could hear a long-prolonged "Coo--oo--ee!"
-
-"That's a white man's voice," said Craig; "we're safe."
-
-The door and fort was at once opened, and a minute after five
-squatters entered.
-
-"Sorry we came so late," they said; "but we've been and done it, and
-it took some time."
-
-"What have you done?" said Craig.
-
-"Fired the woods all along the gullies among the hills."
-
-"Is that fair to the blacks?"
-
-"Curse them!" exclaimed the spokesman. "Why do they not keep back?
-The law grumbles if we shoot the dogs, unless in what they please to
-call self-defence, which means after they have speared our beasts and
-shepherds, and are standing outside our doors with a nullah ready to
-brain us."
-
-Craig and Archie went to the door and looked towards the hills.
-
-What a scene was there! The fire seemed to have taken possession of
-the whole of the highlands from east to west, and was entwining wood
-and forest, glen and ravine, in its snake-like embrace. The hills
-themselves were cradled in flames and lurid smoke. The stems of the
-giant gum trees alone seemed to defy the blaze, and though their
-summits looked like steeples on fire, the trunks stood like pillars
-of black marble against the golden gleam behind them. The noise was
-deafening, and the smoke rolled away to leeward, laden with sparks
-thick as the snow-flakes in a winter's fall. It was an appalling
-sight, the description of which is beyond the power of any pen.
-
-"Well, men," said Craig when he re-entered the hut, "I don't quite
-see the force of what you have done. It is like a declaration of
-war, and, depend upon it, the black fellows will accept the
-challenge."
-
-"It'll make the grass grow," said one of the men with a laugh.
-
-"Yes," said another; "and that grass will grow over a black man's
-grave or two ere long, if I don't much mistake."
-
-"It wouldn't be worth while burying the fiends," said a third.
-"We'll leave them to the rooks."
-
-"Well," said Craig, "there's meat and damper there, men. Stir up the
-fire, warm your tea, and be happy as long as you can. We're off to
-bed."
-
-Gentleman Craig was as good as his word next day. He rode away in
-search of the tribe, and after a long ride found them encamped on a
-tableland.
-
-As it turned out they knew him, and he rode quietly into their midst.
-
-They were all armed with spear, and nullah, and boomerang. They were
-tattooed, nearly naked, and hideous enough in their horrid war-paint.
-
-Craig showed no signs of fear. Indeed he felt none. He told the
-chief, however, that he had not approved of the action of the white
-men, his brothers, and had come, if possible, to make peace. Why
-should they fight? There was room enough in the forest and scrub for
-all. If they--the blacks--would leave the cattle and flocks of the
-squatters alone, he--Craig--could assure them things would go on as
-happily as before.
-
-"And if not?" they asked.
-
-"If not, for one black man there was in the country, there were a
-thousand white. They would come upon them in troops, even like the
-locusts; they would hunt them as they hunted the dingoes; they would
-kill them as dingoes were killed, and before long all the black
-fellows would be in the land of forgetfulness. What would it profit
-them then that they had speared a few white fellows?"
-
-Craig stayed for hours arguing with these wild men, and left at last
-after having actually made peace with honour.
-
-The cloud had rolled away, for a time at all events. In the course
-of a few days Archie and his man left on his return journey.
-Findlayson made up his mind to go on with him to Burley New Farm; for
-this Scot was very fond of an occasional trip eastwards, and what he
-called a "twa-handed crack" with Bob or Harry.
-
-Everybody was glad to see him; for, truth to tell, no one had ever
-seen Findlayson without a smile on his old-fashioned face, and so he
-was well liked.
-
-Bob came galloping out to meet them, and with him, greatly to
-Archie's astonishment, was what he at first took for a black bear.
-
-The black bear was Bounder.
-
-Archie dismounted and threw his arms round the great honest dog's
-neck, and almost burst into tears of joy.
-
-For just half a minute Bounder was taken aback; then memory came
-rushing over him; he gave a jump, and landed Archie on his back, and
-covered his face and hair with his canine kisses. But this was not
-enough. Bounder must blow off steam. He must get rid of the
-exuberance of his delight before it killed him. So with a
-half-hysterical but happy bark he went off at a tangent, and
-commenced sweeping round and round in a circle so quickly that he
-appeared but a black shape. This wild caper he kept up till nearly
-exhausted, then returned once more to be embraced.
-
-"So they've come." It was all that Archie could say.
-
-Yes, they had come. Elsie had come, Rupert had come, Branson and
-Bounder had come.
-
-And oh, what a joyful meeting that was! Only those who have been
-separated for many long years from all they love and hold dear, and
-have met just thus, as Archie now met his sister and brother, can
-have any appreciation of the amount of joy that filled their hearts.
-
-The very first overflowing of this joy being expended, of course the
-next thing for both Archie and the newcomers to say was, "How you've
-changed!"
-
-Yes, they had all changed. None more so than Elsie. She always gave
-promise of beauty; but now that Archie held her at arms' length, to
-look at and criticise, he could not help exclaiming right truthfully:
-
-"Why, Elsie, you're almost as beautiful as Etheldene!"
-
-"Oh, what a compliment!" cried Rupert. "I wouldn't have it, Elsie.
-That '_almost_' spoils it."
-
-"Just you wait till you see Etheldene, young man," said Archie,
-nodding his head. "You'll fall in love at once. I only hope she
-won't marry Gentleman Craig. And how is mother and father?"
-
-Then questions came in streams. To write one half that was spoken
-that night would take me weeks. They all sat out in the verandah of
-the old house; for the night was sultry and warm, and it was very
-late indeed before anyone ever thought of retiring.
-
-Findlayson had been unusually quiet during the whole of the evening.
-To be sure, it would not have been quite right for him to have put in
-his oar too much, but, to tell the truth, something had happened
-which appeared to account for his silence. Findlayson had fallen in
-love--love at first sight. Oh, there are such things! I had a touch
-of the complaint myself once, so my judgment is critical. Of course,
-it is needless to say that Elsie was the bright particular star, that
-had in one brief moment revolutionized the existence and life of the
-ordinarily placid and very matter-of-fact Findlayson. So he sat
-to-night in his corner and hardly spoke, but, I daresay, like Paddy's
-parrot, he made up for it in thinking; and he looked all he could
-also, without seeming positively rude.
-
-Well, a whole fortnight was spent by Archie in showing his brother
-and sister round the station, and initiating them into some of the
-mysteries and contrarieties of life in the Australian Bush.
-
-After this the three started off for Brisbane and Sydney, to complete
-the purchase of furniture for Archie's house. Archie proved himself
-exceedingly clever at this sort of thing, considering that he was
-only a male person. But in proof of what I state, let me tell you,
-that before leaving home he had even taken the measure of the rooms,
-and of the windows and doors. And when he got to Sydney he showed
-his taste in the decorative art by choosing "fixings" of an
-altogether Oriental and semi-esthetic design.
-
-At Sydney Elsie and Rupert were introduced to the Winslows, and, as
-soon as he conveniently could, Archie took his brother's opinion
-about Etheldene.
-
-Very much to his astonishment, Rupert told him that Etheldene was
-more sisterly than anything else, and he dare say she was rather a
-nice girl--"as far as girls go."
-
-Archie laughed outright at Rupert's coolness, but somehow or other he
-felt relieved.
-
-First impressions go a far way in a matter of this kind, and it was
-pretty evident there was little chance of Rupert's falling in love
-with Etheldene, for some time at least.
-
-Yet this was the plan of campaign Archie had cut out: Rupert and
-Etheldene should be very much struck with each other from the very
-first; the young lady should frequently visit at Burley New Farm,
-and, for the good of his health, Rupert should go often to Sydney.
-Things would progress thus, off and on, for a few years, then the
-marriage would follow, Rupert being by this time settled perhaps, and
-in a fair way of doing well. I am afraid Archie had reckoned without
-his host, or even his hostess.
-
-He was not long in coming to this conclusion either; and about the
-same time he made another discovery, very much to his own surprise;
-namely, that he himself was in love with Etheldene, and that he had
-probably been so for some considerable length of time, without
-knowing it. He determined in his own mind therefore that he would
-steel his heart towards Miss Winslow, and forget her.
-
-Before Elsie and Rupert came to settle down finally at the farm, they
-enjoyed, in company with Mr. Winslow and his daughter, many charming
-trips to what I might call the show-places of Australia. Sydney, and
-all its indescribably-beautiful surroundings, they visited first.
-Then they went to Melbourne, and were much struck with all the wealth
-and grandeur they saw around them, although they could not help
-thinking the actual state of the streets was somewhat of a reproach
-to the town. They sailed on the Yarra-Yarra; they went inland and
-saw, only to marvel at, the grandeur of the scenery, the ferny
-forests, the glens and hills, the waterfalls and tumbling streams and
-lovely lakes. And all the time Rupert could not get rid of the
-impression that it was a beautiful dream, from which he would
-presently awake and find himself at Burley Old Farm.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-_THE MASSACRE AT FINDLAYSON'S FARM._
-
-By the time Elsie and Rupert had returned from their wanderings
-winter was once more coming on; but already both the sister and
-brother had got a complexion.
-
-The house was quite furnished now, guest-room and all. It was indeed
-a mansion, though I would not like to say how much money it had cost
-Archie to make it so. However, he had determined, as he said himself
-to Bob, to do the thing properly while he was about it.
-
-And there is no doubt he succeeded well. His garden too was all he
-had depicted it in his letter home.
-
-That Archie had succeeded to his heart's content in breaking ties
-with the old country was pretty evident, from a letter received by
-him from his father about mid-winter.
-
-"He had noticed for quite a long time," the Squire wrote, "and was
-getting more and more convinced, that this England was,
-agriculturally speaking, on its last legs. Even American inventions,
-and American skill and enterprise, had failed to do much for the
-lands of Burley. He had tried everything, but the ground failed to
-respond. Burley was a good place for an old retired man who loved to
-potter around after the partridges; but for one like himself, still
-in the prime of his life, it had lost its charms. Even Archie's
-mother, he told him, did not see the advisability of throwing good
-money after bad, and Uncle Ramsay was of the same way of thinking.
-So he had made up his mind to let the place and come straight away
-out. He would allow Archie to look out for land for him, and
-by-and-bye he would come and take possession. Australia would
-henceforth reap the benefit of his genius and example; for he meant
-to show Australians a thing or two."
-
-When Archie read that letter, he came in with a rush to read it to
-Bob, Harry, and Sarah.
-
-"I think your father is right," said Bob.
-
-"I tell you, Bob, my boy, it isn't father so much as mother. The
-dear old mummy speaks and breathes through every line and word of
-this epistle. Now I'm off to astonish Elsie and Roup. Come along,
-Bounder."
-
-* * * * * *
-
-Meanwhile Findlayson became a regular visitor at the farm.
-
-"Why," Archie said to him one evening, as he met him about the outer
-boundary of the farm, "why, Findlayson, my boy, you're getting to be
-a regular 'sundowner.' Well, Miss Winslow has come, and Craig is
-with us, and as I want to show Branson a bit of real Australian
-sport, you had better stop with us a fortnight."
-
-"I'll be delighted. I wish I'd brought my fiddle."
-
-"We'll send for it if you can't live without it."
-
-"Not very weel. But I've something to tell you."
-
-"Well, say on; but you needn't dismount."
-
-"Yes, I'll speak better down here."
-
-Findlayson sat up on top of the fence, and at once opened fire by
-telling Archie he had fallen in love with Elsie, and had determined
-to make her his wife. Archie certainly was taken aback.
-
-"Why, Findlayson," he said, "you're old enough to be her father."
-
-"A' the better, man. And look here, I've been squatting for fifteen
-years, ever since there was a sheep in the plains almost. I have a
-nice little nest egg at the bank, and if your sister doesna care to
-live in the Bush we'll tak' a hoose in Sydney. For, O man, man,
-Elsie is the bonniest lassie the world e'er saw. She beats the
-gowan."*
-
-
-* Gowan = mountain daisy.
-
-
-Archie laughed.
-
-"I must refer you to the lady herself," he said.
-
-"Of course, man, of course--
-
- "'He either fears his fate too much,
- Or his deserts are small,
- Who dares not put it to the test
- To win or lose it all.'"
-
-
-So away went Findlayson to put his fate to the test.
-
-What _he_ said or what _she_ said does not really concern us; but
-five minutes after his interview Archie met the honest Scot, and
-wondrously crest-fallen he looked.
-
-"She winna hae me," he cried, "but _nil desperandum_, that'll be my
-motto till the happy day."
-
-The next fortnight was in a great measure given up to pleasure and
-sport. Both Branson and Bounder received their baptism of fire,
-though the great Newfoundland was wondrously exercised in his mind as
-to what a kangaroo was, and what it was not. As to the dingoes, he
-arrived at a conclusion very speedily. They could beat him at a
-race, however; but when Bounder one time got two of them together, he
-proved to everybody's satisfaction that there was life in the old dog
-yet.
-
-Gentleman Craig never appeared to such excellent advantage anywhere
-as in ladies' society. He really led the conversation at the
-dinner-table, though not appearing to do so, but rather the reverse,
-while in the drawing-room he was the moving spirit.
-
-He also managed to make Findlayson happy after a way. The Scotchman
-had told Craig all his troubles, but Craig brought him his fiddle, on
-which he was a really excellent performer.
-
-"Rouse out, Mr. Findlayson, and join the ladies at the piano."
-
-"But, man," the squatter replied, "my heart's no in it; my heart is
-broken. I can play slow music, but when it comes to quick, it goes
-hard against the grain."
-
-Nevertheless, Findlayson took his stand beside the piano, and the ice
-thus being broken, he played every night, though it must be
-confessed, for truth's sake, he never refused a "cogie" when the
-bottle came round his way. Towards ten o'clock Findlayson used,
-therefore, to become somewhat sentimental. The gentleman sat up for
-a wee half hour after the ladies retired, and sometimes Findlayson
-would seize his fiddle.
-
-"Gentlemen," he would say, "here is how I feel."
-
-Then he would play a lament or a wail with such feeling that even his
-listeners would be affected, while sometimes the tears would be
-quivering on the performer's eyelashes.
-
-At the end of the fortnight Findlayson went to Brisbane. He had some
-mysterious business to transact, the nature of which he refused to
-tell even Archie. But it was rumoured that a week or two later on,
-drays laden with furniture were seen to pass along the tracks on
-their way to Findlayson's farm.
-
-Poor fellow, he was evidently badly hit. He was very much in love
-indeed, and, like a drowning man, he clutched at straws.
-
-The refurnishing of his house was one of these straws. Findlayson
-was going to give "a week's fun," as he phrased it. He was
-determined, after having seen Archie's new house, that his own should
-rival and even outshine it in splendour. And he really was insane
-enough to believe that if Elsie only once saw the charming house he
-owned, with the wild and beautiful scenery all around it, she would
-alter her mind, and look more favourably on his suit.
-
-In giving way to vain imaginings of this kind, Findlayson was really
-ignoring, or forgetting at all events, the sentiments of his own
-favourite poet, Burns, as impressed in the following touching lines:
-
- "It ne'er was wealth, it ne'er was wealth,
- That bought contentment, peace, or pleasure;
- The bands and bliss o' mutual love,
- O that's the chiefest warld's treasure!"
-
-His sister was very straightforward, and at once put her brother down
-as a wee bit daft. Perhaps he really was; only the old saying is a
-true one: "Those that are in love are like no one else."
-
-* * * * * *
-
-It was the last month of winter, when early one morning a gay party
-from Burley New Farm set out to visit Findlayson, and spend a week or
-two in order to "'liven him up," as Harry expressed it.
-
-Bob was not particularly fond of going much from home--besides,
-Winslow and he were planning some extensions--so he stopped on the
-Station. But Harry went, and, as before, when going to the kangaroo
-hunt, Gentleman Craig was in the cavalcade, and of course Rupert and
-Elsie.
-
-It would have been no very difficult matter to have done the journey
-in a single day, only Archie was desirous of letting his brother and
-sister have a taste of camping out in the Bush.
-
-They chose the same route as before, and encamped at night in the
-self-same place.
-
-The evening too was spent in much the same way, even to singing and
-story-telling, and Craig's lullaby to Baby, when she and Elsie had
-gone to their tent.
-
-Morning dawned at last on forest and plain, and both Harry and the
-brothers were early astir. It would have been impossible to remain
-asleep much after daybreak, owing to the noise of the birds,
-including the occasional ear-splitting clatter of the laughing
-jackasses.
-
-Besides, towards morning it had been exceedingly cold. The first
-thing that greeted their eyes was a thorough old-fashioned hoar
-frost, the like of which Archie had not seen for many a year.
-Everything gleamed white almost as coral. The grass itself was a
-sight to see, and the leaves on the trees were edged with lace. But
-up mounted the sun, and all was speedily changed. Leaves grew
-brightly green again, and the hoar frost was turned into glancing,
-gleaming, rainbow-coloured drops of dew.
-
-The young men ran merrily away to the pool in the creek, and most
-effectually scared the ducks.
-
-The breakfast to-day was a different sort of a meal to the morsel of
-stiff damper and corned junk that had been partaken of at last
-bivouac. Elsie made the tea, and Etheldene and she presided. The
-meat pies and patties were excellent, and everyone was in the highest
-possible spirits, and joyously merry.
-
-Alas! and alas! this was a breakfast no one who sat down to, and who
-lives, is ever likely to forget.
-
-Have you ever, reader, been startled on a bright sunshiny summer's
-day by a thunder-peal? And have you seen the clouds rapidly bank up
-after this and obscure the sky, darkness brooding over the windless
-landscape, lighted up every moment by the blinding lightning's flash,
-and gloom and danger brooding all round, where but a short half-hour
-ago the birds carolled in sunlight? Then will you be able, in some
-measure, to understand the terribleness of the situation in which an
-hour or two after breakfast the party found themselves, and the awful
-suddenness of the shock that for a time quite paralyzed every member
-of it.
-
-They had left the dismal depths of the forest, and were out on the
-open pasture-land, and nearing Findlayson's house, when Craig and
-Archie, riding on in front, came upon the well-known bobtailed
-collie, who was the almost constant companion of the squatter. The
-dog was alive, but dying. There was a terrible spear-gash in his
-neck. Craig dismounted and knelt beside him. The poor brute knew
-him, wagged his inch-long tail, licked the hand that caressed him,
-and almost immediately expired. Craig immediately rode back to the
-others.
-
-"Do not be alarmed, ladies," he said. "But I fear the worst. There
-is no smoke in Findlayson's chimney. The black fellows have killed
-his dog."
-
-Though both girls grew pale, there were no other signs of fear
-manifested by them. If Young Australia could be brave, so could Old
-England.
-
-The men consulted hurriedly, and it was agreed that while Branson and
-Harry waited with the ladies, Archie and Craig should ride on towards
-the house.
-
-Not a sign of life; no, not one. Signs enough of death though, signs
-enough of an awful struggle. It was all very plain and simple,
-though all very, very sad and dreadful.
-
-Here in the courtyard lay several dead natives, festering and
-sweltering in the noonday sun. Here were the boomerangs and spears
-that had fallen from their hands as they dropped never to rise again.
-Here was the door battered and splintered and beaten in with
-tomahawks, and just inside, in the passage, lay the bodies of
-Hurricane Bill and poor Findlayson, hacked about almost beyond
-recognition.
-
-In the rooms all was confusion, every place had been ransacked. The
-furniture, all new and elegant, smashed and riven; the very piano
-that the honest Scot had bought for sake of Elsie had been dissected,
-and its keys carried away for ornaments. In an inner room,
-half-dressed, were Findlayson's sister and her little Scotch maid,
-their arms broken, as if they had held them up to beseech for mercy
-from the monsters who had attacked them. Their arms were broken, and
-their skulls beaten in, their white night-dresses drenched in blood.
-There was blood, blood everywhere--in curdled streams, in great
-liver-like gouts, and in dark pools on the floor. In the kitchen
-were many more bodies of white men (the shepherds), and of the fiends
-in human form with whom they had struggled for their lives.
-
-It was an awful and sickening sight.
-
-No need for Craig or Archie to tell the news when they returned to
-the others. Their very silence and sadness told the terrible tale.
-
-Nothing could be done at present, however, in the way of punishing
-the murderers, who by this time must be far away in their mountain
-fastnesses.
-
-They must ride back, and at once too, in order to warn the people at
-Burley and round about of their great danger.
-
-So the return journey was commenced at once. On riding through the
-forest they had to observe the greatest caution.
-
-Craig was an old Bushman, and knew the ways of the blacks well. He
-trotted on in front. And whenever in any thicket, where an ambush
-might possibly be lurking, he saw no sign of bird or beast, he
-dismounted and, revolver in hand, examined the place before he
-permitted the others to come on.
-
-They got through the forest and out of the gloom at last, and some
-hours afterwards dismounted a long way down the creek to water the
-horses and let them browse. As for themselves, no one thought of
-eating. There was that feeling of weight at every heart one
-experiences when first awakening from some dreadful nightmare.
-
-They talked about the massacre, as they sat under the shadow of a gum
-tree, almost in whispers; and at the slightest unusual noise the men
-grasped their revolvers and listened.
-
-They were just about to resume their journey when the distant sound
-of galloping horses fell on their ears. Their own nags neighed. All
-sprang to their feet, and next moment some eight or nine men rode
-into the clearing.
-
-Most of them were known to Craig, so he advanced to meet them.
-
-"Ah! I see you know the worst," said the leader.
-
-"Yes," said Craig, "we know."
-
-"We've been to your place. It is all right there with one exception."
-
-"One exception?"
-
-"Yes; it's only the kid--Mr. Cooper's little daughter, you know."
-
-"Is she dead?" cried Archie aghast.
-
-"No, sir; that is, it isn't likely. Mr. Cooper's black girl left
-last night, and took the child."
-
-"Good heavens! our little Diana! Poor Bob! He will go raving mad!"
-
-"He is mad, sir, or all but, already; but we've left some fellows to
-defend the station, and taken to the trail as you see."
-
-"Craig," said Archie, "we must go, too."
-
-"Well," said the first speaker, "the coast is all clear betwixt here
-and Burley. Two must return there with the ladies. I advise you to
-make your choice, and lose no time."
-
-It was finally arranged that Branson and one of the newcomers should
-form the escort; and so Archie, Harry, and Craig bade the girls a
-hurried adieu, and speedily rode away after the men.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-_ON THE WAR TRAIL._
-
-Twelve men all told to march against a tribe consisting probably of
-over a hundred and fifty warriors, armed for the fight, and
-intoxicated with their recent success! It was a rash, an almost mad,
-venture; but they did not for one moment dream of drawing back. They
-would trust to their own superior skill to beat the enemy; trust to
-that fortune that so often favours the brave; trusting--many of them
-I hope--to that merciful Providence who protects the weak, and who,
-in our greatest hour of need, does not refuse to listen to our
-pleadings.
-
-They had ridden some little way in silence, when suddenly Archie drew
-rein.
-
-"Halt, men!" he cried. "Halt for a moment and deliberate. Who is to
-be the commander of this little force?"
-
-"Yourself," said Gentleman Craig, lifting his hat "You are boss of
-Burley Farm, and Mr. Cooper's dearest friend."
-
-"Hear, hear!" cried several of the others.
-
-"Perhaps it is best," said Archie, after a moment's thoughtful pause,
-"that I should take the leadership under the circumstances. But,
-Craig, I choose you as my second in command, and one whose counsel I
-will respect and be guided by."
-
-"Thank you," said Craig; "and to begin with, I move we go straight
-back to Findlayson's farm. We are not too well armed, nor too well
-provisioned."
-
-The proposal was at once adopted, and towards sundown they had once
-more reached the outlying pastures.
-
-They were dismounting to enter, when the half-naked figure of a black
-suddenly appeared from behind the storehouse.
-
-A gun or two was levelled at him at once.
-
-"Stay," cried Craig. "Do not fire. That is Jacoby, the black
-stockman, and one of poor Mr. Findlayson's chief men. Ha, Jacoby,
-advance my lad, and tell us all you know."
-
-Jacoby's answer was couched in such unintelligible jargon--a mixture
-of Bush English and broad Scotch--that I will not try the reader's
-patience by giving it verbatim. He was terribly excited, and looked
-heart-broken with grief. He had but recently come home, having
-passed "plenty black-fellows" on the road. They had attempted to
-kill him, but here he was.
-
-"Could he track them?"
-
-"Yes, easily. They had gone away there." He pointed north and east
-as he spoke.
-
-"This is strange," said Craig. "Men, if what Jacoby tells us be
-correct, instead of retreating to their homes in the wilderness, the
-blacks are doubling round; and if so, it must be their intention to
-commit more of their diabolical deeds, so there is no time to be
-lost."
-
-It was determined first to bury their dear friends; and very soon a
-grave was dug--a huge rough hole, that was all--and in it the
-murdered whites were laid side by side.
-
-Rupert repeated the burial-service, or as much of it as he could
-remember; then the rude grave was filled, and as the earth fell over
-the chest of poor old-fashioned Findlayson, and Archie thought of all
-his droll and innocent ways, tears trickled over his face that he
-made no attempt to hide.
-
-The men hauled the gates of a paddock off its hinges, and piled wood
-upon that, so that the wandering dingoes, with their friends the
-rooks, should be baulked in their attempts to gorge upon the dead.
-
-The blacks had evidently commenced to ransack the stores; but for
-some reason or another had gone and left them mostly untouched.
-
-Here were gunpowder and cartridges in abundance, and many dainty,
-easily-carried foods, such as tinned meats and fish, that the unhappy
-owner had evidently laid in for his friends. So enough of everything
-was packed away in the men's pockets or bags, and they were soon
-ready once more for the road.
-
-The horses must rest, however; for these formed the mainstay of the
-little expedition. The men too could not keep on all night without a
-pause; so Archie and Craig consulted, and it was agreed to bivouac
-for a few hours, then resume the journey when the moon should rise.
-
-Meanwhile the sun went down behind the dark and distant wooded hills,
-that in their strange shapes almost resembled the horizon seen at sea
-when the waves are high and stormy. Between the place where Archie
-and his brother stood and the light, all was rugged plain and
-forest-land, but soon the whole assumed a shade of almost blackness,
-and the nearest trees stood up weird and spectre-like against the
-sky's strange hue. Towards the horizon to-night there was a deep
-saffron or orange fading above into a kind of pure grey or opal hue,
-with over it all a light blush of red, and hurrying away to the
-south, impelled by some air-current not felt below, was a mighty host
-of little cloudlets of every colour, from darkest purple to
-golden-red and crimson.
-
-There was now and then the bleating of sheep--sheep without a
-shepherd--and a slight tinkle-tinkle, as of a bell. It was in
-reality the voice of a strange bird, often to be found in the
-neighbourhood of creeks and pools.
-
-Hardly any other sound at present fell on the ear. By-and-bye the
-hurrying clouds got paler, and the orange left the horizon, and stars
-began to twinkle in the east.
-
-"Come out here a little way with me," said Rupert, taking Archie by
-the hand.
-
-When they had gone some little distance, quite out of hearing of the
-camp, Rupert spoke:
-
-"Do you mind kneeling down here," he said, "to pray, Archie?"
-
-"You good old Rupert, no," was the reply.
-
-Perhaps no more simple, earnest, or heart-felt prayer was ever
-breathed under such circumstances, or in such a place. And not only
-was Rupert earnest, but he was confident. He spoke to the great
-Father as to a friend whom he had long, long known, and One whom he
-could trust to do all for the best. He prayed for protection, he
-prayed for help for the speedy restoration of the stolen child, and
-he even prayed for the tribe they soon hoped to meet in
-conflict--prayed that the God who moves in so mysterious a way to
-perform His wonders would bless the present affliction to the white
-man, and even to the misguided black.
-
-Oh, what a beautiful religion is ours--the religion of love--the
-religion taught by the lips of the mild and gentle Jesus!
-
-When they rose from their knees they once more looked skywards at the
-stars, for they were brightly shining now; then hand-in-hand, as they
-had come, the brothers returned to the camp.
-
-No log-fire was lit to-night. The men just lay down to sleep rolled
-in their blankets, with their arms close by their saddle pillows, two
-being told off to walk sentry in case of a sudden surprise.
-
-Even the horses were put in an enclosure, lest they might roam too
-far away.
-
-About twelve o'clock Archie awoke from an uneasy dreamful slumber,
-and looked about him. His attention was speedily attracted to what
-seemed a huge fire blazing luridly behind the hills, and lighting up
-the haze above with its gleams. Was the forest on fire again? No;
-it was only moonrise over the woods. Ha awakened Craig, and soon the
-little camp was all astir and ready for the road. Jacoby was to act
-as guide. No Indian from the Wild West of America could be a better
-tracker.
-
-But even before he started he told Craig the task would be an easy
-one, for the black fellows had drunk plenty, and had taken plenty rum
-with them. They would not go far, he thought, and there was a
-probability that they would meet some of the band returning. Even in
-the moonlight Jacoby followed the trail easily and rapidly.
-
-It took them first straight for the forest that had been burned
-recently--a thoughtless deed on the part of the whites, that probably
-led to all this sad trouble.
-
-There was evidence here that the blacks had gone into camp on the
-very night of the massacre, and had held a corroboree, which could
-only have been a day or two ago. There were the remains of the camp
-fires and the trampled ground and broken branches, with no attempt at
-concealment. There was a chance that even now they might not be far
-away, and that the little band might come up with them ere they had
-started for the day. But if they ventured to hope so, they were
-doomed to disappointment.
-
-Morning broke at last lazily over the woods, and with but a brief
-interval they followed up the trail, and so on and on all that day,
-till far into the afternoon, when for a brief moment only Jacoby
-found himself puzzled, having fallen in with another trail leading
-south and west from the main track. He soon, however, discovered
-that the new trail must be that of some band who had joined the
-Findlayson farm raiders.
-
-It became painfully evident soon after that this was the correct
-solution, for, going backwards some little way. Archie found a
-child's shoe--one of a crimson pair that Bob had bought in Brisbane
-for his little Diana.
-
-"God help her, poor darling!" said Archie reverently, as he placed
-the little shoe in his breast pocket. When he returned he held it up
-for a moment before the men, and the scowl of anger that crossed
-their faces, and the firmer clutch they took of their weapons, showed
-it would indeed be bad for the blacks when they met these rough
-pioneers face to face.
-
-At sunset supper was partaken of, and camp once more formed, though
-no fire was lit, cold though it might be before morning.
-
-The men were tired, and were sound asleep almost as soon as they lay
-down; but Craig, with the brothers, climbed the ridge of the hill to
-look about them soon after it grew dark.
-
-The camp rested at the entrance of a wild gully, a view of which
-could be had, darkling away towards the east, from the hill on which
-the three friends now found themselves.
-
-Presently Rupert spoke.
-
-"Archie," he said, "in this land of contrarieties does the moon
-sometimes rise in the south?"
-
-"Not quite," replied Archie.
-
-"Look, then. What is that reflection over yonder?" Craig and Archie
-both caught sight of it at the same time.
-
-"By Saint George and merry England!" Craig cried exultingly, "that is
-the camp of the blacks. Now to find Diana's other shoe, and the dear
-child herself wearing it. Now for revenge!"
-
-"Nay," said Rupert, "call it justice, Craig."
-
-"What you will; but let us hurry down."
-
-They stayed but for a moment more to take their bearings. The fire
-gleams pointed to a spot to the south-east, on high ground, and right
-above the gully, and they had a background of trees, not the sky. It
-was evident then that the enemy was encamped in a little clearing on
-a forest table-land; and if they meant to save the child's life--if
-indeed she was not already dead--the greatest caution would be
-necessary.
-
-They speedily descended, and a consultation being held, it was
-resolved to commence operations as soon as the moon should rise; but
-meanwhile to creep in the darkness as near to the camp as possible.
-
-But first Jacoby was sent out to reconnoitre. No cat, no flying
-squirrel could glide more noiselessly through an Australian forest
-than this faithful fellow. Still he seemed an unconsciously long
-time gone. Just as Craig and Archie were getting seriously uneasy
-the tinkle, tinkle of the bell-bird was heard. This was the signal
-agreed upon, and presently after, Jacoby himself came silently into
-their midst.
-
-"The child?" was Archie's first question.
-
-"Baāl mumhill piccaninny, belong a you. Pidney you."
-
-"The child is safe," said Craig, after asking a few more questions of
-this Scotch Myell black.
-
-"Safe? and they are holding a corroboree and drinking. There is
-little time to lose. They may sacrifice the infant at any time."
-
-Craig struck a light as he spoke, and every man examined his arms.
-
-"The moon will rise in an hour. Let us go on. Silent as death, men!
-Do not overturn a stone or break a twig, or the poor baby's life will
-be sacrificed in a moment."
-
-They now advanced slowly and cautiously, guided by Jacoby, and at
-length lay down almost within pistol-shot of the place where the
-horrid corroboree was going on.
-
-Considering the noise--the shrieking, the clashing of arms, the rude
-chanting of songs, and awful din, of the dancers and actors in this
-ugly drama--to maintain silence might have seemed unnecessary; but
-these blacks have ears like wolves, and, in a lull of even half a
-second, would be sharp to hear the faintest unusual noise.
-
-Craig and Archie, however, crept on till they came within sight of
-the ceremonies.
-
-At another time it might have been interesting to watch the hideous
-grotesqueness of that awful war-dance, but other thoughts were in
-their minds at present--they were looking everywhere for Diana.
-Presently the wild, naked, dancing blacks surged backwards, and,
-asleep in the arms of a horrid gin, they discovered Bob's darling
-child. It was well Bob himself was not here or all would quickly
-have been lost. All was nearly lost as it was, for suddenly Archie
-inadvertently snapped a twig. In a moment there was silence, except
-for the barking of a dog.
-
-Craig raised his voice, and gave vent to a scream so wild and
-unearthly that even Archie was startled.
-
-At once all was confusion among the blacks. Whether they had taken
-it for the yell of Bunyip or not may never be known, but they
-prepared to fly. The gin carrying Diana threw down the frightened
-child. A black raised his arm to brain the little toddler. He fell
-dead instead.
-
-[Illustration: "A black raised his arm to brain the little toddler.
-He fell dead instead. Diana was saved! Craig's aim had been a
-steady one. Almost immediately after a volley or two completed the
-rout."]
-
-Craig's aim had been a steady one. Almost immediately after a volley
-or two completed the rout, and the blacks fled yelling into the
-forest.
-
-Diana was saved! This was better than revenge; for not a hair of her
-bonnie wee head had been injured, so to speak, and she still wore the
-one little red-morocco shoe.
-
-There was not a man there who did not catch that child up in his arms
-and kiss her, some giving vent to their feelings in wild words of
-thankfulness to God in heaven, while the tears came dripping over
-their hardy, sun-browned cheeks.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-_CHEST TO CHEST WITH SAVAGES--HOW IT ALL ENDED._
-
-No one thought of sleeping again that night. They went back for
-their horses, and, as the moon had now risen, commenced the journey
-in a bee line, as far as that was possible, towards Burley New Farm.
-
-They travelled on all night, still under the guidance of Jacoby, who
-needed no blazed trees to show in which direction to go. But when
-morning came rest became imperative, for the men were beginning to
-nod in their saddles, and the horses too seemed to be falling asleep
-on their feet, for several had stumbled and thrown their
-half-senseless riders. So camp was now formed and breakfast
-discussed, and almost immediately all save a sentry went off into
-sound and dreamless slumber, Diana lying close to Craig, whom she was
-very fond of, with her head on his great shoulder and her fingers
-firmly entwined in his beard.
-
-It was hard upon the one poor fellow who had to act as sentry. Do
-what he might he could scarcely keep awake, and he was far too tired
-to continue walking about. He went and leant his body against a
-tree, and in this position, what with the heat of the day, and the
-drowsy hum of insects, with the monotonous song of the grasshopper,
-again and again he felt himself merging into the land of dreams.
-Then he would start and shake himself, and take a turn or two in the
-sunshine, then go back to the tree and nod as before.
-
-The day wore on, the sun got higher and higher, and about noon, just
-when the sentry was thinking or rather dreaming of waking the
-sleepers, there was a wild shout from a neighbouring thicket, a spear
-flew past him and stuck in the tree. Next moment there was a
-terrible _melée_--a hand-to-hand fight with savages that lasted for
-long minutes, but finally resulted in victory for the squatters.
-
-But, alas! it was a dearly-bought victory. Three out of the twelve
-were dead, and three more, including Gentleman Craig, grievously
-wounded.
-
-The rest followed up the blacks for some little way, and more than
-one of them bit the dust. Then they returned to help their fellows.
-
-Craig's was a spear wound through the side, none the less dangerous
-in that hardly a drop of blood was lost externally.
-
-They drew the killed in under a tree, and having bound up the wounds
-of the others, and partly carrying them or helping them along, they
-resumed the march.
-
-All that day they dragged themselves along, and it was far into the
-early hours of morning ere they reached the boundaries of Burley New
-Farm.
-
-The moon was shining, though not very brightly, light fleecy clouds
-were driving rapidly across the sky, so they could see the lights in
-both the old house and in the lower windows of Archie's own dwelling.
-They fired guns and coo-ee-ed, and presently Bob and Winslow rushed
-out to bid them welcome.
-
-Diana went bounding away to meet him.
-
-"Oh, daddy, daddy!" she exclaimed, "what a time we've been having!
-but mind, daddy, it wasn't all fun."
-
-Bob could not speak for the life of him. He just staggered in with
-the child in his arms and handed her over to Sarah; but I leave the
-reader to imagine the state of Sarah's feelings now.
-
-Poor Craig was borne in and put to bed in Archie's guest room, and
-there he lay for weeks.
-
-Bob himself had gone to Brisbane to import a surgeon, regardless of
-expense; but it was probably more owing to the tender nursing of
-Elsie than anything else that Craig was able at length to crawl out
-and breathe the balmy, flower-scented air in the verandah.
-
-One afternoon, many weeks after this, Craig was lying on a bank,
-under the shade of a tree, in a beautiful part of the forest, all in
-whitest bloom, and Elsie was seated near him.
-
-There had been silence for some time, and the girl was quietly
-reading.
-
-"I wonder," said Craig at last, "if my life is really worth the care
-that you and all the good people here have lavished on me?"
-
-"How can you speak thus?" said Elsie, letting her book drop in her
-lap, and looking into his face with those clear, blue eyes of hers.
-
-"If you only knew all my sad, sinful story, you would not wonder that
-I speak thus."
-
-"Tell me your story: may I not hear it?"
-
-"It is so long and, pardon me, so melancholy."
-
-"Never mind, I will listen attentively."
-
-Then Craig commenced. He told her all the strange history of his
-early demon-haunted life, about his recklessness, about his struggles
-and his final victory over self. He told her he verily did believe
-that his mother's spirit was near him that night in the forest when
-he made the vow which Providence in His mercy had enabled him to keep.
-
-Yes, it was a long story. The sun had gone down ere he had finished,
-a crescent moon had appeared in the southern sky, and stars had come
-out. There was sweetness and beauty everywhere. There was calm in
-Craig's soul now. For he had told Elsie something besides. He had
-told her that he had loved her from the first moment he had seen her,
-and he had asked her in simple language to become his wife--to be his
-guardian angel.
-
-That same evening, when Archie came out into the garden, he found
-Elsie still sitting by Craig's couch, but her hand was clasped in his.
-
-Then Archie knew all, and a great, big sigh of relief escaped him,
-for until this very moment he had been of opinion that Craig loved
-Etheldene.
-
-* * * * * *
-
-In course of a few months Squire Broadbent was as good as his word.
-He came out to the new land to give the Australians the benefit of
-his genius in the farming way; to teach Young Australia a thing or
-two it had not known before; so at least he thought.
-
-With him came Mrs. Broadbent, and even Uncle Ramsay, and the day of
-their arrival at Brisbane was surely a red-letter day in the annals
-of that thriving and prosperous place.
-
-Strange to say, however, none of the squatters from the Bush, none of
-the speculating men, nor anybody else apparently, were very much
-inclined to be lectured about their own country, and the right and
-wrong way of doing things, by a Squire from the old country, who had
-never been here before. Some of them were even rude enough to laugh
-in his face, but the Squire was not offended a bit. He was on far
-too good terms with himself for that, and too sure that he was in the
-right in all he said. He told some of these Bush farmers that if
-_they_ did not choose to learn a wrinkle or two from him _he_ was not
-the loser, with much more to the same purpose, all of which had about
-the same effect on his hearers that rain has on a duck's back.
-
-To use a rather hackneyed phrase, Squire Broadbent had the courage of
-his convictions.
-
-He settled quietly down at Burley New Farm, and commenced to study
-Bush life in all its bearings. It soon began to dawn upon him that
-Australia was getting to be a great country, that she had a great
-future before her, and that _he_--Squire Broadbent--would be
-connected with it. He was in no great hurry to invest, though
-eventually he would. It would be better to wait and watch. There
-was room enough and to spare for all at Archie's house, and that all
-included honest Uncle Ramsay of course. He and Winslow resumed
-acquaintance, and in the blunt, straightforward ways of the man even
-Squire Broadbent found a deal to admire and even to marvel at.
-
-"He is a clever man," said the Squire to his brother; "a clever man
-and a far-seeing. He gets a wonderful grasp of financial matters in
-a moment. Depend upon it, brother, he is the right metal, and it is
-upon solid stones like him that the future greatness of a nation
-should be founded."
-
-Uncle Ramsay said he himself did not know much about it. He knew
-more about ships, and was quite content to settle down at Brisbane,
-and keep a morsel of a 20-tonner. That was his ambition.
-
-What a delight it was for Archie to have them all round his
-breakfast-table in the green-parlour at Burley New Farm, or seated
-out in the verandah all so home-like and happy.
-
-His dear old mummy too, with her innocent womanly ways, delighted
-with all she saw, yet half afraid of almost everything--half afraid
-the monster gum-trees would fall upon her when out in the forest;
-half afraid to put her feet firmly to the ground when walking, but
-gathering up her skirts gingerly, and thinking every withered branch
-was a snake; half afraid the howling dingoes would come down in force
-at night, as wild wolves do on Russian wastes, and kill and eat
-everybody; half afraid of the most ordinary good-natured-looking
-black fellow; half afraid of even the pet kangaroo when he hopped
-round and held up his chin to have his old-fashioned neck stroked;
-half afraid--but happy, so happy nevertheless, because she had all
-she loved around her.
-
-Gentleman Craig was most deferential and attentive to Mrs. Broadbent,
-and she could not help admiring him--indeed, no one could--and quite
-approved of Elsie's choice; though, mother-like, she thought the girl
-far too young to marry yet, as the song says.
-
-However, they were not to be married yet quite. There was a year to
-elapse, and a busy one it was. First and foremost, Craig took the
-unfortunate Findlayson's farm. But the old steading was allowed to
-go to decay, and some one told me the other day that there is now a
-genuine ghost, said to be seen on moonlight nights, wandering round
-the ruined pile. Anyhow, its associations were of far too terrible a
-character for Craig to think of building near it.
-
-He chose the site for his house and outbuildings near the creek and
-the spot where they had bivouaced before the murder was discovered.
-It was near here too that Craig had made his firm resolve to be a
-free man--made it and kept it. The spot was charmingly beautiful
-too; and as his district included a large portion of the forest, he
-commenced clearing that, but in so scientific and tasteful a manner
-that it looked, when finished, like a noble park.
-
-During this year Squire Broadbent also became a squatter. From
-Squire to Squatter may sound to some like a come-down in life; but
-really Broadbent did not think so.
-
-He managed to buy out a station immediately adjoining Archie's, and
-when he had got fairly established thereon he told his brother Ramsay
-that fifteen years had tumbled off his shoulders all in a
-lump--fifteen years of care and trouble, fifteen years of struggle to
-keep his head above water, and live up to his squiredom.
-
-"I'm more contented now by far and away," he told his wife, "than I
-was in the busy, boastful days before the fire at Burley Old Farm;
-so, you see, it doesn't take much in this world to make a man happy."
-
-Rupert did not turn squatter, but missionary. It was a great treat
-for him to have Etheldene to ride with him away out into the bush
-whenever he heard a tribe had settled down anywhere for a time.
-Etheldene knew all their ways, and between the two of them they no
-doubt did much good.
-
-It is owing to such earnest men as Rupert that so great a change has
-come over the black population, and that so many of them, even as I
-write, sit humbly at the feet of Jesus, clothed and in their right
-mind. To quote the words of a recent writer: "The war-paints and
-weapons for fights are seen no more, the awful heathen corroborees
-have ceased, the females are treated with kindness, and the
-lamentable cries, accompanied by bodily injuries, when death
-occurred, have given place to Christian sorrow and quiet tears for
-their departed friends."
-
-It came to pass one day that Etheldene and Archie, towards the end of
-the year, found themselves riding alone, through scrub and over
-plain, just as they were that day they were lost. The conversation
-turned round to Rupert's mission.
-
-"What a dear, good, young man your brother is, Archie!" said the girl.
-
-"Do you really love him?"
-
-"As a brother, yes."
-
-"Etheldene, have him for a brother, will you?"
-
-The rich blood mounted to her cheeks and brow. She cast one
-half-shy, half-joyful look at Archie, and simply murmured, "Yes."
-
-It was all over in a moment then. Etheldene struck her horse lightly
-across the crest with the handle of her stock-whip, and next minute
-both horses were galloping as if for dear life.
-
-When Archie told Rupert how things had turned out, he only smiled in
-his quiet manner.
-
-"It is a queer way of wooing," he said; "but then you were always a
-queer fellow, Archie, and Etheldene is a regular Bush baby, as Craig
-calls her. Oh, I knew long ago she loved you!"
-
-At the year's end then both Elsie and Etheldene were married, and
-married, too, at the same church in Sydney from which Bob led Sarah,
-his blushing bride. It might not have been quite so wild and daft a
-wedding, but it was a very happy one nevertheless.
-
-No one was more free in blessing the wedded couples than old Kate.
-Yes, old as she was, she had determined not to be left alone in
-England.
-
-We know how Bob spent his honeymoon. How were the new young folks to
-spend theirs? Oh, it was all arranged beforehand! And on the very
-morning of the double marriage they embarked--Harry and Bob going
-with them for a holiday--on board Captain Vesey's pretty yacht, and
-sailed away for England. Etheldene's dream of romance was about to
-become a reality; she was not only to visit the land of chivalry, but
-with Archie her husband and hero by her side.
-
-The yacht hung off and on the shore all day, as if reluctant to leave
-the land; but towards evening a breeze sprang up from the west, the
-sails filled, and away she went, dancing and curtseying over the
-water like a thing of life.
-
-The sunset was bewitchingly beautiful; the green of the land was
-changed to a purple haze, that softened and beautified its every
-outline; the cloudless sky was clear and deep; that is, it gave you
-the idea you could see so far into and through it. There was a flush
-of saffron along the horizon; above it was of an opal tint, with here
-and there a tender shade of crimson--only a suspicion of this colour,
-no more; and apparently close at hand, in the east, were long-drawn
-cloudlets of richest red and gold.
-
-Etheldene looked up in her husband's face.
-
-"Shall we have such a sky as that to greet our arrival on English
-shores?" she said.
-
-Archie drew her closer to his side.
-
-"I'm not quite sure about the sky," he replied, shaking his head and
-smiling, "but we'll have a hearty English welcome."
-
-And so they had.
-
-
-
-FINIS.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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