Methuen's Colonial Library A SERIES OF COPYRIGHT BOOKS BY EMINENT AND POPULAR AUTHORS, PUBLISHED AS FAR AS POSSIBLE SIMULTANEOUSLY WITH THEIR APPEARANCE IN ENGLAND. THEY ARE OF VERY HANDSOME APPEARANCE, BEINQ PRINTED ON ANTIQUE PAPER AND BOUND TASTE- FULLY IN CRIMSON PAPER OR IN CLOTH. THEY FALL INTO TWO DIVISION8-{T) FICTION; (2) GENERAL LITERATURE FICTION THE SALVATION SEEKERS. By NOEL AINSLIB. A BAYARD OP BENGAL. By F. ANSTEY, Author of Vice-Versa.' Illus- trated by BERNARD PARTRIDGE. A DAUGHTER OP THE VINE. By GERTRUDE ATHBRTON. A ROMAN MYSTERY. By RICHARD BAGOT. BY STROKE OP SWORD. By ANDREW BALFOUR. Illustrated. TO A RMS I By ANDREW BALFOUR. Illustrated. VENGEANCE IS MINE. By ANDREW BALFOUR. Illustrated. THE QUEEN OP LOVE. By S. BAKING-GOULD. KITTY ALONE. By S. BARING-GOULD. CHEAP JACK ZITA. By S. BARING-GOULD. MRS. CURGENVEN OP CURGENVEN. By S. BARING-GOULD. NOEMI. A Romance of Old France. By S. BARING-GOULD. Illustrated. THE BROOM SQUIRE. By S. BARING-GOULD. 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By HUME NISBET. MATTHEW AUSTIN. By W. E. NORRIS. HIS GRACE. By W. E. NORRIS. THE DESPOTIC LADY. By W. E. NORRIS. A DEPLORABLE AFFAIR. By W. E. NORRIS. CLARISSA FURIOSA. BY W. E. NORRIS. GILES INGILBY. By W. E. NORRIS. Illustrated. AN OCTAVE. By W. E. NORRIS. THE EMBARRASSING ORPHAN. By W. E. NORRIS. THE CREDIT OP THE COUNTY. By W. E. NORRIS. Illustrated. {far rtmnindtr i/Liit stt tnd e/ Volumt - tta Jftithtten'0 Colonial ICibrarg CHILDREN OF THE BUSH BY THE SAME AUTHOR JOE WILSON AND His MATES WHILE THE BILLY BOILS THE COUNTRY I COME FROM WHEN THE WORLD WAS WIDE CHILDREN OF THE BUSH BY HENRY LAWSON .THEY HURRY THE BLACKSHEEP DOWN TO THE SHIPS SOCIETY'S BANNED AND CURSED AND THE BOYS LOOK BACK AS THE OLD LAND DIPS: SOME WITH A RECKLESS LAUGH ON THEIR LIPS, AND SOME WITH A PRAYER REVERSED. AND IT'S "GOOD-BYE, ENGLAND!" AND " GOOD-BYE, LOVE! AND PERHAPS IT IS JUST AS WELL ..." Will. Ogitvie METHUEN & CO. 36 ESSEX STREET W.C. LONDON 1902 Colonial Library. TO BERTHA REST, FOR YOUR EYES ARE WEARY, GIRL J YOU HAVE DRIVEN THE WORST AWAY ; THE GHOST OF THE MAN THAT I MIGHT HAVE BEEN IS GONE FROM MY HEART TO-DAY ! WE'LL LIVE FOR LIFE AND THE BEST IT BRINGS TILL OUR TWILIGHT SHADOWS FALL I MY HEART GROWS BRAVE, AND THE WORLD, MY GIRL, IS A GOOD WORLD AFTER ALL. 22301G1 INTRODUCTION THE SHEARERS NO church-bell rings them from the Track, No pulpit lights their blindness "Tis hardship, drought and homelessness That teach those Bushmen kindness : The mateship born of barren lands, Of toil and thirst and danger The camp-fare for the stranger set, The first place to the stranger. They do the best they can to-day Take no thought of the morrow ; Their way is not the old-world way They live to lend and borrow. When shearing's done and cheques gone wrong, They call it 'time to slither' They saddle up and say ' So-long ! ' And ride the Lord knows whither. And though he may be brown or black, Or wrong man there or right man, The mate that's honest to his mates They call that man a ' white man ' ! x INTRODUCTION They tramp in mateship side by side The Protestant and ' Roman ' They call no biped lord or 'sir,' And touch their hats to no man ! They carry in their swags, perhaps, A portrait and a letter And, maybe, deep down in their hearts, The hope of 'something better.' Where lonely miles are long to ride, And all days seem recurrent, There's lots of time to think of men We might have been but weren't. They turn their faces to the west And leave the world behind them (Their drought-dried graves are seldom green Where even mates can find them). They know too little of the world To rise to wealth or greatness: But in this book of mine I pay Pay tribute to their 'straightness.' CONTENTS PAGE SEND ROUND THE HAT i 'G. S.,' OR THE FOURTH COOK - - 22 THAT PRETTY GIRL IN THE ARMY - - 24 ' LORD DOUGLAS ' 46 JACK CORNSTALK' - - 60 THE BLINDNESS OF ONE-EYED BOGAN - 61 'UNKNOWN' -72 Two SUNDOWNERS ... - 74 A SKETCH OF MATESHIP 86 ON THE TUCKER TRACK - -88 'THE BULLETIN HOTEL' - 92 A BUSH PUBLICAN'S LAMENT - - 94 THE BALLAD OF THE ROUSEABOUT' - - 99 THE SHEARER'S DREAM - - 103 THE LOST SOULS' HOTEL - - - 108 THE BOOZERS' HOME - - - 121 THE SEX-PROBLEM AGAIN . 127 ' THE THINGS WE DARE NOT TELL ' - 133 THE ROMANCE OF THE SWAG - - 135 ' BUCKO LTS' GATE' - . 142 'KNOCKING AROUND' - - - . - 162 xii CONTENTS PAGE THE BUSH FIRE 163 THE BITSH GIRL' - 176 THE HOUSE THAT WAS NEVER BUILT - 178 4 BARNEY, TAKE ME HOME AGAIN ' - 192 A DROVING YARN - - 202 4 BALLAD OF THE CORNSTALK ' - 206 GBTTIN' BACK ON DAVE REGAN - 208 4 SHALL WE GATHER AT THE RIVER ? ' 219 His BROTHER'S KEEPER 234 'FROM THE BUSH' - 254 4 HEED NOT' - 256 'As FAR AS YOUR RIFLES COVER' 258 THE STORY OF 4 GENTLEMAN-ONCE ' - - 259 THE GHOSTS OF MANY CHRISTMASES - - 278 'THE MEN WHO MADE AUSTRALIA' - - - 289 CHILDREN OF THE BUSH SEND ROUND THE HAT Now this is the creed from the Book of the Bush Should be simple and plain to a dunce : ' If a man's in a hole you must pass round the hat Were he jail-bird or gentleman once.' ' T S it any harm to wake yer ? ' J_ It was about nine o'clock in the morning, and, though it was Sunday morning, it was no harm to wake me ; but the shearer had mistaken me for a deaf Jackeroo, who was staying at the shanty and was something like me, and had good-naturedly shouted almost at the top of his voice, and he woke the whole shanty. Anyway he woke three or four others who were sleeping on beds and stretchers, and one on a shake-down on the floor, in the same room. It had been a wet night, and the shanty was full of shearers from Big Billabong Shed which had cut-out the day before. My room mates had been drinking and gambling over night, and they swore luridly at the intruder for disturbing them. He was six-foot-three or thereabout. He was loosely built, bony, sandy-complexioned and grey eyed. He wore a good-humoured grin at most times, as I noticed later on ; he was of a type of Bushman that I always liked the sort that seem to get more good-natured the longer they grow, yet are hard-knuckled and would accommodate a man who A 2 CHILDREN OF THE BUSH wanted to fight, or thrash a bully in a good-natured way. The sort that like to carry somebody's baby round, and cut wood, carry water and do little things for overworked married Bush-women. He wore a saddle-tweed sac suit two sizes too small for him, and his face, neck, great hands and bony wrists were covered with sun blotches and freckles. ' I hope I ain't disturbing yer,' he shouted, as he bent over my bunk, ' but there's a cove ' ' You needn't shout ! ' I interrupted, ' I'm not deaf.' ' Oh I beg your pardon ! ' he shouted. ' I didn't know I was yellin'. I thought you was the deaf feller.' ' Oh, that's all right,' I said. ' What's the trouble ? ' 1 Wait till them other chaps is done swearin' and I'll tell yer,' he said. He spoke with a quiet, good-natured drawl, with something of the nasal twang, but tone and drawl distinctly Australian altogether apart from that of the Americans. ' Oh, spit it out for Christ's sake, Long-un ! ' yelled One-eyed Bogan, who had been the worst swearer in a rough shed, and he fell back on his bunk as if his previous remarks had exhausted him. ' It's that there sick Jackeroo that was pickin'-up at Big Billabong,' said the Giraffe. ' He had to knock off the first week, an' he's been here ever since. They're sendin' him away to the hospital in Sydney by the speeshall train. They're just goin' to take him up in the waggonette to the railway station, an' I thought I might as well go round with the hat an' get him a few bob. He's got a missus and kids in Sydney.' ' Yer always goin' round with yer gory hat ! ' growled Bogan. ' Yer'd blanky well take it round in hell ! ' ' That's what he's doing, Bogan,' muttered ' Gentleman Once,' on the shakedown, with his face to the wall. The hat was a genuine 'cabbage tree,' one of the sort that 'last a lifetime,' it was well coloured, almost black in SEND ROUND THE HAT 3 fact with weather and age, and it had a new strap round the base of the crown. I looked into it and saw a dirty pound note and some silver. I dropped in half a crown, which was more than I could spare, for I had only been a green hand at Big Billabong. ' Thank yer ! ' he said. ' Now then, you fellers ! ' 'I wish you'd keep your hat on your head, and your money in your pockets and your sympathy somewhere else,' growled Jack Moonlight as he raised himself painfully on his elbow and felt under his pillow for two half-crowns. ' Here,' he said, 'here's two half-casers. Chuck 'em in and let me sleep for God's sake ! ' 'Gentleman Once,' the gambler, rolled round on his shake-down, bringing his good-looking, dissipated face from the wall. He had turned in in his clothes and, with con- siderable exertion he shoved his hand down into the pocket of his trousers, which were a tight fit. He brought up a roll of pound notes and could find no silver. ' Here,' he said to the Giraffe, ' I might as well lay a quid. I'll chance it anyhow. Chuck it in.' ' You've got rats this mornin', Gentleman Once,' growled the Bogan. ' It ain't a blanky horse race.' ' P'r'aps I have,' said Gentleman Once, and he turned to the wall again with his head on his arm. ' Now, Bogan, yer might as well chuck in somethin',' said the Giraffe. ' What's the matter with the Jackeroo ? ' asked the Bogan, tugging his trousers from under the mattress. Moonlight said something in a low tone. ' The he has ! ' said Bogan. ' Well, I pity the ! Here, I'll chuck in half a quid ! ' and he dropped half a sovereign into the hat. The fourth man, who was known to his face as ' Barcoo- Rot,' and behind his back as 'the Mean Man,' had been drinking all night, and not even Bogan's stump- splitting adjectives could rouse him. So Bogan got out of 'h 4 CHILDREN OF THE BUSH bed, and calling on us (as blanky female cattle) to witness what he was about to do, he rolled the drunkard over, prospected his pockets till he made up five shillings (or a 'caser' in Bush language), and 'chucked' them into the hat. And Barcoo-Rot is probably unconscious to this day that he was ever connected with an act of charity. The Giraffe struck the deaf Jackeroo in the next room. I heard the chaps cursing ' Long-'un ' for waking them, and 'Deaf-'un' for being, as they thought at first, the indirect cause of the disturbance. I heard the Giraffe and his hat being condemned in other rooms and cursed along the verandah where more shearers were sleeping ; and after a while I turned out. The Giraffe was carefully fixing a mattress and pillows on the floor of a waggonette, and presently a man, who looked like a corpse, was carried out and lifted into the trap. As the waggonette started, the shanty keeper a fat, soulless-looking man put his hand in his pocket and dropped a quid into the hat which was still going round, in the hands of the Giraffe's mate, little Teddy Thompson, who was as far below medium height as the Giraffe was above it. The Giraffe took the horse's head and led him along on e most level parts of the road towards the railway station, and two or three chaps went along to help get the sick man into the train. The shearing season was over in that district, but I got a job of house painting, which was my trade, at the Great Western Hotel (a two-storey brick place), and I stayed in Bourke for a couple of months. The Giraffe was a Victorian native from Bendigo. He was well known in Bourke and to many shearers who came through the great dry scrubs from hundreds of miles round. He was stakeholder, drunkard's banker, peacemaker where SEND ROUND THE HAT 5 possible, referee or second to oblige the chaps when a fight was on, big brother or uncle to most of the children in town, final court of appeal when the youngsters had a dispute over a footrace at the school picnic, referee at their fights, and he was the stranger's friend. ' The feller as knows can battle around for himself,' he'd say. ' But I always like to do what I can for a hard-up stranger cove. I was a green hand Jackeroo once meself, and I know what it is.' 'You're always bothering about other people, Giraffe,' said Tom Hall, the Shearers' Union Secretary, who was only a couple of inches shorter than the Giraffe. ' There's nothing in it, you can take it from me I ought to know.' ' Well, what's a feller to do ? ' said the Giraffe. ' I'm only hangin' round here till shearin' starts agen, an' a cove might as well be doin' something. Besides, it ain't as if I was like a cove that had old people or a wife an' kids to look after. I ain't got no responsibilities. A feller can't be doin' nothin'. Besides, I like to lend a helpin' hand when I can.' 'Well, all I've got to say,' said Tom, most of whose screw went in borrowed quids, etc. ' All I've got to say is that you'll get no thanks, and you might blanky well starve in the end.' ' There ain't no fear of me starvin' so long as I've got me hands about me ; an' I ain't a cove as wants thanks,' said the Giraffe. He was always helping someone or something. Now it was a bit of a ' darnce ' that we was gettin' up for the girls ; again it was Mrs Smith, the woman whose husban' was drowned in the flood in the Bogan River lars' Crismas, or that there poor woman down by the Billabong her husban' cleared out and left her with a lot o' kids. Or Bill Some- thing, the bullocky, who was run over by his own waggon, while he was drunk, and got his leg broke. 6 CHILDREN OF THE BUSH Toward the end of his spree One-eyed Bogan broke loose and smashed nearly all the windows of the Carriers' Arms, and next morning he was fined heavily at the police court. About dinner time I encountered the Giraffe and his hat, with two half-crowns in it for a start. ' I'm sorry to trouble yer,' he said, ' but One-eyed Bogan carn't pay his fine, an' I thought we might fix it up for him. He ain't half a bad sort of feller when he ain't drinkin'. It's only when he gets too much booze in him.' After shearing, the hat usually started round with the Giraffe's own dirty crumpled pound note in the bottom of it as a send-off, later on it was half a sovereign, and so on down to half a crown and a shilling, as he got short of stuff; till in the end he would borrow a 'few bob' which he always repaid after next shearing ' just to start the thing goin'.' There were several yarns about him and his hat. 'Twas said that the hat had belonged to his father, whom he resembled in every respect, and it had been going round for so many years that the crown was worn as thin as paper by the quids, half-quids, casers, half-casers, bobs and tanners or sprats to say nothing of the scrums that had been chucked into it in its time and shaken up. They say that when a new governor visited Bourke the Giraffe happened to be standing on the platform close to the exit, grinning good-humouredly, and the local toady nudged him urgently and said in an awful whisper, ' Take off your hat ! Why don't you take off your hat ? ' 1 Why?' drawled the Giraffe, 'he ain't hard up, is he?.' And they fondly cherish an anecdote to the effect that, when the One-Man-One-Vote Bill was passed (or Payment of Members, or when the first Labour Party went in I forget on which occasion they said it was) the Giraffe was carried away by the general enthusiasm, got a few beers in him, 'chucked' a quid into his hat, and sent it round. SEND ROUND THE HAT 7 The boys contributed by force of habit, and contributed largely, because of the victory and the beer. And when the hat came back to the Giraffe, he stood holding it in front of him with both hands and stared blankly into it for a while. Then it dawned on him. ' Blowed if I haven't bin an' gone an' took up a bloomin' collection for meself ! ' he said. He was almost a teetotaller, but he stood his shout in reason. He mostly drank ginger beer. ' I ain't a feller that boozes, but I ain't got nothin' agen chaps enjoyin' themselves, so long as they don't go too far.' It was common for a man on the spree to say to him, ' Here ! here's five quid. Look after it for me, Giraffe, will yer, till I git off the booze.' His real name was Bob Brothers, and his Bush names, 'Long-'un,' 'The Giraffe,' ' Send-round-the-hat,' 'Chuck-in- a-bob,' and 'Ginger-ale.' Some years before, camels and Afghan drivers had been imported to the Bourke district ; the camels did very well in the dry country, they went right across country and carried everything from sardines to flooring boards. And the teamsters loved the Afghans nearly as much as Sydney furniture makers love the cheap Chinese in the same line. They loved 'em even as union shearers on strike love blacklegs brought up-country to take their places. Now the Giraffe was a good, straight unionist, but in cases of sickness or trouble he was as apt to forget his unionism, as all Bushmen are, at all times (and for all time), to forget their creed. So, one evening, the Giraffe blundered into the 'Carriers' Arms' of all places in the world when it was full of teamsters ; he had his hat in his hand and some small silver and coppers in it. ' I say, you fellers, there's a poor, sick Afghan in the camp down there along the ' A big, brawny bullock driver took him firmly by the 8 CHILDREN OP THE BUSH shoulders, or, rather by the elbows, and ran him out before any damage was done. The Giraffe took it as he took most things, good-humouredly ; but, about dusk, he was seen slipping down towards the Afghan camp with a billy of soup. ' I believe,' remarked Tom Hall, ' that when the Giraffe goes to heaven and he's the only one of us, as far as I can see, that has a ghost of a show I believe that when he goes to heaven, the first thing he'll do will be to take his infernal hat round amongst the angels getting up a collec- tion for this damned world that he left behind.' ' Well, I don't think there's so much to his credit, after all,' said Jack Mitchell, shearer. 'You see, the Giraffe is ambitious ; he likes public life, and that accounts for him shoving himself forward with his collections. As for bothering about people in trouble, that's only common curiosity ; he's one of those chaps that are always shoving their noses into other people's troubles. And, as for looking after sick men why ! there's nothing the Giraffe likes better than pottering round a sick man, and watching him and studying him. He's awfully interested in sick men, and they're pretty scarce out here. I tell you there's nothing he likes better except, maybe, it's pottering round a corpse. I believe he'd ride forty miles to help and sympathise and potter round a funeral. The fact of the matter is that the Giraffe is only enjoying himself with other people's troubles that's all it is. Its only vulgar curiosity and selfishness. I set it down to his ignorance ; the way he was brought up.' A few days after the Afghan incident the Giraffe and his hat had a run of luck. A German, one of a party who were building a new wooden bridge over the Big Billabong, was helping unload some girders from a truck at the railway station, when a big log slipped on the skids and his leg was smashed badly. They carried him to the Carriers' Arms, which was the nearest hotel, and into a SEND ROUND THE HAT 9 bedroom behind the bar, and sent for the doctor. The Giraffe was in evidence as usual. ' It vas not that at all,' said German Charlie, when they asked him if he was in much pain. ' It vas not that at all. I don't cares a damn for der bain ; but dis is der tird year und I vas going home dis year after der gontract und der contract yoost commence ! ' That was the burden of his song all through, between his groans. There were a good few chaps sitting quietly about the bar and verandah when the doctor arrived. The Giraffe was sitting at the end of the counter, on which he had laid his hat while he wiped his face, neck and forehead with a big speckled c sweat-rag.' It was a very hot day. The doctor, a good-hearted young Australian, was heard saying something. Then German Charlie, in a voice that rung with pain, ' Make that leg right, doctor quick ! Dis is der tird pluddy year und I must go home ! ' The doctor asked him if he was in great pain. ' Neffer mind der pluddy bain, doctor ! Neffer mind der pluddy bain ! Dot vas nossing. Make dat leg well quick, doctor. Dis vas der last gontract, and I vas going home dis year.' Then the words jerked out of him by physical agony : ' Der girl vas vaiting dree year, und by Got ! I must go home.' The publican Watty Braithwaite, known as ' Watty Broadweight,' or, more familiarly, 'Watty Bothways' turned over the Giraffe's hat in a tired, bored sort of way, dropped a quid into it, and nodded resignedly at the Giraffe. The Giraffe caught up the hint and the hat with alacrity. The hat went all round town, so to speak ; and, as soon as his leg was firm enough not to come loose on the road German Charlie went home. It was well known that I contributed to the Sydney 10 CHILDREN OF THE BUSH Bulletin and several other papers. The Giraffe's bump of reverence was very large, and swelled especially for sick men and poets. He treated me with much more respect than is due from a Bushman to a man, and with an odd sort of extra gentleness I sometimes fancied. But one day he rather surprised me. ' I'm sorry to trouble yer,' he said in a shamefaced way. 'I don't know as you go in for sportin', but One-eyed Bogan an' Barcoo-Rot is goin' to have a bit of a scrap down the Billybong this evenin', an' ' ' A bit of a what ? ' I asked. ' A bit of fight to a finish,' he said apologetically. ' An' the chaps is tryin' to fix up a fiver to put some life into the thing. There's bad blood between One-eyed Bogan and Barcoo-Rot, an' it ' won't do them any harm to have it out.' It was a great fight, I remember. There must have been a couple of score blood-soaked handkerchiefs (or ' sweat- rags ') buried in a hole on the field of battle, and the Giraffe was busy the rest of the evening helping to patch up the principals. Later on he took up a small collection for the loser, who happened to be Barcoo-Rot in spite of the advantage of an eye. The Salvation Army lassie, who went round with the War Cry, nearly always sold the Giraffe three copies. A new-chum parson, who wanted a subscription to build or enlarge a chapel, or something, sought the assistance of the Giraffe's influence with his mates. ' Well,' said the Giraffe, ' I ain't a churchgoer meself. I ain't what you might call a religious cove, but I'll be glad to do what I can to help yer. I don't suppose I can do much. I ain't been to church since I was a kiddy.' The parson was shocked, but later on he learned to appreciate the Giraffe and his mates, and to love Australia for the Bushman's sake, and it was he who told me the above anecdote. SEND ROUND THE HAT 11 The Giraffe helped fix some stalls for a Catholic church bazaar, and some of the chaps chaffed him about it in the union office. 'You'll be taking up a collection for a Joss-House down in the Chinamen's camp next,' said Tom Hall in conclusion. 'Well, I ain't got nothin' agen the Roming Carflics,' said the Giraffe. 'An' Father O'Donovan's a very decent sort of cove. He stuck up for the unions all right in the strike anyway.' (' He wouldn't be Irish if he wasn't,' some- one commented.) ' I carried swags once for six months with a feller that was a Carflick, an' he was a very straight feller. And a girl I knowed turned Carflick to marry a chap that had got her into trouble, an' she was always jes- the same to me after as she was before. Besides, I like to help everything that's goin' on.' Tom Hall and one or two others went out hurriedly to have a drink. But we all loved the Giraffe. He was very innocent and very humorous, especially when he meant to be most serious and philosophical. ' Some of them Bush girls is regular tomboys,' he said to me solemnly one day. ' Some of them is too cheeky altogether. I remember once I was stoppin' at a place they was sort of relations o' mine an' they put me to sleep in a room off the verander, where there was a glass door an' no blinds. An' the first mornin' the girls they was sort o' cousins o' mine they come gigglin' and foolin' round outside the door on the verander, an' kep' me in bed till nearly ten o'clock. I had to put me trowsis on under the bedclothes in the end. But I got back on 'em the next night,' he reflected. ' How did you do that, Bob ? ' I asked. ' Why, I went to bed in me trowsis ! ' One day I was on a plank, painting the ceiling of the bar of the Great Western Hotel. I was anxious to get the 12 CHILDREN OF THE BUSH job finished. The work had been kept back most of the day by chaps handing up long beers to me, and drawing my attention to the alleged fact that I was putting on the paint wrong side out. I was slapping it on over the last few boards when, ' I'm very sorry to trouble yer ; I always seem to be troublin' yer; but there's that there woman and them girls' I looked down about the first time I had looked down on him and there was the Giraffe, with his hat brim up on the plank and two half-crowns in it. ' Oh, that's all right, Bob,' I said, and I dropped in half a crown. There were shearers in the bar, and presently there was some barracking. It appeared that that there woman and them girls were strange women, in the local as well as the Biblical sense of the word, who had come from Sydney at the end of the shearing season, and had taken a cottage on the edge of the scrub on the outskirts of the town. There had been trouble this week in connection with a row at their establishment, and they had been fined, warned off by the police, and turned out by their landlord. ' This is a bit too red hot, Giraffe,' said one of the shearers. ' Them s has made enough out of us coves. They've got plenty of stuff, don't you fret. Let 'em go to ! I'm blanked if I give a sprat.' ' They ain't got their fares to Sydney,' said the Giraffe. ' An', what's more, the little 'un is sick, an' two of them has kids in Sydney.' ' How the do you know ? ' ' Why, one of 'em come to me an' told me all about it.' There was an involuntary guffaw. ' Look here, Bob, ' said Billy Woods, the Rouseabout's Secretary, kindly. ' Don't you make a fool of yourself. You'll have all the chaps laughing at you. Those girls are only working you for all you're worth. I suppose one of SEND ROUND THE HAT 13 'em came crying and whining to you. Don't you bother about them. You don't know them ; they can pump water at a moment's notice. You haven't had any experience with women yet, Bob.' 'She didn't come whinin' and cryin' to me,' said the Giraffe, dropping his twanging drawl a little. c She looked me straight in the face an' told me all about it.' c I say, Giraffe,' said Box-o'-Tricks, ' what have you been doin'? You've bin down there on the nod. I'm surprised at yer, Giraffe.' 'An' he pretends to be so gory soft an' innocent too,' growled the Bogan. ' We know all about you, Giraffe.' ' Look here, Giraffe,' said Mitchell the shearer. ' I'd never have thought it of you. We all thought you were the only virgin youth west the river ; I always thought you were a moral young man. You mustn't think that because your conscience is pricking you everyone else's is.' ' I ain't had anythin' to do with them,' said the Giraffe, drawling again. ' I ain't a cove that goes in for that sort of thing. But other chaps has, and I think they might as well help 'em out of their fix.' ' They're a rotten crowd,' said Billy Woods. ' You don't know them, Bob. Don't bother about them they're not worth it. Put your money in your pocket. You'll find a better use for it before next shearing.' ' Better shout, Giraffe,' said Box-o'-Tricks. Now in spite of the Giraffe's softness he was the hardest man in Bourke to move when he'd decided on what he thought was 'the fair thing to do.' Another peculiarity of his was that on occasion, such for instance as ' sayin' a few words ' at a strike meeting, he would straighten him- self, drop the twang, and rope in his drawl, so to speak. ' Well, look here, you chaps,' he said now. ' I don't know anything about them women. I s'pose they're bad, but I don't suppose they're worse than men has made 14 CHILDREN OF THE BUSH them. All I know is that there's four women turned out, without any stuff, and every woman in Bourke, an' the police, an' the law agen 'em. An' the fact that they is women is agenst 'em most of all. You don't expect 'em to hump their swags to Sydney ! Why, only I ain't got the stuff I wouldn't trouble yer. I'd pay their fares meself. Look,' he said, lowering his voice, ' there they are now, an' one of the girls is cryin'. Don't let 'em see yer lookin'.' I dropped softly from the plank and peeped out with the rest. They stood by the fence on the opposite side of the street, a bit up towards the railway station, with their port- manteaux and bundles at their feet. One girl leant with her arms on the fence rail and her face buried in them, another was trying to comfort her. The third girl and the woman stood facing our way. The woman was good- looking ; she had a hard face, but it might have been made hard. The third girl seemed half defiant, half inclined to cry. Presently she went to the other side of the girl who was crying on the fence and put her arm round her shoulder. The woman suddenly turned her back on us and stood looking away over the paddocks. The hat went round. Billy Woods was first, then Box- o'-Tricks, and then Mitchell. Billy contributed with eloquent silence. ' I was only jokin', Giraffe,' said Box-o'-Tricks, dredging his pockets for a couple of shillings. It was some time after the shearing, and most of the chaps were hard up. 1 Ah, well,' sighed Mitchell. ' There's no help for it. If the Giraffe would take up a collection to import some decent girls to this God-forgotten hole there might be some sense in it. ... It's bad enough for the Giraffe to under- mine our religious prejudices, and tempt us to take a morbid interest in sick chows and Afghans, and blacklegs and widows ; but when he starts mixing us up with strange women it's time to buck.' And he prospected his pockets SEND ROUND THE HAT 15 and contributed two shillings, some odd pennies, and a pinch of tobacco dust. ' I don't mind helping the girls, but I'm damned if I'll give a penny to help the old ' said Tom Hall. 1 Well, she was a girl once herself,' drawled the Giraffe. The Giraffe went round to the other pubs and to the union offices, and when he returned he seemed satisfied with the plate, but troubled about something else. ' I don't know what to do for them for to-night,' he said. 1 None of the pubs or boardin'-houses will hear of them, an' there ain't no empty houses, an' the women is all agen 'em.' ' Not all,' said Alice, the big, handsome barmaid from Sydney. ' Come here, Bob.' She gave the Giraffe half a sovereign and a look for which some of us would have paid him ten pounds had we had the money, and had the look been transferable. ' Wait a minute, Bob,' she said, and she went in to speak to the landlord. 1 There's an empty bedroom at the end of the store in the yard,' she said when she came back. ' They can camp there for to-night if they behave themselves. You'd better tell 'em, Bob.' ' Thank yer, Alice,' said the Giraffe. Next day, after work, the Giraffe and I drifted together and down by the river in the cool of the evening, and sat i|pn the edge of the steep, drought-parched bank. ' I heard you saw your lady friends off this morning, Bob,' I said, and was sorry I said it, even before he answered. 'Oh, they ain't no friends of mine,' he said. ' Only four poor devils of women. I thought they mightn't like to stand waitin' with the crowd on the platform, so I jest offered to get their tickets an' told 'em to wait round at the back of the station till the bell rung. . . . An' what do yer think they did, Harry ? ' he went on, with an exasper- atingly unintelligent grin. ' Why, they wanted to kiss me.' 1 Did they ? ' 16 CHILDREN OF THE BUSH 'Yes. An' they would have done it, too, if I hadn't been so long, . . . Why, I'm blessed if they didn't kiss me hands.' ' You don't say so.' ' God's truth. Somehow I didn't like to go on the plat- form with them after that ; besides they was cryin', and I can't stand women cryin'. But some of the chaps put them into an empty carriage.' He thought a moment. Then, ' There's some terrible good-hearted fellers in the world,' he reflected. I thought so too. ' Bob,' I said, ' you're a single man. Why don't you get married and settle down ? ' ' Well,' he said, c I ain't got no wife an' kids, that's a fact. But it ain't my fault.' He may have been right about the wife. But I thought of the look that Alice had given him, and ' Girls seem to like me right enough,' he said, ' but it don't go no further than that. The trouble is that I'm so long, and I always seem to get shook after little girls. At least there was one little girl in Bendigo that I was properly gone on.' ' And wouldn't she have you ? ' ' Well, it seems not.' ' Did you ask her ? ' ' Oh, yes, I asked her right enough.' ' Well, and what did she say ? ' ' She said it would be redicilus for her to be seen trottin' alongside of a chimbly like me.' ' Perhaps she didn't mean that. There are any amount of little women who like tall men.' ' I thought of that too afterwards. P'r'aps she didn't mean it that way. I s'pose the fact of the matter was that she didn't cotton on to me, and wanted to let me down easy. She didn't want to hurt me feelin's, if yer understand she was a very good-hearted little girl. There's some terrible SEND ROUND THE HAT 17 tall fellers where I come from, and I know two as married little girls.' He seemed a hopeless case. ' Sometimes,' he said, ' sometimes I wish that I wasn't so blessed long.' 'There's that there deaf Jackeroo,'he reflected presently. ' He's something in the same fix about girls as I am. He's too deaf and I'm too long.' ' How do you make that out ? ' I asked. ' He's got three girls, to my knowledge, and, as for being deaf, why, he gasses more than any man in the town, and knows more of what's going on than old Mother Brindle the washer- woman.' ' Well, look at that now ! ' said the Giraffe, slowly. ' Who'd have thought it ? He never told me he had three girls, an' as for hearin' news, I always tell him anything that's goin' on that I think he doesn't catch. He told me his trouble was that whenever he went out with a girl people could hear what they was sayin' at least they could hear what she was sayin' to him, an' draw their own con- clusions, he said. He said he went out one night with a girl, and some of the chaps foxed 'em an' heard her sayin' " don't " to him, an' put it all round town.' < What did she say " don't " for ? ' I asked. ' He didn't tell me that, but I s'pose he was kissin' her or huggin' her or something.' ' Bob,' I said presently, ' didn't you try the little girl in Bendigo a second time ? ' 'No,' he said. 'What was the use. She was a good little girl, and I wasn't goin' to go botherin' her. I ain't the sort of cove that goes hangin' round where he isn't wanted. But somehow I couldn't stay about Bendigo after she gave me the hint, so I thought I'd come over an' have a knock round on this side for a year or two.' ' And you never wrote to her ? ' ' No. What was the use of goin' pesterin' her with letters ? B 18 CHILDREN OF THE BUSH I know what trouble letters give me when I have to answer one. She'd have only had to tell me the straight truth in a letter an' it wouldn't have done me any good. But I've pretty well got over it by this time.' A few days later I went to Sydney. The Giraffe was the last I shook hands with from the carriage window, and he slipped something in a piece of newspaper into my hand. ' I hope yer won't be offended,' he drawled, ' but some of the chaps thought you mightn't be too flush of stuff you've been shoutin' a good deal ; so they put a quid or two together. They thought it might help yer to have a bit of a fly round in Sydney. I was back in Bourke before next shearing. On the evening of my arrival I ran against the Giraffe ; he seemed strangely shaken over something, but he kept his hat on his head. ' Would yer mind takin' a stroll as fur as the Billerbong ? ' he said. ' I got something I'd like to tell yer.' His big, brown, sun-burnt hands trembled and shook as he took a letter from his pocket and opened it. ' I've just got a letter,' he said. c A letter from that little girl at Bendigo. It seems it was all a mistake. I'd like you to read it. Somehow I feel as if I want to talk to a feller, and I'd rather talk to you than any of them other chaps.' It was a good letter, from a big-hearted little girl. She had been breaking her heart for the great ass all these months. It seemed that he had left Bendigo without saying good-bye to her. ' Somehow I couldn't bring meself to it,' he said, when I taxed him with it. She had never been able to get his address until last week ; then she got it from a Bourke man who had gone South. She called him 'an' awful long fool,' which he was, without the slightest doubt, and she implored him to write, and come back to her. SEND ROUND THE HAT 19 ' And will you go back, Bob ? ' I asked. ' My oath ! I'd take the train to-morrer only I ain't got the stuff. But I've got a stand in Big Billerbong shed an' I'll soon knock a few quid together. I'll go back as soon as ever shearin's over. I'm goin' to write away to her to-night.' The Giraffe was the ' ringer ' of Big Billabong Shed that season. His tallies averaged 120 a day. He only sent his hat round once during shearing, and it was noticed that he hesitated at first and only contributed half a crown. But then it was a case of a man being taken from the shed by the police for wife desertion. 'It's always that way,' commented Mitchell. 'Those soft, good-hearted fellows always end by getting hard and selfish. The world makes 'em so. It's the thought of the soft fools they've been that finds out sooner or later and makes 'em repent. Like as not the Giraffe will be the meanest man out-back before he's done.' When Big Billabong cut out, and we got back to Bourke with our dusty swags and dirty cheques, I spoke to Tom Hall, ' Look here, Tom,' I said. ' That long fool, the Giraffe, has been breaking his heart for a little girl in Bendigo ever since he's been out-back, and she's been breaking her heart for him, and the ass didn't know it till he got a letter from her just before Big Billabong started. He's going to-morrow morning.' That evening Tom stole the Giraffe's hat. ' I s'pose it'll turn up in the mornin', said the Giraffe. ' I don't mind a lark,' he added, ' but it does seem a bit red hot for the chaps to collar a cove's hat and a feller goin' away for good, p'r'aps, in the mornin'.' Mitchell started the thing going with a quid. ' It's worth it,' he said, ' to get rid of him. We'll have some peace now. There won't be so many accidents or women in trouble when the Giraffe and his blessed hat are 20 CHILDREN OF THE BUSH gone. Anyway, he's an eyesore in the town, and he's getting on my nerves for one. . . . Come on, you sinners ! Chuck 'em in ; we're only taking quids and half-quids.' About daylight next morning Tom Hall slipped into the Giraffe's room at the 'Carriers' Arms.' The Giraffe was sleeping peacefully. Tom put the hat on a chair by his side. The collection had been a record one, and, besides the packet of money in the crown of the hat, there was a silver-mounted pipe with case the best that could be bought in Bourke, a gold brooch, and several trifles besides an ugly valentine of a long man in his shirt walking the room with a twin on each arm. Tom was about to shake the Giraffe by the shoulder, when he noticed a great foot, with about half a yard of big-boned ankle and shank, sticking out at the bottom of the bed. The temptation was too great. Tom took up the hair-brush, and, with the back of it, he gave a smart rap on the point of an in-growing toe-nail, and slithered. We heard the Giraffe swearing good-naturedly for a while, and then there was a pregnant silence. He was staring at the hat we supposed. We were all up at the station to see him off. It was rather a long wait. The Giraffe edged me up to the other end of the platform. He seemed overcome. 'There's there's some terrible good-hearted fellers in this world,' he said. ' You mustn't forgit 'em, Harry, when you make a big name writin'. I'm well, I'm blessed if I don't feel as if I was jist goin' to blubber ! ' I was glad he didn't. The Giraffe blubberin' would have been a spectacle. I steered him back to his friends. ' Ain't you going to kiss me, Bob ? ' said the Great Western's big, handsome barmaid, as the bell rang. ' Well, I don't mind kissin' you, Alice,' he said, wiping his mouth. ' But I'm goin' to be married, yer know.' And he kissed her fair on the mouth. SEND ROUND THE HAT 21 ' There's nothin' like gettin' into practice,' he said, grinning round. We thought he was improving wonderfully ; but at the last moment something troubled him. ' Look here, you chaps,' he said hesitatingly, with his hand in his pocket, ' I don't know what I'm going to do with all this stuff. There's that there poor washerwoman that scalded her legs liftin' the boiler of clothes off the fire' We shoved him into the carriage. He hung about half of him out the window, wildly waving his hat, till the train disappeared in the scrub. And, as I sit here writing by lamplight at mid-day, in the midst of a great city of shallow social sham, of hopeless, squalid poverty, of ignorant selfishness, cultured or brutish, and of noble and heroic endeavour frowned down or callously neglected, I am almost aware of a burst of sun- shine in the room, and a long form leaning over my chair, and, ' Excuse me for troublin' yer ; I'm always troublin' yer ; but there's that there poor woman. . . .' And I wish I could immortalise him ! 'G. S.,' OR THE FOURTH COOK H-E has notions of Australia from the tales that he's been told Land of leggings and revolvers, land of savages and gold ; So he begs old shirts, and someone patches up his worn-out duds. He is shipped as 'general servant,' scrubbing pots and peeling spuds (In the steamer's grimy alley, hating man and peeling spuds). There is little time to comfort, there is little time to cry He will come back with a fortune 'We'll be happy by- and-by ! ' Scarcely time to kiss his sweetheart, barely time to change his duds, Ere they want him at the galley, and they set him peeling spuds (With a butcher's knife, a bucket, and, say, half a ton of spuds). And he peels 'em hard to Plymouth, peels 'em fast to drown his grief, Peels 'em while his stomach sickens on the road to TenerirTe ; Peels 'em while the donkey rattles, peels 'em while the engine thuds, By the time they touch at Cape Town he's a don at peeling spuds (And he finds some time for dreaming as he gets on with the spuds). 22 " G. S.," OR THE FOURTH COOK 23 In the steamer's slushy alley, where the souls of men are dead, And the adjectives are crimson if the substances are red, He's perhaps a college black-sheep, and, maybe, of ancient blood Ah ! his devil grips him sometimes as he reaches for a spud (And he jerks his head and sadly gouges dry-rot from a spud). And his brave heart hopes and sickens as the weary days go round ; There is plenty time for blue-lights ere they reach King George's Sound. But he gets his best suit ready two white shirts and three bone studs ! He will face the new world bravely when he's finished with the spuds (And next week, perhaps, he'll gladly take a job at peeling spuds). There were heroes in Australia went exploring long ago ; There are heroes in Australia that the world shall never know; And the men we use for heroes in the land of droughts and floods Often win their way to Sydney scrubbing pots and peeling spuds (Plucky beggars ! brave, poor devils ! gouging dry-rot from their spuds). THAT PRETTY GIRL IN THE ARMY ' Now I often sit at Watty's, when the night is very near, With a head that's full of jingles and the fumes of bottled beer ; For I always have a fancy that, if I am over there When the Army prays for Watty, I'm included in the prayer. ' It would take a lot of praying, lots of thumping on the drum, To prepare our sinful, straying, erring souls for Kingdom Come. But I love my fellow-sinners ! and I hope, upon the whole, That the Army gets a hearing when it prays for Watty's soul.' From When the World was Wide. THE Salvation Army does good business in some of the out-back towns of the great pastoral wastes of Australia. There's the thoughtless, careless generosity of the Bushman, whose pockets don't go far enough down his trousers (that's what's the matter with him), and who contributes to anything that comes along, without troubling to ask questions, like long Bob Brothers of Bourke, who, chancing to be 'a Protestant by rights,' unwittingly sub- scribed towards the erection of a new Catholic church, and, being chaffed for his mistake, said, 1 Ah, well, I don't suppose it'll matter a hang in the end, anyway it goes. I ain't got nothink agenst the Roming Carflicks.' There's the shearer, fresh with his cheque from a cut-out shed, gloriously drunk and happy, in love with all the world, and ready to subscribe towards any creed and shout for all hands including Old Nick if he happened to come along. There's the shearer, half drunk and inclined to be nasty, 24 THAT PRETTY GIRL IN THE ARMY 25 who has got the wrong end of all things with a tight grip, and who flings a shilling in the face of out-back convention- ality (as he thinks) by chucking a bob into the Salvation Army ring. Then he glares round to see if he can catch anybody winking behind his back. There's the cynical joker, a queer mixture, who contributes generously and tempts the reformed boozer afterwards. There's the severe- faced old station hand in clean shirt and neckerchief and white moleskins in for his annual or semi-annual spree, who contributes on principle, and then drinks religiously until his cheque is gone' and the horrors are come. There's the shearer, feeling mighty bad after a spree, and in danger of seeing things when he tries to go to sleep. He has dropped ten or twenty pounds over bar counters and at cards, and he now ' chucks ' a repentant shilling into the ring, with a very private and rather vague sort of feeling that something might come of it. There's the stout, contented, good-natured publican, who tips the Army as if it were a barrel-organ. And there are others and other reasons black sheep and ne'er-do-weels and faint echoes of other times in Salvation Army tunes. Bourke, the metropolis of the Great Scrubs, on the banks of the Darling River, about 500 miles from Sydney, was suffering from a long drought when I was there in '92 ; and the heat may or may not have been another cause contri- buting to the success, from a business point of view, of the Bourke garrison. There was much beer boozing and, besides, it was vaguely understood (as most things are vaguely understood out there in the drought-haze) that the place the Army came to save us from was hotter than Bourke. We didn't hanker to go to a hotter place than Bourke. But that year there was an extraordinary reason for the Army's great financial success there. She was a little girl, nineteen or twenty, I should judge, the prettiest girl I ever saw in the Army, and one of the prettiest I've ever seen out of it. She had the features of 26 CHILDREN OF THE BUSH an angel, but her expression was wonderfully human, sweet and sympathetic. Her big grey eyes were sad with sym- pathy for sufferers and sinners, and her poke bonnet was full of bunchy, red-gold hair. Her first appearance was somewhat dramatic perhaps the Army arranged it so. The Army used to pray, and thump the drum, and sing, and take up collections every evening outside Watty Bothway's Hotel, the 'Carriers' Arms.' They performed longer and more often outside Watty's than any other pub in town perhaps because Watty was considered the most hopeless publican and his customers the hardest crowd of boozers in Bourke. The band generally began to play about dusk. Watty would lean back comfortably in a basket easy-chair on his wide verandah, and clasp his hands, in a calm, contented way, while the Army banged the drum and got steam up, and whilst, perhaps, there was a barney going on in the bar, or a bloodthirsty fight in the backyard. On such occasions there was something like an indulgent or fatherly expression on his fat and usually emotionless face. And by-and-by he'd move his head gently and doze. The banging and the singing seemed to soothe him, and the praying, which was often very personal, never seemed to disturb him in the least. Well, it was about dusk one day ; it had been a terrible day, a hundred and something startling in the shade, but there came a breeze after sunset. There had been several dozen of buckets of water thrown on the verandah floor and the ground outside. Watty was seated in his accus- tomed place when the Army arrived. There was no barney in the bar because there was a fight in the backyard, and that claimed the attention of all the customers. The Army prayed for Watty and his clients; then a reformed drunkard started to testify against publicans and all their works. Watty settled himself comfortably, folded his hands, and leaned back and dozed. The fight was over, and the chaps began to drop round THAT PRETTY GIRL IN THE ARMY 27 to the bar. The man who was saved waved his arms, and danced round and howled. ' Ye-es ! ' he shouted hoarsely. ' The publicans, and boozers, and gamblers, and sinners may think that Bourke is hot, but hell is a thousand times hotter ! I tell you ' ' Oh, Lord ! ' said Mitchell, the shearer, and he threw a penny into the ring. 1 Ye-es ! I tell you that hell is a million times hotter than Bourke ! I tell you ' 'Oh, look here,' said a voice from the background, ' that won't wash. Why, don't you know that when the Bourke people die they send back for their blankets ? ' The saved brother glared round. ' I hear a freethinker speaking, my friends,' he said. Then, with sudden inspiration and renewed energy, ' I hear the voice of a freethinker. Show me the face of a free- thinker,' he yelled, glaring round like a hunted, hungry man. 'Show me the face of a freethinker, and I'll tell you what he is.' Watty hitched himself into a more comfortable position and clasped his hands on his knee and closed his eyes again. ' Ya-a-a-s ! ' shrieked the brand. ' I tell you, my friends, I can tell a freethinker by his face. Show me the face of a ' At this point there was an interruption. One-eyed, or Wall-eyed, Bogan, who had a broken nose, and the best side of whose face was reckoned the ugliest and most sinister One-eyed Bogan thrust his face forward from the ring of darkness into the torchlight of salvation. He had got the worst of a drawn battle ; his nose and mouth were bleeding, and his good eye was damaged. ' Look at my face ! ' he snarled, with dangerous earnest- ness. Look at my face ! That's the face of a free- thinker, and I don't care who knows it. Now ! what have you got to say against my face, " Man-without-a-Shirt ? " ' 28 CHILDREN OF THE BUSH The brother drew back. He had been known in the North-West in his sinful days as ' Man-without-a-Shirt,' alias 'Shirty,' or 'The Dirty Man,' and was flabbergasted at being recognised in speech. Also, he had been in a shearing shed and in a shanty orgie with One-eyed Bogan, and knew the man. Now most of the chaps respected the Army, and, indeed, anything that looked like religion, but the Bogan's face, as representing free-thought, was a bit too sudden for them. There were sounds on the opposite side of the ring as from men being smitten repeatedly and rapidly below the belt, and long Tom Hall and one or two others got away into the darkness in the background, where Tom rolled help- lessly on the grass and sobbed. It struck me that Bogan's face was more the result of free speech than anything else. The Army was about to pray when the Pretty Girl stepped forward, her eyes shining with indignation and enthusiasm. She had arrived by the evening train, and had been standing shrinkingly behind an Army lass of fifty Australian summers, who was about six feet high, flat and broad, and had a square face, and a mouth like a joint in boiler plates. The Pretty Girl stamped her pretty foot on the gravel, and her eyes flashed in the torchlight. ' You ought to be ashamed of yourselves,' she said. ' Great big men like you to be going on the way you are. If you were ignorant or poor, as I've seen people, there might be some excuse for you. Havep't you got any mothers, or sisters, or wives to think of ? What sort of a life is this you lead? Drinking, and gambling, and fighting, and swearing your lives away ! Do you ever think of God and the time when you were children ? Why don't you make homes ? Look at that man's face ! ' (she pointed suddenly at Bogan, who collapsed and sidled behind his mates out of the light). ' Look at that man's face ! Is it THAT PRETTY GIRL IN THE ARMY 29 a face for a Christian ? And you help and encourage him to fight. You're worse than he is. Oh, it's brutal. It's- it's wicked. Great big men like you, you ought to be ashamed of yourselves.' Long Bob Brothers about six-foot-four the longest and most innocent there, shrunk down by the wall and got his inquiring face out of the light. The Pretty Girl fluttered on for a few moments longer, greatly excited, and then stepped back, seemingly much upset, and was taken under the wing of the woman with the boiler-plate mouth. It was a surprise, and very sudden. Began slipped round to the backyard, and was seen bathing his battered features at the pump. The rest wore the expression of men who knew that something unusual has happened, but don't know what, and are waiting vacantly for developments. Except Tom Hall, who had recovered and returned. He stood looking over the head of the ring of Bushmen, and apparently taking the same critical interest in the girl as he would in a fight his expression was such as a journalit/ might wear who is getting exciting copy. The Army had it all their own way for the rest of the evening, and made a good collection. The Pretty Girl stood smiling round with shining eyes as the bobs and tanners dropped in, and then, being shoved forward by the flat woman, she thanked us sweetly, and said we were good fellows, and that she was sorry for some things she'd said to us. Then she retired, fluttering and very much flushed, and hid herself behind the hard woman who, by the way, had an excrescence on her upper lip which might have stood for a rivet. Presently the Pretty Girl came from behind the big woman and stood watching things with glistening eyes. Some of the chaps on the opposite side of the ring moved a little to one side and all were careful not to meet her eye not to be caught looking at her lest she should be embarrassed. Watty had roused himself a little at the 30 CHILDREN OF THE BUSH sound of a strange voice in the Army (and such a clear, sweet voice too !) and had a look ; then he settled back peacefully again, but it was noticed that he didn't snore that evening. And when the Army prayed, the Pretty Girl knelt down with the rest on the gravel. One or two tall Bushmen bowed their heads as if they had to, and One-eyed Bogan, with the blood washed from his face, stood with his hat off, glaring round to see if he could catch anyone sniggering. Mitchell, the shearer, said afterwards that the whole business made him feel for the moment like he felt some- times in the days when he used to feel things. The town discussed the Pretty Girl in the Army that night and for many days thereafter, but no one could find out who she was or where she belonged to except that she came from Sydney last. She kept her secret, if she had one, very close or else the other S.-A. women were not to be pumped. She lived in skillion-rooms at the back of the big weatherboard Salvation Army barracks with two other 'lassies,' who did washing and sewing and nursing, and went shabby, and half starved themselves, and were baked in the heat, like scores of women in the Bush, and even as hundreds of women, suffering from religious mania, slave and stint in city slums, and neglect their homes, husbands and children for the glory of Booth. The Pretty Girl was referred to as Sister Hannah by the Army people, and came somehow to be known by sinners as c Miss Captain.' I don't know whether that was her real name or what rank she held in the Army, if indeed she held any. She sold War Crys, and the circulation doubled in a day. One-eyed Bogan, being bailed up unexpectedly, gave her ' half a caser ' for a Cry, and ran away without the paper or the change. Jack Mitchell bought a Cry for the first time in his life, and read it. He said he found some of the articles intensely realistic, and many of the statements were THAT PRETTY GIRL IN THE ARMY 31 very interesting. He said he read one or two things in the Cry that he didn't know before. Tom Hall, taken unawares, bought three Crys from the Pretty Girl, and blushed to find it fame. Little Billy Woods, the Labourers' Union Secretary who had a poetic temperament and more than the average Bushman's reverence for higher things Little Billy Woods told me in a burst of confidence that he generally had two feelings, one after the other, after encountering that girl. One was that unfathomable far-away feeling of loneliness and longing, that comes at odd times to the best of married men, with the best of wives and children as Billy had. The other feeling, which came later on, and was a reaction in fact, was the feeling of a man who thinks he's been twisted round a woman's little finger for the benefit of somebody else. Billy said that he couldn't help being reminded by the shy, sweet smile and the shy, sweet ' thank you ' of the Pretty Girl in the Army, of the shy, sweet smile and the shy, sweet gratitude of a Sydney private barmaid, who had once roped him in, in the days before he was married. Then he'd reckon that the Army lassie had been sent out back to Bourke as a business speculation. Tom Hall was inclined to reckon so too but that was after he'd been chaffed for a month about the three War Crys. The Pretty Girl was discussed from psychological points of view ; not forgetting the sex problem. Donald Macdonald shearer, union leader and labour delegate to other colonies on occasion Donald Macdonald said that when- ever he saw a circle of plain or ugly, dried-up women or girls round a shepherd, evangelist or a Salvation Army drum, he'd say ' sexually starved ! ' They were hungry for love. Religious mania was sexual passion dammed out of its course. Therefore he held that morbidly religious girls were the most easily seduced. 32 CHILDREN OF THE BUSH But this couldn't apply to Pretty Girl in the Army. Mitchell reckoned that she'd either had a great sorrow a lot of trouble, or a disappointment in love (the 'or' is Mitchell's); but they couldn't see how a girl like her could possibly be disappointed in love unless the chap died or got into jail for life. Donald decided that her soul had been starved somehow. Mitchell suggested that it might be only a craving for notoriety, the same thing that makes women and girls go amongst lepers, and out to the battlefield, and nurse ugly pieces of men back to life again; the same thing that makes some women and girls swear ropes round men's necks. The Pretty Girl might be the daughter of well-to- do people even aristocrats, said Mitchell she was pretty enough and spoke well enough. 'Every woman's a bar- maid at heart,' as the Bulletin puts it, said Mitchell. But not even one of the haggard women of Bourke ever breathed a suspicion of scandal against her. They said she was too good and too pretty to be where she was. You see it was not as in an old settled town where hags blacken God's world with their tongues. Bourke was just a little camping town in a big land, where free, good-hearted democratic Australians, and the best of black sheep from the old world were constantly passing through ; where husbands were often obliged to be away from home for twelve months, and the storekeepers had to trust the people, and mates trusted each other, and the folks were broad-minded. The mind's eye had a wide range. After her maiden speech the Pretty Girl seldom spoke, except to return thanks for collections and she never testified. She had a sweet voice and used to sing. Now, if 1 were writing pure fiction, and were not cursed with an obstinate inclination to write the truth, I might say that, after the advent of the Pretty Girl, the morals of Bourke improved suddenly and wonderfully. That One- eyed Bogan left off gambling and drinking and fighting and swearing, and put on a red coat and testified and fought the devil only ; that Mitchell dropped his mask of cynicism ; that Donald Macdonald ate no longer of the tree of knowledge and ceased to worry himself with psychological problems, and was happy; and that Tom Hall was no longer a scoffer. That no one sneaked round through the scrub after dusk to certain necessary establish- ments in weather-board cottages on the outskirts of the town ; and that the broad-minded and obliging ladies thereof became Salvation Army lassies. But none of these things happened. Drunks quieted down or got out of the way if they could when the Pretty Girl appeared on the scene, fights and games of ' headin' 'em' were adjourned, and weak, ordinary language was used for the time being, and that was about all. Nevertheless, most of the chaps were in love with that Pretty Girl in the Army all those who didn't worship her privately. Long Bob Brothers hovered round in hopes, they said, that she'd meet with an accident get run over by a horse or something and he'd have to carry her in ; he scared the women at the barracks by dropping firewood over the fence after dark. Barcoo-Rot, the meanest man in the back country, was seen to drop a threepenny bit into the ring, and a rumour was industriously circulated (by Tom Hall) to the effect that One-eyed Began intended to shave and join the Army disguised as a lassie. Handsome Jake Boreham (alias Bore-'em), a sentimental shearer from New Zealand, who had read Bret Harte, made an elaborate attempt for the Pretty Girl, by pre- tending to be going to the dogs headlong, with an idea of first winning her sorrowful interest and sympathy, and then making an apparently hard struggle to straighten up for her sake. He related his experience with the cheerful and refreshing absence of reserve which was characteristic of him, and is of most Bushmen. ' I'd had a few drinks,' he said, ' and was having a spell c 34 CHILDREN OF THE BUSH under a gum by the river, when I saw the Pretty Girl and another Army woman coming down along the bank. It was a blazing hot day. I thought of Sandy and the Schoolmistress in Bret Harte, and I thought it would be a good idea to stretch out in the sun and pretend to be helpless ; so I threw my hat on the ground and lay down, with my head in the blazing heat, in the most graceful position I could get at, and I tried to put a look of pained regret on my face, as if I was dreaming of my lost boyhood and me mother. I thought, perhaps, the Girl would pity me, and I felt sure she'd stoop and pick up my hat and put it gently over my poor troubled head. Then I was going to become conscious for a moment, and look hopelessly round, and into her eyes, and then start and look sorrowful and ashamed, and stagger to my feet, taking off my hat like the Silver King does to the audience when he makes his first appearance drunk on the stage ; and then I was going to reel off, trying to walk as straight as I could. And next day I was going to clean up my teeth and nails and put on a white shirt, and start to be a new man henceforth. ' Well, as I lay there with my eyes shut, I heard the footsteps come up and stop, and heard 'em whisper, and I thought I heard the Pretty Girl say "Poor fellow!" or something that sounded like that ; and just then I got a God-almighty poke in the ribs with an umbrella at least I suppose it was aimed for my ribs ; but women are bad shots, and the point of the umbrella caught me in the side, just between the bottom rib and the hip bone, and I sat up with a click, like the blade of a pocket-knife. 'The other lassie was the big square-faced woman. The Pretty Girl looked rather more frightened and dis- gusted than sentimental, but she had plenty of pluck, and soon pulled herself together. She said I ought to be ashamed of myself, a great, big man like me, lying there in the dust like a drunken tramp an eyesore and a disgrace to all the world, She told me to go to my camp, wherever THAT PRETTY GIRL IN THE ARMY 35 that was, and sleep myself sober. The square-jawed woman said I looked like a fool sitting there. I did feel ashamed, and I reckon I did look like a fool a man generally does in a fix like that. I felt like one, anyway. I got up and walked away, and it hurt me so much that I went over to West Bourke and went to the dogs properly for a fortnight, and lost twenty quid on a game of draughts against a blind- fold player. Now both those women had umbrellas, but I'm not sure to this day which of 'em it was that gave me the poke. It wouldn't have mattered much anyway. I haven't borrowed one of Bret Harte's books since.' Jake reflected a while. ' The worst of it was,' he said ruefully, ' that I wasn't sure that the girl or the woman didn't see through me, and that worried me a bit. You never can tell how much a woman suspects, and that's the worst of 'em. I found that out after I got married.' The Pretty Girl in the Army grew pale and thin and bigger-eyed. The women said it was a shame, and that she ought to be sent home to her friends, wherever they were. She was laid up for two or three days, and some of the women cooked delicacies and handed 'em over the barracks fence, and offered to come in and nurse her ; but the square woman took washing home and nursed the girl herself. The Pretty Girl still sold War Crys and took up collec- tions, but in a tire'd, listless, half shamed-faced way. It was plain that she was tired of the Army, and growing ashamed of the Salvationists. Perhaps she had come to see things too plainly. You see, the Army does no good out-back in Australia except from a business point of view. It is simply there to collect funds for hungry headquarters. The Bushmen are much too intelligent for the Army. There was no poverty in Bourke as it is understood in the city ; there was plenty of food ; and camping out and roughing it come natural to the Bushmen. In cases of sickness, accident, widows or 36 CHILDREN OF THE BUSH orphans, the chaps sent round the hat, without banging a drum or testifying, and that was all right. If a chap was hard up he borrowed a couple of quid from his mate. If a strange family arrived without a penny, someone had to fix 'em up, and the storekeepers helped them till the man got work. For the rest, we work out our own salvation, or damnation as the case is in the Bush, with no one to help us, except a mate, perhaps. The Army can't help us, but a fellow-sinner can, sometimes, who has been through it all him- self. The Army is only a drag on the progress of Democracy, because it attracts many who would otherwise be aggressive Democrats and for other reasons. Besides, if we all reformed the Army would get deuced little from us for its city missions. The Pretty Girl went to service for a while with the Stock Inspector's wife, who could get nothing out of her concern- ing herself or her friends. She still slept at the barracks, stuck to the Army, and attended its meetings. It was Christmas morning, and there was peace in Bourke and goodwill towards all men. There hadn't been a fight since yesterday evening, and that had only been a friendly one, to settle an argument concerning the past 'ownership, and, at the same time, to decide as to the future possession of a dog. It had been a hot, close night, and it ended in a suffocat- ing sunrise. The free portion of the male population were in the habit of taking their blankets and sleeping out in ' the Park,' or town square, in hot weather; the wives and daughters of the town slept, or tried to sleep, with bedroom windows and doors open, while husbands lay outside on the verandahs. I camped in a corner of the park that night, and the sun woke me. As I sat up I caught sight of a swagman coming along the whife, dusty road from the direction of the bridge, where he cleared road ran across west and on, a hundred and THAT PRETTY GIRL IN THE ARMY 37 thirty miles, through the barren, broiling mulga scrubs, to Hungerford, on the border of Sheol. I knew that swag- man's walk. It was John Merrick (Jack Moonlight), one time Shearers' Union Secretary at Coonamble, and generally ' Rep ' (Shearers' Representative) in any shed where he sheared. He was a ' better-class shearer,' one of those quiet, thoughtful men of whom there are generally two or three in the roughest of rough sheds, who have great influence, and give the shed a good name from a Union point of view. Not quiet with the resentful or snobbish reserve of the educated Englishman, but with a sad or subdued sort of quietness that has force in it as if they fully realised that their intelligence is much higher than the average, that they have suffered more real trouble and heartbreak than the majority of their mates, and that their mates couldn't possibly under- stand them if they spoke as they felt and couldn't see things as they do yet men who understand and are intensely sympathetic in their loneliness and sensitive reserve. I had worked in a shed with Jack Moonlight, and had met him in Sydney, and to be mates with a Bushman for a few weeks is to know him well anyway, I found it so. He had taken a trip to Sydney the Christmas before last, and when he came back there was something wanting. He became more silent, he drank more, and sometimes alone, and took to smoking heavily. He dropped his mates, took little or no interest in Union matters, and travelled alone, and at night. The Australian Bushman is born with a mate who sticks to him through life like a mole. They may be hundreds of miles apart sometimes, and separated for years, yet they are mates for life. A Bushman may have many mates in his roving, but there is always one his mate, ' my mate ' j and it is common to hear a Bushman, who is, in every way, a true mate to the man he happens to be travelling with, speak of his mate's mate ' Jack's mate ' who might be in Klondyke or South Africa. A Bushman has always a mate 38 CHILDREN OF THE BUSH to comfort him and argue with him, and work and tramp and drink with him, and lend him quids when he's hard up, and call him a b fool, and fight him sometimes ; to abuse him to his face and defend his name behind his back ; to bear false witness and perjure his soul for his sake ; to lie to the girl for him if he's single, and to his wife if he's married ; to secure a ' pen ' for him at a shed where he isn't on the spot, or, if the mate is away in New Zealand or South Africa, to write and tell him if it's any good com- ing over this way. And each would take the word of the other against all the world, and each believes that the other is the straightest chap that ever lived ' a white man ! ' And next best to your old mate is the man you're tramping, riding, working or drinking with. About the first thing the cook asks you when you come along to a shearers' hut is, ' Where's your mate ? ' I travelled alone for a while one time, and it seemed to me sometimes, by the tone of the inquiry concerning the whereabouts of my mate, that the Bush had an idea that I might have done away with him and that the thing ought to be looked into. When a man drops mateship altogether and takes to ' hatting ' in the Bush, it's a step towards a convenient tree and a couple of saddle-straps buckled together. I had an idea that I, in a measure, took the place of Jack Moonlight's mate about this time. ' 'Ullo, Jack ! ' I hailed as he reached the corner of the park. ' Good morning, Harry ! ' said Jack, as if he'd seen me last yesterday evening instead of three months ago. ' How are you getting on ? ' We walked together towards the Union Office, where I had a camp in the skillion-room at the back. Jack was silent. But there's no place in the world where a man's silence is respected so much (within reasonable bounds) as in the Australian Bush, where every man has THAT PRETTY GIRL IN THE ARMY 39 a past more or less sad, and every man a ghost perhaps from other lands that we know nothing of, and speaking in a foreign tongue. They say in the Bush, ' Oh, Jack's only thinking ! ' And they let him think. Generally you want to think as much as your mate; and when you've been together some time it's quite natural to travel all day without exchanging a word. In the morning Jim says, ' Well, I think I made a bargain with that horse, Bill,' and some time late in the afternoon, say twenty miles further on, it occurs to Bill to ' rejoin,' ' Well, I reckon the blank as sold it to you had yer proper ! ' I like a good thinking mate, and I believe that thinking in company is a lot more healthy and more comfortable, as well as less risky, than thinking alone. On the way to the Union Office Jack and I passed the Royal Hotel, and caught a glimpse, through the open door of a bedroom off the verandah, of the landlord's fresh, fair, young Sydney girl-wife, sleeping prettily behind the mosquito net, like a sleeping beauty, while the boss lay on a mattress outside on the verandah, across the open door. (He wasn't necessary for publication, but an evidence of good faith.) I glanced at Jack for a grin, but didn't get one. He wore the pained expression of a man who is suddenly hit hard with the thought of something that might have been. I boiled the billy and fried a pound of steak. ' Been travelling all night, Jack ? ' I asked. ' Yes,' said Jack. ' I camped at Emus yesterday.' He didn't eat. I began to reckon that he was brooding too much for his health. He was much thinner than when I saw him last, and pretty haggard, and he had something of the hopeless, haggard look that I'd seen in Tom Hall's eyes after the last big shearing strike, when Tom had worked day and night to hold his mates up 40 CHILDREN OF THE BUSH all through the hard, bitter struggle, and the battle was lost. ' Look here, Jack ! ' I said at last. ' What's up ? ' ' Nothing's up, Harry,' said Jack. ' What made you think so ? ' 1 Have you got yourself into any fix ? ' I asked. ' What's the Hungerford track been doing to you ? ' ' No, Harry,' he said, ' I'm all right. How are you ? ' And he pulled some string and papers and a roll of dusty pound notes from his pocket and threw them on the bunk. I was hard up just then, so I took a note and the billy to go to the Royal and get some beer. I thought the beer might loosen his mind a bit. 1 Better take a couple of quid,' said Jack. ' You look as if you want some new shirts and things.' But a pound was enough for me, and I think he had reason to be glad of that later on, as it turned out. ' Anything new in Bourke ? ' asked Jack as we drank the beer. ' No,' I said, ' not a thing, except there's a pretty girl in the Salvation Army.' ' And it's about time,' growled Jack. ' Now, look here, Jack,' I said presently, ' what's come over you lately at all ? I might be able to help you. It's not a bit of use telling me that there's nothing the matter. When a man takes to brooding and travelling alone it's a bad sign, and it will end in a leaning tree and a bit of clothes-line as likely as not. Tell me what the trouble is. Tell us all about it. There's a ghost, isn't there ? ' ' Well, I suppose so,' said Jack. ' We've all got our ghosts for that matter. But never you mind, Harry ; I'm all right. I don't go interfering with your ghosts, and I don't see what call you've got to come haunting mine. Why, it's as bad as kicking a man's dog.' And he gave the ghost of a grin. THAT PRETTY GIRL IN THE ARMY 41 ' Tell me, Jack,' I said, ' is it a woman ? ' 'Yes,' said Jack, 'it's a woman. Now, are you satisfied ? ' ' Is it a girl ? ' I asked. ' Yes,' he said. So there was no more to be said. I'd thought it might have been a lot worse than a girl. I'd thought he might have got married somewhere, sometime, and made a mess of it. We had dinner at Billy Wood's place, and a sensible Christmas dinner it was everything cold, except the vegetables, with the hose going on the verandah in spite of the bye-laws, and Billy's wife and her sister, fresh and cool- looking and jolly, instead of being hot and brown and cross like most Australian women who roast themselves over a blazing fire in a hot kitchen on a broiling day, all the morning, to cook scalding plum pudding and red-hot roasts, for no other reason than that their grandmothers used to cook hot Christmas dinners in England. And in the afternoon we went for a row on the river, pulling easily up the anabranch and floating down with the stream under the shade of the river timber instead of going to sleep and waking up helpless and soaked in perspiration, to find the women with headaches, as many do on Christmas Day in Australia. Mrs Woods tried to draw Jack out, but it was no use, and in the evening he commenced drinking, and that made Billy uneasy. ' I'm afraid Jack's on the wrong track,' he said. After tea most of us collected about Watty's verandah. Most things that happened in Bourke happened at Watty's pub, or near it. If a horse bolted with a buggy or cart, he was generally stopped outside Watty's, which seemed to suggest, as Mitchell said, that most of the heroes drank at Watty's also that the pluckiest men were found amongst the hardest 42 CHILDREN OP THE BUSH drinkers. (But sometimes the horse fetched up against Watty's sign and lamp-post which was a stout one of ' iron-bark ' and smashed the trap.) Then Watty's was the ' Carriers' Arms,' a Union pub ; and Australian teamsters are mostly hard cases : while there was something in Watty's beer which made men argue fluently, and the best fights came off in his backyard. Watty's dogs were the most quarrelsome in town, and there was a dog-fight there every other evening, followed as often as not by a man- fight. If a Bushman's horse ran away with him the chances were that he'd be thrown on to Watty's verandah, if he wasn't pitched into the bar ; and victims of accidents, and sick, hard-up shearers, were generally carried to Watty's pub, as being the most convenient and comfortable for them. Mitchell denied that it was generosity or good nature on Watty's part, he said it was all business adver- tisement. Watty knew what he was doing. He was very deep, was Watty. Mitchell further hinted that if he was sick he wouldn't be carried to Watty's, for Watty knew what a thirsty business a funeral was. Tom Hall reckoned that Watty bribed the Army on the quiet. I was sitting on a stool along the verandah wall with Donald Macdonald, Bob Brothers (the Giraffe) and Mitchell, and one or two others, and Jack Moonlight sat on the floor with his back to the wall and his hat well down over his eyes. The Army came along at the usual time, but we didn't see the Pretty Girl at first she was a bit late. Mitchell said he liked to be at Watty's when the Army prayed and the Pretty Girl was there ; he had no objection to being prayed for by a girl like that, though he reckoned that nothing short of a real angel could save him now. He said his old grandmother used to pray for him every night of her life and three times on Sunday, with Christmas Day extra when Christmas Day didn't fall on a Sunday; but Mitchell reckoned that the old lady couldn't have had much influence because he became more sinful every year, THAT PRETTY GIRL IN THE ARMY 43 and went deeper in ways of darkness, until finally he embarked on a career of crime. The Army prayed, and then a thin ' ratty ' little woman bobbed up in the ring ; she'd gone mad on religion as women do on woman's rights and hundreds of other things. She was so skinny in the face, her jaws so pro- minent, and her mouth so wide, that when she opened it to speak it was like a ventriloquist's dummy and you could almost see the cracks open down under her ears. ' They say I'm cracked ! ' she screamed in a shrill, cracked voice. ' But I'm not cracked I'm only cracked on the Lord Jesus Christ ! That's all I'm cracked on .' And just then the Amen man of the Army the Army groaner we called him, who was always putting both feet in it just then he blundered forward, rolled up his eyes, threw his hands up and down as if he were bouncing two balls, and said, with deep feeling, ' Thank the Lord she's got a crack in the right place ! ' Tom Hall doubled up, and most of the other sinners seemed to think there was something very funny about it. And the Army, too, seemed struck with an idea that there was something wrong somewhere, for they started a hymn. A big American negro, who'd been a night watchman in Sydney, stepped into the ring and waved his arms and kept time, and as he got excited he moved his hands up and down rapidly, as if he was hauling down a rope in a great hurry through a pulley block above, and he kept saying, 1 Come down, Lord ! ' all through the hymn, like a bass accompaniment, ' Come down, Lord ; Come down, Lord ; Come down, Lord ; Come down, Lord ! ' and the quicker he said it the faster he hauled. He was as good as a drum. And, when the hymn was over, he started to testify. ' My Frens ! ' he said, ' I was once black as der coals in der mined ! I was once black as der ink in der ocean of sin! But now thank an' bless the Lord! I am whiter dan der dribben snow ! ' 44 CHILDREN OF THE BUSH Tom Hall sat down on the edge of the verandah and leaned his head against a post and cried. He had con- tributed a bob this evening, and he was getting his money's worth. Then the Pretty Girl arrived and was pushed forward into the ring. She looked thinner and whiter than I'd ever seen her, and there was a feverish brightness in her eyes that I didn't like. ' Men ! ' she said, ' this is Christmas Day .' I didn't hear any more for, at the sound of her voice, Jack Moon- light jumped up as if he'd sat on a baby. He started forward, stared at her for a moment as if he couldn't believe his eyes, and then said ' Hannah ! ' short and sharp. She started as if she was shot, gave him a wild look, and stumbled forward; the next moment he had her in his arms and was steering for the private parlour. I heard Mrs Bothways calling for water and smelling- salts; she was as fat as Watty, and very much like him in the face, but she was emotional and sympathetic. Then presently I heard, through the open window, the Pretty Girl say to Jack, ' Oh, Jack, Jack ! Why did you go away and leave me like that ? It was cruel ! ' ' But you told me to go, Hannah,' said Jack. 'That that didn't make any difference. Why didn't you write ? ' she sobbed. ' Because you never wrote to me, Hannah,' he said. ' That that was no excuse ! ' she said. ' It was so k-k-k-cruel of you, Jack .' Mrs Bothways pulled down the window. A newcomer asked Watty what the trouble was, and he said that the Army girl had only found her chap, or husband, or long- lost brother or something, but the missus was looking after the business ; then he dozed again. And then we adjourned to the Royal and took the Army with us. ' That's the way of it,' said Donald Macdonald. { With THAT PRETTY GIRL IN THE ARMY 45 a woman it's love or religion ; with a man it's love or the devil.' 'Or with a man,' said Mitchell, presently, 'it's love and the devil both, sometimes, Donald.' I looked at Mitchell hard, but for all his face expressed he might only have said, ' I think it's going to rain.' 'LORD DOUGLAS' ' They hold him true, who's true to one, However false he be ' The Rouseabout of Rouseabouts. THE Imperial Hotel was rather an unfortunate name for an out-back town pub, for out-back is the stronghold of Australian democracy; it was the out-back vote and influence that brought about ' One Man One Vote,' ' Payment of Members,' and most of the democratic legisla- tion of late years, and from out-back came the overwhelming vote in favour of Australian as against Imperial Federation. The name Royal Hotel is as familiar as that of the Railway Hotel, and passes unnoticed and ungrowled at, even by Bush republicans. The Royal Hotel at Bourke was kept by an Irishman, one O'Donohoo, who was Union to the backbone, loudly in favour of 'Australia for the Australians,' and, of course, against even the democratic New South Wales Government of the time. He went round town all one St Patrick's morning with a bunch of green ribbon fastened to his coat-tail with a large fish-hook, and wasn't aware of the fact till he sat down on the point of it. But that's got nothing to do with it. The Imperial Hotel at Bourke was unpopular from the first. It was said that the very existence of the house was the result of a swindle. It had been built with money borrowed on certain allotments in the centre of the town and on the understanding that it should be built on the mortgaged land, whereas it was erected on a free allotment. 46 'LORD DOUGLAS' 47 Which fact was discovered, greatly to its surprise, by the building society when it came to foreclose on the allot- ments some years later. While the building was being erected the Bourke people understood, in a vague way, that it was to be a convent (perhaps the building society thought so, too), and when certain ornaments in brick and cement in the shape of a bishop's mitre were placed over the corners of the walls the question seemed decided. But when the place was finished a bar was fitted up, and up went the sign, to the disgust of the other publicans, who didn't know a licence had been taken out for licensing didn't go by local option in those days. It was rumoured that the place belonged to, and the whole business was engineered by, a priest. And priests are men of the world. The Imperial Hotel was patronised by the Pastoralists, the civil servants, the bank manager and clerks all the scrub aristocracy ; it was the headquarters of the Pastoral- ists* Union in Bourke ; a barracks for blacklegs brought up from Sydney to take the place of Union shearers on strike ; and the new Governor, on his inevitable visit to Bourke, was banqueted at the Imperial Hotel. The editor of the local 'Capitalistic rag' stayed there; the Pastoralists' member was elected mostly by dark ways and means devised at the Imperial Hotel, and one of its managers had stood as a dummy candidate to split the Labour vote ; the manage- ment of the hotel was his reward. In short, it was there that most of the plots were hatched to circumvent Freedom, and put away or deliver into the clutches of law and order certain sons of Light and Liberty who believed in converting blacklegs into jellies by force of fists when bribes, gentle persuasion and pure Australian language failed to convert them to clean Unionism. The Imperial Hotel was called the c Squatters' Pub,' the ' Scabbery,' and other and more expressive names. The hotel became still more unpopular after Percy Douglas had managed it for a while. He was an avowed 48 CHILDREN OF THE BUSH enemy of Labour Unionists. He employed Chinese cooks, and that in the height of the anti-Chinese agitation in Australia, and he was known to have kindly feelings towards the Afghans who, with their camels, were running white carriers off the roads. If an excited Unionist called a man a ' blackleg ' or ' scab ' in the Imperial bar 'he was run out sometimes with great difficulty, and occasionally as far as the lock-up. Percy Douglas was a fine-looking man, ' wid a chest on' him an' well hung a fine fee-gure of a man,' as O'Donohoo pronounced it. He was tall and erect, he dressed well, wore small side whiskers, had an eagle nose, and looked like an aristocrat. Like many of his type, who start some- times as billiard-markers and suddenly become hotel managers in Australia, nothing was known of his past. Jack Mitchell reckoned, by the way he treated his employ'es and spoke to workmen, that he was the educated son of an English farmer gone wrong and sent out to Australia. Someone called him 'Lord Douglas,' and the nickname caught on. He made himself well hated. He got One-eyed Bogan ' three months' hard ' for taking a bottle of whisky off the Imperial bar counter because he (Bogan) was drunk and thirsty and had knocked down his cheque, and because there was no one minding the bar at the moment. Lord Douglas dismissed the barmaid, and, as she was leaving, he had her boxes searched and gave her in charge for stealing certain articles belonging to the hotel. The chaps subscribed to defend the case, and subsequently put a few pounds together for the girl. She proved her grati- tude by bringing a charge of a baby against one of the chaps but that was only one of the little ways of the world, as Mitchell said. She joined a Chinese camp later on. Lord Douglas employed a carpenter to do some work about the hotel, and because the carpenter left before the job was finished Lord Douglas locked his tools in an 'LORD DOUGLAS 49 outhouse and refused to give them up ; and when the carpenter, with the spirit of an Australian workman, broke the padlock and removed his tool-chest, the landlord gave him in charge for breaking and entering. The chaps defended the case and won it, and hated Lord Douglas as much as if he were their elder brother. Mitchell was the only one to put in a word for him. ' I've been puzzling it out,' said Mitchell, as he sat nursing . his best leg in the Union Office, ' and, as far as I can see, it all amounts to this We're all mistaken in Lord Douglas. We don't know the man. He's all right. We don't under- stand him. He's really a sensitive, good-hearted man who's been shoved a bit off the track by the world. It's the world's fault he's not to blame. You see, when he was a youngster he was the most good-natured kid in the school ; he was always soft, and, consequently, he was always being impose^ upon, and bullied, and knocked about. Whenever he got a penny to buy lollies he'd count 'em out carefully and divide 'em round amongst his schoolmates and brothers and sisters. He was the only one that worked at home, and consequently they all hated him. His father respected him, but didn't love him, because he wasn't a younger son, and wasn't bringing his father's grey hairs down in sorrow to the grave. If it was in Australia, probably Lord Douglas was an elder son and had to do all the hard graft, and teach himself at night, and sleep in a bark skillion while his younger brothers benefited they were born in the new brick house and went to boarding-schools. His mother had a contempt for him because he wasn't a black sheep and a prodigal, and, when the old man died, the rest of the family got all the stuff and Lord Douglas was kicked out because they could do without him now. And the family hated him like poison ever afterwards (especially his mother), and spread lies about him because they had treated him shamefully and because his mouth was shut they knew he wouldn't speak. Then probably he went in for Democ- D 50 CHILDREN OF THE racy and worked for Freedom, till Freedom trod on him once too often with her hob-nailed boots. Then the chances are, in the end, he was ruined by a girl or woman, and driven, against his will, to take refuge in pure individualism. He's all right, only we don't appreciate him. He's only fighting against his old ideals his old self that comes up sometimes and that's what makes him sweat his barmaids and servants, and hate us, and run us in ; and perhaps when he cuts up extra rough it's because his conscience kicks him when he thinks of the damned soft fool he used to be. He's all right take my word for it. It's all a mask. Why, he might be one of the kindest-hearted men in Bourke underneath.' Tom Hall rubbed his head and blinked, as if he was worried by an idea that there might be some facts in Mitchell's theories. ' You're allers findin' excuses for blacklegs an' scabs, Mitchell,' said Barcoo-Rot, who took Mitchell seriously (and who would have taken a laughing jackass seriously). ' Why, you'd find a white spot on a squatter. I wouldn't be surprised if you blacklegged yourself in the end.' This was an unpardonable insult, from a Union point of view, and the chaps half-unconsciously made room on the floor for Barcoo-Rot to fall after Jack Mitchell hit him. But Mitchell took the insult philosophically. ' Well, Barcoo-Rot,' he said, nursing the other leg, ' for the matter of that, I did find a white spot on a squatter once. He lent me a quid when I was hard up. There's white spots on the blackest characters if you only drop prejudice and look close enough. I suppose even Jack-the- Ripper's character was speckled. Why, I can even see spots on your character, sometimes, Barcoo-Rot. I've known white spots to spread on chaps' characters until they were little short of saints. Sometimes I even fancy I can feel my own wings sprouting. And as for turning blackleg well, I suppose I've got a bit of the crawler in my composi- 'LORD DOUGLAS' 51 tion (most of us have), and a man never knows what might happen to his principles." ' Well,' said Barcoo-Rot, ' I beg yer pardon ain't that enough ? ' ' No,' said Mitchell, ' you ought to wear a three-bushel bag and ashes for three months, and drink water; but since the police would send you to an asylum if you did that, I thing the best thing we can do is to go out and have a drink.' Lord Douglas married an Australian girl somewhere, somehow, and brought her to Bourke, and there were two little girls regular little fairies. She was a gentle, kind- hearted little woman, but she didn't seem to improve him much, save that he was very good to her. 'It's mostly that way,' commented Mitchell, 'When a boss gets married and has children he thinks he's got a greater right to grind his fellowmen and rob their wives and children. I'd never work for a boss with a big family it's hard enough to keep a single boss nowadays in this country.' After one stormy election, at the end of a long and bitter shearing strike, One-eyed Bogan, his trusty enemy, Barcoo- Rot, and one or two other enthusiastic reformers were charged with rioting, and got from one to three months' hard. And they had only smashed three windows of the Imperial Hotel and chased the Chinese cook into the river. ' I used to have some hopes for Democracy,' commented Mitchell, 'but I've got none now. How can you expect Liberty, Equality or Fraternity how can you expect Freedom and Universal Brotherhood and Equal Rights in a country where Sons of Light get three months' hard for breaking windows and bashing a Chinaman? It almost makes me long to sail away in a gallant barque.' There were other cases in connection with the rotten- 52 CHILDREN OF THE BUSH egging of Capitalistic candidates on the Imperial Hotel balcony, and it was partly on the evidence of Douglas and his friends that certain respectable Labour Leaders got heavy terms of imprisonment for rioting and 'sedition' and 'inciting,' in connection with organised attacks on blacklegs and their escorts. Retribution, if it was retribution, came suddenly and in a most unexpected manner to Lord Douglas. It seems he employed a second carpenter for six months to repair and make certain additions to the hotel, and put him off under various pretences until he owed him a hundred pounds or thereabout. At last, immediately after an exciting interview with Lord Douglas, the carpenter died suddenly of heart disease. The widow, a strong- minded Bushwoman, put a bailiff in the hotel on a very short notice and against the advice of her lawyer, who thought the case hopeless and the Lord Douglas bubble promptly burst. He had somehow come to be regarded as the proprietor of the hotel, but now the real proprietors or proprietor he was still said to be a priest turned Douglas out and put in a new manager. The old servants were paid after some trouble. The local storekeepers and one or two firms in Sydney, who had large accounts against the Imperial Hotel (and had trusted it, mainly because it was patronised by Capitalism and Fat), were never paid. Lord Douglas cleared out to Sydney, leaving his wife and children, for the present, with her brother, a hay-and- corn storekeeper, who also had a large and hopeless account against the hotel ; and when the brother went broke and left the district she rented a two-roomed cottage and took in dressmaking. Dressmaking didn't pay so well in the Bush then as it did in the old diggings' days when sewing-machines were scarce and the possession of one meant an independent living to any girl when diggers paid ten shillings for a strip of 'flannen' doubled over and sewn together, with C LORD DOUGLAS' 53 holes for arms and head, and called a shirt. Mrs Douglas had a hard time, with her two little girls, who were still better and more prettily dressed than any other children in Bourke. One grocer still called on her for orders and pretended to be satisfied to wait 'till Mr Douglas came back,' and when she would no longer order what he con- sidered sufficient provisions for her and the children, and commenced buying sugar, etc., by the pound, for cash, he one day sent a box of groceries round to her. He pretended it was a mistake. ' However,' he said, ' I'd be very much obliged if you could use 'em, Mrs Douglas. I'm overstocked now ; haven't got room for another tin of sardines in the shop. Don't you worry about bills, Mrs Douglas; I can wait till Douglas comes home. I did well enough out of the Imperial Hotel when your husband had it, and a pound's worth o' groceries won't hurt me now. I'm only too glad to get rid of some of the stock.' She cried a little, thought of the children, and kept the groceries. ' I suppose I'll be sold up soon meself if things don't git brighter,' said that grocer to a friend, 'so it doesn't matter much.' The same with Foley the butcher, who had a brogue with a sort of drawling groan in it, and was a cynic of the Mitchell school. 'You see,' he said, 'she's as proud as the devil, but when I send round a bit o' rawst, or porrk, or the undercut o' the blade-bawn, she thinks o' the little gur-r-ls before she thinks o' sendin' it back to me. That's where I've got the pull on her.' The Giraffe borrowed a horse and tip-dray one day at the beginning of winter and cut a load of firewood in the Bush, and next morning, at daylight, Mrs Douglas was nearly startled out of her life by a crash at the end of the cottage, which made her think that the chimney had 54 CHILDREN OF THE BUSH fallen in, or a tree fallen on the house; and when she slipped on a wrapper and looked out, she saw a load of short-cut wood by the chimney, and caught a glimpse of the back view of the Giraffe, who stood in the dray with his legs wide apart and was disappearing into the edge of the scrub; and soon the rapid clock-clock-clock of the wheels died away in the west, as if he were making for West Australia. The next we heard of Lord Douglas he had got two years' hard for embezzlement in connection with some canvassing he had taken up. Mrs Douglas fell ill a touch of brain-fever and one of the labourer's wives took care of the children while two others took turns in nursing. While she was recovering, Bob Brothers sent round the hat, and, after a conclave in the Union Office as mysterious as any meeting ever called with the object of downing bloated Capitalism it was discovered that one of the chaps who didn't wish his name to be mentioned had borrowed just twenty-five pounds from Lord Douglas in the old days and now wished to return it to Mrs Douglas. So the thing was managed, and if she had any suspicions she kept them to herself. She started a little fancy goods shop and got along fairly comfortable. Douglas, by the way, was, publicly, supposed, for her sake and because of the little girls, to be away in West Australia on the gold-fields. Time passes without much notice out-back, and one hot day, when the sun hung behind the fierce sandstorms from the north-west as dully lurid as he ever showed in a London fog, Lord Douglas got out of the train that had just finished its five-hundred-miles' run, and not seeing a new-chum porter, who started forward by force of habit to take his bag, he walked stiffly off the platform and down the main street towards his wife's cottage. He was very gaunt, and his eyes, to those who passed LORD DOUGLAS' 55 him closely, seemed to have a furtive, hunted expression. He had let his beard grow, and it had grown grey. It was within a few days of Christmas the same Christ- mas that we lost the pretty girl in the Salvation Army. As a rule the big shearing sheds within a fortnight of Bourke cut out in time for the shearers to reach the town and have their Christmas dinners and sprees and for some of them to be locked up over Christmas Day within sound of a church-going bell. Most of the chaps gathered in the Shearers' Union Office on New Year's Eve and discussed Douglas amongst other things. ' I vote we kick the cow out of the town ! ' snarled One- eyed Bogan, viciously. 'We can't do that,' said Bob Brothers (the Giraffe), speaking more promptly than usual. ' There's his wife and youngsters to consider, yer know.' ' He something well deserted his wife,' snarled Bogan, 'an' now he comes crawlin' back to her to keep him.' 'Well,' said Mitchell, mildly, 'but we ain't all got as much against him as you have, Bogan.' ' He made a crimson jail-bird of me ! ' snapped Bogan. 'Well,' said Mitchell, 'that didn't hurt you much, any- way; it rather improved your character if anything. Besides, he made a jail-bird of himself afterwards, so you ought to have a fellow-feeling a feathered feeling, so to speak. Now you needn't be offended, Bogan, we're all jail-birds at heart, only we haven't all got the pluck.' ' I'm in favour of blanky well tarrin' an' featherin' him an' kickin' him out of the town ! ' shouted Bogan. " It would be a good turn to his wife, too ; she'd be well rid of the ' 'Perhaps she's fond of him,' suggested Mitchell; 'I've known such cases before. I saw them sitting together on the verandah last night when they thought no one was looking.' ' He deserted her,' said One-eyed Bogan, in a climbing- down tone, 'and left her to starve.' 56 CHILDREN OF THE BUSH ' Perhaps the police were to blame for that,' said Mitchell. ' You know you deserted all your old mates once for three months, Bogan, and it wasn't your fault ' ' He seems to be a crimson pet of yours, Jack Mitchell,' said Bogan, firing up. 'Ah, well, all I know,' said Mitchell, standing up and stretching himself wearily, 'all I know is that he looked like a gentleman once, and treated us like a gentleman, and cheated us like a gentleman, and ran some of us in like a gentleman, and, as far as I can see, he's served his time like a gentleman and come back to face us and live himself down like a man. I always had a sneaking regard for a gentleman.' c Why, Mitchell, I'm beginning to think you are a gentle- man yourself,' said Jake Boreham. 'Well,' said Mitchell, 'I used to have a suspicion once that I had a drop of blue blood in me somewhere, and it worried me a lot; but I asked my old mother about it one day, and she scalded me God bless her ! and father chased me with a stockwhip, so I gave up making inquiries.' 'You'll join the bloomin' Capitalists next,' sneered One- eyed Bogan. ' I wish I could, Bogan,' said Mitchell. ' I'd take a trip to Paris and see for myself whether the Frenchwomen are as bad as they're made out to be, or go to Japan. But what are we going to do about Douglas ? ' ' Kick the skunk out of town, or boycott him ! ' said one or two. 'He ought to be tarred and feathered and hanged.' 'Couldn't do worse than hang him,' commented Jake Boreham, cheerfully. ' Oh, yes, we could,' said Mitchell, sitting down, resting his elbows on his knees, and marking his points with one forefinger on the other. ' For instance, we might boil him slow in tar. We might skin him alive. We might put him 'LORD DOUGLAS' 57 in a cage and poke him with sticks, with his wife and children in another cage to look on and enjoy the fun.' The chaps, who had been sitting quietly listening to Mitchell, and grinning, suddenly became serious and shifted their positions uneasily. ' But I can tell you what would hurt his feelings more than anything else we could do,' said Mitchell. 'Well, what is it, Jack?' said Tom Hall, rather im- patiently. 'Send round the hat and take up a collection for him,' said Mitchell, 'enough to let him get away with his wife and children and start life again in some less respectable town than Bourke. You needn't grin, I'm serious about it.' There was a thoughtful pause, and one or two scratched their heads. 'His wife seems pretty sick,' Mitchell went on in a reflective tone. ' I passed the place this morning and saw him scrubbing out the floor. He's been doing a bit of house painting for old Heegard to-day. I suppose he learnt it in jail. I saw him at work and touched my hat to him.' ' What ! ' cried Tom Hall, affecting to shrink from Mitchell in horror. ' Yes,' said Mitchell, ' I'm not sure that I didn't take my hat off. Now I know it's not Bush religion for a man to touch his hat, except to a funeral, or a strange roof or woman sometimes ; but when I meet a braver man than myself I salute him. I've only met two in my life.' ' And who were they, Jack ? ' asked Jake Boreham. 1 One,' said Mitchell ' one is Douglas, and the other well, the other was the man I used to be. But that's got nothing to do with it.' ' But perhaps Douglas thought you were crowing over him when you took off your hat to him sneerin' at him, like, Mitchell,' reflected Jake Boreham. ' No, Jake,' said Mitchell, growing serious suddenly. 58 CHILDREN OF THE BUSH ' There are ways of doing things that another man understands.' They all thought for a while. ' Well,' said Tom Hall, ' supposing we do take up a collection for him, he'd be too damned proud to take it.' ' But that's where we've got the pull on him,' said Mitchell, brightening up. ' I heard Dr Morgan say that Mrs Douglas wouldn't live if she wasn't sent away to a cooler place, and Douglas knows it ; and, besides, one of the little girls is sick. We've got him in a corner and he'll have to take the stuff. Besides, two years in jail takes a lot of the pride out of a man.' ' Well, I'm damned if I'll give a sprat to help the man who tried his best to crush the Unions ! ' said One-eyed Bogan. ' Damned if I will either ! ' said Barcoo-Rot. ' Now, look here, One-eyed Bogan,' said Mitchell, ' I don't like to harp on old things, for I know they bore you, but when you returned to public life that time no one talked of kicking you out of the town. In fact, I heard that the chaps put a few pounds together to help you get away for a while till you got over your modesty.' No one spoke. ' I passed Douglas's place on my way here from my camp to-night,' Mitchell went on musingly, ' and I saw him walking up and down in the yard with his sick child in his arms. You remember that little girl, Bogan ? I saw her run and pick up your hat and give it to you one day when you were trying to put it on with your feet. You remember, Bogan ? The shock nearly sobered you.' There was a very awkward pause. The position had become too psychological altogether and had to be ended somehow. The awkward silence had to be broken, and Bogan broke it. He turned up Bob Brothers's hat, which was lying on the table, and ' chucked in ' a ' quid,' qualify- ' LORD DOUGLAS ' 59 ing the hat and the quid, and disguising his feelings with the national oath of the land. 'We've had enough of this gory, maudlin, sentimental tommy-rot,' he said. ' Here, Barcoo, stump up or I'll belt it out of your hide ! I'll I'll take yer to pieces ! ' But Douglas didn't leave the town. He sent his wife and children to Sydney until the heat wave was past, built a new room onto the cottage, and started a book and newspaper shop, and a poultry farm in the back paddock, and flourished. They called him Mr Douglas for a while, then Douglas, then Percy Douglas, and now he is well-known as Old Daddy Douglas, and the Sydney Worker, Truth, Bulletin, to say nothing of Reynolds^ Newspaper and other democratic and seditious and ' scurrilous ' rags are on sale at his shop. He is big with schemes for locking the Darling River, and he gets his drink at O'Donohoo's. He is scarcely yet regarded as a straight-out democrat. He was a gentleman once, Mitchell said, and the old blood was not to be trusted. But, last elections, Douglas worked quietly for Unionism, and gave the leaders certain hints, and put them up to various electioneering dodges which enabled them to return, in the face of Monopoly, a Labour member who is as likely to go straight as long as any other Labour member. JACK CORNSTALK I MET with Jack Cornstalk in London to-day, He saw me and coo-eed from over the way. Oh ! the solemn-faced Londoners stared with surprise At his hair and his height as compared with his size ; For his trousers were short and his collar was low, And there's not room to coo-ee in London, I know ! But I said to him, ' Jack ! ' as he gripped my hand fast, ' Oh, I hear that our Country's a nation at last ! I hear they have launched the new ship of the State, And with men at the wheel who are steering it straight. I hear 'twas the vote of your Bush mates and you ; And, oh, tell me, Jack Cornstalk, if this can be true ? ' I hear that the bitter black strike times are o'er, And that Grabbitt & Co. shall crush Labour no more ; That Australians are first where Australia was last, And the day of the foreign adventurer's past ; That all things are coming we fought for so long; And, oh, tell me, Jack Cornstalk, if I have heard wrong ? ' For a moment he dropped the old grin that he wore He'd a light in his eyes that was not there before And he reached for my hand, which I gave, nothing loth. And replied in two words, and those words were ' My Oath ! ' ' They are standing up grand Toby Barton and See And Australia's all right. You can take it from me.' 60 THE BLINDNESS OF ONE-EYED BOGAN ' They judge not and they are not judged 'tis their philosophy (There's something wrong with every ship that sails upon the sea).' The Ballad of the Rouseabout. ND what became of One-eyed Bogan ? ' I asked Tom Hall when I met him and Jack Mitchell down in Sydney with their shearing cheques the Christmas before last. ' You'd better ask Mitchell, Harry,' said Tom. ' He can tell you about Bogan better than I can. But first, what about the drink we're going to have ? ' We turned up Hunter Street, out of Pitt Street, where a double line of fast electric tramway was running, and the 'bus companies still holding on, and turned into Warby's Hotel, where a counter lunch as good as many dinners you get for a shilling was included with a sixpenny drink. ' Get a quiet corner,' said Mitchell, ' I like to hear myself cackle.' So we took our beer out in the fernery and got a cool place at a little table in a quiet corner amongst the fern boxes. 'Well, One-eyed Bogan was a hard case, Mitchell,' I said. ' Wasn't he ? ' ' Yes,' said Mitchell, putting down his ' long-beer ' glass, 'he was.' ' Rather a bad egg ? ' 'Yes, a regular bad egg,' said Mitchell, decidedly. ' I heard he got caught cheating at cards,' I said. 61 62 4 Did you ? ' said Mitchell. ' Well, I believe he did. Ah, well,' he added reflectively, after another long pull, 'One-eyed Bogan won't cheat at cards any more.' Why ? ' I said. ' Is he dead then ? ' 'No,' said Mitchell, 'he's blind.' ' Good God ! ' I said, ' how did that happen ? ' 'He lost the other eye,' said Mitchell, and he took another drink ; ' ah, well, he won't cheat at cards any more unless there's cards invented for the blind.' ' How did it happen ? ' I asked, ' Well,' said Mitchell, ' you see, Harry, it was this way. Bogan went pretty free in Bourke after the shearing before last, and in the end he got mixed up in a very ugly-looking business : he was accused of doing two new-chum Jackeroos out of their stuff by some sort of confidence trick.' ' Confidence trick,' I said. ' I'd never have thought that One-eyed Bogan had the brains to go in for that sort of thing.' ' Well, it seems he had, or else he used somebody else's brains; there's plenty of broken-down English gentlemen sharpers knocking about out-back, you know, and Bogan might have been taking lessons from one. I don't know the rights of the case, it was hushed up, as you'll see presently; but anyway, the Jackeroos swore that Bogan had done 'em out of ten quid. They were both Cockneys and I suppose they reckoned themselves smart, but Bush- men have more time to think. Besides, Bogan's one eye was in his favour. You see he always kept his one eye fixed strictly on whatever business he had in hand ; if he'd had another eye to rove round and distract his attention and look at things on the outside, the chances are he would never have got into trouble.' ' Never mind that, Jack,' said Tom Hall. ' Harry wants to hear the yarn.' 'Well, to make it short, one of the Jackeroos went to the police and Bogan cleared out. His character was THE BLINDNESS OP ONE-EYED BOGAN 63 pretty bad just then, so there was a piece of blue paper out for him. Began didn't seem to think the thing was so serious as it was, for he only went a few miles down the river ani camped with his horses on a sort of island inside an anabranch, till the thing should blow over or the new-chums leave Bourke. 'Bogan's old enemy, Constable Campbell, got wind of Bogan's camp, and started out after him. He rode round the outside track and came in onto the river just below where the anabranch joins it, at the lower end of the island and right opposite Bogan's camp. You know what those billabongs are : dry gullies till the river rises from the Queensland rains and backs them up till the water runs round into the river again and makes anabranches of 'em places that you thought were hollows you'll find above water, and you can row over places you thought were hills. There's no water so treacherous and deceit- ful as you'll find in some of those billabongs. A man starts to ride across a place where he thinks the water is just over the grass, and blunders into a deep channel that wasn't there before with a steady undercurrent with the whole weight of the Darling River funnelled into it; and if he can't swim and his horse isn't used to it or sometimes if he can swim it's a case with him, and the Darling River cod hold an inquest on him, if they have time, before he's buried deep in Darling River mud for ever. And somebody advertises in the missing column for Jack Somebody who was last heard of in Australia.' ' Never mind that, Mitchell, go on,' I said. ' Well, Campbell knew the river and saw that there was a stiff current there, so he hailed Bogan. ' " Good day, Campbell," shouted Bogan. ' " I want you, Bogan," said Campbell. " Come across and bring your horses." ' " I'm damned if I will," says Bogan. " I'm not going to catch me death o' cold to save your skin. If you want me 64 CHILDREN OF THE BUSH you'll have to bloody well come and git me." Eogan was a good strong swimmer, and he had good horses, but he didn't try to get away I suppose he reckoned he'd have to face the music one time or another and one time is as good as another out-back. ' Campbell was no swimmer ; he had no temptation to risk his life you see it wasn't as in war with a lot of comrades watching ready to advertise a man as a coward for staying alive so he argued with Bogan and tried to get him to listen to reason, and swore at him. " I'll make it damned hot for you, Bogan," he said, " if I have to come over for you." ' "Two can play at that game," says Bogan. ' " Look here, Bogan," said Campbell, " I'll tell you what I'll do. If you give me your word that you'll come up to the police-station to-morrow I'll go back and say nothing about it. You can say you didn't know a warrant was out after you. It will be all the better for you in the end. Better give me your word, man." ' Perhaps Campbell knew Bogan better than any of us. ' " Now then, Bogan," he said, " don't be a fool. Give your word like a sensible man, and I'll go back. I'll give you five minutes to make up your mind." And he took out his watch. 1 But Bogan was nasty and wouldn't give his word, so there was nothing for it but for Campbell to make a try for him. ' Campbell had plenty of pluck, or obstinacy, which amounts to the same thing. He put his carbine and revolver under a log, out of the rain that was coming on, saw to his handcuffs, and then spurred his horse into the water, Bogan lit his pipe with a stick from his camp fire so Campbell said afterwards and sat down on his heels and puffed away, and waited for him. ' Just as Campbell's horse floundered into the current Bogan shouted to go back, but Campbell thought it was a THE BLINDNESS OP ONE-EYED BOGAN 65 threat and kept on. But Bogan had caught sight of a log coming down the stream, end on, with a sharp, splintered end, and before Campbell knew where he was, the sharp end of the log caught the horse in the flank. The horse started to plunge and struggle sideways, with all his legs, and Campbell got free of him as quick as he could. Now, you know, in some of those Darling River reaches the current will seem to run steadily for a while, and then come with a rush. (I was caught in one of those rushes once, when I was in swimming, and would have been drowned if I hadn't been born to be hanged.) Well, a rush came along just as Campbell got free from his horse, and he went down stream one side of a snag and his horse the other. Camp- bell's pretty stout, you know, and his uniform was tight, and it handicapped him. ' Just as he was being washed past the lower end of the snag he caught hold of a branch that stuck out of the water and held on. He swung round and saw Bogan running down to the point opposite him. Now, you know there was always a lot of low cunning about Bogan, and I suppose he reckoned that if he pulled Campbell out he'd stand a good show of getting clear of his trouble ; anyway, if he didn't save Campbell it might be said that he killed him besides, Bogan was a good swimmer, so there wasn't any heroism about it anyhow. Campbell was only a few feet from the bank, but Bogan started to strip to make the job look as big as possible, I suppose. He shouted to Campbell to say he was coming, and to hold on. Campbell said afterwards that Bogan seemed an hour undressing. The weight of the current was forcing down the bough that Campbell was hanging on to, and suddenly, he said, he felt a great feeling of helplessness take him by the shoulders. He yelled to Bogan and let go. ' Now, it happened that Jake Boreham and I were passing away the time between shearings, and we were having a sort of fishing and shooting loaf down the river in a boat arrange- 66 CHILDREN OF THE BUSH ment that Jake had made out of boards and tarred canvas. We called her the Jolly Coffin. We were just poking up the bank in the slack water, a few hundred yards below the Billabong, when Jake said, " Why, there's a horse or some- thing in the river ; " then he shouted, " No, by God, it's a man," and we poked the Coffin out into the stream for all she was worth. " Looks like two men fighting in the water," Jake shouts presently.