Robbery Under Arms Rolf Boldrewood (best way to read an ebook .TXT) đ
- Author: Rolf Boldrewood
Book online «Robbery Under Arms Rolf Boldrewood (best way to read an ebook .TXT) đ». Author Rolf Boldrewood
When my twelve years was within a couple of months or so of being up I began to hear that there was a deal of in-and-out sort of work about my getting my freedom. Old George Storefield and Mr. Falklandâ âboth of âem in the Upper Houseâ âand one or two more people that had some say with the Government, was working back and edge for me. There was a party on the other side that wasnât willing as I should lose a day or an hour of my sentence, and that made out I ought to have been hanged âright away,â as old Arizona Bill would have said, when I was first taken. Well, I donât blame any of âem for that; but if they could have known the feelings of a man thatâs done a matter of twelve years, and thinks he mightâ âyes, mightâ âsmell the fresh air and feel the grass under his feet in a week or twoâ âwell, theyâd perhaps consider a bit.
Whatever way it came out I couldnât say, but the big man of the Government people at that timeâ âthe Minister that had his say in all these sort of thingsâ âtook it into his head that Iâd had about enough of it, if I was to be let out at all; that the steel had been pretty well taken out of me, and that, from what he knew of my people and so on, I wasnât likely to trouble the Government again. And he was right. All I wanted was to be let out a pardoned man, that had done bad things, and helped in worse; but had paidâ âand paid dear, God knowsâ âfor every pound heâd got crooked and every day heâd wasted in cross work. If Iâd been sent back for them three years, I do râaly believe something of dadâs old savage blood would have come uppermost in me, and Iâd have turned reckless and revengeful like to my lifeâs end.
Anyhow, as I said before, the Ministerâ âheâd been into the gaol and had a look once or twiceâ âmade up his mind to back me right out; and he put it so before the Governor that he gave an order for my pardon to be made out, or for me to be discharged the day my twelve years was up, and to let off the other three, along of my good behaviour in the gaol, and all the rest of it.
This leaked out somehow, and there was the deuceâs own barney over it. When some of the Parliament men and them sort of coves in the country that never forgives anybody heard of it they began to buck, and no mistake. Youâd have thought every bushranger that ever had been shopped in New South Wales had been hanged or kept in gaol till he died; nothing but petitions and letters to the papers; no end of bobbery. The only paper that had a word to say on the side of a poor devil like me was the Turon Star. He said that âDick Marston and his brother Jim, not to mention Starlight (who paid his debts at any rate, unlike some people he could name who had signed their names to this petition), had worked manly and true at the Turon diggings for over a year. They were respected by all who knew them, and had they not been betrayed by a revengeful woman might have lived thenceforth a life of industry and honourable dealing. He, for one, upheld the decision of the Chief Secretary. Thousands of the Turon miners, men of worth and intelligence, would do the same.â
The Governor hadnât been very long in the colony, and they tried it on all roads to get him to go back on his promise to me. They began bullying, and flattering, and preaching at him if such a notorious criminal as Richard Marston was to be allowed to go forth with a free pardon after a comparatively shortâ âshort, think of that, short!â âimprisonment, what a bad example it will be to the rising generation, and so on.
They managed to put the thing back for a week or two till I was nearly drove mad with fretting, and being doubtful which way it would go.
Lucky for me it was, and for some other people as well, the Governor was one of those men that takes a bit of trouble and considers over a thing before he says yes or no. When he says a thing he sticks to it. When he goes forward a step he puts his foot down, and all the blowing, and cackle, and yelping in the world wonât shift him.
Whether the Chief Secretary would have taken my side if heâd known what a dust the thing would have raised, and how near his Ministersâ âor whatever they call âemâ âwas to going out along with poor Dick Marston, I canât tell. Some people say he wouldnât. Anyhow, he stuck to his word; and the Governor just said heâd given his decision about the matter, and he hadnât the least intention of altering itâ âwhich showed he knew something of the world, as well as intended to be true to his own opinions. The whole thing blew over after a bit, and the people of the country soon found out that there wasnât such another Governor (barrinâ one) as the Queen had the sending out of.
The day it was all settled the head gaoler comes to me, and says he, âRichard Marston, the Governor and Council has been graciously pleased to order that you be discharged from her Majestyâs gaol upon the completion of twelve years of imprisonment; the term of three yearsâ further imprisonment being remitted on account of your uniform good conduct while in the said gaol. You are now free!â
I heard it all as if it had been the
Comments (0)