Robbery Under Arms Rolf Boldrewood (best way to read an ebook .TXT) đ
- Author: Rolf Boldrewood
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That day week Gracey and I were married, very quiet and private. We thought weâd have no one at the little church at Bargo but George and his wife, the old woman, and the chap as drove me home. Just as we were going into the church who should come rattling up on horseback but Maddie Barnes and her husbandâ âMrs. Moreton, as she was now, with a bright-looking boy of ten or eleven on a pony. She jumps off and gives the bridle to him. She looked just the same as ever, a trifle stouter, but the same saucy look about the eyes. âWell, Dick Marston,â says she, âhow are you? Glad to see you, old man. Youâve got him safe at last, Gracey, and I wish you joy. You came to Bellaâs wedding, Dick, and so I thought Iâd come to yours, though you kept it so awful quiet. How dâye think the old horse looks?â
âWhy, itâs never Rainbow?â says I. âItâs twelve years and over since I saw him last.â
âI didnât care if it was twenty,â said she. âHere he is, and goes as sound as a bell. His poor old teeth are getting done, but he ainât the only one that way, is he, Joe? Heâll never die if I can keep him alive. I have to give him cornmeal, though, so as he can grind it easy.â
âI believe she thinks more of that old moke than me and the children all put together,â says Joe Moreton.
âAnd why shouldnât I?â says Maddie, facing round at him just the old way. âIsnât he the finest horse that ever stood on legs, and didnât he belong to the finest gentleman that you or anyone else looked at? Donât say a word against him, for I canât stand it. I believe if you was to lay a whip across that old horse in anger Iâd go away and leave you, Joe Moreton, just as if you was a regular black stranger. Poor Rainbow! Isnât he a darling?â Here she stroked the old horseâs neck. He was rolling fat, and had a coat like satin. His legs were just as clean as ever, and he stood there as if he heard everything, moving his old head up and down the way he always didâ ânever still a moment. It brought back old times, and I felt soft enough, I tell you. Maddieâs lips were trembling again, too, and her eyes like two coals of fire. As for Joe, he said nothing more, and the best thing too. The boy led Rainbow over to the fence, and old George walked us all into the church, and that settled things.
After the words were said we all went back to Georgeâs together, and Maddie and her husband drank a glass of wine to our health, and wished us luck. They rode as far as the turn off to Rocky Flat with us, and then took the Turon road.
âGoodbye, Dick,â says Maddie, bending down over the old horseâs neck. âYouâve got a stunning good wife now, if ever any man had in the whole world. Mind youâre an A1 husband, or weâll all round on you, and your life wonât be worth having; and Iâve got the best horse in the country, havenât I? See where the bullet went through his poor neck. Thereâs no lady in the land got one thatâs a patch on him. Steady, now, Rainbow, weâll be off in a minute. You shall see my little Jim there take him over a hurdle yard. He can ride a bit, as young as he is. Pity poor old Jim ainât here today, isnât it, Dick? Think of him being cold in his grave now, and we here. Well, itâs no use crying, is it?â
And off went Maddie at a pace that gave Joe and the boy all they knew to catch her.
Weâre to live here for a month or two till I get used to outdoor work and the regular old bush life again. Thereâs no life like it, to my fancy. Then we start, bag and baggage, for one of Georgeâs Queensland stations, right away up on the Barcoo, that Iâm to manage and have a share in.
It freshens me up to think of making a start in a new country. Itâs a long way from where we were born and brought up; but all the better for that. Of course theyâll know about me; but in any part of Australia, once a chap shows that heâs given up cross doings and means to go straight for the future, the people of the country will always lend him a helping hand, particularly if heâs married to such a wife as Gracey. Iâm not afraid of any of my troubles in the old days being cast up to me; and men are so scarce and hard to get west of the Barcoo that no one that once had Dick Marstonâs help at a muster is likely to remind him of such an old story as that of âRobbery Under Arms.â
EndnotesThis is the authorâs preface to the abridged one-volume edition published in 1889. ââ S.E. Editor â©
âGibbersâ: boulders. â©
âGinâ: a black woman. â©
ColophonRobbery Under Arms
was published in 1883 by
Rolf Boldrewood.
Google
sponsored the production of this ebook for
Standard Ebooks.
It was produced by
David Grigg,
and is based on a transcription produced in 1998 by
Alan R. Light and David Widger
for
Project Gutenberg
and on a transcription produced in 2021 by
David Grigg
for Standard Ebooks
and on digital scans available at the
Internet Archive and at the National Library of Australia.
The cover page is adapted from
The Golden Splendour
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