Such Is Life Joseph Furphy (ebook reader screen .TXT) đ
- Author: Joseph Furphy
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In a couple of minutes, one end of the wool-ropeâ âsixty feet long and an inch and a-half in diameterâ âwas looped round the roots of the bullockâs horns, and the team was attached to the fall. Then a slow, steady strain drove Damperâs nose into the ground, and gently shifted him, first forward, then upward, then on to the surface, where he slid smoothly to the solid ground. We released him there, and he staggered to his feet, shook himself thoroughly, and followed the team to the camp, ravenously snatching mouthfuls of grass as he went along.
Price and Mosey had just got under way. Willoughby was trying to yoke Dixonâs leaders, while Dixon, owing to his screwmatics, could do nothing but sit on his horse, cursing with wearisome tautology, and casting glances of frantic apprehension toward the ram-paddock. His anxiety was not unreasonable, for there had just come into sight an upright speck, too small to be a horseman; and it was easy to guess who was the likeliest person to be coming on foot from that direction. There is a limit to the dignified sufficiency even of a bullock driver; and the unhappy conjecture of circumstances had driven Dixon past this point.
âStiddy, now; go stiddy, anâ keep yer (adj.) mouth shut. Now lay right (adv.) bang up to him; jam him agen the offsider, soâs he canât shift. There! block him! (Sheol)! Let him rip now. O may theâ ââ etc., etc.
âDixon! Dixon! I must protestâ ââ
âPurtest be (verbed). Fetch âem up agen. Donât be frightened; they âonât bite. Yoke on yer other (adj.) shoulder. Right. Git well up agen him this time. Lay yer whole (adj.) weight onto him, anâ jam him, soâs he canât budge if it was to save his (adj.) life.â
Willoughby, with the yoke on his shoulder, and the offside bow in his hand, gingerly approached the excited bullocks, essaying a light touch on the near-siderâs shrinking shoulder. The next moment, he was reeling backward, and both bullocks were gone. Eveâs curse on Cain, in Byronâs fine drama, is mere balderdash to what followed on Dixonâs part.
âDem your soul, you uncultivated savage! you force me to inform you that your helpless condition was my incentive to these well-meant efforts on your behalfâ âas, begad! it is now the only consideration which restrainsâ ââ
âO, go to (sheol). Youâre no (adj.) good. You ainât fit to (purvey offal to Bruin). Anâ hereâs them (adj.) sneaks gone; anâ Martin heâll be on top oâ me in about two (adj.) twos; anâ me left by my own (adj.) self, like a (adj.) natey cat in a (adj.) trap. May the holyâ ââ etc., etc. âIf Iâd that horse,â he continued, glancing furiously at Cleopatra, âIâd make him smell (adj. sheol).â
âNonsense, Dixon,â said I pleasantly; âthe horse is not annoying you. Ah! Willoughby; Ne ultra-no, letâs seeâ âNe sutor ultra crepidam. Let me try my hand there. I took my degree of B.D.â âwhich doesnât always signify Bachelor of Divinityâ âbefore you took your B.A. Will you just bring up the unspeakables as Dixon points them out.â
âPalmam qui meruit ferat,â responded Willoughby, instantly recovering his temper. âSmokerâ âNelsonâ âdem your skins, come up once more!â
Dixonâs bullocks were exceptionally docile, for that uncultivated animal was one of the most humane and skilful drivers in Riverina; therefore, about twenty-five minutes sufficed to place his team in readiness for a start.
âYou might as well come along oâ me for a change,â said he to Willoughby. âWeâll git on grand together. Iâm a quiet, agreeable sort oâ (person), though I say it myself; anâ I wouldnât wish for better (adj.) company nor you. Come on; you wonât be sorry after.â
âQuocunque trahunt fata sequamur,â rejoined Willoughby, bowing gaily to me. Then taking up the whipâ âDixon was a virtuoso in whips, and always carried one with six feet of handle and twelve feet of lashâ âhe aimed at the team, collectively, a clip which, in the most literal sense, recoiled on himself. And so the officerâs son and the sojerâs son took their way together; to become, as I afterward learned, the most attached and mutually considerate friends on the track. Such is life.
Thompson and Cooper, now ready for the road, were repairing the fence as well as they could. This being done, and the relics of the fire kicked about, they put their teams in motion, leaving little trace of the camp, except Bumâs mare, standing asleep outside the fence. The ominous speck on the plain had approached much nearer, but had taken definite form as an emu; and now the negative blessing of escape seemed like a positive benefaction. âIf,â says Carlyle, âthou wert condemned to be hangedâ âwhich is probably less than thou deservestâ âthou wouldest esteem it happiness to be shot.â
Serene gratitude therefore shone in the frank faces of the outlaws; tempered, however, in Thompsonâs case, by salutary remorse, for his companion had reproachfully asked him what the (adj. sheol) good his swearing had done.
We could see Priceâs teams stopped, half a mile away; one of the loads appearing low, and canted over to the off side; bogged, evidently. Dixonâs wagon was close in front of us; Willoughby was zealously flogging himself, and occasionally we could hear Dixonâs voice in encouragement and counsel.
The place where Priceâs wagon was stuck was not a creek, but merely a narrow belt of treacherous ground. Mosey hadnât gone down six inches, but Price had happened on a bad place, and his wagon had found the bottom. All Moseyâs team, except the polers, had been hooked on, but with no result beyond the breaking of a well-worn chain.
âAinât got puddinâ enough, Thompson,â said Mosey, as my companions stopped their
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