Such Is Life Joseph Furphy (ebook reader screen .TXT) đ
- Author: Joseph Furphy
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The repast being concluded, the drivers went into committee on the subject of grassâ âa vital question in â83, as you may remember.
âItâs this way,â said Mosey imperatively, and deftly weaving into his address the thin red line of puissant adjective; âYou dunno what youâre doinâ when youâre foolinâ with this run. Sheâs hair-trigger at the best oâ times, anâ sheâs on full cock this year. Best watched station on the track. Itâs risk whatever way you take it. Weâre middlinâ safe to be collared in the selection, anâ weâre jist as safe to be collared in the ram-paddick. Choice between the divil anâ the dam. Anâ thereâs too big a township oâ wagons together. Twoâs enough, anâ threeâs a glutton, for sich a season as this.â
âI think Cooper and I had better push on to the ram-paddock,â suggested Thompson. âYou three can work on the selection. Division of labourâs the secret of success, they say.â
âSecret of Englandâs greatness,â mused Dixon. âI forgit what the (irrelevant expletive) that is.â
âThe true secret of Englandâs greatness lies in her dependencies, Mr. Dixon,â replied Willoughby handsomely; and straightway the serene, appreciative expression of the bullock driverâs face, rightly interpreted, showed that his mind was engaged in a Graeco-Roman conflict with the polysyllable, the latter being uppermost.
âWell, no,â said Mosey, replying to Thompson; âno use separatinâ now; itâs onây spreadinâ the risk; we should âaâ separated yesterday. I wouldnât misdoubt the selection, onây Cunningham told me the other day, Magomeryâs shiftinâ somebody to live there. If thatâs so, itâs up a tree, straight. The ram-paddickâs always a riskâ âtoo near the station.â
âThe hut on the selection was empty a week ago,â I remarked. âI know it, for I camped there one night.â
âGood grass?â inquired a chorus of voices.
âAbout the best Iâve had this season.â
âWeâll chance the selection,â said Mosey decidedly. âSomebody can ride on ahead, anâ see the coast clear. But they wonât watch a bit of a paddick in the thick oâ the shearinâ, when thereâs nobody livinâ in it.â
âSquatters hed orter fine grass fâr wool teams, anâ glad oâ the chance,â observed Price, with unprintable emphasis.
âLot of sense in that remark,â commented Mosey, with a similar potency of adjective.
âWell, this is about the last place God made,â growled Cooper, the crimson thread of kinship running conspicuously through his observation, notwithstanding its narrow provinciality.
âRoll up, Port Phillipers! the Sydney manâs goinâ to strike a match!â retorted Mosey. âI wonder what fetched a feller like you onto bad startinâ-ground. I swear we didnât want no lessons.â
Cooper was too lazy to reply; and we smoked dreamily, while my kangaroo dog silently abstracted a boiled leg of mutton from Priceâs tuckerbox, and carried it out of sight. By-and-by, all eyes converged on a shapeless streak which had moved into sight in the restless, glassy glitter of the plain, about a mile away.
âWarrigal Alf going out on the lower track,â remarked Thompson, at length. âHe was coming behind Baxter and Donovan yesterday, but he stopped opposite the station, talking to Montgomery and Martin, and the other fellows lost the run of him. I wonder where he camped last night? He ought to be able to tell us where the safest grass is, considering heâs had a load in from the station. But to tell you the truth, Iâm in favour of the ram-paddock. If weâre caught there, weâll most likely only get insultedâ âand we can stand a lot of thatâ âbut if weâre caught in the selection, itâs about seven years. Then we can make the Lignum Swamp tomorrow from the ram-paddock, and we canât make it from the selection. So I think we better be moving; itâll be dark enough before we unyoke. Iâve worked on that ram-paddock so often that I seem to have a sort of title to it.â
âBut thereâs lots oâ changes since you was here last,â said Mosey. âMagomery heâs beginninâ to think heâs got a sort oâ title to the ram-paddick now, considerinâ itâs all purchased. Tell you what Iâll do: Iâll slip over in two minits on Valiparaiser, anâ consult with Alf. Me anâ himâs as thick as thieves.â
âIâll go with you, Mosey,â said I. âIâve got some messages for him. Keep an eye on my dog, Steve.â
Mosey untied the fine upstanding grey horse from the rear of his wagon; I hitched Bunyip to a tree, and mounted Fancy, and we cantered away together across the plain; the ponderous empty wagonâ âSydney-side patternâ âwith eight bullocks in yoke and twelve travelling loose, coming more clearly into detail through the vibrating translucence of the lower atmosphere. Alf didnât deign to stop. I noticed a sinister smile on his sad, stern face as Mosey gaily accosted him.
âAnâ howâs the world usinâ you, Alf? Got red oâ Pilot, I notice. Ever see sich a suck-in? Best at a distance, ainât he? Tell you what I come over for, Alf: They say things is middlinâ hot here on Runnymede; anâ weâre in a (sheol) of a (adjective) stink about what to do with our frames tonight. Our wagons is over there on the other track, among the pines. Where did you stop lasâ night? Your carrionâs as full as ticks.â
âI had them in the selection; took them out this morning after they lay down.â
âGood shot!â
âWhy, I donât see how it concerns you.â
âThe selectionâs reasonable safeâ âainât it?â
âPlease yourself about that.â
âIs the ram-paddick safe?â
âNo.â
âIs there enough water in the tank at the selection?â
âHow do I know? There was enough for me.â
âI say, Alf,â said I: âStyles, of Karowra, told me to let you know, if possible, that you were right about the boring rods; and
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