While the Billy Boils Henry Lawson (best ereader for pc TXT) đ
- Author: Henry Lawson
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One day in the shed, during smoke-ho the devil whispered to a shearer named Geordie that it would be a lark to shear the cookâs dogâ âthe Evil One having previously arranged that the dog should be there, sitting close to Geordieâs pen, and that the shearer should have a fine lamb comb on his machine. The idea was communicated through Geordie to his mates, and met with entire and general approval; and for five or ten minutes the air was kept alive by shouting and laughter of the men, and the protestations of the dog. When the shearer touched skin, he yelled âTar!â and when he finished he shouted âWool away!â at the top of his voice, and his mates echoed him with a will. A picker-up gathered the fleece with a great show of labour and care, and tabled it, to the well-ventilated disgust of old Scotty, the wool-roller. When they let the dog go he struck for homeâ âa clean-shaven poodle, except for a ferocious moustache and a tuft at the end of his tail.
The cookâs assistant said that heâd have given a five-pound note for a portrait of Curry-and-Rice when that poodle came back from the shed. The cook was naturally very indignant; he was surprised at firstâ âthen he got mad. He had the whole afternoon to get worked up in, and at teatime he went for the men properly.
âWotter yer growlinâ about?â asked one. âWotâs the matter with yer, anyway?â
âI donât know nothing about yer dog!â protested a rouseabout; âwotyer gettinâ on to me for?â
âWotter they bin doinâ to the cook now?â inquired a ring leader innocently, as he sprawled into his place at the table. âCanât yer let Curry alone? Wot dâyer want to be chyackinâ him for? Give it a rest.â
âWell, look here, chaps,â observed Geordie, in a determined tone, âI call it a shame, thatâs what I call it. Why couldnât you leave an old manâs dog alone? It was a mean, dirty trick to do, and I suppose you thought it funny. You ought to be ashamed of yourselves, the whole lot of you, for a drafted mob of crawlers. If Iâd been there it wouldnât have been done; and I wouldnât blame Curry if he was to poison the whole convicted push.â
General lowering of faces and pulling of hats down over eyes, and great working of knives and forks; also sounds like men trying not to laugh.
âWhy couldnât you play a trick on another manâs darg?â said Curry. âItâs no use tellinâ me. I can see it all as plain as if I was on the boardâ âall of you runninâ anâ shoutinâ anâ cheerinâ anâ laughinâ, and all over shearinâ and ill-usinâ a poor little darg! Why couldnât you play a trick on another manâs darg?â ââ ⊠It doesnât matter muchâ âIâm nearly done cookieâ here now.â ââ ⊠Only that Iâve got a family to think of I wouldnât âaâ stayed so long. Iâve got to be up at five every morninâ, anâ donât get to bed till ten at night, cookinâ anâ bakinâ anâ cleaninâ for you anâ waitinâ on you. First one lot in from the wool-wash, anâ then one lot in from the shed, anâ another lot in, anâ at all hours anâ times, anâ all wantinâ their meals kept hot, anâ then they ainât satisfied. And now you must go anâ play a dirty trick on my darg! Why couldnât you have a lark with some other manâs darg!â
Geordie bowed his head and ate as though he had a cud, like a cow, and could chew at leisure. He seemed ashamed, as indeed we all wereâ âsecretly. Poor old Curryâs oft-repeated appeal, âWhy couldnât you play a trick with another manâs dog?â seemed to have something pathetic about it. The men didnât notice that it lacked philanthropy and logic, and probably the cook didnât notice it either, else he wouldnât have harped on it. Geordie lowered his face, and just then, as luck or the devil would have it, he caught sight of the dog. Then he exploded.
The cook usually forgot all about it in an hour, and then, if you asked him what the chaps had been doing, heâd say, âOh, nothing! nothing! Only their larks!â But this time he didnât; he was narked for three days, and the chaps marvelled much and were sorry, and treated him with great respect and consideration. They hadnât thought heâd take it so hardâ âthe dog shearing businessâ âelse they wouldnât have done it. They were a little puzzled too, and getting a trifle angry, and would shortly be prepared to take the place of the injured party, and make things unpleasant for the cook. However, he brightened up towards the end of the week, and then it all came out.
âI wouldnât âaâ minded so much,â he said, standing by the table with a dipper in one hand, a bucket in the other, and a smile on his face. âI wouldnât âaâ minded so much only theyâll think me a flash man in Bourke with that theer darg trimmed up like that!â
âDossing Outâ and âCampingâAt least two hundred poor beggars were counted sleeping out on the pavements of the main streets of Sydney the other nightâ âgrotesque bundles of rags lying under the verandas of the old Fruit Markets and York Street shops, with their heads to the wall and their feet to the gutter. It was raining and cold that night, and the unemployed had been driven in from Hyde Park and the bleak Domainâ âfrom dripping trees, damp seats, and drenched grassâ âfrom the rain, and cold, and the wind. Some had sheets of old newspapers to cover themâ âand some hadnât. Two were mates, and they divided a Herald between them. One had a sheet of brown paper, and another (lucky man!)
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