While the Billy Boils Henry Lawson (best ereader for pc TXT) đ
- Author: Henry Lawson
Book online «While the Billy Boils Henry Lawson (best ereader for pc TXT) đ». Author Henry Lawson
The mild financial boarder, with desperate courage, is telling the landlady that heâll have to shift next weekâ âit is too far to go to work, he cannot always get down in time; he is very sorry he has to go, he says; he is very comfortable here, but it canât be helped; anyway, as soon as he can get work nearer, heâll come back at once; also (oh, what cowards men are when women are concerned), he says he wishes she could shift and take a house down at the other end of the town. She says (at least here are some fragments of her gabble which we caught and shorthanded): âWell, Iâm very sorry to lose you, Mr. Sampson, very sorry indeed; but of course if you must go, you must. Of course you canât be expected to walk that distance every morning, and you mustnât be getting to work late, and losing your placeâ ââ ⊠Of course we could get breakfast an hour earlier ifâ ââ ⊠well, as I said before, Iâm sorry to lose you and, indeedâ ââ ⊠You wonât forget to come and see usâ ââ ⊠glad to see you at any timeâ ââ ⊠Well, anyway, if you ever want to come back, you know, your bed will be always ready for you, and youâll be treated just the same, and made just as comfortableâ âyou wonât forget thatâ (he says he wonât); âand you wonât forget to come to dinner sometimesâ (he says he wonât); âand, of courseâ ââ ⊠You know I always tryâ ââ ⊠Donât forget to drop in sometimesâ ââ ⊠Well, anyway, if you ever do happen to hear of a decent young fellow who wants a good, clean, comfortable home, youâll be sure to send him to me, will you?â (He says he will.) âWell, of course, Mr. Sampson, etc., etc., etc., and-so-on, and-so-on, and-so-on, and-so-on,â ââ âŠâ Itâs enough to give a man rats.
He escapes, and we regard his departure very much as a gang of hopeless convicts might regard the unexpected liberation of one of their number.
This is the sort of life that gives a man a God-Almighty longing to break away and take to the bush.
His Colonial OathI lately met an old schoolmate of mine upcountry. He was much changed. He was tall and lank, and had the most hideous bristly red beard I ever saw. He was working on his fatherâs farm. He shook hands, looked anywhere but in my faceâ âand said nothing. Presently I remarked at a venture:
âSo poor old Mr. B., the schoolmaster, is dead.â
âMy oath!â he replied.
âHe was a good old sort.â
âMy oath!â
âTime goes by pretty quick, doesnât it?â
His oath (colonial).
âPoor old Mr. B. died awfully sudden, didnât he?â
He looked up the hill, and said: âMy oath!â
Then he added: âMy blooming oath!â
I thought, perhaps, my city rig or manner embarrassed him, so I stuck my hands in my pockets, spat, and said, to set him at his ease: âItâs blanky hot today. I donât know how you blanky blanks stand such blank weather! Itâs blanky well hot enough to roast a crimson carnal bullock; ainât it?â Then I took out a cake of tobacco, bit off
Comments (0)