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
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 a quarter, and pretended to chew. He replied:
âMy oath!â
The conversation flagged here. But presently, to my great surprise, he came to the rescue with:
âHe finished me, yer know.â
âFinished? How? Who?â
He looked down towards the river, thought (if he did think) and said: âFinished me edyercation, yer know.â
âOh! you mean Mr. B.?â
âMy oathâ âhe finished me first-rate.â
âHe turned out a good many scholars, didnât he?â
âMy oath! Iâm thinkinâ about going down to the traininâ school.â
âYou ought toâ âI would if I were you.â
âMy oath!â
âThose were good old times,â I hazarded, âyou remember the old bark school?â
He looked away across the sidling, and was evidently getting uneasy. He shifted about, and said:
âWell, I must be goinâ.â
âI suppose youâre pretty busy now?â
âMy oath! So long.â
âWell, goodbye. We must have a yarn some day.â
âMy oath!â
He got away as quickly as he could.
I wonder whether he was changed after allâ âor, was it I? A man does seem to get out of touch with the bush after living in cities for eight or ten years.
âSome DayâThe two travellers had yarned late in their camp, and the moon was getting low down through the mulga. Mitchellâs mate had just finished a rather racy yarn, but it seemed to fall flat on Mitchellâ âhe was in a sentimental mood. He smoked a while, and thought, and then said:
âAh! there was one little girl that I was properly struck on. She came to our place on a visit to my sister. I think she was the best little girl that ever lived, and about the prettiest. She was just eighteen, and didnât come up to my shoulder; the biggest blue eyes you ever saw, and she had hair that reached down to her knees, and so thick you couldnât span it with your two handsâ âbrown and glossyâ âand her skin with like lilies and roses. Of course, I never thought sheâd look at a rough, ugly, ignorant brute like me, and I used to keep out of her way and act a little stiff towards her; I didnât want the others to think I was gone on her, because I knew theyâd laugh at me, and maybe sheâd laugh at me more than all. She would come and talk to me, and sit near me at table; but I thought that that was on account of her good nature, and she pitied me because I was such a rough, awkward chap. I was gone on that girl, and no joking; and I felt quite proud to think she was a countrywoman of mine. But I wouldnât let her know that, for I felt sure sheâd only laugh.
âWell, things went on till I got the offer of two or three yearsâ work on a station up near the border, and I had to go, for I was hard up; besides, I wanted to get away. Stopping round where she was only made me miserable.
âThe night I left they were all down at the station to see me offâ âincluding the girl I was gone on. When the train was ready to start she was standing away by herself on the dark end of the platform, and my sister kept nudging me and winking, and fooling about, but I didnât know what she was driving at. At last she said:
âââGo and speak to her, you noodle; go and say goodbye to Edie.â
âSo I went up to where she was, and, when the others turned their backsâ â
âââWell, goodbye, Miss Brown,â I said, holding out my hand; âI donât suppose Iâll ever see you again, for Lord knows when Iâll be back. Thank you for coming to see me off.â
âJust then she turned her face to the light, and I saw she was crying. She was trembling all over. Suddenly she said, âJack! Jack!â just like that, and held up her arms like this.â
Mitchell was speaking in a tone of voice that didnât belong to him, and his mate looked up. Mitchellâs face was solemn, and his eyes were fixed on the fire.
âI suppose you gave her a good hug then, and a kiss?â asked the mate.
âI sâpose so,â snapped Mitchell. âThere is some things a man doesnât want to joke about.â ââ ⊠Well, I think weâll shove on one of the billies, and have a drink of tea before we turn in.â
âI suppose,â said Mitchellâs mate, as they drank their tea, âI suppose youâll go back and marry her some day?â
âSome day! Thatâs it; it looks like it, doesnât it? We all say, âSome day.â I used to say it ten years ago, and look at me now. Iâve been knocking round for five years, and the last two years constant on the track, and no show of getting off it unless I go for good, and what have I got for it? I look like going home and getting married, without a penny in my pocket or a rag to my back scarcely, and no show of getting them. I swore Iâd never go back home without a cheque, and, whatâs more, I never will; but the cheque days are past. Look at that boot! If we were down among the settled districts weâd be called tramps and beggars; and whatâs the difference? Iâve been a fool, I know, but Iâve paid for it; and now thereâs nothing for it but to tramp, tramp, tramp for your tucker, and keep tramping till you get old and careless and dirty, and older, and more careless and dirtier, and you get used to the dust and sand, and heat, and flies, and mosquitoes,
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