While the Billy Boils Henry Lawson (best ereader for pc TXT) đ
- Author: Henry Lawson
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âItâs time yer turned in, Brum,â he said, lifting the body down.
He carried it to the grave and dropped it into one corner like a post. He arranged the bark so as to cover the face, and, by means of a piece of clothesline, lowered the body to a horizontal position. Then he threw in an armful of gum-leaves, and then, very reluctantly, took the shovel and dropped in a few shovelfuls of earth.
âAnâ this is the last of Brummy,â he said, leaning on his spade and looking away over the tops of the ragged gums on the distant range.
This reflection seemed to engender a flood of memories, in which the old man became absorbed. He leaned heavily upon his spade and thought.
âArter all,â he murmured sadly, âarter allâ âit were Brummy.â
âBrummy,â he said at last. âItâs all over now; nothinâ matters nowâ ânothinâ didnât ever matter, norâ ânor donât. You uster say as how it âud be all right termorrerâ (pause); âtermorrerâs come, Brummyâ âcome fur youâ âit ainât come fur me yet, butâ âitâs a-cominâ.â
He threw in some more earth.
âYer donât remember, Brummy, anâ mebbe yer donât want to rememberâ âI donât want to rememberâ âbutâ âwell, but, yer see thatâs where yer got the pull on me.â
He shovelled in some more earth and paused again.
The dog rose, with ears erect, and looked anxiously first at his master and then into the grave.
âTheer oughter be somethinâ sed,â muttered the old man; âââtainât right to put âim under like a dog. Theer oughter be some sort oâ sarmin.â He sighed heavily in the listening silence that followed this remark and proceeded with his work. He filled the grave to the brim this time, and fashioned the mound carefully with his spade. Once or twice he muttered the words, âI am the rassaraction.â As he laid the tools quietly aside, and stood at the head of the grave, he was evidently trying to remember the something that ought to be said. He removed his hat, placed it carefully on the grass, held his hands out from his sides and a little to the front, drew a long deep breath, and said with a solemnity that greatly disturbed Five Bob: âHashes ter hashes, dus ter dus, Brummyâ âanââ âanâ in hopes of a great anâ gerlorious rassaraction!â
He sat down on a log near by, rested his elbows on his knees and passed his hand wearily over his foreheadâ âbut only as one who was tired and felt the heat; and presently he rose, took up the tools, and walked back to the hut.
And the sun sank again on the grand Australian bushâ âthe nurse and tutor of eccentric minds, the home of the weird, and of much that is different from things in other lands.
Our PipesThe moon rose away out on the edge of a smoky plain, seen through a sort of tunnel or arch in the fringe of mulga behind which we were campedâ âJack Mitchell and I. The timber proper was just behind us, very thick and very dark. The moon looked like a big new copper boiler set on edge on the horizon of the plain, with the top turned towards us and a lot of old rags and straw burning inside.
We had tramped twenty-five miles on a dry stretch on a hot dayâ âswagmen know what that means. We reached the water about two hours âafter darkââ âswagmen know what that means. We didnât sit down at once and restâ âwe hadnât rested for the last ten miles. We knew that if we sat down we wouldnât want to get up again in a hurryâ âthat, if we did, our leg-sinews, especially those of our calves, would âdrawâ like red-hot wireâs. You see, we hadnât been long on the track this timeâ âit was only our third day out. Swagmen will understand.
We got the billy boiled first, and some leaves laid down for our beds and the swags rolled out. We thanked the Lord that we had some cooked meat and a few johnnycakes left, for we didnât feel equal to cooking. We put the billy of tea and our tucker-bags between the heads of our beds, and the pipes and tobacco in the crown of an old hat, where we could reach them without having to get up. Then we lay down on our stomachs and had a feed. We didnât eat muchâ âwe were too tired for thatâ âbut we drank a lot of tea. We gave our calves time to tone down a bit; then we lit up and began to answer each other. It got to be pretty comfortable, so long as we kept those unfortunate legs of ours straight and didnât move round much.
We cursed society because we werenât rich men, and then we felt better and conversation drifted lazily round various subjects and ended in that of smoking.
âHow came to start smoking?â said Mitchell. âLetâs see.â He reflected. âI started smoking first when I was about fourteen or fifteen. I smoked some sort of weedâ âI forget the name of itâ âbut it wasnât tobacco; and then I smoked cigarettesâ ânot the ones we get now, for those cost a penny each. Then I reckoned that, if I could smoke those, I could smoke a pipe.â
He reflected.
âWe lived in Sydney thenâ âSurry Hills. Those were different times; the place was nearly all sand. The old folks were alive then, and we were all at home, except Tom.â
He reflected.
âAh, well!â ââ ⊠Well, one evening I was playing marbles out in front of our house when a chap we knew gave me his pipe to mind while he went into a church-meeting. The little church was oppositeâ âa âchapelâ they called it.â
He reflected.
âThe pipe was alight. It was a clay pipe and niggerhead tobacco. Mother was at work out in the kitchen at the back, washing up the tea-things, and, when I went in, she said: âYouâve been smoking!â
âWell, I
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