Such Is Life Joseph Furphy (ebook reader screen .TXT) đ
- Author: Joseph Furphy
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Meanwhile, Mosey had taken a handsaw from its receptacle on his wagon, and had cut the pine spar to a length of about eighteen inches less than a panel of the fence. âLash this âere saplinâ hard down on the top rail,â he now commanded. Price and Dixon obeyed, and Mosey laid his powerful bottlejack on the rail, filling up the space, and began to turn it with a long bolt, by way of lever. âYou see, Tom,â he remarked to me; âthis fixterâll put the crooked maginnis on any fence from ere to âell. Itâs got to come. No matter how tight rails is shouldered, theyâll spring some; anâ if every postâll give onây half a inch, why then, ten posts makes five or six inches; anâ thatâs about all you want. Then in the morninâ, you can fix the fence soâs the ole-man divil his self couldnât ball you out. Ah! âž»! Thatâs what comes oâ blowinâ.â For the post, being wild and free in the grain, had burst along the two mortices; one half running completely off, just above the ground. âServe people right for puttinâ in rails when wire would do,â he continued, removing the screwjack. âAccidents will happenâ âbest regâlated famblies. âTainât our business, anyhow. Now, chaps, round up yer carrion, anâ shove âem in.â
The four wires in the lower part of the fence rung like harp strings as the cattle stepped into or over them, and in a few minutes the whole live stock of the caravan-eighty-four bullocks and seven horsesâ âwere in the selection, but too thirsty to feed. Then whilst Thompson, Mosey, Willoughby and I tailed them toward the tank, Dixon hurried on ahead with his five-gallon oil-drum, in order to replenish it before the water was disturbed; and Price, by Moseyâs orders, accompanied him on the same business. We steadied the bullocks at the tank till all were satisfied, then headed them back to within fifty yards of the wagons, where we hobbled all the horses, except Bumâs mare.
âSteve,â said I to my old schoolmate: âof course, you and I are seized of the true inwardness of duffing; but to those who live cleanly, as noblemen should, this would appear a dirty transaction.â
âThe worldâs full of dirty transactions, Tom,â replied the bullock driver wearily. âItâs a dirty transaction to round up a manâs team in a ten-mile paddock, and stick a bob a head on them, but thatâs a thing that Iâm very familiar with; itâs a dirty transaction to refuse water to perishing beasts, but Iâve been refused times out of number, and will be to the end of the chapter; itâs a dirty transaction to persecute men for having no occupation but carting, yet thatâs what nine-tenths of the squatters do, and this Montgomery is one of the nine. Youâre a bit sarcastic. How long is it since you were one of the cheekiest grass-stealers on the track?â
âNever, Steve. Youâve been drinking.â
âAnyway, you neednât be more of a hypocrite than you can help,â grumbled Thompson. âIf you want a problem to work out, just consider that God constructed cattle for living on grass, and the grass for them to live on, and that, last night, and tonight, and tomorrow night, and mostly every night, weâve a choice between two dirty transactionsâ âone is, to let the bullocks starve, and the other is to steal grass for them. For my own part, Iâm sick and tired of studying why some people should be in a position where they have to go out of their way to do wrong, and other people are cornered to that extent that they canât live without doing wrong, and canât suicide without jumping out of the frying-pan into the fire. Wonder if any allowance is made for bullock drivers?â âor are they supposed to be able to make enough money to retire into some decent life before they die? Well, thank God for one good camp, at all events.â
âHowâs the water?â asked Cooper, meeting us at the fence.
âEnough for tonight,â replied Thompson; âbut very little left for posterity.â
âAfter us, the Deluge,â observed Willoughby.
âI hope so,â replied Cooper devoutly. âLord knows, itâs badly wanted; and Iâm sure we donât grudge nobody the benefit. Turninâ out nice anâ cool, ainât it? The bullocksâll be able to do their selves some sort oâ justice.â
It was a clear but moonless night; the dark blue canopy spangled with myriad starsâ âgrandeur, peace, and purity above; squalor, worry, and profanity below. Fit basis for many an ancient system of Theologyâ âunscientific, if you will, but by no means contemptible.
Price and Cooper, being cooks, had kindled an unobtrusive fire in a crabhole, where three billies were soon boiling. And the tea, when cool enough, needed no light to escort a due proportion of simple provender into that mysterious laboratory which should never be considered too curiously.
After supper, we lay around, resting ourselves; everyone smoking tranquilly except Willoughby. Dixon and Bum were evidently old friends; they reclined with their heads together, occasionally laughing and whisperingâ âa piece of bad manners silently but strongly resented by the rest of the company.
âIâll jist go anâ have a squint at the carrion,â remarked Mosey, at length, with the inevitable adjective; and, passing through the broken fence, he disappeared in the timber and old-man salt-bush.
âWants some oâ the flashness took outen him,â remarked Price, in arrogant assertion of parental authority, yet glancing apprehensively after Mosey as he spoke.
âShould âaâ thought about that before,â observed Cooper gravely. âToo late now. You ainât good enough.â
A few minutes silence ensued, while each member of the company thought the matter over in his own way. Then Mosey returned.
âGrass up over yer boots, anâ the carrion goinâ into it lemons,â he remarked. âI do like to give this Runnymede
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