While the Billy Boils Henry Lawson (best ereader for pc TXT) đ
- Author: Henry Lawson
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I tell you, without a word of a lie, that we must have drunk about a dozen cups each. We made her fill the teapot twice, and kept her waitinâ nearly an hour, but we couldnât make her say a word. She never said a single word to us from the time we came in till the time we went out, nor before nor after. Sheâd made up her mind from the first not to speak to us.
We had to get up and leave our cups half full at last. We went out and sat down on our swags in the shade against the wall, and smoked and gave that tea time to settle, and then we got on to the track again.
The Geological SpielerThereâs nothing so interesting as Geology, even to common and ignorant people, especially when you have a bank or the side of a cutting, studded with fossil fish and things and oysters that were stale when Adam was fresh to illustrate by.
Remark made by Steelman, professional wanderer, to his pal and pupil, Smith.The first man that Steelman and Smith came up to on the last embankment, where they struck the new railway line, was a heavy, gloomy, labouring man with bowyangs on and straps round his wrists. Steelman bade him the time of day and had a few words with him over the weather. The man of mullock gave it as his opinion that the fine weather wouldnât last, and seemed to take a gloomy kind of pleasure in that reflection; he said there was more rain down yonder, pointing to the southeast, than the moon could swallow upâ âthe moon was in its first quarter, during which time it is popularly believed in some parts of Maoriland that the southeaster is most likely to be out on the wallaby and the weather bad. Steelman regarded that quarter of the sky with an expression of gentle remonstrance mingled as it were with a sort of fatherly indulgence, agreed mildly with the labouring man, and seemed lost for a moment in a reverie from which he roused himself to inquire cautiously after the boss. There was no boss, it was a cooperative party. That chap standing over there by the dray in the end of the cutting was their spokesmanâ âtheir representative: they called him boss, but that was only his nickname in camp. Steelman expressed his thanks and moved on towards the cutting, followed respectfully by Smith.
Steelman wore a snuff-coloured sac suit, a wide-awake hat, a pair of professional-looking spectacles, and a scientific expression; there was a clerical atmosphere about him, strengthened, however, by an air as of unconscious dignity and superiority, born of intellect and knowledge. He carried a black bag, which was an indispensable article in his profession in more senses than one. Smith was decently dressed in sober tweed and looked like a man of no account, who was mechanically devoted to his employerâs interests, pleasures, or whims.
The boss was a decent-looking young fellow, with a good faceâ ârather solemnâ âand a quiet manner.
âGood day, sir,â said Steelman.
âGood day, sir,â said the boss.
âNice weather this.â
âYes, it is, but Iâm afraid it wonât last.â
âI am afraid it will not by the look of the sky down there,â ventured Steelman.
âNo, I go mostly by the look of our weather prophet,â said the boss with a quiet smile, indicating the gloomy man.
âI suppose bad weather would put you back in your work?â
âYes, it will; we didnât want any bad weather just now.â
Steelman got the weather question satisfactorily settled; then he said:
âYou seem to be getting on with the railway.â
âOh yes, we are about over the worst of it.â
âThe worst of it?â echoed Steelman, with mild surprise: âI should have thought you were just coming into it,â and he pointed to the ridge ahead.
âOh, our section doesnât go any further than that pole you see sticking up yonder. We had the worst of it back there across the swampsâ âworking up to our waists in water most of the time, in midwinter tooâ âand at eighteenpence a yard.â
âThat was bad.â
âYes, rather rough. Did you come from the terminus?â
âYes, I sent my baggage on in the brake.â
âCommercial traveller, I suppose?â asked the boss, glancing at Smith, who stood a little to the rear of Steelman, seeming interested in the work.
âOh no,â said Steelman, smilingâ ââI amâ âwellâ âIâm a geologist; this is my man here,â indicating Smith. â(You may put down the bag, James, and have a smoke.) My name is Stoneleighâ âyou might have heard of it.â
The boss said, âOh,â and then presently he added âindeed,â in an undecided tone.
There was a pauseâ âembarrassed on the part of the bossâ âhe was silent not knowing what to say. Meanwhile Steelman studied his man and concluded that he would do.
âHaving a look at the country, I suppose?â asked the boss presently.
âYes,â said Steelman; then after a momentâs reflection: âI am travelling for my own amusement and improvement, and also in the interest of science, which amounts to the same thing. I am a member of the Royal Geological Societyâ âvice-president in fact of a leading Australian branch;â and then, as if conscious that he had appeared guilty of egotism, he shifted the subject a bit. âYes. Very interesting country thisâ âvery interesting indeed. I should like to make a stay here for a day or so. Your work opens right into my hands. I cannot remember seeing a geological formation which interested me so much. Look at the face of that cutting, for instance. Why! you can almost read the history of the geological world from yesterdayâ âthis morning as it wereâ âbeginning with the super-surface on top and going right down through the different layers and stratasâ âthrough the vanished agesâ âright down and back to the prehistoricalâ âto the very primeval or fundamental geological formations!â And Steelman studied the face of the cutting as if he could read it like a book, with every layer
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