While the Billy Boils Henry Lawson (best ereader for pc TXT) đ
- Author: Henry Lawson
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You may battle round with mates for many years, and share and share alike, good times or hard, and find the said mates true and straight through it all; but it is their little thoughtful attentions when you are going away, that go right down to the bottom of your heart, and lift it up and make you feel inclinedâ âas you stand alone by the rail when the sun goes down on the seaâ âto write or recite poetry and otherwise make a fool of yourself.
We helped our mate on board with his box, and inspected his bunk, and held a consultation over the merits or otherwise of its position, and got in his way and that of the under-steward and the rest of the crew right down to the captain, and superintended our old chumâs general arrangements, and upset most of them, and interviewed various members of the crew as to when the boat would start for sure, and regarded their statements with suspicion, and calculated on our own account how long it would take to get the rest of the cargo aboard, and dragged our mate ashore for a final drink, and found that we had âplenty of time to slip ashore for a parting wetâ so often that his immediate relations grew anxious and officious, and the universe began to look good, and kind, and happy, and bully, and jolly, and grand, and glorious to us, and we forgave the world everything wherein it had not acted straight towards us, and were filled full of love for our kind of both gendersâ âfor the human race at largeâ âand with an almost irresistible longing to go aboard, and stay at all hazards, and sail along with our mate. We had just time âto slip ashore and have anotherâ when the gangway was withdrawn and the steamer began to cast off. Then a rush down the wharf, a hurried and confused shaking of hands, and our mate was snatched aboard. The boat had been delayed, and we had waited for three hours, and had seen our chum nearly every day for years, and now we found we hadnât begun to say half what we wanted to say to him. We gripped his hand in turn over the rail, as the green tide came between, till there was a danger of one mate being pulled aboardâ âwhich he wouldnât have minded muchâ âor the other mate pulled ashore, or one or both yanked overboard. We cheered the captain and cheered the crew and the passengersâ âthere was a big crowd of them going and a bigger crowd of enthusiastic friends on the wharfâ âand our mate on the forward hatch; we cheered the land they were going to and the land they had left behind, and sang âAuld Lang Syneâ and âHeâs a Jolly Good Fellowâ (and so yelled all of us) and âHome Rule for Ireland Evermoreââ âwhich was, I donât know why, an old song of ours. And we shouted parting injunctions and exchanged old war cries, the meanings of which were only known to us, and we were guilty of such riotous conduct that, it being now Sunday morning, one or two of the quieter members suggested we had better drop down to about half-a-gale, as there was a severe-looking old sergeant of police with an eye on us; but once, in the middle of a heart-stirring chorus of âAuld Lang Syne,â Jack, my especial chum, paused for breath and said to me:
âItâs all right, Joe, the trapâs joining in.â
And so he wasâ âand leading.
But I well remember the hush that fell on that, and several other occasions, when the steamer had passed the point.
And so our first mate sailed away out under the rising moon and under the morning stars. He is settled down in Maoriland now, in a house of his own, and has a family and a farm; but somehow, in the bottom of our hearts, we donât like to think of things like this, for they donât fit in at all with Auld Lang Syne.
There were six or seven of us on the wharf to see our next mate go. His ultimate destination was known to himself and us only. We had pickets at the shore end of the wharf, and we kept him quiet and out of sight; the send-off was not noisy, but the handgrips were very tight and the sympathy deep. He was running away from debt, and wrong, and dishonour, a drunken wife, and other sorrows, and we knew it all.
Two went nextâ âto try their luck in Western Australia; they were plasterers. Ten of us turned up again, the push having been reinforced by one or two new members and an old one who had been absent on the first occasion. It was a glorious send-off, and only two found beds that nightâ âthe government supplied the beds.
And one by one and two by two they have gone from the wharf since then. Jack went today; he was perhaps the most irreclaimable of us allâ âa hard case where all cases were hard; and I loved him bestâ âanyway I know that, wherever Jack goes, there will be someone who will barrack for me to the best of his ability (which is by no means to be despised as far as barracking is concerned), and resent, with enthusiasm and force if he deems it necessary, the barest insinuation which might be made to the effect that I could write a bad line if I tried, or be guilty of an
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