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- The Project Gutenberg Etext of Three Elephant Power and Other Stories
- by Andrew Barton `Banjo' Paterson
- [Australian Poet & Reporter -- 1864-1941.]
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- Three Elephant Power, by Andrew Barton `Banjo' Paterson
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-
- Three Elephant Power and Other Stories
-
- by Andrew Barton `Banjo' Paterson [Australian Poet, Reporter -- 1864-1941.]
-
-
-
-
-
-
- [Note on text: Italicized words or phrases are capitalized.
- Some obvious errors have been corrected.]
-
- [This etext is transcribed from the original edition of 1917,
- which was published in Sydney.]
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Three Elephant Power and Other Stories
- By A. B. Paterson, Author of The Man from Snowy River, Rio Grande,
- Saltbush Bill, J.P., An Outback Marriage, Etc.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- These stories appeared originally in several Australian journals.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Contents
-
-
-
- Three Elephant Power
- The Oracle
- The Cast-iron Canvasser
- The Merino Sheep
- The Bullock
- White-when-he's-wanted
- The Downfall of Mulligan's
- The Amateur Gardener
- Thirsty Island
- Dan Fitzgerald Explains
- The Cat
- Sitting in Judgment
- The Dog
- The Dog -- as a Sportsman
- Concerning a Steeplechase Rider
- Victor Second
- Concerning a Dog-fight
- His Masterpiece
- Done for the Double
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Three Elephant Power
-
-
-
- "Them things," said Alfred the chauffeur, tapping the speed indicator
- with his fingers, "them things are all right for the police. But, Lord,
- you can fix 'em up if you want to. Did you ever hear about Henery,
- that used to drive for old John Bull -- about Henery and the elephant?"
-
- Alfred was chauffeur to a friend of mine who owned a very powerful car.
- Alfred was part of that car. Weirdly intelligent, of poor physique,
- he might have been any age from fifteen to eighty. His education had been
- somewhat hurried, but there was no doubt as to his mechanical ability.
- He took to a car like a young duck to water. He talked motor,
- thought motor, and would have accepted -- I won't say with enthusiasm,
- for Alfred's motto was `Nil admirari' -- but without hesitation,
- an offer to drive in the greatest race in the world.
- He could drive really well, too; as for belief in himself,
- after six months' apprenticeship in a garage he was prepared
- to vivisect a six-cylinder engine with the confidence of
- a diplomaed bachelor of engineering.
-
- Barring a tendency to flash driving, and a delight in persecuting slow cars
- by driving just in front of them and letting them come up
- and enjoy his dust, and then shooting away again,
- he was a respectable member of society. When his boss was in the car
- he cloaked the natural ferocity of his instincts; but this day,
- with only myself on board, and a clear run of a hundred and twenty miles
- up to the station before him, he let her loose, confident that
- if any trouble occurred I would be held morally responsible.
-
- As we flew past a somnolent bush pub, Alfred, whistling softly,
- leant forward and turned on a little more oil.
-
- "You never heard about Henery and the elephant?" he said.
- "It was dead funny. Henery was a bushwacker, but clean mad on motorin'.
- He was wood and water joey at some squatter's place until he seen
- a motor-car go past one day, the first that ever they had in the districk.
-
- "`That's my game,' says Henery; `no more wood and water joey for me.'
-
- "So he comes to town and gets a job off Miles that had that garage
- at the back of Allison's. An old cove that they called John Bull
- -- I don't know his right name, he was a fat old cove --
- he used to come there to hire cars, and Henery used to drive him.
- And this old John Bull he had lots of stuff, so at last he reckons
- he's going to get a car for himself, and he promises Henery a job
- to drive it. A queer cove this Henery was -- half mad, I think,
- but the best hand with a car ever I see."
-
- While he had been talking we topped a hill, and opened up a new stretch
- of blue-grey granite-like road. Down at the foot of the hill
- was a teamster's waggon in camp; the horses in their harness munching at
- their nose-bags, while the teamster and a mate were boiling a billy
- a little off to the side of the road. There was a turn in the road
- just below the waggon which looked a bit sharp, so of course
- Alfred bore down on it like a whirlwind. The big stupid team-horses
- huddled together and pushed each other awkwardly as we passed.
- A dog that had been sleeping in the shade of the waggon sprang out
- right in front of the car, and was exterminated without ever knowing
- what struck him.
-
- There was just room to clear the tail of the waggon and negotiate the turn.
- Alfred, with the calm decision of a Napoleon, swung round the bend
- to find that the teamster's hack, fast asleep, was tied to the tail
- of the waggon. Nothing but a lightning-like twist of the steering-wheel
- prevented our scooping the old animal up, and taking him on board
- as a passenger. As it was, we carried off most of his tail as a trophy
- on the brass of the lamp. The old steed, thus rudely awakened,
- lashed out good and hard, but by that time we were gone,
- and he missed the car by a quarter of a mile.
-
- During this strenuous episode Alfred never relaxed
- his professional stolidity, and, when we were clear, went on with his story
- in the tone of a man who found life wanting in animation.
-
- "Well, at fust, the old man would only buy one of these little
- eight-horse rubby-dubbys that go strugglin' up 'ills with a death-rattle
- in its throat, and all the people in buggies passin' it.
- O' course that didn't suit Henery. He used to get that spiked
- when a car passed him, he'd nearly go mad. And one day he nearly
- got the sack for dodgin' about up a steep 'ill in front of one o' them
- big twenty-four Darracqs, full of 'owlin' toffs, and not lettin' 'em
- get a chance to go past till they got to the top. But at last he persuaded
- old John Bull to let him go to England and buy a car for him.
- He was to do a year in the shops, and pick up all the wrinkles,
- and get a car for the old man. Bit better than wood and water joeying,
- wasn't it?"
-
- Our progress here was barred by our rounding a corner right on to a flock
- of sheep, that at once packed together into a solid mass in front of us,
- blocking the whole road from fence to fence.
-
- "Silly cows o' things, ain't they?" said Alfred, putting on his
- emergency brake, and skidding up till the car came softly to rest against
- the cushion-like mass -- a much quicker stop than any horse-drawn vehicle
- could have made. A few sheep were crushed somewhat, but it is well known
- that a sheep is practically indestructible by violence.
- Whatever Alfred's faults were, he certainly could drive.
-
- "Well," he went on, lighting a cigarette, unheeding the growls
- of the drovers, who were trying to get the sheep to pass the car,
- "well, as I was sayin', Henery went to England, and he got a car.
- Do you know wot he got?"
-
- "No, I don't."
-
- "'E got a ninety," said Alfred slowly, giving time for the words
- to soak in.
-
- "A ninety! What do you mean?"
-
- "'E got a ninety -- a ninety-horse-power racin' engine wot was made
- for some American millionaire and wasn't as fast as wot
- some other millionaire had, so he sold it for the price of the iron,
- and Henery got it, and had a body built for it, and he comes out here
- and tells us all it's a twenty mongrel -- you know, one of them cars
- that's made part in one place and part in another, the body here
- and the engine there, and the radiator another place.
- There's lots of cheap cars made like that.
-
- "So Henery he says that this is a twenty mongrel --
- only a four-cylinder engine; and nobody drops to what she is
- till Henery goes out one Sunday and waits for the big Napier
- that Scotty used to drive -- it belonged to the same bloke wot owned
- that big racehorse wot won all the races. So Henery and Scotty
- they have a fair go round the park while both their bosses is at church,
- and Henery beat him out o' sight -- fair lost him -- and so Henery
- was reckoned the boss of the road. No one would take him on after that."
-
- A nasty creek-crossing here required Alfred's attention. A little girl,
- carrying a billy-can of water, stood by the stepping stones,
- and smiled shyly as we passed. Alfred waved her a salute quite as though
- he were an ordinary human being. I felt comforted. He had his moments
- of relaxation evidently, and his affections like other people.
-
- "What happened to Henry and the ninety-horse machine?" I asked.
- "And where does the elephant come in?"
-
- Alfred smiled pityingly.
-
- "Ain't I tellin' yer," he said. "You wouldn't understand if I didn't
- tell yer how he got the car and all that. So here's Henery," he went on,
- "with old John Bull goin' about in the fastest car in Australia,
- and old John, he's a quiet old geezer, that wouldn't drive faster
- than the regulations for anything, and that short-sighted he can't see
- to the side of the road. So what does Henery do? He fixes up
- the speed-indicator -- puts a new face on it, so that when the car
- is doing thirty, the indicator only shows fifteen, and twenty for forty,
- and so on. So out they'd go, and if Henery knew there was a big car
- in front of him, he'd let out to forty-five, and the pace would very near
- blow the whiskers off old John; and every now and again he'd look
- at the indicator, and it'd be showin' twenty-two and a half, and he'd say:
-
- "`Better be careful, Henery, you're slightly exceedin' the speed limit;
- twenty miles an hour, you know, Henery, should be fast enough for anybody,
- and you're doing over twenty-two.'
-
- "Well, one day, Henery told me, he was tryin' to catch up a big car
- that just came out from France, and it had a half-hour start of him,
- and he was just fairly flyin', and there was a lot of cars on the road,
- and he flies past 'em so fast the old man says, `It's very strange,
- Henery,' he says, `that all the cars that are out to-day are comin'
- this way,' he says. You see he was passin' 'em so fast he thought
- they were all comin' towards him.
-
- "And Henery sees a mate of his comin', so he lets out a notch or two,
- and the two cars flew by each other like chain lightnin'. They were each
- doin' about forty, and the old man, he says, `There's a driver
- must be travellin' a hundred miles an hour,' he says. `I never see a car
- go by so fast in my life,' he says. `If I could find out who he is,
- I'd report him,' he says. `Did you know the car, Henery?'
- But of course Henery, he doesn't know, so on they goes.
-
- "The owner of the big French car thinks he has the fastest car
- in Australia, and when he sees Henery and the old man coming, he tells
- his driver to let her out a little; but Henery gives the ninety-horse
- the full of the lever, and whips up alongside in one jump. And then
- he keeps there just half a length ahead of him, tormentin' him like.
- And the owner of the French car he yells out to old John Bull,
- `You're going a nice pace for an old 'un,' he says. Old John has a blink
- down at the indicator. `We're doing twenty-five,' he yells out.
- `Twenty-five grandmothers,' says the bloke; but Henery he put on
- his accelerator, and left him. It wouldn't do to let the old man
- get wise to it, you know."
-
- We topped a big hill, and Alfred cut off the engine and let the car swoop,
- as swiftly and noiselessly as an eagle, down to the flat country below.
-
- "You're a long while coming to the elephant, Alfred," I said.
-
- "Well, now, I'll tell you about the elephant," said Alfred,
- letting his clutch in again, and taking up the story to the accompaniment
- of the rhythmic throb of the engine.
-
- "One day Henery and the old man were going out a long trip
- over the mountain, and down the Kangaroo Valley Road that's all cut out
- of the side of the 'ill. And after they's gone a mile or two,
- Henery sees a track in the road -- the track of the biggest car
- he ever seen or 'eard of. An' the more he looks at it, the more he reckons
- he must ketch that car and see what she's made of. So he slows down
- passin' two yokels on the road, and he says, `Did you see a big car
- along 'ere?'
-
- "`Yes, we did,' they says.
-
- "`How big is she?' says Henery.
-
- "`Biggest car ever we see,' says the yokels, and they laughed
- that silly way these yokels always does.
-
- "`How many horse-power do you think she was?' says Henery.
-
- "`Horse-power,' they says; `elephant-power, you mean!
- She was three elephant-power,' they says; and they goes `Haw, haw!'
- and Henery drops his clutch in, and off he goes after that car."
-
- Alfred lit another cigarette as a preliminary to the climax.
-
- "So they run for miles, and all the time there's the track ahead of 'em,
- and Henery keeps lettin' her out, thinkin' that he'll never ketch that car.
- They went through a town so fast, the old man he says, `What house was that
- we just passed,' he says. At last they come to the top of the big 'ill,
- and there's the tracks of the big car goin' straight down ahead of 'em.
-
- "D'you know that road? It's all cut out of the side of the mountain,
- and there's places where if she was to side-slip you'd go down
- 'undreds of thousands of feet. And there's sharp turns, too;
- but the surface is good, so Henery he lets her out, and down they go,
- whizzin' round the turns and skatin' out near the edge,
- and the old cove sittin' there enjoyin' it, never knowin' the danger.
- And comin' to one turn Henery gives a toot on the 'orn,
- and then he heard somethin' go `toot, toot' right away down the mountain.
-
- "'Bout a mile ahead it seemed to be, and Henery reckoned he'd go
- another four miles before he'd ketch it, so he chances them turns
- more than ever. And she was pretty hot, too; but he kept her at it,
- and he hadn't gone a full mile till he come round a turn
- about forty miles an hour, and before he could stop he run right into it,
- and wot do you think it was?"
-
- I hadn't the faintest idea.
-
- "A circus. One of them travellin' circuses, goin' down the coast;
- and one of the elephants had sore feet, so they put him in a big waggon,
- and another elephant pulled in front and one pushed behind.
- Three elephant-power it was, right enough. That was the waggon wot made
- the big track. Well, it was all done so sudden. Before Henery could stop,
- he runs the radiator -- very near boiling she was -- up against the
- elephant's tail, and prints the pattern of the latest honeycomb radiator
- on the elephant as clear as if you done it with a stencil.
-
- "The elephant, he lets a roar out of him like one of them bulls bellerin',
- and he puts out his nose and ketches Henery round the neck,
- and yanks him out of the car, and chucks him right clean over the cliff,
- 'bout a thousand feet. But he never done nothin' to the old bloke."
-
- "Good gracious!"
-
- "Well, it finished Henery, killed him stone dead, of course,
- and the old man he was terrible cut up over losin' such a steady,
- trustworthy man. `Never get another like him,' he says."
-
- We were nearly at our journey's end, and we turned through a gate
- into the home paddocks. Some young stock, both horses and cattle,
- came frisking and cantering after the car, and the rough bush track
- took all Alfred's attention. We crossed a creek, the water swishing
- from the wheels, and began the long pull up to the homestead.
- Over the clamour of the little-used second speed, Alfred concluded
- his narrative.
-
- "The old bloke advertised," he said, "for another driver, a steady,
- reliable man to drive a twenty horse-power, four-cylinder touring car.
- Every driver in Sydney put in for it. Nothing like a fast car
- to fetch 'em, you know. And Scotty got it. Him wot used to drive
- the Napier I was tellin' you about."
-
- "And what did the old man say when he found he'd been running
- a racing car?"
-
- "He don't know now. Scotty never told 'im. Why should he?
- He's drivin' about the country now, the boss of the roads,
- but he won't chance her near a circus. Thinks he might bump
- the same elephant. And that elephant, every time he smells a car
- passin' in the road, he goes near mad with fright. If he ever sees
- that car again, do you think he'd know it?"
-
- Not being used to elephants, I could not offer an opinion.
-
-
-
-
- The Oracle
-
-
-
- No tram ever goes to Randwick races without him; he is always fat,
- hairy, and assertive; he is generally one of a party,
- and takes the centre of the stage all the time --
- collects and hands over the fares, adjusts the change,
- chaffs the conductor, crushes the thin, apologetic stranger next him
- into a pulp, and talks to the whole compartment as if they had asked
- for his opinion.
-
- He knows all the trainers and owners, or takes care to give the impression
- that he does. He slowly and pompously hauls out his race book,
- and one of his satellites opens the ball by saying, in a deferential way:
-
- "What do you like for the 'urdles, Charley?"
-
- The Oracle looks at the book and breathes heavily; no one else
- ventures to speak.
-
- "Well," he says, at last, "of course there's only one in it --
- if he's wanted. But that's it -- will they spin him? I don't think
- they will. They's only a lot o' cuddies, any'ow."
-
- No one likes to expose his own ignorance by asking which horse he refers to
- as the "only one in it"; and the Oracle goes on to deal out
- some more wisdom in a loud voice.
-
- "Billy K---- told me" (he probably hardly knows Billy K---- by sight)
- "Billy K---- told me that that bay 'orse ran the best mile-an'-a-half
- ever done on Randwick yesterday; but I don't give him a chance,
- for all that; that's the worst of these trainers. They don't know
- when their horses are well -- half of 'em."
-
- Then a voice comes from behind him. It is that of the thin man,
- who is crushed out of sight by the bulk of the Oracle.
-
- "I think," says the thin man, "that that horse of Flannery's
- ought to run well in the Handicap."
-
- The Oracle can't stand this sort of thing at all. He gives a snort,
- wheels half-round and looks at the speaker. Then he turns back
- to the compartment full of people, and says: "No 'ope."
-
- The thin man makes a last effort. "Well, they backed him last night,
- anyhow."
-
- "Who backed 'im?" says the Oracle.
-
- "In Tattersall's," says the thin man.
-
- "I'm sure," says the Oracle; and the thin man collapses.
-
- On arrival at the course, the Oracle is in great form. Attended by his
- string of satellites, he plods from stall to stall staring at the horses.
- Their names are printed in big letters on the stalls, but the Oracle
- doesn't let that stop his display of knowledge.
-
- "'Ere's Blue Fire," he says, stopping at that animal's stall,
- and swinging his race book. "Good old Blue Fire!" he goes on loudly,
- as a little court collects. "Jimmy B----" (mentioning a popular jockey)
- "told me he couldn't have lost on Saturday week if he had only
- been ridden different. I had a good stake on him, too, that day.
- Lor', the races that has been chucked away on this horse.
- They will not ride him right."
-
- A trainer who is standing by, civilly interposes. "This isn't Blue Fire,"
- he says. "Blue Fire's out walking about. This is a two-year-old filly
- that's in the stall ----"
-
- "Well, I can see that, can't I," says the Oracle, crushingly.
- "You don't suppose I thought Blue Fire was a mare, did you?"
- and he moves off hurriedly.
-
- "Now, look here, you chaps," he says to his followers at last.
- "You wait here. I want to go and see a few of the talent, and it don't do
- to have a crowd with you. There's Jimmy M---- over there now"
- (pointing to a leading trainer). "I'll get hold of him in a minute.
- He couldn't tell me anything with so many about. Just you wait here."
-
- He crushes into a crowd that has gathered round the favourite's stall,
- and overhears one hard-faced racing man say to another, "What do you like?"
- to which the other answers, "Well, either this or Royal Scot.
- I think I'll put a bit on Royal Scot." This is enough for the Oracle.
- He doesn't know either of the men from Adam, or either of the horses
- from the great original pachyderm, but the information will do
- to go on with. He rejoins his followers, and looks very mysterious.
-
- "Well, did you hear anything?" they say.
-
- The Oracle talks low and confidentially.
-
- "The crowd that have got the favourite tell me they're not afraid
- of anything but Royal Scot," he says. "I think we'd better put
- a bit on both."
-
- "What did the Royal Scot crowd say?" asks an admirer deferentially.
-
- "Oh, they're going to try and win. I saw the stable commissioner,
- and he told me they were going to put a hundred on him. Of course,
- you needn't say I told you, 'cause I promised him I wouldn't tell."
- And the satellites beam with admiration of the Oracle, and think
- what a privilege it is to go to the races with such a knowing man.
-
- They contribute their mites to the general fund, some putting in a pound,
- others half a sovereign, and the Oracle takes it into the ring to invest,
- half on the favourite and half on Royal Scot. He finds that the favourite
- is at two to one, and Royal Scot at threes, eight to one being offered
- against anything else. As he ploughs through the ring, a Whisperer
- (one of those broken-down followers of the turf who get their living
- in various mysterious ways, but partly by giving "tips" to backers)
- pulls his sleeve.
-
- "What are you backing?" he says.
-
- "Favourite and Royal Scot," says the Oracle.
-
- "Put a pound on Bendemeer," says the tipster. "It's a certainty.
- Meet me here if it comes off, and I'll tell you something
- for the next race. Don't miss it now. Get on quick!"
-
- The Oracle is humble enough before the hanger-on of the turf.
- A bookmaker roars "10 to 1 Bendemeer;" he suddenly fishes out a sovereign
- of his own -- and he hasn't money to spare, for all his knowingness --
- and puts it on Bendemeer. His friends' money he puts on the favourite
- and Royal Scot as arranged. Then they all go round to watch the race.
-
- The horses are at the post; a distant cluster of crowded animals
- with little dots of colour on their backs. Green, blue, yellow, purple,
- French grey, and old gold, they change about in a bewildering manner,
- and though the Oracle has a cheap pair of glasses, he can't make out
- where Bendemeer has got to. Royal Scot and the favourite
- he has lost interest in, and secretly hopes that they will be
- left at the post or break their necks; but he does not confide
- his sentiment to his companions.
-
- They're off! The long line of colours across the track
- becomes a shapeless clump and then draws out into a long string.
- "What's that in front?" yells someone at the rails.
- "Oh, that thing of Hart's," says someone else. But the Oracle
- hears them not; he is looking in the mass of colour
- for a purple cap and grey jacket, with black arm bands.
- He cannot see it anywhere, and the confused and confusing mass
- swings round the turn into the straight.
-
- Then there is a babel of voices, and suddenly a shout of "Bendemeer!
- Bendemeer!" and the Oracle, without knowing which is Bendemeer,
- takes up the cry feverishly. "Bendemeer! Bendemeer!" he yells,
- waggling his glasses about, trying to see where the animal is.
-
- "Where's Royal Scot, Charley? Where's Royal Scot?" screams one
- of his friends, in agony. "'Ow's he doin'?"
-
- "No 'ope!" says the Oracle, with fiendish glee. "Bendemeer! Bendemeer!"
-
- The horses are at the Leger stand now, whips are out, and three horses
- seem to be nearly abreast; in fact, to the Oracle there seem to be
- a dozen nearly abreast. Then a big chestnut sticks his head in front
- of the others, and a small man at the Oracle's side emits
- a deafening series of yells right by the Oracle's ear:
-
- "Go on, Jimmy! Rub it into him! Belt him! It's a cake-walk!
- A cake-walk! The big chestnut, in a dogged sort of way,
- seems to stick his body clear of his opponents, and passes the post
- a winner by a length. The Oracle doesn't know what has won, but fumbles
- with his book. The number on the saddle-cloth catches his eye -- No. 7;
- he looks hurriedly down the page. No. 7 -- Royal Scot. Second is No. 24
- -- Bendemeer. Favourite nowhere.
-
- Hardly has he realised it, before his friends are cheering and clapping him
- on the back. "By George, Charley, it takes you to pick 'em."
- "Come and 'ave a wet!" "You 'ad a quid in, didn't you, Charley?"
- The Oracle feels very sick at having missed the winner, but he dies game.
- "Yes, rather; I had a quid on," he says. "And" (here he nerves himself
- to smile) "I had a saver on the second, too."
-
- His comrades gasp with astonishment. "D'you hear that, eh? Charley backed
- first and second. That's pickin' 'em if you like." They have a wet,
- and pour fulsome adulation on the Oracle when he collects their money.
-
- After the Oracle has collected the winnings for his friends
- he meets the Whisperer again.
-
- "It didn't win?" he says to the Whisperer in inquiring tones.
-
- "Didn't win," says the Whisperer, who has determined to brazen
- the matter out. "How could he win? Did you see the way he was ridden?
- That horse was stiffened just after I seen you, and he never tried a yard.
- Did you see the way he was pulled and hauled about at the turn?
- It'd make a man sick. What was the stipendiary stewards doing, I wonder?"
-
- This fills the Oracle with a new idea. All that he remembers of the race
- at the turn was a jumble of colours, a kaleidoscope of horses and of riders
- hanging on to the horses' necks. But it wouldn't do to admit that he
- didn't see everything, and didn't know everything; so he plunges in boldly.
-
- "O' course I saw it," he says. "And a blind man could see it.
- They ought to rub him out."
-
- "Course they ought," says the Whisperer. "But, look here,
- put two quid on Tell-tale; you'll get it all back!"
-
- The Oracle does put on "two quid", and doesn't get it all back.
- Neither does he see any more of this race than he did of the last one --
- in fact, he cheers wildly when the wrong horse is coming in.
- But when the public begin to hoot he hoots as loudly as anybody --
- louder if anything; and all the way home in the tram he lays down the law
- about stiff running, and wants to know what the stipendiaries are doing.
-
- If you go into any barber's shop, you can hear him at it, and he flourishes
- in suburban railway carriages; but he has a tremendous local reputation,
- having picked first and second in the handicap, and it would be a bold man
- who would venture to question the Oracle's knowledge of racing
- and of all matters relating to it.
-
-
-
-
- The Cast-iron Canvasser
-
-
-
- The firm of Sloper and Dodge, publishers and printers,
- was in great distress. These two enterprising individuals had worked up
- an enormous business in time-payment books, which they sold
- all over Australia by means of canvassers. They had put
- all the money they had into the business; and now, just when everything
- was in thorough working order, the public had revolted against them.
-
- Their canvassers were molested by the country folk in divers
- strange bush ways. One was made drunk, and then a two-horse harrow
- was run over him; another was decoyed into the ranges on pretence
- of being shown a gold-mine, and his guide galloped away
- and left him to freeze all night in the bush. In mining localities
- the inhabitants were called together by beating a camp-oven lid
- with a pick, and the canvasser was given ten minutes in which
- to get out of the town alive. If he disregarded the hint he would,
- as likely as not, fall accidentally down a disused shaft.
-
- The people of one district applied to their M.P. to have canvassers
- brought under the "Noxious Animals Act", and demanded that a reward
- should be offered for their scalps. Reports appeared in the country press
- about strange, gigantic birds that appeared at remote selections
- and frightened the inhabitants to death -- these were Sloper and Dodge's
- sober and reliable agents, wearing neat, close-fitting suits
- of tar and feathers.
-
- In fact, it was altogether too hot for the canvassers,
- and they came in from North and West and South, crippled and disheartened,
- to tender their resignations. To make matters worse, Sloper and Dodge had
- just got out a large Atlas of Australasia, and if they couldn't sell it,
- ruin stared them in the face; and how could they sell it
- without canvassers?
-
- The members of the firm sat in their private office. Sloper was a long,
- sanctimonious individual, very religious and very bald.
- Dodge was a little, fat American, with bristly, black hair and beard,
- and quick, beady eyes. He was eternally smoking a reeking black pipe,
- and puffing the smoke through his nose in great whiffs, like a locomotive
- on a steep grade. Anybody walking into one of those whiffs
- was liable to get paralysis.
-
- Just as things were at their very blackest, something had turned up
- that promised to relieve all their difficulties. An inventor had offered
- to supply them with a patent cast-iron canvasser -- a figure which
- (he said) when wound up would walk, talk, collect orders,
- and stand any amount of ill-usage and wear and tear. If this could
- indeed be done, they were saved. They had made an appointment
- with the genius; but he was half-an-hour late, and the partners
- were steeped in gloom.
-
- They had begun to despair of his appearing at all, when a cab rattled up
- to the door. Sloper and Dodge rushed unanimously to the window.
- A young man, very badly dressed, stepped out of the cab,
- holding over his shoulder what looked like the upper half of a man's body.
- In his disengaged hand he held a pair of human legs
- with boots and trousers on. Thus burdened he turned to ask his fare,
- but the cabman gave a yell of terror, whipped up his horse,
- and disappeared at a hand-gallop; and a woman who happened to be going by,
- ran down the street, howling that Jack the Ripper had come to town.
- The man bolted in at the door, and toiled up the dark stairs
- tramping heavily, the legs and feet, which he dragged after him,
- making an unearthly clatter. He came in and put his burden down
- on the sofa.
-
- "There you are, gents," he said; "there's your canvasser."
-
- Sloper and Dodge recoiled in horror. The upper part of the man
- had a waxy face, dull, fishy eyes, and dark hair; he lounged on the sofa
- like a corpse at ease, while his legs and feet stood by, leaning stiffly
- against the wall. The partners gazed at him for a while in silence.
-
- "Fix him together, for God's sake," said Dodge. "He looks awful."
-
- The Genius grinned, and fixed the legs on.
-
- "Now he looks better," said Dodge, poking about the figure --
- "looks as much like life as most -- ah, would you, you brute!"
- he exclaimed, springing back in alarm, for the figure had made
- a violent La Blanche swing at him.
-
- "That's all right," said the Inventor. "It's no good having his face
- knocked about, you know -- lot of trouble to make that face.
- His head and body are full of springs, and if anybody hits him in the face,
- or in the pit of the stomach -- favourite places to hit canvassers,
- the pit of the stomach -- it sets a strong spring in motion,
- and he fetches his right hand round with a swipe that'll knock them into
- the middle of next week. It's an awful hit. Griffo couldn't dodge it,
- and Slavin couldn't stand up against it. No fear of any man
- hitting HIM twice.
-
- "And he's dog-proof, too. His legs are padded with tar and oakum,
- and if a dog bites a bit out of him, it will take that dog weeks
- to pick his teeth clean. Never bite anybody again, that dog won't.
- And he'll talk, talk, talk, like a suffragist gone mad;
- his phonograph can be charged for 100,000 words, and all you've got to do
- is to speak into it what you want him to say, and he'll say it.
- He'll go on saying it till he talks his man silly, or gets an order.
- He has an order-form in his hand, and as soon as anyone signs it
- and gives it back to him, that sets another spring in motion,
- and he puts the order in his pocket, turns round, and walks away.
- Grand idea, isn't he? Lor' bless you, I fairly love him."
-
- He beamed affectionately on his monster.
-
- "What about stairs?" said Dodge.
-
- "No stairs in the bush," said the Inventor, blowing a speck of dust
- off his apparition; "all ground-floor houses. Anyhow, if there were stairs
- we could carry him up and let him fall down afterwards,
- or get flung down like any other canvasser."
-
- "Ha! Let's see him walk," said Dodge.
-
- The figure walked all right, stiff and erect.
-
- "Now let's hear him yabber."
-
- The Genius touched a spring, and instantly, in a queer, tin-whistly voice,
- he began to sing, "Little Annie Rooney".
-
- "Good!" said Dodge; "he'll do. We'll give you your price.
- Leave him here to-night, and come in to-morrow. We'll send you off
- to the back country with him. Ninemile would be a good place to start in.
- Have a cigar?"
-
- Mr. Dodge, much elated, sucked at his pipe, and blew through his nose
- a cloud of nearly solid smoke, through which the Genius sidled out.
- They could hear him sneezing and choking all the way down the stairs.
-
- Ninemile is a quiet little place, sleepy beyond description.
- When the mosquitoes in that town settle on anyone,
- they usually go to sleep, and forget to bite him. The climate is so hot
- that the very grasshoppers crawl into the hotel parlours out of the sun,
- climb up the window curtains, and then go to sleep. The Riot Act
- never had to be read in Ninemile. The only thing that can arouse
- the inhabitants out of their lethargy is the prospect of a drink
- at somebody else's expense.
-
- For these reasons it had been decided to start the Cast-iron Canvasser
- there, and then move him on to more populous and active localities
- if he proved a success. They sent up the Genius, and one of their men
- who knew the district well. The Genius was to manage the automaton,
- and the other was to lay out the campaign, choose the victims,
- and collect the money, geniuses being notoriously unreliable
- and loose in their cash. They got through a good deal of whisky
- on the way up, and when they arrived at Ninemile were in a cheerful mood,
- and disposed to take risks.
-
- "Who'll we begin on?" said the Genius.
-
- "Oh, hang it all," said the other, "let's make a start with Macpherson."
-
- Macpherson was a Land Agent, and the big bug of the place.
- He was a gigantic Scotchman, six feet four in his socks,
- and freckled all over with freckles as big as half-crowns.
- His eyebrows would have made decent-sized moustaches for a cavalryman,
- and his moustaches looked like horns. He was a fighter from the ground up,
- and had a desperate "down" on canvassers generally,
- and on Sloper and Dodge's canvassers in particular.
-
- Sloper and Dodge had published a book called "Remarkable Colonials",
- and Macpherson had written out his own biography for it. He was
- intensely proud of his pedigree and his relations, and in his narrative
- made out that he was descended from the original Fhairshon
- who swam round Noah's Ark with his title-deeds in his teeth.
- He showed how his people had fought under Alexander the Great and Timour,
- and had come over to Scotland some centuries before William the Conqueror
- landed in England. He proved that he was related in a general way
- to one emperor, fifteen kings, twenty-five dukes, and earls and lords
- and viscounts innumerable. And then, after all, the editor
- of "Remarkable Colonials" managed to mix him up with some other fellow,
- some low-bred Irish McPherson, born in Dublin of poor but honest parents.
-
- It was a terrible outrage. Macpherson became president of
- the Western District Branch of the "Remarkable Colonials" Defence League,
- a fierce and homicidal association got up to resist, legally and otherwise,
- paying for the book. He had further sworn by all he held sacred
- that every canvasser who came to harry him in future should die,
- and had put up a notice on his office-door, "Canvassers come in
- at their own risk."
-
- He had a dog of what he called the Hold'em breed, who could tell
- a canvasser by his walk, and would go for him on sight.
- The reader will understand, therefore, that, when the Genius and his mate
- proposed to start on Macpherson, they were laying out a capacious contract
- for the Cast-iron Canvasser, and could only have been inspired by a morbid
- craving for excitement, aided by the influence of backblock whisky.
-
- The Inventor wound the figure up in the back parlour of the pub.
- There were a frightful lot of screws to tighten before the thing
- would work, but at last he said it was ready, and they shambled off
- down the street, the figure marching stiffly between them.
- It had a book tucked under its arm and an order-form in its hand.
- When they arrived opposite Macpherson's office, the Genius started
- the phonograph working, pointed the figure straight at Macpherson's door,
- and set it going. Then the two conspirators waited, like Guy Fawkes
- in his cellar.
-
- The automaton marched across the road and in at the open door,
- talking to itself loudly in a hoarse, unnatural voice.
-
- Macpherson was writing at his table, and looked up.
-
- The figure walked bang through a small collection of flower-pots,
- sent a chair flying, tramped heavily in the spittoon, and then brought up
- against the table with a loud crash and stood still. It was talking
- all the time.
-
- "I have here," it said, "a most valuable work, an Atlas of Australia,
- which I desire to submit to your notice. The large and increasing demand
- of bush residents for time-payment works has induced the publishers
- of this ----"
-
- "My God!" said Macpherson, "it's a canvasser. Here, Tom Sayers,
- Tom Sayers!" and he whistled and called for his dog. "Now," he said,
- "will you go out of this office quietly, or will you be thrown out?
- It's for yourself to decide, but you've only got while a duck wags his tail
- to decide in. Which'll it be?"
-
- "---- works of modern ages," said the canvasser. "Every person
- subscribing to this invaluable work will receive, in addition,
- a flat-iron, a railway pass for a year, and a pocket-compass.
- If you will please sign this order ----"
-
- Just here Tom Sayers came tearing through the office,
- and without waiting for orders hitched straight on to the canvasser's calf.
- To Macpherson's amazement the piece came clear away, and Tom Sayers
- rolled about on the floor with his mouth full of a sticky substance
- which seemed to surprise him badly.
-
- The long Scotchman paused awhile before this mystery, but at last
- he fancied he had got the solution. "Got a cork leg, have you?" said he --
- "Well, let's see if your ribs are cork too," and he struck the canvasser
- an awful blow on the fifth button of the waistcoat.
-
- Quicker than lightning came that terrific right-hand cross-counter.
- Macpherson never even knew what happened to him. The canvasser's
- right hand, which had been adjusted by his inventor for a high blow,
- had landed on the butt of Macpherson's ear and dropped him like a fowl.
- The gasping, terrified bull-dog fled the scene, and the canvasser
- stood over his fallen foe, still intoning the virtues of his publication.
- He had come there merely as a friend, he said, to give the inhabitants
- of Ninemile a chance to buy a book which had recently earned the approval
- of King O'Malley and His Excellency the Governor-General.
-
- The Genius and his mate watched this extraordinary drama
- through the window. The stimulant habitually consumed by the Ninemilers
- had induced in them a state of superlative Dutch courage,
- and they looked upon the whole affair as a wildly hilarious joke.
-
- "By Gad! he's done him," said the Genius, as Macpherson went down,
- "done him in one hit. If he don't pay as a canvasser I'll take him to town
- and back him to fight Les Darcy. Look out for yourself;
- don't you handle him!" he continued as the other approached the figure.
- "Leave him to me. As like as not, if you get fooling about him,
- he'll give you a clout that'll paralyse you."
-
- So saying, he guided the automaton out of the office and into the street,
- and walked straight into a policeman.
-
- By a common impulse the Genius and his mate ran rapidly away
- in different directions, leaving the figure alone with the officer.
-
- He was a fully-ordained sergeant -- by name Aloysius O'Grady; a squat,
- rosy little Irishman. He hated violent arrests and all that sort of thing,
- and had a faculty of persuading drunks and disorderlies and other
- fractious persons to "go quietly along wid him," that was little short
- of marvellous. Excited revellers, who were being carried by their mates,
- struggling violently, would break away to prance gaily along to the lock-up
- with the sergeant. Obstinate drunks who had done nothing
- but lie on the ground and kick their feet in the air,
- would get up like birds, serpent-charmed, to go with him to durance vile.
-
- As soon as he saw the canvasser, and noted his fixed, unearthly stare,
- and listened to his hoarse, unnatural voice, the sergeant knew
- what was the matter; it was a man in the horrors, a common enough spectacle
- at Ninemile. He resolved to decoy him into the lock-up, and accosted him
- in a friendly, free-and-easy way.
-
- "Good day t'ye," he said.
-
- "---- most magnificent volume ever published, jewelled in fourteen holes,
- working on a ruby roller, and in a glass case," said the book-canvasser.
- "The likenesses of the historical personages are so natural
- that the book must not be left open on the table, or the mosquitoes
- will ruin it by stinging the portraits."
-
- It then dawned on the sergeant that this was no mere case of the horrors --
- he was dealing with a book-canvasser.
-
- "Ah, sure," he said, "fwhat's the use uv tryin' to sell books at all,
- at all; folks does be peltin' them out into the street, and the nanny-goats
- lives on them these times. Oi send the childer out to pick 'em up,
- and we have 'em at me place in barrow-loads. Come along wid me now,
- and Oi'll make you nice and comfortable for the night,"
- and he laid his hand on the outstretched palm of the figure.
-
- It was a fatal mistake. He had set in motion the machinery which operated
- the figure's left arm, and it moved that limb in towards its body,
- and hugged the sergeant to its breast, with a vice-like grip.
- Then it started in a faltering and uneven, but dogged, way
- to walk towards the river.
-
- "Immortial Saints!" gasped the sergeant, "he's squazin' the livin' breath
- out uv me. Lave go now loike a dacent sowl, lave go. And oh,
- for the love uv God, don't be shpakin' into me ear that way;"
- for the figure's mouth was pressed tight against the sergeant's ear,
- and its awful voice went through and through the little man's head,
- as it held forth about the volume. The sergeant struggled violently,
- and by so doing set some more springs in motion, and the figure's right arm
- made terrific swipes in the air. A following of boys and loafers
- had collected by this time. "Blimey, how does he lash out!" was the remark
- they made. But they didn't interfere, notwithstanding the sergeant's
- frantic appeals, and things were going hard with him when his subordinate,
- Constable Dooley, appeared on the scene.
-
- Dooley, better known as The Wombat because of his sleepy disposition,
- was a man of great strength. He had originally been quartered at Sydney,
- and had fought many bitter battles with the notorious "pushes" of Bondi,
- Surry Hills and The Rocks. After that, duty at Ninemile was child's play,
- and he never ran in fewer than two drunks at a time;
- it was beneath his dignity to be seen capturing a solitary inebriate.
- If they wouldn't come any other way, he would take them by the ankles
- and drag them after him. When the Wombat saw the sergeant in the grasp
- of an inebriate he bore down on the fray full of fight.
-
- "I'll soon make him lave go, sergeant," he said, and he caught hold
- of the figure's right arm, to put on the "police twist". Unfortunately,
- at that exact moment the sergeant touched one of the springs in
- the creature's breast. With the suddenness and severity of a horse-kick,
- it lashed out with its right hand, catching the redoubtable Dooley
- a thud on the jaw, and sending him to grass as if he had been shot.
-
- For a few minutes he "lay as only dead men lie". Then he got up
- bit by bit, wandered off home to the police-barracks,
- and mentioned casually to his wife that John L. Sullivan had come to town,
- and had taken the sergeant away to drown him. After which,
- having given orders that anybody who called was to be told
- that he had gone fifteen miles out of town to serve a summons on a man
- for not registering a dog, he locked himself up in a cell
- for the rest of the day.
-
- Meanwhile, the Cast-iron Canvasser, still holding the sergeant
- tightly clutched to its breast, was marching straight towards the river.
- Something had disorganised its vocal arrangements, and it was now
- positively shrieking in the sergeant's ear, and, as it yelled,
- the little man yelled still louder.
-
- "Oi don't want yer accursed book. Lave go uv me, Oi say!"
- He beat with his fists on its face, and kicked its shins without avail.
- A short, staggering rush, a wild shriek from the officer,
- and they both toppled over the steep bank and went souse into the depths
- of Ninemile Creek.
-
- That was the end of the matter. The Genius and his mate
- returned to town hurriedly, and lay low, expecting to be indicted
- for murder. Constable Dooley drew up a report for the Chief of Police
- which contained so many strange statements that the Police department
- concluded the sergeant must have got drunk and drowned himself,
- and that Dooley saw him do it, but was too drunk to pull him out.
-
- Anyone unacquainted with Ninemile might expect that a report
- of the occurrence would have reached the Sydney papers.
- As a matter of fact the storekeeper did think of writing one,
- but decided that it was too much trouble. There was some idea
- of asking the Government to fish the two bodies out of the river;
- but about that time an agitation was started in Ninemile
- to have the Federal Capital located there, and nothing else mattered.
-
- The Genius discovered a pub in Sydney that kept the Ninemile brand
- of whisky, and drank himself to death; the Wombat became
- a Sub-Inspector of Police; Sloper entered the Christian ministry;
- Dodge was elected to the Federal Parliament; and a vague tradition about
- "a bloke who came up here in the horrors, and drownded poor old O'Grady,"
- is the only memory that remains of that wonderful creation,
- the Cast-iron Canvasser.
-
-
-
-
- The Merino Sheep
-
-
-
- People have got the impression that the merino is a gentle, bleating animal
- that gets its living without trouble to anybody, and comes up every year
- to be shorn with a pleased smile upon its amiable face.
- It is my purpose here to exhibit the merino sheep in its true light.
-
- First let us give him his due. No one can accuse him of being
- a ferocious animal. No one could ever say that a sheep attacked him
- without provocation; although there is an old bush story of a man
- who was discovered in the act of killing a neighbour's wether.
-
- "Hello!" said the neighbour, "What's this? Killing my sheep!
- What have you got to say for yourself?"
-
- "Yes," said the man, with an air of virtuous indignation.
- "I AM killing your sheep. I'll kill ANY man's sheep that bites ME!"
-
- But as a rule the merino refrains from using his teeth on people.
- He goes to work in another way.
-
- The truth is that he is a dangerous monomaniac, and his one idea
- is to ruin the man who owns him. With this object in view
- he will display a talent for getting into trouble and a genius for dying
- that are almost incredible.
-
- If a mob of sheep see a bush fire closing round them, do they run away
- out of danger? Not at all, they rush round and round in a ring
- till the fire burns them up. If they are in a river-bed,
- with a howling flood coming down, they will stubbornly refuse
- to cross three inches of water to save themselves. Dogs may bark
- and men may shriek, but the sheep won't move. They will wait there
- till the flood comes and drowns them all, and then their corpses
- go down the river on their backs with their feet in the air.
-
- A mob will crawl along a road slowly enough to exasperate a snail,
- but let a lamb get away in a bit of rough country,
- and a racehorse can't head him back again. If sheep are put into
- a big paddock with water in three corners of it, they will resolutely
- crowd into the fourth, and die of thirst.
-
- When being counted out at a gate, if a scrap of bark be left on the ground
- in the gateway, they will refuse to step over it until dogs and men
- have sweated and toiled and sworn and "heeled 'em up", and "spoke to 'em",
- and fairly jammed them at it. At last one will gather courage,
- rush at the fancied obstacle, spring over it about six feet in the air,
- and dart away. The next does exactly the same, but jumps a bit higher.
- Then comes a rush of them following one another in wild bounds
- like antelopes, until one overjumps himself and alights on his head.
- This frightens those still in the yard, and they stop running out.
-
- Then the dogging and shrieking and hustling and tearing have to be
- gone through all over again. (This on a red-hot day, mind you,
- with clouds of blinding dust about, the yolk of wool irritating your eyes,
- and, perhaps, three or four thousand sheep to put through).
- The delay throws out the man who is counting, and he forgets whether
- he left off at 45 or 95. The dogs, meanwhile, have taken the first chance
- to slip over the fence and hide in the shade somewhere, and then
- there are loud whistlings and oaths, and calls for Rover and Bluey.
- At last a dirt-begrimed man jumps over the fence, unearths Bluey,
- and hauls him back by the ear. Bluey sets to work barking
- and heeling-'em up again, and pretends that he thoroughly enjoys it;
- but all the while he is looking out for another chance to "clear".
- And THIS time he won't be discovered in a hurry.
-
- There is a well-authenticated story of a ship-load of sheep that was lost
- because an old ram jumped overboard, and all the rest followed him.
- No doubt they did, and were proud to do it. A sheep won't go through
- an open gate on his own responsibility, but he would gladly and proudly
- "follow the leader" through the red-hot portals of Hades:
- and it makes no difference whether the lead goes voluntarily,
- or is hauled struggling and kicking and fighting every inch of the way.
-
- For pure, sodden stupidity there is no animal like the merino.
- A lamb will follow a bullock-dray, drawn by sixteen bullocks
- and driven by a profane person with a whip, under the impression
- that the aggregate monstrosity is his mother. A ewe never knows
- her own lamb by sight, and apparently has no sense of colour.
- She can recognise its voice half a mile off among a thousand other voices
- apparently exactly similar; but when she gets within five yards of it
- she starts to smell all the other lambs within reach,
- including the black ones -- though her own may be white.
-
- The fiendish resemblance which one sheep bears to another
- is a great advantage to them in their struggles with their owners.
- It makes it more difficult to draft them out of a strange flock,
- and much harder to tell when any are missing.
-
- Concerning this resemblance between sheep, there is a story told
- of a fat old Murrumbidgee squatter who gave a big price for a famous ram
- called Sir Oliver. He took a friend out one day to inspect Sir Oliver,
- and overhauled that animal with a most impressive air of sheep-wisdom.
-
- "Look here," he said, "at the fineness of the wool. See the serrations
- in each thread of it. See the density of it. Look at the way
- his legs and belly are clothed -- he's wool all over, that sheep.
- Grand animal, grand animal!"
-
- Then they went and had a drink, and the old squatter said, "Now,
- I'll show you the difference between a champion ram and a second-rater."
- So he caught a ram and pointed out his defects. "See here -- not half
- the serrations that other sheep had. No density of fleece to speak of.
- Bare-bellied as a pig, compared with Sir Oliver. Not that this isn't
- a fair sheep, but he'd be dear at one-tenth Sir Oliver's price.
- By the way, Johnson" (to his overseer), "what ram IS this?"
-
- "That, sir," replied the astounded functionary -- "that IS Sir Oliver,
- sir!"
-
- There is another kind of sheep in Australia, as great a curse
- in his own way as the merino -- namely, the cross-bred,
- or half-merino-half-Leicester animal. The cross-bred will get through,
- under, or over any fence you like to put in front of him.
- He is never satisfied with his owner's run, but always thinks
- other people's runs must be better, so he sets off to explore.
- He will strike a course, say, south-east, and so long as the fit takes him
- he will keep going south-east through all obstacles -- rivers, fences,
- growing crops, anything. The merino relies on passive resistance
- for his success; the cross-bred carries the war into the enemy's camp,
- and becomes a living curse to his owner day and night.
-
- Once there was a man who was induced in a weak moment to buy
- twenty cross-bred rams. From that hour the hand of Fate was upon him.
- They got into all the paddocks they shouldn't have been in.
- They scattered themselves over the run promiscuously.
- They visited the cultivation paddock and the vegetable-garden
- at their own sweet will. And then they took to roving. In a body
- they visited the neighbouring stations, and played havoc with the sheep
- all over the district.
-
- The wretched owner was constantly getting fiery letters
- from his neighbours: "Your blanky rams are here. Come and take them away
- at once," and he would have to go nine or ten miles to drive them home.
- Any man who has tried to drive rams on a hot day knows what purgatory is.
- He was threatened every week with actions for trespass.
-
- He tried shutting them up in the sheep-yard. They got out and went back
- to the garden. Then he gaoled them in the calf-pen.
- Out again and into a growing crop. Then he set a boy to watch them;
- but the boy went to sleep, and they were four miles away across country
- before he got on to their tracks.
-
- At length, when they happened accidentally to be at home
- on their owner's run, there came a big flood. His sheep, mostly merinos,
- had plenty of time to get on to high ground and save their lives;
- but, of course, they didn't, and were almost all drowned. The owner sat
- on a rise above the waste of waters and watched the dead animals go by.
- He was a ruined man. But he said, "Thank God, those cross-bred rams
- are drowned, anyhow." Just as he spoke there was a splashing in the water,
- and the twenty rams solemnly swam ashore and ranged themselves in front
- of him. They were the only survivors of his twenty thousand sheep.
- He broke down, and was taken to an asylum for insane paupers.
- The cross-breds had fulfilled their destiny.
-
- The cross-bred drives his owner out of his mind, but the merino
- ruins his man with greater celerity. Nothing on earth
- will kill cross-breds; nothing will keep merinos alive.
- If they are put on dry salt-bush country they die of drought.
- If they are put on damp, well-watered country they die of worms, fluke,
- and foot-rot. They die in the wet seasons and they die in the dry ones.
-
- The hard, resentful look on the faces of all bushmen comes from
- a long course of dealing with merino sheep. The merino dominates the bush,
- and gives to Australian literature its melancholy tinge,
- its despairing pathos. The poems about dying boundary-riders,
- and lonely graves under mournful she-oaks, are the direct outcome
- of the poet's too close association with that soul-destroying animal.
- A man who could write anything cheerful after a day in the drafting-yards
- would be a freak of nature.
-
-
-
-
- The Bullock
-
-
-
- The typical Australian bullock -- long-horned, sullen-eyed, stupid,
- and vindictive -- is bred away out in Queensland, on remote stations
- in the Never Never land, where men live on damper and beef,
- and occasionally eat a whole bottle of hot pickles at a sitting,
- simply to satisfy their craving for vegetable food. Here,
- under the blazing tropic sun, among flies and dust and loneliness,
- they struggle with the bullock from year's end to year's end.
- It is not to be supposed that they take up this kind of thing for fun.
- The man who worked cattle for sport would wheel bricks for amusement.
-
- At periodical intervals a boom in cattle-country arises in the cities,
- and syndicates are formed to take up country and stock it.
- It looks so beautifully simple -- ON PAPER.
-
- You get your country, thousands of miles of it, for next to nothing.
- You buy your breeding herd for a ridiculously small sum,
- on long-dated bills. Your staff consists of a manager,
- who toils for a share of the profits, a couple of half-civilized
- white stockmen at low wages, and a handful of blacks,
- who work harder for a little opium ash than they would for much money.
- Plant costs nothing, improvements nothing -- no woolshed is needed,
- there are no shearers to pay, and no carriage to market, for the bullock
- walks himself down to his doom. Granted that prices are low,
- still it is obvious that there must be huge profits in the business.
- So the cattle start away out to "the country", where they are supposed
- to increase and multiply, and enrich their owners. Alas! for such hopes.
- There is a curse on cattle.
-
- No one has ever been able to explain exactly how the deficit arises.
- Put the figures before the oldest and most experienced cattleman,
- and he will fail to show why they don't work out right.
- And yet they never do. It is not the fault of the cattle themselves.
- Sheep would rather die than live -- and when one comes to think of
- the life they lead, one can easily understand their preference for death;
- but cattle, if given half a chance, will do their best to prolong
- their existence.
-
- If they are running on low-lying country and are driven off
- when a flood comes, they will probably walk back into the flood-water
- and get drowned as soon as their owner turns his back. But, as a rule,
- cattle are not suicidal. They sort themselves into mobs,
- they pick out the best bits of country, they find their way to the water,
- they breed habitually; but it always ends in the same way.
- The hand of Fate is against them.
-
- If a drought comes, they eat off the grass near the water
- and have to travel far out for a feed. Then they fall away and get weak,
- and when they come down to drink they get bogged in the muddy waterholes
- and die there.
-
- Or Providence sends the pleuro, and big strong beasts slink away
- by themselves, and stand under trees glaring savagely till death comes.
- Or else the tick attacks them, and soon a fine, strong beast becomes
- a miserable, shrunken, tottering wreck. Once cattle get really low
- in condition they are done for. Sheep can be shifted when their
- pasture fails, but you can't shift cattle. They die quicker on the roads
- than on the run. The only thing is to watch and pray for rain.
- It always comes -- after the cattle are dead.
-
- As for describing the animals themselves, it would take volumes.
- Sheep are all alike, but cattle are all different. The drovers on the road
- get to know the habits and tendencies of each particular bullock --
- the one-eyed bullock that pokes out to the side of the mob,
- the inquisitive bullock that is always walking over towards the drover
- as if he were going to speak to him, the agitator bullock who is always
- trying to get up a stampede and prodding the others with his horns.
-
- In poor Boake's "Where the Dead Men Lie" he says:
-
- Only the hand of Night can free them --
- That's when the dead men fly!
- Only the frightened cattle see them --
- See the dead men go by!
- Cloven hoofs beating out one measure,
- Bidding the stockman know no leisure --
- That's when the dead men take their pleasure!
- That's when the dead men fly!
-
- Cattle on a camp see ghosts, sure enough -- else, why is it that,
- when hundreds are in camp at night -- some standing, some lying asleep,
- all facing different ways -- in an instant, at some invisible
- cause of alarm, the whole mob are on their feet and all racing
- IN THE SAME DIRECTION, away from some unseen terror?
-
- It doesn't do to sneak round cattle at night; it is better
- to whistle and sing than to surprise them by a noiseless appearance.
- Anyone sneaking about frightens them, and then they will charge
- right over the top of somebody on the opposite side,
- and away into the darkness, becoming more and more frightened as they go,
- smashing against trees and stumps, breaking legs and ribs,
- and playing the dickens with themselves generally. Cattle "on the road"
- are unaccountable animals; one cannot say for certain what they will do.
- In this respect they differ from sheep, whose movements can be predicted
- with absolute certainty.
-
- All the cussedness of the bovine race is centred in the cow. In Australia
- the most opprobious epithet one can apply to a man or other object
- is "cow". In the whole range of a bullock-driver's vocabulary
- there is no word that expresses his blistering scorn so well as "cow".
- To an exaggerated feminine perversity the cow adds a fiendish ingenuity
- in making trouble.
-
- A quiet milking-cow will "plant" her calf with such skill that ten stockmen
- cannot find him in a one-mile paddock. While the search goes on
- she grazes unconcernedly, as if she never had a calf in her life.
- If by chance he be discovered, then one notices a curious thing.
- The very youngest calf, the merest staggering-Bob two days old,
- will not move till the old lady gives him orders to do so.
- One may pull him about without getting a move out of him.
- If sufficiently persecuted he will at last sing out for help, and then
- his mother will arrive full-gallop, charge men and horses indiscriminately,
- and clear out with him to the thickest timber in the most rugged part
- of the creek-bed, defying man to get her to the yard.
-
- While in his mother's company he seconds her efforts with great judgment.
- But, if he be separated from her, he will follow a horse and rider
- up to the yard thinking he is following his mother, though she bellow
- instructions to him from the rear. Then the guileless agriculturist,
- having penned him up, sets a dog on him, and his cries soon fetch
- the old cow full-run to his assistance. Once in the yard she is roped,
- hauled into the bail, propped up to prevent her throwing herself down,
- and milked by sheer brute-force. After a while she steadies down
- and will walk into the bail, knowing her turn and behaving like
- a respectable female.
-
- Cows and calves have no idea of sound or distance. If a cow is on
- the opposite side of the fence, and wishes to communicate with her calf,
- she will put her head through the fence, place her mouth against his ear
- as if she were going to whisper, and then utter a roar that can be heard
- two miles off. It would stun a human being; but the calf thinks it over
- for a moment, and then answers with a prolonged yell in the old cow's ear.
- So the dialogue goes on for hours without either party dropping dead.
-
- There is an element of danger in dealing with cattle that makes men
- smart and self-reliant and independent. Men who deal with sheep
- get gloomy and morbid, and are for ever going on strike. Nobody ever heard
- of a stockman's strike. The true stockrider thinks himself just as good
- a man as his boss, and inasmuch as "the boss" never makes any money,
- while the stockman gets his wages, the stockman may be considered as having
- the better position of the two.
-
- Sheepmen like to think that they know all about cattle, and could work them
- if they chose. A Queensland drover once took a big mob from the Gulf
- right down through New South Wales, selling various lots as he went.
- He had to deliver some to a small sheep-man, near Braidwood,
- who was buying a few hundred cattle as a spec. By the time they arrived,
- the cattle had been on the road eight months, and were quiet as milkers.
- But the sheep-man and his satellites came out, riding stable-fed horses and
- brandishing twenty-foot whips, all determined to sell their lives dearly.
- They galloped round the astonished cattle and spurred their horses
- and cracked their whips, till they roused the weary mob. Then they started
- to cut out the beasts they wanted. The horses rushed and pulled,
- and the whips maddened the cattle, and all was turmoil and confusion.
-
- The Queensland drovers looked on amazed, sitting their patient
- leg-weary horses they had ridden almost continuously for eight months.
- At last, seeing the hash the sheep-men were making of it,
- the drovers set to work, and in a little while, without a shout,
- or crack of a whip, had cut out the required number.
- These the head drover delivered to the buyer, simply remarking,
- "Many's the time YOU never cut-out cattle."
-
- As I write, there rises a vision of a cattle-camp on an open plain,
- the blue sky overhead, the long grass rustling below,
- the great mob of parti-coloured cattle eddying restlessly about,
- thrusting at each other with their horns; and in among
- the sullen half-savage animals go the light, wiry stock-riders,
- horse and man working together, watchful, quick, and resolute.
-
- A white steer is wanted that is right in the throng. Way! -- make way!
- and horse and rider edge into the restless sea of cattle,
- the man with his eye fixed on the selected animal, the horse,
- glancing eagerly about him, trying to discover which is the wanted one.
- The press divides and the white steer scuttles along the edge of the mob
- trying to force his way in again. Suddenly he and two or three others
- are momentarily eddied out to the outskirts of the mob, and in that second
- the stockman dashes his horse between them and the main body.
- The lumbering beasts rush hither and thither in a vain attempt
- to return to their comrades. Those not wanted are allowed to return,
- but the white steer finds, to his dismay, that wherever he turns that horse
- and man and dreaded whip are confronting him. He doubles and dodges
- and makes feints to charge, but the horse anticipates every movement
- and wheels quicker than the bullock. At last the white steer sees
- the outlying mob he is required to join, and trots off to them quite happy,
- while horse and rider return to cut out another.
-
- It is a pretty exhibition of skill and intelligence, doubly pleasant
- to watch because of the undoubted interest that the horses take in it.
- Big, stupid creatures that they are, cursed with highly-strung nerves,
- and blessed with little sense, they are pathetically anxious to do
- such work as they can understand. So they go into the cutting-out camp
- with a zest, and toil all day edging lumbering bullocks out of the mob,
- but as soon as a bad rider gets on them and begins
- to haul their mouths about, their nerves overcome them,
- and they get awkward and frightened. A horse that is a crack camp-horse
- in one man's hands may be a hopeless brute in the hands of another.
-
-
-
-
- White-when-he's-wanted
-
-
-
- Buckalong was a big freehold of some 80,000 acres, belonging to
- an absentee syndicate, and therefore run in most niggardly style.
- There was a manager on 200 pounds a year, Sandy M'Gregor to wit --
- a hard-headed old Scotchman known as "four-eyed M'Gregor",
- because he wore spectacles. For assistants, he had half-a-dozen of us --
- jackaroos and colonial-experiencers -- who got nothing a year,
- and earned it.
-
- We had, in most instances, paid premiums to learn the noble art
- of squatting -- which now appears to me hardly worth studying,
- for so much depends on luck that a man with a head as long as a horse's
- has little better chance than the fool just imported.
- Besides the manager and the jackaroos, there were a few boundary riders
- to prowl round the fences of the vast paddocks. This constituted
- the whole station staff.
-
- Buckalong was on one of the main routes by which stock were taken
- to market, or from the plains to the tablelands, and vice versa.
- Great mobs of travelling sheep constantly passed through the run,
- eating up the grass and vexing the soul of the manager. By law,
- sheep must travel six miles per day, and they must be kept to within
- half-a-mile of the road. Of course we kept all the grass near the road
- eaten bare, to discourage travellers from coming that way.
-
- Such hapless wretches as did venture through Buckalong used to try hard
- to stray from the road and pick up a feed, but old Sandy was always
- ready for them, and would have them dogged right through the run.
- This bred feuds, and bad language, and personal combats between us
- and the drovers, whom we looked upon as natural enemies.
-
- The men who came through with mobs of cattle used to pull down
- the paddock fences at night, and slip the cattle in for refreshments,
- but old Sandy often turned out at 2 or 3 a.m. to catch a mob of bullocks
- in the horse-paddock, and then off they went to Buckalong pound.
- The drovers, as in duty bound, attributed the trespass to accident --
- broken rails, and so on -- and sometimes they tried to rescue the cattle,
- which again bred strife and police-court summonses.
-
- Besides having a particular aversion to drovers, old M'Gregor had
- a general "down" on the young Australians whom he comprehensively described
- as a "feckless, horrse-dealin', horrse-stealin', crawlin' lot o' wretches."
- According to him, a native-born would sooner work a horse to death
- than work for a living any day. He hated any man who wanted
- to sell him a horse.
-
- "As aw walk the street," he used to say, "the fouk disna stawp me
- to buy claes nor shoon, an' wheerfore should they stawp me to buy horrses?
- It's `Mister M'Gregor, will ye purrchase a horrse?' Let them wait
- till I ask them to come wi' their horrses."
-
- Such being his views on horseflesh and drovers, we felt
- no little excitement when one Sunday, at dinner, the cook came in to say
- there was "a drover-chap outside wanted the boss to come and have a look
- at a horse." M'Gregor simmered a while, and muttered something about
- the "Sawbath day"; but at last he went out, and we filed after him
- to see the fun.
-
- The drover stood by the side of his horse, beneath the acacia trees
- in the yard. He had a big scar on his face, apparently the result
- of collision with a fence; he looked thin and sickly and seemed
- poverty-stricken enough to disarm hostility. Obviously, he was down
- on his luck. Had it not been for that indefinable self-reliant look
- which drovers -- the Ishmaels of the bush -- always acquire, one might
- have taken him for a swagman. His horse was in much the same plight.
- It was a ragged, unkempt pony, pitifully poor and very footsore,
- at first sight, an absolute "moke"; but a second glance showed
- colossal round ribs, square hips, and a great length of rein,
- the rest hidden beneath a wealth of loose hair. He looked like
- "a good journey horse", possibly something better.
-
- We gathered round while M'Gregor questioned the drover.
- The man was monosyllabic to a degree, as the real bushmen generally are.
- It is only the rowdy and the town-bushy that are fluent of speech.
-
- "Guid mornin'," said M'Gregor.
-
- "Mornin', boss," said the drover, shortly.
-
- "Is this the horrse ye hae for sale?"
-
- "Yes."
-
- "Ay," and M'Gregor looked at the pony with a businesslike
- don't-think-much-of-him air, ran his hand lightly over the hard legs,
- and opened the passive creature's mouth. "H'm," he said.
- Then he turned to the drover. "Ye seem a bit oot o' luck.
- Ye're thin like. What's been the matter?"
-
- "Been sick with fever -- Queensland fever. Just come through
- from the North. Been out on the Diamantina last."
-
- "Ay. I was there mysel'," said M'Gregor. "Hae ye the fever on ye still?"
-
- "Yes -- goin' home to get rid of it."
-
- A man can only get Queensland fever in a malarial district, but he can
- carry it with him wherever he goes. If he stays, it will sap his strength
- and pull him to pieces; if he moves to a better climate, the malady moves
- with him, leaving him by degrees, and coming back at regular intervals
- to rack, shake, burn, and sweat its victim. Gradually it wears itself out,
- often wearing its patient out at the same time. M'Gregor had been through
- the experience, and there was a slight change in his voice as he went on
- with his palaver.
-
- "Whaur are ye makin' for the noo?"
-
- "Monaro -- my people live in Monaro."
-
- "Hoo will ye get to Monaro gin ye sell the horrse?"
-
- "Coach and rail. Too sick to care about ridin'," said the drover,
- while a wan smile flitted over his yellow-grey features.
- "I've rode him far enough. I've rode that horse a thousand miles.
- I wouldn't sell him, only I'm a bit hard up. Sellin' him now
- to get the money to go home."
-
- "Hoo auld is he?"
-
- "Seven."
-
- "Is he a guid horrse on a camp?" asked M'Gregor.
-
- "No better camp-horse in Queensland," said the drover. "You can chuck
- the reins on his neck, an' he'll cut out a beast by himself."
-
- M'Gregor's action in this matter puzzled us. We spent our time
- crawling after sheep, and a camp-horse would be about as much use to us
- as side-pockets to a pig. We had expected Sandy to rush the fellow
- off the place at once, and we couldn't understand how it was that he took
- so much interest in him. Perhaps the fever-racked drover
- and the old camp-horse appealed to him in a way incomprehensible to us.
- We had never been on the Queensland cattle-camps, nor shaken and shivered
- with the fever, nor lived the roving life of the overlanders.
- M'Gregor had done all this, and his heart (I can see it all now) went out
- to the man who brought the old days back to him.
-
- "Ah, weel," he said, "we hae'na muckle use for a camp-horrse here,
- ye ken; wi'oot some of these lads wad like to try theer han'
- cuttin' oot the milkers' cawves frae their mithers." And the old man
- laughed contemptuously, while we felt humbled in the sight of the man
- from far back. "An' what'll ye be wantin' for him?" asked M'Gregor.
-
- "Reckon he's worth fifteen notes," said the drover.
-
- This fairly staggered us. Our estimates had varied between
- thirty shillings and a fiver. We thought the negotiations
- would close abruptly; but M'Gregor, after a little more examination,
- agreed to give the price, provided the saddle and bridle,
- both grand specimens of ancient art, were given in. This was agreed to,
- and the drover was sent off to get his meals in the hut before leaving
- by the coach.
-
- "The mon is verra harrd up, an' it's a sair thing that Queensland fever,"
- was the only remark M'Gregor made. But we knew now that there was
- a soft spot in his heart somewhere.
-
- Next morning the drover got a crisp-looking cheque. He said no word
- while the cheque was being written, but, as he was going away,
- the horse happened to be in the yard, and he went over to the old comrade
- that had carried him so many miles, and laid a hand on his neck.
-
- "He ain't much to look at," said the drover, speaking slowly and awkwardly,
- "but he's white when he's wanted." And just before the coach rattled off,
- the man of few words leant down from the box and nodded impressively,
- and repeated, "Yes, he's white when he's wanted."
-
- We didn't trouble to give the new horse a name. Station horses
- are generally called after the man from whom they are bought.
- "Tom Devine", "The Regan mare", "Black M'Carthy" and "Bay M'Carthy"
- were among the appellations of our horses at that time. As we didn't know
- the drover's name, we simply called the animal "The new horse"
- until a still newer horse was one day acquired. Then, one of the hands
- being told to take the new horse, said, "D'yer mean the NEW new horse
- or the OLD new horse?"
-
- "Naw," said the boss, "not the new horrse -- that bay horrse we bought
- frae the drover. The ane he said was white when he's wanted."
-
- And so, by degrees, the animal came to be referred to as the horse
- that's white when he's wanted, and at last settled down
- to the definite name of "White-when-he's-wanted".
-
- White-when-he's-wanted didn't seem much of an acquisition. He was sent out
- to do slavery for Greenhide Billy, a boundary-rider who plumed himself
- on having once been a cattle-man. After a week's experience of "White",
- Billy came in to the homestead disgusted. The pony was so lazy
- that he had to build a fire under him to get him to move, and so rough
- that it made a man's nose bleed to ride him more than a mile. "The boss
- must have been off his head to give fifteen notes for such a cow."
-
- M'Gregor heard this complaint. "Verra weel, Mr. Billy," said he, hotly,
- "ye can juist tak' ane of the young horrses in yon paddock,
- an' if he bucks wi' ye an' kills ye, it's yer ain fault.
- Ye're a cattleman -- so ye say -- dommed if ah believe it.
- Ah believe ye're a dairy-farmin' body frae Illawarra. Ye ken neither
- horrse nor cattle. Mony's the time ye never rode buckjumpers, Mr. Billy"
- -- and with this parting-shot the old man turned into the house,
- and White-when-he's-wanted came back to the head station.
-
- For a while he was a sort of pariah. He used to yard the horses,
- fetch up the cows, and hunt travelling sheep through the run.
- He really was lazy and rough, and we all decided that Billy's opinion
- of him was correct, until the day came to make one of our periodical raids
- on the wild horses in the hills at the back of the run.
-
- Every now and again we formed parties to run in some of these animals,
- and, after nearly galloping to death half-a-dozen good horses,
- we would capture three or four brumbies, and bring them in triumph
- to the homestead to be broken in. By the time they had thrown
- half the crack riders on the station, broken all the bridles,
- rolled on all the saddles, and kicked all the dogs, they would be
- marketable (and no great bargains) at about thirty shillings a head.
-
- Yet there is no sport in the world to be mentioned in the same volume
- as "running horses", and we were very keen on it. All the crack nags
- were got as fit as possible, and fed up beforehand;
- and on this particular occasion White-when-he's-wanted, being in good trim,
- was given a week's hard feed and lent to a harum-scarum fellow from
- the Upper Murray, who happened to be working in a survey camp on the run.
- How he did open our eyes!
-
- He ran the mob from hill to hill, from range to range,
- across open country and back again to the hills, over flats and gullies,
- through hop-scrub and stringybark ridges; and all the time
- White-when-he's-wanted was on the wing of the mob, pulling double.
- The mares and foals dropped out, the colts and young stock pulled up
- dead beat, and only the seasoned veterans were left. Most of our horses
- caved in altogether; one or two were kept in the hunt by judicious nursing
- and shirking the work; but White-when-he's-wanted was with the quarry
- from end to end of the run, doing double his share; and at the finish,
- when a chance offered to wheel them into the trapyard, he simply
- smothered them for pace, and slewed them into the wings before they knew
- where they were. Such a capture had not fallen to our lot for many a day,
- and the fame of White-when-he's-wanted was speedily noised abroad.
-
- He was always fit for work, always hungry, always ready
- to lie down and roll, and always lazy. But when he heard the rush
- of the brumbies' feet in the scrub he became frantic with excitement.
- He could race over the roughest ground without misplacing a hoof
- or altering his stride, and he could sail over fallen timber
- and across gullies like a kangaroo. Nearly every Sunday
- we were after the brumbies, until they got as lean as greyhounds
- and as cunning as policemen. We were always ready
- to back White-when-he's-wanted to run-down, single-handed,
- any animal in the bush that we liked to put him after -- wild horses,
- wild cattle, kangaroos, emus, dingoes, kangaroo-rats -- we barred nothing,
- for, if he couldn't beat them for pace, he would outlast them.
-
- And then one day he disappeared from the paddock, and we never
- saw him again. We knew there were plenty of men in the district
- who would steal him; but, as we knew also of many more who would "inform"
- for a pound or two, we were sure that it could not have been local "talent"
- that had taken him. We offered good rewards and set some of the right sort
- to work, but heard nothing of him for about a year.
-
- Then the surveyor's assistant turned up again, after a trip
- to the interior. He told us the usual string of back-block lies,
- and wound up by saying that out on the very fringe of settlement
- he had met an old acquaintance.
-
- "Who was that?"
-
- "Why, that little bay horse that I rode after the brumbies that time.
- The one you called White-when-he's-wanted."
-
- "The deuce you did! Are you sure? Who had him?"
-
- "Sure! I'd swear to him anywhere. A little drover fellow had him.
- A little fellow, with a big scar across his forehead. Came from Monaro way
- somewhere. He said he bought the horse from you for fifteen notes."
-
- The King's warrant doesn't run much out west of Boulia,
- and it is not likely that any of us will ever see the drover again,
- or will ever again cross the back of "White-when-he's-wanted".
-
-
-
-
- The Downfall of Mulligan's
-
-
-
- The sporting men of Mulligan's were an exceedingly knowing lot;
- in fact, they had obtained the name amongst their neighbours
- of being a little bit too knowing. They had "taken down"
- the adjoining town in a variety of ways. They were always winning
- maiden plates with horses which were shrewdly suspected to be old
- and well-tried performers in disguise.
-
- When the sports of Paddy's Flat unearthed a phenomenal runner in the shape
- of a blackfellow called Frying-pan Joe, the Mulligan contingent
- immediately took the trouble to discover a blackfellow of their own,
- and they made a match and won all the Paddy's Flat money
- with ridiculous ease; then their blackfellow turned out to be
- a well-known Sydney performer. They had a man who could fight,
- a man who could be backed to jump five-feet-ten, a man who could
- kill eight pigeons out of nine at thirty yards, a man who could make
- a break of fifty or so at billiards if he tried; they could all drink,
- and they all had that indefinite look of infinite wisdom
- and conscious superiority which belongs only to those who know something
- about horseflesh.
-
- They knew a great many things never learnt at Sunday-school.
- They were experts at cards and dice. They would go to immense trouble
- to work off any small swindle in the sporting line.
- In short the general consensus of opinion was that they were
- a very "fly" crowd at Mulligan's, and if you went there you wanted to
- "keep your eyes skinned" or they'd "have" you over a threepenny-bit.
-
- There were races at Sydney one Christmas, and a select band of
- the Mulligan sportsmen were going down to them. They were in high feather,
- having just won a lot of money from a young Englishman at pigeon-shooting,
- by the simple method of slipping blank cartridges into his gun
- when he wasn't looking, and then backing the bird.
-
- They intended to make a fortune out of the Sydney people,
- and admirers who came to see them off only asked them as a favour
- to leave money enough in Sydney to make it worth while
- for another detachment to go down later on. Just as the train
- was departing a priest came running on to the platform,
- and was bundled into the carriage where our Mulligan friends were;
- the door was slammed to, and away they went. His Reverence was hot
- and perspiring, and for a few minutes mopped himself with a handkerchief,
- while the silence was unbroken except by the rattle of the train.
-
- After a while one of the Mulligan fraternity got out a pack of cards
- and proposed a game to while away the time. There was a young squatter
- in the carriage who looked as if he might be induced to lose a few pounds,
- and the sportsmen thought they would be neglecting their opportunities
- if they did not try to "get a bit to go on with" from him.
- He agreed to play, and, just as a matter of courtesy, they asked the priest
- whether he would take a hand.
-
- "What game d'ye play?" he asked, in a melodious brogue.
-
- They explained that any game was equally acceptable to them,
- but they thought it right to add that they generally played for money.
-
- "Sure an' it don't matter for wanst in a way," said he --
- "Oi'll take a hand bedad -- Oi'm only going about fifty miles,
- so Oi can't lose a fortune."
-
- They lifted a light portmanteau on to their knees to make a table,
- and five of them -- three of the Mulligan crowd and the two strangers --
- started to have a little game of poker. Things looked rosy
- for the Mulligan boys, who chuckled as they thought how soon
- they were making a beginning, and what a magnificent yarn they would have
- to tell about how they rooked a priest on the way down.
-
- Nothing sensational resulted from the first few deals, and the priest began
- to ask questions.
-
- "Be ye going to the races?"
-
- They said they were.
-
- "Ah! and Oi suppose ye'll be betting wid thim bookmakers --
- betting on the horses, will yez? They do be terrible knowing men,
- thim bookmakers, they tell me. I wouldn't bet much if Oi was ye," he said,
- with an affable smile. "If ye go bettin' ye will be took in
- wid thim bookmakers."
-
- The boys listened with a bored air and reckoned that by the time
- they parted the priest would have learnt that they were well able
- to look after themselves. They went steadily on with the game,
- and the priest and the young squatter won slightly; this was part
- of the plan to lead them on to plunge. They neared the station
- where the priest was to get out. He had won rather more than they liked,
- so the signal was passed round to "put the cross on". Poker is a game
- at which a man need not risk much unless he feels inclined,
- and on this deal the priest stood out. Consequently,
- when they drew up at his station he was still a few pounds in.
-
- "Bedad," he said, "Oi don't loike goin' away wid yer money.
- Oi'll go on to the next station so as ye can have revinge."
- Then he sat down again, and play went on in earnest.
-
- The man of religion seemed to have the Devil's own luck. When he was dealt
- a good hand he invariably backed it well, and if he had a bad one
- he would not risk anything. The sports grew painfully anxious
- as they saw him getting further and further ahead of them,
- prattling away all the time like a big schoolboy. The squatter was
- the biggest loser so far, but the priest was the only winner.
- All the others were out of pocket. His reverence played with great dash,
- and seemed to know a lot about the game, so that on arrival
- at the second station he was a good round sum in pocket.
-
- He rose to leave them with many expressions of regret, and laughingly
- promised full revenge next time. Just as he was opening the carriage door,
- one of the Mulligan fraternity said in a stage-whisper:
- "He's a blanky sink-pocket. If he can come this far,
- let him come on to Sydney and play for double the stakes."
- Like a shot the priest turned on him.
-
- "Bedad, an' if THAT'S yer talk, Oi'll play ye fer double stakes
- from here to the other side of glory. Do yez think men are mice
- because they eat cheese? It isn't one of the Ryans would be fearing
- to give any man his revinge!"
-
- He snorted defiance at them, grabbed his cards and waded in.
- The others felt that a crisis was at hand and settled down to play
- in a dead silence. But the priest kept on winning steadily,
- and the "old man" of the Mulligan push saw that something decisive
- must be done, and decided on a big plunge to get all the money back
- on one hand. By a dexterous manipulation of the cards
- he dealt himself four kings, almost the best hand at poker.
- Then he began with assumed hesitation to bet on his hand,
- raising the stake little by little.
-
- "Sure ye're trying to bluff, so ye are!" said the priest,
- and immediately raised it.
-
- The others had dropped out of the game and watched with painful interest
- the stake grow and grow. The Mulligan fraternity felt a cheerful certainty
- that the "old man" had made things safe, and regarded themselves
- as mercifully delivered from an unpleasant situation. The priest went on
- doggedly raising the stake in response to his antagonist's challenges
- until it had attained huge dimensions.
-
- "Sure that's high enough," said he, putting into the pool
- sufficient to entitle him to see his opponent's hand.
-
- The "old man" with great gravity laid down his four kings,
- whereat the Mulligan boys let a big sigh of relief escape them.
-
- Then the priest laid down four aces and scooped the pool.
-
- The sportsmen of Mulligan's never quite knew how they got out to Randwick.
- They borrowed a bit of money in Sydney, and found themselves
- in the saddling-paddock in a half-dazed condition, trying to realize
- what had happened to them. During the afternoon they were up at the end
- of the lawn near the Leger stand and could hear the babel of tongues,
- small bookmakers, thimble riggers, confidence men, and so on,
- plying their trades outside. In the tumult of voices they heard one
- that sounded familiar. Soon suspicion grew into certainty,
- and they knew that it was the voice of "Father" Ryan.
- They walked to the fence and looked over. This is what he was saying: --
-
- "Pop it down, gents! Pop it down! If you don't put down a brick
- you can't pick up a castle! I'll bet no one here can pick
- the knave of hearts out of these three cards. I'll bet half-a-sovereign
- no one here can find the knave!"
-
- Then the crowd parted a little, and through the opening
- they could see him distinctly, doing a great business
- and showing wonderful dexterity with the pasteboard.
-
- There is still enough money in Sydney to make it worth while
- for another detachment to come down from Mulligan's; but the next lot
- will hesitate about playing poker with priests in the train.
-
-
-
-
- The Amateur Gardener
-
-
-
- The first step in amateur gardening is to sit down and consider what good
- you are going to get by it. If you are only a tenant by the month,
- as most people are, it is obviously not of much use for you to plant
- a fruit orchard or an avenue of oak trees. What you want is something
- that will grow quickly, and will stand transplanting, for when you move
- it would be a sin to leave behind you the plants on which you have spent
- so much labour and so much patent manure.
-
- We knew a man once who was a bookmaker by trade --
- and a Leger bookmaker at that -- but had a passion for horses and flowers.
- When he "had a big win", as he occasionally did, it was his custom
- to have movable wooden stables, built on skids, put up in the yard,
- and to have tons of the best soil that money could buy
- carted into the garden of the premises which he was occupying.
-
- Then he would keep splendid horses, and grow rare roses
- and show-bench chrysanthemums. His landlord passing by
- would see the garden in a blaze of colour, and promise himself
- to raise the bookmaker's rent next quarter day.
-
- However, when the bookmaker "took the knock", as he invariably did at least
- twice a year, it was his pleasing custom to move without giving notice.
- He would hitch two cart-horses to the stables, and haul them right away
- at night. He would not only dig up the roses, trees, and chrysanthemums
- he had planted, but would also cart away the soil he had brought in;
- in fact, he used to shift the garden bodily. He had one garden
- that he shifted to nearly every suburb in Sydney; and he always argued
- that the change of air was invaluable for chrysanthemums.
-
- Being determined, then, to go in for gardening on common-sense principles,
- and having decided on the shrubs you mean to grow, the next consideration
- is your chance of growing them.
-
- If your neighbour keeps game fowls, it may be taken for granted
- that before long they will pay you a visit, and you will see the rooster
- scratching your pot plants out by the roots as if they were so much straw,
- just to make a nice place to lie down and fluff the dust over himself.
- Goats will also stray in from the street, and bite the young shoots off,
- selecting the most valuable plants with a discrimination
- that would do credit to a professional gardener.
-
- It is therefore useless to think of growing delicate or squeamish plants.
- Most amateur gardeners maintain a lifelong struggle against
- the devices of Nature; but when the forces of man and the forces of Nature
- come into conflict Nature wins every time. Nature has decreed
- that certain plants shall be hardy, and therefore suitable to suburban
- amateur gardeners; the suburban amateur gardener persists in trying to grow
- quite other plants, and in despising those marked out by Nature
- for his use. It is to correct this tendency that this article is written.
-
- The greatest standby to the amateur gardener should undoubtedly be
- the blue-flowered shrub known as "plumbago". This homely but hardy plant
- will grow anywhere. It naturally prefers a good soil,
- and a sufficient rainfall, but if need be it will worry along
- without either. Fowls cannot scratch it up, and even the goat
- turns away dismayed from its hard-featured branches.
- The flower is not strikingly beautiful nor ravishingly scented,
- but it flowers nine months out of the year; smothered with street dust
- and scorched by the summer sun, you will find that faithful old plumbago
- plugging along undismayed. A plant like this should be encouraged --
- but the misguided amateur gardener as a rule despises it.
-
- The plant known as the churchyard geranium is also one marked out
- by Providence for the amateur; so is Cosmea, which comes up year after year
- where once planted. In creepers, bignonia and lantana will hold their own
- under difficulties perhaps as well as any that can be found.
- In trees the Port Jackson fig is a patriotic one to grow.
- It is a fine plant to provide exercise, as it sheds its leaves unsparingly,
- and requires the whole garden to be swept up every day.
-
- Your aim as a student of Nature should be to encourage
- the survival of the fittest. There is a grass called nut grass,
- and another called Parramatta grass, either of which holds its own
- against anything living or dead. The average gardening manual
- gives you recipes for destroying these. Why should you destroy them
- in favour of a sickly plant that needs constant attention? No.
- The Parramatta grass is the selected of Nature, and who are you
- to interfere with Nature?
-
- Having decided to go in for strong, simple plants that will hold their own,
- and a bit over, you must get your implements of husbandry.
-
- The spade is the first thing, but the average ironmonger will show you
- an unwieldy weapon only meant to be used by navvies. Don't buy it.
- Get a small spade, about half-size -- it is nice and light and doesn't
- tire the wrist, and with it you can make a good display of enthusiasm,
- and earn the hypocritical admiration of your wife. After digging
- for half-an-hour or so, get her to rub your back with any
- of the backache cures. From that moment you will have no further need
- for the spade.
-
- A barrow is about the only other thing needed; anyhow,
- it is almost a necessity for wheeling cases of whisky up to the house.
- A rake is useful when your terrier dog has bailed up a cat,
- and will not attack it until the cat is made to run.
-
- Talking of terrier dogs, an acquaintance of ours has a dog that does all
- his gardening. The dog is a small elderly terrier with a failing memory.
- As soon as the terrier has planted a bone in the garden
- the owner slips over, digs it up and takes it away. When that terrier
- goes back and finds the bone gone, he distrusts his memory,
- and begins to think that perhaps he has made a mistake,
- and has dug in the wrong place; so he sets to work, and digs patiently
- all over the garden, turning over acres of soil in the course of
- his search. This saves his master a lot of backache.
-
- The sensible amateur gardener, then, will not attempt to fight with Nature
- but will fall in with her views. What more pleasant than to get out of bed
- at 11.30 on a Sunday morning; to look out of your window at a lawn
- waving with the feathery plumes of Parramatta grass, and to see beyond it
- the churchyard geranium flourishing side by side with the plumbago
- and the Port Jackson fig?
-
- The garden gate blows open, and the local commando of goats,
- headed by an aged and fragrant patriarch, locally known as De Wet,
- rushes in; but their teeth will barely bite through the wiry stalks
- of the Parramatta grass, and the plumbago and the figtree fail
- to attract them, and before long they stand on one another's shoulders,
- scale the fence, and disappear into the next-door garden,
- where a fanatic is trying to grow show roses.
-
- After the last goat has scaled your neighbour's fence, and only De Wet
- is left, your little dog discovers him. De Wet beats a hurried retreat,
- apparently at full speed, with the dog exactly one foot behind him
- in frantic pursuit. We say apparently at full speed, because experience
- has taught that De Wet can run as fast as a greyhound when he likes;
- but he never exerts himself to go faster than is necessary
- to keep just in front of whatever dog is after him.
-
- Hearing the scrimmage, your neighbour comes on to his verandah,
- and sees the chase going down the street.
-
- "Ha! that wretched old De Wet again!" he says. "Small hope your dog has
- of catching him! Why don't you get a garden gate like mine,
- so that he won't get in?"
-
- "No; he can't get in at your gate," is the reply; "but I think his commando
- are in your back garden now."
-
- Then follows a frantic rush. Your neighbour falls downstairs in his haste,
- and the commando, after stopping to bite some priceless pot plants
- of your neighbour's as they come out, skips easily back over the fence
- and through your gate into the street again.
-
- If a horse gets in his hoofs make no impression on the firm turf
- of the Parramatta grass, and you get quite a hearty laugh
- by dropping a chair on him from the first-floor window.
-
- The game fowls of your other neighbour come fluttering into your garden,
- and scratch and chuckle and fluff themselves under your plumbago bush;
- but you don't worry. Why should you? They can't hurt it; and, besides,
- you know that the small black hen and the big yellow one,
- who have disappeared from the throng, are even now laying their daily egg
- for you behind the thickest bush.
-
- Your little dog rushes frantically up and down the front bed
- of your garden, barking and racing, and tearing up the ground,
- because his rival little dog, who lives down the street, is going past
- with his master, and each pretends that he wants to be at the other --
- as they have pretended every day for the past three years. The performance
- he is going through doesn't disturb you. Why should it? By following
- the directions in this article you have selected plants he cannot hurt.
-
- After breakfasting at noon, you stroll out, and, perhaps,
- smooth with your foot, or with your spade, the inequalities
- made by the hens; you gather up casually the eggs they have laid;
- you whistle to your little dog, and go out for a stroll with a light heart.
-
-
-
-
- Thirsty Island
-
-
-
- Travellers approaching a bush township are sure to find some distance
- from the town a lonely public-house waiting by the roadside
- to give them welcome. Thirsty (miscalled Thursday) Island
- is the outlying pub of Australia.
-
- When the China and British-India steamers arrive from the North
- the first place they come to is Thirsty Island, the sentinel at the gate
- of Torres Straits. New chums on the steamers see a fleet
- of white-sailed pearling luggers, a long pier clustered with a hybrid crowd
- of every colour, caste and creed under Heaven, and at the back of it all
- a little galvanized-iron town shining in the sun.
-
- For nine months of the year a crisp, cool south-east wind blows,
- the snow-white beach is splashed with spray and dotted with
- the picturesque figures of Japanese divers and South Sea Island boatmen.
- Coco-nut palms line the roads by the beach, and back of the town
- are the barracks and a fort nestling among the trees on the hillside.
- Thirsty Island is a nice place -- to look at.
-
- When a vessel makes fast the Thirsty Islanders come down
- to greet the new-comers and give them welcome to Australia.
- The new-chums are inclined to patronise these simple, outlying people.
- Fresh from the iniquities of the China-coast cocktail
- and the unhallowed orgies of the Sourabaya Club, new-chums think they have
- little to learn in the way of drink; at any rate, they haven't come
- all the way to Thursday Island to be taught anything. Poor new-chums!
- Little do they know the kind of people they are up against.
-
- The following description of a night at Thursday Island is taken from
- a new-chum's note book:
-
- "Passed Proudfoot shoal and arrived at Thursday Island.
- First sight of Australia. Lot of men came aboard, all called Captain.
- They are all pearl-fishers or pilots, not a bit like the bushmen
- I expected. When they came aboard they divided into parties. Some invaded
- the Captain's cabin; others sat in the smoking room; the rest crowded
- into the saloon. They talked to the passengers about the Boer War,
- and told us about pearls worth 1000 pounds that had been found lately.
-
- "One captain pulled a handful of loose pearls out of a jar
- and handed them round in a casual way for us to look at.
- The stewards opened bottles and we all sat down for a drink and a smoke.
- I spoke to one captain -- an oldish man -- and he grinned amiably,
- but did not answer. Another captain leaned over to me and said,
- `Don't take any notice of him, he's boozed all this week.'
-
- "Conversation and drink became general. The night was very hot and close,
- and some of the passengers seemed to be taking more than was good for them.
- A contagious thirst spread round the ship, and before long the stewards
- and firemen were at it. The saloon became an inferno of drink and sweat
- and tobacco smoke. Perfect strangers were talking to each other
- at the top of their voices.
-
- "Young MacTavish, who is in a crack English regiment,
- asked the captain of a pearling lugger whether he didn't know
- Talbot de Cholmondeley in the Blues.
-
- "The pearler said very likely he had met 'em, and no doubt he'd remember
- their faces if he saw them, but he never could remember names.
-
- "Another passenger -- a Jew -- was trying to buy some pearls cheap
- from the captains, but the more the captains drank the less anxious
- they became to talk about pearls.
-
- "The night wore on, and still the drinks circulated. Young MacTavish
- slept profoundly.
-
- "One passenger gave his steward a sovereign as he was leaving the ship,
- and in half an hour the steward was carried to his berth in a fit --
- alcoholic in its origin. Another steward was observed openly drinking
- the passengers' whisky. When accused, he didn't even attempt
- to defend himself; the great Thursday Island thirst seemed to have
- communicated itself to everyone on board, and he simply HAD to drink.
-
- "About three in the morning a tour of the ship disclosed the following
- state of affairs: Captain's room full of captains solemnly tight;
- smoking-room empty, except for the inanimate form of the captain
- who had been boozed all the week, and was now sleeping peacefully
- with his feet on the sofa and his head on the floor. The saloon was full
- of captains and passengers -- the latter mostly in a state of collapse
- or laughing and singing deliriously; the rails lined with firemen
- who had business over the side; stewards ditto.
-
- "At last the Thursday Islanders departed, unsteadily, but still on
- their feet, leaving a demoralized ship behind them. And young MacTavish,
- who has seen a thing or two in his brief span, staggered to his berth,
- saying, `My God! Is ALL Australia like this place?'"
-
- * * * * *
-
- When no ships arrive, the Islanders just drop into the pubs,
- as a matter of routine, for their usual evening soak.
- They drink weird compounds -- horehound beer, known as "lady dog",
- and things like that. About two in the morning they go home speechless,
- but still able to travel. It is very rarely that an Islander gets
- helplessly drunk, but strangers generally have to be put to bed.
-
- The Japanese on the island are a strong faction. They have a club
- of their own, and once gave a dinner to mark the death
- of one of their members. He was shrewdly suspected of having tried
- to drown another member by cutting his airpipe, so, when he died,
- the club celebrated the event. The Japanese are not looked upon with favor
- by the white islanders. They send their money to Japan --
- thousands of pounds a year go through the little office in money-orders --
- and so they are not "good for trade".
-
- The Manilamen and Kanakas and Torres Strait islanders,
- on the other hand, bring all the money they do not spend
- on the pearling schooner to the island, and "blow it in", like men.
- They knife each other sometimes, and now and again have to be
- run in wholesale, but they are "good for trade". The local lock-up
- has a record of eighteen drunks run in in seven minutes.
- They weren't taken along in carriages-and-four, either;
- they were mostly dragged along by the scruff of the neck.
-
- Billy Malkeela, the South Sea diver, summed up the Japanese question --
- "Seems to me dis Islan' soon b'long Japanee altogedder.
- One time pa-lenty rickatta (plenty regatta), all same Isle of Wight.
- Now no more rickatta. All money go Japan!"
-
- An English new-chum made his appearance there lately --
- a most undefeated sportsman. He was put down in a diving dress
- in about eight feet of water, where he bubbled and struggled about
- in great style. Suddenly he turned, rushed for the beach,
- and made for the foot of a tree, which he tried to climb
- under the impression that he was still at the bottom of the ocean.
- Then he was hauled in by the life-line.
-
- The pearlers thought to get some fun out of him by giving him
- an oyster to open in which they had previously planted a pearl;
- he never saw the pearl and threw the oyster into the scuppers
- with the rest, and the pearlers had to go down on all fours
- and grope for that pearl among the stinking oysters. It was funny --
- but not in the way they had intended.
-
- The pearlers go out in schooners called floating stations
- (their enemies call them floating public-houses) and no man knows
- what hospitality is till he has been a guest on a pearling schooner.
- They carry it to extremes sometimes. Some pearlers were out in a lugger,
- and were passing by one of these schooners. They determined
- not to go on board, as it was late, and they were in a hurry.
- The captain of the schooner went below, got his rifle and put two bullets
- through their foresail. Then they put the helm down and went aboard;
- it was an invitation almost equivalent to a royal command.
- They felt heartily ashamed of themselves as they slunk up on deck,
- and the captain of the schooner eyed them reproachfully.
-
- "I couldn't let you disgrace yourselves by passing my schooner," he said;
- "but if it ever happens again I'll fire at the deck. A man that would
- pass a schooner in broad daylight is better dead."
-
- There is a fort and garrison at Thirsty Island, but they are not needed.
- If an invading fleet comes this way it should be encouraged
- by every possible means to land at the island; the heat, the thirst,
- the horehound beer, and the Islanders may be trusted to do the rest.
-
-
-
-
- Dan Fitzgerald Explains
-
-
-
- The circus was having its afternoon siesta. Overhead the towering
- canvas tent spread like a giant mushroom on a network of stalks --
- slanting beams, interlaced with guys and wire ropes.
-
- The ring looked small and lonely; its circle of empty benches seemed
- to stare intently at it, as though some sort of unseen performance
- were going on for the benefit of a ghostly audience. Now and again
- a guy rope creaked, or a loose end of canvas flapped like faint,
- unreal applause, as the silence shut down again, it did not need
- much imagination to people the ring with dead and gone circus riders
- performing for the benefit of shadowy spectators packed on those benches.
-
- In the menagerie portion matters were different; here there was
- a free and easy air, the animals realising that for the present
- the eyes of the public were off them, and they could put in the afternoon
- as they chose.
-
- The big African apes had dropped the "business" of showing their teeth,
- and pretending that they wanted to tear the spectators' faces off.
- They were carefully and painstakingly trying to fix up a kind of
- rustic seat in the corner of their cage with a short piece of board,
- which they placed against the wall. This fell down every time
- they sat on it, and the whole adjustment had to be gone through again.
-
- The camel had stretched himself full length on the tan, and was enjoying
- a luxurious snooze, oblivious of the fact that before long he would have to
- get up and assume that far-off ship-of-the-desert aspect. The remainder
- of the animals were, like actors, "resting" before their "turn" came on;
- even the elephant had ceased to sway about, while a small monkey,
- asleep on a sloping tent pole, had an attack of nightmare
- and would have fallen off his perch but for his big tail.
- It was a land of the Lotus-eater
-
- "In which it seemed always afternoon."
-
- These visions were dispelled by the entry of a person who said,
- "D'ye want to see Dan?" and soon Dan Fitzgerald, the man who knows
- all about the training of horses, came into the tent with Montgomery,
- the ringmaster, and between them they proceeded to expound the methods
- of training horseflesh.
-
- "What sort of horse do we buy for circus work? Well, it depends what
- we want 'em for. There are three sorts of horses in use in a circus --
- ring horses, trick horses, and school horses; but it doesn't matter
- what he is wanted for, a horse is all the better if he knows nothing.
- A horse that has been pulled about and partly trained has to unlearn a lot
- before he is any use to us. The less he knows, the better it is."
-
- "Then do you just try any sort of horse?"
-
- "Any sort, so long as he is a good sort, but it depends on what
- he is wanted for. If we want a ring horse, he has to be a quiet
- sober-going animal, not too well-bred and fiery. A ring horse is one
- that just goes round the ring for the bareback riders and equestriennes
- to perform on. The human being is the "star", and the horse in only
- a secondary performer, a sort of understudy; yes, that's it,
- an understudy -- he has to study how to keep under the man."
-
- "Are they hard to train?"
-
- "Their work all depends on the men that ride them. In bareback riding
- there's a knack in jumping on the horse. If a man lands awkwardly
- and jars the horse's back, the horse will get out of step
- and flinch at each jump, and he isn't nearly so good to perform on.
- A ring horse must not swerve or change his pace; if you're up in the air,
- throwing a somersault, and the horse swerves from underneath you --
- where are you?"
-
- "Some people think that horses take a lot of notice of the band --
- is that so?"
-
- "Not that I know of. If there are any horses in the show
- with an ear for music, I haven't heard of them. They take a lot of notice
- of the ringmaster."
-
- "Does it take them long to learn this work?"
-
- "Not long; a couple of months will teach a ring horse; of course,
- some are better than others."
-
- "First of all we teach them to come up to you, with the whip,
- like horsebreakers do. Then we run them round the ring with a lunging rein
- for a long time; then, when they are steady to the ring, we let them run
- with the rein loose, and the trainer can catch hold of it if they go wrong.
- Then we put a roller on them -- a broad surcingle that goes round
- the horse's body -- and the boys jump on them and canter round,
- holding on to the roller, or standing up, lying down, and doing tricks
- till the horse gets used to it."
-
- "Well?"
-
- "Well, you give 'em a couple of hours of it, perhaps, and then dry them
- and feed them, and give them a spell, and then bring them out again.
- They soon get to know what you want; but you can't break in horses
- on the move. The shifting and worry and noise and excitement put it all
- out of their heads. We have a fixed camp where we break them in.
- And a horse may know his work perfectly well when there is no one about,
- but bring him into the ring at night, and he is all abroad."
-
- "Do you have to give them much whip?"
-
- "Not much. If a horse doesn't know what you want him to do,
- it only ruins him to whip him. But once he does a thing a few times,
- and then won't do it, then you must whip him."
-
- "What about trick horses?"
-
- "A trick horse rolls a barrel, or lies down and goes to bed with the clown,
- or fires a pistol -- does any trick like that. Some small circuses
- make the same horses do both trick and ring work, but it isn't a good line.
- A horse is all the better to have only one line of business --
- same as a man."
-
- "How do you teach them tricks?"
-
- "Oh, it takes a long time and a lot of hard work and great patience.
- Even to make a horse lie down when he's ordered takes a couple of months
- sometimes. To make a horse lie down, you strap up one leg,
- and then pull his head round; after a while he gets so tired
- of the strained position that he lies down, after which
- he learns to do it at command. If you want him to pick up a handkerchief,
- you put a bit of carrot in it, and after a while they know
- that you want them to pick it up -- but it takes a long time.
- Then a strange hand in the ring will flurry them,
- and if anything goes wrong, they get all abroad. A good active pony,
- with a bit of Arab blood in him, is the best for tricks."
-
- "What's a school horse?"
-
- "Ah, that's a line of business that isn't appreciated enough out here.
- On the Continent they think a lot of them. A school horse is one
- that is taught to do passaging, to change his feet at command,
- to move sideways and backwards; in fact, to drill. Out here
- no one thinks much of it. But in Germany, where everyone goes through
- military riding schools, they do. The Germans are the best horse-trainers
- in the world; and the big German circus-proprietors have men
- to do all their business for them, while they just attend to the horses."
-
- "How long does it take to turn out a school horse?"
-
- "Well, Chiarini was the best trainer out here, and he used to take
- two years to get a horse to his satisfaction. For school horses, you must
- have thoroughbreds, because their appearance is half their success.
- We had a New Zealand thoroughbred that had raced, and was turning out
- a splendid school horse, and he got burnt after costing a year's training.
- That's the luck of the game, you know. You keep at it year after year,
- and sometimes they die, and sometimes they get crippled --
- it's all in the luck of the game. You may give fifty pounds for a horse,
- and find that he can never get over his fear of the elephant, while you
- give ten pounds for another, and find him a ready-made performer almost."
-
- We passed out through the ghostly circus and the menagerie tent
- down to the stable tent. There, among a lot of others,
- a tranquil-looking animal was munching some feed, while in front of him
- hung a placard, "Tiger Horse".
-
- "That's a new sort! What is he, ring, trick, or school horse?"
-
- "Well, he's a class by himself. I suppose you'd call him a ring horse.
- That's the horse that the tiger rides on."
-
- "Did it take him long to learn that?"
-
- "Well, it did not take this horse long; but we tried eleven others
- before we could get one to stand it. They're just like men, all different.
- What one will stand another won't look at. Well, good-bye."
-
- Just like men -- no doubt; most men have to carry tigers of various sorts
- through life to get a living.
-
-
-
-
- The Cat
-
-
-
- Most people think that the cat is an unintelligent animal,
- fond of ease, and caring little for anything but mice and milk.
- But a cat has really more character than most human beings,
- and gets a great deal more satisfaction out of life.
- Of all the animal kingdom, the cat has the most many-sided character.
-
- He -- or she -- is an athlete, a musician, an acrobat, a Lothario,
- a grim fighter, a sport of the first water. All day long
- the cat loafs about the house, takes things easy, sleeps by the fire,
- and allows himself to be pestered by the attentions of our womenfolk
- and annoyed by our children. To pass the time away
- he sometimes watches a mouse-hole for an hour or two --
- just to keep himself from dying of ennui; and people get the idea
- that this sort of thing is all that life holds for the cat. But watch him
- as the shades of evening fall, and you see the cat as he really is.
-
- When the family sits down to tea, the cat usually puts in an appearance
- to get his share, and purrs noisily, and rubs himself against the legs
- of the family; and all the time he is thinking of a fight or a love-affair
- that is coming off that evening. If there is a guest at table
- the cat is particularly civil to him, because the guest is likely to have
- the best of what is going. Sometimes, instead of recognizing this civility
- with something to eat, the guest stoops down and strokes the cat, and says,
- "Poor pussy! poor pussy!"
-
- The cat soon tires of that; he puts up his claw and quietly but firmly
- rakes the guest in the leg.
-
- "Ow!" says the guest, "the cat stuck his claws into me!"
- The delighted family remarks, "Isn't it sweet of him?
- Isn't he intelligent? HE WANTS YOU TO GIVE HIM SOMETHING TO EAT."
-
- The guest dares not do what he would like to do -- kick the cat
- through the window -- so, with tears of rage and pain in his eyes,
- he affects to be very much amused, and sorts out a bit of fish
- from his plate and hands it down. The cat gingerly receives it,
- with a look in his eyes that says: "Another time, my friend,
- you won't be so dull of comprehension," and purrs maliciously
- as he retires to a safe distance from the guest's boot before eating it.
- A cat isn't a fool -- not by a long way.
-
- When the family has finished tea, and gathers round the fire to enjoy
- the hours of indigestion, the cat slouches casually out of the room
- and disappears. Life, true life, now begins for him.
-
- He saunters down his own backyard, springs to the top of the fence
- with one easy bound, drops lightly down on the other side,
- trots across the right-of-way to a vacant allotment, and skips to the roof
- of an empty shed. As he goes, he throws off the effeminacy
- of civilisation; his gait becomes lithe and pantherlike;
- he looks quickly and keenly from side to side, and moves noiselessly,
- for he has so many enemies -- dogs, cabmen with whips,
- and small boys with stones.
-
- Arrived on the top of the shed, the cat arches his back, rakes his claws
- once or twice through the soft bark of the old roof, wheels round
- and stretches himself a few times; just to see that every muscle
- is in full working order; then, dropping his head nearly to his paws,
- he sends across a league of backyards his call to his kindred --
- a call to love, or war, or sport.
-
- Before long they come, gliding, graceful shadows, approaching circuitously,
- and halting occasionally to reconnoitre -- tortoiseshell, tabby, and black,
- all domestic cats, but all transformed for the nonce
- into their natural state. No longer are they the hypocritical,
- meek creatures who an hour ago were cadging for fish and milk.
- They are now ruffling, swaggering blades with a Gascon sense of dignity.
- Their fights are grim and determined, and a cat will be clawed to ribbons
- before he will yield.
-
- Even young lady cats have this inestimable superiority over human beings,
- that they can work off jealousy, hatred, and malice in a sprawling,
- yelling combat on a flat roof. All cats fight, and all keep themselves
- more or less in training while they are young. Your cat may be
- the acknowledged lightweight champion of his district --
- a Griffo of the feline ring!
-
- Just think how much more he gets out of his life than you do out of yours
- -- what a hurricane of fighting and lovemaking his life is --
- and blush for yourself. You have had one little love-affair,
- and never had a good, all-out fight in your life!
-
- And the sport they have, too! As they get older and retire from the ring
- they go in for sport more systematically; the suburban backyards,
- that are to us but dullness indescribable, are to them hunting-grounds
- and trysting-places where they may have more gallant adventure
- than ever had King Arthur's knights or Robin Hood's merry men.
-
- Grimalkin decides to kill a canary in a neighbouring verandah.
- Consider the fascination of it -- the stealthy reconnaissance
- from the top of the fence; the care to avoid waking the house-dog,
- the noiseless approach and the hurried dash, and the fierce clawing
- at the fluttering bird till its mangled body is dragged through
- the bars of the cage; the exultant retreat with the spoil;
- the growling over the feast that follows. Not the least entertaining part
- of it is the demure satisfaction of arriving home in time for breakfast
- and hearing the house-mistress say: "Tom must be sick; he seems to have
- no appetite."
-
- It is always levelled as a reproach against cats that they are more fond
- of their home than of the people in it. Naturally, the cat doesn't like
- to leave his country, the land where all his friends are,
- and where he knows every landmark. Exiled in a strange land,
- he would have to learn a new geography, to exploit another tribe of dogs,
- to fight and make love to an entirely new nation of cats.
- Life isn't long enough for that sort of thing. So, when the family moves,
- the cat, if allowed, will stay at the old house and attach himself
- to the new tenants. He will give them the privilege of boarding him
- while he enjoys life in his own way. He is not going to sacrifice
- his whole career for the doubtful reward which fidelity to his old master
- or mistress might bring.
-
-
-
-
- Sitting in Judgment
-
-
-
- The show ring was a circular enclosure of about four acres,
- with a spiked batten fence round it, and a listless crowd
- of back-country settlers propped along the fence. Behind them were
- the sheds for produce, and the machinery sections where steam threshers
- and earth scoops hummed and buzzed and thundered unnoticed.
- Crowds of sightseers wandered past the cattle stalls to gape at
- the fat bullocks; side-shows flourished, a blase goose drew marbles
- out of a tin canister, and a boxing showman displayed his muscles
- outside his tent, while his partner urged the youth of the district
- to come in and be thumped for the edification of the spectators.
-
- Suddenly a gate opened at the end of the show ring, and horses, cattle,
- dogs, vehicles, motor-cars, and bicyclists crowded into the arena.
- This was the general parade, but it would have been better described
- as a general chaos. Trotting horses and ponies, in harness,
- went whirling round the ring, every horse and every driver fully certain
- that every eye was fixed on them; the horses -- the vainest creatures
- in the world -- arching their necks and lifting their feet,
- whizzed past in bewildering succession, till the onlookers grew giddy.
- Inside the whirling circle blood stallions stood on their hind legs,
- screaming defiance to the world at large; great shaggy-fronted bulls,
- with dull vindictive eyes, paced along, looking as though they were trying
- to remember who it was that struck them last. A showground bull
- always seems to be nursing a grievance.
-
- Mixed up with the stallions and bulls were dogs and donkeys.
- The dogs were led by attendants, apparently selected on the principle
- of the larger the dog the smaller the custodian; while the donkeys
- were the only creatures unmoved by their surroundings,
- for they slept peaceably through the procession, occasionally waking up
- to bray their sense of boredom.
-
- In the centre of the ring a few lady-riders, stern-featured women
- for the most part, were being "judged" by a trembling official,
- who feared to look them in the face, but hurriedly and apologetically
- examined horses and saddles, whispered his award to the stewards,
- and fled at top speed to the official stand -- his sanctuary from the fury
- of spurned beauty. The defeated ladies immediately began to "perform" --
- that is, to ask the universe at large whether anyone ever heard
- the like of that! But the stewards strategically slipped away,
- and the injured innocents had no resource left but to ride haughtily
- round the ring, glaring defiance at the spectators.
-
- All this time stewards and committee-men were wandering among
- the competitors, trying to find the animals for judgment.
- The clerk of the ring -- a huge man on a small cob -- galloped around,
- roaring like a bull: "This way for the fourteen stone 'acks! Come on,
- you twelve 'and ponies!" and by degrees various classes got judged,
- and dispersed grumbling. Then the bulls filed out with their grievances
- still unsettled, the lady riders were persuaded to withdraw,
- and the clerk of the ring sent a sonorous bellow across the ground:
- "Where's the jumpin' judges?"
-
- From the official stand came a brisk, dark-faced, wiry little man.
- He had been a steeplechase rider and a trainer in his time.
- Long experience of that tricky animal, the horse, had made him reserved
- and slow to express an opinion. He mounted the table,
- and produced a note-book. From the bar of the booth came a large, hairy,
- red-faced man, whose face showed fatuous self-complacency.
- He was a noted show-judge because he refused, on principle,
- to listen to others' opinions; or in those rare cases when he did,
- only to eject a scornful contradiction. The third judge was
- a local squatter, who was overwhelmed with a sense of his own importance.
-
- They seated themselves on a raised platform in the centre of the ring,
- and held consultation. The small dark man produced his note-book.
-
- "I always keep a scale of points," he said. "Give 'em so many points
- for each fence. Then give 'em so many for make, shape, and quality,
- and so many for the way they jump."
-
- The fat man looked infinite contempt. "I never want any scale of points,"
- he said. "One look at the 'orses is enough for me. A man that judges
- by points ain't a judge at all, I reckon. What do you think?" he went on,
- turning to the squatter. "Do you go by points?"
-
- "Never," said the squatter, firmly; which, as he had never judged before
- in his life, was strictly true.
-
- "Well, we'll each go our own way," said the little man. "I'll keep points.
- Send 'em in."
-
- "Number One, Conductor!" roared the ring steward in a voice like thunder,
- and a long-legged grey horse came trotting into the ring
- and sidled about uneasily. His rider pointed him for the first jump,
- and went at it at a terrific pace. Nearing the fence the horse made
- a wild spring, and cleared it by feet, while the crowd yelled applause.
- At the second jump he raced right under the obstacle, propped dead,
- and rose in the air with a leap like a goat, while the crowd
- yelled their delight again, and said: "My oath! ain't he clever?"
- As he neared the third fence he shifted about uneasily, and finally
- took it at an angle, clearing a wholly unnecessary thirty feet.
- Again the hurricane of cheers broke out. "Don't he fly 'em," said one man,
- waving his hat. At the last fence he made his spring yards too soon;
- his forelegs got over all right, but his hind legs dropped on the rail
- with a sounding rap, and he left a little tuft of hair sticking on it.
-
- "I like to see 'em feel their fences," said the fat man.
- "I had a bay 'orse once, and he felt every fence he ever jumped;
- shows their confidence."
-
- "I think he'll feel that last one for a while," said the little dark man.
- "What's this now?"
-
- "Number Two, Homeward Bound!" An old, solid chestnut horse came out
- and cantered up to each jump, clearing them coolly and methodically.
- The crowd was not struck by the performance, and the fat man said:
- "No pace!" but surreptitiously made two strokes (to indicate Number Two)
- on the cuff of his shirt.
-
- "Number Eleven, Spite!" This was a leggy, weedy chestnut, half-racehorse,
- half-nondescript, ridden by a terrified amateur, who went at the fence
- with a white, set face. The horse raced up to the fence, and stopped dead,
- amid the jeers of the crowd. The rider let daylight into him
- with his spurs, and rushed him at it again. This time he got over.
-
- Round he went, clouting some fences with his front legs,
- others with his hind legs. The crowd jeered, but the fat man,
- from a sheer spirit of opposition, said: "That would be a good horse
- if he was rode better." And the squatter remarked: "Yes,
- he belongs to a young feller just near me. I've seen him jump splendidly
- out in the bush, over brush fences."
-
- The little dark man said nothing, but made a note in his book.
-
- "Number Twelve, Gaslight!" "Now, you'll see a horse," said the fat man.
- "I've judged this 'orse in twenty different shows, and gave him first prize
- every time!"
-
- Gaslight turned out to be a fiddle-headed, heavy-shouldered brute,
- whose long experience of jumping in shows where they give points for pace
- -- as if the affair was a steeplechase -- had taught him
- to get the business over as quickly as he could. He went thundering
- round the ring, pulling double, and standing off his fences in a style
- that would infallibly bring him to grief if following hounds across roads
- or through broken timber.
-
- "Now," said the fat man, "that's a 'unter, that is. What I say is,
- when you come to judge at a show, pick out the 'orse you'd soonest be on
- if Ned Kelly was after you, and there you have the best 'unter."
-
- The little man did not reply, but made the usual scrawl in his book,
- while the squatter hastened to agree with the fat man. "I like to see
- a bit of pace myself," he ventured.
-
- The fat man sat on him heavily. "You don't call that pace,
- do you?" he said. "He was going dead slow."
-
- Various other competitors did their turn round the ring,
- some propping and bucking over the jumps, others rushing and tearing
- at their fences; not one jumped as a hunter should. Some got themselves
- into difficulties by changing feet or misjudging the distance,
- and were loudly applauded by the crowd for "cleverness"
- in getting themselves out of the difficulties they had themselves created.
-
- A couple of rounds narrowed the competitors down to a few,
- and the task of deciding was entered on.
-
- "I have kept a record," said the little man, "of how they jumped
- each fence, and I give them points for style of jumping, and for their make
- and shape and hunting qualities. The way I bring it out is that
- Homeward Bound is the best, with Gaslight second."
-
- "Homeward Bound!" said the fat man. "Why, the pace he went wouldn't head
- a duck. He didn't go as fast as a Chinaman could trot with two baskets
- of stones. I want to have three of 'em in to have another look at 'em."
- Here he looked surreptitiously at his cuff, saw a note "No. II.",
- mistook it for "Number Eleven", and said: "I want Number Eleven
- to go another round."
-
- The leggy, weedy chestnut, with the terrified amateur up, came sidling
- and snorting out into the ring. The fat man looked at him with scorn.
-
- "What is that fiddle-headed brute doing in the ring?" he said.
-
- "Why," said the ring steward, "you said you wanted him."
-
- "Well," said the fat man, "if I said I wanted him I do want him.
- Let him go the round."
-
- The terrified amateur went at his fences with the rashness of despair,
- and narrowly escaped being clouted off on two occasions.
- This put the fat man in a quandary. He had kept no record,
- and all the horses were jumbled up in his head; but he had one fixed idea,
- to give the first prize to Gaslight; as to the second he was open
- to argument. From sheer contrariness he said that Number Eleven would be
- "all right if he were rode better," and the squatter agreed.
- The little man was overruled, and the prizes went -- Gaslight, first;
- Spite, second; Homeward Bound, third.
-
- The crowd hooted loudly as Spite's rider came round with the second ribbon,
- and small boys suggested to the fat judge in shrill tones that he ought to
- boil his head. The fat man stalked majestically into the stewards' stand,
- and on being asked how he came to give Spite the second prize,
- remarked oracularly: "I judge the 'orse, I don't judge the rider."
- This silenced criticism, and everyone adjourned to have a drink.
-
- Over the flowing bowl the fat man said: "You see, I don't believe
- in this nonsense about points. I can judge 'em without that."
-
- Twenty dissatisfied competitors vowed they would never bring
- another horse there in their lives. Gaslight's owner said: "Blimey,
- I knew it would be all right with old Billy judging. 'E knows this 'orse."
-
-
-
-
- The Dog
-
-
-
- The dog is a member of society who likes to have his day's work,
- and who does it more conscientiously than most human beings.
- A dog always looks as if he ought to have a pipe in his mouth
- and a black bag for his lunch, and then he would go quite happily to office
- every day.
-
- A dog without work is like a man without work, a nuisance to himself
- and everybody else. People who live about town, and keep a dog
- to give the children hydatids and to keep the neighbours awake at night,
- imagine that the animal is fulfilling his destiny. All town dogs,
- fancy dogs, show dogs, lap-dogs, and other dogs with no work to do,
- should be abolished; it is only in the country that a dog has
- any justification for his existence.
-
- The old theory that animals have only instinct, not reason, to guide them,
- is knocked endways by the dog. A dog can reason as well as a human being
- on some subjects, and better on others, and the best reasoning dog of all
- is the sheep-dog. The sheep-dog is a professional artist with a pride
- in his business. Watch any drover's dogs bringing sheep into the yards.
- How thoroughly they feel their responsibility, and how very annoyed
- they get if a stray dog with no occupation wants them to stop
- and fool about! They snap at him and hurry off, as much as to say:
- "You go about your idleness. Don't you see this is my busy day?"
-
- Sheep-dogs are followers of Thomas Carlyle. They hold that
- the only happiness for a dog in this life is to find his work and to do it.
- The idle, `dilettante', non-working, aristocratic dog they have no use for.
-
- The training of a sheep-dog for his profession begins at a very early age.
- The first thing is to take him out with his mother and let him see
- her working. He blunders lightheartedly, frisking along
- in front of the horse, and his owner tries to ride over him,
- and generally succeeds. It is amusing to see how that knocks all the gas
- out of a puppy, and with what a humble air he falls to the rear
- and glues himself to the horse's heels, scarcely daring to look
- to the right or to the left, for fear of committing some other breach
- of etiquette.
-
- He has had his first lesson -- to keep behind the horse until he is wanted.
- Then he watches the old slut work, and is allowed to go with her
- round the sheep; and if he shows any disposition to get out of hand
- and frolic about, the old lady will bite him sharply to prevent
- his interfering with her work.
-
- By degrees, slowly, like any other professional, he learns his business.
- He learns to bring sheep after a horse simply at a wave of the hand;
- to force the mob up to a gate where they can be counted or drafted;
- to follow the scent of lost sheep, and to drive sheep through a town
- without any master, one dog going on ahead to block the sheep from
- turning off into by-streets while the other drives them on from the rear.
-
- How do they learn all these things? Dogs for show work
- are taught painstakingly by men who are skilled in handling them;
- but, after all, they teach themselves more than the men teach them.
- It looks as if the acquired knowledge of generations were transmitted
- from dog to dog. The puppy, descended from a race of sheep-dogs,
- starts with all his faculties directed towards the working of sheep;
- he is half-educated as soon as he is born. He can no more help
- working sheep than a born musician can help being musical,
- or a Hebrew can help gathering in shekels. It is bred in him.
- If he can't get sheep to work, he will work a fowl;
- often and often one can see a collie pup painstakingly and carefully
- driving a bewildered old hen into a stable, or a stock-yard,
- or any other enclosed space on which he has fixed his mind.
- How does he learn to do that? He didn't learn it at all.
- The knowledge was born with him.
-
- When the dog has been educated, or has educated himself,
- he enjoys his work; but very few dogs like work "in the yards".
- The sun is hot, the dust rises in clouds, and there is nothing to do
- but bark, bark, bark -- which is all very well for learners and amateurs,
- but is beneath the dignity of the true professional sheep-dog.
- When they are hoarse with barking and nearly choked with dust,
- the men lose their tempers and swear at them, and throw clods of earth
- at them, and sing out to them "Speak up, blast you!"
-
- Then the dogs suddenly decide that they have done enough for the day.
- Watching their opportunity, they silently steal over the fence,
- and hide in any cool place they can find. After a while the men notice
- that hardly any are left, and operations are suspended while
- a great hunt is made into outlying pieces of cover, where the dogs
- are sure to be found lying low and looking as guilty as so many thieves.
- A clutch at the scruff of the neck, a kick in the ribs, and they are
- hauled out of hiding-places; and accompany their masters to the yard
- frolicking about and pretending that they are quite delighted to be
- going back, and only hid in those bushes out of sheer thoughtlessness.
- He is a champion hypocrite, is the dog.
-
- Dogs, like horses, have very keen intuition. They know when the men
- around them are frightened, though they may not know the cause.
- In a great Queensland strike, when the shearers attacked and burnt
- Dagworth shed, some rifle-volleys were exchanged. The air was full
- of human electricity, each man giving out waves of fear and excitement.
- Mark now the effect it had on the dogs. They were not in the fighting;
- nobody fired at them, and nobody spoke to them; but every dog
- left his master, left the sheep, and went away to the homestead,
- about six miles off. There wasn't a dog about the shed next day
- after the fight. The noise of the rifles had not frightened them,
- because they were well-accustomed to that.*
-
- * The same thing happened constantly with horses in the South African War.
- A loose horse would feed contentedly while our men were firing,
- but when our troops were being fired at the horses became uneasy,
- and the loose ones would trot away. The excitement of the men
- communicated itself to them.
-
- Dogs have an amazing sense of responsibility. Sometimes,
- when there are sheep to be worked, an old slut who has young puppies
- may be greatly exercised in her mind whether she should go out or not.
- On the one hand, she does not care about leaving the puppies, on the other,
- she feels that she really ought to go rather than allow the sheep
- to be knocked about by those learners. Hesitatingly, with many a look
- behind her, she trots out after the horses and the other dogs.
- An impassioned appeal from the head boundary rider,
- "Go back home, will yer!" is treated with the contempt it deserves.
- She goes out to the yards, works, perhaps half the day,
- and then slips quietly under the fences and trots off home, contented.
-
-
-
-
- The Dog -- as a Sportsman
-
-
-
- The sheep-dog and the cattle-dog are the workmen of the animal kingdom;
- sporting and fighting dogs are the professionals and artists.
-
- A house-dog or a working-dog will only work for his master;
- a professional or artistic dog will work for anybody, so long as he
- is treated like an artist. A man going away for a week's shooting
- can borrow a dog, and the dog will work for him loyally, just as
- a good musician will do his best, though the conductor is strange to him,
- and the other members of the band are not up to the mark.
- The musician's art is sacred to him, and that is the case with the dog --
- Art before everything.
-
- It is a grand sight to see a really good setter or pointer
- working up to a bird, occasionally glancing over his shoulder to see
- if the man with the gun has not lost himself. He throws his whole soul
- into his work, questing carefully over the cold scent, feathering eagerly
- when the bird is close, and at last drawing up like a statue.
- Not Paganini himself ever lost himself in his art more thoroughly than does
- humble Spot or Ponto. It is not amusement and not a mere duty to him;
- it is a sacred gift, which he is bound to exercise.
-
- A pointer in need of amusement will play with another dog --
- the pair pretending to fight, and so on, but when there is work to be done,
- the dog is lost in the artist. How crestfallen he looks if by any chance
- he blunders on to a bird without pointing it! A fiddler who has played
- a wrong note in a solo is the only creature who can look
- quite so discomfited. Humanity, instead of going to the ant for wisdom,
- should certainly go to the dog.
-
- Sporting dogs are like other artists, in that they are apt to get careless
- of everything except their vocation. They are similarly
- quite unreliable in their affections. They are not good watch dogs,
- and take little interest in chasing cats. They look on a little dog
- that catches rats much as a great musician looks on a cricketer --
- it's clever, but it isn't Art.
-
- Hunting and fighting dogs are the gladiators of the animal world.
- A fox-hound or a kangaroo-dog is always of the same opinion
- as Mr. Jorrocks: -- "All time is wasted what isn't spent in 'untin'."
-
- A greyhound will start out in the morning with three lame legs,
- but as soon as he sees a hare start he MUST go. He utterly forgets
- his sorrows in the excitement, just as a rowing-man, all over
- boils and blisters, will pull a desperate race without feeling any pain.
- Such dogs are not easily excited by anything but a chase,
- and a burglar might come and rob the house and murder the inmates
- without arousing any excitement among them. Guarding a house
- is "not their pidgin" as the Chinese say. That is one great reason
- for the success of the dog at whatever branch of his tribe's work
- he goes in for -- he is so thorough. Dogs who are forced to combine
- half-a-dozen professions never make a success at anything.
- One dog one billet is their motto.
-
- The most earnest and thorough of all the dog tribe is the fighting dog.
- His intense self-respect, his horror of brawling, his cool determination,
- make him a pattern to humanity. The bull-dog or bull-terrier is generally
- the most friendly and best-tempered dog in the world; but when he
- is put down in the ring he fights till he drops, in grim silence,
- though his feet are bitten through and through, his ears are in rags,
- and his neck a hideous mass of wounds.
-
- In a well-conducted dog-fight each dog in turn has to attack the other dog,
- and one can see fierce earnestness blazing in the eye of the attacker
- as he hurls himself on the foe. What makes him fight like that? It is not
- bloodthirstiness, because they are neither savage nor quarrelsome dogs:
- a bulldog will go all his life without a fight, unless put into a ring.
- It is simply their strong self-respect and stubborn pride which will not
- let them give in. The greyhound snaps at his opponent and then runs
- for his life, but the fighting dog stands to it till death.
-
- Just occasionally one sees the same type of human being --
- some quiet-spoken, good-tempered man who has taken up glove-fighting
- for a living, and who, perhaps, gets pitted against a man a shade better
- than himself. After a few rounds he knows he is overmatched, but there is
- something at the back of his brain that will not let him cave in.
- Round after round he stands punishment, and round after round
- he grimly comes up, till, possibly, his opponent loses heart,
- or a fluky hit turns the scale in his favour. These men are to be found
- in every class of life. Many of the gamest of the game are mere
- gutter-bred boys who will continue to fight long after they have endured
- enough punishment to entitle them to quit.
-
- You can see in their eyes the same hard glitter that shows
- in the bulldog's eyes as he limps across the ring, or in the eye
- of the racehorse as he lies down to it when his opponent is outpacing him.
- It is grit, pluck, vim, nerve force; call it what you like,
- and there is no created thing that has more of it than the dog.
-
- The blood-lust is a dog-phase that has never been quite understood.
- Every station-owner knows that sometimes the house-dogs are liable to take
- a sudden fit of sheep-killing. Any kind of dog will do it,
- from the collie downward. Sometimes dogs from different homesteads meet
- in the paddocks, having apparently arranged the whole affair beforehand.
- They are very artful about it, too. They lie round the house till dark,
- and then slink off and have a wild night's blood-spree,
- running down the wretched sheep and tearing their throats open;
- before dawn they slink back again and lie around the house as before.
- Many and many a sheep-owner has gone out with a gun
- and shot his neighbour's dogs for killing sheep which his own wicked,
- innocent-looking dogs had slain.
-
-
-
-
- Concerning a Steeplechase Rider
-
-
-
- Of all the ways in which men get a living there is none so hard
- and so precarious as that of steeplechase-riding in Australia.
- It is bad enough in England, where steeplechases only take place in winter,
- when the ground is soft, where the horses are properly schooled
- before being raced, and where most of the obstacles will yield a little
- if struck and give the horse a chance to blunder over safely.
-
- In Australia the men have to go at racing-speed, on very hard ground,
- over the most rigid and uncompromising obstacles -- ironbark rails
- clamped into solid posts with bands of iron. No wonder they are always
- coming to grief, and are always in and out of hospital
- in splints and bandages. Sometimes one reads that a horse has fallen
- and the rider has "escaped with a severe shaking."
-
- That "shaking", gentle reader, would lay you or me up for weeks,
- with a doctor to look after us and a crowd of sympathetic friends
- calling to know how our poor back was. But the steeplechase-rider
- has to be out and about again, "riding exercise" every morning,
- and "schooling" all sorts of cantankerous brutes over the fences.
- These men take their lives in their hands and look at grim death
- between their horses' ears every time they race or "school".
-
- The death-record among Australian cross-country jockeys and horses
- is very great; it is a curious instance of how custom sanctifies all things
- that such horse-and-man slaughter is accepted in such a callous way.
- If any theatre gave a show at which men and horses were habitually
- crippled or killed in full sight of the audience, the manager would be
- put on his trial for manslaughter.
-
- Our race-tracks use up their yearly average of horses and men
- without attracting remark. One would suppose that the risk being so great
- the profits were enormous; but they are not. In "the game" as played
- on our racecourses there is just a bare living for a good capable horseman
- while he lasts, with the certainty of an ugly smash if he keeps at it
- long enough.
-
- And they don't need to keep at it very long. After a few good "shakings"
- they begin to take a nip or two to put heart into them before they go out,
- and after a while they have to increase the dose. At last they cannot
- ride at all without a regular cargo of alcohol on board, and are either
- "half-muzzy" or shaky according as they have taken too much or too little.
-
- Then the game becomes suicidal; it is an axiom that as soon as a man
- begins to funk he begins to fall. The reason is that a rider who has
- lost his nerve is afraid of his horse making a mistake, and takes a pull,
- or urges him onward, just at the crucial moment when the horse is rattling
- up to his fence and judging his distance. That little, nervous pull
- at his head or that little touch of the spur, takes his attention
- from the fence, with the result that he makes his spring a foot too far off
- or a foot too close in, and -- smash!
-
- The loafers who hang about the big fences rush up to see if the jockey
- is killed or stunned; if he is, they dispose of any jewellery he may have
- about him; they have been known almost to tear a finger off in their
- endeavours to secure a ring. The ambulance clatters up at a canter,
- the poor rider is pushed in out of sight, and the ladies in the stand
- say how unlucky they are -- that brute of a horse falling
- after they backed him. A wolfish-eyed man in the Leger-stand shouts
- to a wolfish-eyed pal, "Bill, I believe that jock was killed
- when the chestnut fell," and Bill replies, "Yes, damn him,
- I had five bob on him." And the rider, gasping like a crushed chicken,
- is carried into the casualty-room and laid on a little stretcher,
- while outside the window the bookmakers are roaring "Four to one bar one,"
- and the racing is going on merrily as ever.
-
- These remarks serve to introduce one of the fraternity
- who may be considered as typical of all. He was a small, wiry,
- hard-featured fellow, the son of a stockman on a big cattle-station,
- and began life as a horse-breaker; he was naturally a horseman,
- able and willing to ride anything that could carry him.
- He left the station to go with cattle on the road, and having picked up
- a horse that showed pace, amused himself by jumping over fences.
- Then he went to Wagga, entered the horse in a steeplechase,
- rode him himself, won handsomely, sold the horse at a good price
- to a Sydney buyer, and went down to ride it in his Sydney races.
-
- In Sydney he did very well; he got a name as a fearless and clever rider,
- and was offered several mounts on fine animals. So he pitched his camp
- in Sydney, and became a fully-enrolled member of the worst profession
- in the world. I had known him in the old days on the road, and when
- I met him on the course one day I enquired how he liked the new life.
-
- "Well, it's a livin'," he said, "but it's no great shakes. They don't give
- steeplechase-riders a chance in Sydney. There's very few races,
- and the big sweepstakes keep horses out of the game."
-
- "Do you get a fair share of the riding?" I asked.
-
- "Oh, yes; I get as much as anybody. But there's a lot of 'em got a notion
- I won't take hold of a horse when I'm told (i.e., pull him
- to prevent him winning). Some of these days I'll take hold of a horse
- when they don't expect it."
-
- I smiled as I thought there was probably a sorry day in store
- for some backer when the jockey "took hold" unexpectedly.
-
- "Do you have to pull horses, then, to get employment?"
-
- "Oh, well, it's this way," he said, rather apologetically, "if an owner
- is badly treated by the handicapper, and is just giving his horse a run
- to get weight off, then it's right enough to catch hold a bit.
- But when a horse is favourite and the public are backing him
- it isn't right to take hold of him then. _I_ would not do it."
- This was his whole code of morals -- not to pull a favourite;
- and he felt himself very superior to the scoundrel who would pull
- favourites or outsiders indiscriminately.
-
- "What do you get for riding?" I asked him.
-
- "Well," he said, looking about uneasily, "we're supposed to get
- a fiver for a losing mount and ten pounds if we win, but a lot
- of the steeplechase-owners are what I call `battlers' --
- men who have no money and get along by owing everybody. They promise us
- all sorts of money if we win, but they don't pay if we lose.
- I only got two pounds for that last steeplechase."
-
- "Two pounds!" I made a rapid calculation. He had ridden over
- eighteen fences for two pounds -- had chanced his life eighteen times
- at less than half-a-crown a time.
-
- "Good Heavens!" I said, "that's a poor game. Wouldn't you be better
- back on the station?"
-
- "Oh, I don't know -- sometimes we get laid a bit to nothing,
- and do well out of a race. And then, you know, a steeplechase rider
- is somebody -- not like an ordinary fellow that is just working."
-
- I realised that I was an "ordinary fellow who was just working",
- and felt small accordingly.
-
- "I'm just off to weigh now," he said -- "I'm riding Contractor,
- and he'll run well, but he always seems to fall at those logs. Still,
- I ought to have luck to-day. I met a hearse as I was coming out.
- I'll get him over the fences, somehow."
-
- "Do you think it lucky, then, to meet a hearse?"
-
- "Oh, yes," he said, "if you MEET it. You mustn't overtake it --
- that's unlucky. So is a cross-eyed man unlucky. Cross-eyed men
- ought to be kept off racecourses."
-
- He reappeared clad in his racing rig, and we set off to see
- the horse saddled. We found the owner in a great state of excitement.
- It seemed he had no money -- absolutely none whatever -- but had borrowed
- enough to pay the sweepstakes, and stood to make something if the horse won
- and lose nothing if he lost, as he had nothing to lose. My friend insisted
- on being paid two pounds before he would mount, and the owner
- nearly had a fit in his efforts to persuade him to ride on credit.
- At last a backer of the horse agreed to pay 2 pounds 10s., win or lose,
- and the rider was to get 25 pounds out of the prize if he won.
- So up he got; and as he and the others walked the big muscular horses
- round the ring, nodding gaily to friends in the crowd, I thought of
- the gladiators going out to fight in the arena with the cry of
- "Hail, Caesar, those about to die salute thee!"
-
- The story of the race is soon told. My friend went to the front
- at the start and led nearly all the way, and "Contractor!" was on
- every one's lips as the big horse sailed along in front of his field.
- He came at the log-fence full of running, and it looked certain
- that he would get over. But at the last stride he seemed to falter,
- then plunged right into the fence, striking it with his chest, and,
- turning right over, landed on his unfortunate rider.
-
- A crowd clustered round and hid horse and rider from view,
- and I ran down to the casualty-room to meet him when the ambulance came in.
- The limp form was carefully taken out and laid on a stretcher
- while a doctor examined the crushed ribs, the broken arm, and all the havoc
- that the horse's huge weight had wrought.
-
- There was no hope from the first. My poor friend, who had so often
- faced Death for two pounds, lay very still awhile. Then he began to talk,
- wandering in his mind, "Where are the cattle?" -- his mind evidently
- going back to the old days on the road. Then, quickly, "Look out there --
- give me room!" and again "Five-and-twenty pounds, Mary, and a sure thing
- if he don't fall at the logs."
-
- Mary was sobbing beside the bed, cursing the fence and the money
- that had brought him to grief. At last, in a tone of satisfaction,
- he said, quite clear and loud: "I know how it was --
- THERE COULDN'T HAVE BEEN ANY DEAD MAN IN THAT HEARSE!"
-
- And so, having solved the mystery to his own satisfaction, he drifted away
- into unconsciousness -- and woke somewhere on the other side
- of the big fence that we can neither see through nor over,
- but all have to face sooner or later.
-
-
-
-
- Victor Second
-
-
-
- We were training two horses for the Buckatowndown races --
- an old grey warrior called Tricolor -- better known to the station boys
- as The Trickler -- and a mare for the hack race. Station horses
- don't get trained quite like Carbine; some days we had no time
- to give them gallops at all, so they had to gallop twice as far
- the next day to make up.
-
- One day the boy we had looking after The Trickler fell in with
- a mob of sharps who told him we didn't know anything about training horses,
- and that what the horse really wanted was "a twicer" -- that is to say,
- a gallop twice round the course. So the boy gave him "a twicer"
- on his own responsibility. When we found out about it we gave the boy
- a twicer with the strap, and he left and took out a summons against us.
- But somehow or other we managed to get the old horse pretty fit,
- tried him against hacks of different descriptions, and persuaded ourselves
- that we had the biggest certainty ever known on a racecourse.
-
- When the horses were galloping in the morning the kangaroo-dog, Victor,
- nearly always went down to the course to run round with them.
- It amused him, apparently, and didn't hurt anyone, so we used
- to let him race; in fact, we rather encouraged him, because it kept him
- in good trim to hunt kangaroo. When we were starting for the meeting,
- someone said we had better tie up Victor or he would be getting stolen
- at the races. We called and whistled, but he had made himself scarce,
- so we started and forgot all about him.
-
- Buckatowndown Races. Red-hot day, everything dusty, everybody drunk
- and blasphemous. All the betting at Buckatowndown was double-event --
- you had to win the money first, and fight the man for it afterwards.
-
- The start for our race, the Town Plate, was delayed for
- a quarter of an hour because the starter flatly refused to leave a fight
- of which he was an interested spectator. Every horse,
- as he did his preliminary gallop, had a string of dogs after him,
- and the clerk of the course came full cry after the dogs with a whip.
-
- By and by the horses strung across to the start at the far side
- of the course. They fiddled about for a bit; then down went the flag
- and they came sweeping along all bunched up together, one holding
- a nice position on the inside. All of a sudden we heard a wild chorus
- of imprecations -- "Look at that dog!" Victor had chipped in with
- the racehorses, and was running right in front of the field.
- It looked a guinea to a gooseberry that some of them would fall on him.
-
- The owners danced and swore. What did we mean by bringing
- a something mongrel there to trip up and kill horses that were worth
- a paddockful of all the horses we had ever owned, or would ever
- breed or own, even if we lived to be a thousand. We were fairly in it
- and no mistake.
-
- As the field came past the stand the first time we could hear the riders
- swearing at our dog, and a wild yell of execration arose from the public.
- He had got right among the ruck by this time, and was racing alongside
- his friend The Trickler, thoroughly enjoying himself. After passing
- the stand the pace became very merry; the dog stretched out all he knew;
- when they began to make it too hot for him, he cut off corners,
- and joined at odd intervals, and every time he made a fresh appearance
- the people in the stand lifted up their voices and "swore cruel".
-
- The horses were all at the whip as they turned into the straight,
- and then The Trickler and the publican's mare singled out.
- We could hear the "chop, chop!" of the whips as they came along together,
- but the mare could not suffer it as long as the old fellow,
- and she swerved off while he struggled home a winner by a length or so.
- Just as they settled down to finish Victor dashed up on the inside,
- and passed the post at old Trickler's girths. The populace
- immediately went for him with stones, bottles, and other missiles,
- and he had to scratch gravel to save his life. But imagine the amazement
- of the other owners when the judge placed Trickler first, Victor second,
- and the publican's mare third!
-
- The publican tried to argue it out with him. He said you couldn't place
- a kangaroo-dog second in a horse-race.
-
- The judge said it was HIS (hiccough) business what he placed,
- and that those who (hiccough) interfered with him would be sorry for it.
- Also he expressed a (garnished) opinion that the publican's mare
- was no rotten good, and that she was the right sort of mare
- for a poor man to own, because she would keep him poor.
-
- Then the publican called the judge a cow. The judge was willing;
- a rip, tear, and chew fight ensued, which lasted some time. The judge won.
-
- Fifteen protests were lodged against our win, but we didn't
- worry about that -- we had laid the stewards a bit to nothing.
- Every second man we met wanted to run us a mile for 100 pounds a side;
- and a drunken shearer, spoiling for a fight, said he had heard we were
- "brimming over with bally science", and had ridden forty miles to find out.
-
- We didn't wait for the hack race. We folded our tents like the Arab
- and stole away. But it remains on the annals of Buckatowndown
- how a kangaroo-dog ran second for the Town Plate.
-
-
-
-
- Concerning a Dog-fight
-
-
-
- Dog-fighting as a sport is not much in vogue now-a-days. To begin with
- it is illegal. Not that THAT matters much, for Sunday drinking
- is also illegal. But dog-fighting is one of the cruel sports which
- the community has decided to put down with all the force of public opinion.
- Nevertheless, a certain amount of it is still carried on near Sydney,
- and very neatly and scientifically carried on, too -- principally by
- gentlemen who live out Botany way and do not care for public opinion.
-
- The grey dawn was just breaking over Botany when we got to
- the meeting-place. Away to the East the stars were paling
- in the faint flush of coming dawn, and over the sandhills came
- the boom of breakers. It was Sunday morning, and all the respectable,
- non-dog-fighting population of that odoriferous suburb were sleeping
- their heavy, Sunday-morning sleep. Some few people, however, were astir.
- In the dim light hurried pedestrians plodded along the heavy road
- towards the sandhills. Now and then a van, laden with ten or eleven of
- "the talent", and drawn by a horse that cost fifteen shillings at auction,
- rolled softly along in the same direction. These were dog-fighters who
- had got "the office", and knew exactly where the match was to take place.
-
- The "meet" was on a main road, about half-a-mile from town;
- here some two hundred people had assembled, and hung up
- their horses and vehicles to the fence without the slightest concealment.
- They said the police would not interfere with them -- and they did not seem
- a nice crowd to interfere with.
-
- One dog was on the ground when we arrived, having come out
- in a hansom cab with his trainer. He was a white bull-terrier,
- weighing about forty pounds, "trained to the hour",
- with the muscles standing out all over him. He waited in the cab,
- licking his trainer's face at intervals to reassure that individual of
- his protection and support; the rest of the time he glowered out of the cab
- and eyed the public scornfully. He knew as well as any human being
- that there was sport afoot, and looked about eagerly and wickedly
- to see what he could get his teeth into.
-
- Soon a messenger came running up to know whether they meant
- to sit in the cab till the police came; the other dog, he said,
- had arrived and all was ready. The trainer and dog got out of the cab;
- we followed them through a fence and over a rise -- and there,
- about twenty yards from the main road, was a neatly-pitched enclosure
- like a prize-ring, a thirty-foot-square enclosure formed with
- stakes and ropes. About a hundred people were at the ringside,
- and in the far corner, in the arms of his trainer, was the other dog --
- a brindle.
-
- It was wonderful to see the two dogs when they caught sight of each other.
- The white dog came up to the ring straining at his leash, nearly dragging
- his trainer off his feet in his efforts to get at the enemy.
- At intervals he emitted a hoarse roar of challenge and defiance.
-
- The brindled dog never uttered a sound. He fixed his eyes on his adversary
- with a look of intense hunger, of absolute yearning for combat.
- He never for an instant shifted his unwinking gaze.
- He seemed like an animal who saw the hopes of years about to be realised.
- With painful earnestness he watched every detail of the other dog's toilet;
- and while the white dog was making fierce efforts to get at him,
- he stood Napoleonic, grand in his courage, waiting for the fray.
-
- All details were carefully attended to, and all rules strictly observed.
- People may think a dog-fight is a go-as-you-please outbreak of lawlessness,
- but there are rules and regulations -- simple, but effective. There were
- two umpires, a referee, a timekeeper, and two seconds for each dog.
- The stakes were said to be ten pounds a-side. After some talk,
- the dogs were carried to the centre of the ring by their seconds and put
- on the ground. Like a flash of lightning they dashed at each other,
- and the fight began.
-
- Nearly everyone has seen dogs fight -- "it is their nature to",
- as Dr. Watts put it. But an ordinary worry between (say) a retriever
- and a collie, terminating as soon as one or other gets his ear bitten,
- gives a very faint idea of a real dog-fight. But bull-terriers
- are the gladiators of the canine race. Bred and trained to fight,
- carefully exercised and dieted for weeks beforehand, they come to the fray
- exulting in their strength and determined to win. Each is trained to fight
- for certain holds, a grip of the ear or the back of the neck
- being of very slight importance. The foot is a favourite hold,
- the throat is, of course, fashionable -- if they can get it.
-
- The white and the brindle sparred and wrestled and gripped and threw
- each other, fighting grimly, and disdaining to utter a sound.
- Their seconds dodged round them unceasingly, giving them encouragement
- and advice -- "That's the style, Boxer -- fight for his foot" --
- "Draw your foot back, old man," and so on. Now and again one dog
- got a grip of the other's foot and chewed savagely, and the spectators
- danced with excitement. The moment the dogs let each other go
- they were snatched up by their seconds and carried to their corners,
- and a minute's time was allowed, in which their mouths were washed out
- and a cloth rubbed over their bodies.
-
- Then came the ceremony of "coming to scratch". When time was called
- for the second round the brindled dog was let loose in his own corner,
- and was required by the rules to go across the ring of his own free will
- and attack the other dog. If he failed to do this he would lose the fight.
- The white dog, meanwhile, was held in his corner waiting the attack.
- After the next round it was the white dog's turn to make the attack,
- and so on alternately. The animals need not fight a moment longer
- than they chose, as either dog could abandon the fight by failing to attack
- his enemy.
-
- While their condition lasted they used to dash across the ring at full run;
- but, after a while, when the punishment got severe and their "fitness"
- began to fail, it became a very exciting question whether or not a dog
- would "come to scratch". The brindled dog's condition was not so good
- as the other's. He used to lie on his stomach between the rounds to
- rest himself, and several times it looked as if he would not cross the ring
- when his turn came. But as soon as time was called he would
- start to his feet and limp slowly across glaring steadily at his adversary;
- then, as he got nearer, he would quicken his pace, make a savage rush,
- and in a moment they would be locked in combat. So they battled on
- for fifty-six minutes, till the white dog (who was apparently having
- all the best of it), on being called to cross the ring,
- only went half-way across and stood there for a minute growling savagely.
- So he lost the fight.
-
- No doubt it was a brutal exhibition. But it was not cruel to the animals
- in the same sense that pigeon-shooting or hare-hunting is cruel.
- The dogs are born fighters, anxious and eager to fight,
- desiring nothing better. Whatever limited intelligence they have
- is all directed to this one consuming passion. They could stop
- when they liked, but anyone looking on could see that they gloried
- in the combat. Fighting is like breath to them -- they must have it.
- Nature has implanted in all animals a fighting instinct
- for the weeding out of the physically unfit, and these dogs have
- an extra share of that fighting instinct.
-
- Of course, now that militarism is going to be abolished, and the world
- is going to be so good and teetotal, and only fight in debating societies,
- these nasty savage animals will be out of date. We will not be allowed
- to keep anything more quarrelsome than a poodle -- and a man of the future,
- the New Man, whose fighting instincts have not been quite bred out of him,
- will, perhaps, be found at grey dawn of a Sunday morning
- with a crowd of other unregenerates in some backyard
- frantically cheering two of them to mortal combat.
-
-
-
-
- His Masterpiece
-
-
-
- Greenhide Billy was a stockman on a Clarence River cattle-station,
- and admittedly the biggest liar in the district. He had been
- for many years pioneering in the Northern Territory, the other side
- of the sun-down -- a regular "furthest-out man" -- and this assured
- his reputation among station-hands who award rank according to
- amount of experience.
-
- Young men who have always hung around the home districts, doing a job
- of shearing here or a turn at horse-breaking there, look with reverence
- on Riverine or Macquarie-River shearers who come in with tales of runs
- where they have 300,000 acres of freehold land and shear 250,000 sheep;
- these again pale their ineffectual fires before the glory of
- the Northern Territory man who has all-comers on toast, because no one
- can contradict him or check his figures. When two of them meet, however,
- they are not fools enough to cut down quotations and spoil the market;
- they lie in support of each other, and make all other bushmen feel
- mean and pitiful and inexperienced.
-
- Sometimes a youngster would timidly ask Greenhide Billy about
- the `terra incognita': "What sort of a place is it, Billy -- how big
- are the properties? How many acres had you in the place you were on?"
-
- "Acres be d----d!" Billy would scornfully reply; "hear him
- talking about acres! D'ye think we were blanked cockatoo selectors!
- Out there we reckon country by the hundred miles. You orter say,
- `How many thousand miles of country?' and then I'd understand you."
-
- Furthermore, according to Billy, they reckoned the rainfall
- in the Territory by yards, not inches. He had seen blackfellows
- who could jump at least three inches higher than anyone else had ever seen
- a blackfellow jump, and every bushman has seen or personally known
- a blackfellow who could jump over six feet. Billy had seen
- bigger droughts, better country, fatter cattle, faster horses,
- and cleverer dogs, than any other man on the Clarence River.
- But one night when the rain was on the roof, and the river was rising
- with a moaning sound, and the men were gathered round the fire in the hut
- smoking and staring at the coals, Billy turned himself loose and gave us
- his masterpiece.
-
- "I was drovin' with cattle from Mungrybanbone to old Corlett's station
- on the Buckadowntown River" (Billy always started his stories
- with some paralysing bush names). "We had a thousand head of store-cattle,
- wild, mountain-bred wretches that'd charge you on sight;
- they were that handy with their horns they could skewer a mosquito.
- There was one or two one-eyed cattle among 'em -- and you know how
- a one-eyed beast always keeps movin' away from the mob,
- pokin' away out to the edge of them so as they won't git on his blind side,
- so that by stirrin' about he keeps the others restless.
-
- "They had been scared once or twice, and stampeded and gave us
- all we could do to keep them together; and it was wet and dark
- and thundering, and it looked like a real bad night for us.
- It was my watch. I was on one side of the cattle, like it might be here,
- with a small bit of a fire; and my mate, Barcoo Jim, he was right opposite
- on the other side of the cattle, and had gone to sleep under a log.
- The rest of the men were in the camp fast asleep. Every now and again
- I'd get on my horse and prowl round the cattle quiet like,
- and they seemed to be settled down all right, and I was sitting by my fire
- holding my horse and drowsing, when all of a sudden a blessed 'possum
- ran out from some saplings and scratched up a tree right alongside me.
- I was half-asleep, I suppose, and was startled; anyhow, never thinking
- what I was doing, I picked up a firestick out of the fire and flung it
- at the 'possum.
-
- "Whoop! Before you could say Jack Robertson, that thousand head of cattle
- were on their feet, and made one wild, headlong, mad rush right over
- the place where poor old Barcoo Jim was sleeping. There was no time
- to hunt up materials for the inquest; I had to keep those cattle together,
- so I sprang into the saddle, dashed the spurs into the old horse,
- dropped my head on his mane, and sent him as hard as he could leg it
- through the scrub to get to the lead of the cattle and steady them.
- It was brigalow, and you know what that is.
-
- "You know how the brigalow grows," continued Bill; "saplings about as thick
- as a man's arm, and that close together a dog can't open his mouth
- to bark in 'em. Well, those cattle swept through that scrub, levelling it
- like as if it had been cleared for a railway line. They cleared a track
- a quarter of a mile wide, and smashed every stick, stump and sapling on it.
- You could hear them roaring and their hoofs thundering
- and the scrub smashing three or four miles off.
-
- "And where was I? I was racing parallel with the cattle, with my head down
- on the horse's neck, letting him pick his way through the scrub
- in the pitchy darkness. This went on for about four miles.
- Then the cattle began to get winded, and I dug into the old stock-horse
- with the spurs, and got in front, and began to crack the whip and sing out,
- so as to steady them a little; after awhile they dropped slower and slower,
- and I kept the whip going. I got them all together in a patch of
- open country, and there I rode round and round 'em all night till daylight.
-
- "And how I wasn't killed in the scrub, goodness only knows;
- for a man couldn't ride in the daylight where I did in the dark.
- The cattle were all knocked about -- horns smashed, legs broken, ribs torn;
- but they were all there, every solitary head of 'em; and as soon as
- the daylight broke I took 'em back to the camp -- that is,
- all that could travel, because I had to leave a few broken-legged ones."
-
- Billy paused in his narrative. He knew that some suggestions would
- be made, by way of compromise, to tone down the awful strength of the yarn,
- and he prepared himself accordingly. His motto was "No surrender";
- he never abated one jot of his statements; if anyone chose to remark
- on them, he made them warmer and stronger, and absolutely flattened out
- the intruder.
-
- "That was a wonderful bit of ridin' you done, Billy,"
- said one of the men at last, admiringly. "It's a wonder you wasn't killed.
- I suppose your clothes was pretty well tore off your back with the scrub?"
-
- "Never touched a twig," said Billy.
-
- "Ah!" faltered the inquirer, "then no doubt you had a real
- ringin' good stock-horse that could take you through a scrub like that
- full-split in the dark, and not hit you against anything."
-
- "No, he wasn't a good un," said Billy decisively, "he was the worst horse
- in the camp. Terrible awkward in the scrub he was, always fallin' down
- on his knees; and his neck was so short you could sit far back on him
- and pull his ears."
-
- Here that interrogator retired hurt; he gave Billy best. After a pause
- another took up the running.
-
- "How did your mate get on, Billy? I s'pose he was trampled to a mummy!"
-
- "No," said Billy, "he wasn't hurt a bit. I told you he was sleeping
- under the shelter of a log. Well, when those cattle rushed
- they swept over that log a thousand strong; and every beast of that herd
- took the log in his stride and just missed landing on Barcoo Jimmy
- by about four inches."
-
- The men waited a while and smoked, to let this statement soak well
- into their systems; at last one rallied and had a final try.
-
- "It's a wonder then, Billy," he said, "that your mate didn't come after you
- and give you a hand to steady the cattle."
-
- "Well, perhaps it was," said Billy, "only that there was a bigger wonder
- than that at the back of it."
-
- "What was that?"
-
- "My mate never woke up all through it."
-
- Then the men knocked the ashes out of their pipes and went to bed.
-
-
-
-
- Done for the Double
-
- by Knott Gold
- Author of "Flogged for a Furlong", "Won by a Winker", etc., etc.
-
-
-
- Chapter I. -- Wanted, a Pony
-
-
- Algernon de Montgomery Smythers was a merchant, wealthy beyond
- the dreams of avarice. Other merchants might dress more lavishly,
- and wear larger watch chains; but the bank balance is the true test
- of mercantile superiority, and in a trial of bank balances
- Algernon de Montgomery Smythers represented Tyson at seven stone.
- He was unbeatable.
-
- He lived in comfort, not to say luxury. He had champagne
- for breakfast every morning, and his wife always slept with a pair
- of diamond earrings worth a small fortune in her ears.
- It is things like these that show true gentility.
-
- Though they had been married many years, the A. de M. Smythers
- had but one child -- a son and heir. No Christmas Day was allowed to pass
- by his doting parents without a gift to young Algy of some trifle
- worth about 150 pounds, less the discount for cash. He had six play-rooms,
- all filled with the most expensive toys and ingenious mechanical devices.
- He had a phonograph that could hail a ship out at the South Head,
- and a mechanical parrot that sang "The Wearing of the Green".
- And still he was not happy.
-
- Sometimes, in spite of the vigilance of his four nurses
- and six under-nurses, he would escape into the street, and run about
- with the little boys he met there. One day he gave one of them a sovereign
- for a locust. Certainly the locust was a "double-drummer",
- and could deafen the German Band when shaken up judiciously;
- still, it was dear at a sovereign.
-
- It is ever thus.
-
- What we have we do not value, and what other people have
- we are not strong enough to take from them.
-
- Such is life.
-
- Christmas was approaching, and the question of Algy's Christmas present
- agitated the bosom of his parents. He already had nearly everything
- a child could want; but one morning a bright inspiration
- struck Algy's father. Algy should have a pony.
-
- With Mr. Smythers to think was to act. He was not a man
- who believed in allowing grass to grow under his feet. His motto was,
- "Up and be doing -- somebody." So he put an advertisement in the paper
- that same day.
-
- "Wanted, a boy's pony. Must be guaranteed sound, strong, handsome,
- intelligent. Used to trains, trams, motors, fire engines,
- and motor 'buses. Any failure in above respects will disqualify.
- Certificate of birth required as well as references from last place.
- Price no object."
-
-
- Chapter II. -- Blinky Bill's Sacrifice
-
-
- Down in a poverty-stricken part of the city lived Blinky Bill,
- the horse-dealer.
-
- His yard was surrounded by loose-boxes made of any old timber,
- galvanized iron, sheets of roofing-felt, and bark he could gather together.
-
- He kept all sorts of horses, except good sorts. There were harness horses,
- that wouldn't pull, and saddle horses that wouldn't go -- or, if they went,
- used to fall down. Nearly every animal about the place had something
- the matter with it.
-
- When the bailiff dropped in, as he did every two or three weeks,
- Bill and he would go out together, and "have a punt" on some of
- Bill's ponies, or on somebody else's ponies -- the latter for choice.
- But periodical punts and occasional sales of horses would not keep the wolf
- from the door. Ponies keep on eating whether they are winning or not
- and Blinky Bill had got down to the very last pitch of desperation
- when he saw the advertisement mentioned at the end of last chapter.
-
- It was like a ray of hope to him. At once there flashed upon him
- what he must do.
-
- He must make a great sacrifice; he must sell Sausage II.
-
- Sausage II. was the greatest thirteen-two pony of the day.
- Time and again he had gone out to race when, to use William's own words,
- it was a blue duck for Bill's chance of keeping afloat; and every time
- did the gallant race pony pull his owner through.
-
- Bill owed more to Sausage II. than he owed to his creditors.
-
- Brought up as a pet, the little animal was absolutely trustworthy.
- He would carry a lady or a child, or pull a sulky; in fact,
- it was quite a common thing for Blinky Bill to drive him in a sulky
- to a country meeting and look about him for a likely "mark".
- If he could find a fleet youth with a reputedly fast pony,
- Bill would offer to "pull the little cuddy out of the sulky
- and run yer for a fiver." Sometimes he got beaten; but as he never paid,
- that didn't matter. He did not believe in fighting; but he would always
- sooner fight than pay.
-
- But all these devices had left him on his uppers in the end.
- He had no feed for his ponies, and no money to buy it; the corn merchant
- had written his account off as bad, and had no desire to make it worse.
- Under the circumstances, what was he to do? Sausage II. must be sold.
-
- With heavy heart Bill led the pony down to be inspected.
- He saw Mr. Algernon de Montgomery Smythers, and measured him with his eye.
- He saw it would be no use to talk about racing to him,
- so he went on the other track.
-
- He told him that the pony belonged to a Methodist clergyman,
- who used to drive him in a "shay". There are no shays in this country;
- but Bill had read the word somewhere, and thought it sounded respectable.
- "Yus, sir," he said, "'e goes lovely in a shay," and he was
- just starting off at twenty words a second, when he was stopped.
-
- Mr. A. de M. Smythers was brusque with his inferiors, and in this
- he made a mistake. Instead of listening to all that Blinky Bill said,
- and disbelieving it at his leisure, he stopped his talk.
-
- "If you want to sell this pony, dry up," he said. "I don't believe
- a word you say, and it only worries me to hear you lying."
-
- Fatal mistake! You should never stop a horse-dealer's talk.
- And call him anything you like, but never say you doubt his word.
-
- Both these things Mr. Smythers did; and, though he bought the pony
- at a high price, yet the insult sank deep into the heart of Blinky Bill.
-
- As the capitalist departed leading the pony, Blinky Bill muttered
- to himself, "Ha! ha! Little does he know that he is leading Sausage II.,
- the greatest 13.2 pony of the century. Let him beware how he gets
- alongside anything. That's all! Blinky Bill may yet be revenged!"
-
-
- Chapter III. -- Exit Algy
-
-
- Christmas Day came. Algy's father gave orders to have the pony saddled,
- and led round to the front door. Algy's mother, a lady of forty summers,
- spent the morning superintending the dinner. Dinner was the
- principal event in the day with her. Alas, poor lady! Everything she ate
- agreed with her, and she got fatter and fatter and fatter.
-
- The cold world never fully appreciates the struggles of those
- who are fat -- the efforts at starvation, the detested exercise,
- the long, miserable walks. Well has one of our greatest poets written,
- "Take up the fat man's burden." But we digress.
-
- When Algy saw the pony he shouted with delight, and in half a minute
- was riding him up and down the front drive. Then he asked for leave
- to go out in the street -- and that was where the trouble began.
-
- Up and down the street the pony cantered, as quietly as possible,
- till suddenly round a corner came two butcher boys racing their horses.
- With a clatter of clumsy hoofs they thundered past. In half a second
- there was a rattle, and a sort of comet-like rush through the air.
- Sausage II. was off after them with his precious burden.
-
- The family dog tried to keep up with him, and succeeded in keeping ahead
- for about three strides. Then, like the wolves that pursued Mazeppa,
- he was left yelping far behind. Through Surry Hills and Redfern swept
- the flying pony, his rider lying out on his neck in Tod Sloan fashion,
- while the ground seemed to race beneath him. The events of the way
- were just one hopeless blur till the pony ran straight as an arrow
- into the yard of Blinky Bill.
-
-
- Chapter IV. -- Running the Rule
-
-
- As soon as Blinky Bill recognised his visitor, he was delighted.
-
- "You here," he said, "Ha, ha, revenge is mine! I'll get a tidy reward
- for taking you back, my young shaver."
-
- Then from the unresisting child he took a gold watch and three sovereigns.
- These he said he would put in a safe place for him, till he was
- going home again. He expected to get at least a tenner ready money for
- bringing Algy back, and hoped that he might be allowed to keep the watch
- into the bargain.
-
- With a light heart he went down town with Algy's watch and sovereigns
- in his pocket. He did not return till daylight, when he awoke his wife
- with bad news.
-
- "Can't give the boy up," he said. "I moskenoed his block and tackle,
- and blued it in the school." In other words, he had pawned the boy's
- watch and chain, and had lost the proceeds at pitch and toss.
-
- "Nothing for it but to move," he said, "and take the kid with us."
-
- So move they did.
-
- The reader can imagine with what frantic anxiety the father and mother
- of little Algy sought for their lost one. They put the matter into
- the hands of the detective police, and waited for the Sherlock Holmeses
- of the force to get in their fine work. There was nothing doing.
-
- Years rolled on, and the mysterious disappearance of little Algy
- was yet unsolved. The horse-dealer's revenge was complete.
-
- The boy's mother consulted a clairvoyant, who murmured mystically
- "What went by the ponies, will come by the ponies;" and with that
- they had to remain satisfied.
-
-
- Chapter V. -- The Tricks of the Turf
-
-
- It was race day at Pulling'em Park, and the ponies were doing
- their usual performances.
-
- Among the throng the heaviest punter is a fat lady with diamond earrings.
- Does the reader recognize her? It is little Algy's mother.
- Her husband is dead, leaving her the whole of his colossal fortune,
- and, having developed a taste for gambling, she is now engaged in
- "doing it in on the ponies". She is one of the biggest bettors
- in the game.
-
- When women take to betting they are worse than men.
-
- But it is not for betting alone that she attends the meetings.
- She remembers the clairvoyant's "What went by the ponies will come
- by the ponies." And always she searches in the ranks of the talent
- for her lost Algy.
-
- Here enters another of our dramatis personae -- Blinky Bill,
- prosperous once more. He has got a string of ponies and punters together.
- The first are not much use to a man without the second; but, in spite of
- all temptations, Bill has always declined to number among his punters
- the mother of the child he stole. But the poor lady regularly punts
- on his ponies, and just as regularly is "sent up" -- in other words,
- loses her money.
-
- To-day she has backed Blinky's pair, Nostrils and Tin Can, for the double.
- Nostrils has won his race, and Tin Can, if on the job,
- can win the second half of the double. Is he on the job?
- The prices are lengthening against him, and the poor lady recognises
- that once more she is "in the cart".
-
- Just then she meets Tin Can's jockey, Dodger Smith, face to face.
- A piercing scream rends the atmosphere, as if a thousand school children
- drew a thousand slate pencils down a thousand slates simultaneously.
- "Me cheild! Me cheild! Me long-lost Algy!"
-
- It did not take long to convince Algy that he would be better off as a son
- to a wealthy lady than as a jockey, subject to the fiendish caprices
- of Blinky Bill.
-
- "All right, mother," he said. "Put all you can raise on Tin Can.
- I'm going to send Blinky up. It's time I had a cut on me own, anyway."
-
- The horses went to the post. Tons of money were at the last moment
- hurled on to Tin Can. The books, knowing he was "dead",
- responded gamely, and wrote his name till their wrists gave out.
- Blinky Bill had a half-share in all the bookies' winnings,
- so he chuckled grimly as he went to the rails to watch the race.
-
- They're off. And what is this that flashes to the front,
- while the howls of the bookies rise like the yelping of fiends in torment?
- It is Dodger Smith on Tin Can, and from the grandstand there is
- a shrill feminine yell of triumph as the gallant pony sails past the post.
-
- The bookies thought that Blinky Bill had sold them,
- and they discarded him for ever.
-
- Algy and his mother were united, and backed horses together
- happily ever after, and sometimes out in the back yard of
- their palatial mansion they hand the empty bottles, free of charge,
- to a poor old broken-down bottle-O, called Blinky Bill.
-
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- End of this Project Gutenberg Etext of Three Elephant Power and Other Stories
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