by Henry Lawson
“Oh!—orlright.”
“And if you can, time yourself to get here in the cool of the evening, or just about sunset.”
“What for?”
I’d thought it would be better to have the buggy there in the cool of the evening, when Mary would have time to get excited and get over it better than in the blazing hot morning, when the sun rose as hot as at noon, and we’d have the long broiling day before us.
“What do you want me to come at sunset for?” asked James. “Do you want me to camp out in the scrub and turn up like a blooming sundowner?”
“Oh well,” I said, “get here at midnight if you like.”
We didn’t say anything for a while—just sat and puffed at our pipes. Then I said:
“Well, what are you thinking about?”
“I’m thinking it’s time you got a new hat, the sun seems to get in through your old one too much,” and he got out of my reach and went to see about penning the calves. Before we turned in he said:
“Well, what am I to get out of the job, Joe?”
He had his eye on a double-barrel gun that Franca the gunsmith in Cudgegong had—one barrel shot, and the other rifle; so I said:
“How much does Franca want for that gun?”
“Five-ten; but I think he’d take my single barrel off it. Anyway, I can squeeze a couple of quid out of Phil Lambert for the single barrel.” (Phil was his bosom chum.)
“All right,” I said. “Make the best bargain you can.”
He got his own breakfast and made an early start next morning, to get clear of any instructions or messages that Mary might have forgotten to give him overnight. He took his gun with him.
I’d always thought that a man was a fool who couldn’t keep a secret from his wife—that there was something womanish about him. I found out. Those three days waiting for the buggy were about the longest I ever spent in my life. It made me scotty with everyone and everything; and poor Mary had to suffer for it. I put in the time patching up the harness and mending the stockyard and the roof, and, the third morning, I rode up the ridges to look for trees for fencing-timber. I remember I hurried home that afternoon because I thought the buggy might get there before me.
At tea-time I got Mary on to the buggy business.
“What’s the good of a single buggy to you, Mary?” I asked. “There’s only room for two, and what are you going to do with the children when we go out together?”
“We can put them on the floor at our feet, like other people do. I can always fold up a blanket or ’possum rug for them to sit on.”
But she didn’t take half so much interest in buggy talk as she would have taken at any other time, when I didn’t want her to. Women are aggravating that way. But the poor girl was tired and not very well, and both the children were cross. She did look knocked up.
“We’ll give the buggy a rest, Joe,” she said. (I thought I heard it coming then.) “It seems as far off as ever. I don’t know why you want to harp on it to-day. Now, don’t look so cross, Joe—I didn’t mean to hurt you. We’ll wait until we can get a double buggy, since you’re so set on it. There’ll be plenty of time when we’re better off.”
After tea, when the youngsters were in bed, and she’d washed up, we sat outside on the edge of the verandah floor, Mary sewing, and I smoking and watching the track up the creek.
“Why don’t you talk, Joe?” asked Mary. “You scarcely ever speak to me now: it’s like drawing blood out of a stone to get a word from you. What makes you so cross, Joe?”
“Well, I’ve got nothing to say.”
“But you should find something. Think of me—it’s very miserable for me. Have you anything on your mind? Is there any new trouble? Better tell me, no matter what it is, and not go worrying and brooding and making both our lives miserable. If you never tell me anything, how can you expect me to understand?”
I said there was nothing the matter.
“But there must be, to make you so unbearable. Have you been drinking, Joe—or gambling?”
I asked her what she’d accuse me of next.
“And another thing I want to speak to you about,” she went on. “Now, don’t knit up your forehead like that, Joe, and get impatient——”
“Well, what is it?”
“I wish you wouldn’t swear in the hearing of the children. Now, little Jim to-day, he was trying to fix his little go-cart and it wouldn’t run right, and—and——
“Well, what did he say?”
“He—he” (she seemed a little hysterical, trying not to laugh)—“he said ‘damn it!’”
I had to laugh. Mary tried to keep serious, but it was no use.
“Never mind, old woman,” I said, putting an arm round her, for her mouth was trembling, and she was crying more than laughing. “It won’t be always like this. Just wait till we’re a bit better off.”
Just then a black boy we had (I must tell you about him some other time) came sidling along by the wall, as if he were afraid somebody was going to hit him—poor little devil! I never did.
“What is it, Harry?” said Mary.
“Buggy comin’, I bin thinkit.”
“Where?”
He pointed up the creek.
“Sure it’s a buggy?”
“Yes, missus.”
“How many horses?”
“One—two.”
We knew that he could hear and see things long before we could. Mary went and perched on the wood-heap, and shaded her eyes—though the sun had gone—and peered through between the eternal grey trunks of the stunted trees on the flat across the creek. Presently she jumped down and came running in.
“There’s someone coming in a buggy, Joe!” she cried, excitedly. “And both my white table-cloths are rough dry. Harry! put two flat-irons down to the fire, quick, and put on some more wood. It’s lucky I kept those new sheets packed away. Get up out of that, Joe! What are you sitting grinning like that for? Go and get on another shirt. Hurry—Why! It’s only James—by himself.”
She stared at me, and I sat there, grinning like a fool.
“Joe!” she said, “whose buggy is that?”
“Well, I suppose it’s yours,” I said.
She caught her breath, and stared at the buggy and then at me again. James drove down out of sight into the crossing, and came up close to the house.
“Oh, Joe! what have you done?” cried Mary. “Why, it’s a new double buggy!” Then she rushed at me and hugged my head. “Why didn’t you tell me, Joe? You poor old boy!—and I’ve been nagging at you all day!” And she hugged me again.
James got down and started taking the horses out—as if it was an everyday occurrence. I saw the double-barrel gun sticking out from under the seat. He’d stopped to wash the buggy, and I suppose that’s what made him grumpy. Mary stood on the verandah, with her eyes twice as big as usual, and breathing hard—taking the buggy in.
James skimmed the harness off, and the horses shook themselves and went down to the dam for a drink. “You’d better look under the seats,” growled James, as he took his gun out with great care.
Mary dived for the buggy. There was a dozen of lemonade and ginger-beer in a candle-box from Galletly—James said that Galletly’s men had a gallon of beer, and they cheered him, James (I suppose he meant they cheered the buggy), as he drove off; there was a “little bit of a ham” from Pat Murphy, the storekeeper at Home Rule, that he’d “cured himself”—it was the biggest I ever saw; there were three loaves of baker’s bread, a cake, and a dozen yards of something “to make up for the children”, from Aunt Gertrude at Gulgong; there was a fresh-water cod, that long Dave Regan had caught the night before in the Macquarie River and sent out packed in salt in a box; there was a holland suit for the black boy, with red braid to trim it; and there was a jar of preserved ginger, and some lollies (sweets) (“for the lil’ boy”), and a rum-looking Chinese doll and a rattle (“for lil’ girl”) from Sun Tong Lee, our storekeeper at Gulgong—James was chummy with Sun Tong Lee,
and got his powder and shot and caps there on tick when he was short of money. And James said that the people would have loaded the buggy with “rubbish” if he’d waited. They all seemed glad to see Joe Wilson getting on—and these things did me good.
We got the things inside, and I don’t think either of us knew what we were saying or doing for the next half-hour. Then James put his head in and said, in a very injured tone:
“What about my tea? I ain’t had anything to speak of since I left Cudgegong. I want some grub.”
Then Mary pulled herself together.
“You’ll have your tea directly,” she said. “Pick up that harness at once, and hang it on the pegs in the skillion; and you, Joe, back that buggy under the end of the verandah, the dew will be on it presently—and we’ll put wet bags up in front of it to-morrow, to keep the sun off. And James will have to go back to Cudgegong for the cart—we can’t have that buggy to knock about in.”
“All right,” said James—“anything! Only get me some grub.”
Mary fried the fish, in case it wouldn’t keep till the morning, and rubbed over the table-cloths, now the irons were hot—James growling all the time—and got out some crockery she had packed away that had belonged to her mother, and set the table in a style that made James uncomfortable.
“I want some grub—not a blooming banquet!” he said. And he growled a lot because Mary wanted him to eat his fish without a knife, “and that sort of Tommy-rot”. When he’d finished he took his gun, and the black boy, and the dogs, and went out ’possum-shooting.
When we were alone Mary climbed into the buggy to try the seat, and made me get up alongside her. We hadn’t had such a comfortable seat for years; but we soon got down, in case anyone came by, for we began to feel like a pair of fools up there.
Then we sat, side by side, on the edge of the verandah, and talked more than we’d done for years—and there was a good deal of “Do you remember?” in it—and I think we got to understand each other better that night.
And at last Mary said, “Do you know, Joe, why, I feel tonight just—just like I did the day we were married.”
And somehow I had that strange, shy sort of feeling too.
FROM JOE WILSON’S MATES
The Golden Graveyard
MOTHER MIDDLETON was an awful woman, an “old hand” (transported convict) some said. The prefix “mother” in Australia mostly means “old hag”, and is applied in that sense. In early boyhood we understood, from old diggers, that Mother Middleton—in common with most other “old hands”—had been sent out for “knocking a donkey off a hen-roost”. We had never seen a donkey. She drank like a fish and swore like a trooper when the spirit moved her; she went on periodical sprees, and swore on most occasions. There was a fearsome yarn, which impressed us greatly as boys, to the effect that once, in her best (or worst) days she had pulled a mounted policeman off his horse, and half-killed him with a heavy pick-handle, which she used for poking down clothes in her boiler. She said that he had insulted her.
She could still knock down a tree and cut a load of firewood with any Bushman; she was square and muscular, with arms like a navvy’s; she had often worked shifts, below and on top, with her husband, when he’d be putting down a prospecting shaft without a mate, as he often had to do—because of her mainly. Old diggers said that it was lovely to see how she’d spin up a heavy green-hide bucket full of clay and “tailings”, and land and empty it with a twist of her wrist. Most men were afraid of her, and few diggers’ wives were strong-minded enough to seek a second row with Mother Middleton. Her voice could be heard right across Golden Gully and Specimen Flat, whether raised in argument or in friendly greeting. She came to the old Pipeclay diggings with the “rough crowd” (mostly Irish), and when the old and new Pipeclays were worked out, she went with the rush to Gulgong (about the last of the great alluvial or “poor-man’s” gold-fields) and came back to Pipeclay when the Log Paddock gold-field “broke out”, adjacent to the old fields, and so helped prove the truth of the old digger’s saying, that no matter how thoroughly ground has been worked, there is always room for a new Ballarat.
Jimmy Middleton died at Log Paddock, and was buried, about the last, in the little old cemetery—appertaining to the old farming town on the river, about four miles away—which adjoined the district racecourse, in the Bush, on the far edge of Specimen Flat. She conducted the funeral. Some said she made the coffin, and there were alleged jokes to the effect that her tongue had provided the corpse; but this, I think, was unfair and cruel, for she loved Jimmy Middleton in her awful way, and was, for all I ever heard to the contrary, a good wife to him. She then lived in a hut in Log Paddock, on a little money in the bank, and did sewing and washing for single diggers.
I remember hearing her one morning in neighbourly conversation, carried on across the gully, with a selector, Peter Olsen, who was hopelessly slaving to farm a dusty patch in the scrub.
“Why don’t you chuck up that dust-hole and go up country and settle on good land, Peter Olsen? You’re only slaving your stomach out here.” (She didn’t say stomach.)
Peter Olsen (mild-whiskered little man, afraid of his wife): “But then you know my wife is so delicate, Mrs Middleton. I wouldn’t like to take her out in the Bush.”
Mrs Middleton: “Delicate be damned! She’s only shamming!” (at her loudest). “Why don’t you kick her off the bed and the book out of her hand, and make her go to work? She’s as delicate as I am. Are you a man, Peter Olsen, or a——?”
This for the edification of the wife and of all within half a mile.
Log Paddock was “petering”. There were a few claims still being worked down at the lowest end, where big, red-and-white waste-heaps of clay and gravel, rising above the blue-grey gum-bushes, advertised deep sinking; and little, yellow, clay-stained streams, running towards the creek over the drought-parched surface, told of trouble with the water below—time lost in bailing and extra expense in timbering. And diggers came up with their flannels and moleskins yellow and heavy, and dripping with wet “mullock”.
Most of the diggers had gone to other fields, but there were a few prospecting, in parties and singly, out on the flats and amongst the ridges round Pipeclay. Sinking holes in search of a new Ballarat.
Dave Regan—lanky, easy-going Bush native; Jim Bently—a bit of a “Flash Jack”; and Andy Page—a character like what Kit (in The Old Curiosity Shop) might have been after a voyage to Australia and some Colonial experience. These three were mates from habit and not necessity, for it was all shallow sinking where they worked. They were poking down pot-holes in the scrub in the vicinity of the racecourse, where the sinking was from ten to fifteen feet.
Dave had theories—“ideers” or “notions” he called them; Jim Bently laid claim to none—he ran by sight, not scent, like a kangaroo-dog. Andy Page—by the way, great admirer and faithful retainer of Dave Regan—was simple and trusting, but, on critical occasions, he was apt to be obstinately, uncomfortably, exasperatingly truthful, honest, and he had reverence for higher things.
Dave thought hard all one quiet drowsy Sunday afternoon, and next morning he, as head of the party, started to sink a hole as close to the cemetery fence as he dared. It was a nice quiet spot in the thick scrub, about three panels along the fence from the farthest corner post from the road. They bottomed here at nine feet, and found encouraging indications. They “drove” (tunnelled) inwards at right angles to the fence, and at a point immediately beneath it they were “making tucker”; a few feet farther and they were making wages. The old alluvial bottom sloped gently that way. The bottom here, by the way, was shelving, brownish, rotten rock.
Just inside the cemetery fence, and at right angles to Dave’s drive, lay the shell containing all that was left of the late fiercely lamented James Middleton, with older graves close at each end. Agrave was supposed to be six feet deep, and local gravediggers had been conscientious. The old alluvial bottom sloped from nine to fifteen feet here.
Da
ve worked the ground all round from the bottom of his shaft, timbering—i.e., putting in a sapling prop—here and there where he worked wide; but the “payable dirt” ran in under the cemetery, and in no other direction.
Dave, Jim, and Andy held a consultation in camp over their pipes after tea, as a result of which Andy next morning rolled up his swag, sorrowfully but firmly shook hands with Dave and Jim, and started to tramp out back to look for work on a sheep-station.
This was Dave’s theory—drawn from a little experience and many long yarns with old diggers:—
He had bottomed on a slope to an old original water-course, covered with clay and gravel from the hills by centuries of rains, to the depth of from nine or ten to twenty feet; he had bottomed on a gutter running into the bed of the old buried creek, and carrying patches and streaks, of “wash” or gold-bearing, dirt. If he went on he might strike it rich at any stroke of his pick; he might strike the rich “lead” which was supposed to exist round there. (There was always supposed to be a rich lead round there somewhere. “There’s gold in them ridges yet—if a man can only git at it,” says the toothless old relic of the Roaring Days.)
Dave might strike a ledge, “pocket”, or “pot-hole” holding wash rich with gold. He had prospected on the opposite side of the cemetery, found no gold, and the bottom sloping upwards towards the graveyard. He had prospected at the back of the cemetery, found a few “colours”, and the bottom sloping downwards towards the point under the cemetery towards which all indications were now leading him. He had sunk shafts across the road opposite the cemetery frontage and found the sinking twenty feet and not a colour of gold. Probably the whole of the ground under the cemetery was rich—maybe the richest in the district. The old gravediggers had not been gold-diggers—besides, the graves, being six feet, would, none of them, have touched the alluvial bottom. There was nothing strange in the fact that none of the crowd of experienced diggers who rushed the district had thought of the cemetery and racecourse. Old brick chimneys and houses, the clay for the bricks of which had been taken from sites of subsequent goldfields, had been put through the crushing-mill in subsequent years and had yielded “payable gold”. Fossicking Chinamen were said to have been the first to detect a case of this kind.