The Foundation of the Gold League.
Mr. Crewe sat in the Timber Town Club
with his satellite, Cathro, beside him. The old
gentleman was smoking a well-seasoned briar pipe, from
which he puffed clouds of smoke contemplatively, as
he watched the gesticulations of a little man who
was arguing with a gentleman who wore riding-breeches
and leggings.
“I tell you, sir,” said
the little man, “that there is not the vestige
of proof that the mails were stolen, not the slightest
scintilla of truth in the suspicion.”
“Then what became of them?”
asked the other, as he fixed a gold horse-shoe pin
more securely in his tie.
“What became of them?”
exclaimed the little man. “They were washed
overboard, washed overboard and lost.”
“But,” said the man of
horses, “I happened to be riding home late that
night, and, I assure you, there was not a breath of
wind; the sea was as smooth as glass.”
“That might be,” retorted
the little man, who was now pacing up and down in
front of his adversary in a most excited fashion.
“That might be, but there is a lot of surge
and swell about a steamer, especially in the neighbourhood
of the screw, and it is very possible, I may say highly
probable, that the missing bags were lost as the mail
was being passed up the side.”
“But how would that affect the
incoming mail?” asked the other. “Did
that drop over the side, too?”
“No, sir,” said the diminutive
man, drawing himself up to his full height. “There
is nothing to prove that the incoming mail was anything
but complete. We are honest people in Timber Town,
sir. I do not believe we have in the entire community
men capable of perpetrating so vile a crime.”
He turned to the Father of Timber Town for corroboration.
“I appeal to you, Mr. Crewe; to you, sir, who
have known the town from its inception.”
Mr. Crewe drew his pipe from his mouth,
and said, with great deliberation, “Well, that
is, ah that is a very difficult question.
I may say that though Timber Town is remarkably free
from crime, still I have known rascals here, and infernal
dam’ rascals, too.”
The little man fairly bristled with
indignation at this remark. He was about to refute
the stigma laid on his little pet town, when the door
opened and in walked Scarlett, dressed still in his
travel-stained clothes, and with his beard unshorn.
His appearance was so strange, that
the little argumentative man believed an intruder,
of low origin and objectionable occupation, had invaded
the sacred precincts of his club.
“I beg your pardon, but what
does this mean, sir?” he asked; immense importance
in his bearing, gesture, and tone. “You
have made some mistake, sir. I should like to
know if your name has been duly entered in the visitors’
book, and by whom, sir?”
Taking no notice of these remarks,
Jack walked straight across the room, and held out
his hand to Mr. Crewe. The white-haired old gentleman
was on his feet in a moment. He took the proffered
hand, and said, with a politeness which was as easy
as it was natural, “What is it I can do for
you, sir? If you will step this way, we can talk
quite comfortably in the ante-room.”
Jack laughed. “I don’t believe you
know me,” he said.
“’Pon my honour, you’re right.
I don’t,” said Mr. Crewe.
Jack laughed again, a thing which
in a non-member almost caused the pompous little man
to explode with indignation.
“I’m the fellow, you know,
who went to look for the new gold-field,” said
Jack, “and by the lord! I’ve found
it.”
“Scarlett! Is it you?”
exclaimed old Mr. Crewe. “You have got it?
My dear sir, this is good news; this is excellent
news! You have found the new gold-field?
This is really remarkable, this is indeed most fortunate!
This is the happiest day I have seen for a long while!”
“Eh? What? what?”
said Cathro, who was on his feet too. “Is
it rich?”
“Rich?” said Jack.
Taking a bank deposit-receipt from his pocket, he
handed it to Cathro.
“Good God!” cried he,
eyeing the figures on the paper, “it’s
a fortune.”
Mr. Crewe had his gold spectacles
upon his nose and the paper in his hand in a moment.
“Three thousand one hundred and eighty-seven
pounds!” he exclaimed. “Well, well,
that is luck! And where’s your mate, Scarlett?
Where is Moonlight?”
“He’s on the claim.”
“On the claim? Then there’s still
gold in sight?”
“We’ve but scratched the
surface,” said Jack. “This is only
the foretaste of what’s to come.”
The important little man, who had
eagerly listened to all that had been said, was hovering
round the group, like an excited cock sparrow.
“Really!” he exclaimed,
“this is most interesting, very interesting
indeed. A remarkable event, Mr. Crewe, a most
remarkable event. Do me the honour, sir, to introduce
me to your friend.”
“Mr. Tonks, Scarlett,”
said the old gentleman. “Allow me to introduce
Mr. Tonks.”
Jack greeted the little man politely,
and then turning to Cathro, said, “We’ve
pegged off four men’s claims; so, Cathro, you’ll
have to turn digger, and go back with me to the field.”
“But my dear sir,” replied
Cathro, whose shrivelled form betokened no great physical
strength, “my dear Scarlett, am I to do pick-and-shovel
work? Am I to trundle a barrow? Am I to work
up to my waist in water, and sleep in a tent?
My dear sir, I cannot dig; to beg I am ashamed.”
Scarlett threw back his head, and
laughed. “Oh, that’s nothing,”
he said. “It’s the getting there
with a 70lb. swag on your back that’s the trouble.
The country is a mass of ranges; the bush is as thick
as a jungle, and there’s nothing but a blazed
track to go by. But your claim is waiting for
you. What do you intend doing with it?”
The attenuated Cathro sank on a couch
despairingly. “I think I’ll sell
it,” he said. “I’ll sell it
to Tonks here, I’ll sell it for L1000 down,
and be content with small profits and quick returns.”
The little man, important that he
should be referred to as good for so substantial an
amount, strutted up and down, like a bantam on whom
the eyes of the fowl-yard rested. However, the
gentleman, dressed for riding, was beforehand with
him.
“It’s an open offer, I suppose,”
he said.
“Certainly,” replied Cathro.
“I don’t care who gets my claim, so long
as I get the money.”
“Then it’s concluded,”
said the horsey man. “I buy the claim.”
“Done,” said Cathro.
“The matter is closed. The claim is yours.
Now, that’s how I like to do business; just
a straight offer and a prompt acceptance. Scarlett,
this is Mr. Chesterman. He takes my place.
You can take him over the ranges and along the blazed
track: no doubt, you’ll find him a better
bushman than myself. Chesterman is accustomed
to carry a 70lb. swag; he’ll make an excellent
beast of burden. I wish you luck, Chesterman.”
“But don’t you think,”
said Mr. Crewe, turning to the horsey man, “don’t
you think you’re rather hasty in buying for such
a large sum a property you have never seen?”
“I’ve been on several
gold-fields,” said Chesterman, “and I have
had good luck on all of them. My method has always
been to act on the first information of a discovery.
A field is always richest at the beginning of the
rush, and I know by experience that the picked claims,
on a new field that yields such results as this does
on the first washing, are worth having. I start
to-morrow. Is it possible to get a horse through?”
“No,” replied the pioneer,
“not the slightest chance of it. Until a
track is cut, it will be quite impossible; but if you’re
good in the bush you can follow the blaze, when once
you have struck it.”
At this moment, there entered the
room a very imposing person. He was quite six
feet high, and broad in proportion; his frank and open
face was adorned with a crisp, gold-coloured beard.
He was dressed in a rough, grey, tweed suit, and carried
a newspaper in his hand. Big men are not usually
excitable, but the blue eyes of this Hercules were
ablaze with suppressed emotion. In a voice that
sounded like a cathedral bell, he said, without preface
or introduction, so that the room rang again, “Listen.
’Gold discovery in the Eastern ranges. There
has arrived in town a lucky digger who is said to
have sold, this morning, some 800 ounces of gold to
the Kangaroo Bank. It is understood that the precious
metal came from a new gold-field on Bush Robin Creek,
which lies somewhere Eastward of the Dividing Range.
From accounts received, it would appear that a field
of unequalled richness has been opened up, and that
a phenomenal rush to the new El Dorado will shortly
set in. All holders of Miners’ Rights are
entitled to peg off claims.’ Gentlemen,
I have been to the Kangaroo Bank,” continued
the giant, “and I have seen the gold myself.
It is different from any sold here hitherto, barring
some 70 ounces, which were brought in a few weeks ago,
from the same locality. So, you see, we have
had a gold rush created at our very doors. I
propose that all the men present form themselves into
a committee to wait upon the local representative
of the Minister for Mines that, I take
it, would be the Commissioner for Lands and
urge the construction of a graded track to the new
field.”
“A very good suggestion,”
said Mr. Crewe, “a very good suggestion.
For if you want to get these Government people to
do anything, by Jupiter, you need to commence early.
We’ll go along, if you are willing, gentlemen;
we’ll go in a body to the Red Tape Office, and
see what can be done. But before we go, let us
drink the health of Mr. Scarlett, here. He has
done remarkably well in bringing this discovery to
light, and I ask you to drink to his continued good
luck, at my expense, gentlemen, entirely at my expense.”
The steward of the club, a thin, dark
man, with black eyes which were watchful and merry,
went quietly round the room, which was now filled
with men, and took their orders. Then he disappeared.
“I think, gentlemen,”
continued Mr. Crewe, “that, as the oldest colonist
present, I may be allowed to express an opinion.
I think I may say, without fear of contradiction,
that I have watched the development of many gold-fields
in my time, and have benefited by not a few; and,
gentlemen, from the description given by our friend,
here, this new field is likely to prove the richest
of them all. By far the best thing is for the
younger men amongst us to go and prove the thing.
I should recommend a party being formed under the
guidance of Mr. Scarlett, and that it should start
as soon as possible. I would go myself if I were
a few years younger, and I will go so soon
as the track is cut. I shall see the field myself.
But I am really too old to contend with supple-jacks
and ‘lawyers’ and the thick undergrowth
of the bush. I should only be in your way.
I should only be a nuisance.”
The quick-eyed steward, who, by a
method of memory known only to himself, had retained
in his mind the correct list of the strange and various
liquors ordered, now appeared with a gigantic tray,
on which he bore a multitude of glasses. These
he deftly handed round, and then all present rose
to their feet.
“Mr. Scarlett,” said the
Father of Timber Town. “I ask you to drink
his health and continued good luck.”
The ceremony over, Jack stood up.
“It’s awfully good of
you,” he said, “to give me the credit of
this new ‘find,’ but as a matter of fact
I have had little to do with it. The real discoverer
is the man who came in from the bush, some six weeks
ago, and painted the town red. After doing him
justice, you should pay your respects to my mate,
Moonlight, who is more at home in the bush than he
is in town. To him you owe the declaration of
the new field. I shall be returning in a day
or two, and I shall be glad to take with me any of
you who care to come. I promise you a rough journey,
but there is good gold at the end of it.”
He raised his glass to his lips, drained
it, and sat down.
“We must organise,” said
the giant who had read from the newspaper, “we
must form ourselves into some sort of a company, for
mutual strength and support.”
The notion of so big a man calling
upon his fellows for help did not seem to strike anybody
as peculiar, if not pathetic.
“Chair, chair,” cried
the pompous Mr. Tonks. “I propose that Mr.
Crewe be placed in the chair.”
“Hear, hear.”
“Unity is strength.”
“Limited liability
“Order! ORDER!”
“Let me have my say.”
“Sit down, old fellow; nobody wants to hear
you.”
Amid this babel of voices, old Mr.
Crewe rose, and waited for the attention of his audience.
When every eye was riveted on him,
he said, “Though I discerned the importance
of this discovery, I was not prepared, gentlemen, for
the interest you have so warmly expressed. It
is a fact that this is the commencement of a new era
in the history of Timber Town. We are about to
enter upon a new phase of our existence, and from being
the centre of an agricultural district, we are to
become a mining town with all the bustle and excitement
attendant upon a gold rush. Under the mining laws,
each of you has as much right as my friend Scarlett,
here, to a digger’s claim upon this field, provided
only that you each obtain a Miner’s Right and
peg off the ground legitimately. But I understand
that the desire is to unite for mutual benefit.
That is to say, you desire to pool your interests
and divide the proceeds. The first thing, then,
is for each man to peg off his claim. That done,
you can work the properties conjointly under the supervision
of a committee, pay the gross takings into a common
account, and divide the profits. In this way
the owner of a duffer claim participates equally with
the owner of a rich one. In other words, there
is less risk of failure I might say, no
risk at all but also much temptation.
Such a scheme would be quite impossible except amongst
gentlemen, but I should imagine that where men hold
honour to be more precious than money, none will risk
his good name for a little gold. First, it must
be the association of working miners; secondly, a
company of gentlemen. Unless a man feels he can
comply with these two conditions, he had best stand
aside.”
“It would be too late for a
man to think of backing out,” interrupted the
bearded Hercules, “after he had turned thief
by performing the Ananias trick of keeping back part
of his gains: that man would probably leave the
field quicker than he went, and poorer.”
“Or possibly he might not leave
it at all,” interjected Chesterman.
“However that might be,”
continued Mr. Crewe, “the object of all present
is, I understand, to act in unison. There will
be hundreds of diggers on the field before very long,
and in many cases claims will be jumped and gold will
be stolen, in spite of the Warden and the constabulary.
You will be wise, therefore, to co-operate for mutual
protection, if for no other reason.”
“Name, title?”
“What shall the association be called?”
A dozen names were suggested by as
many men. Some were offered in jest, some in
earnest; but none met with approval. When the
tempest of voices was past, Mr. Crewe said, “The
association must have a name; certainly, it must have
a name. It is not to be a company, registered
under the Act. It is not to be a syndicate, or
a trust. It is simply a league, composed of gentlemen
who intend to stand beside each other, and divide
the profits of their enterprise. If you cannot
consolidate your claims, you must work them individually.
I shall therefore suggest that you call yourselves
The Timber Town Gold League. Your articles of
agreement can be drawn up in half-an-hour, and you
can all sign them before you leave this room.”
Here Scarlett whispered to Mr. Crewe, who scrutinised
his hearers, and then said, “To be sure; certainly.
Whilst Bulstrode, here, who is a lawyer and should
know his business, is drawing up the document, Scarlett
asks you to drink to the prosperity of the new league.”
The suggested ceremony necessitated
more speeches, but when they were finished the lawyer
read the articles of association. Strangely enough,
they were devoid of legal technicalities, and consisted
of four clearly-worded clauses, destitute of legal
fiction, to which all present readily subscribed their
names.
That done, they drank to the prosperity
of The Timber Town Gold League.