Sam Buckley’s education
This narrative which I am now writing
is neither more nor less than an account of what befell
certain of my acquaintances during a period extending
over nearly, or quite, twenty years, interspersed,
and let us hope embellished, with descriptions of
the country in which these circumstances took place,
and illustrated by conversations well known to me
by frequent repetition, selected as throwing light
upon the characters of the persons concerned.
Episodes there are, too, which I have thought it worth
while to introduce as being more or less interesting,
as bearing on the manners of a country but little known,
out of which materials it is difficult to select those
most proper to make my tale coherent; yet such has
been my object, neither to dwell on the one hand unnecessarily
on the more unimportant passages, nor on the other
hand to omit anything which may be supposed to bear
on the general course of events.
Now, during all the time above mentioned,
I, Geoffry Hamlyn, have happened to lead a most uninteresting,
and with few exceptions prosperous existence.
I was but little concerned, save as a hearer, in the
catalogue of exciting accidents and offences which
I chronicle. I have looked on with the deepest
interest at the lovemaking, and ended a bachelor;
I have witnessed the fighting afar off, only joining
the battle when I could not help it, yet I am a steady
old fogey, with a mortal horror of a disturbance of
any sort. I have sat drinking with the wine-bibbers,
and yet at sixty my hand is as steady as a rock.
Money has come to me by mere accumulation; I have taken
more pains to spend it than to make it; in short,
all through my life’s drama, I have been a spectator,
and not an actor, and so in this story I shall keep
myself as much as possible in the background, only
appearing personally when I cannot help it.
Acting on this resolve I must now
make my Congé, and bid you farewell for a few
years, and go back to those few sheep which James Stockbridge
and I own in the wilderness, and continue the history
of those who are more important than myself.
I must push on too, for there is a long period of
dull stupid prosperity coming to our friends at Baroona
and Toonarbin, which we must get over as quickly as
is decent. Little Sam Buckley also, though at
present a most delightful child, will soon be a mere
uninteresting boy. We must teach him to read and
write, and ride, and what not, as soon as possible,
and see if we can’t find a young lady well,
I won’t anticipate, but go on. Go on, did
I say? jump on, rather two whole
years at once.
See Baroona now. Would you know
it? I think not. That hut where we spent
the pleasant Christmas-day you know of is degraded
into the kitchen, and seems moved backward, although
it stands in the same place, for a new house is built
nearer the river, quite overwhelming the old slab
hut in its grandeur a long low wooden house,
with deep cool verandahs all round, already festooned
with passion-flowers, and young grapevines, and fronted
by a flower garden, all a-blaze with pétunias
and geraniums.
It was a summer evening, and all the
French windows reaching to the ground were open to
admit the cool south wind, which had just come up,
deliciously icily cold after a scorching day.
In the verandah sat the Major and the Doctor over
their claret (for the Major had taken to dining late
again now, to his great comfort), and in the garden
were Mrs. Buckley and Sam watering the flowers, attended
by a man who drew water from a new-made reservoir
near the house.
“I think, Doctor,” said
the Major, “that the habit of dining in the
middle of the day is a gross abuse of the gifts of
Providence, and I’ll prove it to you. What
does a man dine for? answer me that.”
“To satisfy his hunger, I should
say,” answered the Doctor.
“Pooh! pooh! stuff and nonsense,
my good friend,” said the Major; “you
are speaking at random. I suppose you will say,
then, that a black fellow is capable of dining?”
“Highly capable, as far as I
can judge from what I have seen,” replied the
Doctor. “A full-grown fighting black would
be ashamed if he couldn’t eat a leg of mutton
at a sitting.”
“And you call that dining?”
said the Major. “I call it gorging.
Why, those fellows are more uncomfortable after food
than before. I have seen them sitting close before
the fire and rubbing their stomachs with mutton fat
to reduce the swelling. Ha! ha! ha! dining,
eh? Oh, Lord!”
“Then if you don’t dine
to satisfy your hunger, what the deuce do you eat
dinners for at all?” asked the Doctor.
“Why,” said the Major,
spreading his legs out before him with a benign smile,
and leaning back in his chair, “I eat my dinner,
not so much for the sake of the dinner itself, as
for the after-dinnerish feeling which follows:
a feeling that you have nothing to do, and that if
you had you’d be shot if you’d do it.
That, to return to where I started from, is why I
won’t dine in in the middle of the day.”
“If that is the way you feel
after dinner, I certainly wouldn’t.”
“All the most amiable feelings
in the human breast,” continued the Major, “are
brought out in their full perfection by dinner.
If a fellow were to come to me now and ask me to lend
him ten pounds, I’d do it, provided, you know,
that he would fetch out the cheque-book and pen and
ink.”
“Laziness is nothing,”
said the Doctor, “unless well carried out.
I only contradicted you, however, to draw you out;
I agree entirely. Do you know, my friend, I am
getting marvellously fond of this climate.”
“So am I. But then you know,
Doctor, that we are sheltered from the north wind
here by the snow-ranges. The summer in Sydney,
now, is perfectly infernal. The dust is so thick
you can’t see your hand before you.”
“So I believe,” said the
Doctor. “By the bye, I got a new butterfly
to-day; rather an event, mind you, here, where there
are so few.”
“What is he?”
“An Hipparchia,” said the Doctor, “Sam
saw him first and gave chase.”
“You seem to be making quite
a naturalist of my boy, Doctor. I am sincerely
obliged to you. If we can make him take to that
sort of thing it may keep him out of much mischief.”
“He will never get into much,”
said the Doctor, “unless I am mistaken; he is
the most docile child I ever came across. It is
a pleasure to be with him. What are you going
to do with him?”
“He must go to school, I am
afraid,” said the Major with a sigh, “I
can’t bring my heart to part with him; but his
mother has taught him all she knows, so I suppose
he must go to school and fight, and get flogged, and
come home with a pipe in his mouth, and an oath on
his lips, with his education completed. I don’t
fancy his staying here among these convict servants,
when he is old enough to learn mischief.”
“He’ll learn as much mischief
at a colonial school, I expect,” said the Doctor,
“and more too. All the evil he hears from
these fellows will be like the water on a duck’s
back; whereas, if you send him to school in a town,
he’ll learn a dozen vices he’ll never hear
of here. Get him a tutor.”
“That is easier said than done,
Doctor. It is very hard to get a respectable
tutor in the colony.”
“Here is one at your hand,” said the Doctor.
“Take me.”
“My dear friend,” said
the Major, jumping up, “I would not have dared
to ask such a thing. If you would undertake him
for a short time?”
“I will undertake the boy’s
education altogether. Potztausend, and why not!
It will be a labour of love, and therefore the more
thoroughly done. What shall he learn, now?”
“That I must leave to you.”
“A weighty responsibility,”
said the Doctor. “No Latin or Greek, I
suppose? They will be no use to him here.”
“Well no; I suppose
not. But I should like him to learn his Latin
grammar. You may depend upon it there’s
something in the Latin grammar.”
“What use has it been to you, Major?”
“Why, the least advantage it
has been to me is to give me an insight into the construction
of languages, which is some use. But while I was
learning the Latin grammar, I learnt other things besides,
of more use than the construction of any languages,
living or dead. First, I learnt that there were
certain things in this world that must be done.
Next, that there were people in this world, of whom
the Masters of Eton were a sample, whose orders must
be obeyed without question. Third, I found that
it was pleasanter in all ways to do one’s duty
than to leave it undone. And last, I found out
how to bear a moderate amount of birching without
any indecent outcry.”
“All very useful things,”
said the Doctor. “Teach a boy one thing
well, and you show him how to learn others. History,
I suppose?”
“As much as you like, Doctor.
His mother has taught him his catechism, and all that
sort of thing, and she is the fit person, you know.
With the exception of that and the Latin grammar,
I trust everything to your discretion.”
“There is one thing I leave
to you, Major, if you please, and that is corporal
chastisement. I am not at all sure that I could
bring myself to flog Sam, and, if I did, it would
be very inefficiently done.”
“Oh, I’ll undertake it,”
said the Major, “though I believe I shall have
an easy task. He won’t want much flogging.”
At this moment Mrs. Buckley approached
with a basketful of fresh-gathered flowers. “The
roses don’t flower well here, Doctor,”
she said, “but the geraniums run mad. Here
is a salmon-coloured one for your button-hole.”
“He has earned it well, Agnes,”
said her husband. “He has decided the discussion
we had last night by offering to undertake Sam’s
education himself.”
“And God’s blessing on
him for it!” said Mrs. Buckley warmly. “You
have taken a great load off my mind, Doctor.
I should never have been happy if that boy had gone
to school. Come here, Sam.”
Sam came bounding into the verandah,
and clambered up on his father, as if he had been
a tree. He was now eleven years old, and very
tall and wellformed for his age. He was a good-looking
boy, with regular features, and curly chestnut hair.
He had, too, the large grey-blue eye of his father,
an eye that never lost for a moment its staring expression
of kindly honesty, and the lad’s whole countenance
was one which, without being particularly handsome,
or even very intelligent, won an honest man’s
regard at first sight.
“My dear Sam,” said his
mother, “leave off playing with your father’s
hair, and listen to me, for I have something serious
to say to you. Last night your father and I were
debating about sending you to school, but Doctor Mulhaus
has himself offered to be your tutor, thereby giving
you advantages, for love, which you never could have
secured for money. Now, the least we can expect
of you, my dear boy, is that you will be docile and
attentive to him.”
“I will try, Doctor dear,”
said Sam. “But I am very stupid sometimes,
you know.”
So the good Doctor, whose head was
stored with nearly as much of human knowledge as mortal
head could hold, took simple, guileless little Sam
by the hand, and led him into the garden of knowledge.
Unless I am mistaken, these two will pick more flowers
than they will dig potatoes in the aforesaid garden,
but I don’t think that two such honest souls
will gather much unwholesome fruit. The danger
is that they will waste their time, which is no danger
at all, but a certainty.
I believe that such an education as
our Sam got from the Doctor would have made a slattern
and a faineant out of half the boys in England.
If Sam had been a clever boy, or a conceited boy,
he would have ended with a superficial knowledge of
things in general, imagining he knew everything when
he knew nothing, and would have been left in the end,
without a faith either religious or political, a useless,
careless man.
This danger the Doctor foresaw in
the first month, and going to the Major abruptly,
as he walked up and down the garden, took his arm,
and said,
“See here, Buckley. I have
undertaken to educate that boy of yours, and every
day I like the task better, and yet every day I see
that I have undertaken something beyond me. His
appetite for knowledge is insatiable, but he is not
an intellectual boy; he makes no deductions of his
own, but takes mine for granted. He has no commentary
on what he learns, but that of a dissatisfied idealist
like me, a man who has been thrown among circumstances
sufficiently favourable to make a prime minister out
of some men, and yet who has ended by doing nothing.
Another thing: this is my first attempt at education,
and I have not the schoolmaster’s art to keep
him to details. Every day I make new resolutions,
and every day I break them. The boy turns his
great eyes upon me in the middle of some humdrum work,
and asks me a question. In answering, I get off
the turnpike road, and away we go from lane to lane,
from one subject to another, until lesson-time is over,
and nothing done. And, if it were merely time
wasted, it could be made up, but he remembers every
word I say, and believes in it like gospel, when I
myself couldn’t remember half of it to save my
life. Now, my dear fellow, I consider your boy
to be a very sacred trust to me, and so I have mentioned
all this to you, to give you an opportunity of removing
him to where he might be under a stricter discipline,
if you thought fit. If he was like some boys,
now, I should resign my post at once but, as it is,
I shall wait till you turn me out, for two reasons.
The first is, that I take such delight in my task,
that I do not care to relinquish it; and the other
is, that the lad is naturally so orderly and gentle,
that he does not need discipline, like most boys.”
“My dear Doctor,” replied
Major Buckley, “listen to me. If we were
in England, and Sam could go to Eton, which, I take
it you know, is the best school in the world, I would
still earnestly ask you to continue your work.
He will probably inherit a great deal of money, and
will not have to push his way in the world by his
brains; so that close scholarship will be rather unnecessary.
I should like him to know history well and thoroughly;
for he may mix in the political life of this little
colony by and by. Latin grammar, you know,”
he said, laughing, “is indispensable. Doctor,
I trust my boy with you because I know that you will
make him a gentleman, as his mother, with God’s
blessing, will make him a Christian.”
So, the Doctor buckled to his task
again, with renewed energy; to Euclid, Latin grammar,
and fractions. Sam’s good memory enabled
him to make light of the grammar, and the fractions
too were no great difficulty, but the Euclid was an
awful trial. He couldn’t make out what
it was all about. He got on very well until he
came nearly to the end of the first book, and then
getting among the parallelogram “props,”
as we used to call them (may their fathers’ graves
be defiled!), he stuck dead. For a whole evening
did he pore patiently over one of them till A B, setting
to C D, crossed hands, poussetted, and whirled round
“in Sahara waltz” through his throbbing
head. Bed-time, but no rest! Whether he
slept or not he could not tell. Who could sleep
with that long-bodied, ill-tempered-looking parallelogram
A H standing on the bed-clothes, and crying out, in
tones loud enough to waken the house, that it never
had been, nor never would be equal to the fat jolly
square C K? So, in the morning, Sam woke to the
consciousness that he was farther off from the solution
than ever, but, having had a good cry, went into the
study and tackled to it again.
No good! Breakfast time, and
matters much worse! That long peaked-nose vixen
of a triangle A H C, which yesterday Sam had made out
was equal to half the parallelogram and half the square,
now had the audacity to declare that she had nothing
to do with either of them; so what was to be done
now?
After breakfast Sam took his book
and went out to his father, who was sitting smoking
in the verandah. He clambered up on to his knee,
and then began:
“Father, dear, see here; can
you understand this? You’ve got to prove,
you know, oh, dear! I’ve forgot
that now.”
“Let’s see,” said
the Major; “I am afraid this is a little above
me. There’s Brentwood, now, could do it;
he was in the Artillery, you know, and learnt fortification,
and that sort of thing. I don’t think I
can make much hand of it, Sam.”
But Sam had put his head upon his
father’s shoulder, and was crying bitterly.
“Come, come, my old man,”
said the Major, “don’t give way, you know;
don’t be beat.”
“I can’t make it out at
all,” said Sam, sobbing. “I’ve
got such a buzzing in my head with it! And if
I can’t do it I must stop; because I can’t
go on to the next till I understand this. Oh,
dear me!”
“Lay your head there a little,
my boy, till it gets clearer; then perhaps you will
be able to make it out. You may depend on it that
you ought to learn it, or the good Doctor wouldn’t
have set it to you: never let a thing beat you,
my son.”
So Sam cried on his father’s
shoulder a little, and then went in with his book;
and not long after, the Doctor looked in unperceived,
and saw the boy with his elbows on the table and the
book before him. Even while he looked a big tear
fell plump into the middle of A H; so the Doctor came
quietly in and said,
“Can’t you manage it, Sam?”
Sam shook his head.
“Just give me hold of the book; will you, Sam?”
Sam complied without word or comment;
the Doctor sent it flying through the open window,
halfway down the garden. “There!”
said he, nodding his head, “that’s the
fit place for him this day: you’ve had enough
of him at present; go and tell one of the blacks to
dig some worms, and we’ll make holiday and go
a fishing.”
Sam looked at the Doctor, and then
through the window at his old enemy lying in the middle
of the flowerbed. He did not like to see the poor
book, so lately his master, crumpled and helpless,
fallen from its high estate so suddenly. He would
have gone to its assistance, and picked it up and
smoothed it, the more so as he felt that he had been
beaten.
The Doctor seemed to see everything.
“Let it lie here, my child,” he said;
“you are not in a position to assist a fallen
enemy; you are still the vanquished party. Go
and get the worms.”
He went, and when he came back he
found the Doctor sitting beside his father in the
verandah, with a penknife in one hand and the ace of
spades in the other. He cut the card into squares,
triangles, and parallelograms, while Sam looked on,
and, demonstrating as he went, fitted them one into
the other, till the boy saw his bugbear of a proposition
made as clear as day before his eyes.
“Why,” said Sam, “that’s
all as clear as need be. I understand it.
Now may I pick the book up, Doctor?”
History was the pleasantest part of
all Sam’s tasks, for they would sit in the little
room given up for a study, with the French windows
open looking on the flower-garden, Sam reading aloud
and the Doctor making discursive commentaries.
At last, one day the Doctor said,
“My boy, we are making too much
of a pleasure of this: you must really learn
your dates. Now tell me the date of the accession
of Edward the Sixth.”
No returns.
“Ah! I thought so:
we must not be so discursive. We’ll learn
the dates of the Grecian History, as being an effort
of memory, you not having read it yet.”
But this plan was rather worse than
the other; for one morning, Sam having innocently
asked, at half-past eleven, what the battle of Thermopylae
was, Mrs. Buckley coming in, at one, to call them to
lunch, found the Doctor, who had begun the account
of that glorious fight in English, and then gone on
to German, walking up and down the room in a state
of excitement, reciting to Sam, who did not know delta
from psi, the soul-moving account of it from Herodotus
in good sonorous Greek. She asked, laughing,
“What language are you talking now, my dear
Doctor?”
“Greek, madam, Greek! and the very best of Greek!”
“And what does Sam think of
it? I should like you to learn Greek, my boy,
if you can.”
“I thought he was singing, mother,”
said Sam; but after that the lad used to sit delighted,
by the river side, when they were fishing, while the
Doctor, with his musical voice, repeated some melodious
ode of Pindar’s.
And so the intellectual education
proceeded, with more or less energy; and meanwhile
the physical and moral part was not forgotten, though
the two latter, like the former, were not very closely
attended to, and left a good deal to Providence. (And,
having done your best for a boy, in what better hands
can you leave him?) But the Major, as an old soldier,
had gained a certain faith in the usefulness of physical
training; so, when Sam was about twelve, you might
have seen him any afternoon on the lawn, with his
father, the Major, patiently teaching him singlestick,
and Sam as patiently learning, until the boy came to
be so marvellously active on his legs, and to show
such rapidity of eye and hand, that the Major, on
one occasion, having received a more than usually
agonizing cut on the forearm, remarked that he thought
he was not quite so active on his pins as formerly,
and that he must hand the boy over to the Doctor.
“Doctor,” said he that
day, “I have taught my boy ordinary sword play
till, by Jove, sir, he is getting quicker than I am.
I wish you would take him in hand and give him a little
fencing.”
“Who told you I could fence?” said the
Doctor.
“Why, I don’t know; no
one, I think. I have judged, I fancy, more by
seeing you flourish your walking-stick than anything
else. You are a fencer, are you not?”
The Doctor laughed. He was, in
fact, a consummate maitre D’ARMES; and
Captain Brentwood, before spoken of, no mean fencer,
coming to Baroona on a visit, found that our friend
could do exactly as he liked with him, to the Captain’s
great astonishment. And Sam soon improved under
his tuition, not indeed to the extent of being a master
of the weapon; he was too large and loosely built
for that; but, at all events, so far as to gain an
upright and elastic carriage, and to learn the use
of his limbs.
The Major issued an edict, giving
the most positive orders against its infringement,
that Sam should never mount a horse without his special
leave and licence. He taught him to ride, indeed,
but would not give him much opportunity for practising
it. Once or twice a-week he would take him out,
but seldom oftener. Sam, who never dreamt of questioning
the wisdom and excellence of any of his father’s
decisions, rather wondered at this; pondering in his
own mind how it was that, while all the lads he knew
around, now getting pretty numerous, lived, as it
were, on horseback, never walking a quarter of a mile
on any occasion, he alone should be discouraged from
it. “Perhaps,” he said to himself
one day, “he doesn’t want me to make many
acquaintances. Its true, Charley Delisle smokes
and swears, which is very ungentlemanly; but Cecil
Mayford, Dad says, is a perfect little gentleman, and
I ought to see as much of him as possible, and yet
he wouldn’t give me a horse to go to their muster.
Well, I suppose he has some reason for it.”
One holiday the Doctor and the Major
were sitting in the verandah after breakfast, when
Sam entered to them, and, clambering on to his father
as his wont was, said,
“See here, father! Harry
is getting in some young beasts at the stockyard hut,
and Cecil Mayford is coming over to see if any of theirs
are among them; may I go out and meet him?”
“To be sure, my boy; why not?”
“May I have Bronsewing, father? He is in
the stable.”
“It is a nice cool day, and only four miles;
why not walk out, my boy?”
Sam looked disappointed, but said nothing.
“I know all about it, my child,”
said the Major; “Cecil will be there on Blackboy,
and you would like to show him that Bronsewing is the
superior pony of the two. That’s all very
natural; but still I say, get your hat, Sam, and trot
through the forest on your own two legs, and bring
Cecil home to dinner.”
Sam still looked disappointed, though
he tried not to show it. He went and got his
hat, and, meeting the dogs, got such a wild welcome
from them that he forgot all about Bronsewing.
Soon his father saw him merrily crossing the paddock
with the whole kennel of the establishment, Kangaroo
dogs, cattle dogs, and colleys, barking joyously
around him.
“There’s a good lesson
manfully learnt, Doctor,” said the Major; “he
has learnt to sacrifice his will to mine without argument,
because he knows I have always a reason for things.
I want that boy to ride as little as possible, but
he has earned an exception in his favour to-day. Jerry!”
(After a few calls the stableman appeared.) “Put
Mr. Samuel’s saddle on Bronsewing, and mine
on Ricochette, and bring them round.”
So Sam, walking cheerily forward singing,
under the light and shadow of the old forest, surrounded
by his dogs, hears horses’ feet behind him,
and looking back sees his father riding and leading
Bronsewing saddled.
“Jump up, my boy,” said
the Major; “Cecil shall see what Bronsewing is
like, and how well you can sit him. The reason
I altered my mind was that I might reward you for
acting like a man, and not arguing. Now, I don’t
want you to ride much yet for a few years. I don’t
want my lad to grow up with a pair of bow legs like
a groom, and probably something worse, from living
on horseback before his bones are set. You see
I have a good reason for what I do.”
But I think that the lessons Sam liked
best of all were the swimming lessons, and at a very
early age he could swim and dive like a black, and
once when disporting himself in the water, when not
more than thirteen, poor Sam nearly had a stop put
to his bathing for ever, and that in a very frightful
manner.
His father and he had gone down to
bathe one hot noon; the Major had swum out and was
standing on the rock wiping himself while Sam was
still disporting in the mid-river; as he watched the
boy he saw what seemed a stick upon the water, and
then, as he perceived the ripple around it, the horrible
truth burst on the affrighted father: it was a
large black snake crossing the river, and poor little
Sam was swimming straight towards it, all unconscious
of his danger.
The Major cried out and waved his
hand; the boy, seeing something was wrong, turned
and made for the shore, and the next moment his father,
bending his body back, hurled himself through the air
and alighted in the water alongside of him, clutching
him round the body, and heading down the river with
furious strokes.
“Don’t cling, Sam, or
get frightened; make for the shore.”
The lad, although terribly frightened
at he knew not what, with infinite courage seconded
his father’s efforts although he felt sinking.
In a few minutes they were safe on the bank, in time
for them to see the reptile land, and crawling up
the bank disappear among the rocks.
“God has been very good to us,
my son. You have been saved from a terrible death.
Mind you don’t breathe a word to your mother
about this.”
That night Sam dreamt that he was
in the coils of a snake, but waking up found that
his father was laid beside him in his clothes with
one arm round his neck, so he went to sleep again
and thought no more of the snake.
“My son, if sinners entice thee,
consent thou not” a saying which it
is just possible you have heard before. I can
tell you where it comes from: it is one of the
apothegms of the king of a little eastern nation who
at one time were settled in Syria, and whose writings
are not much read now-a-days, in consequence of the
vast mass of literature of a superior kind which this
happy century has produced. I can recommend the
book, however, as containing some original remarks,
and being generally worth reading. The meaning
of the above quotation (and the man who said it, mind
you, had at one time a reputation for shrewdness)
is, as I take it, that a man’s morals are very
much influenced by the society he is thrown among;
and although in these parliamentary times we know
that kings must of necessity be fools, yet in this
instance I think that the man shows some glimmerings
of reason, for his remark tallies singularly with
my own personal observation; so, acting on this, while
I am giving you the history of this little wild boy
of the bush, I cannot do better than give some account
of the companions with whom he chiefly assorted out
of school-hours.
With broad intelligent forehead, with
large loving hazel eyes, with a frill like Queen Elizabeth,
with a brush like a fox; deep in the brisket, perfect
in markings of black, white, and tan; in sagacity a
Pitt, in courage an Anglesey, Rover stands first on
my list, and claims to be king of Colley-dogs.
In politics I should say Conservative of the high
Protectionist sort. Let us have no strange dogs
about the place to grub up sacred bones, or we will
shake out our frills and tumble them in the dust.
Domestic cats may mioul in the garden at night to a
certain extent, but a line must be drawn; after that
they must be chased up trees and barked at, if necessary,
all night. Opossums and native cats are
unfit to cumber the earth, and must be hunted into
holes, wherever possible. Cows and other horned
animals must not come into the yard, or even look
over the garden fence, under penalties. Black
fellows must be barked at, and their dogs chased to
the uttermost limits of the habitable globe.
Such were the chief points of the creed subscribed
to by Sam’s dog Rover.
All the love that may be between dog
and man, and man and dog, existed between Sam and
Rover. Never a fresh cheery morning when the boy
arose with the consciousness of another happy day
before him, but that the dog was waiting for him as
he stepped from his window into clear morning air.
Never a walk in the forest, but that Rover was his
merry companion. And what would lessons have
been without Rover looking in now and then with his
head on one side, and his ears cocked, to know when
he would be finished and come out to play?
Oh, memorable day, when Sam got separated
from his father in the Yass, and, looking back, saw
a cloud of dust in the road, and dimly descried Rover,
fighting valiantly against fearful odds, with all the
dogs in the township upon him! He rode back,
and prayed for assistance from the men lounging in
front of the publichouse; who, pitying his distress,
pulled off all the dogs till there were only left Rover
and a great white bulldog to do battle. The fight
seemed going against Sam’s dog; for the bulldog
had him by the neck, and held him firm, so that he
could do nothing. Nevertheless, mind yourself,
master bulldog; you’ve only got a mouthful of
long hair there; and when you do let go, I think,
there is danger for you in those fierce gleaming eyes,
and terrible grinning fangs.
Sam was crying; and the men round
were saying, “Oh! take the bulldog off; the
colley’s no good to him,” when
a man suddenly appeared at Sam’s side, and called
out,
“I’ll back the colley
for five pounds, and here’s my money!”
Half-a-dozen five-pound notes were
ready for him at once; and he had barely got the stakes
posted before the event proved he was right. In
an evil moment for him the bulldog loosed his hold,
and, ere he had time to turn round, Rover had seized
him below the eye, and was dragging him about the
road, worrying him as he would worry an opossum:
so the discomfited owner had to remove his bulldog
to save his life. Rover, after showing his teeth
and shaking himself, came to Sam as fresh as a daisy;
and the new comer pocketed his five pounds.
“I am so much obliged to you,”
said Sam, turning to him, “for taking my dog’s
part! They were all against me.”
“I’m much obliged to your
dog, sir, for winning me five pound so easy.
But there ain’t a many bad dogs, or bad men either,
about Major Buckley’s house.”
“Then you know us?” said Sam.
“Ought to it, sir. An old
Devonshire man. Mr. Hamlyn’s stud-groom,
sir Dick.”
Well, as I am going to write Rover’s
life, in three volumes post octavo, I won’t
any further entrench on my subject matter, save to
say that, while on the subject of Sam’s education,
I could not well omit a notice of the aforesaid Rover.
For, I think that all a man can learn from a dog,
Sam learnt from him; and that is something. Now
let us go on to the next of his notable acquaintances.
Who is this glorious, blue-eyed, curly-headed
boy, who bursts into the house like a whirlwind, making
it ring again with merry laughter? This is Jim
Brentwood, of whom we shall see much anon.
At Waterloo, when the French cavalry
were coming up the hill, and our artillerymen were
running for the squares, deftly trundling their gun-wheels
before them, it happened that there came running towards
the square where Major Buckley stood like a tower
of strength (the tallest man in the regiment), an
artillery officer, begrimed with mud and gunpowder,
and dragging a youth by the collar, or rather, what
seemed to be the body of a youth. Some cried
out to him to let go; but he looked back, seeming
to measure the distance between the cavalry and the
square, and then, never loosing his hold, held on against
hope. Every one thought he would be too late;
when some one ran out of the square (men said it was
Buckley), and, throwing the wounded lad over his shoulder,
ran with him into safety; and a cheer ran along the
line from those who saw him do it. Small time
for cheering then; for neither could recover his breath
before there came a volley of musketry, and all around
them, outside the bayonets, was a wild sea of fierce
men’s faces, horses’ heads, gleaming steel,
and French blasphemy. A strange scene for the
commencement of an acquaintance! And yet it throve;
for that same evening, Buckley, talking to his Colonel,
saw the artillery officer coming towards them, and
asked who he might be?
“That,” said the Colonel,
“is Brentwood of the Artillery, who ran away
with Lady Kate Bingley, and they haven’t a rap
to bless themselves with, sir. It was her brother
that you and he fetched into the square to-day.”
And so began a friendship which lasted
the lives of both men; and, I doubt not, will last
their sons’ lives too. For Brentwood lived
within thirty miles of the Major, and their sons spent
much of their time together, having such a friendship
for one another as only boys can have.
Captain Brentwood’s son Jim
was a very different boy to Sam, though a very fine
fellow too. Mischief and laughter were the apparent
objects of his life; and when the Doctor saw him approaching
the house, he used to put away Sam’s lesson-books
with a sigh and wait for better times. The Captain
had himself undertaken his son’s education, and,
being a somewhat dreamy man, excessively attached
to mathematics, Jim had got, altogether, a very remarkable
education indeed; which, however, is hardly to our
purpose just now. Brentwood, I must say, was a
widower, and a kindhearted, easy-going man; he had,
besides, a daughter, who was away at school.
Enough of them at present.
The next of Sam’s companions
who takes an important part in this history is Cecil
Mayford a delicate, clever little dandy,
and courageous withal; with more brains in his head,
I should say, than Sam and Jim could muster between
them. His mother was a widow, who owned the station
next down the river from the Buckleys’, distant
about five miles, and which, since the death of her
husband, Doctor Mayford, she had managed with the
assistance of an overseer. She had, besides Cecil,
a little daughter of great beauty.
Also, I must here mention that the
next station below Mrs. Mayford’s, on the river,
distant by the windings of the valley fifteen miles,
and yet, in consequence of a bend, scarcely ten from
Major Buckley’s at Baroona, was owned and inhabited
by Yahoos (by name Donovan), with whom we had nothing
to do. But this aforesaid station, which is called
Garoopna, will shortly fall into other hands, when
you will see that many events of deep importance will
take place there, and many pleasant hours spent there
by all our friends, more particularly one by
name Sam.
“There is one other left of
whom I must say something here, and more immediately.
The poor, puling little babe, born in misery and disaster,
Mary Hawker’s boy Charles!”
Toonarbin was but a short ten miles
from Baroona, and, of course, the two families were
as one. There was always a hostage from the one
house staying as a visitor in the other; and, under
such circumstances, of course, Charles and Sam were
much together, and, as time went on, got to be firm
friends.
Charles was two years younger than
Sam; the smallest of all the lads, and perhaps the
most unhappy. For the truth must be told:
he was morose and uncertain in his temper; and although
all the other boys bore with him most generously,
as one whom they had heard was born under some great
misfortune, yet he was hardly a favourite amongst them;
and the poor boy, sometimes perceiving this, would
withdraw from his play, and sulk alone, resisting
all the sober, kind inducements of Sam, and the merry,
impetuous persuasions of Jim, to return.
But he was a kind, good-hearted boy,
nevertheless. His temper was not under control;
but, after one of his fierce, volcanic bursts of ill-humour,
he would be acutely miserable and angry with himself
for days, particularly if the object of it had been
Jim or Sam, his two especial favourites. On one
occasion, after a causeless fit of anger with Jim,
while the three were at Major Buckley’s together,
he got his pony and rode away home, secretly speaking
to no one. The other two lamented all the afternoon
that he had taken the matter so seriously, and were
debating even next morning going after him to propitiate
him, when Charles reappeared, having apparently quite
recovered his temper, but evidently bent upon something.
He had a bird, a white corrella, which
could talk and whistle surprisingly, probably, in
fact, the most precious thing he owned. This
prodigy he had now brought back in a basket as a peace-offering,
and refused to be comforted, unless Jim accepted it
as a present.
“But see, Charley,” said
Jim, “I was as much in the wrong as you were”
(which was not fact, for Jim was perfectly innocent).
“I wouldn’t take your bird for the world.”
But Charles said that his mother approved
of it, and if Jim didn’t take it he’d
let it fly.
“Well, if you will, old fellow,”
said Jim, “I’ll tell you what I would
rather have. Give me Fly’s dun pup instead,
and take the bird home.”
So this was negotiated after a time,
and the corrella was taken back to Toonarbin, wildly
excited by the journey, and calling for strong liquor
all the way home.
Those who knew the sad circumstances
of poor Charles’s birth (the Major, the Doctor,
and Mrs. Buckley) treated him with such kindness and
consideration, that they won his confidence and love.
In any of his Berserk fits, if his mother were not
at hand, he would go to Mrs. Buckley and open his
griefs; and her motherly tact and kindness seldom
failed to still the wild beatings of that poor, sensitive,
silly little heart, so that in time he grew to love
her as only second to his mother.
Such is my brief and imperfect, and
I fear tedious account of Sam’s education, and
of the companions with whom he lived, until the boy
had grown into a young man, and his sixteenth birthday
came round, on which day, as had been arranged, he
was considered to have finished his education, and
stand up, young as he was, as a man.
Happy morning, and memorable for one
thing at least that his father, coming
into his bedroom and kissing his forehead, led him
out to the front door, where was a groom holding a
horse handsomer than any Sam had seen before, which
pawed the gravel impatient to be ridden, and ere Sam
had exhausted half his expressions of wonder and admiration that
his father told him the horse was his, a birthday-present
from his mother.