Jim was born on Gulgong, New South
Wales. We used to say ‘on’ Gulgong-and
old diggers still talked of being ‘on th’
Gulgong’-though the goldfield there
had been worked out for years, and the place was only
a dusty little pastoral town in the scrubs. Gulgong
was about the last of the great alluvial ‘rushes’
of the ’roaring days’-and dreary
and dismal enough it looked when I was there.
The expression ‘on’ came from being on
the ‘diggings’ or goldfield-the
workings or the goldfield was all underneath, of course,
so we lived (or starved) on them-not
in nor at ’em.
Mary and I had been married about
two years when Jim came -His name
wasn’t ‘Jim’, by the way, it was
‘John Henry’, after an uncle godfather;
but we called him Jim from the first-(and
before it)-because Jim was a popular Bush
name, and most of my old mates were Jims. The
Bush is full of good-hearted scamps called Jim.
We lived in an old weather-board shanty
that had been a sly-grog-shop, and the Lord knows
what else! in the palmy days of Gulgong; and I did
a bit of digging (’fossicking’, rather),
a bit of shearing, a bit of fencing, a bit of Bush-carpentering,
tank-sinking,-anything, just to keep the
billy boiling.
We had a lot of trouble with Jim with
his teeth. He was bad with every one of them,
and we had most of them lanced-couldn’t
pull him through without. I remember we got one
lanced and the gum healed over before the tooth came
through, and we had to get it cut again. He was
a plucky little chap, and after the first time he
never whimpered when the doctor was lancing his gum:
he used to say ‘tar’ afterwards, and want
to bring the lance home with him.
The first turn we got with Jim was
the worst. I had had the wife and Jim out camping
with me in a tent at a dam I was making at Cattle Creek;
I had two men working for me, and a boy to drive one
of the tip-drays, and I took Mary out to cook for
us. And it was lucky for us that the contract
was finished and we got back to Gulgong, and within
reach of a doctor, the day we did. We were just
camping in the house, with our goods and chattels
anyhow, for the night; and we were hardly back home
an hour when Jim took convulsions for the first time.
Did you ever see a child in convulsions?
You wouldn’t want to see it again: it plays
the devil with a man’s nerves. I’d
got the beds fixed up on the floor, and the billies
on the fire-I was going to make some tea,
and put a piece of corned beef on to boil over night-when
Jim (he’d been queer all day, and his mother
was trying to hush him to sleep)-Jim, he
screamed out twice. He’d been crying a good
deal, and I was dog-tired and worried (over some money
a man owed me) or I’d have noticed at once that
there was something unusual in the way the child cried
out: as it was I didn’t turn round till
Mary screamed ’Joe! Joe!’ You know
how a woman cries out when her child is in danger or
dying-short, and sharp, and terrible.
’Joe! Look! look! Oh, my God! our
child! Get the bath, quick! quick! it’s
convulsions!’
Jim was bent back like a bow, stiff
as a bullock-yoke, in his mother’s arms, and
his eyeballs were turned up and fixed-a
thing I saw twice afterwards, and don’t want
ever to see again.
I was falling over things getting
the tub and the hot water, when the woman who lived
next door rushed in. She called to her husband
to run for the doctor, and before the doctor came
she and Mary had got Jim into a hot bath and pulled
him through.
The neighbour woman made me up a shake-down
in another room, and stayed with Mary that night;
but it was a long while before I got Jim and Mary’s
screams out of my head and fell asleep.
You may depend I kept the fire in,
and a bucket of water hot over it, for a good many
nights after that; but (it always happens like this)
there came a night, when the fright had worn off, when
I was too tired to bother about the fire, and that
night Jim took us by surprise. Our wood-heap
was done, and I broke up a new chair to get a fire,
and had to run a quarter of a mile for water; but
this turn wasn’t so bad as the first, and we
pulled him through.
You never saw a child in convulsions?
Well, you don’t want to. It must be only
a matter of seconds, but it seems long minutes; and
half an hour afterwards the child might be laughing
and playing with you, or stretched out dead.
It shook me up a lot. I was always pretty high-strung
and sensitive. After Jim took the first fit, every
time he cried, or turned over, or stretched out in
the night, I’d jump: I was always feeling
his forehead in the dark to see if he was feverish,
or feeling his limbs to see if he was ‘limp’
yet. Mary and I often laughed about it-afterwards.
I tried sleeping in another room, but for nights after
Jim’s first attack I’d be just dozing off
into a sound sleep, when I’d hear him scream,
as plain as could be, and I’d hear Mary cry,
’Joe!-Joe!’-short,
sharp, and terrible-and I’d be up
and into their room like a shot, only to find them
sleeping peacefully. Then I’d feel Jim’s
head and his breathing for signs of convulsions, see
to the fire and water, and go back to bed and try
to sleep. For the first few nights I was like
that all night, and I’d feel relieved when daylight
came. I’d be in first thing to see if they
were all right; then I’d sleep till dinner-time
if it was Sunday or I had no work. But then I
was run down about that time: I was worried about
some money for a wool-shed I put up and never got
paid for; and, besides, I’d been pretty wild
before I met Mary.
I was fighting hard then-struggling
for something better. Both Mary and I were born
to better things, and that’s what made the life
so hard for us.
Jim got on all right for a while:
we used to watch him well, and have his teeth lanced
in time.
It used to hurt and worry me to see
how-just as he was getting fat and rosy
and like a natural happy child, and I’d feel
proud to take him out-a tooth would come
along, and he’d get thin and white and pale and
bigger-eyed and old-fashioned. We’d say,
’He’ll be safe when he gets his eye-teeth’:
but he didn’t get them till he was two; then,
’He’ll be safe when he gets his two-year-old
teeth’: they didn’t come till he was
going on for three.
He was a wonderful little chap-Yes,
I know all about parents thinking that their child
is the best in the world. If your boy is small
for his age, friends will say that small children
make big men; that he’s a very bright, intelligent
child, and that it’s better to have a bright,
intelligent child than a big, sleepy lump of fat.
And if your boy is dull and sleepy, they say that
the dullest boys make the cleverest men-and
all the rest of it. I never took any notice of
that sort of clatter-took it for what it
was worth; but, all the same, I don’t think
I ever saw such a child as Jim was when he turned two.
He was everybody’s favourite. They spoilt
him rather. I had my own ideas about bringing
up a child. I reckoned Mary was too soft with
Jim. She’d say, ‘Put that’
(whatever it was) ‘out of Jim’s reach,
will you, Joe?’ and I’d say, ’No!
leave it there, and make him understand he’s
not to have it. Make him have his meals without
any nonsense, and go to bed at a regular hour,’
I’d say. Mary and I had many a breeze over
Jim. She’d say that I forgot he was only
a baby: but I held that a baby could be trained
from the first week; and I believe I was right.
But, after all, what are you to do?
You’ll see a boy that was brought up strict
turn out a scamp; and another that was dragged up anyhow
(by the hair of the head, as the saying is) turn out
well. Then, again, when a child is delicate-and
you might lose him any day-you don’t
like to spank him, though he might be turning out
a little fiend, as delicate children often do.
Suppose you gave a child a hammering, and the same
night he took convulsions, or something, and died-how’d
you feel about it? You never know what a child
is going to take, any more than you can tell what
some women are going to say or do.
I was very fond of Jim, and we were
great chums. Sometimes I’d sit and wonder
what the deuce he was thinking about, and often, the
way he talked, he’d make me uneasy. When
he was two he wanted a pipe above all things, and
I’d get him a clean new clay and he’d sit
by my side, on the edge of the verandah, or on a log
of the wood-heap, in the cool of the evening, and
suck away at his pipe, and try to spit when he saw
me do it. He seemed to understand that a cold
empty pipe wasn’t quite the thing, yet to have
the sense to know that he couldn’t smoke tobacco
yet: he made the best he could of things.
And if he broke a clay pipe he wouldn’t have
a new one, and there’d be a row; the old one
had to be mended up, somehow, with string or wire.
If I got my hair cut, he’d want his cut too;
and it always troubled him to see me shave-as
if he thought there must be something wrong somewhere,
else he ought to have to be shaved too. I lathered
him one day, and pretended to shave him: he sat
through it as solemn as an owl, but didn’t seem
to appreciate it-perhaps he had sense enough
to know that it couldn’t possibly be the real
thing. He felt his face, looked very hard at the
lather I scraped off, and whimpered, ‘No blood,
daddy!’
I used to cut myself a good deal:
I was always impatient over shaving.
Then he went in to interview his mother
about it. She understood his lingo better than
I did.
But I wasn’t always at ease
with him. Sometimes he’d sit looking into
the fire, with his head on one side, and I’d
watch him and wonder what he was thinking about (I
might as well have wondered what a Chinaman was thinking
about) till he seemed at least twenty years older than
me: sometimes, when I moved or spoke, he’d
glance round just as if to see what that old fool
of a dadda of his was doing now.
I used to have a fancy that there
was something Eastern, or Asiatic-something
older than our civilisation or religion-about
old-fashioned children. Once I started to explain
my idea to a woman I thought would understand-and
as it happened she had an old-fashioned child, with
very slant eyes-a little tartar he was too.
I suppose it was the sight of him that unconsciously
reminded me of my infernal theory, and set me off
on it, without warning me. Anyhow, it got me
mixed up in an awful row with the woman and her husband-and
all their tribe. It wasn’t an easy thing
to explain myself out of it, and the row hasn’t
been fixed up yet. There were some Chinamen in
the district.
I took a good-size fencing contract,
the frontage of a ten-mile paddock, near Gulgong,
and did well out of it. The railway had got as
far as the Cudgeegong river-some twenty
miles from Gulgong and two hundred from the coast-and
‘carrying’ was good then. I had a
couple of draught-horses, that I worked in the tip-drays
when I was tank-sinking, and one or two others running
in the Bush. I bought a broken-down waggon cheap,
tinkered it up myself-christened it ’The
Same Old Thing’-and started carrying
from the railway terminus through Gulgong and along
the bush roads and tracks that branch out fanlike
through the scrubs to the one-pub towns and sheep
and cattle stations out there in the howling wilderness.
It wasn’t much of a team. There were the
two heavy horses for ‘shafters’; a stunted
colt, that I’d bought out of the pound for thirty
shillings; a light, spring-cart horse; an old grey
mare, with points like a big red-and-white Australian
store bullock, and with the grit of an old washerwoman
to work; and a horse that had spanked along in Cob
& Co.’s mail-coach in his time. I had a
couple there that didn’t belong to me:
I worked them for the feeding of them in the dry weather.
And I had all sorts of harness, that I mended and fixed
up myself. It was a mixed team, but I took light
stuff, got through pretty quick, and freight rates
were high. So I got along.
Before this, whenever I made a few
pounds I’d sink a shaft somewhere, prospecting
for gold; but Mary never let me rest till she talked
me out of that.
I made up my mind to take on a small
selection farm-that an old mate of mine
had fenced in and cleared, and afterwards chucked up-about
thirty miles out west of Gulgong, at a place called
Lahey’s Creek. (The places were all called Lahey’s
Creek, or Spicer’s Flat, or Murphy’s Flat,
or Ryan’s Crossing, or some such name-round
there.) I reckoned I’d have a run for the horses
and be able to grow a bit of feed. I always had
a dread of taking Mary and the children too far away
from a doctor-or a good woman neighbour;
but there were some people came to live on Lahey’s
Creek, and besides, there was a young brother of Mary’s-a
young scamp (his name was Jim, too, and we called
him ‘Jimmy’ at first to make room for
our Jim-he hated the name ‘Jimmy’
or James). He came to live with us-without
asking-and I thought he’d find enough
work at Lahey’s Creek to keep him out of mischief.
He wasn’t to be depended on much-he
thought nothing of riding off, five hundred miles or
so, ’to have a look at the country’-but
he was fond of Mary, and he’d stay by her till
I got some one else to keep her company while I was
on the road. He would be a protection against
‘sundowners’ or any shearers who happened
to wander that way in the ‘D.T.’s’
after a spree. Mary had a married sister come
to live at Gulgong just before we left, and nothing
would suit her and her husband but we must leave little
Jim with them for a month or so-till we
got settled down at Lahey’s Creek. They
were newly married.
Mary was to have driven into Gulgong,
in the spring-cart, at the end of the month, and taken
Jim home; but when the time came she wasn’t too
well-and, besides, the tyres of the cart
were loose, and I hadn’t time to get them cut,
so we let Jim’s time run on a week or so longer,
till I happened to come out through Gulgong from the
river with a small load of flour for Lahey’s
Creek way. The roads were good, the weather grand-no
chance of it raining, and I had a spare tarpaulin if
it did-I would only camp out one night;
so I decided to take Jim home with me.
Jim was turning three then, and he
was a cure. He was so old-fashioned that he used
to frighten me sometimes-I’d almost
think that there was something supernatural about
him; though, of course, I never took any notice of
that rot about some children being too old-fashioned
to live. There’s always the ghoulish old
hag (and some not so old nor haggish either) who’ll
come round and shake up young parents with such croaks
as, ‘You’ll never rear that child-he’s
too bright for his age.’ To the devil with
them! I say.
But I really thought that Jim was
too intelligent for his age, and I often told Mary
that he ought to be kept back, and not let talk too
much to old diggers and long lanky jokers of Bushmen
who rode in and hung their horses outside my place
on Sunday afternoons.
I don’t believe in parents talking
about their own children everlastingly-you
get sick of hearing them; and their kids are generally
little devils, and turn out larrikins as likely as
not.
But, for all that, I really think
that Jim, when he was three years old, was the most
wonderful little chap, in every way, that I ever saw.
For the first hour or so, along the
road, he was telling me all about his adventures at
his auntie’s.
‘But they spoilt me too much,
dad,’ he said, as solemn as a native bear.
‘An’ besides, a boy ought to stick to his
parrans!’
I was taking out a cattle-pup for
a drover I knew, and the pup took up a good deal of
Jim’s time.
Sometimes he’d jolt me, the
way he talked; and other times I’d have to turn
away my head and cough, or shout at the horses, to
keep from laughing outright. And once, when I
was taken that way, he said-
’What are you jerking your shoulders
and coughing, and grunting, and going on that way
for, dad? Why don’t you tell me something?’
‘Tell you what, Jim?’
‘Tell me some talk.’
So I told him all the talk I could
think of. And I had to brighten up, I can tell
you, and not draw too much on my imagination-for
Jim was a terror at cross-examination when the fit
took him; and he didn’t think twice about telling
you when he thought you were talking nonsense.
Once he said-
‘I’m glad you took me home with you, dad.
You’ll get to know Jim.’
‘What!’ I said.
‘You’ll get to know Jim.’
‘But don’t I know you already?’
‘No, you don’t. You never has time
to know Jim at home.’
And, looking back, I saw that it was
cruel true. I had known in my heart all along
that this was the truth; but it came to me like a blow
from Jim. You see, it had been a hard struggle
for the last year or so; and when I was home for a
day or two I was generally too busy, or too tired
and worried, or full of schemes for the future, to
take much notice of Jim. Mary used to speak to
me about it sometimes. ’You never take notice
of the child,’ she’d say. ’You
could surely find a few minutes of an evening.
What’s the use of always worrying and brooding?
Your brain will go with a snap some day, and, if you
get over it, it will teach you a lesson. You’ll
be an old man, and Jim a young one, before you realise
that you had a child once. Then it will be too
late.’
This sort of talk from Mary always
bored me and made me impatient with her, because I
knew it all too well. I never worried for myself-only
for Mary and the children. And often, as the days
went by, I said to myself, ’I’ll take
more notice of Jim and give Mary more of my time,
just as soon as I can see things clear ahead a bit.’
And the hard days went on, and the weeks, and the
months, and the years - Ah, well!
Mary used to say, when things would
get worse, ’Why don’t you talk to me,
Joe? Why don’t you tell me your thoughts,
instead of shutting yourself up in yourself and brooding-eating
your heart out? It’s hard for me:
I get to think you’re tired of me, and selfish.
I might be cross and speak sharp to you when you are
in trouble. How am I to know, if you don’t
tell me?’
But I didn’t think she’d understand.
And so, getting acquainted, and chumming
and dozing, with the gums closing over our heads here
and there, and the ragged patches of sunlight and
shade passing up, over the horses, over us, on the
front of the load, over the load, and down on to the
white, dusty road again-Jim and I got along
the lonely Bush road and over the ridges, some fifteen
miles before sunset, and camped at Ryan’s Crossing
on Sandy Creek for the night. I got the horses
out and took the harness off. Jim wanted badly
to help me, but I made him stay on the load; for one
of the horses-a vicious, red-eyed chestnut-was
a kicker: he’d broken a man’s leg.
I got the feed-bags stretched across the shafts, and
the chaff-and-corn into them; and there stood the
horses all round with their rumps north, south, and
west, and their heads between the shafts, munching
and switching their tails. We use double shafts,
you know, for horse-teams-two pairs side
by side,-and prop them up, and stretch bags
between them, letting the bags sag to serve as feed-boxes.
I threw the spare tarpaulin over the wheels on one
side, letting about half of it lie on the ground in
case of damp, and so making a floor and a break-wind.
I threw down bags and the blankets and ’possum
rug against the wheel to make a camp for Jim and the
cattle-pup, and got a gin-case we used for a tucker-box,
the frying-pan and billy down, and made a good fire
at a log close handy, and soon everything was comfortable.
Ryan’s Crossing was a grand camp. I stood
with my pipe in my mouth, my hands behind my back,
and my back to the fire, and took the country in.
Reedy Creek came down along a western
spur of the range: the banks here were deep and
green, and the water ran clear over the granite bars,
boulders, and gravel. Behind us was a dreary flat
covered with those gnarled, grey-barked, dry-rotted
‘native apple-trees’ (about as much like
apple-trees as the native bear is like any other),
and a nasty bit of sand-dusty road that I was always
glad to get over in wet weather. To the left
on our side of the creek were reedy marshes, with frogs
croaking, and across the creek the dark box-scrub-covered
ridges ended in steep ‘sidings’ coming
down to the creek-bank, and to the main road that
skirted them, running on west up over a ‘saddle’
in the ridges and on towards Dubbo. The road
by Lahey’s Creek to a place called Cobborah
branched off, through dreary apple-tree and stringy-bark
flats, to the left, just beyond the crossing:
all these fanlike branch tracks from the Cudgeegong
were inside a big horse-shoe in the Great Western Line,
and so they gave small carriers a chance, now that
Cob & Co.’s coaches and the big teams and vans
had shifted out of the main western terminus.
There were tall she-oaks all along the creek, and a
clump of big ones over a deep water-hole just above
the crossing. The creek oaks have rough barked
trunks, like English elms, but are much taller, and
higher to the branches-and the leaves are
reedy; Kendel, the Australian poet, calls them the
‘she-oak harps Aeolian’. Those trees
are always sigh-sigh-sighing-more of a
sigh than a sough or the ‘whoosh’ of gum-trees
in the wind. You always hear them sighing, even
when you can’t feel any wind. It’s
the same with telegraph wires: put your head against
a telegraph-post on a dead, still day, and you’ll
hear and feel the far-away roar of the wires.
But then the oaks are not connected with the distance,
where there might be wind; and they don’t roar
in a gale, only sigh louder and softer according to
the wind, and never seem to go above or below a certain
pitch,-like a big harp with all the strings
the same. I used to have a theory that those
creek oaks got the wind’s voice telephoned to
them, so to speak, through the ground.
I happened to look down, and there
was Jim (I thought he was on the tarpaulin, playing
with the pup): he was standing close beside me
with his legs wide apart, his hands behind his back,
and his back to the fire.
He held his head a little on one side,
and there was such an old, old, wise expression in
his big brown eyes-just as if he’d
been a child for a hundred years or so, or as though
he were listening to those oaks and understanding
them in a fatherly sort of way.
‘Dad!’ he said presently-’Dad!
do you think I’ll ever grow up to be a man?’
‘Wh-why, Jim?’ I gasped.
‘Because I don’t want to.’
I couldn’t think of anything
against this. It made me uneasy. But I remembered
I used to have a childish dread of growing up
to be a man.
‘Jim,’ I said, to break
the silence, ’do you hear what the she-oaks
say?’
‘No, I don’t. Is they talking?’
‘Yes,’ I said, without thinking.
‘What is they saying?’ he asked.
I took the bucket and went down to
the creek for some water for tea. I thought Jim
would follow with a little tin billy he had, but he
didn’t: when I got back to the fire he
was again on the ’possum rug, comforting the
pup. I fried some bacon and eggs that I’d
brought out with me. Jim sang out from the waggon-
‘Don’t cook too much, dad-I
mightn’t be hungry.’
I got the tin plates and pint-pots
and things out on a clean new flour-bag, in honour
of Jim, and dished up. He was leaning back on
the rug looking at the pup in a listless sort of way.
I reckoned he was tired out, and pulled the gin-case
up close to him for a table and put his plate on it.
But he only tried a mouthful or two, and then he said-
‘I ain’t hungry, dad! You’ll
have to eat it all.’
It made me uneasy-I never
liked to see a child of mine turn from his food.
They had given him some tinned salmon in Gulgong, and
I was afraid that that was upsetting him. I was
always against tinned muck.
‘Sick, Jim?’ I asked.
‘No, dad, I ain’t sick; I don’t
know what’s the matter with me.’
‘Have some tea, sonny?’
‘Yes, dad.’
I gave him some tea, with some milk
in it that I’d brought in a bottle from his
aunt’s for him. He took a sip or two and
then put the pint-pot on the gin-case.
‘Jim’s tired, dad,’ he said.
I made him lie down while I fixed
up a camp for the night. It had turned a bit
chilly, so I let the big tarpaulin down all round-it
was made to cover a high load, the flour in the waggon
didn’t come above the rail, so the tarpaulin
came down well on to the ground. I fixed Jim up
a comfortable bed under the tail-end of the waggon:
when I went to lift him in he was lying back, looking
up at the stars in a half-dreamy, half-fascinated
way that I didn’t like. Whenever Jim was
extra old-fashioned, or affectionate, there was danger.
‘How do you feel now, sonny?’
It seemed a minute before he heard me and turned from
the stars.
‘Jim’s better, dad.’
Then he said something like, ’The stars are looking
at me.’ I thought he was half asleep.
I took off his jacket and boots, and carried him in
under the waggon and made him comfortable for the
night.
’Kiss me ‘night-night, daddy,’ he
said.
I’d rather he hadn’t asked
me-it was a bad sign. As I was going
to the fire he called me back.
‘What is it, Jim?’
‘Get me my things and the cattle-pup, please,
daddy.’
I was scared now. His things
were some toys and rubbish he’d brought from
Gulgong, and I remembered, the last time he had convulsions,
he took all his toys and a kitten to bed with him.
And ‘’night-night’ and ‘daddy’
were two-year-old language to Jim. I’d thought
he’d forgotten those words-he seemed
to be going back.
‘Are you quite warm enough, Jim?’
‘Yes, dad.’
I started to walk up and down-I
always did this when I was extra worried.
I was frightened now about Jim, though
I tried to hide the fact from myself. Presently
he called me again.
‘What is it, Jim?’
‘Take the blankets off me, fahver-Jim’s
sick!’ (They’d been teaching him to say
father.)
I was scared now. I remembered
a neighbour of ours had a little girl die (she swallowed
a pin), and when she was going she said-
‘Take the blankets off me, muvver-I’m
dying.’
And I couldn’t get that out of my head.
I threw back a fold of the ’possum
rug, and felt Jim’s head-he seemed
cool enough.
‘Where do you feel bad, sonny?’
No answer for a while; then he said
suddenly, but in a voice as if he were talking in
his sleep-
‘Put my boots on, please, daddy. I want
to go home to muvver!’
I held his hand, and comforted him
for a while; then he slept-in a restless,
feverish sort of way.
I got the bucket I used for water
for the horses and stood it over the fire; I ran to
the creek with the big kerosene-tin bucket and got
it full of cold water and stood it handy. I got
the spade (we always carried one to dig wheels out
of bogs in wet weather) and turned a corner of the
tarpaulin back, dug a hole, and trod the tarpaulin
down into the hole, to serve for a bath, in case of
the worst. I had a tin of mustard, and meant
to fight a good round for Jim, if death came along.
I stooped in under the tail-board
of the waggon and felt Jim. His head was burning
hot, and his skin parched and dry as a bone.
Then I lost nerve and started blundering
backward and forward between the waggon and the fire,
and repeating what I’d heard Mary say the last
time we fought for Jim: ’God! don’t
take my child! God! don’t take my boy!’
I’d never had much faith in doctors, but, my
God! I wanted one then. The nearest was
fifteen miles away.
I threw back my head and stared up
at the branches, in desperation; and-Well,
I don’t ask you to take much stock in this, though
most old Bushmen will believe anything of the Bush
by night; and-Now, it might have been that
I was all unstrung, or it might have been a patch of
sky outlined in the gently moving branches, or the
blue smoke rising up. But I saw the figure of
a woman, all white, come down, down, nearly to the
limbs of the trees, point on up the main road, and
then float up and up and vanish, still pointing.
I thought Mary was dead! Then it flashed on me -
Four or five miles up the road, over
the ‘saddle’, was an old shanty that had
been a half-way inn before the Great Western Line got
round as far as Dubbo and took the coach traffic off
those old Bush roads. A man named Brighten lived
there. He was a selector; did a little farming,
and as much sly-grog selling as he could. He was
married-but it wasn’t that:
I’d thought of them, but she was a childish,
worn-out, spiritless woman, and both were pretty ‘ratty’
from hardship and loneliness-they weren’t
likely to be of any use to me. But it was this:
I’d heard talk, among some women in Gulgong,
of a sister of Brighten’s wife who’d gone
out to live with them lately: she’d been
a hospital matron in the city, they said; and there
were yarns about her. Some said she got the sack
for exposing the doctors-or carrying on
with them-I didn’t remember which.
The fact of a city woman going out to live in such
a place, with such people, was enough to make talk
among women in a town twenty miles away, but then
there must have been something extra about her, else
Bushmen wouldn’t have talked and carried her
name so far; and I wanted a woman out of the ordinary
now. I even reasoned this way, thinking like
lightning, as I knelt over Jim between the big back
wheels of the waggon.
I had an old racing mare that I used
as a riding hack, following the team. In a minute
I had her saddled and bridled; I tied the end of a
half-full chaff-bag, shook the chaff into each end
and dumped it on to the pommel as a cushion or buffer
for Jim; I wrapped him in a blanket, and scrambled
into the saddle with him.
The next minute we were stumbling
down the steep bank, clattering and splashing over
the crossing, and struggling up the opposite bank to
the level. The mare, as I told you, was an old
racer, but broken-winded-she must have
run without wind after the first half mile. She
had the old racing instinct in her strong, and whenever
I rode in company I’d have to pull her hard
else she’d race the other horse or burst.
She ran low fore and aft, and was the easiest horse
I ever rode. She ran like wheels on rails, with
a bit of a tremble now and then-like a railway
carriage-when she settled down to it.
The chaff-bag had slipped off, in
the creek I suppose, and I let the bridle-rein go
and held Jim up to me like a baby the whole way.
Let the strongest man, who isn’t used to it,
hold a baby in one position for five minutes-and
Jim was fairly heavy. But I never felt the ache
in my arms that night-it must have gone
before I was in a fit state of mind to feel it.
And at home I’d often growled about being asked
to hold the baby for a few minutes. I could never
brood comfortably and nurse a baby at the same time.
It was a ghostly moonlight night. There’s
no timber in the world so ghostly as the Australian
Bush in moonlight-or just about daybreak.
The all-shaped patches of moonlight falling between
ragged, twisted boughs; the ghostly blue-white bark
of the ‘white-box’ trees; a dead naked
white ring-barked tree, or dead white stump starting
out here and there, and the ragged patches of shade
and light on the road that made anything, from the
shape of a spotted bullock to a naked corpse laid
out stark. Roads and tracks through the Bush made
by moonlight-every one seeming straighter
and clearer than the real one: you have to trust
to your horse then. Sometimes the naked white
trunk of a red stringy-bark tree, where a sheet of
bark had been taken off, would start out like a ghost
from the dark Bush. And dew or frost glistening
on these things, according to the season. Now
and again a great grey kangaroo, that had been feeding
on a green patch down by the road, would start with
a ‘thump-thump’, and away up the siding.
The Bush seemed full of ghosts that
night-all going my way-and being
left behind by the mare. Once I stopped to look
at Jim: I just sat back and the mare ’propped’-she’d
been a stock-horse, and was used to ‘cutting-out’.
I felt Jim’s hands and forehead; he was in a
burning fever. I bent forward, and the old mare
settled down to it again. I kept saying out loud-and
Mary and me often laughed about it (afterwards):
‘He’s limp yet!-Jim’s
limp yet!’ (the words seemed jerked out of me
by sheer fright)-’He’s limp
yet!’ till the mare’s feet took it up.
Then, just when I thought she was doing her best and
racing her hardest, she suddenly started forward,
like a cable tram gliding along on its own and the
grip put on suddenly. It was just what she’d
do when I’d be riding alone and a strange horse
drew up from behind-the old racing instinct.
I felt the thing too! I felt as if a strange
horse was there! And then-the
words just jerked out of me by sheer funk-I
started saying, ’Death is riding to-night!...
Death is racing to-night!... Death is riding
to-night!’ till the hoofs took that up.
And I believe the old mare felt the black horse at
her side and was going to beat him or break her heart.
I was mad with anxiety and fright:
I remember I kept saying, ’I’ll be kinder
to Mary after this! I’ll take more notice
of Jim!’ and the rest of it.
I don’t know how the old mare
got up the last ‘pinch’. She must
have slackened pace, but I never noticed it:
I just held Jim up to me and gripped the saddle with
my knees-I remember the saddle jerked from
the desperate jumps of her till I thought the girth
would go. We topped the gap and were going down
into a gully they called Dead Man’s Hollow, and
there, at the back of a ghostly clearing that opened
from the road where there were some black-soil springs,
was a long, low, oblong weatherboard-and-shingle building,
with blind, broken windows in the gable-ends, and
a wide steep verandah roof slanting down almost to
the level of the window-sills-there was
something sinister about it, I thought-like
the hat of a jail-bird slouched over his eyes.
The place looked both deserted and haunted. I
saw no light, but that was because of the moonlight
outside. The mare turned in at the corner of the
clearing to take a short cut to the shanty, and, as
she struggled across some marshy ground, my heart
kept jerking out the words, ’It’s deserted!
They’ve gone away! It’s deserted!’
The mare went round to the back and pulled up between
the back door and a big bark-and-slab kitchen.
Some one shouted from inside-
‘Who’s there?’
’It’s me. Joe Wilson.
I want your sister-in-law-I’ve got
the boy-he’s sick and dying!’
Brighten came out, pulling up his
moleskins. ‘What boy?’ he asked.
‘Here, take him,’ I shouted, ‘and
let me get down.’
‘What’s the matter with
him?’ asked Brighten, and he seemed to hang
back. And just as I made to get my leg over the
saddle, Jim’s head went back over my arm, he
stiffened, and I saw his eyeballs turned up and glistening
in the moonlight.
I felt cold all over then and sick
in the stomach-but clear-headed
in a way: strange, wasn’t it? I don’t
know why I didn’t get down and rush into the
kitchen to get a bath ready. I only felt as if
the worst had come, and I wished it were over and
gone. I even thought of Mary and the funeral.
Then a woman ran out of the house-a
big, hard-looking woman. She had on a wrapper
of some sort, and her feet were bare. She laid
her hand on Jim, looked at his face, and then snatched
him from me and ran into the kitchen-and
me down and after her. As great good luck would
have it, they had some dirty clothes on to boil in
a kerosene tin-dish-cloths or something.
Brighten’s sister-in-law dragged
a tub out from under the table, wrenched the bucket
off the hook, and dumped in the water, dish-cloths
and all, snatched a can of cold water from a corner,
dashed that in, and felt the water with her hand-holding
Jim up to her hip all the time-and I won’t
say how he looked. She stood him in the tub and
started dashing water over him, tearing off his clothes
between the splashes.
‘Here, that tin of mustard-there
on the shelf!’ she shouted to me.
She knocked the lid off the tin on
the edge of the tub, and went on splashing and spanking
Jim.
It seemed an eternity. And I?
Why, I never thought clearer in my life. I felt
cold-blooded-I felt as if I’d like
an excuse to go outside till it was all over.
I thought of Mary and the funeral-and wished
that that was past. All this in a flash, as it
were. I felt that it would be a great relief,
and only wished the funeral was months past. I
felt-well, altogether selfish. I only
thought for myself.
Brighten’s sister-in-law splashed
and spanked him hard-hard enough to break
his back I thought, and-after about half
an hour it seemed-the end came: Jim’s
limbs relaxed, he slipped down into the tub, and the
pupils of his eyes came down. They seemed dull
and expressionless, like the eyes of a new baby, but
he was back for the world again.
I dropped on the stool by the table.
‘It’s all right,’
she said. ’It’s all over now.
I wasn’t going to let him die.’ I
was only thinking, ’Well it’s over now,
but it will come on again. I wish it was over
for good. I’m tired of it.’
She called to her sister, Mrs Brighten,
a washed-out, helpless little fool of a woman, who’d
been running in and out and whimpering all the time-
’Here, Jessie! bring the new
white blanket off my bed. And you, Brighten,
take some of that wood off the fire, and stuff something
in that hole there to stop the draught.’
Brighten-he was a nuggety
little hairy man with no expression to be seen for
whiskers-had been running in with sticks
and back logs from the wood-heap. He took the
wood out, stuffed up the crack, and went inside and
brought out a black bottle-got a cup from
the shelf, and put both down near my elbow.
Mrs Brighten started to get some supper
or breakfast, or whatever it was, ready. She
had a clean cloth, and set the table tidily. I
noticed that all the tins were polished bright (old
coffee- and mustard-tins and the like, that they used
instead of sugar-basins and tea-caddies and salt-cellars),
and the kitchen was kept as clean as possible.
She was all right at little things. I knew a
haggard, worked-out Bushwoman who put her whole soul-or
all she’d got left-into polishing
old tins till they dazzled your eyes.
I didn’t feel inclined for corned
beef and damper, and post-and-rail tea. So I
sat and squinted, when I thought she wasn’t looking,
at Brighten’s sister-in-law. She was a
big woman, her hands and feet were big, but well-shaped
and all in proportion-they fitted her.
She was a handsome woman-about forty I
should think. She had a square chin, and a straight
thin-lipped mouth-straight save for a hint
of a turn down at the corners, which I fancied (and
I have strange fancies) had been a sign of weakness
in the days before she grew hard. There was no
sign of weakness now. She had hard grey eyes
and blue-black hair. She hadn’t spoken
yet. She didn’t ask me how the boy took
ill or I got there, or who or what I was-at
least not until the next evening at tea-time.
She sat upright with Jim wrapped in
the blanket and laid across her knees, with one hand
under his neck and the other laid lightly on him,
and she just rocked him gently.
She sat looking hard and straight
before her, just as I’ve seen a tired needlewoman
sit with her work in her lap, and look away back into
the past. And Jim might have been the work in
her lap, for all she seemed to think of him.
Now and then she knitted her forehead and blinked.
Suddenly she glanced round and said-in
a tone as if I was her husband and she didn’t
think much of me-
‘Why don’t you eat something?’
‘Beg pardon?’
‘Eat something!’
I drank some tea, and sneaked another
look at her. I was beginning to feel more natural,
and wanted Jim again, now that the colour was coming
back into his face, and he didn’t look like an
unnaturally stiff and staring corpse. I felt
a lump rising, and wanted to thank her. I sneaked
another look at her.
She was staring straight before her,-I
never saw a woman’s face change so suddenly-I
never saw a woman’s eyes so haggard and hopeless.
Then her great chest heaved twice, I heard her draw
a long shuddering breath, like a knocked-out horse,
and two great tears dropped from her wide open eyes
down her cheeks like rain-drops on a face of stone.
And in the firelight they seemed tinged with blood.
I looked away quick, feeling full
up myself. And presently (I hadn’t seen
her look round) she said-
‘Go to bed.’
‘Beg pardon?’ (Her face was the same as
before the tears.)
‘Go to bed. There’s a bed made for
you inside on the sofa.’
‘But-the team-I must -’
‘What?’
‘The team. I left it at the camp.
I must look to it.’
’Oh! Well, Brighten will
ride down and bring it up in the morning-or
send the half-caste. Now you go to bed, and get
a good rest. The boy will be all right.
I’ll see to that.’
I went out-it was a relief
to get out-and looked to the mare.
Brighten had got her some corn and chaff in a candle-box,
but she couldn’t eat yet. She just stood
or hung resting one hind-leg and then the other, with
her nose over the box-and she sobbed.
I put my arms round her neck and my face down on her
ragged mane, and cried for the second time since I
was a boy.
Maize or Indian corn-wheat
is never called corn in
Australia.-
As I started to go in I heard Brighten’s
sister-in-law say, suddenly and sharply-
‘Take that away, Jessie.’
And presently I saw Mrs Brighten go
into the house with the black bottle.
The moon had gone behind the range.
I stood for a minute between the house and the kitchen
and peeped in through the kitchen window.
She had moved away from the fire and
sat near the table. She bent over Jim and held
him up close to her and rocked herself to and fro.
I went to bed and slept till the next
afternoon. I woke just in time to hear the tail-end
of a conversation between Jim and Brighten’s
sister-in-law. He was asking her out to our place
and she promising to come.
‘And now,’ says Jim, ‘I
want to go home to “muffer” in “The
Same Öl’ Fling".’
‘What?’
Jim repeated.
‘Oh! “The Same Old Thing",-the
waggon.’
The rest of the afternoon I poked
round the gullies with old Brighten, looking at some
‘indications’ (of the existence of gold)
he had found. It was no use trying to ‘pump’
him concerning his sister-in-law; Brighten was an
‘old hand’, and had learned in the old
Bush-ranging and cattle-stealing days to know nothing
about other people’s business. And, by
the way, I noticed then that the more you talk and
listen to a bad character, the more you lose your
dislike for him.
I never saw such a change in a woman
as in Brighten’s sister-in-law that evening.
She was bright and jolly, and seemed at least ten years
younger. She bustled round and helped her sister
to get tea ready. She rooted out some old china
that Mrs Brighten had stowed away somewhere, and set
the table as I seldom saw it set out there. She
propped Jim up with pillows, and laughed and played
with him like a great girl. She described Sydney
and Sydney life as I’d never heard it described
before; and she knew as much about the Bush and old
digging days as I did. She kept old Brighten
and me listening and laughing till nearly midnight.
And she seemed quick to understand everything when
I talked. If she wanted to explain anything that
we hadn’t seen, she wouldn’t say that it
was ’like a-like a’-and
hesitate (you know what I mean); she’d hit the
right thing on the head at once. A squatter with
a very round, flaming red face and a white cork hat
had gone by in the afternoon: she said it was
‘like a mushroom on the rising moon.’
She gave me a lot of good hints about children.
But she was quiet again next morning.
I harnessed up, and she dressed Jim and gave him his
breakfast, and made a comfortable place for him on
the load with the ’possum rug and a spare pillow.
She got up on the wheel to do it herself. Then
was the awkward time. I’d half start to
speak to her, and then turn away and go fixing up round
the horses, and then make another false start to say
good-bye. At last she took Jim up in her arms
and kissed him, and lifted him on the wheel; but he
put his arms tight round her neck, and kissed her-a
thing Jim seldom did with anybody, except his mother,
for he wasn’t what you’d call an affectionate
child,-he’d never more than offer
his cheek to me, in his old-fashioned way. I’d
got up the other side of the load to take him from
her.
‘Here, take him,’ she said.
I saw his mouth twitching as I lifted
him. Jim seldom cried nowadays-no
matter how much he was hurt. I gained some time
fixing Jim comfortable.
‘You’d better make a start,’
she said. ’You want to get home early with
that boy.’
I got down and went round to where
she stood. I held out my hand and tried to speak,
but my voice went like an ungreased waggon wheel, and
I gave it up, and only squeezed her hand.
‘That’s all right,’
she said; then tears came into her eyes, and she suddenly
put her hand on my shoulder and kissed me on the cheek.
’You be off-you’re only a boy
yourself. Take care of that boy; be kind to your
wife, and take care of yourself.’
‘Will you come to see us?’
‘Some day,’ she said.
I started the horses, and looked round
once more. She was looking up at Jim, who was
waving his hand to her from the top of the load.
And I saw that haggard, hungry, hopeless look come
into her eyes in spite of the tears.
I smoothed over that story and shortened
it a lot, when I told it to Mary-I didn’t
want to upset her. But, some time after I brought
Jim home from Gulgong, and while I was at home with
the team for a few days, nothing would suit Mary but
she must go over to Brighten’s shanty and see
Brighten’s sister-in-law. So James drove
her over one morning in the spring-cart: it was
a long way, and they stayed at Brighten’s overnight
and didn’t get back till late the next afternoon.
I’d got the place in a pig-muck, as Mary said,
‘doing for’ myself, and I was having a
snooze on the sofa when they got back. The first
thing I remember was some one stroking my head and
kissing me, and I heard Mary saying, ’My poor
boy! My poor old boy!’
I sat up with a jerk. I thought
that Jim had gone off again. But it seems that
Mary was only referring to me. Then she started
to pull grey hairs out of my head and put ’em
in an empty match-box-to see how many she’d
get. She used to do this when she felt a bit soft.
I don’t know what she said to Brighten’s
sister-in-law or what Brighten’s sister-in-law
said to her, but Mary was extra gentle for the next
few days.