The Half-way House at Tinned Dog (Out-Back
in Australia) kept Daniel Myers-licensed
to retail spirituous and fermented liquors-in
drink and the horrors for upward of five years, at
the end of which time he lay hidden for weeks in a
back skillion, an object which no decent man would
care to see-or hear when it gave forth sound.
’Good accommodation for man and beast’;
but few shanties save his own might, for a consideration,
have accommodated the sort of beast which the man Myers
had become towards the end of his career. But
at last the eccentric Bush doctor, ‘Doc’
Wild’ (who perhaps could drink as much as Myers
without its having any further effect upon his temperament
than to keep him awake and cynical), pronounced the
publican dead enough to be buried legally; so the
widow buried him, had the skillion cleaned out, and
the sign altered to read, ‘Margaret Myers, licensed,
&c.’, and continued to conduct the pub. just
as she had run it for over five years, with the joyful
and blessed exception that there was no longer a human
pig and pigstye attached, and that the atmosphere
was calm. Most of the regular patrons of the
Half-way House could have their horrors decently, and,
comparatively, quietly-or otherwise have
them privately-in the Big Scrub adjacent;
but Myers had not been one of that sort.
Mrs Myers settled herself to enjoy
life comfortably and happily, at the fixed age of
thirty-nine, for the next seven years or so. She
was a pleasant-faced dumpling, who had been baked
solid in the droughts of Out-Back without losing her
good looks, and had put up with a hard life, and Myers,
all those years without losing her good humour and
nature. Probably, had her husband been the opposite
kind of man, she would have been different-haggard,
bad-tempered, and altogether impossible-for
of such is woman. But then it might be taken into
consideration that she had been practically a widow
during at least the last five years of her husband’s
alleged life.
Mrs Myers was reckoned a good catch
in the district, but it soon seemed that she was not
to be caught.
‘It would be a grand thing,’
one of the periodical boozers of Tinned Dog would
say to his mates, ’for one of us to have his
name up on a pub.; it would save a lot of money.’
‘It wouldn’t save you
anything, Bill, if I got it,’ was the retort.
’You needn’t come round chewing my lug
then. I’d give you one drink and no more.’
The publican at Dead Camel, station
managers, professional shearers, even one or two solvent
squatters and promising cockatoos, tried their luck
in vain. In answer to the suggestion that she
ought to have a man to knock round and look after
things, she retorted that she had had one, and was
perfectly satisfied. Few trav’lers on those
tracks but tried ‘a bit of bear-up’ in
that direction, but all to no purpose. Chequemen
knocked down their cheques manfully at the Half-way
House-to get courage and goodwill and ‘put
it off’ till, at the last moment, they offered
themselves abjectly to the landlady; which was worse
than bad judgment on their part-it was
very silly, and she told them so.
One or two swore off, and swore to
keep straight; but she had no faith in them, and when
they found that out, it hurt their feelings so much
that they ‘broke out’ and went on record-breaking
sprees.
About the end of each shearing the
sign was touched up, with an extra coat of paint on
the ‘Margaret’, whereat suitors looked
hopeless.
One or two of the rejected died of
love in the horrors in the Big Scrub-anyway,
the verdict was that they died of love aggravated by
the horrors. But the climax was reached when
a Queensland shearer, seizing the opportunity when
the mate, whose turn it was to watch him, fell asleep,
went down to the yard and hanged himself on the butcher’s
gallows-having first removed his clothes,
with some drink-lurid idea of leaving the world as
naked as he came into it. He climbed the pole,
sat astride on top, fixed the rope to neck and bar,
but gave a yell-a yell of drunken triumph-before
he dropped, and woke his mates.
They cut him down and brought him
to. Next day he apologised to Mrs Myers, said,
‘Ah, well! So long!’ to the rest,
and departed-cured of drink and love apparently.
The verdict was that the blanky fool should have dropped
before he yelled; but she was upset and annoyed, and
it began to look as though, if she wished to continue
to live on happily and comfortably for a few years
longer at the fixed age of thirty-nine, she would
either have to give up the pub. or get married.
Her fame was carried far and wide,
and she became a woman whose name was mentioned with
respect in rough shearing-sheds and huts, and round
the camp-fire.
About thirty miles south of Tinned
Dog one James Grimshaw, widower-otherwise
known as ‘Old Jimmy’, though he was little
past middle age-had a small selection which
he had worked, let, given up, and tackled afresh (with
sinews of war drawn from fencing contracts) ever since
the death of his young wife some fifteen years agone.
He was a practical, square-faced, clean-shaven, clean,
and tidy man, with a certain ‘cleanness’
about the shape of his limbs which suggested the old
jockey or hostler. There were two strong theories
in connection with Jimmy-one was that he
had had a university education, and the other that
he couldn’t write his own name. Not nearly
such a ridiculous nor simple case Out-Back as it might
seem.
Jimmy smoked and listened without
comment to the ‘heard tells’ in connection
with Mrs Myers, till at last one night, at the end
of his contract and over a last pipe, he said quietly,
’I’ll go up to Tinned Dog next week and
try my luck.’
His mates and the casual Jims and
Bills were taken too suddenly to laugh, and the laugh
having been lost, as Bland Holt, the Australian actor
would put it in a professional sense, the audience
had time to think, with the result that the joker
swung his hand down through an imaginary table and
exclaimed-
‘By God! Jimmy’ll do it.’ (Applause.)
So one drowsy afternoon at the time
of the year when the breathless day runs on past 7
P.M., Mrs Myers sat sewing in the bar parlour, when
a clean-shaved, clean-shirted, clean-neckerchiefed,
clean-moleskinned, greased-bluchered-altogether
a model or stage swagman came up, was served in the
bar by the half-caste female cook, and took his way
to the river-bank, where he rigged a small tent and
made a model camp.
A couple of hours later he sat on
a stool on the verandah, smoking a clean clay pipe.
Just before the sunset meal Mrs Myers asked, ’Is
that trav’ler there yet, Mary?’
‘Yes, missus. Clean pfellar that.’
The landlady knitted her forehead
over her sewing, as women do when limited for ‘stuff’
or wondering whether a section has been cut wrong-or
perhaps she thought of that other who hadn’t
been a ’clean pfellar’. She put her
work aside, and stood in the doorway, looking out
across the clearing.
‘Good-day, mister,’ she
said, seeming to become aware of him for the first
time.
‘Good-day, missus!’
‘Hot!’
‘Hot!’
Pause.
‘Trav’lin’?’
‘No, not particular!’
She waited for him to explain.
Myers was always explaining when he wasn’t raving.
But the swagman smoked on.
‘Have a drink?’ she suggested, to keep
her end up.
’No, thank you, missus.
I had one an hour or so ago. I never take more
than two a-day-one before breakfast, if
I can get it, and a night-cap.’
What a contrast to Myers! she thought.
‘Come and have some tea; it’s ready.’
‘Thank you. I don’t mind if I do.’
They got on very slowly, but comfortably.
She got little out of him except the facts that he
had a selection, had finished a contract, and was
‘just having a look at the country.’
He politely declined a ‘shake-down’, saying
he had a comfortable camp, and preferred being out
this weather. She got his name with a ‘by-the-way’,
as he rose to leave, and he went back to camp.
He caught a cod, and they had it for
breakfast next morning, and got along so comfortable
over breakfast that he put in the forenoon pottering
about the gates and stable with a hammer, a saw, and
a box of nails.
And, well-to make it short-when
the big Tinned Dog shed had cut-out, and the shearers
struck the Half-way House, they were greatly impressed
by a brand-new sign whereon glistened the words-
Half-way house
hotel,
by
James Grimshaw.
Good Stabling.
The last time I saw Mrs Grimshaw she
looked about thirty-five.