After this stupendous incident had
ruffled the waters of provincial repose, a long untroubled
calm succeeded. Little was heard in the article
of news except the weekly chronicle of stock movements:
who had sold, who had bought, who, having stocked
up that is, filled his run with all the
sheep it would carry, and more had sold
to a new arrival, and gone to England ‘for good,’
or at least till the long-dated station bills became
due. Among this last-named division was Mr. Jack
Charteris, who, having sold one of his far-out runs
to a Queenslander, considered this to be a favourable
opportunity to take ‘a run home,’ as he
expressed it, for a year, for various specified reasons
which he displayed before his friends, such as seeing
the world and renewing his constitution, lately injured
by hard work and anxiety. So he ostentatiously
took his passage by a well-known mail-steamer, and
made all ready to start in a couple of months.
He had, however, two plans in petto, of which
he did not advise society generally.
One was, by personal application to
English capitalists being provided with
all proper credentials from his bankers and others,
with a carefully drawn out schedule of his properties
(purchased lands, leasehold, sheep, cattle, horses,
outside country), with carefully kept accounts showing
the profits upon stations and stock for the last five
or ten years, the increasing value of the wool clip,
and the annual expenditure upon permanent improvements;
the whole with personal valuation (approximate), and
references to leading colonists of rank and position to
discover whether he, John Charteris, with an improving
property, but constantly in want of cash advances,
could not secure a loan for a term of years at English
rates of interest, say five or six per cent, instead
of at colonial rates, eight, nine, and ten. This
would make a considerable difference to Mr. Jack’s
annual disbursements, relieve him from anxiety when
the money-market hardened, and would, moreover, euchre
his friends the bankers in Sydney, with whom he was
wont to carry on a half-playful, half-serious war of
words whenever they met.
His other coup was to make
a farewell visit to Corindah, and at the last moment
‘try his luck,’ as he phrased it, with
the daughter of the house. He was not over sanguine,
but in reviewing the situation, he decided that with
women, as with other ’enterprises of great pith
and moment,’ you never know what you can do
till you try. He ran over all the reasons for
and against on his fingers as he was wont
to do in a bargain for stock finally deciding
that he would ‘submit an offer.’
Many a time and often had he acted
similarly after the same calculation offered
a price far below the owner’s presumable valuation
and the market rate of the article. As often,
to his great surprise, it had been accepted.
He would do so now.
‘Let me see,’ he said
to himself. ’Old MacCallum got the sack,
they say. I rather wonder at that that
is, I should have wondered if it had been any other
girl. Not another girl in the district but would
have accepted him on his knees. Such a house such
horses! Good-looking, pleasant fellow, full-mouthed
of course, but sound on his pins, hardly a grey hair regular
short price in the betting. What a sell for him!
Well, now about Jack Charteris. How stands he
for odds? Nine-and-twenty next birthday; fairly
good-looking, so the girls say; plenty of pluck, good
nature, and impudence; ride, run, shoot, or fight any
man of his weight in the country. Clever?
Well, I wish I was a little better up in those confounded
books. If I were, I really believe I might go
in and win. The only man I’m afraid of
is that confounded cousin fellow. He is infernally
sly and quiet, and, I expect, is coming up in the inside
running. I’d like to punch his head.’
Here Mr. Charteris stood up, squared
his shoulders, and delivered an imaginary right and
left into an enemy with extraordinary gusto. Then
exclaiming, ’Here goes anyhow! I’ll
go in for it on my way to Sydney. I’ll
provide a retreat in case of total rout and defeat.
It will be half forgotten by the time I return.’
To resolve and to execute were with
Mr. Charteris almost simultaneous acts. Working
night and day until his preparations were complete,
he sent on a note to say when he might be expected,
and on the appointed evening drove up, serious and
determined, to Corindah gate. He was received
with so much cordiality that he half thought his mission
was accomplished, and that the princess would accompany
him to Europe without notice, which would have been
one of the rapid and triumphant coups in which
his speculative soul delighted. The real reason
was, that both ladies were moved in their feminine
hearts by the idea of so old an acquaintance going
a journey to a far land, and were sensitively anxious
to show him all the honour and attention they could
under such exceptional circumstances.
So the best of us are deceived occasionally.
Who has not seen the unwonted sparkle in a woman’s
eyes and as often as not if the truth be
told put a totally wrong interpretation
upon the signal?
Thus Mr. Charteris fared, much encouraged,
and greatly heightened in determination. He was
at his best and brightest all the evening, and when
he said pressing Pollie’s hand as
they parted that he wanted to say a last
word to her about his voyage if she would be in the
orangery before breakfast, that young woman assented
in the most unsuspicious manner, believing it to be
something about Maltese lace, as to which she had
given him a most unmerciful commission. So, shaking
his hand with renewed fervour, she went off to bed,
leaving Mr. Charteris in the seventh heaven, and almost
unable to sleep for the tumultuous nature of his emotions.
The sun was closely inspected by John
Charteris next morning, from its earliest appearance
until after about an hour’s radiance had been
shed upon the vast ocean of verdure, from which its
heat extracted a silvery mist. How different
from the outlook one little year ago! His eye
roamed over the vast expanse meditatively, as if calculating
the number of sheep to the acre such a grass crop
would sustain, if one could only have it for five
years all the season through. Suddenly he became
aware of a light form flitting through the dark-green
foliage and gold-globed greenery of the orangery.
In a moment he was by her side.
His face lit up with innocent pleasure as she greeted
him with childish joy. In her heart she thought
she had never known him so pleasant in his manner,
so nice and friendly, and yet reticent, before.
If so improved now, what would he be when he returned
from Europe? She had no more idea of any arrière
pensee in meeting him by appointment in the garden
than if he had been the Bishop of Riverina.
When Mr. Charteris, after a few unconnected
remarks about the beauty of the weather, the prospects
of the season, his sorrow for leaving all his old
friends, thought it time to come to the point, especially
as Pollie in the goodness of her heart replied to
the last statement with ’Not more sorry than
they are to lose you, Mr. Charteris,’ he certainly
produced an effect.
’Oh, Miss Devereux, oh, my dearest
Pollie, if you will let me call you so, why should
we part at all? Surely you must see the affection
I’ve cherished, the feelings I’ve had
for you ever since we first met. Years and years
I’ve stood by and said nothing, because because
I was doubtful of your affection, but now, now!’
Here he took her hand and began gently
to draw her towards him, putting an imploring expression
into his eyes, which was so utterly foreign to their
usual merry and audacious expression, that Pollie,
after one wild, fixed gaze of horrified anxiety, as
if to see whether he had not become suddenly insane,
burst into a fit of uncontrollable laughter.
‘Miss Devereux, surely,’
began he, with a hurt and surprised look, ’this
is not exactly fair or kind under the circumstances.
What I have said may or may not be ridiculous, but
it is generally looked upon as a compliment paid to
a young lady and not as a matter, pardon me, for ridicule
and contempt.’
The girl’s face changed suddenly.
She made a strong effort and prevented herself from
lapsing into what might have been an hysterical outbreak
of mirth.
‘Mr. Charteris,’ she said
gravely, ’I am the last person, as you ought
to know, likely to hurt your feelings consciously;
but I might ask you whether you think it right or
fair to entice me here, with my mind running on Maltese
lace and Cingalese ornaments, which were the last
things we spoke about last night, and suddenly fire
off a proposal in form at me. I declare I was
never more astonished in my life. Whatever could
you be thinking of?’
‘What every one who sees you
is thinking of,’ answered Jack, humbly and regretfully ’love
and admiration for your sweet self. Oh! Miss
Devereux, I worship the very ground you stand upon.’
‘I will never be decently civil
to any one again,’ declared Pollie. ’I
suppose you saw mother and I were glad to see you,
and so thought Heaven forgive you! that
I had fallen in love with you. Don’t you
know that girls never show their feelings that way?
It will be a lesson to you another time. Don’t
say another word. We shall always be good friends,
I hope. When you come out with a wife you’ll
find lots of nicer girls than me in England, so everybody
says we shall laugh over this. Mother
and I will hold our tongues; nobody need know.
I shall not show at breakfast. You had better
tell her, and she will comfort you. Good-bye.’
She looked him frankly in the face
and held out her hand, which poor Jack took ruefully,
and raising it to his lips, turned away. When
he looked round, she had disappeared. The glory
of the morning had passed away with her. He made
a melancholy attempt to whistle, and slowly betook
himself to the stables, where he arranged that his
luggage should be stowed in his phaeton and all things
made ready for a start at a moment’s notice
after breakfast.
This done, he sauntered into the house,
and, intercepting Mrs. Devereux before she reached
the breakfast-room, told her of the melancholy occurrence
with a countenance to match, and begged her pardon
and her daughter’s for making so great a mistake.
Mrs. Devereux was a tender-hearted
woman, and, as are most of her age, inclined to condone
all offences of this nature, though, like her daughter,
as Mr. Charteris resentfully felt, she expressed extreme
astonishment at the idea of his having come with malice
prepense to make so serious a proposition. She
was sure that Pollie had not given him reason to think
that she had any other feeling for him but that of
sincere, unalloyed friendship, which they had always
felt, and, she trusted, always would.
But Mr. Charteris’ humility
broke down and changed at this point into something
very like a strong sense of unfair treatment.
‘Confound it!’ he broke out. ’That
is, I beg a thousand pardons; but it appears to me
the first time in my life that you are not quite just,
Mrs. Devereux. How in the world is a man to find
out if a girl likes him, if he doesn’t ask her?
Is he to wait years and years until they both grow
old, or until he worries her into making some sign
that she cares for him more than other fellows?
I call that rather a mean way. I must say I thought
Miss Devereux liked me, and that’s enough in
my mind for a man to begin on. I’ve had
my shot, and missed. But for the life of me, I
can’t see where I’ve acted either unlike
a man or a gentleman.’
As Jack stood straight up and delivered
himself of this explanation of his views and principles,
with a heightened colour and a kindling eye, Mrs.
Devereux could not help thinking that he would have
advanced his views very much with her daughter if
he had spoken to her in the same decided tone and
manner. ‘He really is a fine young man,’
she thought to herself, ’and very good-looking
too. But there’s no persuading a wilful
girl. I hope she may never do worse.’
Then she took Jack’s hand herself
in her’s, and said, ’My dear John, neither
I nor Polly would hurt your feelings for the world.
It did take us by surprise; but perhaps I ought
to have noticed that your admiration for her was genuine.
I quite agree with you that it is more manly and straightforward
for a man to declare himself positively. I am
sure we shall always look upon you as one of our best
and dearest friends.’
‘I hope Miss Pollie may do better,’
said Jack gloomily, as he pressed the hand of the
kind matron. ’She may or she may not.
A girl doesn’t always judge men rightly until
it is too late too late but whether
or no, God bless her and you in that and everything
else! Don’t forget poor Jack Charteris.’
And he was gone.
Mr. Charteris, with habitual forethought,
had left nothing till the last moment. As he
came into the yard, he had but to take the reins and
gain the box-seat. His horses plunged at their
collars, and swept out of the yard across the plain
at a rate which showed that they were instinctively
aware that a rapid start was intended. Half-way
across the first plain he encountered Harold Atherstone
on horseback, looking like a man who had already had
a long ride.
’Hallo! Jack, whither away?
You look as if you were driving against time.
What’s up?’
’Well, I’m off by next
week’s mail-steamer, as I told you before.
I’ve been at Corindah since yesterday, where
I’ve been fool enough to run my head against
a post. I needn’t explain.’ Harold
nodded sympathetically. ’We’re in
the same boat, I expect. I wouldn’t care
if you were the fortunate man, old fellow; though
every one has a right to try his own luck. But
I expect we shall both be euchred by that infernal,
smooth-faced, mild-voiced, new-chum cousin. I
can’t see what there is to attract the women
about him; but they are all in the same line.
I heard Bella Pemberton praising him up hill and down
dale. I suppose there is a fate in these things.
Where is he now?’
‘I am not prepared to agree
with all you say,’ answered Harold calmly.
’The end will show. I don’t trust
him too much myself, though I should be puzzled upon
what to ground my “Doctor Fell” feeling.
He is away on some back country that Mrs. Devereux
has rented, and won’t be back for a month.’
‘I hope his horse will put its
foot in a crab-hole and break its neck,’ said
Jack viciously. ’I wouldn’t mind the
girl being carried away from us by a man.
She has a right to follow her fancy. But a pale-faced,
half-baked, sea-sick looking beggar like that it’s
more than a fellow can bear.’
’Come, Jack, you’re unjust,
and not over respectful to Miss Devereux herself.
But I make allowances. Good-bye, old man. Bon
voyage! Bring out a rosy-cheeked English girl.
Hearts are reparable commodities, you know. Yours
has been broken before.’
’Never like this, Harold; give
you my word. I could sell the whole place, and
cut the colony for ever, I feel so miserable and downhearted.
But I’m not one of the lie-down-and-die sort,
so I suppose I shall risk another entry. Good-bye,
old man. God bless you!’
A silent hand-grasp, and the friends
parted. Mr. Charteris’ equipage gradually
faded away in the mirage of the far distance, while
Harold rode quietly onward towards his own station much
musing and with a heart less calm than his words had
indicated.
When he arrived at the spot where
the tracks diverged, he was conscious of a strong
instinctive inclination first of his steed,
and then of himself to take the track which
led to Corindah. After combating this not wholly
logical tendency, and telling himself that it was his
first duty to go and see that all things were well
in order at home before making his usual call at Corindah,
he descried another horseman coming rather fast across
the plain, and evidently making for the Corindah track.
Pulling up so as to give the stranger
an opportunity for ranging alongside, he presently
said to himself involuntarily, ’Why, it’s
the parson; and furthermore, I shall have to go to
Corindah now, as the old lady says she finds it hard
work entertaining Courtenay all by himself. He’s
not a bad hand at talking, but he’s so terrifically
serious and matter-of-fact that he’s rather
much for a couple of women. When Bertram’s
there it’s better, for I notice he generally
contrives to get up an argument with him, and bowl
him over on some point of church history. That
fellow Bertram knows everything, to do him justice.’
As these thoughts passed through his
mind the individual referred to cantered up on an
active-looking hackney, rather high in bone, and greeted
him with pleased recognition.
‘I was debating in my own mind,
Mr. Atherstone,’ he said, ’whether I should
hold divine service at your station to-day or at that
of Mrs. Devereux.’
‘You are equally welcome at
both houses, as you know,’ said the layman;
’but I think it may be perhaps a more convenient
arrangement in all respects to manage it in this way.
If you will ride home with me now to Maroobil, I will
see that all the men are mustered and the wool-shed
got ready to-night. I can send a messenger to
Corindah with a note telling Mrs. Devereux that you
and I will be there to-morrow night, which will be
Saturday. She will then have everything prepared
for a regular morning service on Sunday.’
The clergyman bowed assentingly.
’I think that will suit better than the plan
I had proposed to myself of going there to-night.
There are a good many people within a few hours’
ride of Corindah, and Mrs. Devereux always kindly
sends word to them of my arrival. The Sabbath
will be the more appropriate day for divine service
at Corindah, where there will probably be a larger
gathering.’
‘Then we may as well ride,’
said the other, looking at his watch, ’and we
shall be in time for a late lunch at Maroobil.’
The Rev. Cyril Courtenay was a spare,
rather angular young man, about seven-and-twenty,
who had a parish about as large as Scotland to supply,
as he best might, with religious nourishment and spiritual
consolation. He had taken a colonial University
degree, and was therefore well instructed in a general
way, in addition to which he was a gentleman by birth
and early training. He was gifted with a commendable
amount of zeal for the cause of true religion generally,
if more particularly for the Church of England, of
which he was an ordained clergyman.
His duties were different from what
they would have been in an English parish. The
distances were indeed magnificent. His stipend
was paid chiefly by the voluntary contributions of
the inhabitants of the district of West Logan, and
partly from a fund of which the bishop of his diocese
had the management, and from which he was able to supplement
the incomes of the poorer clergy. This amounted
to about two hundred and fifty pounds per annum.
The contributories were almost entirely squatters.
The other laymen of the denomination labourers,
shepherds, station hands, boundary riders, etc. though
they attended his services cheerfully, did not consider
themselves bound to pay anything; holding, apparently,
that the Rev. Cyril was included in the category of
’swells’ a class radically differing
from themselves, whose subsistence was safe and assured,
being provided for in some mysterious manner between
the squatters and the Government, by whom all the good
things of this life, in their opinion, including ‘place
and pay,’ were distributed at will.
The horse of the Rev. Cyril had started
off when Mr. Atherstone gave the signal to his own
hackney, and powdered along the level road as if a
hand-gallop was the only pace with which he was acquainted.
It is a curious fact that the clergymen of all Protestant
denominations ride hard, and are not famous for keeping
their horses in good condition. Exceptis excipiendis,
of course. There are not many of them, either,
to whom the laity are anxious to lend superior hackneys.
They are accused, and not without reason, of being
hard on their borrowed mounts, and of not being careful
of their sustenance. The priest of the Romish
communion, on the other hand, invariably has a good
horse, in good condition. He treats him well
and tenderly withal. Why this difference?
Why the balance of care and merciful dealing on the
side of our Roman Catholic brethren? For one
thing, priests are chiefly Irishmen, who are horsemen
and horse-lovers to a man. Then the celibate Levite,
having no human outlet for his affections, pets his
steed, as the old maid her cat. With the married
clergyman the oats of the rough-coated, though serviceable,
steed come often in competition with the butcher’s
and baker’s bills or the children’s schooling.
The married parson’s horse, like himself, must
work hard on the smallest modicum of sustenance, lodging,
and support that will keep body and soul together.
And very good work the pair often do.
The Rev. Cyril, however, being a bachelor,
and living a good deal at free quarters, was not an
impecunious individual. He should therefore have
had his hackney in better order. But it was more
a matter of carelessness with him than lack of purpose.
He had not been a horseman in his youth. Australian
born as he was, he had studied hard and permitted
himself few recreations of a physical kind; so that
when, after serving as a catechist, he was appointed
to the district of West Logan, where he had two or
three hundred miles a week to ride or drive in a general
way, he found himself awkwardly deficient in this
particular accomplishment.
To take a man-servant with him always
would have doubled his expenses, without being of
any corresponding benefit. After trying it for
a few months he gave it up. He then took to riding
and driving himself at first with partial
success, inasmuch as he had several falls, and the
periodical overthrow of the parson’s buggy became
part of the monthly news of the district. Gradually,
however, he attained to that measure of proficiency
which enables a man to ride a quiet horse along a road
or through open country, besides being able to drive
a buggy without colliding with obstacles. He
certainly drove with painfully loose reins, and rode
his horse much after the sailor’s fashion, as
if they are warranted to go fifty miles without stopping.
However, he got on pretty well on the whole, and Australian
horses, like Cossack ponies, being accustomed to stand
a good deal of violent exercise with the aid only of
occasional feeding and no grooming at all, Mr. Courtenay
and his steed got through their work and adventures
reasonably well.
Three o’clock saw the two young
men at the Maroobil home station, a large, old-fashioned,
comfortable congeries of buildings, without attempt
at architectural embellishment. The barns, sheds,
and stables were massive and commodious, showing signs
of having been built in that earlier period of colonial
history when less attention was paid to rapidity of
construction. The garden was full of fruit-trees
of great age and size, which even in the late droughts
seemed to have been supplied with adequate moisture.
Comfort and massiveness had been the leading characteristics
of the establishment since its foundation. Homesteads
have a recognisable expression at first sight, even
as their proprietors.
A neat brown-faced groom took the
horses from the young men as they dismounted, looking
critically at the rather ‘tucked up’ condition
of the parson’s steed. ’Take Mr.
Courtenay’s horse to a box and feed him till
sundown; then put him into the creek paddock.
Go round and tell the hands to roll up in the shed
at half-past seven to-night. Mr. Courtenay will
hold service.’ The groom touched his hat
with a gesture of assent, and departed with his charge.
The principal sitting-room at Maroobil
was a fairly large apartment, which did not aspire
to the dignity of a drawing-room. In the days
of his father and mother Harold had always remembered
them sitting there in the evenings after the evening
meal had been cleared away. There was a large
old-fashioned fireplace, where in winter such a fire
glowed as effectually prevented those in the room
from being cold. A solid mahogany table enabled
any one to read or write thereon with comfort.
And Harold was one of those persons who was unable
to pass his evenings in a general way without doing
more or less of both. A well-chosen library,
with most of the standard authors and a reasonable
infusion of modern light literature, filled up one
end of the room. Sofas and lounges helped to
redeem the room from stiffness or discomfort.
Full-length portraits in oil of Harold’s father
and mother, as also of a preceding generation, with
an admiral who had fought at Trafalgar, adorned the
walls.
A stag’s head and antlers shot
in New Zealand, with a brace of stuffed pheasants
and the brush of an Australian-bred fox, were fixed
over doorways. Guns and rifles of every kind
of size, gauge, and construction filled a couple of
racks. All things were neat and scrupulously clean,
but there was that total absence of ornamentation which
characterises a bachelor establishment of a settled
and confirmed type.
In the evening, when the master of
the establishment and his clerical guest walked across
the half-mile which separated the wool-shed from the
house another old-world institution absurdly
near the homestead, as the overseer, a ‘Riverina
man’ of advanced views, declared a
fairly numerous congregation was assembled. The
chairs and forms had been conveniently placed for
the people. The wool table had been dressed up,
so as to be made a serviceable reading-desk. Candles
in tin sconces lit up the building a matter
which had been found necessary during theatrical representations
in the same building during the shearing season, when
travelling troupes of various orders of merit essay
to levy toll on the cash earnings so freely disbursed
at such times.
It was a representative gathering,
in some respects a strange and pathetic assemblage.
It was known that Mr. Atherstone particularly wished
all his employees to attend these occasional services,
and to pay due respect to whatever clergyman, in the
exercise of his vocation, might find his way to Maroobil.
Harold was unprejudiced as to denominations, although
firmly attached to his own, and exacted as far as
possible a decent recognition of the trouble and personal
expenditure undertaken for the spiritual welfare of
the neighbourhood.
On the nearest form might be seen
the unmistakable type of the English peasant from
Essex. The gardener, John Thrum, and his wife,
had emigrated from Bishop-Stortford thirty years ago,
and finding a congenial resting-place at Maroobil,
had remained there ever since, saving their money,
and at the beginning of every year expressing their
determination to ‘go home to England.’
A dozen station hands and boundary riders exhibited
bronzed and sunburnt features, darkened almost to
the complexion of ‘Big Billy,’ the black
fellow, who, with a clean shirt and a countenance
of edifying solemnity, sat on one of the back benches.
A score of young men and lads, long of limb, rather
slouching of manner, with regular features and athletic
frames, showed a general resemblance in type, such
as that towards which the Anglo-Celtic and Anglo-Saxon
Australian is gradually merging. A few women and
children, a stray hawker, a policeman on the track
of horse-stealers, resplendent in spotless boots and
breeches voila tous! There were
Roman Catholics among the crowd, but much abiding
in the backwoods had rubbed off prejudice. Padres
were scarce, anyhow. There was no chapel within
fifty miles, and they didn’t think it would
be any harm to come.
For the rest, the service of the Church
of England, slightly condensed, was gone through;
a plain, serviceable sermon, sound in doctrine and
not above the heads of the hearers, was administered;
the benediction was said; and the little congregation
composed of such different elements dispersed some
of them certainly soothed and comforted by the familiar
words, if by nought else; others, let us hope, induced
to consider or amend their course of life, where such
was needful.
As the young men strolled home back
to the homestead the clergyman, after a pause, said,
’It often oppresses me with a feeling of sadness,
the doubt which I feel whether any appreciable good
results from these occasional services, the efforts
of myself and other men, who labour under different
titles in the Lord’s vineyard. When we reflect
on the lives these men, almost without exception,
lead the old gardener, perhaps, the sole
exception, and the women and children a
man may well doubt whether he is not wearing out his
life for nought.’
‘It’s hard to say,’
answered Harold. ’If the soldier does not
fight, the battle is not won. One does not see
much improvement, certainly, from decade to decade.
Perhaps there is less of the open, reckless profligacy
that we used to hear of in our boyhood. But no
doubt most of the men that we saw to-night gamble,
drink, and in riotous living of one form or other
dispose of their yearly wages; confessedly going to
town at Christmas, or some other holiday, to “knock
it down."’
‘All of them?’ said the
preacher. ’Surely there must be some of
them who do not?’
’Well, not the married men perhaps those
who have farms and who live in the cooler regions,
near the foothills, as the Americans say, of the great
mountain-chain. They save their money, and take
it home to their wives; it helps for harvest and other
time of need. But the older men, the regular
nomadic hands, who are rarely married, and the boys,
save nothing, except for a grand annual carnival,
which after a month leaves them penniless for another
year.’
’A practice which must have
the most demoralising effect upon these poor victims
of drink and debauchery?’
‘I really can’t say that
it has,’ replied Harold Atherstone. ’That
is the extraordinary part of it. That grizzled,
clean-shaved man with the square shoulders and highly
respectable English appearance is a Devonshire man,
who came here early in life. He has been employed
on Maroobil, off and on, ever since I remember.
He never drinks when at work. You might send
him into the township with a five-pound note any day
and he would return sober. He is as hard as nails.
I would take his word as soon as any friend I know.
He is brave, honest, hard-working, simple. As
a labourer he is without a fault. He is the stuff
of which England’s best soldiers and sailors
are made. And yet ’
‘And yet what?’
’He is a hopeless and irreclaimable
drunkard. He has collected his knock-about money,
his shearing, and his harvest money about the end of
January. By the first or second week in March
he has not a shilling in the world starting
out “on the wallaby,” as he calls it, sober
and penniless, with barely a shirt to his back, trusting
to the first job he meets for food and covering.
What are you to do with a man like that?’
‘Surely a word in season might influence him?’
’Not if one rose from the dead.
’Because, now consider the case
carefully, as Mr. Jaggers says. Here is a man
who has self-denial enough, with the raging drunkard’s
thirst upon him, to suddenly determine to abstain
wholly, solely, and absolutely from even a teaspoonful
of beer, wine, or alcohol, with gallons of it under
his nose at every public-house he passes. When
you talk to him he is as sober as I am more
so indeed, for I am going to have a glass of whisky
and water to-night, whereas he will touch nothing for
nearly a year. He says, “Well, master,
I be always main sorry at the time, and I do aim not
to touch it no more. But the devil, he be too
strong for I, and zumhow or zumhow, the old feeling
comes over me arter Christmas time, and I knocks all
the cheques down, zame as before. But I’ve
neither chick nor child, and I reckon I harm no one
but myself.”
’"But you’ll die in a ditch some day,
Ben,” I say to him.
’"Like as not, master,”
he replies, quite good-humouredly; “and no great
matter. A man must die when his turn comes.
But you’ll have the hay spoiling, master, if
you keeps a-talkin’ to your hands ’stead
of drivin’ ’em at their work."’
‘How it must ruin their constitution!’
groaned the clergyman. ’They can’t
have a healthy pulse or movement.’
‘Even that is not borne out
by fact,’ said the squatter. ’Have
up this old private in the industrial army, and what
do you find? His eye is clear, his cheek is healthy
and brown. Let either of us, fairly strong men taller
and broader too stand alongside of him at
a hard day’s work, and see where we shall be!
Every muscle and sinew, strained and tested since
childhood, is like wire compared to cord. The
country-bred Englishman is certainly the best working
animal in the world, and I cannot conscientiously
say that this man’s bodily or mental powers have
suffered for the life he has led.’
‘Is there no hope, then?’
said the young preacher despondingly. ’Must
the best and bravest of the race be doomed to this
hopeless degradation? The preacher’s warning
is useless, the kindly master’s advice, the
teaching of experience, the voice of God. What
are we to look to in the future?’
’To the spread of education
and the development of intelligence. I see no
other safeguard. Ben can neither read nor write.
Hundreds like him can do so with difficulty which
amounts to nearly the same thing. A certain reaction
sets in after continuous labour. What change or
recreation have these barren intelligences so complete,
so transforming as the madness of intoxication?
With culture national and universal will
come additional means of recreation a hundredfold
multiplied. With the refinement inseparable from
education will come the distaste for unbridled debauchery,
for the coarse and degrading enjoyments of mere sensuality,
for a practice which will have become unfashionable
with every grade and every class of society.’
’Then you trust in the millennium
of universal education secular or otherwise not
fearing the communistic and atheistic principles which
may be involved by mere mental culture unregulated
by religious teaching.’
’So long as the race preserves
the attributes which have always distinguished it,
so long as the passions disturb the reasoning powers,
so long as the body preserves its present relation
to the spirit, men will drink to heighten pleasure
or to dull pain. But in proportion as the mental
powers are developed and refined by culture, so will
the vice which we call drunkenness diminish, perhaps
disappear. With other results of the tillage
of that rich and boundless estate, the nation’s
mind, so long fallow, so negligently worked, I shall
not at present concern myself. I have my own
opinion.’
‘You will not take anything?’
said Atherstone, lighting his pipe as the two men
sat over the wide fireplace upon their return from
the wool-shed. ’Light wine or spirits you
will find on the tray; the aerated water is yonder.’
’I think it better for me to
practise what I preach in the matter of intoxicating
liquors,’ said Mr. Courtenay, filling a large
tumbler with the aerated water. ’This is
very refreshing though I do not feel called
upon to denounce the moderate use of what was doubtless
ordained for wise purposes.’
’I can put your horse in the
paddock, and let me drive you over to Corindah,’
said the host after breakfast next morning. ’He
will be all the better for it, and on return you can
make across to Yandah just as well from here.
I’ll send Jack with you across the bush, and
he’ll put you on to the main Wannonbah road.’
’Thank you very much, Mr. Atherstone;
you are always considerate. I began to think
Rover was failing a little; yet I had only ridden him
forty miles when I met you.’
‘Before lunch-time?’ said
the other, smiling. ’Well, he is a good
horse, and carries you well; only, when you come back
from Yandah, I’d put the other nag into commission.
Leave Rover here till autumn, and he’ll be fat
and strong to carry you all the winter. And now,
if you have any writing to do before lunch, I must
leave you in possession. We’ll start at
half-past three sharp. There’s the library,
the writing-table, the house generally, to do as you
like with till I come back to lunch.’
Punctually at the appointed hour after
lunch the pair of fast-trotting, well-bred buggy horses
whirled the two young men away on the track to Corindah,
a pathway which, already well-beaten, did not appear
to be in danger of becoming faint from disuse.
Arriving before sundown, they were
received with unmistakable cordiality by the lady
of the house, who explained that Pollie had gone out
for a ride with her cousin, but would be home by tea-time.
This trifling piece of intelligence did not, strange
to relate, appear to add to the satisfaction of either
guest. Nor even when the missing damsel came
riding in, looking deliciously fresh and exhilarated
by the healthful exercise, talking in an animated
way to Mr. Bertram Devereux, who, attired with great
neatness and mounted upon the handsomest horse that
Corindah ‘had to its name,’ looked like
an equestrian lounger from Rotten Row, was their equanimity
altogether restored. Harold was reserved and
imperturbable as usual even more so.
Mr. Courtenay discoursed gloomily about the low state
of morality everywhere apparent in the bush.
The rather carefully prepared tea entertainment, to
which poor Mrs. Devereux had looked forward with a
certain pleasurable anticipation, proved flat and
uninteresting.
The attendance was comparatively large
in the dining-room of the bachelor’s quarters,
which Mrs. Devereux had caused to be rigorously cleaned
out for the occasion. But it was agreed that the
sermon of Mr. Courtenay was not so good as usual;
that he had ‘gone off’ in his preaching,
and had not been so pleasant-mannered as was his wont.
Mrs. Devereux was lost in astonishment at the variation
in his performance and demeanour, and concluded by
remarking to Pollie privately that clergymen were
uncertain in their ways, and that Mr. Courtenay in
particular, must have been overworking himself lately,
which accounted for his altered form.
Mrs. Devereux was anxious to confide
in Harold about Mr. Charteris’ unlucky declaration
before his departure, and to assure herself of his
approval of her conduct. She knew that the young
men were as brothers, and that Mr. Charteris would
by no means object to such a proceeding. But
Harold said rather sternly that he and Mr. Courtenay
must drive home that afternoon: he had work to
do, etc.; and in spite of an appealing and surprised
glance from Miss Pollie, he adhered to his resolution,
and after saying farewell formally, was seen no more.