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Books: On Our Selection

S >> Steele Rudd (Arthur Hoey Davis) >> On Our Selection

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This etext was produced by Dudley Col Choat





PIONEERS OF AUSTRALIA!
To You "Who Gave Our Country Birth;"
to the memory of You
whose names, whose giant enterprise, whose deeds of
fortitude and daring
were never engraved on tablet or tombstone;
to You who strove through the silences of the Bush-lands
and made them ours;
to You who delved and toiled in loneliness through
the years that have faded away;
to You who have no place in the history of our Country
so far as it is yet written;
to You who have done MOST for this Land;
to You for whom few, in the march of settlement, in the turmoil
of busy city life, now appear to care;
and to you particularly,
GOOD OLD DAD,
This Book is most affectionately dedicated.

"STEELE RUDD."




CONTENTS.




CHAPTER I. STARTING THE SELECTION
CHAPTER II. OUR FIRST HARVEST
CHAPTER III. BEFORE WE GOT THE DEEDS
CHAPTER IV. WHEN THE WOLF WAS AT THE DOOR
CHAPTER V. THE NIGHT WE WATCHED FOR WALLABIES
CHAPTER VI. GOOD OLD BESS
CHAPTER VII. CRANKY JACK
CHAPTER VIII. A KANGAROO HUNT FROM SHINGLE HUT
CHAPTER IX. DAVE'S SNAKEBITE
CHAPTER X. DAD AND THE DONOVANS
CHAPTER XI. A SPLENDID YEAR FOR CORN
CHAPTER XII. KATE'S WEDDING
CHAPTER XIII. THE SUMMER OLD BOB DIED
CHAPTER XIV. WHEN DAN CAME HOME
CHAPTER XV. OUR CIRCUS
CHAPTER XVI. WHEN JOE WAS IN CHARGE
CHAPTER XVII. DAD'S "FORTUNE"
CHAPTER XVIII. WE EMBARK IN THE BEAR INDUSTRY
CHAPTER XIX. NELL AND NED
CHAPTER XX THE COW WE BOUGHT
CHAPTER XXI. THE PARSON AND THE SCONE
CHAPTER XXII. CALLAGHAN'S COLT
CHAPTER XXIII. THE AGRICULTURAL REPORTER
CHAPTER XXIV. A LADY AT SHINGLE HUT
CHAPTER XXV. THE MAN WITH THE BEAR-SKIN CAP
CHAPTER XXVI. CHRISTMAS




On Our Selection.



Chapter I.



Starting the Selection.


It's twenty years ago now since we settled on the Creek. Twenty years!
I remember well the day we came from Stanthorpe, on Jerome's dray--eight
of us, and all the things--beds, tubs, a bucket, the two cedar chairs with
the pine bottoms and backs that Dad put in them, some pint-pots and old
Crib. It was a scorching hot day, too--talk about thirst! At every creek
we came to we drank till it stopped running.

Dad did n't travel up with us: he had gone some months before, to put up
the house and dig the waterhole. It was a slabbed house, with shingled
roof, and space enough for two rooms; but the partition was n't up. The
floor was earth; but Dad had a mixture of sand and fresh cow-dung with
which he used to keep it level. About once every month he would put it
on; and everyone had to keep outside that day till it was dry. There were
no locks on the doors: pegs were put in to keep them fast at night; and
the slabs were not very close together, for we could easily see through
them anybody coming on horseback. Joe and I used to play at counting the
stars through the cracks in the roof.

The day after we arrived Dad took Mother and us out to see the paddock and
the flat on the other side of the gully that he was going to clear for
cultivation. There was no fence round the paddock, but he pointed out on
a tree the surveyor's marks, showing the boundary of our ground. It must
have been fine land, the way Dad talked about it! There was very valuable
timber on it, too, so he said; and he showed us a place, among some rocks
on a ridge, where he was sure gold would be found, but we were n't to say
anything about it. Joe and I went back that evening and turned over every
stone on the ridge, but we did n't find any gold.

No mistake, it was a real wilderness--nothing but trees, "goannas," dead
timber, and bears; and the nearest house--Dwyer's--was three miles away.
I often wonder how the women stood it the first few years; and I can
remember how Mother, when she was alone, used to sit on a log, where the
lane is now, and cry for hours. Lonely! It WAS lonely.

Dad soon talked about clearing a couple of acres and putting in corn--all
of us did, in fact--till the work commenced. It was a delightful topic
before we started,; but in two weeks the clusters of fires that illumined
the whooping bush in the night, and the crash upon crash of the big trees
as they fell, had lost all their poetry.

We toiled and toiled clearing those four acres, where the haystacks are
now standing, till every tree and sapling that had grown there was down.
We thought then the worst was over; but how little we knew of clearing
land! Dad was never tired of calculating and telling us how much the crop
would fetch if the ground could only be got ready in time to put it in;
so we laboured the harder.

With our combined male and female forces and the aid of a sapling lever we
rolled the thundering big logs together in the face of Hell's own fires;
and when there were no logs to roll it was tramp, tramp the day through,
gathering armfuls of sticks, while the clothes clung to our backs with a
muddy perspiration. Sometimes Dan and Dave would sit in the shade beside
the billy of water and gaze at the small patch that had taken so long to
do; then they would turn hopelessly to what was before them and ask Dad
(who would never take a spell) what was the use of thinking of ever
getting such a place cleared? And when Dave wanted to know why Dad
did n't take up a place on the plain, where there were no trees to grub
and plenty of water, Dad would cough as if something was sticking in his
throat, and then curse terribly about the squatters and political jobbery.
He would soon cool down, though, and get hopeful again.

"Look at the Dwyers," he'd say; "from ten acres of wheat they got seventy
pounds last year, besides feed for the fowls; they've got corn in now,
and there's only the two."

It was n't only burning off! Whenever there came a short drought the
waterhole was sure to run dry; then it was take turns to carry water from
the springs--about two miles. We had no draught horse, and if we had
there was neither water-cask, trolly, nor dray; so we humped it--and talk
about a drag! By the time you returned, if you had n't drained the
bucket, in spite of the big drink you'd take before leaving the springs,
more than half would certainly be spilt through the vessel bumping against
your leg every time you stumbled in the long grass. Somehow, none of us
liked carrying water. We would sooner keep the fires going all day
without dinner than do a trip to the springs.

One hot, thirsty day it was Joe's turn with the bucket, and he managed to
get back without spilling very much. We were all pleased because there
was enough left after the tea had been made to give each a drink. Dinner
was nearly over; Dan had finished, and was taking it easy on the sofa,
when Joe said:

"I say, Dad, what's a nater-dog like?" Dad told him: "Yellow, sharp ears
and bushy tail."

"Those muster bin some then thet I seen--I do n't know 'bout the bushy
tail--all th' hair had comed off." "Where'd y' see them, Joe?" we asked.
"Down 'n th' springs floating about--dead."

Then everyone seemed to think hard and look at the tea. I did n't want
any more. Dan jumped off the sofa and went outside; and Dad looked after
Mother.

At last the four acres--excepting the biggest of the iron-bark trees and
about fifty stumps--were pretty well cleared; and then came a problem that
could n't be worked-out on a draught-board. I have already said that we
had n't any draught horses; indeed, the only thing on the selection like
a horse was an old "tuppy" mare that Dad used to straddle. The date of
her foaling went further back than Dad's, I believe; and she was shaped
something like an alderman. We found her one day in about eighteen inches
of mud, with both eyes picked out by the crows, and her hide bearing
evidence that a feathery tribe had made a roost of her carcase. Plainly,
there was no chance of breaking up the ground with her help. We had no
plough, either; how then was the corn to be put in? That was the question.

Dan and Dave sat outside in the corner of the chimney, both scratching the
ground with a chip and not saying anything. Dad and Mother sat inside
talking it over. Sometimes Dad would get up and walk round the room
shaking his head; then he would kick old Crib for lying under the table.
At last Mother struck something which brightened him up, and he called Dave.

"Catch Topsy and--" He paused because he remembered the old mare was dead.

"Run over and ask Mister Dwyer to lend me three hoes."

Dave went; Dwyer lent the hoes; and the problem was solved. That was
how we started.




Chapter II.



Our First Harvest


If there is anything worse than burr-cutting or breaking stones, it's
putting corn in with a hoe.

We had just finished. The girls were sowing the last of the grain when
Fred Dwyer appeared on the scene. Dad stopped and talked with him while
we (Dan, Dave and myself) sat on our hoe-handles, like kangaroos on their
tails, and killed flies. Terrible were the flies, particularly when you
had sore legs or the blight.

Dwyer was a big man with long, brown arms and red, bushy whiskers.

"You must find it slow work with a hoe?" he said.

"Well-yes-pretty," replied Dad (just as if he was n't quite sure).

After a while Dwyer walked over the "cultivation", and looked at it hard,
then scraped a hole with the heel of his boot, spat, and said he did n't
think the corn would ever come up. Dan slid off his perch at this, and
Dave let the flies eat his leg nearly off without seeming to feel it; but
Dad argued it out.

"Orright, orright," said Dwyer; "I hope it do."

Then Dad went on to speak of places he knew of where they preferred hoes
to a plough for putting corn in with; but Dwyer only laughed and shook
his head.

"D--n him!" Dad muttered, when he had gone; "what rot! WON'T COME UP!"

Dan, who was still thinking hard, at last straightened himself up and said
HE did n't think it was any use either. Then Dad lost his temper.

"No USE?" he yelled, "you whelp, what do you know about it?"

Dan answered quietly: "On'y this, that it's nothing but tomfoolery,
this hoe business."

"How would you do it then?" Dad roared, and Dan hung his head and tried to
button his buttonless shirt wrist-band while he thought.

"With a plough," he answered.

Something in Dad's throat prevented him saying what he wished, so he
rushed at Dan with the hoe, but--was too slow.

Dan slept outside that night.

No sooner was the grain sown than it rained. How it rained! for weeks!
And in the midst of it all the corn came up--every grain-and proved Dwyer
a bad prophet. Dad was in high spirits and promised each of us
something--new boots all round.

The corn continued to grow--so did our hopes, but a lot faster. Pulling
the suckers and "heeling it up" with hoes was but child's play--we liked it.
Our thoughts were all on the boots; 'twas months months since we had pulled
on a pair. Every night, in bed, we decided twenty times over whether they
would be lace-ups or bluchers, and Dave had a bottle of "goanna" oil ready
to keep his soft with.

Dad now talked of going up country--as Mother put it, "to keep the wolf
from the door"--while the four acres of corn ripened. He went, and
returned on the day Tom and Bill were born--twins. Maybe his absence did
keep the wolf from the door, but it did n't keep the dingoes from the
fowl-house!

Once the corn ripened it did n't take long to pull it, but Dad had to put
on his considering-cap when we came to the question of getting it in.
To hump it in bags seemed inevitable till Dwyer asked Dad to give him a
hand to put up a milking-yard. Then Dad's chance came, and he seized it.

Dwyer, in return for Dad's labour, carted in the corn and took it to the
railway-station when it was shelled. Yes, when it WAS shelled! We had to
shell it with our hands, and what a time we had! For the first half-hour
we did n't mind it at all, and shelled cob after cob as though we liked it;
but next day, talk about blisters! we could n't close our hands for them,
and our faces had to go without a wash for a fortnight.

Fifteen bags we got off the four acres, and the storekeeper undertook to
sell it. Corn was then at 12 shillings and 14 shillings per bushel,
and Dad expected a big cheque.

Every day for nearly three weeks he trudged over to the store (five miles)
and I went with him. Each time the storekeeper would shake his head and
say "No word yet."

Dad could n't understand. At last word did come. The storekeeper was
busy serving a customer when we went in, so he told Dad to "hold on a bit".

Dad felt very pleased--so did I.

The customer left. The storekeeper looked at Dad and twirled a piece of
string round his first finger, then said--"Twelve pounds your corn
cleared, Mr. Rudd; but, of course" (going to a desk) "there's that account
of yours which I have credited with the amount of the cheque--that brings
it down now to just three pound, as you will see by the account."

Dad was speechless, and looked sick.

He went home and sat on a block and stared into the fire with his chin
resting in his hands, till Mother laid her hand upon his shoulder and
asked him kindly what was the matter. Then he drew the storekeeper's bill
from his pocket, and handed it to her, and she too sat down and gazed
into the fire.

That was OUR first harvest.




Chapter III.



Before We Got The Deeds


Our selection adjoined a sheep-run on the Darling Downs, and boasted of
few and scant improvements, though things had gradually got a little
better than when we started. A verandahless four-roomed slab-hut now
standing out from a forest of box-trees, a stock-yard, and six acres under
barley were the only evidence of settlement. A few horses--not
ours--sometimes grazed about; and occasionally a mob of cattle--also not
ours--cows with young calves, steers, and an old bull or two, would stroll
around, chew the best legs of any trousers that might be hanging on the
log reserved as a clothes-line, then leave in the night and be seen no
more for months--some of them never.

And yet we were always out of meat!

Dad was up the country earning a few pounds--the corn drove him up when it
did n't bring what he expected. All we got out of it was a bag of
flour--I do n't know what the storekeeper got. Before he left we put in
the barley. Somehow, Dad did n't believe in sowing any more crops, he
seemed to lose heart; but Mother talked it over with him, and when
reminded that he would soon be entitled to the deeds he brightened up
again and worked. How he worked!

We had no plough, so old Anderson turned over the six acres for us, and
Dad gave him a pound an acre--at least he was to send him the first six
pounds got up country. Dad sowed the seed; then he, Dan and Dave yoked
themselves to a large dry bramble each and harrowed it in. From the way
they sweated it must have been hard work. Sometimes they would sit down
in the middle of the paddock and "spell" but Dad would say something about
getting the deeds and they'd start again.

A cockatoo-fence was round the barley; and wire-posts, a long distance
apart, round the grass-paddock. We were to get the wire to put in when
Dad sent the money; and apply for the deeds when he came back. Things
would be different then, according to Dad, and the farm would be worked
properly. We would break up fifty acres, build a barn, buy a reaper,
ploughs, cornsheller, get cows and good horses, and start two or three
ploughs. Meanwhile, if we (Dan, Dave and I) minded the barley he was sure
there'd be something got out of it.

Dad had been away about six weeks. Travellers were passing by every day,
and there was n't one that did n't want a little of something or other.
Mother used to ask them if they had met Dad? None ever did until an old
grey man came along and said he knew Dad well--he had camped with him one
night and shared a damper. Mother was very pleased and brought him in.
We had a kangaroo-rat (stewed) for dinner that day. The girls did n't
want to lay it on the table at first, but Mother said he would n't know
what it was. The traveller was very hungry and liked it, and when passing
his plate the second time for more, said it was n't often he got
any poultry.

He tramped on again, and the girls were very glad he did n't know it was
a rat. But Dave was n't so sure that he did n't know a rat from a
rooster, and reckoned he had n't met Dad at all.

The seventh week Dad came back. He arrived at night, and the lot of us
had to get up to find the hammer to knock the peg out of the door and let
him in. He brought home three pounds--not enough to get the wire with,
but he also brought a horse and saddle. He did n't say if he bought them.
It was a bay mare, a grand animal for a journey--so Dad said--and only
wanted condition. Emelina, he called her. No mistake, she was a quiet
mare! We put her where there was good feed, but she was n't one that
fattened on grass. Birds took kindly to her--crows mostly--and she
could n't go anywhere but a flock of them accompanied her. Even when Dad
used to ride her (Dan or Dave never rode her) they used to follow, and
would fly on ahead to wait in a tree and "caw" when he was passing beneath.

One morning when Dan was digging potatoes for dinner--splendid potatoes
they were, too, Dad said; he had only once tasted sweeter ones, but they
were grown in a cemetery--he found the kangaroos had been in the barley.
We knew what THAT meant, and that night made fires round it, thinking to
frighten them off, but did n't--mobs of them were in at daybreak. Dad
swore from the house at them, but they took no notice; and when he ran
down, they just hopped over the fence and sat looking at him. Poor Dad!
I do n't know if he was knocked up or if he did n't know any more, but he
stopped swearing and sat on a stump looking at a patch of barley they had
destroyed, and shaking his head. Perhaps he was thinking if he only had
a dog! We did have one until he got a bait. Old Crib! He was lying
under the table at supper-time when he took the first fit, and what a
fright we got! He must have reared before stiffening out, because he
capsized the table into Mother's lap, and everything on it smashed except
the tin-plates and the pints. The lamp fell on Dad, too, and the melted
fat scalded his arm. Dad dragged Crib out and cut off his tail and ears,
but he might as well have taken off his head.

Dad stood with his back to the fire while Mother was putting a stitch in
his trousers. "There's nothing for it but to watch them at night," he was
saying, when old Anderson appeared and asked "if I could have those few
pounds." Dad asked Mother if she had any money in the house? Of course
she had n't. Then he told Anderson he would let him have it when he got
the deeds. Anderson left, and Dad sat on the edge of the sofa and seemed
to be counting the grains on a corn-cob that he lifted from the floor,
while Mother sat looking at a kangaroo-tail on the table and did n't
notice the cat drag it off. At last Dad said, "Ah, well!--it won't be
long now, Ellen, before we have the deeds!"

We took it in turns to watch the barley. Dan and the two girls watched
the first half of the night, and Dad, Dave and I the second. Dad always
slept in his clothes, and he used to think some nights that the others
came in before time. It was terrible going out, half awake, to tramp
round that paddock from fire to fire, from hour to hour, shouting and
yelling. And how we used to long for daybreak! Whenever we sat down
quietly together for a few minutes we would hear the dull THUD! THUD!
THUD!--the kangaroo's footstep.

At last we each carried a kerosene tin, slung like a kettle-drum, and
belted it with a waddy--Dad's idea. He himself manipulated an old bell
that he had found on a bullock's grave, and made a splendid noise with it.

It was a hard struggle, but we succeeded in saving the bulk of the barley,
and cut it down with a scythe and three reaping-hooks. The girls helped
to bind it, and Jimmy Mulcahy carted it in return for three days' binding
Dad put in for him. The stack was n't built twenty-four hours when a
score of somebody's crawling cattle ate their way up to their tails in it.
We took the hint and put a sapling fence round it.

Again Dad decided to go up country for a while. He caught Emelina after
breakfast, rolled up a blanket, told us to watch the stack, and started.
The crows followed.

We were having dinner. Dave said, "Listen!" We listened, and it seemed
as though all the crows and other feathered demons of the wide bush were
engaged in a mighty scrimmage. "Dad's back!" Dan said, and rushed out in
the lead of a stampede.

Emelina was back, anyway, with the swag on, but Dad was n't. We caught
her, and Dave pointed to white spots all over the saddle, and said--"Hanged
if they have n't been ridin' her!"--meaning the crows.

Mother got anxious, and sent Dan to see what had happened. Dan found Dad,
with his shirt off, at a pub on the main road, wanting to fight the
publican for a hundred pounds, but could n't persuade him to come home.
Two men brought him home that night on a sheep-hurdle, and he gave up the
idea of going away.

After all, the barley turned out well--there was a good price that year,
and we were able to run two wires round the paddock.

One day a bulky Government letter came. Dad looked surprised and pleased,
and how his hand trembled as he broke the seal! "THE DEEDS!" he said,
and all of us gathered round to look at them. Dave thought they were like
the inside of a bear-skin covered with writing.

Dad said he would ride to town at once, and went for Emelina.

"Could n't y' find her, Dad?" Dan said, seeing him return without the mare.

Dad cleared his throat, but did n't answer. Mother asked him.

"Yes, I FOUND her," he said slowly, "DEAD."

The crows had got her at last.

He wrapped the deeds in a piece of rag and walked.

There was nothing, scarcely, that he did n't send out from town, and Jimmy
Mulcahy and old Anderson many and many times after that borrowed our dray.

Now Dad regularly curses the deeds every mail-day, and wishes to Heaven
he had never got them.




Chapter IV.



When the Wolf was at the Door.


There had been a long stretch of dry weather, and we were cleaning out the
waterhole. Dad was down the hole shovelling up the dirt; Joe squatted on
the brink catching flies and letting them go again without their wings--a
favourite amusement of his; while Dan and Dave cut a drain to turn the
water that ran off the ridge into the hole--when it rained. Dad was
feeling dry, and told Joe to fetch him a drink.

Joe said: "See first if this cove can fly with only one wing." Then he
went, but returned and said: "There's no water in the bucket--Mother used
the last drop to boil th' punkins," and renewed the fly-catching. Dad
tried to spit, and was going to say something when Mother, half-way
between the house and the waterhole, cried out that the grass paddock was
all on fire. "So it is, Dad!" said Joe, slowly but surely dragging the
head off a fly with finger and thumb.

Dad scrambled out of the hole and looked. "Good God!" was all he said.
How he ran! All of us rushed after him except Joe--he could n't run very
well, because the day before he had ridden fifteen miles on a poor horse,
bare-back. When near the fire Dad stopped running to break a green bush.
He hit upon a tough one. Dad was in a hurry. The bush was n't. Dad
swore and tugged with all his might. Then the bush broke and Dad fell
heavily upon his back and swore again.

To save the cockatoo fence that was round the cultivation was what was
troubling Dad. Right and left we fought the fire with boughs. Hot! It
was hellish hot! Whenever there was a lull in the wind we worked. Like a
wind-mill Dad's bough moved--and how he rushed for another when one was
used up! Once we had the fire almost under control; but the wind rose
again, and away went the flames higher and faster than ever.

"It's no use," said Dad at last, placing his hand on his head, and throwing
down his bough. We did the same, then stood and watched the fence go.
After supper we went out again and saw it still burning. Joe asked Dad if
he did n't think it was a splendid sight? Dad did n't answer him--he
did n't seem conversational that night.

We decided to put the fence up again. Dan had sharpened the axe with a
broken file, and he and Dad were about to start when Mother asked them
what was to be done about flour? She said she had shaken the bag to get
enough to make scones for that morning's breakfast, and unless some was
got somewhere there would be no bread for dinner.

Dad reflected, while Dan felt the edge on the axe with his thumb.

Dad said, "Won't Missus Dwyer let you have a dishful until we get some?"

"No," Mother answered; "I can't ask her until we send back what we
owe them."

Dad reflected again. "The Andersons, then?" he said.

Mother shook her head and asked what good there was it sending to them
when they, only that morning, had sent to her for some?

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