登陆注册
5216800000032

第32章 Part I.(31)

He took the west road,and down Guntawang way a big farmer who saw James with the sheep (and who was speculating,or adding to his stock,or took a fancy to the wool)offered James as much for them as he reckoned I'd get in Sydney,after paying the carriage and the agents and the auctioneer.James put the sheep in a paddock and rode back to me.

He was all there where riding was concerned.I told him to let the sheep go.

James made a Greener shot-gun,and got his saddle done up,out of that job.

I took up a couple more forty-acre blocks --one in James's name,to encourage him with the fencing.There was a good slice of land in an angle between the range and the creek,farther down,which everybody thought belonged to Wall,the squatter,but Mary got an idea,and went to the local land office and found out that it was `unoccupied Crown land',and so I took it up on pastoral lease,and got a few more sheep --I'd saved some of the best-looking ewes from the last lot.

One evening --I was going down next day for a load of fencing-wire for myself --Mary said,--`Joe!do you know that the Matthews have got a new double buggy?'

The Matthews were a big family of cockatoos,along up the main road,and I didn't think much of them.The sons were all `bad-eggs',though the old woman and girls were right enough.

`Well,what of that?'I said.`They're up to their neck in debt,and camping like black-fellows in a big bark humpy.They do well to go flashing round in a double buggy.'

`But that isn't what I was going to say,'said Mary.`They want to sell their old single buggy,James says.I'm sure you could get it for six or seven pounds;and you could have it done up.'

`I wish James to the devil!'I said.`Can't he find anything better to do than ride round after cock-and-bull yarns about buggies?'

`Well,'said Mary,`it was James who got the steers and the sheep.'

Well,one word led to another,and we said things we didn't mean --but couldn't forget in a hurry.I remember I said something about Mary always dragging me back just when I was getting my head above water and struggling to make a home for her and the children;and that hurt her,and she spoke of the `homes'she'd had since she was married.

And that cut me deep.

It was about the worst quarrel we had.When she began to cry I got my hat and went out and walked up and down by the creek.

I hated anything that looked like injustice --I was so sensitive about it that it made me unjust sometimes.I tried to think I was right,but I couldn't --it wouldn't have made me feel any better if I could have thought so.I got thinking of Mary's first year on the selection and the life she'd had since we were married.

When I went in she'd cried herself to sleep.I bent over and,`Mary,'

I whispered.

She seemed to wake up.

`Joe --Joe!'she said.

`What is it Mary?'I said.

`I'm pretty well sure that old Spot's calf isn't in the pen.

Make James go at once!'

Old Spot's last calf was two years old now;so Mary was talking in her sleep,and dreaming she was back in her first year.

We both laughed when I told her about it afterwards;but I didn't feel like laughing just then.

Later on in the night she called out in her sleep,--`Joe --Joe!Put that buggy in the shed,or the sun will blister the varnish!'

I wish I could say that that was the last time I ever spoke unkindly to Mary.

Next morning I got up early and fried the bacon and made the tea,and took Mary's breakfast in to her --like I used to do,sometimes,when we were first married.She didn't say anything --just pulled my head down and kissed me.

When I was ready to start Mary said,--

`You'd better take the spring-cart in behind the dray and get the tyres cut and set.They're ready to drop off,and James has been wedging them up till he's tired of it.The last time I was out with the children I had to knock one of them back with a stone:there'll be an accident yet.'

So I lashed the shafts of the cart under the tail of the waggon,and mean and ridiculous enough the cart looked,going along that way.

It suggested a man stooping along handcuffed,with his arms held out and down in front of him.

It was dull weather,and the scrubs looked extra dreary and endless --and I got thinking of old things.Everything was going all right with me,but that didn't keep me from brooding sometimes --trying to hatch out stones,like an old hen we had at home.I think,taking it all round,I used to be happier when I was mostly hard-up --and more generous.

When I had ten pounds I was more likely to listen to a chap who said,`Lend me a pound-note,Joe,'than when I had fifty;THEN I fought shy of careless chaps --and lost mates that I wanted afterwards --and got the name of being mean.When I got a good cheque I'd be as miserable as a miser over the first ten pounds I spent;but when I got down to the last I'd buy things for the house.

And now that I was getting on,I hated to spend a pound on anything.

But then,the farther I got away from poverty the greater the fear I had of it --and,besides,there was always before us all the thought of the terrible drought,with blazing runs as bare and dusty as the road,and dead stock rotting every yard,all along the barren creeks.

I had a long yarn with Mary's sister and her husband that night in Gulgong,and it brightened me up.I had a fancy that that sort of a brother-in-law made a better mate than a nearer one;Tom Tarrant had one,and he said it was sympathy.But while we were yarning I couldn't help thinking of Mary,out there in the hut on the Creek,with no one to talk to but the children,or James,who was sulky at home,or Black Mary or Black Jimmy (our black boy's father and mother),who weren't oversentimental.Or maybe a selector's wife (the nearest was five miles away),who could talk only of two or three things --`lambin''and `shearin''and `cookin'for the men',and what she said to her old man,and what he said to her --and her own ailments --over and over again.

同类推荐
  • 闺墨萃珍

    闺墨萃珍

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 蚍蜉传

    蚍蜉传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 南宗抉秘

    南宗抉秘

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 忆钓舟

    忆钓舟

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 南华真经

    南华真经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 抓住每分钱:洛克菲勒大传

    抓住每分钱:洛克菲勒大传

    约翰·D洛克菲勒,美国石油大王,洛克菲勒财团的创始人,美国历史上最富有的人。自16岁从商到55岁退休,洛克菲勒创造了美国商业神话,从无到有创建起自己的财富大厦,谱写了平民阶层奋斗崛起之歌,是“美国精神”的耀眼典范。晚年,洛克菲勒开始投身慈善事业,捐款总计5.5亿美元,在世界医疗、教育、环保等多个领域做出了卓越的贡献,树立了慈善运作管理的典范,开启了慈善新时代。
  • 第一丫鬟:绝色美女是我的小姐

    第一丫鬟:绝色美女是我的小姐

    【本情节纯属虚构,请勿模仿】一段穿越时空的爱恨情仇,一个关于爱与离开的故事。是非纠葛,花开花落缘起缘灭十几年,直到故事的结局,也没人能说得清楚。遗落异时空的公主回归变成江湖绝色美女骆清清的丫鬟。并不漂亮的她遇到了放荡不羁武林盟主之子汐云夏之后,会有一段怎样感天动地纠葛十几年的爱情故事?【感谢中国作者素材库免费封面支持!】2011魅力奈瑞儿,第二届网络形象代言人选拔大赛http://m.wkkk.net/m.wkkk.net?mid=245
  • 头可断,CP不可乱

    头可断,CP不可乱

    当爱上的人是个宅基腐,该怎么办?当爱上的人是个耐心值负无穷的的宅基腐,又该怎么办?当爱上的人是个武力值破表、耐心值负无穷的宅基腐……这个时候,自然就轮到卖萌腹黑星大魔王上场了!人生苦短,必须挑战!爱上你,是我今生最甜蜜的挑战;被你爱上,是我今生最值得的回报。
  • 洪荒之命运至高

    洪荒之命运至高

    梅青身返混沌成为命运神魔,伴生灵宝为三十六枚命运金钱,可以篡改命格、夺取气运、演算天机.....时间为尊,空间为王,力量至上,命运至高。
  • 刘墉人生三部曲(全集)

    刘墉人生三部曲(全集)

    《人生不过一场爱》这是一本刘墉献给迷茫中独自面对成长与爱的年轻人的温情告白书。本书收集了刘墉先生关于亲情、爱情、友情的经典之作,讲述关于爱的人生与意义,以及为什么要有爱,该如何去学会爱。《成功只能靠自己》这是一本刘墉写给所有希望获得成功却又对成功感到迷茫困惑的人的勉励书,让你不惧前行、不怕跌撞,拼命做个人上人。每个人都能成功,每一种青春都五色斑斓,正因为年轻,所以我们要把握这冲力、把握这浪漫,多看多学,以不辜负上天赐给我们的青春。《此生何必从头来》这是一本刘墉献给所有受尽呵护但不得不独自奋斗与成长的年轻人的人生箴言书,让你心态安然、不骄不躁,丰富地过一生。
  • 山奴

    山奴

    生老病死,人生四大轮回,。其中占这四大轮回中的四分之三是苦的,而人又是哭着来到人世间,世人真如宗教所说的那样生来就是赎罪的?山奴,背负轮回大山的奴隶。
  • 京城反扒行动

    京城反扒行动

    现如今,人们出行的时间越来越多了:上班,上街,走亲访友,外出旅游,进城或下乡等等。然而当你行色匆匆或谈笑风生之间,别忘了熙来攘往的人流中,很可能有贼眉鼠眼正贪婪地盯着你的衣兜或提包,他们身上的第三只手也随时都可能偷窃你的财物。仅2001年,北京公交分局反扒民警共抓获扒窃嫌疑人5524名,破获扒窃案件2016起,作劳教以上处理的扒窃嫌疑人828名。每到年底,尤其是春节来临,许多大中城市的盗窃案往往是高发时期。
  • 文房四谱

    文房四谱

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 世界上最经典的心理学故事全集

    世界上最经典的心理学故事全集

    本书从一个个生动典型的故事入手,以精辟的语言、简单的道理,对人的内心世界和心理活动加以剖析,让你在一个个故事中荡涤心灵,让你的心灵在阳光下自由呼吸。
  • 像猫一样生活,像狗一样工作

    像猫一样生活,像狗一样工作

    人是万物之灵,但是万物之中还有其他许多可爱的生灵。与人类接触最多的,恐怕就是随处可见的猫猫狗狗了。有的人喜欢它们,有的人讨厌它们,不管怎样,它们身上还是有很多值得我们人类学习的地方。能让身处职场的你学到精妙的为人处世的哲学和实用的工作哲学,能够帮助您成为人际关系达人,最终实现职场上的成功。 本书将向您呈现猫咪身上特有的处世哲学和狗狗身上独有的工作哲学。