登陆注册
19979100000101

第101章

`The last time I drank wine as good as this,' says Starlight, `was at the Caffy Troy, something or other, in Paris.I wouldn't mind being there again, with the Variety Theatre to follow.Would you, Clifford?'

`Well, I don't know,' says the other swell.`I find this amazing good fun for a bit.I never was in such grand condition since I left Oxford.

This eight-hours' shift business is just the right thing for training.

I feel fit to go for a man's life.Just feel this, Despard,'

and he holds out his arm to the camp swell.`There's muscle for you!'

`Plenty of muscle,' said Mr.Despard, looking round.He was a swell that didn't work, and wouldn't work, and thought it fine to treat the diggers like dogs.Most of the commissioners and magistrates were gentlemen and acted as such; but there were a few young fools like this one, and they did the Government a deal of harm with the diggers more than they knew.`Plenty of muscle,' says he, `but devilish little society.'

`I don't agree with you,' says the other Honourable.

`It's the most amusing and in a way instructive place for a man who wants to know his fellow-creatures I was ever in.I never pass a day without meeting some fresh variety of the human race, man or woman;and their experiences are well worth knowing, I can tell you.

Not that they're in a hurry to impart them; for that there's more natural, unaffected good manners on a digging than in any society I ever mingled in I shall never doubt.But when they see you don't want to patronise, and are content to be a simple man among men, there's nothing they won't do for you or tell you.'

`Oh, d--n one's fellow-creatures; present company excepted,' says Mr.Despard, filling his glass, `and the man that grew this "tipple".They're useful to me now and then and one has to put up with this crowd; but I never could take much interest in them.'

`All the worse for you, Despard,' says Clifford.`You're wasting your chances -- golden opportunities in every sense of the word.

You'll never see such a spectacle as this, perhaps, again as long as you live.

It's a fancy dress ball with real characters.'

`Dashed bad characters, if we only knew,' says Despard, yawning.

`What do you say, Haughton?' looking at Starlight, who was playing with his glass and not listening much by the look of him.

`I say, let's go into the little parlour and have a game of picquet, unless you'll take some more wine.No? Then we'll move.Bad characters, you were saying? Well, you camp fellows ought to be able to give an opinion.'

They sauntered through the big room, which was just then crowded with a curious company, as Clifford said.I suppose there was every kind of man and miner under the sun.Not many women, but what there was not a little out of the way in looks and manners.

We kept on working away all the time.It helped to stop us from thinking, and every week we had a bigger deposit-receipt in the bank where we used to sell our gold.People may say what they like, but there's nothing like a nest egg; seeing it grow bigger keeps many a fellow straight, and he gets to like adding to it, and feels the pull of being careful with his money, which a poor man that never has anything worth saving doesn't.Poor men are the most extravagant, I've always found.They spend all they have, which middling kind of people just above them don't.They screw and pinch to bring up their children, and what not; and dress shabby and go without a lot which the working man never thinks of stinting himself in.But there's the parson here to do that kind of thing.I'm not the proper sort of cove to preach.

I'd better leave it to him.So we didn't spend our money foolish, like most part of the diggers that had a bit of luck; but we had to do a fair thing.We got through a lot of money every week, I expect.

Talking of foolish things, I saw one man that had his horse shod with gold, regular pure gold shoes.The blacksmith made 'em -- good solid ones, and all regular.He rode into the main street one holiday, and no end of people stopped him and lifted up his horse's feet to see.

They weighed 7 oz.4 dwt.each.Rainbow ought to have been shod that way.

If ever a horse deserved it he did.But Starlight didn't go in for that kind of thing.Now and then some of the old colonial hands, when they were regularly `on the burst', would empty a dozen of champagne into a bucket or light their pipes with a ten-pound note.But these were not everyday larks, and were laughed at by the diggers themselves as much as anybody.

But of course some allowance had to be made for men not making much above wages when they came suddenly on a biggish stone, and sticking the pick into it found it to be a gigantic nugget worth a small fortune.Most men would go a bit mad over a stroke of luck like that, and they did happen now and then.There was the Boennair nugget, dug at Louisa Creek by an Irishman, that weighed 364 oz.11 dwt.

It was sold in Sydney for 1156 Pounds.There was the King of Meroo nugget, weighing 157 oz.; and another one that only scaled 71 oz.seemed hardly worth picking up after the others, only 250 Pounds worth or so.

But there was a bigger one yet on the grass if we'd only known, and many a digger, and shepherd too, had sat down on it and lit his pipe, thinking it no better than other lumps of blind white quartz that lay piled up all along the crown of the ride.

Mostly after we'd done our day's work and turned out clean and comfortable after supper, smoking our pipes, we walked up the street for an hour or two.

Jim and I used to laugh a bit in a queer way over the change it was from our old bush life at Rocky Flat when we were boys, before we had any thoughts beyond doing our regular day's work and milking the cows and chopping wood enough to last mother all day.

The little creek, that sounded so clear in the still night when we woke up, rippling and gurgling over the stones, the silent, dark forest all round on every side; and on moonlight nights the moon shining over Nulla Mountain, dark and overhanging all the valley, as if it had been sailing in the clear sky over it ever since the beginning of the world.

同类推荐
  • The Counterpane Fairy

    The Counterpane Fairy

    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。
  • THE FOOLISH VIRGIN

    THE FOOLISH VIRGIN

    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。
  • Awakening & To Let

    Awakening & To Let

    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。
  • 锦衣志

    锦衣志

    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。
  • 贤劫经

    贤劫经

    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
  • 恶魔天使我爱你

    恶魔天使我爱你

    她,冷血无情,在她的世界里,只有亲情与友情,没有人知道她的真实身份。她是暗夜的创始人,世界第一的情报组织又为何而存在。一次错误的决定让她遇到了他,他宠她入骨,却伤她最深,在生命的尽头,她们又能否冰释前嫌,他又能否执她之手,此生不弃。
  • 兽噬风云

    兽噬风云

    一个山村的男孩,本想安安静静的在这个山村度过一生。可是一场突兀的变故使他家破人亡!一个人,一把斧,一个卑微的战士,怎么才能在以兽魂师的天下为家人报仇?他该如何强势的崛起?风云书友会70799937
  • 恶魔学院:我的专属暴君

    恶魔学院:我的专属暴君

    【求点击,求收藏,求评论(*^▽^*)】号外号外:英兰校霸倒追转校少女啦!!某日,英兰学院鼎鼎大名的暴君忽降而至——云初然:“听说你这个女人暗恋本少爷?”我:“云初然,你今天是不是又忘记吃药了??”云初然咆哮:“苏小嗳!你居然敢骂本少爷有病!”“你这个样子居然没病吗?”“你这个女人……究竟是怎么知道本少爷有病的!!”“what??!!”Σ(⊙▽⊙"a“本少爷告诉你,苏小嗳——本少爷就是有病才会看上你了!不许拒绝本少爷,听到没有!!”PS:【火爆暴君×吐槽少女,坑品保证,欢迎入坑!】
  • 龙焰魔幻传说

    龙焰魔幻传说

    在交错与混乱的时空下,轩辕拓无意间碰触了交错之门,从此让他成为一个半数生活在现实、半数生活在魔幻世界中的奇异生活,在两地时空与混乱交错中,他生命线走进了交叉领域,开启了一个完全不同生活,从此纵笑人生路。
  • 天降女将之总裁大人请接招

    天降女将之总裁大人请接招

    作为一国女将,她万万没想到死后却到了两千多年以后。电脑电器汽车高楼……五光十色光彩陆离,实在是颠覆了她所有的认知。不过最难以捉摸的好像还是她遇到的第一个人——那个叫做高纪凡的男人。他,实力强悍的总裁大人,却意外遇到了一个武力非同常人的女子还说是什么将军!拍电视剧吗,还是神经病出逃了!但两人之间的牵绊却愈渐加深,他那家传的玉佩,竟有一半在她身上!究竟这一分为二的玉佩里隐藏着什么样的秘密?玉佩将她送到了这个时空,送到了他的身边,到底是无意的,还是命中的注定?……一句话简介:这就是一个古代女将军穿越到现代,遇上帅气总裁而不得不说的故事!
  • 开花落花

    开花落花

    英国公主--Aim,在中国留学,留学期间,遇见了欧阳魇,他们各自心里一见钟情………
  • 八年后的我们——三叶草的幸福

    八年后的我们——三叶草的幸福

    一个由几位明星所领导的故事,有着那淡淡的爱情,用多字数少章节的方法编写(大约700一章),令读者读起来更加方便,优惠。
  • 巴黎:维也纳

    巴黎:维也纳

    本书作者踏上欧洲火车之旅,循着两部经典爱情电影《爱在黎明破晓时》、《爱在日落余辉时》的场景跟景点,进行一段开始于火车,而主要场景发生在巴黎及维也纳的旅行。文章的呈现方式主要是以抒情旅游文学的方式撰写,适时的带出景点的介绍。希望带着属于《爱在黎明破晓时》的浪漫,去追寻属于自己生命的流动与爱。
  • 骗子当官

    骗子当官

    莎士比亚说:成功的骗子,不必再以说谎为生,因为被骗的人已经成为他的拥护者。话说能够达到这个境界的骗子,其实已经不能称之为骗子。他一定会是是哪个领域的王者,书写着属于自己的传说。书友群:42406464胤宠需要大家的鼓励。。。
  • 文武皇后

    文武皇后

    明末清初一代奇女子---红娘子穿越异界,原本武艺高强、才学出众的她来到这个文人墨客如过江鲫鱼的朝代。她将何去何从?