<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1 class='c003'>PLAIN LIVING <br/> <span class='small'><em>A BUSH IDYLL</em></span></h1>
<div><span class='small'>BY</span></div>
<div class='c004'>ROLF BOLDREWOOD</div>
<h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER I</h2>
<p class='c006'>Mr. Stamford was riding slowly, wearily
homeward in the late autumnal twilight along
the dusty track which led to the Windāhgil
station. The life of a pastoral tenant of the
Crown in Australia is, for the most part, free,
pleasant, and devoid of the cares which assail so
mordantly the heart of modern man in cities.</p>
<p>But striking exceptions to this rule are
furnished periodically. “A dry season,” in the
bush vernacular, supervenes. In the drear
months which follow, “the flower fadeth, the
grass withereth” as in the olden Pharaoh days.
The waters are “forgotten of the footstep”;
the flocks and herds which, in the years of
plenty, afford so liberal an income, so untrammelled
an existence to their proprietor, are apt
to perish if not removed. Prudence and energy
may serve to modify such a calamity. No
human foresight can avert it.</p>
<p><span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>In such years, a revengeful person could
desire his worst enemy to be an Australian
squatter. For he would then behold him hardly
tried, sorely tormented, a man doomed to watch
his most cherished possessions daily fading
before his eyes; nightly to lay his head on his
pillow with the conviction that he was so much
poorer since sunrise. He would mark him day
by day, compelled to await the slow-advancing
march of ruin—hopeless, irrevocable—which he
was alike powerless to hasten or evade.</p>
<p>If he were a husband and a father, his
anxieties would be ingeniously heightened and
complicated. The privations of poverty, the
social indignities which his loved ones might be
fated to undergo, would be forever in his
thoughts, before his eyes, darkening his melancholy
days, disturbing his too scanty rest.</p>
<p>Such was the present position, such were the
prospects, of Harold Stamford of Windāhgil.
As he rode slowly along on a favourite hackney—blood-like,
but palpably low in condition—with
bent head and corrugated brow, it needed
but little penetration to note that the “iron had
entered into his soul.”</p>
<p>Truth to tell, he had that morning received
an important letter from his banker in Sydney.
Not wholly unexpected; still it had destroyed
the remnant of his last hope. Before its arrival
he had been manfully struggling against fate.
He had hoped against hope. The season might
change. How magical an alteration would
<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>forty-eight hours of steady rain produce! He
might be able to tide over till next shearing.
The station was being worked with the strictest
economy. How he grudged, indeed, the payment
of their wages to the men who performed
the unthankful task of cutting down the
<em>Casuarina</em> and <em>Acacia pendula</em>, upon which the
starving flocks were now in a great measure
kept alive!</p>
<p>But for that abnormal expenditure, he and
his boy Hubert, gallant, high-hearted fellow
that he was, might make shift to do the station
work themselves until next shearing. How
they had worked, too, all of them! Had not
the girls turned themselves into cooks and
laundresses for weeks at a time! Had not his
wife (delicate, refined Linda Carisforth—who
would have thought to see a broom in those
hands?) worn herself well-nigh to death, supplementing
the details of household work, when
servants were inefficient, or, indeed, not to be
procured! And was this to be the end of all?
Of the years of patient labour, of ungrudging
self-denial, of so much care and forethought,
the fruit of which he had seen in the distance,
a modest competence, an assured position? A
well-improved freehold estate comprising the
old homestead, and a portion of the fertile lands
of Windāhgil, once the crack station of the
district, which Hubert should inherit after him.</p>
<p>It was hard--very hard! As he came near
the comfortable, roomy cottage, and marked the
<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>orchard trees, the tiny vineyard green with
trailing streamers in despite of the weary,
sickening, cruel drought, his heart swelled nigh
to bursting as he thought how soon this ark of
their fortunes might be reft from them.</p>
<p>Surely there must be some means of escape!
Providence would never be so hard! God’s
mercy was above all. In it he would trust
until the actual moment of doom. And yet,
as he marked the desolate, dusty waste across
which the melancholy flocks feebly paced; as
he saw on every side the carcases of animals
that had succumbed to long remorseless famine;
as he watched the red sun sinking below the
hard, unclouded sky, a sense of despair fell like
lead upon his heart, and he groaned aloud.</p>
<p>“Hallo, governor!” cried out a cheery
voice from a clump of timber which he had
approached without observing, “you and old
Sindbad look pretty well told out! I thought
you were going to ride over me and the team,
in your very brown study. But joking apart,
dear old dad, you look awfully down on it.
Times are bad, and it’s never going to rain
again, is it? But we can’t afford to have you
throwing up the sponge. <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>Fortuna favet
fortibus</em></span>, that’s our heraldic motto. Why, there
are lots of chances, and any amount of fortunes,
going begging yet.”</p>
<p>“Would you point out one or two of them,
Master Hubert?” said his father, relaxing his
features as he looked with an air of pride on
<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>the well-built youngster, who stood with bare
throat and sun-bronzed, sinewy arms beside a
dray upon which was a high-piled load of firewood.</p>
<p>“Well, let us see! if the worst comes to
the worst, you and I must clear out, governor,
and take up this new Kimberley country. I’ve
got ten years’ work in me right off the reel.”
Here the boy raised his head, and stretched his
wide, yet graceful shoulders; “and so have
you, dad, if you wouldn’t fret so over what
can’t be helped. You’d better get home,
though, mother’s been expecting you this hour.
I’ll be in as soon as I’ve put on this last log.
This load ought to keep them in firewood for a
month.”</p>
<p>“You’re a good boy, Hubert. I’ll ride on;
don’t knock any more skin off your hands than
is absolutely necessary, though,” pointing to a
bleeding patch about half an inch square, from
which the cuticle had been recently removed. “A
gentleman should consider his hands, even when
he is obliged to work. Besides, in this weather
there is a little danger of inflammation.”</p>
<p>“Oh, that!” said the youngster with the
fine carelessness of early manhood. “Scratches
don’t count in the bush. I wish my clothes
would heal of themselves when they get torn.
It would save poor mother’s everlasting stitch,
stitch, a little, and her eyes too, poor dear!
Now, you go on, dad, and have your bath, and
make yourself comfortable before I come in.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>A new magazine came by post to-day, and the
last <em>Australasian</em>. Laura’s got such a song too.
We’re going to have no end of an evening, if
you’ll only pull yourself together a bit. Now
you won’t fret about this miserable season, will
you? It’s bad enough, of course, but it’s no
use lying down to it—now, is it?”</p>
<p>“Right, my boy; we must all do our best,
and trust in God’s mercy. He has helped us
hitherto. It is cowardly to despair. I thank
Him that I have children whom I can be proud
of, whether good or ill fortune betide.”</p>
<p>Mr. Stamford put spurs to his horse. The
leg-weary brute threw up his head gamely, and,
true to his blood, made shift to cover the remaining
distance from the homestead at a brisk
pace. As he rode into the stable yard, a figure
clad in a jersey, a pair of trousers, and a bathing
towel, which turned out to be an eager lad of
twelve, ran up to him.</p>
<p>“Give me Sindbad, father; I’m just going
down to the river for a swim, and I’ll give him
one too. It will freshen him up. I’ll scrape
him up a bit of lucerne, just a taste; his chaff
and corn are in the manger all ready.”</p>
<p>“Take him, Dick; but don’t stay in too
long. It’s getting dark, and tea will soon be
ready.”</p>
<p>The boy sprang into the saddle, and, touching
the old horse with his bare heels, started off on
a canter over the river meadow, now comparatively
cool in the growing twilight, towards a
<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>gravelly ford in which the mountain water still
ran strong and clear.</p>
<p>With a sigh of relief, his father walked
slowly forward through the garden gate and
into the broad verandah of the cottage. Dropping
listlessly into a great Cingalese cane chair,
he looked round with an air of exhaustion and
despondency. Below him was a well-grown
orchard, with rows of fruit trees, the size and
spreading foliage of which showed as well great
age as the fertility of the soil. The murmuring
sound of the river over the rocky shallows was
plainly audible. Dark-shadowed eucalypti
marked its winding course. As the wearied
man lay motionless on the couch, the night air
from the meadow played freshly cool against his
temples. Stars arose of wondrous southern
brilliancy. Dark blue and cloudless, the sky
was undimmed. Strange cries came from the
woods. A solemn hush fell over all things. It
was an hour unspeakably calm and solemn—restful
to the spirit after the long, burdensome,
heated day.</p>
<p>“Ah, me!” sighed he; “how many an
evening I have enjoyed from this very spot, at
this self-same hour! Is it possible that we are
to be driven out even from this loved retreat?”</p>
<p>A sweet girlish voice suddenly awoke him
from his reverie, as one of the casement
windows opened, and a slight, youthful figure
stood at his shoulder.</p>
<p>“No wonder you are ashamed, you mean old
<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>daddy! Here have mother and I been exerting
ourselves this hot afternoon to provide you with
a superior entertainment, quite a club dinner in
its way; attired ourselves, too, in the most
attractive manner—look at me, for instance—and
what is our reward? Why, instead of going
to dress sensibly, you sit mooning here, and
everything will be spoiled.”</p>
<p>“My darling! I am ready for my bath, I
promise you; but I am tired, and perhaps a little
discouraged. I have had a long day, and seen
nothing to cheer me either.”</p>
<p>“Poor old father! So have we all; so has
mother, so has Hubert, so have I and Linda.
But it’s no use giving in, is it? Now walk off,
there’s a dear! You’re not so very tired, unless
your constitution has broken down all of a
sudden. It takes a good day to knock you up,
that I know. But we must all put a good face
on it—mustn’t we?—till we’re <em>quite</em> sure that
the battle’s lost. The Prussians may come up
yet, you know!”</p>
<p>He drew the girl’s face over to his own, and
kissed her fondly. Laura Stamford was indeed
a daughter that a father might proudly look
upon, that her mother might trust to be her
best aid and comfort, loving in prosperity,
lightsome of heart as the bird that sings at
dawn, brave in adversity, and strong to suffer
for those she loved.</p>
<p>All innocent she of the world’s hard ways, its
lurid lights, its dread shadows. Proud, pure,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>unselfish in every thought and feeling, all the
strength of her nature went out in fondness for
those darlings of her heart, the inmates of
that cherished home, wherein they had never as
yet known sorrow. The fateful passion which
makes or mars all womanhood was for her as yet
in the future. What prayers had ascended to
Heaven that her choice might be blessed, her
happiness assured!</p>
<p>“This is the time for action, no more contemplation,”
she said, with a mock heroic air;
“the shower bath is filled; your evening clothes
are ready in the dressing-room; mother is
putting the last touch to her cap, Andiamo!”</p>
<p>When the family met at the tea-table—a
comprehensive meal which, though not claiming
the rank of dinner, furnished most of its requisites—Mr.
Stamford owned that life wore a
brighter prospect.</p>
<p>His wife and daughters in tasteful, though
not ostentatious, evening attire would have
graced a more brilliant entertainment. The
boys, cool and fresh after their swim in the
river, were happy and cheerful. Hubert,
correctly attired, and much benefited by his
bath and toilette, had done justice to his manifest
good looks.</p>
<p>The well-cooked, neatly served meal, with
the aid of a few glasses of sound Australian
Reisling, was highly restorative. All these permissible
palliatives tended to recreate tone and
allay nervous depression. “The banker’s letter
<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>notwithstanding, things might not be so very
bad,” the squatter thought. He would go to
town. He might make other arrangements.
It might even rain. If the worst came to the
worst, he might be able to change his account.
If things altered for the better, there was no use
desponding. If, again, all were lost, it were
better to confront fate boldly.</p>
<hr class='c007' />
<p>“Shall I pull through, after all?” said
Mr. Stamford to himself, for the fiftieth time,
as he looked over the morning papers at Batty’s
Hotel, about a week after the occurrences lately
referred to. In a mechanical way, his eyes and
a subsection of his brain provided him with the
information that, in spite of his misfortunes, the
progress of Australian civilisation went on
pretty much as usual. Floods in one colony,
fires in another. The Messageries steamer
<em>Caledonien</em> just in. The <em>Carthage</em> (P. and O.)
just sailed with an aristocratic passenger list.
Burglars cleverly captured. Larrikins difficult
of extinction. The wheat crop fair, maize only
so-so. These important items were registered
in the brooding man’s duplex-acting brain after
a fashion. But in one corner of that mysterious
store-house, printing machine, signal-station,
whatnot, <em>one thought</em> was steadily repeating itself
with bell-like regularity. “What if the bank’s
ultimatum is, no further advance, no further
advance, no further ad—--”</p>
<p>After breakfast, sadly resolved, he wended his
<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>way to the palace of finance, with the potentate
of which he was to undergo so momentous an
interview.</p>
<p>Heart-sick and apprehensive as he was, he
could not avoid noting with quick appreciation
the sights and sounds of civilisation which
pressed themselves on his senses as he walked in
a leisurely manner towards the Bank of New
Guinea. “What wonders and miracles daily
pass before one’s eyes in a city,” he said to
himself, “when one has been as long away from
town as I have! What a gallery of studies to
a man, after a quiet bush life, is comprised in
the everyday life of a large city! What processions
of humanity—what light and colour!
What models of art, strength, industry! What
endless romances in the faces of the very men
and women that pass and repass so ceaselessly!
Strange and how wonderful is all this!
Glorious, too, the ocean breath that fans the
pale faces of the city dwellers! What would I
not give for a month’s leisure and a quiet heart
in which to enjoy it all!”</p>
<p>The solemn chime of a turret clock struck
ten. It aroused Stamford to a sense of the
beginning of the commercial day, and his urgent
necessity to face the enemy, whose outposts
were so dangerously near his fortress.</p>
<p>The ponderously ornate outer door of the
Bank of New Guinea had but just swung open
as he passed in, preceding but by a second a
portly, silk-coated personage, apparently equally
<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>anxious for an early interview. He looked disappointed
as he saw Stamford make his way to
the manager’s room.</p>
<p>For one moment he hesitated, then said: “If
your business is not important, sir, perhaps you
won’t mind my going in first?”</p>
<p>“I’m sorry to say it <em>is</em> important,” he replied,
with his customary frankness; “but I
will promise you not to take up a minute more
of Mr. Merton’s valuable time than I can
help.”</p>
<p>The capitalist bowed gravely as Harold
Stamford passed into the fateful reception-room,
of which the very air seemed to him to be full
of impalpable tragedies.</p>
<p>The manager’s manner was pleasant and
gentlemanlike. The weather, the state of the
country, and the political situation were glanced
at conversationally. There was no appearance
of haste to approach the purely financial topic
which lay so near the thoughts of both. Then
the visitor took the initiative.</p>
<p>“I had your letter last week about my
account, Mr. Merton. What is the bank
going to do in my case? I came down on
purpose to see you.”</p>
<p>The banker’s face became grave. It was the
crossing of swords, <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>en garde</em></span> as it were. And
the financial duel began.</p>
<p>“I trust, Mr. Stamford, that we shall be able
to make satisfactory arrangements. You are an
old constituent, and one in whom the bank has
<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>reposed the fullest confidence; but,” here the
banker pushed up his hair, and his face assumed
an altered expression, “the directors have drawn
my attention to the state of your account, and
I feel called upon to speak decidedly. It must
be reduced.”</p>
<p>“But how am I to reduce it? You hold all
my securities. It is idle to talk thus; pardon
me if I am a little brusque, but I must sell
Windāhgil—sell the old place, and clear out
without a penny if I do not get time—a few
months of time—from the bank! You know
as well as I do that it is impossible to dispose
of stations now at a reasonable price. Why,
you can hardly get the value of the sheep!
Look at Wharton’s Bundah Creek how it was
given away the other day. Fifteen thousand
good sheep, run all fenced, good brick house,
frontage to a navigable river. What did it
bring? Six and threepence a head. Six and
threepence! With everything given in, even
to his furniture, poor devil! Why, the ewe
cost him twelve shillings, five years before.
Sale! It was a murder, a mockery! And is
Windāhgil to go like that, after all my hard
work? Am I and my children to be turned
out penniless because the bank refuses me
another year’s grace? The seasons are just as
sure to change as we are to have a new moon
next month. I have always paid up the interest
and part of the principal regularly, have I not?
I have lived upon so little too! My poor wife
<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>and children for these last long years have been
so patient! Is there no mercy, not even
ordinary consideration to be shown me?”</p>
<p>“My dear Mr. Stamford,” said the manager
kindly, “do not permit yourself to be excited
prematurely. Whatever happens you have my
fullest sympathy. If any one receives consideration
from the bank, you will do so. You
have done everything that an energetic, honourable
man could have done. I wish I could say
the same of all our constituents. But the
seasons have been against you, and you must
understand that, although personally I would
run any fair mercantile risk for your sake, even
to the extent of straining my relations with the
directors, I have not the power; I must obey
orders, and these are precise. If a certain
policy is decided upon by those who guide the
affairs of this company, I must simply carry
out instructions. Yours is a hard case, a <em>very</em>
hard case; but you are not alone, I can tell you
in confidence.”</p>
<p>“Is there nothing I can do?” pleaded the
ruined man, instinctively beholding the last
plank slipping from beneath his feet.</p>
<p>“Don’t give in yet,” said Merton kindly.
“Get one of these newly-started Mortgage and
Agency Companies to take up your account.
They have been organised chiefly, I am informed,
with a view to get a share of the
pastoral loan business, which is now assuming
such gigantic proportions. They are enabled
<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>to make easier terms than we can afford to do;
though, after all, this station pawn business is
not legitimate banking. If you have any friend
who would join in the security it would,
perhaps, smooth the way.”</p>
<p>“I will try,” said Stamford, a ray of hope,
slender but still definite, illumining the darkness
of his soul. “There may be a chance, and I
thank you, Mr. Merton, for the suggestion, and
your wish to aid me. Good morning!” He
took his hat and passed through the waiting-room,
somewhat sternly regarded by the
capitalist, who promptly arose as the inner door
opened. But Harold Stamford heeded him not,
and threading the thronged atrium, re-entered
once more the city pageant, novel and attractive
to him in spite of his misery. To-day he
mechanically took the seaward direction, walking
far and fast until he found himself among
the smaller shops and unmistakable “waterside
characters” of Lower George Street. Here he
remembered that there were stone stairs at
which, in his boyhood’s days, he had so often
watched the boats return or depart on their
tiny voyages. A low stone wall defended the
street on that side, while permitting a view of
the buildings and operations of a wharf.
Beyond lay the harbour alive with sail and
steam. In his face blew freshly the salt odours
of the deep, the murmuring voice of the sea
wave was in his ears, the magic of the ocean
stole once more into his being.</p>
<p><span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>In his youth he had delighted in boating, and
many a day of careless, unclouded joy could he
recall, passed amid the very scenes and sounds
that now lay around him. Long, happy days
spent in fishing when the fair wind carried the
boy sailors far away through the outer bays or
even through the grand portals where the sandstone
pillars have borne the fret of the South
Pacific deep for uncounted centuries. The long
beat back against the wind, the joyous return,
the pleasant evening, the dreamless slumber.
He remembered it all. What a heaven of
bliss, had he but known it; and what an inferno
of debt, ruin, and despair seemed yawning
before him now!</p>
<p>He leaned over the old stone wall and
watched mechanically the shadow of a passing
squall deepen the colour of the blue waters of
the bay. After a while, his spirits rose
insensibly. He even took comfort from the
fact that after the sudden tempest had brooded
ominously over the darkening water, the clouds
suddenly opened—the blue sky spread itself like
an azure mantle over the rejoicing firmament—the
golden sun reappeared, and Nature assumed
the smile that is rarely far from her brow in
the bright lands of the South.</p>
<p>“I may have another chance yet,” Stamford
said to himself. “Why should I despair?
Many a man now overladen with wealth has
passed into a bank on such an errand as mine,
uncertain whether he should return (financially)
<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>alive. Are not there Hobson, Walters, Adamson—ever
so many others—who have gone
through that fiery trial? I must fight the
battle to the end. My Waterloo is not yet
lost. ‘The Prussians may come up,’ as darling
Laura said.”</p>
<p>Although receiving the advice of Mr.
Merton, whom he personally knew and
respected, mainly in good faith, he was
sufficiently experienced in the ways of the world
to mingle distrust with his expectations. It
was not such an unknown thing with bankers to
“shunt” a doubtful or unprofitable constituent
upon a less wary student of finance. Might it
not be so in this case? Or would not the
manager of the agency company indicated
regard him in that light? How hard it was to
decide! However, he would try his fortune.
He could do himself no more harm.</p>
<p>So he turned wearily from the dancing waters
and the breezy bay, and retracing his steps
through the crowded thoroughfare, sought the
imposing freestone mansion in which were
located the offices of the Austral Agency Company.</p>
<p>“How these money-changing establishments
house themselves!” he said. “And we borrowers
pay for it with our heart’s blood,” he
added, bitterly. “Here goes, however!”</p>
<p>He was not doomed on this occasion to any
lingering preparatory torture, for in that light
<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>he had come to regard all ante-chamber detentions.
He accepted it as a good omen that
he was informed on sending in his card, that
Mr. Barrington Hope was disengaged, and
would be found in his private room.</p>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>
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