<h1 id='ch5'>THE GARDEN GULLY<br/> MINE.</h1>
<p class='pindent'>“You ken Bendigo,” said my companion, looking out of
the corner of his eye at the bottle sitting on the table before
us.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Right well,” I answered. We had dropped in at the
Criterion, Swanson street, Melbourne, for an evening.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Weel,” continued Sandy McLeod, “it’s a long time
agone but I’ll never forget it.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Forget what?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“The Garden Gully, did you ever hear the story?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“No, I’m a new chum, as you know.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>I poured out a glass of Falon’s sparkling, at the sight
Sandy smacked his lips. Sandy was a colonial solicitor and
apparently an unprofitable mine to work for a story, so I
bided my time. The glass of wine began to mellow his
heart, for he abruptly exclaimed, “Men on gold fields are
crazed with greed, but a good-looking woman sends them
stark mad. Even I, Sandy McLeod, was once mad.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“It was only a passing craze,” I suggested.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Not a bit of it, mad for months, mad when awake and
doubly mad when asleep.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What cured you?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“A nip of the same dog,” and then he burst into a laugh.
“One more glass and then I will tell you the story.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Settling back in his chair, he began in a voice, mellower
than I dreamed that he possessed:</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Teddy O’Flynn, yes O’Flynn with a big O, as he used
to say, had a little cabin on the Bendigo field, and behind
the cabin was a little garden in the gully. It was the only
garden on Bendigo at that time and we all knew it to a man.
No deep shafts then, only a spade, a pick, and a tin dish, and
thirty thousand miners on the field. That garden grew roses
and English roses too, at that. I can see them now and it’s
near on fifty years ago. They whispered to every man Jack
of us of home, dear home. When we went up there and
leaned on the palings of a Sunday, back we were in our
native villages. Teddy O’Flynn was not the man to cultivate
roses, save the ones which blossomed on his nose and they
were always in full bloom. Teddy had a foster daughter,
the queen rose of Bendigo, and as the roses bloomed so
bloomed Rosa, for that was her name. While the roses were
in bloom on Saturday afternoon Rosa made a round of the
camp. She never sold the roses but she made each miner a
present of one, and the miners not to be outdone, made her a
present of a pinch of gold. She had to pinch it herself between
her rosy little finger and thumb. Rosa took up the
camp in a regular way so that in time we all got a rose and
were satisfied.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Teddy O’Flynn had never studied books and yet he was
a bit of a philosopher, and an Irish philosopher at that.
Teddy never worked and yet he ate and drank of the best on
Bendigo. Perhaps the pinches which Rosa made had something
to do with Teddy’s good fortune. The miners were
content, Teddy was happy, and Rosa—well the whole camp
was in love with her.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“And you fell in love with her too,” I ventured to
remark.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I never denied it.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“At that time there were but two lawyers on the field,
Phalin Shea and Sandy McLeod, that’s myself. Part of the
time we dug on the lead, for we both held claims, but when
a dispute arose Phalin was retained by one client, and
McLeod by the other, then we fought it out before the Gold
Commissioner and honors were generally equally divided.
The Shamrock and the Scotch Thistle, they used to call us.
The best of friends we were, though we often nearly came to
blows. Rosa distinguished us from the other miners by calling
us gentlemen. Phalin and I were regarded as the favored
suitors but that did not prevent the other men from striving
to secure such a valuable claim. One evening I was at
O’Flynn’s cabin and the next night Phalin was at the same
place and basking in the same smiles. To all of our vows
Rosa returned the same answer.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What would become of Teddy O’Flynn if I married?”
We each promised to allow Teddy a pension for life. Rosa
well knew that Phalin and I could not scrape up a hundred
pounds, but like all miners, we were willing to bank on the
future for any number of thousands. Rosa was most impartial
and fed each on the same manna. Our infatuation
increased month by month and when the rainy season came
on and no roses remained Teddy proved equal to the occasion
and regularly borrowed half a sovereign from each when we
called at the cabin. Phalin may have lent the money out of
sheer Irish good-will but I know that Sandy McLeod, in his
heart regarded him, Teddy, as a golden fleece. How the
contest would have ended I cannot say, but unfortunately
Teddy suddenly conceived the idea of becoming rich. That
decided our fate. His plan was to sink a shaft in the garden
in the gully and open up a gold mine. Naturally we expected
that Rosa would protest, but on the contrary she
declared that the plan originated with her own sweet self.
She had dreamed that there was an immense deposit of gold
hidden away beneath the English roses. Teddy had only to
dig and he would find the treasure, but no person was to
assist him and the work must be done at night. Only
Phalin and myself were taken into the secret. Teddy went
to work and day after day poured into our ears the history of
his progress. As the garden lay far removed from the Bendigo
lead and no indications existed that gold would be
found, in our hearts we secretly felt that it was a clever device,
upon the part of Rosa, to keep her foster parent out of
the public and at the same time set him to work. The mining
had been going on for about three weeks when one afternoon
Phalin and I each received a note from Rosa asking us
to call that evening at the cabin. We were punctual to the
minute, but each was somewhat crestfallen on discovering the
presence of his rival. Teddy O’Flynn was laboring under an
excitement which he in vain attempted to conceal. After a
substantial supper and a glass of hot toddy, Rosa drew the
curtain of the four pane window and then told us the
story.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Teddy had struck upon one of the richest leads ever found
on Bendigo. The earth was literally packed with gold.
Then Teddy took up the running.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I tell yez I’ve struck it.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>We both grasped him by the hand, for Teddy had suddenly
become an important factor, a factor we instantly saw
must be counted upon and conciliated. Rosa was now sole
heiress, it might be to millions. Not that we loved her any
more ardently, that was impossible, but fortune had suddenly
turned the wheel and we keenly felt the change. All we
could say to Teddy was, “Rich, rich.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Just loaded down with the yellow beauty,” he exclaimed.
“Come down and see the jade. She’s led me many a fine
caper from the old sod, up here among the kangaroos and
the wallaby and the bears wid no tails and the dirty hathen
nagers, but I’ve got her down in the gully, and it will be
sailing away to the blessed shores of St. Patrick that Teddy
O’Flynn will be, with a mighty big O.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Come with me this blessed minute.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>We hurried down to the gully. Once on the spot we saw
that Teddy was original in his mining. He had cut a series
of short trenches which grew deeper and finally terminated in
an irregular hole, into which we all crowded, though unable
to stand upright, so low was the pit. Teddy lit a candle and
pointing to the pick said to Phalin, “dig, dig,” then he
gave me the shovel. The ground was very hard, of a dull
yellow color and interspersed with small grey, broken quartz
crystals. We filled a wash-tub which Teddy deftly lifted to
his head and balanced with his hands, then marched out and
up to the cabin. In the kitchen we began to pan out the
contents of the tub with the aid of some water and a tin
wash-dish. Teddy stood aloof leaving Phalin and McLeod
to do the work. The earth was literally full of coarse gold.
In all of our experience at Ballarat and Bendigo we had never
seen its equal.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I want yez gintlemen to float a Company,” said
O’Flynn.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What shall we call it?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“The Saint Patrick.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“No,” said Rosa, “I dreamed it out and I must name
it.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What shall it be?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Call it the Garden Gully.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Then and there it was christened and baptised in the wash-tub.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“How much shall we float it for?” inquired Phalin.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Fifty thousand pounds at a pound a share. Give all the
boys a chance.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>The following morning the notice was on the door of the
Commissioner’s office and within two hours every rod of land
for half a mile on each side of the cabin had been staked out.
The camp went mad, hundreds of good claims were abandoned
and as promptly jumped by the unlucky. Before the sun
went down Phalin and I had more cases than had ever fallen
to us before in our lives. When questioned about the Garden
Gully we related the story of the wash-tub. That day every
share was sold and half a crown paid down. For two days it
was almost impossible to get near the cabin. The earth
swarmed with miners but not a spec of gold was found.</p>
<p class='pindent'>On the morning of the third day Phalin and I found our
huts besieged by an angry mob. During the excitement
Teddy had been transformed into Teddy O’Flynn, Esq., a
personage who held high carnival at the Golden Fleece and
who, during that time, had ordered and helped drink one
hundred bottles of champagne at twenty dollars a bottle.
The situation was serious. Phalin and I were marched up
to the Golden Fleece where O’Flynn was secured and the trio,
followed by thousands, proceeded to the Garden Gully where
Rosa was mounting guard over the entrance to the mine.
She was armed with an antiquated musket and resolutely
kept the men at bay. A fierce light burned in her blue eyes
which enhanced her beauty a thousand fold. At our suggestion
two miners were let into the pit to secure some wash-dirt.
Our lives hung upon the issue. If the miners did not
find gold our fate was sealed. Phalin, McLeod and Teddy
would dangle from the limb of the nearest gum tree within
ten minutes. The dirt was brought out and panned off in
the presence of the mob. I shall never forget the silence
which fell upon the men till my dying day. When the
miner turned and flashed the gold in the pan in our faces a
cheer for O’Flynn broke forth, and such cheers as Bendigo
had never heard before. The very hills rang again and again.
Rosa was the heroine of the hour. Dirty and greasy miners
clasped her in their arms and kissed her with frantic joy.
O’Flynn and his solicitors were escorted in a triumphal
march back to the Golden Fleece where Teddy made a speech
and ‘shouted’ for all who cared to drink. In the confusion
Phalin and I made our escape. The next day shares in the
Garden Gully advanced to two pounds each. A week later
the mine was turned over to the share holders and work
commenced. Teddy O’Flynn was entertained that night at
a banquet at which it was declared that he was the gold king
of the land of the Southern Cross. At midnight Teddy sank
a limp mass under the table and was carried to bed with the
honors of a dead Pharoah.</p>
<p class='pindent'>For a few hours the Garden Gully realized the wildest
dreams and then just as suddenly stopped. Not even the
colour could be found. Shares dropped to a shilling and no
takers. The gold Commissioner ordered an investigation.
During the inquiry it was clearly shown that the mine had
been salted. The plan had been to first dig the hole and
then charge a gun with powder and coarse gold and fire it
into the earth. Rosa, who was innocent of the fraud, testified
that at night she had heard many shots and that O’Flynn
had explained that he had been shooting at kangaroos,
which came to gnaw the rose bushes. When confronted by
the evidence, O’Flynn refused to confess maintaining a
dogged silence, save that if the mine was salted Rosa and his
solicitors were innocent. The money received was returned
to the share holders, except a few hundred pounds which
O’Flynn had squandered. O’Flynn was committed to stand
his trial.</p>
<p class='pindent'>The following night Phalin and I repaired to the little
cabin where, much to our surprise, we found Rosa, apparently
in the best of spirits. When we asked her for an explanation
she said:</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I tell you there is plenty of gold in the Garden Gully
and it was not put there by Teddy O’Flynn. I saw it again
last night in my dreams. It is down deeper and runs away
out there,” pointing toward the range. “Will you dig for it
or shall I do the work myself.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>We suggested hiring two miners.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“No,” she said, with a toss of her pretty head, “it must
be found without any outside help and Teddy set free.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Instantly we both agreed with her. We would have
agreed to any proposition falling from the same lips. Without
a moment’s delay she produced two miner’s caps, into the
peaks of which she thrust two candles, then marched us out
to the pit. The candles were lighted. Rosa took a seat on
the tub, we seized the pick and shovel and began to dig.
Rosa chatted and laughed, the hours flew by, at midnight
she brought us a lunch and two bottles of ale, but it was not
until near dawn that our taskmaster called a halt. Rosa explained
that during the day she would wash some of the
dirt and report the result the next night. Worn out and
completely exhausted Phalin and I staggered to our huts.
Not a word was exchanged as we stumbled down the path.
Our hands were covered with blisters, our clothes bedaubed
with yellow clay, our faces streaked and seared with soot and
grease from the dripping candles. Two such melancholy
objects could not be found in all Bendigo. Each was determined
not to yield. It was a contest of Scotch grit and Irish
pluck. All day long we slept or nursed our lacerated hands,
each recuperating for the second struggle. We were animated
by no hope that gold would be found, a more powerful influence
was at work and bade us continue the struggle. At
night we were again at the cabin. Rosa reported “No gold.”
Then we renewed our labors, with the same hardships and
the same results. For eight nights in succession the struggle
went on. Our legal business went by the board, rumor said
we were drinking ourselves to death and appearances confirmed
the rumor. On the ninth night imagine our surprise
when Rosa informed us that we had struck the lead and in
proof exhibited fully an ounce of the yellow metal. No
miner ever gazed upon a great nugget which he had found,
with joy equal to ours. It was a drawn battle. When will
it end? was the query in our minds. Rosa gave no sign but
served an excellent supper, prepared to celebrate our success.
It was then arranged that Rosa was to pay the gold Commissioner
a visit the following morning and inform him that the
lead had again been found in the Garden Gully and that
consequently Teddy O’Flynn had committed no fraud and
should be released. Our offices was opened that day, but no
attention was paid to our reformation so great was the excitement.
An investigation of the mine proved the truth of
Rosa’s statement. Once more the tide turned in favor of
Teddy O’Flynn and for the second time he became the gold
king of Bendigo. Teddy had sold the Garden Gully for a
rich mine and it was rich. The shareholders demanded the
return of their stock, paid in their money and gave Teddy a
second banquet at the Golden Fleece, with the same results,
save that Teddy went under the table at ten thirty instead
of at twelve, a weakness attributed to his confinement in
the caboose and consequently condoned by his friends.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Three days later Phalin and Sandy McLeod each received
a note from Rosa requesting them to be present at the cabin
at eight p.m., and also stating, in post script, that it was an
important occasion, therefore we were to be dressed in our
best. Phalin inferred from the word ‘important’ that he was
the lucky man, while I drew the same inference from the
same word. Walking on the air, for our happiness made us
oblivious of Bendigo, its dust and its wretchedness, we approached
the cabin at the same time, punctual to a minute.
We passed compliments of the day and then surveyed each
other. Phalin was dressed in a pair of black trousers, a white
shirt and a collar, a yellow vest, but no coat. Sandy boasted
an antideluvian dress coat, blue trousers and a red shirt.
We were met at the door by Rosa, clad in a white muslin
gown, with a great bunch of roses at her belt. I had never
seen her look lovelier. So great was my happiness at securing
the prize that the words died on my lips. Phalin was
equally overcome and for precisely the same reasons. Teddy
received us with genuine Irish hospitality and a glass of
whiskey. Entering the cabin we were face to face with a
young English curate who had been sent up from Melbourne
as a missionary. It was evident that the hour had come, we
were confronted by our destiny. The curate remarked in a
languid drawl, “This is a happy occasion.” Rosa smiled
her sweetest. Then she went out to the kitchen and came
back blushing and leaning on the arm of Dennis McCarthy,
a young Irish miner.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“My dear friends,” she said, “I have bid you to my wedding.
Dennis is the lucky man, we pledged our troth in
dear old Kerry.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>The ceremony proceeded and each kissed the bride. It
was the first and last time. How we spent the next hour I
shall never know and Phalin can furnish you with no fuller
particulars. I have a confused recollection of Rosa, the curate,
Teddy, a bunch of roses and McCarthy, that is all. At
last we got away, heaven only knows what we said. Once
out on the path we stalked along in moody silence. When
we came to the Golden Fleece we both turned in, entered the
private parlor and ordered whiskey, straight. Two hours
later we were sent home by the landlord in barrows. When
I awoke the next morning I found myself in Phalin’s hut and
in Phalin’s bed. Phalin found himself in my hut and in my
bed. How the thing happened we have never been able to
explain. The following day when we met we concluded to
enter into partnership and the sign reads to this day, Shea &
McLeod, solicitors.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“No, we have never married.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What about the Garden Gully?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“The mine is running yet and has paid the shareholders
many handsome dividends.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Rosa?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>The day following the wedding, the bride, McCarthy and
Teddy took a special stage for Melbourne en route for the
old sod. A week later my partner and I each received a letter,
precisely the same, written in Rosa’s best hand, containing
a certified cheque on the Bank of Australia, drawn in
our favor, for five hundred pounds.</p>
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