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1880. A. Sutherland, `Tales of Goldfields,' p. 76:
"The battery was to have eight stampers."
1890. `Goldfields of Victoria,' p. 11:
"This, with the old battery, brings the number of stampers up to sixty."
Ibid. p. 15:
"A battery of twenty-six stamp heads."
The Australian species is the s.h.i.+ning Starling, Calornis metallica. The common English starling is also acclimatised.
1896. Modern talk in the train:
"The horse started to stop, and the backers commenced to hoot."
1833. C. Sturt, `Southern Australia,' vol. i. (Introd.):
"They ... will only be occupied as distant stock-stations."
1861. T. McCombie, `Australian Sketches,' p. 120:
"Their [squatters'] huts or houses, gardens, paddocks, etc., form what is termed a station, while the range of country over which their flocks and herds roam is termed a run."
1868. J. Bonwick, `John Batman, Founder of Victoria,' p. 35:
"The lecturer a.s.sured his audience that he came here to prevent this country being a squatting station."
1870. A. L. Gordon, `Bush Ballads,' p. 17:
"The st.u.r.dy station-children pull the bush flowers on my grave."
1890. E. D. Cleland, `The White Kangaroo,' p. 4:
"Station--the term applied in the colonies to the homesteads of the sheep-farmers or squatters."
1890. Rolf Boldrewood,'Miner's Right,' c. xviii. p. 171:
"Men who in their youth had been peaceful stockmen and station-labourers."
1896. A. B. Paterson, `Man from Snowy River,' p. 125:
"I'm travelen' down the Castlereagh and I'm a station-hand, I'm handy with the ropin' pole, I'm handy with the brand, And I can ride a rowdy colt, or swing the axe all day, But there's no demand for a stationhand along the Castlereagh."
1853. `The Emigrant's Guide to Australia.' (Article on Bush-Cookery, from an unpublished MS. by Mrs. Chisholm], pp. 111-12:
"The great art of bush-cookery consists in giving a variety out of salt beef and flour ... let the Sunday share be soaked on the Sat.u.r.day, and beat it well ... take the ... flour and work it into a paste; then put the beef into it, boil it, and you will have a very nice pudding, known in the bush as `Station jack.'"
See quotation.
1820. Lieut. C. Jeffreys, R.N., `Geographical and Descriptive Delineations of the Island of Van Dieman's Land,'
p. 69:
"Their meal consisted of the hindquarters of a kangaroo cut into mincemeat, stewed in its own gravy, with a few rashers of salt pork; this dish is commonly called a steamer."
1827. P. Cunningham, `Two Years in New South Wales,' vol. i.
p. 309:
"Our largest animals are the Kangaroos ... making most delicious stews and steaks, the favourite dish being what is called a steamer, composed of steaks and chopped tail, (with a few slices of salt pork) stewed with a very small quant.i.ty of water for a couple of hours in a close vessel."
(2) In the case of a bank or a station, simply to rob.
1846. J. L. Stokes, `Discoveries in Australia,' vol. ii.
c. xiii. p. 502:
"It was only the previous night that he had been `stuck up'
with a pistol at his head."
1855. W. Howitt, `Two Years in Victoria,' vol. ii. p. 187:
"Unless the mail came well armed, a very few men could `stick it up,' without any trouble or danger."
1857. `Melbourne Punch,' Feb. 19, p. 26, col. 1: