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From Squire to Squatter Part 27

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If seeing and enjoying such scenes as these with a contented mind, a good appet.i.te, and the certainty of an excellent dinner on their return, did not const.i.tute genuine happiness, then I do not know from personal experience what that feeling is.

But the time flew by. Preparations had to be made to leave this fascinating city, and one day Archie proposed that Bob and he should visit Winslow in his suburban villa.

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN.

MR WINSLOW IN A DIFFERENT LIGHT.

"You'll find him a rough stick," said Archie.



"What, rougher than me or Harry?" said Bob.

"Well, as you've put the question I'll answer you pat. I don't consider either you or Harry particularly rough. If you're rough you're right, Bob, and it is really wonderful what a difference mixing with the world has done for both of you; and if you knew a little more of the rudiments of English grammar, you would pa.s.s at a pinch."

"Thank ye," said Bob.

"You've got a bit of the bur-r-r of Northumbria in your brogue, but I do believe people like it, and Harry isn't half the c.o.c.kney he used to be.

But, Bob, this man--I wish I could say gentleman--Winslow never was, and never could be, anything but a sh.e.l.l-back. He puts me in mind of the warty old lobsters one sees crawling in and out among the rocks away down at the point yonder.

"But, oh!" added Archie, "what a little angel the daughter is! Of course she is only a baby. And what a lovely name--Etheldene! Isn't it sweet, Bob?"

"I don't know about the sweetness; there is a good mouthful of it, anyhow."

"Off you go, Bob, and dress. Have you darned those holes in your gloves?"

"No; bought a new pair."

"Just like your extravagance. Be off!"

Bob Cooper took extra pains with his dressing to-day, and when he appeared at last before his little wife Sarah, she turned him round and round and round three times, partly for luck, and partly to look at him with genuine pride up and down.

"My eye," she said at last, "you does look stunning! Not a pin in sight, nor a string sticking out anywheres. You're going to see a young lady, I suppose; but Sarah ain't jealous of her little man. She likes to see him admired."

"Yes," said Bob, laughing; "you've hit the nail straight on the head; I am going to see a young lady. She is fourteen year old, I think. But bless your little bobbing bit o' a heart, la.s.s, it isn't for her I'm dressed. No; I'm going with t' young Squire. He may be all the same as us out here, and lets me call him Archie. But what are they out here, after all? Why, only a set o' whitewashed heathens. No, I must dress for the company I'm in."

"And the very young lady--?"

"Is a Miss Winslow. I think t' young Squire is kind o' gone on her, though she _is_ only a baby. Well, good-bye, la.s.s."

"Good-bye, little man."

Etheldene ran with smiles and outstretched arms to meet Archie, but drew back when she noticed the immense bearded stranger.

"It's only Bob," said Archie. "Is your father in?"

"Yes, and we're all going to have tea out here under the trees."

The "all" was not a very large number; only Etheldene's governess and father, herself, and a girl playmate.

Poor Etheldene's mother had died in the Bush when she was little more than a baby. The rough life had hardly suited her. And this child had been such a little bushranger from her earliest days that her present appearance, her extreme beauty and gentleness, made another of those wonderful puzzles for which Australia is notorious.

Probably Etheldene knew more about the blacks, with their strange customs and manners, their curious rites and superst.i.tions, and more about the home life of wallabies, kangaroos, dingoes, birds, insects, and every thing that grew wild, than many a professed naturalist; but she had her own names, or names given by blacks, to the trees and to the wild flowers.

While Etheldene, somewhat timidly it must be confessed, was leading big Bob round the gardens and lawns by the hand as if he were a kind of exaggerated schoolboy, and showing him all her pets--animate and inanimate--her ferns and flowers and birds, Winslow himself came upon the scene with the _Morning Herald_ in his hand. He was dressed--if dressing it could be called--in the same careless manner Archie had last seen him. It must be confessed, however, that this semi-negligent style seemed to suit him. Archie wondered if ever he had worn a necktie in his life, and how he would look in a dress suit. He lounged up with careless ease, and stuck out his great spade of a hand.

Archie remembered he was Etheldene's father, and shook it.

"Well, youngster, how are you? Bobbish, eh? Ah, I see Ethie has got in tow with a new chum. Your friend? Is he now? Well, that's the sort of man I like. He's bound to do well in this country. You ain't a bad sort yourself, lad; but nothing to that, no more than a young turkey is to an emu. Well, sit down."

Mr Winslow flung himself on the gra.s.s. It might be rather damp, but he dared not trust his weight and bulk on a lawn-chair.

"So your friend's going to the Bush, and going to take you with him, eh?"

Archie's proud soul rebelled against this way of talking, but he said nothing. It was evident that Mr Winslow looked upon him as a boy.

"Well, I hope you'll do right both of you. What prospects have you?"

Archie told him how high his hopes were, and how exalted his notions.

"Them's your sentiments, eh? Then my advice is this: Pitch 'em all overboard--the whole jing-bang of them. Your high-flown notions sink you English greenhorns. Now, when I all but offered you a position under me--"

"Under your gardener," said Archie, smiling. "Well, it's all the same.

I didn't mean to insult your father's son. I wanted to know if you had the grit and the go in you."

"I think I've both, sir. Father--Squire Broadbent--"

"Squire Fiddlestick!"

"Sir!"

"Go on, lad, never mind me. Your father--"

"My father brought me up to work."

"Tossing hay, I suppose, raking flower-beds and such. Well, you'll find all this different in Australian Bush-life; it is sink or swim there."

"Well, I'm going to swim."

"Bravo, boy!"

"And now, sir, do you mean to tell me that brains go for nothing in this land of contrariety?"

"No," cried Winslow, "no, lad. Goodness forbid I should give you that impression. If I had only the gift of the gab, and were a good writer, I'd send stuff to this paper," (here he struck the sheet that lay on the gra.s.s) "that would show men how I felt, and I'd be a member of the legislature in a year's time. But this is what I say, lad, _Brains without legs and arms, and a healthy stomach, are no good here_, or very little. We want the two combined; but if either are to be left out, why leave out the brains. There is many an English youth of gentle birth and good education that would make wealth and honour too in this new land of ours, if he could pocket his pride, don a workman's jacket, and put his shoulder to the wheel. That's it, d'ye see?"

"I think I do."

"That's right. Now tell me about your uncle. Dear old man! We never had a cross word all the time I sailed with him."

Archie did tell him all, everything, and even gave him his last letter to read.

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From Squire to Squatter Part 27 summary

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