While the Billy Boils by Henry Lawson (best value ebook reader .txt) š
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While the Billy Boils collates Henry Lawsonās most well known short stories of the 1890s, originally published in a variety of Australian and New Zealand newspapersāmost prominently the Sydney Bulletin. Lawson presents a satirical and sometimes emotional study of frontier life in late colonial Australia, and the characters living in it.
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- Author: Henry Lawson
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Mr. James Mitchell,
ā
J. W. Dowell, Esq.,
Munnigrub Station.
and so on. āMitchellā seems strangeā āBill couldnāt think of it for the momentā āand so does āJames.ā
And, a week or so later, over on Coolgardie, or away up in northern Queensland, or bush-felling down in Maoriland, Jim takes a stroll up to the post office after tea on mail night. He doesnāt expect any letters, but there might be a paper from Bill. Bill generally sends him a newspaper. They seldom write to each other, these old mates.
There were points, of course, upon which Bill and Jim couldnāt agreeā āsubjects upon which they argued long and loud and often in the old days; and it sometimes happens that Bill across an article or a paragraph which agrees with and, so to speak, barracks for a pet theory of his as against one held by Jim; and Bill marks it with a chuckle and four crosses at the cornersā āand an extra one at each side perhapsā āand sends it on to Jim; he reckons itāll rather corner old Jim. The crosses are not over ornamental nor artistic, but very distinct; Jim sees them from the reverse side of the sheet first, maybe, and turns it over with interest to see what it is. He grins a good-humoured grin as he readsā āpoor old Bill is just as thickheaded and obstinate as everā ājust as far gone on his old fad. Itās rather rough on Jim, because heās too far off to argue; but, if heās very earnest on the subject, heāll sit down and write, using all his old arguments to prove that the man who wrote that rot was a fool. This is one of the few things that will make them write to each other. Or else Jim will wait till he comes across a paragraph in another paper which barracks for his side of the argument, and, in his opinion; rather knocks the stuffing out of Billās man; then he marks it with more and bigger crosses and a grin, and sends it along to Bill. They are both democratsā āthese old mates generally areā āand at times one comes across a stirring article or poem, and marks it with approval and sends it along. Or it may be a good joke, or the notice of the death of an old mate. What a wave of feeling and memories a little par can take through the land!
Jim is a sinner and a scoffer, and Bill is an earnest, thorough, respectable old freethinker, and consequently they often get a War Cry or a tract sent inside their exchangesā āsomebody puts it in for a joke.
Long years agoā ālong years ago Bill and Jim were sweet on a rose of the bushā āor a lily of the goldfieldsā ācall her Lily King. Both courted her at the same time, and quarrelled over herā āfought over her, perhapsā āand were parted by her for years. But thatās all bygones. Perhaps she loved Bill, perhaps she loved Jimā āperhaps both; or, maybe, she wasnāt sure which. Perhaps she loved neither, and was only stringing them on. Anyway, she didnāt marry either the one or the other. She married another manā ācall him Jim Smith. And so, in after years, Bill comes across a paragraph in a local paper, something like the following:ā ā
On July 10th, at her residence, Eureka Cottage, Ballarat-street, Tally Town, the wife of James Smith of twins (boy and girl); all three doing well.
And Bill marks it with a loud chuckle and big crosses, and sends it along to Jim. Then Bill sits and thinks and smokes, and thinks till the fire goes out, and quite forgets all about putting that necessary patch on his pants.
And away down on Auckland gum-fields, perhaps, Jim reads the par with a grin; then grows serious, and sits and scrapes his gum by the flickering firelight in a mechanical manner, andā āthinks. His thoughts are far away in the back yearsā āfaint and far, far and faint. For the old, lingering, banished pain returns and hurts a manās heart like the false wife who comes back again, falls on her knees before him, and holds up her trembling arms and pleads with swimming, upturned eyes, which are eloquent with the love she felt too late.
It is supposed to be something to have your work published in an English magazine, to have it published in book form, to be flattered by critics and reprinted throughout the country press, or even to be cut up well and severely. But, after all, now we come to think of it, we would almost as soon see a piece of ours marked with big inky crosses in the soiled and crumpled rag that Bill or Jim gets sent him by an old mate of hisā āthe paper that goes thousands of miles scrawled all over with smudgy addresses and tied with a
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