Such Is Life by Joseph Furphy (children's books read aloud .TXT) đ
Description
Such Is Life is an Australian novel written by Joseph Furphy under a pseudonym of âTom Collinsâ and published in 1903. It purports to be a series of diary entries by the author, selected at approximately one-month intervals during late 1883 and early 1884. âTom Collinsâ travels rural New South Wales and Victoria, interacting and talking at length with a variety of characters including the drivers of bullock-teams, itinerant swagmen, boundary riders, and squatters (the owners of large rural properties). The novel is full of entertaining and sometimes melancholy incidents mixed with the philosophical ramblings of the author and his frequent quotations from Shakespeare and poetry. Its depictions of the Australian bush, the rural lifestyle, and the depredations of drought are vivid.
Furphy is sometimes called the âFather of the Australian Novel,â and Such Is Life is considered a classic of Australian literature.
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- Author: Joseph Furphy
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âEveninâ, chaps.â
âEveninâ,â came in sullen, but general, response. Then Baxter queried indifferently:
âSame ole lay?â
âNot me,â replied the deep, low voice. âEvery man to his work. My workâs mullockinâ in a reservoy, with a new-chum weaver from Leeds for a mate, anâ a scoop thatâs nyther make nor form, anâ the ten worst bullocks ever was yoked.â
âWell, Bob,â said I; âthough you gave me a fright, I must congratulate you. I heard you were dead.â
âWouldnât mind if I was dead, Collins.â
âWhereâs Bat?â I asked.
âGone to a better billetââ âand the leonine voice deepened to hoarseness. âRestinâ in the shadder of a lonely rock, as the Bible says. I buried him by my own self, way out back, eight or ten months ago. Manyâs the time I wish I was with him, for Iâm dog-tired of everything goinâ. Best-hearted feller ever broke bread, Bat was; anâ the prittiest rider ever I seen on a horse. Yes; pore ole chapâs gone. Youâd âaâ thought he was onây asleep whenâ ââ
No further word was spoken for a couple of minutes. Then Stevenson asked:
âHow long since you came down?â
âFive months since I left the Diamantinar. Grand grass there, anâ most oâ the road down. I come with some fats as fur as Wilcannia; anâ a drover took charge oâ them there; anâ my orders was to come on to Mondunbarra. I been here goinâ on for three weeks, rasslinâ with that reservoy, anâ cursinâ MâGregor anâ Smythe for beinâ man-eaters, anâ myself for beinâ a born fool.â
âThen why donât you leave?â asked Thompson.
âHow can I leave without a settlinâ-up?â
âAnâ why the (sheol) donât you git a settlinâ-up?â asked Donovan.
âHowâm I goinâ to git a settlinâ-up, when MâGregor donât know me from a crow, anâ says Smytheâll represent him in the meantime; anâ Smythe says his hands is tied on account oâ MâGregor, or else heâd dem soon give me the run. Nice way for a man to be fixed, after me breakinâ my neck since I was fifteen, to make MâGregor what he is. Eighteen solid years clean throwed away!â
âHow did you fine us here, unless you was (adv.) well after somebody?â asked Baxter, still suspicious of the dog with a bad name.
âWell, I am after somebody. Iâm after ole MâGregorâ âat least, Iâll be after him as soonâs I git this reservoy off oâ my mind. Daresay Iâll git you to understand by-ânâ-by. See: Jist when Smythe wanted this job fixed-up, he got a slant oâ fourteen bullocks, sold at a gift, for debt; anâ he thought that would be the cheapest way to git the work done; for he didnât want to engage any oâ your sort, knowinâ youâd loaf on the grass, anâ most likely make a song about it, anâ be the instigation of no end oâ trouble watchinâ the place. Well, them fourteen was put in Sling Hoâs paddick for a fortnit before I come; anâ I could onây muster ten; anâ me anâ this mate oâ mine we made a start with that lotâ ânot knowinâ which was nearsiders, nor off-siders, nor leaders, nor nothing. Nice contract. Anyway, jist before dark this eveninâ, I seen two oâ the missinâ ones in the âjoininâ paddock, so I rooted-up one oâ my horses, anâ fetched them in here. Then I heard a dog barkinâ out this way, anâ I thought Iâd come across to kill time, anâ then I happened to hear a lot oâ laughinâ where them other blokes is campedâ ââ
âWhich other blokes?â asked Saunders.
âDan Lister anâ three Vic. chaps. Be about half-a-mile out there. Danâs as sulky as a pig with these coves for foxinâ him; anâ theyâre laughinâ at him like three overgrown kids. They got twelve bullocks each. Dan tells me he dropped two out of his eighteen, cominâ down from Mooltunya. Says one oâ the Chinks laid him on to this bit oâ grass. Two other fellers I met in the plain-strangers to meâ âthey had the very same yarn. Them heathens think Iâm in charge here; anâ theyâre workinâ a point to make me nasty with the chaps on the track. Anâ if I was in charge, thatâs jist the sort oâ thing would put a hump on me. Sort oâ off-sider for a gang oâ Chinks! My word!â
âBin many people workinâ on this paddick lately?â asked Saunders innocently.
âWell, besides your three horses, thereâs been an odd team now anâ agen for the fortnit or three weeks I been here. Good many last night. Rallyinâ-up tonight. No business oâ mine. Too busy shiftinâ mullock to know whatâs goinâ on. Way oâ the world, I sâpose. Anyway, Smytheâs gittinâ a slant to come to an understandinâ with MâGregor about me; anâ if it ainât satisfactory, thereâll be bad feelinâ between us. I want to be kepâ at my own proper work, or else sacked anâ squared-up withâ ânot shoved into a job like this the minit I show my face; with that young pup cheekinâ me for callinâ him âBert.â âMr. Smythe, if you please,â says he! Hope Iâll live to see him with bluey on his back.â
âWell-matched pairâ âMâGregor anâ Smythe,â remarked Donovan thoughtfully. âWonder which of the two (individuals) is worst in the sight oâ God?â
âTossup,â replied Bob. âSame time, thereâs a lot oâ difference in
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