Such Is Life by Joseph Furphy (children's books read aloud .TXT) š
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Such Is Life is an Australian novel written by Joseph Furphy under a pseudonym of āTom Collinsā 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. āTom Collinsā 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 āFather of the Australian Novel,ā and Such Is Life is considered a classic of Australian literature.
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- Author: Joseph Furphy
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āDo you think heāll shift Smythe from Mondunbarra, as he did Pratt from Boolka?ā I asked.
āAināt he doinā it all the time?ā replied Bob. āHeās got Smythe frightened of him now, anā beginninā to hate him like fury, besides. Thatās MāGregorās lay. By-ānā-by, Smytheāll be dreaminā about him all night, anā wishinā he was game to poison him all day; anā when he feels enough haunted, MāGregorāll make him an offer, anā heāll sell out like a bird.ā
āI should be inclined to reverse the situation,ā remarked Stevenson. āI should make him glad to sell out to me.ā
āMy word, youād do a lot,ā replied Bob. āI seen smarter men nor you took-down through tryinā to work points on the same ole MāGregor. Tell you what I seen on Wo-Winya, about three year agoā ājist before me anā pore Bat was put on the Diamantinar. Feller name oā Tregarvis, from Bendigo, he selected a lot oā land on Wo-Winya, anā made-up his mind heād straighten MāGregor. Bit of a Berryite, he was. Well-off for a selector, too; anā he done a big business back anā forrid to Vic. with cattle. Mixed lots, of course, with stags anā ole cows that no fence would hold. North of Ireland feller, name oā Moore, was managinā Wo-Winya at the time; anā MāGregor was a good deal about the station, takinā a sort oā interest in this Tregarvis. Well, things was so arranged that the Cousin Jackās cattle was always gittinā into our paddicks; anā the rule was that his people had to come to the home-station to get leaf to hunt āem; anā a man was sent along oā them as a percaution. Anā generally, by the time they founā the cattle, there was one or two oā the fattest oā them short.ā
āRemedy for that game,ā remarked Stevenson. āI should have laid a trap.ā
āJist what Tregarvis done,ā rejoined Bob. āOne day there was a stranger among our cattleā āa fine big white bullock, anā Tregarvisās brand on him. We run this mob into the yard before dinner, to git a beast to kill, anā turned āem all out agen, bar the white one; but he was in the killinā-yard all the afternoon. Dusk in the eveninā, the white bullock was shot; anā jist in the nick oā time, when the head was slung in the pigsty, anā the hide was hanginā on the fence, raw side up, who should pounce on us but ole Tregarvis, anā Young Tregarvis, anā a trooper. No mistake, Moore looked a bit gallied on it; anā he humād anā haād, anā threatened to brain Tregarvis if he laid a hand on the hide. Anyhow, the trooper took charge oā the hide; anā both the Tregarvises struck matches anā examined the head in the pigsty. Next morninā, a warrant was served on Moore; but, of course, he was bailed. Then the Court-day come on; anā Tregarvis swore to a knowledge that a white bullock of his was among the Wo-Winya cattle; anā he give evidence about the findinā oā the skin, anā swore to the head he seen in the pigsty. Anā young Tregarvis, he swore he was watchinā with a telescope, anā seen a white bullock oā theirs yarded with some more, anā all the rest turned out; anā he kepā his eye on that white bullock all the afternoon; anā he heard the shot, anā went up with his ole man anā the trooper; anā he seen the raw hide hanginā on the fence, anā the head in the pigsty, anā a couple oā fellers hoistinā the carkidge on the gallus. When the magistrate asked Moore if he wanted to make a statement, he said he was quite bewildered about it. He allowed he had picked the white bullock for killinā, anā he had give the order; but heād swear the beast belonged to the station. So the hide was spread out on a bit oā tarpolin in the floor oā the Court; anā there was onāy one brand on it, anā that brand was MāGregorāsā āDMG off-rump. Mind you, this is onāy what I was told. My orders was to keep clear till the case was over; anā it was onāy a day or two follerinā that me anā pore Bat got our orders for the Diamantinar. Anyhow, Moore whanged it on to Tregarvis for malicious prosecution; anā it cost the Cousin Jack a good many hundred before he was done with it. As for young Dick Tregarvis, he got four years for perjury; so theyāll be jist about lettinā him out now, if heās got the good-conduct remission.
āBeast changed?ā suggested Thompson.
āYes. That was the idear. Some different dodge next time. Changed jist at dusk, anā shot the minit after. I had the station bullock all ready, before ever Tregarvisās one was yarded. Dead spit oā one another, down to the shape oā their hornsā ābar the brands, of course; Treganisās beast havinā NT near-shoulder, anā JH conjoined under halfcircle off-ribs. I had him halfways back to the paddick agen when Tregarvis thought he was identifyinā him in the killinā-yard. So he fell-in, simple enough. Anā between one thing anā another, anā beinā follered-up like the last dingo on a sheep station, ole Tregarvis was glad to sellout to MāGregor, before all was over. Yes, Stevenson; Lord āaā mercy on MāGregor
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