My Brilliant Career eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 327 pages of information about My Brilliant Career.

My Brilliant Career eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 327 pages of information about My Brilliant Career.

Seeing my father beside me, and thinking of his infant with its mother, eating her heart out with anxiety at home, this was the reasoning which took possession of me.  Among other such inexpressible thoughts I got lost, grew dizzy, and drew back appalled at the spirit which was maturing within me.  It was a grim lonely one, which I vainly tried to hide in a bosom which was not big or strong enough for its comfortable habitation.  It was as a climbing plant without a pole—­it groped about the ground, bruised itself, and became hungry searching for something strong to which to cling.  Needing a master-hand to train and prune, it was becoming rank and sour.

CHAPTER FIVE

Disjointed Sketches And Grumbles

It was my duty to “rare the poddies”.  This is the most godless occupation in which it has been my lot to engage.  I did a great amount of thinking while feeding them—­for, by the way, I am afflicted with the power of thought, which is a heavy curse.  The less a person thinks and inquires regarding the why and the wherefore and the justice of things, when dragging along through life, the happier it is for him, and doubly, trebly so, for her.

Poor little calves!  Slaves to the greed of man!  Bereft of the mothers with which Nature has provided them, and compelled to exist on milk from the separator, often thick, sour, and icy cold.

Besides the milking I did, before I went to school every morning, for which I had to prepare myself and the younger children, and to which we had to walk two miles.  I had to feed thirty calves and wash the breakfast dishes.  On returning from school in the afternoon, often in a state of exhaustion from walking in the blazing sun, I had the same duties over again, and in addition boots to clean and home lessons to prepare for the morrow.  I had to relinquish my piano practice for want of time.

Ah, those short, short nights of rest and long, long days of toil!  It seems to me that dairying means slavery in the hands of poor people who cannot afford hired labour.  I am not writing of dairy-farming, the genteel and artistic profession as eulogized in leading articles of agricultural newspapers and as taught in agricultural colleges.  I am depicting practical dairying as I have lived it, and seen it lived, by dozens of families around me.

It takes a great deal of work to produce even one pound of butter fit for market.  At the time I mention it was 3d. and 4d. per lb., so it was much work and small pay.  It was slaving and delving from morning till night—­Sundays, week-days, and holidays, all alike were work-days to us.

Hard graft is a great leveller.  Household drudgery, woodcutting, milking, and gardening soon roughen the hands and dim the outside polish.  When the body is wearied with much toil the desire to cultivate the mind, or the cultivation it has already received, is gradually wiped out.  Thus it was with my parents.  They had dropped from swelldom to peasantism.  They were among and of the peasantry.  None of their former acquaintances came within their circle now, for the iron ungodly hand of class distinction has settled surely down upon Australian society—­Australia’s democracy is only a tradition of the past.

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My Brilliant Career from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.