The Book of the Bush eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 421 pages of information about The Book of the Bush.

The Book of the Bush eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 421 pages of information about The Book of the Bush.
contained a quantity of axes, tomahawks, saddles and bridles, a grindstone, some shot and powder, two double-barrelled guns, nails and hammers, and a few other articles, but there was nothing eatable to be seen in it.  If there was any flour, tea, or sugar left, it was carefully concealed from any of the famishing settlers who might by chance peep in at the door.  Outside the hut was a nine-pounder gun on wheels, which had been landed by the company for use in time of war; but until this day there had been no hostilities between the natives and the settlers.  From time to time numbers of black faces had been seen among the scrub, but so far no spear had been thrown nor hostile gun fired.  The members of the company were Turnbull, McLeod, Rankin, Brodribb, Hornden, and Orr.  Soon after they landed they cleared a semi-circular piece of ground behind their tents, to prevent the blacks from sneaking up to them unseen.  Near the beach stood two she-oak trees, marked, one with the letters M. M., 1 Feb., 1841, the other 2 Mar., 1841, and the initials of the members of the Port Albert Company.  Behind the huts three hobbled horses were feeding, two of which had been brought by Jack Shay.  A gaunt deerhound, with a shaggy coat, lame and lean, was lying in the sun.  There was also an old cart in front of one of the huts, out of which two boys came and began to gather wood and to kindle a fire.  They were ragged and hungry, and looked shyly at Jack Shay.  One was Bill Clancy, and the other had been printer’s devil to Hardy, of the ‘Gazette’, and was therefore known as Dick the Devil.  They had been picked up in Melbourne by Captain Davy, who had brought them to Port Albert in his whaleboat.  Their ambition had been for “a life on the ocean wave, and a home on the rolling deep,” as heroic young pirates; but at present they lived on shore, and their home was George Scutt’s old cart.

A man emerged from one of the huts carrying a candle-box, which he laid on the ground before the fire.  Jack observed that the box was full of eggs, on the top of which lay two teaspoons.  The man was Captain David, usually known as Davy.  He said: 

“I am going to ask you to breakfast, Jack; but you have been a long time coming, and provisions are scarce in these parts.”

“Don’t you make no trouble whatsomever about me,” said Jack.  “Many’s the time I’ve hadshort rations, and I can take pot-luck with any man.”

“You’ll find pot-luck here is but poor luck,” replied Davy.  “I’ve got neither grub nor grog, no meat, no flour, no tea, no sugar—­ nothing but eggs; but, thank God, I’ve got plenty of them.  There are five more boxes full of them in my hut, so we may as well set to at once.”

Davy drew some hot ashes from the fire, and thrust the eggs into them, one by one.  When they were sufficiently cooked, he handed one and a teaspoon to Jack and took another himself, saying, “We shall have to eat them just as they are; there is plenty of salt water, but I haven’t even a pinch of salt.”

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The Book of the Bush from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.