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       Henry Lawson

      Joe Wilson and His Mates

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664645524

       Part I.

       Joe Wilson’s Courtship.

       Brighten’s Sister-In-Law.

       ‘Water Them Geraniums’.

       I. A Lonely Track.

       II. ‘Past Carin’’.

       A Double Buggy at Lahey’s Creek.

       I. Spuds, and a Woman’s Obstinacy.

       II. Joe Wilson’s Luck.

       III. The Ghost of Mary’s Sacrifice.

       IV. The Buggy Comes Home.

       The Writer Wants to Say a Word.

       Part II.

       The Golden Graveyard.

       The Chinaman’s Ghost.

       The Loaded Dog.

       Poisonous Jimmy Gets Left.

       I. Dave Regan’s Yarn.

       II. Told by One of the Other Drovers.

       The Ghostly Door.

       Told by one of Dave’s mates.

       A Wild Irishman.

       The Babies in the Bush.

       A Bush Dance.

       The Buck-Jumper.

       Saturday afternoon.

       Jimmy Grimshaw’s Wooing.

       At Dead Dingo.

       Telling Mrs Baker.

       A Hero in Dingo-Scrubs.

       The Little World Left Behind.

       The Never-Never Country.

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      There are many times in this world when a healthy boy is happy. When he is put into knickerbockers, for instance, and ‘comes a man to-day,’ as my little Jim used to say. When they’re cooking something at home that he likes. When the ‘sandy-blight’ or measles breaks out amongst the children, or the teacher or his wife falls dangerously ill—or dies, it doesn’t matter which—‘and there ain’t no school.’ When a boy is naked and in his natural state for a warm climate like Australia, with three or four of his schoolmates, under the shade of the creek-oaks in the bend where there’s a good clear pool with a sandy bottom. When his father buys him a gun, and he starts out after kangaroos or ‘possums. When he gets a horse, saddle, and bridle, of his own. When he has his arm in splints or a stitch in his head—he’s proud then, the proudest boy in the district.

      I wasn’t a healthy-minded, average boy: I reckon I was born for a poet by mistake, and grew up to be a Bushman, and didn’t know what was the matter with me—or the world—but that’s got nothing to do with it.

      There are times when a man is happy. When he finds out that the girl loves him. When he’s just married. When he’s a lawful father for the first time, and everything is going on all right: some men make fools of themselves then—I know I did. I’m happy to-night because I’m out of debt and can see clear ahead, and because I haven’t been easy for a long time.

      But I think that the happiest time in a man’s life is when he’s courting a girl and finds out for sure that she loves him and hasn’t a thought for any one else. Make the most of your courting days, you young chaps, and keep them clean, for they’re about the only days when there’s a chance of poetry and beauty coming into this life. Make the best of them and you’ll never regret it the longest day you live. They’re the days that the wife will look back to, anyway, in the brightest of times as well as in the blackest, and there shouldn’t be anything in those days that might hurt her when she looks back. Make the most of your courting days, you young chaps, for they will never come again.

      A married man knows all about it—after a while: he sees the woman world through the eyes of his wife; he knows what an extra moment’s pressure of the hand means, and, if he has had a hard life, and is inclined to be cynical, the knowledge does him no good. It leads him into awful messes sometimes, for a married man, if he’s inclined that way, has three times the chance with a woman that a single man has—because the married man knows. He is privileged; he can guess pretty closely what a woman means when

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