The scene in the convict yard at Sydney, five years after its
foundation as a penal settlement, was not a pleasant one to the
lover of humanity. Warders armed to the teeth were arranging gangs
that were to go out to labor on the roads. Many of the convicts had
leg irons, but so fastened as to be but slight hindrance to their
working powers, but the majority were unironed. These were the
better behaved convicts; not that this would be judged from their
faces, for the brutalizing nature of the system and the close
association of criminals had placed its mark on all, and it would
have been difficult for the most discriminating to have made any
choice between the most hardened criminals and those who had been
sent out for what would now be considered comparatively trivial
offenses. The voyage on board ship had done much to efface distinctions,
the convict life had done more, and the chief difference between
the chained and unchained prisoners was that the latter were men of
more timid disposition than many of their companions, and therefore
less disposed to give trouble that would entail heavy punishment.
But it was only the comparatively well conducted men who were
placed upon road work; the rest were retained for work inside the
jail, or were caged in solitary confinement. Each morning a number,
varying from half a dozen to a dozen, were fastened up and flogged,
in some cases with merciless severity, but it was seldom that a
cry was uttered by these, the most brutal ruffians of the convict
herd. This spectacle was just over: it was conducted in public
for the edification of the rest, but, judging from the low laughs
and brutal jests, uttered below the breath, it signally failed in
producing the desired impression. Two of those who had suffered
the severest punishment were now putting on their coarse woolen
garments over their bloodstained shoulders; both were comparatively
young men.
"I shall not stand this much longer," one muttered. "I will brain
a warder, and get hung for it. One can but die once, while one can
get flogged once a week."
"So would I," the other said bitterly; "but I have some scores to
settle in England, and I am not going to put my head in a noose
until I have wiped them out. The sooner we make arrangements to
get back there the better."
"Yes, we have talked of this before," the other said, "and I quite
agreed with you that if we all had the pluck of men we ought to
be able to overpower the warders, in spite of their firearms. Of
course some of us would get killed, but no one would mind that if
there was but the remotest chance of getting away. The question
is what we should do with ourselves when we were once outside
the prison. Of course I know that there are two or three hundred
settlers, but there would not be much to be got out of them, and
life among those black fellows, even if they were civil to us,
which I don't suppose they would be, would not be worth having."
"We might not have to stay there long; ships with stores or settlers
arrive occasionally, and if a lot of us got away we might seize one
by force, turn pirates for a bit, and when we are tired of that
sail to some South American port, sell our capture, and make our
way home to England. If we were not strong enough to take her, we
could hide up on board her; we should be sure to find some fellow
who for a pound or two would be willing to help us. The thing can
be done if we make up our minds to do it, and I for one have made
up my mind to try. I haven't chalked out a plan yet, but I am
convinced that it is to be done."
"I am with you, whatever it is," the other said; "and I think there
are twenty or thirty we could rely on. I don't say there are more
than that, because there are a lot of white livered cusses among
them who would inform against us at once, so as to get their own
freedom as a reward for doing so. Well, we will both think it over,
mate, and the sooner the better."
The two men who were thus talking together were both by birth
above the common herd of convicts, and had gained a considerable
ascendency over the others because of their reckless indifference
to punishment and their defiance of authority. Few of the men knew
each other's real names; by the officials they were simply known
by numbers, while among themselves each had a slang name generally
gained on board ship.
Separation there had, of course, been impossible, and when fastened
down below each had told his story with such embellishments as he
chose to give it, and being but little interfered with by their
guards, save to insure the impossibility of a mutiny, there had
been fights of a desperate kind. Four or five dead bodies had been
found and thrown overboard, but as none would testify as to who had
been the assailants none were punished for it; and so the strongest
and most desperate had enforced their authority over the others,
as wild beasts might do, and by the time they had reached their
destination all were steeped much deeper in wickedness and brutalism
than when they set sail.
The two men who were speaking together had speedily become chums,
and, though much younger than the majority of the prisoners, had
by their recklessness and ferocity established an ascendency among
the others. This ascendency had been maintained after their arrival
by their constant acts of insubordination, and by their apparent
indifference to the punishment awarded them. At night the convicts
were lodged in wooden buildings, where, so long as they were not
riotous, they were allowed to talk and converse freely, as indeed
was the case when their work for the day was done.
As to any attempt at escape, the authorities had but small anxiety,
for until the arrival of the first settlers, three years after that
of the convicts, there was nowhere a fugitive could go to, no food
to be obtained, no shelter save among the blacks, who were always
ready for a reward of tobacco and spirits to hand them over at
once to the authorities. The case had but slightly changed since
the settlement began to grow. It was true that by stealing sheep or
driving off a few head of cattle a fugitive might maintain himself
for a time, but even if not shot down by the settlers or patrols,
he would be sure before long to be brought in by the blacks.
The experiment had already been tried of farming our better
conducted convicts to the settlers, and indeed it was the prospect
of obtaining such cheap labor that had been the main inducement
to many of the colonists to establish themselves so far from
home, instead of going to America. As a whole the system worked
satisfactorily; the men were as much prisoners as were the inmates
of the jail, for they knew well enough that were they to leave the
farmers and take to the bush they would remain free but a short
time, being either killed or handed over by the blacks, and in the
latter case they would be severely punished and set to prison work
in irons, with labor very much more severe than that they were
called upon to do on the farms.
Some little time after the conversation between the two convicts
the prison authorities were congratulating themselves upon the fact
that a distinct change had taken or was taking place in the demeanor
of many of the men who had hitherto been the most troublesome, and
they put it down to the unusually severe floggings that had been
inflicted on the two most refractory prisoners in the establishment.
When in the prison yard or at work they were more silent than
before, and did their tasks doggedly and sullenly; there was no open
defiance to the authorities, and, above all, a marked cessation of
drunkenness from the spirits smuggled into the place.
Only the two originators were aware of the extent of the plot;
for they had agreed that only by keeping every man in ignorance as
to who had joined it could they hope to escape treachery. In the
first place, they had taken into their confidence a dozen men on
whom they could absolutely rely. Beyond this they had approached
the others singly, beginning by hinting that there was a plot for
escape, and that a good many were concerned, and telling them that
these had bound themselves together by a solemn oath to kill any
traitor, even if hanged for it.
"No one is to know who is in it and who is not," the leaders said
to each recruit. "Every new man will be closely watched by the
rest, and if he has any communication privately with a warder or
any other official he will be found strangled the next morning;
no one will know who did it. Even if he succeeded in eluding the
vigilance of his comrades at the time, it would soon be known; for
if indulgence of any kind was shown towards one man, or he was
relieved from his ordinary work, or even freed altogether and suddenly,
he would be a dead man in twenty-four hours, for we have friends
outside among the ticket of leave men who have bound themselves to
kill at once any man set free."
To the question, "What do you intend to do when we get off?" the
answer was, "We shall go straight to the bush, so as to avoid a
fight with the soldiers, in the first place; then we shall join that
night, and drive off all the cattle and sheep from the settlements,
take possession of every firearm found in the houses, then move
off a couple of hundred miles or so into the bush, and establish
a settlement of our own.
"Of course, we shall take horses and clothes and any spirits and
food we may find. If the soldiers pursue us, we will fight them;
but as there are only three or four companies of them, and we shall
be eight hundred strong, we shall very soon show them that they
had better leave us alone.
"Oh, yes, no doubt they will send more soldiers out from England,
but it will be over a year before they can get here; and we propose
after we have done with the fellows here to break up into parties
of twenty and thirty, dividing the sheep and cattle among us, and
each party going where it will. The place is of tremendous size,
as big as a dozen Englands, they say, and each party will fix a
place it fancies, where there is good water and a river with fish
and so on, and we may live all our lives comfortably, with just
enough work to raise potatoes and corn, and to watch our stock
increasing. Anyhow, we might calculate on having some years of
peace and freedom, and even if in the end they searched us all out,
which would be very unlikely, they could but bring us back, hang a
few, and set the rest to work again; but we think that they would
most likely leave us alone altogether, quite satisfied with having
got rid of us."
"Those who liked it could, no doubt, take wives among the blacks.
The convict women who are out on service with the settlers would,
you may be sure, join us at once, and an enterprising chap who
preferred a white woman to a black could always make his way down
here and persuade one to go off with him to his farm. That is the
general plan; if many get tired of the life they have only to come
down to Sydney, hide up near the place on some dark night, and go
down to the port, seize a ship, and make off in her, compelling the
officers and sailors to take them and land them at any port they
fancy, either in Chili, Peru, or Mexico, or, if they like, sail
west and make for Rio or Buenos Ayres or one of the West Indian
islands. As to when it is going to be done, or how it is going to
be done, no one will be told till it is ready to be carried out. We
have not settled that ourselves, and thus one who was fool enough
to risk certain death could tell the Governor no more than that
there was a plot on hand, and that the man who had sworn him in
was concerned in it."
So one by one every man in the prison was sworn by a terrible oath
to secrecy, to watch his companions, and to report anything that
looked suspicious. Many joined willingly, the prospect of relief,
even should it only be temporary, being too fascinating to be
resisted. Some joined against their, will, fearing that a refusal
to do so would be punished by death; and the fact that two or three
men were found strangled in bed had a very great effect in inducing
others to join in the plot.
These deaths caused some uneasiness to the authorities. Their
utmost endeavors failed to discover who were the perpetrators of
these murders; and even when everyone in the same hut was flogged
to obtain information, not one opened his lips.
One night the word was passed round that the time had come. One only
in each hut was familiar with the details, and he gave instructions
to each man individually as to what he was to do. The date had been
determined by the fact that the time which they had been sentenced
to wear irons had terminated the day before, and their unusually
subdued and quiet demeanor having carried them through the interval
without, as usual, fresh punishments being awarded them before the
termination of the former one.
In the morning the whole of the convicts were drawn up to witness
the flogging of the inmates of one of the huts, where a man had
been found strangled the morning before. The first prisoner was
taken to the triangle, stripped to the waist, and tied up. There
was a dead silence in the ranks of the convicts, but as the first
blow fell upon his shoulders there was a loud yell, and simultaneously
the whole ranks broke up, and a number of men sprang upon each of
the warders, wrested their muskets from them, and threw them to the
ground. Then there was a rush towards the Governor and officers,
who were assembled in front of the stone house that faced the open
end of the square. Firing their pistols, these at once took refuge
in the house, three or four falling under the scattered fire that
was opened as soon as the muskets of the warders fell into the
hands of the convicts.
Directly the doors were closed the officers appeared at the windows,
and opened a rifle fire upon the convicts, as did the guards near
the gate. As comparatively few of the convicts had muskets, they
began to waver at once. But, headed by the two ringleaders, the
armed party rushed at the guard, shot them down, and threw open
the gate.
Then an unexpected thing occurred. The soldiers from the barracks
happened to be marching down to do target practice on the shore,
and were passing the convict prison when the firing broke out. They
were at once halted, and ordered to load, and as the convicts, with
exultant shouts, poured through the gate they saw a long line of
soldiers, with leveled muskets, facing them.
"At them!" one of the leaders shouted. "It is too late to draw back
now. We have got to break through them."
Many of the convicts ran back into the yard; but those armed with
muskets, the more desperate of the party, followed their leaders.
A moment later a heavy volley rang out, and numbers of the convicts
fell. Their two leaders, however, and some twenty of their followers,
keeping in a close body, rushed at the line of soldiers with clubbed
muskets, and with the suddenness and fury of the rush burst their
way through the line, and then scattering, fled across the country,
pursued by a dropping fire of musketry.
The officers in command, seeing that but a fraction had escaped,
ordered one company to pursue, and marched the rest into the prison
yard. It was already deserted; the convicts had scattered to their
huts, those who had arms throwing them away. Dotted here and there
over the square were the bodies of eight or ten convicts and as
many warders, whose skulls had been smashed in by their infuriated
assailants as soon as they had obtained possession of their muskets.
Close to the gate lay the six soldiers who had furnished the guard;
these were all dead or mortally wounded.
The Governor and the officials issued from the house as soon as
the soldiers entered the yard. The first step to do was to turn
all the convicts out of the huts and to iron them. No resistance
was attempted, the sight of the soldiers completely cowing the
mutineers. When the bodies of the convicts that had fallen were
counted and the roll of the prisoners called over, it was found that
eighteen were missing, and of these six were during the course of
the next hour or two brought in by the soldiers who had gone in
pursuit of them. The rest had escaped.
The convicts were all questioned separately, and the tales they
told agreed so closely that the Governor could not doubt that they
were speaking the truth. All had been sworn in by one of two men,
and knew nothing whatever of what was intended to be done that day,
until after they were locked up on the evening previous. Each of
those in the huts had received his instructions the night before
from the one man.
There were eighteen huts, each containing fifteen convicts. Of the
men who had given instructions six had fallen outside the gate,
together with sixteen others; five had been overtaken and brought
in; altogether, twelve were still at large. Among these were
the two leaders. The next day six of the prisoners were tried
and executed. The rest were punished only by a reduction in their
rations; sentence of death was at the same time passed upon the
twelve still at large, so as to save the trouble of a succession
of trials as they were caught and brought in.
The two leaders had kept together after they had broken through
the line of soldiers.
"Things have gone off well," one said as they ran through. "Those
soldiers nearly spoilt it all."
"Yes, that was unlucky," the other agreed; "but so far as we are
concerned, which is all we care about, I think things have turned
out for the best."
Nothing more was said until they had far outstripped their pursuers,
hampered as these were by their uniforms and belts.
"You mean that it is not such a bad thing that they have not all
got away?"
"Yes, that is what I mean. It is all very well to tell them about
driving off the sheep and cattle and horses, and going to start a
colony on our own account, but the soldiers would have been up to
us before we had gone a day's journey. Most of the fellows would
have bolted directly they saw them. As it is, I fancy only about a
dozen have got away, perhaps not as many as that, and they are all
men that one can rely upon. One can feed a dozen without difficulty
--a sheep a day would do it--and by giving a turn to each of
the settlers, the animals won't be missed. Besides, we shall want
money if we are ever to get out of this cursed country. It would
not be difficult to get enough for you and me, but when it comes to
a large number the sack of the whole settlement would not go very
far.
"My own idea is that we had best join the others tonight, kill
a few sheep, and go two or three days' march into the bush, until
the heat of the pursuit is over. We are a11 armed, the blacks would
not venture to attack us, and the soldiers would not be likely to
pursue us very far. In a week or so, when we can assume that matters
have cooled down a bit, we can come down again. We know all the
shepherds, and even if they were not disposed to help us they would
not dare to betray us, or report a sheep or two being missing.
Of course, we shall have to be very careful to shift our quarters
frequently. Those black trackers are sure to be sent out pretty
often."
"As long as we are hanging about the settlements there won't be
much fear of our being bothered by the blacks. Of course, we shall
have to decide later on whether it will be best for us to try and
seize a ship, all of us acting together, or for us to get quietly
on board one and keep under hatches until she is well away. That
is the plan I fancy most."
"So do I. In the first place the chances are that in the next two
or three months at least half the fellows will be picked up. To
begin with, several of them are sure to get hold of liquor and make
attacks upon the settlers, in which case some of them, anyhow, are
sure to get killed. In the next place, most of them were brought
up as thieves in the slums of London, and will have no more idea
of roughing it in a country like this than of behaving themselves
if they were transported to a London drawing room. Therefore, I am
pretty sure that at the end of three months we shall not be able
to reckon on half of them. Well, six men are not enough to capture
a ship, or, if they do capture it, to keep the crew under. One must
sleep sometimes, and with only three or four men on deck we could
not hope to keep a whole ship's crew at bay."
"Then there is another reason. You and I, when we have got a decent
rig out, could pass anywhere without exciting observation; while if
we had half a dozen of the others, whatever their good qualities,
they would be noticed at once by their villainous faces, and if
questions were to be asked we should be likely to find ourselves
in limbo again in a very short time. So I am all for working on
our own account, even if the whole of the others were ready to back
us; but, of course, we must keep on good terms with them all, and
breathe no word that we think that each man had better shift for
himself. Some of those fellows, if they thought we had any idea
of leaving them, would go straight into Sydney and denounce us,
although they would know that they themselves would be likely to
swing at the same time."
As none of the convicts were acquainted with the bush, they had been
obliged to select as their rendezvous a hut two miles out of the
town, where the convict gangs that worked on the road were in the
habit of leaving their tools. On the way there the two men killed
a couple of sheep from a flock whose position they had noticed
before it became dark. These they skinned, cut off the heads, and
left them behind, carrying the sheep on their shoulders to the
meeting.
"Is that you, Captain Wild?" a voice said as they approached.
"Well, we have brought a couple of sheep with us, and as we have
carried them something like a mile, you had better handle them by
turns. We will strike off into the bush and put another three or
four miles between us and the jail, and then light a fire and have
a meal."
Two of the men came forward and took the sheep. Then they turned
off from the road, and taking their direction from a star, followed
it for an hour.
"I think we have got far enough now," the man called Captain Wild
said. "You had better cut down the bushes, and we will make a fire."
"But how are we to light it?" one of them exclaimed in a tone
of consternation. "I don't suppose we have got flint and steel or
tinder box among us."
"Oh, we can manage that!" the Captain said. "Get a heap of dried
leaves here first, then some wood, and we will soon have a blaze."
His orders were obeyed. Some of the men had carried off the warders'
swords as well as their muskets, and now used them for chopping
wood. As soon as a small pile of dried leaves was gathered the
Captain broke a cartridge and sprinkled half its contents among
them, and then dropped the remainder into his musket. He flashed
this off among the leaves, and a bright flame at once shot up, and
in five minutes a fire was burning.
One of the sheep was soon cut up, the meat hacked in slices from
the bones, a ramrod was thrust through the pieces, and, supported
by four sticks, was laid across the fire. Three other similarly
laden spits were soon placed beside it, and in a short time the
meat was ready for eating. Until a hearty meal had been made there
was but little talking.
"That is first rate," one of the men said, as he wiped his mouth
with the back of his hand. "Now one only wants a pipe and bacca
and a glass of grog, to feel comfortable."
"Well, Captain, are you satisfied with the day's work?"
"It would have been a grand day had it not been for the soldiers
passing just at the time. As it is, Gentleman Dick and I have been
agreeing that as far as we are all concerned it has not turned out
so badly. There would have been a lot of difficulty in finding food
if we had all got away, and some of those mealy mouthed fellows would
have been sure to go back and peach on us at the first opportunity.
A dozen is better than a hundred for the sort of life we are likely
to lead for some time. We are strong enough to beat off any attack
from the black fellows, and also to break into any of these settlers'
houses.
"We can, when we have a mind to, take a stray sheep now and then,
or even a bullock would scarcely be missed, especially if our pals
in the settlement will lend us a helping hand, which you may be
sure they will do; in fact, they would know better than to refuse.
Then a large party could be traced by those black trackers at a
run, while a small one would not; especially if, as we certainly
will do, we break up into twos and threes for a time. First of
all, though, we must go well into the bush; at daybreak tomorrow
morning we will drive off twenty sheep, and go right away a hundred
miles, and wait there till matters have settled down. They will
never take the troops out that distance after us. Then we can come
back again, and hang about the settlement and take what we want. The
wild blacks don't come near there, and we shall be safer in pairs
than we should be if we kept together; and of course we could meet
once a week or so to talk over our plans. We must borrow some whisky,
flour, tea, tobacco, and a few other items from the settlers, but
we had better do without them for this trip. I don't want to turn
the settlers against us, for they have all got horses, and might
combine with the troops to give chase, so it would be best to leave
them alone, at any rate till we get back again. Another reason for
treating them gently is that even if they did not join the troops
they might get into a funk, and drive their sheep and horses down
into Sydney, and then we should mighty soon get short of food. It
will be quite time enough to draw upon them heavily when we make
up our minds to get hold of a ship and sail away. Money would be
of no use to us here, but we shall want it when we get to a port,
wherever that port may be."
"That sounds right enough, Captain," one of the convicts said,
"and just at present nothing would suit me better than to get so
far away from this place that I can lay on my back and take it easy
for a spell."
There was a general chorus of assent, and there being neither
tobacco nor spirits, the party very soon stretched themselves off
to sleep round the fire.
In the morning they were up before daylight, and half an hour later
arrived at one of the farms farthest from Sydney. Here they found
a flock of a hundred sheep. The shepherd came to the door of his
hut on hearing a noise.
"You had best lie down and go to sleep for the next hour," the
leader of the convicts said sharply. "We don't want to do an old
pal any harm, and when you wake up in the morning and find the flock
some twenty short, of course you won't have any idea what has come
of them."
The man nodded and went back into the hut and shut the door, and
the convicts started for the interior, driving twenty sheep before
them.
During the first day's journey they went fast, keeping the sheep at
a trot before them, and continuing their journey through the heat
of the day.
"I tell you what, Captain," one of the men said when they halted
at sunset, "if we don't get to a water hole we shall have to give
up this idea of going and camping in the bush. My mouth has been
like an oven all day, and it is no use getting away from jail to
die of thirst out here."
There had been similar remarks during the day, and the two leaders
agreed together that it would be madness to push further, and that,
whatever the risk, they would have to return to the settlements
unless they could strike water. As they were sitting moodily round
the fire they were startled by a dozen natives coming forward into
the circle of light. These held out their hands to say that their
intentions were peaceful.
"Don't touch your muskets!" Captain Wild exclaimed sharply, as
some of the men were on the point of jumping to their feet. "The
men are friendly, and we may be able to get them to guide us to
water."
The natives, as they came up, grinned and rubbed their stomachs,
to show that they were hungry.
"I understand," the Captain said; "you want a sheep, we want water;"
and he held up his hand to his mouth and lifted his elbow as if in
the act of drinking.
In two or three minutes the natives understood what he wanted, and
beckoned to the men to follow. The tired sheep were got onto their
legs again, and half a mile away the party arrived at a pool in what
in wet weather was the bed of a river. A sheep was at once handed
over to the natives, and when the men had satisfied their thirst
another sheep was killed for their own use.
After a great deal of trouble the natives were made to understand
that the white men wanted one of their party to go with them
as a guide, and to take them always to water holes, and a boy of
fifteen was handed over to them in exchange for two more sheep, and
at daybreak the next morning they started again for the interior,
feeling much exhilarated by the piece of luck that had befallen
them. They traveled for four days more, and then, considering that
the soldiers had ceased their pursuit long ago, they encamped for
ten days, enjoying to the utmost their recovered freedom and their
immunity from work of any kind. Then they returned to the neighborhood
of the settlements, and broke up, as their leader proposed, into
pairs.
They had been there but a short time before the depredations committed
roused the settlers to band themselves together. Every horse that
could be spared was lent to the military, who formed a mounted
patrol of forty men, while parties of infantry, guided by native
trackers, were constantly on the scent for the convicts.
"This is just what I expected," Captain Wild said to his lieutenant.
"It was the choice of two evils, and I am not sure that the plan we
chose was not the worst. We might have been quite sure that these
fellows would not be able, even for a time, to give up their old
ways. If they had confined themselves, as we have done, to taking
a sheep when they wanted it, and behaving civilly when they went
to one of the houses and begged for a few pounds of flour or tea,
the settlers would have made no great complaint of us; they know
what a hard time we have had, and you can see that some of the
women were really sorry for us, and gave us more than we actually
asked for. But it has not been so with the others. They had been
breaking into houses, stealing every thing they could lay their
hands upon, and in three or four cases shooting down men on the
slightest provocation.
"The money and watches were no good to them, but the brutes could
not help stealing them; so here we are, and the settlement is like
a swarm of angry bees, and this plan of handing over most of their
horses to the military will end in all of us being hunted down
if we stay here. Two were shot yesterday, and in another week we
shall all either be killed or caught. There is nothing for it but
to clear out. I am against violence, not on principle, but because
in this case it sets people's backs up; but it cannot be helped
now. We must get a couple of horses to ride, and a spare one to
carry our swag. We must have half a sack of flour and a sheep--
it is no use taking more than one, because the meat won't keep--
and a good stock of tea and sugar. We must get a good supply of
powder, if we can, some bullets and shot. We shall have to get our
meat by shooting.
"There is no time to be lost, and tonight we had better go to that
settler's place nearest the town. He has got two of the best horses
out here--at least so Redgrave, that shepherd I was talking
to today, told me--and a well filled store of provisions. If he
will let us have them without rumpus, all well and good; if not,
it will be the worse for him. My idea is that we should ride two
or three hundred miles along the coast until we get to a river,
follow it up till we find a tidy place for a camp, and stop there
for three or four months, then come back again and keep ourselves
quiet until we find out that a ship is going to sail; then we
will do a night among the farmhouses, and clean them out of their
watches and money, manage to get on board, and hide till we are
well out to sea. We must get a fresh fit out before we go on board;
these clothes are neither handsome nor becoming. We must put on
our best manners, and tell them that we are men who have served our
full time, and want to get back, and that we were obliged to hide
because we had not enough to pay our full passage money, but that
we have enough to pay the cost of our grub, and are ready to pull
at a rope and make ourselves useful in any way. If we are lucky we
ought to get enough before we start to buy horses and set ourselves
up well in business at home."
"I think that is a very good plan," the other agreed, "and I am
quite sure the sooner we make ourselves scarce here the better."