The Eureka Stockade by Raffaello Carboni
page 27 of 226 (11%)
page 27 of 226 (11%)
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four hundred pounds for their body or carcase.
'Tout cela, n'est pas precisement comme chez nous, pas vrai?' Please, give me a dozen puffs at my black-stump, and then I will proceed to the next chapter. Chapter XII. Sufficit Diei Sua Vexatio. Either this chapter must be very short, or I had better give it up without starting it at all. Up to the middle of September, 1854, the search for licences happened once a month; at most twice: perhaps once a week on the Gravel Pits, owing to the near neighbourhood of the Camp. Now, licence-hunting became the order of the day. Twice a week on every line; and the more the diggers felt annoyed at it, the more our Camp officials persisted in goading us, to render our yoke palatable by habit. I assert, as an eye-witness and a sufferer, that both in October and November, when the weather allowed it, the Camp rode out for the hunt every alternate day. True, one day they would hunt their game on Gravel-pits, another day, they pounced on the foxes of the Eureka; and a third day, on the Red-hill: but, though working |
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