登陆注册
11359900000039

第39章 LOST IN THE BuSH

pari I.

OUT thirty miles from Horsham is the Spring Hill Station; and back from the homestead, in a small, open spot among the mallee, stood in 1864 a shepherd"s hut, built of slabs, with a clay floor and a bark roof-the home of the Duffs. The dreary view was broken only by the summit of Mount Arapiles and the Mitre Rock, some miles to the eastward.

Three children-Isaac, nine years old; Jane, seven and a half; and Frank, a toddler, not four-helped their mother, and filled in the long day as best they could, playing about the hut, for there was no school for them to attend.

Well, one day their mother called them and said, "Now, children, run away to the scrub and get me some broom to sweep the floor and make it nice for father when he comes home."It was a fine day in August-spring was early that year-and the children, who had been to the scrub onthe same errand before, liked going; so they set off merrily.

They had a fine time. Isaac amused himself by climbing trees and cutting down saplings with his tomahawk; he found a possum in a hollow in the trunk of a tree, and poked at the little creature with a stick, but without doing it much harm. Jane chased butterflies, picked flowers, and tried to catch the lizards that Frank wanted so much. When they felt hungry they all had, in addition to their lunch of bread and treacle, quite a feast of gum from a clump of wattle-trees.

In laughter and play the time passed pleasantly and quickly; and, when half a dozen kangaroos bounded away from them through the bush, their delight knew no bounds. But, by and by, Jane thought of going home; so they gathered each a bundle of broom for mother, and turned, as they thought, homewards.

After they had walked some distance, Isaac began to think that it was farther to the edge of the scrub than he had expected, so he urged his sister and little brother to go faster. In an hour or two the scrub grew thicker, and it looked strange to him. He thought that he might have taken a wrong turn, and started off in another direction, and then tried another, and another; but no rememberedspot met his straining eyes.

Then deep dread seized them all. They stopped, and cooeed, and shouted- "Father!" "Mother !" but there was no answer-only the sad "caw! caw!" of a crow winging its homeward flight came to their ears.

Drawn by Tom V. Carter

"They stopped and cooeed, and shouted."

On they pressed once more. Soon little Frank began to cry; and his sister said, "Don"t cry, Frankie dear; don"t cry. We"ll soon be home, and you shall have a nice supper. Let me carry your broom, it"s too heavy for you." She took the bundle of tea-tree twigs; and for ward again they went with wildly beating hearts, sometimes stopping to cooee and look about; and then on, on till the sun set, and the bush, except for the dismal howl now and then of a dingo in the distance, grew gloomyand still.

Tired out and hungry, they huddled together at the foot of a big tree, and said the prayers their mother had taught them. Then they talked of home, wondering if father would be vexed, and if mother knew that they were lost. Frank soon cried himself to sleep; and his sister put some of the broom under his head for a pillow. Poor, dear little things! They little thought how glad mother would be to see them, even without their broom.

As the night went on it grew cold; and Jane, who was awake, took off her frock to wrap round her little brother, and crept close to him to keep him warm. For hours she lay listening to the cry of the curlew and the rush of the possum as it ran from tree to tree over the dead leaves and bark. At last she fell asleep, and slepttill the loud, mocking "Ha, ha! ho, ho! hoo, hoo!" of the laughing-jackass roused her at dawn. What a waking it was! Tired and cold, hungry and thirsty, and lost.

part II.

The mother had grown anxious as the day wore on and the children did not return; and so, late in the afternoon, she went into the scrub and cooeed for them till she was hoarse. As she got no answer, she became really alarmed, and at length hurried back to tell her husband, who she expected would return home from his work just before nightfall. He also searched through the scrub, and cooeed till long after dark, but in vain.

Before daybreak next morning they were up, and as soon as it was light enough were hurrying to tell their nearest neighbours what had happened and ask their help in the search. Before dinner-time a score of willing people-men and women-were scouring the scrub in various directions.

All that day, and the next, and the next, they searched, but found nothing; and the poor mother began to lose hope of ever seeing her darlings again. A messenger had been sent to a station some distance off to bring two or three blackfellows, who were employedthere as boundary-riders.

The Australian blacks can find and follow a trail with wonderful skill. They have sharp eyes, and their training in searching for the tracks of the game they hunt causes them to note signs to guide them in places where a white man, even with good eyesight, sees nothing.

The children had been lost on Saturday; and the black trackers-a monarch, King Richard (better known as Dicky), and two subjects, Jerry and Fred- arrived on Wednesday. The three, taking positions some distance apart, began to look about for the trail of small footsteps. They had worked for some hours when a yell from Dicky brought them to his side. "What is it?" asked the father. "There! there!" exclaimed the black, with a broad smile, pointing to a faint mark of a little boot.

Forward now they went, with the father and some of his neighbours. Sometimes the blacks ran; sometimes they walked; and sometimes they had even to crawl. In rocky places they had to search carefully for traces, working from one point to another. Whenever this happened, it was a trying time for the poor father, as he felt that every minute"s delay lessened the small chance there was of finding his children alive.

The blacks led on so many miles into the bush thatthe white men began to think their tracking was all a sham. At last, however, they stopped at the foot of a big gum-tree; and, pointing to three bundles of broom, Dicky said, "Him been sleep there, fus night."The father was astonished to find that the children had travelled so far in a day, and much troubled at the thought of the long distance they might yet be from him; but he was comforted, too, for he felt that he could trust his guides.

There was no time to stop; but onward the party pressed still faster, till night came and put an end to their efforts for some hours, in spite of their wishes. How the father must have suffered through those hours, and how eagerly he must have watched for the first streaks of the coming dawn !

We can fancy how anxious the poor mother was, also, as day by day passed without any news of the finding of her children. Her fears slowly grew into the belief that they were dead; and her only hope was that their bodies would not be torn to pieces by dingoes or eaten by ants.

As Dicky was leading next day at a trot, he was seen to halt and begin looking around him. An anxious "What is the matter?" from the father caused only a sad shake of the head from Dicky; and two fingers held up showedtoo well what was in his mind. Making a sign to his mates to look about for the dead body, he cast himself on his hands and knees, to study the ground. A cry from him soon brought the party together. "Here three," he said, "here two. Big one carry little one"; and he went through the motions of one child taking another on its back.

When the next sleeping-place of the little wanderers was found, the blacks pointed out that the smallest had lain in the middle. "Him not get cold," they said.

Their third day"s tramp had not been so long as the others had been; and the blacks said again and again, "Him plenty tired; not go much longer." The little tired feet could not get over the ground so quickly now.

Another camping-place was reached, and "Here yesterday!" exclaimed Dicky. On that fourth day"s journey, the children had been passing through a patch of broom like that near their home; and the blacks, pointing to some broken twigs, showed that some branches had been broken off. Had they been gathered for a bed? No, there was no sign of that. Dicky turned to the father, and said, "Him t"ink it him near home." Yes; the children had supposed that they knew where they were when they reached that spot, and their first thought was of mother"s broom. They were weary and starving; but they had beensent for the broom, and they would not go home without it.

"Him run now," said the blacks; "him t"ink it all right"; and they pointed to the signs of haste. But, alas, what a blow to their hopes! By and by a bundle of broom was found. It had been thrown away-a sure sign of despair. "Him been lose him. Him been sit down. Mine t"ink it him plenty cry." Thus ran Dicky"s history of the event.

Another camping-place was passed; and the blacks became doubly earnest, and kept saying, "Him walk slow, slow, slow." Soon Dicky whispered, "Him close up." And then he stopped, and pointed before him in silence at something stretched on the ground.

"They must be dead," groaned the father, and rushed forward with drawn face and straining eyes. Though all were living, only one was able to greet him, and that was little Frank, who raised himself slightly, held out his feeble arms, and cried in a weak, husky voice, "Daddy, daddy, we cooeed for you, but you didn"t come." Jane had wrapped her frock round her little brother whenever they lay down to rest; and she and Isaac had carried him for miles, so that he had not suffered so much as they had. All alive, but very near death! Think of it: eight daysand eight nights in the bush without food to eat or water to drink!

When they were found, the blacks laughed and cried, and rolled on the ground for joy; and Dicky(we may well call him King Richard now), springing on a horse that belonged to one of the party, gave his last order, "Me tak gal home"; and Jane was handed up to him.

For some weeks the children were between life and death, but kind attention and loving care brought them back to health. The story of their suffering and heroism spread far and wide. Jane"s motherly attention to her little brother has won for her a place among the world"s noble girls.

About the Author.-The main part of the story is taken from an account written by the Reverend B. W. Fairclough, and printed in achurch magazine The Southern Cross. Some local details have been added by Mr. Beaumont T. Pearse, who was once a teacher in the Horsham school.

About the Story.-Where did the happenings told of in the story take place? Find the place on the map of Victoria. How did the children amuse themselves in the scrub? What frightened them the first night? What preparations did the searchers make? Why can blacks track better than white men? What signs were found? How long was it till the children were discovered? What do you think of Jane"s conduct? Why? Do you know any other stories about brave girls?

同类推荐
  • 英文爱藏:那一年,我们各奔东西

    英文爱藏:那一年,我们各奔东西

    学英语不再枯燥无味——吴文智编著的《那一年我们各奔东西》内文 篇目均取自国外最经典、最权威、最流行、最动人的篇章,中英双语,适 于诵读,提升阅读能力;学英语不再沉闷辛苦——优美的语言、深厚的情 感、地道的英文,让我们在阅读这些动人的绝美篇章时,不仅能够提升生 活质量,丰富人生内涵,更能够轻松提升英文领悟能力,体味英……
  • 从Hello到玩转英语

    从Hello到玩转英语

    本书从生活中最常用的英语短句到模拟场景会话,循序渐进。本书亮点在于常用短句大全,重点则在场景会话部分。场景会话部分包含135个模拟情景,每个情景后都附有欧美文化介绍。语言与文化同步学习,掌握最地道英语。
  • 那些温暖而美好的小事

    那些温暖而美好的小事

    或许你在经历一段美好的感情,或许你有好多珍藏的回忆。或许无关爱情无关友情无关亲情,只是来自陌生的霎时温柔。但那些事情,都曾触动你的心弦,在流年碎影里,让你嘴角上扬,相信美好。生活是一场又一场对美好事物的追逐。趁着年轻,制造比夏天还要温暖的事。本书汇集大量经典感人故事、哲理小文,感情纯真,内容温暖动人。用中英文对照的形式,呈现出人类最柔美的情感、最深刻的思考。内容积极健康,很适合青少年学习阅读。
  • 生活英语对答如流

    生活英语对答如流

    本书内容真实鲜活,围绕用餐、住宿、聊天、逛街、学习、理财、娱乐、爱情和情感等9个主题,提炼出生活中比较常见的61个话题,每个话题下又包含互动问答、高频精句、场景会话、金词放送和精彩片段等5个部分,内容丰富生动,旨在使读者开心地学习和使用英语口语。
  • 英汉·汉英餐饮分类词汇

    英汉·汉英餐饮分类词汇

    本词汇书分为英汉和汉英两大部分。英汉部分选材广泛,词汇内容贯穿餐饮烹饪过程的各个环节,汉英部分按照烹饪原料、烹饪加工、菜名、饮品、点心五部分进行编排,内容全面、实用。本书可供餐饮业从业人员、旅游业人士、食品专业学生及其他餐饮爱好者使用。
热门推荐
  • 创世重生之命运

    创世重生之命运

    一个从小受尽欺凌的孩子,没有父母的关爱,没有朋友关怀,在生活面前受尽挫折。一次机缘巧合的机会,让他从现实到达一个不可思议地方,受尽磨练的他再次回到现实时,一切的命运就从此改变了。
  • 通天丹医

    通天丹医

    21世纪最年轻的天才中医教授舒清歌,因误偿一棵神秘药草而亡,却不想灵魂穿越异世,投胎成为项家长房嫡长孙女项天歌;黑龙盖脸,形如恶鬼,从出生的一刻就被称作被诅咒的妖孽,人见人怕;六岁测试出她天生废体,无法修炼,更遭家族厌弃,从此人见人欺;爹爹纨绔,却宠女无度;娘亲柔弱,却严如良师,她却淡定自若,重拾前世才华,行医炼丹,暗建势力,护我亲人,保我尊严,在权力倾轧的项族和大武皇朝惬意生活。怕我、嘲我者,彻底无视;欺我、害我者,生不如死;一朝惊变,龙魂苏醒,炎火炼体,蜕胎换骨,而那神秘药草竟也随她穿越而来,从此之后,废物变天才,丑颜变绝色。本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。
  • 穿越归来:惟我倾城

    穿越归来:惟我倾城

    10年前她被继母推下悬崖,堕入一个必须不停完成任务才能不被抹杀的世界。10年后她回来了,回到了她被推下山崖的那天。携带异世界修成的炼金术,看她如何在这个修仙世界做出一番成就!欠我的十倍偿还,辱我的百倍讨回。当昔日的名门贵女褪去淑女柔肠,仙祈大陆从此走向一个无法预测的方向。法器坏了?看我大炼金术!丹药坏了?看我大炼金术!世人有云:所谓伊人,雄霸一方——
  • 无敌职业师

    无敌职业师

    一个普通的地球人,开挂玩地下城被电,魂穿异界成了个瞎子。谁说鬼剑士只会用剑?哥是阿修罗,只要完成任务得到技能书,地下城里所有职业技能我都能放。(本故事纯属虚构,请勿认真,认真你就输了。)
  • 枯杨生花

    枯杨生花

    大量地阅读优秀的文学作品,不仅能增长人的知识,也能丰富人的情感。文学的熏陶可使青少年加深对人生的意义、生命的价值的认识。而人文素质教育的目的在于陶冶学生的人文性情和高扬人文精神的理念。文学教学与人文素质教育切实可行的交汇之处,可以从文学作品的阅读开始。
  • 为君解罗裳:妖女倾天下

    为君解罗裳:妖女倾天下

    这东南国,谁人不知,谁人不晓,这要嫁的王爷,是传说中的暴君,杀人不眨眼,嗜血成狂的一个魔君的?圣旨一下,要千家的女儿嫁给东南国国的这个平南王爷,千家一听,仿佛是立马炸开了锅一样的,你不愿意去,我不愿意去,自然,就是由这个痴儿傻儿嫁过去了?
  • 极限狩猎者

    极限狩猎者

    当人类不再位于食物链的顶端,猎人还是猎物?选择权永远在自己的手中,传说中的黑龙,拥有永恒生命的古龙种,以及幻兽,真兽,无奇不有!看高三学生王琪如何在这片残酷的土地上成为王者,一段奇幻的旅程就此拉开序幕!
  • 轮回之符文重生

    轮回之符文重生

    是不是看惯了那些主角身为正义者最后战胜了邪恶的小说?还是说看厌了那些主角拯救世界的小说?一切,我都要说NO!这部小说,主角降临符文大陆就是为了杀戮,就是为了毁灭世界!跟着凌天大人,撕开那些神邸所谓正义的虚伪的面具吧!看一个善良的人究竟是如何变成一个十恶不赦的嗜血狂魔!对,你没有猜错,这符文大陆就是英雄联盟里的世界!
  • 盗墓奇檀

    盗墓奇檀

    年轻的泥鳅,看到同村的狗蛋通过盗墓发了财,便随着狗蛋踏上了盗墓这条路。这一次他们的目标在罗布泊……故事才刚刚开始,一场更大的阴谋正在向泥鳅逼近……罗布泊,百慕大,穿越时空的盒子,秦始皇……谁才是真正的幕后黑手……————————————————————————新书连载中,求收藏,求推荐!!!
  • 魔创之共鸣

    魔创之共鸣

    一部关于巫师的小说,故事和现实联系紧密。有魔法,但没有穿越;有强者,但没有无敌;有神灵,实质不过是文明的造物。多线叙事,参考《冰与火之歌》的POV写法,主线人物:郭行仁(身怀共振绝技的正义少年)、马腾跃(拥有“巫师杀手”之力的小资)、林尊豪(是拥有最强精神操控力的巫师之一,功利主义者,郭行仁好友,黑化分子)、梁乔月(拥有复活之力的热血基佬)PS:这是一部写给成人的魔幻/科幻小说,未成年人慎读!