Bővebb ismertető
THE DROVER'S WIFE
The two-roomed house is built of round timber, slabs, and stringybark, and floored with split slabs. A big bark kitchen standing at one end is larger than the house itself, veranda included.
Bush all round—bush with no horizon, for the country is flat. No ranges in the distance. The bush consists of stunted, rotten native apple-trees. No undergrowth. Nothing to relieve the eye save the darker green of a few she-oaks which are sighing above the narrow, almost waterless creek. Nineteen miles to the nearest sign of civilization—a shanty on the main road.
The drover, an ex-squatter, is away with sheep. His wife and children are left here alone.
Four ragged, dried-up-looking children are playing about the house. Suddenly one of them yells: "Snake! Mother, here's a snake!"
The gaunt, sun-browned bushwoman dashes from the kitchen, snatches her baby from the ground, holds it on her left hip, and reaches for a stick.
"Where is it?"
"Here! gone into the woodheap!" yells the eldest boy —a sharp-faced urchin of eleven. "Stop there, mother! I'll have him. Stand back! I'll have the beggar!"
"Tomray, come here, or you'll be bit. Come here at once when I teli you, you little wretch!"
The youngster comes reluctantly, carrying a stick bigger than himself. Then he yells, triumphantly:
"There it goes—under the house!" and darts away with club unlifted. At the same time the big, black, yellow-eyed dog-of-all-breeds, who has shown the wildest