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Killing an Old Man


It was shortly after the opening of the great exhibition of 1851 that I set sail from England for the gold fields of New South Wales, with a heart brim full of hope and expectation, and pockets, boxes and portmanteaus made of sufficiently capacious dimensions to hold any amount of the precious metal (when found,) in addition to my somewhat scanty wardrobe. 

Well do I remember the packing of that black leather portmanteau, and the swallow-tailed coat that my mother would insist upon putting in, although, having a presentiment that such articles of apparel were not comme il faut at the gold fields, I vigorously resisted the measure. I also remember the many pairs of warm socks that had been manufactured with sisterly affection and gray worsted, by the five girls—from Julia the eldest, aged nineteen, down to Susan the youngest, just turned nine. Finally, I have a distinct memory of how my maiden aunt, on the strength of her sixteen stone weight, jumped upon the aforesaid portmanteau and performed a kind of war-dance thereon, so as to enable Tom the groom, and Mary the house-maid, to strap and lock it; and how, after many tears being shed by my father and mother, my brothers and sisters, and my maiden aunt in particular, I was whisked away to the railway station, in order to catch the 9.45 A. M. train for London. 

I will not dwell on the voyage out, because it was very much like other voyages. Suffice it to say that in just a hundred days we arrived at Sidney, the capital of New South Wales, and here I discovered that the favorite gold field of the day was at Ophir, near Bathurst, 145 miles up the country. Here some tremendous finds had lately been made, and people had been turning up nuggets like an Irishman shovels up potatoes. 

In due time, after a fortnight’s weary journey in an ox… Read More