HIM.
CHAPTER I.
Why Nellie Shows Ned Round.
CHAPTER II.
Sweating In The Sydney Slums.
CHAPTER III.
Shorn Like Sheep.
CHAPTER IV.
Saturday Night In Paddy's Market.
CHAPTER V.
Were They Conspirators?
CHAPTER VI.
"We Have Seen The Dry Bones Become Men."
CHAPTER VII.
A Medley of Conversation.
CHAPTER VIII.
The Poet And The Pressman.
CHAPTER IX.
"This Is Socialism!"
CHAPTER X.
Where The Evil Really Lies.
CHAPTER XI.
"It Only Needs Enough Faith."
CHAPTER XII.
Love And Lust.
PART II. HE KNEW HIMSELF NAKED.
CHAPTER I.
The Slaughter Of An Innocent.
CHAPTER II.
On The Road To Queensland.
CHAPTER III.
A Woman's Whim.
CHAPTER IV.
The Why Of The Whim.
CHAPTER V.
As The Moon Waned.
CHAPTER VI.
Unemployed.
CHAPTER VII.
"The World Wants Masters."
CHAPTER VIII.
The Republican Kiss.
CHAPTER IX.
Ned Goes To His Fate.
"On the Flinders.
"In a western billabong, with a stretch of plain around, a dirty
waterhole beside me, I sat and read the WORKER. Maxwellton Station
was handy; and sick with a fever on me I crawled off my horse to the
shed on a Sunday. They invited me to supper; I was too ill. One gave
me medicine, another the WORKER, the cook gave me milk and soup.
If this is Unionism, God bless it! This is the moleskin charity, not the
squatter's dole. The manager gave me quinine, and this is a Union
station. I read 'Nellie's Sister' (from THE WORKINGMAN'S
PARADISE) in you last. A woman's tenderness pervades it. Its fiction
is truth. Although my feelings are blunted by a bush life, I dropped a
tear on that page of the WORKER."
--FROM A LETTER.
PART I.
THE WOMAN TEMPTED HIM.
* * * * *
Ah thy people, thy children, thy chosen, Marked cross from the womb
and perverse! They have found out the secret to cozen The gods that
constrain us and curse; They alone, they are wise, and none other; Give
me place, even me, in their train, O my sister, my spouse, and my
mother, Our Lady of Pain.--SWINBURNE.
THE WORKINGMAN'S PARADISE
CHAPTER I.
WHY NELLIE SHOWS NED ROUND.
Nellie was waiting for Ned, not in the best of humours.
"I suppose he'll get drunk to celebrate it," she was saying, energetically
drying the last cup with a corner of the damp cloth. "And I suppose she
feels as though it's something to be very glad and proud about."
"Well, Nellie," answered the woman who had been rinsing the
breakfast things, ignoring the first supposition. "One doesn't want them
to come, but when they do come one can't help feeling glad."
"Glad!" said Nellie, scornfully.
"If Joe was in steady work, I wouldn't mind how often it was. It's when
he loses his job and work so hard to get--" Here the speaker subsided in
tears.
"It's no use worrying," comforted Nellie, kindly. "He'll get another job
soon, I hope. He generally has pretty fair luck, you know."
"Yes, Joe has had pretty fair luck, so far. But nobody knows how long
it'll last. There's my brother wasn't out of work for fifteen years, and
now he hasn't done a stroke for twenty-three weeks come Tuesday. He's
going out of his mind."
"He'll get used to it," answered Nellie, grimly.
"How you do talk, Nellie!" said the other. "To hear you sometimes one
would think you hadn't any heart."
"I haven't any patience."
"That's true, my young gamecock!" exclaimed a somewhat discordant
voice. Nellie looked round, brightening suddenly.
A large slatternly woman stood in the back doorway, a woman who
might possibly have been a pretty girl once but whose passing charms
had long been utterly sponged out. A perceptible growth of hair lent a
somewhat repulsive appearance to a face which at best had a great deal
of the virago in it. Yet there was, in spite of her furrowed skin and
faded eyes and drab dress, an air of good-heartedness about her, made
somewhat ferocious by the muscularity of the arms that fell akimbo
upon her great hips, and by the strong teeth, white as those of a dog,
that flashed suddenly from between her colourless lips when she
laughed.
"That's true, my young gamecock!" she shouted, in a deep voice,
strangely cracked. "And so you're at your old tricks again, are you?
Talking sedition I'll be bound. I've half a mind to turn informer and
have the law on you. The dear lamb!" she added, to the other woman.
"Good morning, Mrs. Macanany," said Nellie, laughing. "We haven't
got yet so that we can't say what we like, here."
"I'm not so sure about that. Wait till you hear what I came to tell you,
hearing from little Jimmy that you were at home and going to have a
holiday
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