Friday 25 October 2013

Jottings by Jetsam 1876 Henry Vale Leathem.

The Gundagai Times and Tumut, Adelong and Murrumbidgee District Advertiser NSW
Friday 30 June 1876

Jottings by Jetsam.

Down in Sydney it would seem as though we are preparing for a surprise— for what may come— for what will come, nothing surer if the programme embraces “Let slip the dogs of war.”

It is a remarkable sign of the times— of a common' impending fate— that the “lion shows a strong disposition to lie down with the lamb”;
for not one dissentient voice has yet been heard, even the 'mild' journals have been galvanised;
the key-note has been struck, and the tocsin of war is sounding in the metropolis; the cry everywhere is—

                            “Britannia hoists the warning—
                            “Against the storm prepare.”

Groups of excited men may be seen at the corners of streets discoursing fast and furious, and using gestures wild.

As for me, I was positively frightened this week by Sir Hercules Robinson’s statement at the recent University ceremonial.

His Excellency remarked that the colony of N.S.W. has a balance of thirteen millions of cash growing blue-mouldy in the banks and Treasury coffers, and that the colony has an annual sea-borne trade in merchandise valued at twenty-seven millions sterling.

Is this a time to 'blow' of our miss-used riches — our imports and exports?
Are we not inviting attacks to furnish, some, of the sinews of war?

Our do-nothing Ministry have certainly tried to get the sister colonies to join in the expense of laying down a second cable— and moreover, wildly invite them also to join in running' a fast steamer from Java to give us news from Europe at intervals of eleven days —

And so far this is good; but what on earth' do they mean by scratching up a few sand heaps across the Botany road?
Do they think an enemy will come that way!
The Enemy is within the gates already, and her name is Procrastination and Incompetence!

What is our best if it takes this direction? Now in your time, Messieurs of the Opposition, the day and the hour has come, shall the man be wanting?  

I hold that no reliance can be placed in the Robertson -cum-  Garrett cabinet, since they recommend as a Parliamentary argument the slinging about of empty bottles.' Borne burning —Nero fiddling. 

This country going to the dogs and the Premier talks of 'empty bottles,' thus metaphorically if not actually, drinking dry sillery and claret in the Refreshment room meanwhile.  

General U. S. Grant—now the American President — asked one of his aides de-camp for a piece of lead pencil in a dire emergency on the battle-field that he might write an order to one of his field-officers ; not one of the staff could furnish an inch of such a commodity; and Grant's dignified rebuke was:-

' Well, gentlemen, I want to open a bottle of whisky,' and each man produced a pocket corkscrew — the soft impeachment, you see, was admittedly right; so is John right. 
Empty bottles, was it?  Quite right, dear old boy, and very apropos.

No foreign iron-clad could come into Port Jackson, of course not, her captain would tremble at the thought of the 'powder-booms and torpedoes which are not there, nor would any modern officer try such a dare-devil game.

He would prefer sending a dignified message by boat or steam-launch (covered by open ports and grinning 600-pounders) that he required five or six of the blue-mouldy millions kept so handy, failing to receive which, he would have an afternoon's amusement in shelling the city, leaving en-route to pay a visit to all the ports from Twofold to Moreton Bays; we should soon hear that the fair city of Newcastle, and all the shipping found there, were in flames.

What about our boasted commerce then, without a ship from one end of our coastline to the other? 
And what precautions are we taking? Scratching up a little sand on the Botany road.' I had fondly hoped, till' now, that', 'Prevention is better than cure.' 
Let us sleep a little longer till the crash comes, and then cry, Pecavi! Pecavi.

A few booms and torpedoes 'might help us—but what matter?
The banks and merchant princes, too, seem still asleep. 
I hope the awakening will not be too rough. 

You know of the legacy my grandmother left me recently ; well, to soon as I hear of war being declared (perhaps sooner) I intend to take a spring cart around to my bank for the cash, with' a view to transferring my account.
Oh ! for the payment of M.P.'s ; what a chance I would have, in a country where all that is required is for—

                           ''Ministers to draw large salaries,
                            And to travel free in trains;
                           Singing hip! hip hurrah! for N.S. Wales.
                           'For she beats the world for brains! “

Go on, New South Wales, Viva La bagatelle.
                                                                                                     JETSAM. .


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