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The Eureka Stockade

Chapter 4 No.4

Word Count: 822    |    Released on: 29/11/2017

Populum T

e not done yet with the

yself to keep coole

will certainly

r at the place of his work, whenever required, without compel

ces, was it not? Why therefore did not the diggers make it a half-holida

onist who knows our silver and gold lace; and is a wicke

oper answer through

14th;-he

e 'Ballaarat Times'

i

ight be afforded to the well disposed digger, who is willing to pay the odious tax demanded of him by government, and not be compelled to stand in the rain or sun, or treated as if the 'distinguished government official' feared that the digger was a thing that would c

ir, you

AH D

y he had worked hard for, and was kept a few hou

with the second question, provided I

y Order of the Bath, landed on the shores of this fair province, as its Lieutenant-Governor, the chosen and commissioned representative of Her Most Gracious Majesty, the QUEEN! Never (w

ORIA'S CHOICE, was the

is transcribed

xcellency's return to the camp, the miners busily employed themselves in laying down slabs to facilitate his progress. I was among the zealous ones who improvised this shabby foot-path. What a lack! we were all of us as cheerful as fighting-cocks.-A crab-hole being in the way, our Big-Larry

d with three-times-three,

five hundred blue shirts

addressed us min

eception-I shall not neglect your int

sh.' After giving three hearty cheers, old Briton's style to 'Charley,' the crowd dispersed to drink a nobbler t

Melbourne, receive the name of this applauded ruler

ber are bleeding from bayonet wounds; thirteen more have the rope round their necks, an

s precisement comme

t my black-stump, and then I wi

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