第34章 CHAPTER VIII(1)(1 / 3)

Taking up the Run--Hut within the Boundary--Land Regulations--Race to Christ Church--Contest for Priority of Application--Successful issue--Winds and their Effects--Their conflicting Currents--Sheep crossing the River.

There was a little hut on my run built by another person,and tenanted by his shepherd.G-had an application for 5,000acres in the same block of country with mine,and as the boundaries were uncertain until the whole was surveyed,and the runs definitely marked out on the Government maps,he had placed his hut upon a spot that turned out eventually not to belong to him.I had waited to see how the land was allotted before I took it up.Knowing the country well,and finding it allotted to my satisfaction,I made my bargain on the same day that the question was settled.I took a tracing from the Government map up with me,and we arrived on the run about a fortnight after the allotment.It was necessary for me to wait for this,or I might have made the same mistake which G-had done.His hut was placed where it was now of no use to him whatever,but on the very site on which I had myself intended to build.It is beyond all possibility of doubt upon my run;but G-is a very difficult man to deal with,and I have had a hard task to get rid of him.To allow him to remain where he was was not to be thought of:

but I was perfectly ready to pay him for his hut (such as it is)and his yard.Knowing him to be at P-'s,I set the men to their contract,and went down next day to see him and to offer him any compensation for the loss of his hut which a third party might arrange.I could do nothing with him;he threatened fiercely,and would hear no reason.My only remedy was to go down to Christ Church at once and buy the freehold of the site from the Government.