Outline for Settling on the Land
I. Frame & Thesis
- Opens with a satirical observation: the “worst bore” in Australia is the man who rants about “getting people on the land.”
- Introduces Tom Hopkins, a man who actually tried it — and whose story disproves the romantic fantasy.
II. Tom’s Departure & Naïve Optimism
- Tom leaves a successful city trade believing he’ll prosper up‑country.
- Makes a promise to his sweetheart (who disappears from the narrative).
- Selects land at Dry Hole Creek and waits for surveyors who never come.
- Begins clearing and farming “at a venture.”
III. The Grubbing Ordeal
- Learns the brutal reality of clearing Australian bush:
- Enormous gum trees
- Flint‑hard taproots
- Stumps that resist every tool
- Attempts burning, digging, levering, and horse‑pulling — all failures.
- Breaks tools, chains, and his own patience.
IV. Early Sabotage & Hostility
- The local squatter becomes an adversary:
- Tom’s tent robbed
- Hut burned twice
- False charges of livestock theft
- Tom survives only because two Justices of the Peace are feuding.
V. Failed Crops & Natural Disasters
- First wheat crop fails due to poor soil.
- Tom hauls manure six miles, resows, and prays for rain.
- Rain comes as a flood:
- Washes away the crop
- Removes soil
- Deposits sand
- Carries off half a mile of fencing
VI. Livestock Misery
A. Dairy Attempt
- Buys cows; their eyes get infected.
- German neighbor Jacob advises alum treatment; Tom blinds himself temporarily.
- Cows develop udder problems; butter prices collapse.
B. Disease & Death
- Cows contract “plooro permoanyer.”
- Tom follows folk cures: ear‑slitting, tail‑cutting, nostril‑pouring “pain killer.”
- All cows die except the notorious fence‑jumping Queen Elizabeth, whom Tom shoots.
C. Horses
- Plough horses get “der shtranguls.”
- Jacob’s treatment kills them.
- Tom improvises a mismatched team; chaos ensues.
VII. Social Conflict & Violence
- Hires a dummy selector’s child to drive the team; the boy is insolent.
- Fight erupts between Tom, the dummy family, and their dogs.
- Tom barely survives.
VIII. Sheep Scheme & More Sabotage
- Good grass year: Tom buys sheep to fatten.
- Squatter stations men and dogs to drive sheep off Tom’s land and into pound traps.
- Tom’s dog is poisoned and dies.
- Tom retaliates; nephew is arrested for sheep‑stealing.
- Tom assaults the squatter and is jailed for six months.
IX. Final Collapse
- After release, Tom tries again:
- Fencing jobs
- Marries a “missus” who robs him and runs off with the dummy
- Cows die or are impounded
- Rents an orchard; hail destroys everything
- Jacob comforts him with wine and a cornet march after the storm.
X. The Last Blow
- Government surveyors finally arrive.
- Reveal Tom’s actual selection is barren land across the creek.
- Squatter seizes Tom’s improvements and sues him for £2500.
XI. Asylum & Aftermath
- Tom is admitted to the Parramatta asylum.
- Later, the squatter also ends up there after drought, rabbits, banks, and wool‑ring ruin him.
- The two become friends and debate schemes to dynamite open the “flood‑gates of Heaven.”
XII. Epilogue
- Tom is discharged.
- Seen wandering suburbs at night with a dray and lantern.
- Says his only regret is not being declared insane before he went up‑country.