"<i>The Sundowner</i>."
1888. D. Macdonald, `Gum Boughs,' p. 32:
"When the real `sundowner' haunts these banks for a season, he is content with a black pannikin, a clasp knife, and a platter whittled out of primaeval bark."
1890. `The Argus,' Sept. 20, p. 13, col. 5:
"Sundowners are still the plague of squatocracy, their petition for `rashons' and a bed amounting to a demand."
1891. F. Adams, `John Webb's End,' p. 34:
"`Swagsmen' too, genuine, or only `sundowners,'—men who loaf about till sunset, and then come in with the demand for the unrefusable `rations.'"
1892. `Scribner's Magazine,' Feb., p. 143:
"They swell the noble army of swagmen or sundowners, who are chiefly the fearful human wrecks which the ebbing tide of mining industry has left stranded in Australia."
[This writer does not differentiate between <i>Swagman</i> (q.v.) and <i>Sundowner</i>.]