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diff --git a/3535-h/3535-h.htm b/3535-h/3535-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..582f896 --- /dev/null +++ b/3535-h/3535-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,3210 @@ +<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"> +<html> +<head> +<title>A Narrative of the Expedition to Botany Bay</title> +<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content= +"text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"> +<style type="text/css"> +<!-- +BODY { + BACKGROUND: #ffffcc; MARGIN: 10%; TEXT-ALIGN: justify +} +H1 { + COLOR: green; TEXT-ALIGN: center +} +H2 { + COLOR: green; TEXT-ALIGN: center +} +H3 { + COLOR: green; TEXT-ALIGN: center +} +H4 { + COLOR: black; TEXT-ALIGN: center +} +DL,OL,UL { text-align: left; line-height: 170%; } +--> +</style> +</head> +<body> + + +<pre> + +The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Narrative of the Expedition to Botany Bay, by +Watkin Tench + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: A Narrative of the Expedition to Botany Bay + +Author: Watkin Tench + +Release Date: May 8, 2006 [EBook #3535] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EXPEDITION TO BOTANY BAY *** + + + + +Produced by Col Choat and Stuart Kidd + + + + + +</pre> + +<h1>A Narrative of the Expedition to Botany Bay</h1> + +<h4>by</h4> + +<h2>Watkin Tench</h2> + +<hr> +<h3>Table of Contents</h3> + +<blockquote><a href="#int">INTRODUCTION</a></blockquote> + +<ol> +<li><a href="#1">From the Embarkation of the Convicts, to the +Departure of the Ships from England.</a></li> + +<li><a href="#2">From the Departure, to the Arrival of the Fleet +at Teneriffe.</a></li> + +<li><a href="#3">From the Fleet’s Arrival at Teneriffe, to +its Departure for Rio de Janeiro, in the Brazils.</a></li> + +<li><a href="#4">The Passage from Teneriffe to Rio de Janeiro, in +the Brazils.</a></li> + +<li><a href="#5">From the Arrival of the Fleet at Rio de Janeiro, +till its Departure for the Cape of Good Hope; with some Remarks +on the Brazils.</a></li> + +<li><a href="#6">The Passage from the Brazils to the Cape of Good +Hope; with an Account of the Transactions of the Fleet +there.</a></li> + +<li><a href="#7">The Passage from the Cape of Good Hope to Botany +Bay.</a></li> + +<li><a href="#8">From the Fleet’s Arrival at Botany Bay to +the Evacuation of it; and taking Possession of Port Jackson. +Interviews with the Natives; and an Account of the Country about +Botany Bay.</a></li> + +<li><a href="#9">The taking Possession of Port Jackson, with the +Disembarkation of the Marines and Convicts.</a></li> + +<li><a href="#10">The reading of the Commissions, and taking +Possession of the Settlement, in form. With an Account of the +Courts of Law, and Mode of administering Public Justice in this +Country.</a></li> + +<li><a href="#11">A Description of the Natives of New South +Wales, and our Transactions with them.</a></li> + +<li><a href="#12">The Departure of the French from Botany Bay; +and the Return of the ‘Supply’ from Norfolk Island; +with a Discovery made by Lieutenant Ball on his Passage to +it.</a></li> + +<li><a href="#13">Transactions at Port Jackson in the Months of +April and May.</a></li> + +<li><a href="#14">From the Beginning of June, to the Departure of +the Ships for Europe.</a></li> + +<li><a href="#15">The Face of the Country; its Productions, +Climate, &c.</a></li> + +<li><a href="#16">The Progress made in the Settlement; and the +Situation of Affairs at the Time of the Ship, which conveys this +Account, sailing for England.</a></li> + +<li><a href="#17">Some Thoughts on the Advantages which may arise +to the Mother Country from forming the Colony.</a></li> + +<li><a href="#app">A list of the Civil and Military +Establishments in New South Wales</a></li> +</ol> + +<blockquote><a href="#post">POSTSCRIPT</a></blockquote> + +<a name="int"></a> +<hr> +<h3>INTRODUCTION</h3> + +<p>In offering this little tract to the public, it is equally the +writer's wish to conduce to their amusement and information.</p> + +<p>The expedition on which he is engaged has excited much +curiosity, and given birth to many speculations, respecting the +consequences to arise from it. While men continue to think +freely, they will judge variously. Some have been sanguine enough +to foresee the most beneficial effects to the Parent State, from +the Colony we are endeavouring to establish; and some have not +been wanting to pronounce the scheme big with folly, impolicy, +and ruin. Which of these predictions will be completed, I leave +to the decision of the public. I cannot, however, dismiss the +subject without expressing a hope, that the candid and liberal of +each opinion, induced by the humane and benevolent intention in +which it originated, will unite in waiting the result of a fair +trial to an experiment, no less new in its design, than difficult +in its execution.</p> + +<p>As this publication enters the world with the name of the +author, candour will, he trusts, induce its readers to believe, +that no consideration could weigh with him in an endeavour to +mislead them. Facts are related simply as they happened, and when +opinions are hazarded, they are such as, he hopes, patient +inquiry, and deliberate decision, will be found to have +authorised. For the most part he has spoken from actual +observation; and in those places where the relations of others +have been unavoidably adopted. He has been careful to search for +the truth, and repress that spirit of exaggeration which is +almost ever the effect of novelty on ignorance.</p> + +<p>The nautical part of the work is comprized in as few pages as +possible. By the professional part of my readers this will be +deemed judicious; and the rest will not, I believe, be +dissatisfied at its brevity. I beg leave, however, to say of the +astronomical calculations, that they may be depended on with the +greatest degree of security, as they were communicated by an +officer, who was furnished with instruments, and commissioned by +the Board of Longitude, to make observations during the voyage, +and in the southern hemisphere.</p> + +<p>An unpractised writer is generally anxious to bespeak public +attention, and to solicit public indulgence. Except on +professional subjects, military men are, perhaps, too fearful of +critical censure. For the present narrative no other apology is +attempted, than the intentions of its author, who has endeavoured +not only to satisfy present curiosity, but to point out to future +adventurers, the favourable, as well as adverse circumstances +which will attend their settling here. The candid, it is hoped, +will overlook the inaccuracies of this imperfect sketch, drawn +amidst the complicated duties of the service in which the Author +is engaged, and make due allowance for the want of opportunity of +gaining more extensive information.</p> + +<p><em>Watkin Tench, Capt. of the Marines.</em></p> + +<p><em>Sydney Cove, Port Jackson, New South Wales, 10 July, +1788.</em></p> + +<a name="1"></a> +<hr> +<h3>CHAPTER I</h3> + +<h4>From the Embarkation of the Convicts, to the Departure of the +Ships from England.</h4> + +<p>The marines and convicts having been previously embarked in +the River, at Portsmouth, and Plymouth, the whole fleet destined +for the expedition rendezvoused at the Mother Bank, on the 16th +of March 1787, and remained there until the 13th of May +following. In this period, excepting a slight appearance of +contagion in one of the transports, the ships were universally +healthy, and the prisoners in high spirits. Few complaints or +lamentations were to be heard among them, and an ardent wish for +the hour of departure seemed generally to prevail.</p> + +<p>As the reputation, equally with the safety of the officers and +soldiers appointed to guard the convicts, consisted in +maintaining due subordination, an opportunity was taken, +immediately on their being embarked, to convince them, in the +most pointed terms, that any attempt on their side, either to +contest the command, or to force their escape, should be punished +with instant death; orders to this effect were given to the +centinels in their presence; happily, however, for all parties, +there occurred not any instance in which there was occasion to +have recourse to so desperate a measure; the behavior of the +convicts being in general humble, submissive, and regular: indeed +I should feel myself wanting in justice to those unfortunate men, +were I not to bear this public testimony of the sobriety and +decency of their conduct.</p> + +<p>Unpleasant as a state of inactivity and delay for many weeks +appeared to us, it was not without its advantages; for by means +of it we were enabled to establish necessary regulations among +the convicts, and to adopt such a system of defence, as left us +little to Apprehend for our own security, in case a spirit of +madness and desperation had hurried them on to attempt our +destruction.</p> + +<p>Among many other troublesome parts of duty which the service +we were engaged on required, the inspection of all letters +brought to, or sent from the ships, was not one of the least +tiresome and disagreeable. The number and contents of those in +the vessel I was embarked in, frequently surprised me very much; +they varied according to the dispositions of the writers: but +their constant language was, an apprehension of the +impracticability of returning home, the dread of a sickly +passage, and the fearful prospect of a distant and barbarous +country. But this apparent despondency proceeded in few instances +from sentiment. With too many it was, doubtless, an artifice to +awaken compassion, and call forth relief; the correspondence +invariably ending in a petition for money and tobacco. Perhaps a +want of the latter, which is considered a great luxury by its +admirers among the lower classes of life, might be the more +severely felt, from their being debarred in all cases whatever, +sickness excepted, the use of spirituous liquors.</p> + +<p>It may be thought proper for me to mention, that during our +stay at the Mother Bank, the soldiers and convicts were +indiscriminately served with fresh beef. The former, in addition, +had the usual quantity of beer allowed in the navy, and were at +what is called full allowance of all species of provisions; the +latter, at two thirds only.</p> + +<a name="2"></a> +<hr> +<h3>CHAPTER II.</h3> + +<h4>From the Departure, to the Arrival of the Fleet at +Teneriffe.</h4> + +<p>Governor Phillip having at length reached Portsmouth, and all +things deemed necessary for the expedition being put on board, at +daylight on the morning of the 13th, the signal to weigh anchor +was made in the Commanding Officer's ship the Sirius. Before six +o'clock the whole fleet were under sail; and, the weather being +fine and wind easterly, proceeded through the Needles with a +fresh leading breeze. In addition to our little armament, the +Hyena frigate was ordered to accompany us a certain distance to +the westward, by which means our number was increased to twelve +sail: His Majesty's ships 'Sirius', 'Hyena', and 'Supply', three +Victuallers with two years stores and provisions on board for the +Settlement, and six Transports, with troops and convicts. In the +transports were embarked four captains, twelve subalterns, +twenty-four serjeants and corporals, eight drummers, and one +hundred and sixty private marines, making the whole of the +military force, including the Major Commandant and Staff on board +the Sirius, to consist of two hundred and twelve persons, of whom +two hundred and ten were volunteers. The number of convicts was +five hundred and sixty-five men, one hundred and ninety-two +women, and eighteen children; the major part of the prisoners +were mechanics and husbandmen, selected on purpose by order of +Government.</p> + +<p>By ten o'clock we had got clear of the Isle of Wight, at which +time, having very little pleasure in conversing with my own +thoughts, I strolled down among the convicts, to observe their +sentiments at this juncture. A very few excepted, their +countenances indicated a high degree of satisfaction, though in +some, the pang of being severed, perhaps for ever, from their +native land, could not be wholly suppressed; in general, marks of +distress were more perceptible among the men than the women; for +I recollect to have seen but one of those affected on the +occasion, "Some natural tears she dropp'd, but wip'd them soon." +After this the accent of sorrow was no longer heard; more genial +skies and change of scene banished repining and discontent, and +introduced in their stead cheerfulness and acquiescence in a lot, +now not to be altered.</p> + +<p>To add to the good disposition which was beginning to manifest +itself, on the morning of the 20th, in consequence of some +favorable representations made by the officers commanding +detachments, they were hailed and told from the Sirius, that in +those cases where they judged it proper, they were at liberty to +release the convicts from the fetters in which they had been +hitherto confined. In complying with these directions, I had +great pleasure in being able to extend this humane order to the +whole of those under my charge, without a single exception. It is +hardly necessary for me to say, that the precaution of ironing +the convicts at any time reached to the men only.</p> + +<p>In the evening of the same day, the Hyena left us for England, +which afforded an early opportunity of writing to our friends, +and easing their apprehensions by a communication of the +favourable accounts it was in our power to send them.</p> + +<p>From this time to the day of our making the land, little +occurred worthy of remark. I cannot, however, help noticing the +propriety of employing the marines on a service which requires +activity and exertion at sea, in preference to other troops. Had +a regiment recruited since the war been sent out, sea-sickness +would have incapacitated half the men from performing the duties +immediately and indispensably necessary; whereas the marines, +from being accustomed to serve on board ship, accommodated +themselves with ease to every exigency, and surmounted every +difficulty.</p> + +<p>At daybreak, on the morning of the 30th of May we saw the +rocks named the Deserters, which lie off the south-east end of +Madeira; and found the south-east extremity of the most southerly +of them, to be in the latitude of 32 deg 28 min north, longitude +16 deg 17 1/2 min west of Greenwich. The following day we saw the +Salvages, a cluster of rocks which are placed between the +Madeiras and Canary Islands, and determined the latitude of the +middle of the Great Salvage to be 30 deg 12 min north, and the +longitude of its eastern side to be 15 deg 39 min west. It is no +less extraordinary than unpardonable, that in some very modern +charts of the Atlantic, published in London, the Salvages are +totally omitted.</p> + +<p>We made the island of Teneriffe on the 3d of June, and in the +evening anchored in the road of Santa Cruz, after an excellent +passage of three weeks from the day we left England.</p> + +<a name="3"></a> +<hr> +<h3>CHAPTER III.</h3> + +<h4>From the Fleet's Arrival at Teneriffe, to its Departure for +Rio de Janeiro, in the Brazils.</h4> + +<p>There is little to please a traveller at Teneriffe. He has +heard wonders of its celebrated Peak, but he may remain for weeks +together at the town of Santa Cruz without having a glimpse of +it, and when its cloud-topped head emerges, the chance is, that +he feels disappointed, for, from the point of view in which he +sees it, the neighbouring mountains lessen its effect very +considerably. Excepting the Peak, the eye receives little +pleasure from the general face of the country, which is sterile +and uninviting to the last degree. The town, however, from its +cheerful white appearance, contrasted with the dreary brownness +of the back ground, makes not an unpleasing coup d'oeil. It is +neither irregular in its plan, nor despicable in its style of +building; and the churches and religious houses are numerous, +sumptuous, and highly ornamented.</p> + +<p>The morning of our arrival, as many officers as could be +spared from the different ships were introduced to the Marquis de +Brancifort, Governor of the Canary Islands, whose reception was +highly flattering and polite. His Excellency is a Sicilian by +birth, and is most deservedly popular in his government. He +prefers residing at Teneriffe, for the conveniency of frequent +communication with Europe, to the Grand Canary, which is properly +the seat of power; and though not long fixed here, has already +found means to establish a manufactory in cotton, silk, and +thread, under excellent regulations, which employs more than +sixty persons, and is of infinite service to the common people. +During our short stay we had every day some fresh proof of his +Excellency's esteem and attention, and had the honour of dining +with him, in a style of equal elegance and splendor. At this +entertainment the profusion of ices which appeared in the desert +was surprising, considering that we were enjoying them under a +sun nearly vertical. But it seems the caverns of the Peak, very +far below its summit, afford, at all seasons, ice in +abundance.</p> + +<p>The restless importunity of the beggars, and the immodesty of +the lowest class of women, are highly disgusting. From the number +of his countrymen to be found, an Englishman is at no loss for +society. In the mercantile houses established here, it is from +gentlemen of this description that any information is derived, +for the taciturnity of the Spaniards is not to be overcome in a +short acquaintance, especially by Englishmen, whose reserve falls +little short of their own. The inland country is described as +fertile, and highly romantic; and the environs of the small town +of Laguza mentioned as particularly pleasant. Some of our +officers who made an excursion to it confirmed the account +amply.</p> + +<p>It should seem that the power of the Church, which has been so +long on the decline in Europe, is at length beginning to be +shaken in the colonies of the Catholic powers: some recent +instances which have taken place at Teneriffe, evince it very +fully. Were not a stranger, however, to be apprized of this, he +would hardly draw the conclusion from his own observations. The +Bishop of these islands, which conjunctively form a See, resides +on the Grand Canary. He is represented as a man in years, and of +a character as amiable as exalted, extremely beloved both by +foreigners and those of his own church. The bishopric is valued +at ten thousand pounds per annum; the government at somewhat less +than two.</p> + +<p>In spite of every precaution, while we lay at anchor in the +road, a convict had the address, one night, to secrete himself on +the deck, when the rest were turned below; and after remaining +quiet for some hours, let himself down over the bow of the ship, +and floated to a boat that lay astern, into which he got, and +cutting her adrift, suffered himself to be carried away by the +current, until at a sufficient distance to be out of hearing, +when he rowed off. This elopement was not discovered till some +hours after, when a search being made, and boats sent to the +different parts of the island, he was discovered in a small cove, +to which he had fled for refuge. On being questioned, it appeared +he had endeavoured to get himself received on board a Dutch East +Indiaman in the road; but being rejected there, he resolved on +crossing over to the Grand Canary, which is at the distance of +ten leagues, and when detected, was recruiting his strength in +order to make the attempt. At the same time that the boats of the +fleet were sent on this pursuit, information was given to the +Spanish Governor of what had happened, who immediately detached +parties every way in order to apprehend the delinquent.</p> + +<p>Having remained a week at Teneriffe, and in that time +completed our stock of water, and taken on board wine, &c. +early on the morning of the 10th of June we weighed anchor, and +stood out to sea with a light easterly breeze. The shortness of +our stay, and the consequent hurry, prevented our increasing much +any previous knowledge we might have had of the place. For the +information of those who may follow us on this service, it may +not, however, be amiss to state the little that will be found of +use to them.</p> + +<p>The markets afford fresh meat, though it is neither plentiful +nor good. Fish is scarce; but poultry may be procured in almost +any quantity, at as cheap a rate as in the English sea-ports. +Vegetables do not abound, except pumpkins and onions, of which I +advise all ships to lay in a large stock. Milch goats are bought +for a trifle, and easily procured. Grapes cannot be scarce in +their season; but when we were here, except figs and excellent +mulberries, no fruit was to be procured. Dry wines, as the +merchants term them, are sold from ten to fifteen pounds a pipe; +for the latter price, the very best, called the London +Particular, may be bought: sweet wines are considerably dearer. +Brandy is also a cheap article. I would not advise the voyager to +depend on this place for either his hogs or sheep. And he will do +well to supply himself with dollars before he quits England, to +expend in the different ports he may happen to touch at. Should +he, however, have neglected this precaution, let him remember +when he discounts bills, or exchanges English money here, not to +receive his returns in quarter dollars, which will be tendered to +him, but altogether in whole ones, as he will find the latter +turn to better account than the former, both at Rio de Janeiro +and the Cape of Good Hope.</p> + +<p>The latitude of the town of Santa Cruz is 28 deg 27 1/2 min +north, the longitude 16 deg 17 1/2 min west of Greenwich.</p> + +<a name="4"></a> +<hr> +<h3>CHAPTER IV.</h3> + +<h4>The Passage from Teneriffe to Rio de Janeiro, in the +Brazils.</h4> + +<p>In sailing from Teneriffe to the south-east, the various and +picturesque appearances of the Peak are beautiful to the highest +degree. The stupendous height, which before was lost on the +traveller, now strikes him with awe and admiration, the whole +island appearing one vast mountain with a pyramidal top. As we +proceeded with light winds, at an easy rate, we saw it distinctly +for three days after our departure, and should have continued to +see it longer, had not the haziness of the atmosphere interrupted +our view. The good people of Santa Cruz tell some stories of the +wonderful extent of space to be seen from the summit of it, that +would not disgrace the memoirs of the ever-memorable Baron +Munchausen.</p> + +<p>On the 18th of June we saw the most northerly of the Cape de +Verd Islands, at which time the Commodore gave the fleet to +understand, by signal, that his intention was to touch at some of +them. The following day we made St. Jago, and stood in to gain an +anchorage in Port Praya Bay. But the baffling winds and lee +current rendering it a matter of doubt whether or not the ships +would be able to fetch, the signal for anchoring was hauled down, +and the fleet bore up before the wind. In passing along them we +were enabled to ascertain the south end of the Isle of Sal to be +in 16 deg 40 min north latitude, and 23 deg 5 min west longitude. +The south end of Bonavista to be in 15 deg 57 min north, 23 deg 8 +min west. The south end of the Isle of May in 15 deg 11 min +north, 23 deg 26 min west; and the longitude of the fort, in the +town of Port Praya, to be 23 deg 36 1/2 min west of +Greenwich.</p> + +<p>By this time the weather, from the sun being so far advanced +in the northern tropic, was become intolerably hot, which, joined +to the heavy rains that soon after came on, made us very +apprehensive for the health of the fleet. Contrary, however, to +expectation, the number of sick in the ship I was embarked on was +surprisingly small, and the rest of the fleet were nearly as +healthy. Frequent explosions of gunpowder, lighting fires between +decks, and a liberal use of that admirable antiseptic, oil of +tar, were the preventives we made use of against impure air; and +above all things we were careful to keep the men's bedding and +wearing apparel dry. As we advanced towards the Line, the weather +grew gradually better and more pleasant. On the 14th of July we +passed the Equator, at which time the atmosphere was as serene, +and the temperature of the air not hotter than in a bright summer +day in England. From this period, until our arrival on the +American coast, the heats, the calms, and the rains by which we +had been so much incommoded, were succeeded by a series of +weather as delightful as it was unlooked for. At three o'clock in +the afternoon of the 2nd of August, the 'Supply', which had been +previously sent a-head on purpose, made the signal for seeing the +land, which was visible to the whole fleet before sunset, and +proved to be Cape Frio, in latitude 23 deg 5 min south, longitude +41 deg 40 1/4 min west.</p> + +<p>Owing to light airs we did not get a-breast of the city of St. +Sebastian, in the harbour of Rio de Janeiro, until the 7th of the +month, when we anchored about three quarters of a mile from the +shore.</p> + +<a name="5"></a> +<hr> +<h3>CHAPTER V.</h3> + +<h4>From the Arrival of the Fleet at Rio de Janeiro, till its +Departure for the Cape of Good Hope; with some Remarks on the +Brazils.</h4> + +<p>Brazil is a country very imperfectly known in Europe. The +Portugueze, from political motives, have been sparing in their +accounts of it. Whence our descriptions of it, in the +geographical publications in England, are drawn, I know not: that +they are miserably erroneous and defective, is certain.</p> + +<p>The city of St. Sebastian stands on the west side of the +harbour, in a low unhealthy situation, surrounded on all sides by +hills, which stop the free circulation of air, and subject its +inhabitants to intermittents and putrid diseases. It is of +considerable extent: Mr. Cook makes it as large as Liverpool; but +Liverpool, in 1767, when Mr. Cook wrote, was not two-thirds of +its present size. Perhaps it equals Chester, or Exeter, in the +share of ground it occupies, and is infinitely more populous than +either of them. The streets intersect each other at right angles, +are tolerably well built, and excellently paved, abounding with +shops of every kind, in which the wants of a stranger, if money +is not one of them, can hardly remain unsatisfied. About the +centre of the city, and at a little distance from the beach, the +Palace of the Viceroy stands, a long, low building, no wise +remarkable in its exterior appearance; though within are some +spacious and handsome apartments. The churches and convents are +numerous, and richly decorated; hardly a night passes without +some of the latter being illuminated in honour of their patron +saints, which has a very brilliant effect when viewed from the +water, and was at first mistaken by us for public rejoicings. At +the corner of almost every street stands a little image of the +Virgin, stuck round with lights in an evening, before which +passengers frequently stop to pray and sing very loudly. Indeed, +the height to which religious zeal is carried in this place, +cannot fail of creating astonishment in a stranger. The greatest +part of the inhabitants seem to have no other occupation, than +that of paying visits and going to church, at which times you see +them sally forth richly dressed, en chapeau bras, with the +appendages of a bag for the hair, and a small sword: even boys of +six years old are seen parading about, furnished with these +indispensable requisites. Except when at their devotions, it is +not easy to get a sight of the women, and when obtained, the +comparisons drawn by a traveller, lately arrived from England, +are little flattering to Portugueze beauty. In justice, however, +to the ladies of St. Sebastian, I must observe, that the custom +of throwing nosegays at strangers, for the purpose of bringing on +an assignation, which Doctor Solander, and another gentleman of +Mr. Cook's ship, met with when here, was never seen by any of us +in a single instance. We were so deplorably unfortunate as to +walk every evening before their windows and balconies, without +being honoured with a single bouquet, though nymphs and flowers +were in equal and great abundance.</p> + +<p>Among other public buildings, I had almost forgot to mention +an observatory, which stands near the middle of the town, and is +tolerably well furnished with astronomical instruments. During +our stay here, some Spanish and Portuguese mathematicians were +endeavouring to determine the boundaries of the territories +belonging to their respective crowns. Unhappily, however, for the +cause of science, these gentleman have not hitherto been able to +coincide in their accounts, so that very little information on +this head, to be depended upon, could be gained. How far +political motives may have caused this disagreement, I do not +presume to decide; though it deserves notice, that the Portuguese +accuse the Abbee de la Caille, who observed here by order of the +King of France, of having laid down the longitude of this place +forty-five miles too much to the eastward.</p> + +<p>Until the year 1770, all the flour in the settlement was +brought from Europe; but since that time the inhabitants have +made so rapid a progress in raising grain, as to be able to +supply themselves with it abundantly. The principal corn country +lies around Rio Grande, in the latitude of 32 deg south, where +wheat flourishes so luxuriantly, as to yield from seventy to +eighty bushels for one. Coffee also, which they formerly received +from Portugal, now grows in such plenty as to enable them to +export considerable quantities of it. But the staple commodity of +the country is sugar. That they have not, however, learnt the art +of making palatable rum, the English troops in New South Wales +can bear testimony; a large quantity, very ill flavoured, having +been bought and shipped here for the use of the garrison of Port +Jackson.</p> + +<p>It was in 1771 that St. Salvador, which had for more than a +century been the capital of Brazil, ceased to be so; and that the +seat of Government was removed to St. Sebastian. The change took +place on account of the colonial war, at that time carried on by +the Courts of Lisbon and Madrid. And, indeed, were the object of +security alone to determine the seat of Government, I know but +few places better situated in that respect than the one I am +describing; the natural strength of the country, joined to the +difficulties which would attend an attack on the fortifications, +being such as to render it very formidable.</p> + +<p>It may be presumed that the Portuguese Government is well +apprized of this circumstance and of the little risque they run +in being deprived of so important a possession, else it will not +be easy to penetrate the reasons which induce them to treat the +troops who compose the garrison with such cruel negligence. Their +regiments were ordered out with a promise of being relieved, and +sent back to Europe at the end of three years, in conformity to +which they settled all their domestic arrangements. But the faith +of Government has been broken, and at the expiration of twenty +years, all that is left to the remnant of these unfortunate men, +is to suffer in submissive silence. I was one evening walking +with a Portuguese officer, when this subject was started, and on +my telling him, that such a breach of public honour to English +troops would become a subject of parliamentary enquiry, he seized +my hand with great eagerness, "Ah, Sir!" exclaimed he, "yours is +a free country--we"!--His emotions spoke what his tongue +refused.</p> + +<p>As I am mentioning the army, I cannot help observing, that I +saw nothing here to confirm the remark of Mr. Cook, that the +inhabitants of the place, whenever they meet an officer of the +garrison, bow to him with the greatest obsequiousness; and by +omitting such a ceremony, would subject themselves to be knocked +down, though the other seldom deigns to return the compliment. +The interchange of civilities is general between them, and seems +by no means extorted. The people who could submit to such +insolent superiority, would, indeed, deserve to be treated as +slaves.</p> + +<p>The police of the city is very good. Soldiers patrole the +streets frequently, and riots are seldom heard of. The dreadful +custom of stabbing, from motives of private resentment, is nearly +at an end, since the church has ceased to afford an asylum to +murderers. In other respects, the progress of improvement appears +slow, and fettered by obstacles almost insurmountable, whose +baneful influence will continue, until a more enlightened system +of policy shall be adopted. From morning to night the ears of a +stranger are greeted by the tinkling of the convent bells, and +his eyes saluted by processions of devotees, whose adoration and +levity seem to keep equal pace, and succeed each other in turns. +"Do you want to make your son sick of soldiering? Shew him the +Trainbands of London on a field-day." Let him who would wish to +give his son a distaste to Popery, point out to him the sloth, +the ignorance, and the bigotry of this place.</p> + +<p>Being nearly ready to depart by the 1st of September, as many +officers as possible went on that day to the palace to take leave +of his Excellency, the Viceroy of the Brazils, to whom we had +been previously introduced; who on this, and every other +occasion, was pleased to honour us with the most distinguished +marks of regard and attention. Some part, indeed, of the numerous +indulgencies we experienced during our stay here, must doubtless +be attributed to the high respect in which the Portuguese held +Governor Phillip, who was for many years a captain in their navy, +and commanded a ship of war on this station: in consequence of +which, many privileges were extended to us, very unusual to be +granted to strangers. We were allowed the liberty of making short +excursions into the country, and on these occasions, as well as +when walking in the city, the mortifying custom of having an +officer of the garrison attending us was dispensed with on our +leaving our names and ranks, at the time of landing, with the +adjutant of orders at the palace. It happened, however, +sometimes, that the presence of a military man was necessary to +prevent imposition in the shopkeepers, who frequently made a +practice of asking more for their goods than the worth of them. +In which case an officer, when applied to, always told us the +usual price of the commodity with the greatest readiness, and +adjusted the terms of the purchase.</p> + +<p>On the morning of the fourth of September we left Rio de +Janeiro, amply furnished with the good things which its happy +soil and clime so abundantly produce. The future voyager may with +security depend on this place for laying in many parts of his +stock. Among these may be enumerated sugar, coffee, rum, port +wine, rice, tapioca, and tobacco, besides very beautiful wood for +the purposes of household furniture. Poultry is not remarkably +cheap, but may be procured in any quantity; as may hops at a low +rate. The markets are well supplied with butcher's meat, and +vegetables of every sort are to be procured at a price next to +nothing; the yams are particularly excellent. Oranges abound so +much, as to be sold for sixpence a hundred; and limes are to be +had on terms equally moderate. Bananas, cocoa nuts, and guavas, +are common; but the few pineapples brought to market are not +remarkable either for flavour, or cheapness. Besides the +inducements to lay out money already mentioned, the naturalist +may add to his collection by an almost endless variety of +beautiful birds and curious insects, which are to be bought at a +reasonable price, well preserved, and neatly assorted.</p> + +<p>I shall close my account of this place by informing strangers, +who may come here, that the Portuguese reckon their money in +rees, an imaginary coin, twenty of which make a small copper +piece called a 'vintin', and sixteen of these last a 'petack'. +Every piece is marked with the number of rees it is worth, so +that a mistake can hardly happen. English silver coin has lost +its reputation here, and dollars will be found preferable to any +other money.</p> + +<a name="6"></a> +<hr> +<h3>CHAPTER VI.</h3> + +<h4>The Passage from the Brazils to the Cape of Good Hope; with +an Account of the Transactions of the Fleet there.</h4> + +<p>Our passage from Rio de Janeiro to the Cape of Good Hope was +equally prosperous with that which had preceded it. We steered +away to the south-east, and lost sight of the American coast the +day after our departure. From this time until the 13th of +October, when we made the Cape, nothing remarkable occurred, +except the loss of a convict in the ship I was on board, who +unfortunately fell into the sea, and perished in spite of our +efforts to save him, by cutting adrift a life buoy and hoisting +out a boat. During the passage, a slight dysentery prevailed in +some of the ships, but was in no instance mortal. We were at +first inclined to impute it to the water we took on board at the +Brazils, but as the effect was very partial, some other cause was +more probably the occasion of it.</p> + +<p>At seven o'clock in the evening of the 13th of October, we +cast anchor in Table Bay, and found many ships of different +nations in the harbour.</p> + +<p>Little can be added to the many accounts already published of +the Cape of Good Hope, though, if an opinion on the subject might +be risqued, the descriptions they contain are too flattering. +When contrasted with Rio de Janeiro, it certainly suffers in the +comparison. Indeed we arrived at a time equally unfavourable for +judging of the produce of the soil and the temper of its +cultivators, who had suffered considerably from a dearth that had +happened the preceding season, and created a general scarcity. +Nor was the chagrin of these deprivations lessened by the news +daily arriving of the convulsions that shook the republic, which +could not fail to make an impression even on Batavian phlegm.</p> + +<p>As a considerable quantity of flour, and the principal part of +the live stock, which was to store our intended settlement, were +meant to be procured here, Governor Phillip lost no time in +waiting on Mynheer Van Graaffe, the Dutch Governor, to request +permission (according to the custom of the place) to purchase all +that we stood in need of. How far the demand extended, I know +not, nor Mynheer Van Graaffe's reasons for complying with it in +part only. To this gentleman's political sentiments I confess +myself a stranger; though I should do his politeness and +liberality at his own table an injustice, were I not to take this +public opportunity of acknowledging them; nor can I resist the +opportunity which presents itself, to inform my readers, in honor +of M. Van Graaffe's humanity, that he has made repeated efforts +to recover the unfortunate remains of the crew of the Grosvenor +Indiaman, which was wrecked about five years ago on the coast of +Caffraria. This information was given me by Colonel Gordon, +commandant of the Dutch troops at the Cape, whose knowledge of +the interior parts of this country surpasses that of any other +man. And I am sorry to say that the Colonel added, these unhappy +people were irrecoverably lost to the world and their friends, by +being detained among the Caffres, the most savage set of brutes +on earth.</p> + +<p>His Excellency resides at the Government house, in the East +India Company's garden. This last is of considerable extent, and +is planted chiefly with vegetables for the Dutch Indiamen which +may happen to touch at the port. Some of the walks are extremely +pleasant from the shade they afford, and the whole garden is very +neatly kept. The regular lines intersecting each other at right +angles, in which it is laid out, will, nevertheless, afford but +little gratification to an Englishman, who has been used to +contemplate the natural style which distinguishes the pleasure +grounds of his own country. At the head of the centre walks +stands a menagerie, on which, as well as the garden, many pompous +eulogiums have been passed, though in my own judgment, +considering the local advantages possessed by the Company, it is +poorly furnished both with animals and birds; a tyger, a zebra, +some fine ostriches, a cassowary, and the lovely crown-fowl, are +among the most remarkable.</p> + +<p>The table land, which stands at the back of the town, is a +black dreary looking mountain, apparently flat at top, and of +more than eleven hundred yards in height. The gusts of wind which +blow from it are violent to an excess, and have a very unpleasant +effect, by raising the dust in such clouds, as to render stirring +out of doors next to impossible. Nor can any precaution prevent +the inhabitants from being annoyed by it, as much within doors as +without.</p> + +<p>At length the wished-for day, on which the next effort for +reaching the place of our destination was to be made, appeared. +The morning was calm, but the land wind getting up about noon, on +the 12th of November we weighed anchor, and soon left far behind +every scene of civilization and humanized manners, to explore a +remote and barbarous land; and plant in it those happy arts, +which alone constitute the pre-eminence and dignity of other +countries.</p> + +<p>The live animals we took on board on the public account from +the Cape, for stocking our projected colony, were, two bulls, +three cows, three horses, forty-four sheep, and thirty-two hogs, +besides goats, and a very large quantity of poultry of every +kind. A considerable addition to this was made by the private +stocks of the officers, who were, however, under a necessity of +circumscribing their original intentions on this head very much, +from the excessive dearness of many of the articles. It will +readily be believed, that few of the military found it convenient +to purchase sheep, when hay to feed them costs sixteen shillings +a hundred weight.</p> + +<p>The boarding-houses on shore, to which strangers have +recourse, are more reasonable than might be expected. For a +dollar and a half per day we were well lodged, and partook of a +table tolerably supplied in the French style. Should a +traveller's stock of tea run short, it is a thousand chances to +one that he will be able to replenish it here at a cheaper rate +than in England. He may procure plenty of arrack and white wine; +also raisins, and dried fruits of other sorts. If he dislikes to +live at a boarding-house, he will find the markets well stored, +and the price of butcher's meat and vegetables far from +excessive.</p> + +<p>Just before the signal for weighing was made, a ship, under +American colours, entered the road, bound from Boston, from +whence she had sailed one hundred and forty days, on a trading +voyage to the East Indies. In her route, she had been lucky +enough to pick up several of the inferior officers and crew of +the Harcourt East-Indiaman, which ship had been wrecked on one of +the Cape de Verd Islands. The master, who appeared to be a man of +some information, on being told the destination of our fleet, +gave it as his opinion, that if a reception could be secured, +emigrations would take place to New South Wales, not only from +the old continent, but the new one, where the spirit of adventure +and thirst for novelty were excessive.</p> + +<a name="7"></a> +<hr> +<h3>CHAPTER VII.</h3> + +<h4>The Passage from the Cape of Good Hope to Botany Bay.</h4> + +<p>We had hardly cleared the land when a south-east wind set in, +and, except at short intervals, continued to blow until the 19th +of the month; when we were in the latitude of 37 deg 40 min +south, and by the time-keeper, in longitude 11 deg 30 min east, +so that our distance from Botany Bay had increased nearly an +hundred leagues since leaving the Cape. As no appearance of a +change in our favour seemed likely to take place, Governor +Phillip at this time signified his intention of shifting his +pennant from the Sirius to the 'Supply', and proceeding on his +voyage without waiting for the rest of the fleet, which was +formed in two divisions. The first consisting of three +transports, known to be the best sailors, was put under the +command of a Lieutenant of the navy; and the remaining three, +with the victuallers, left in charge of Captain Hunter, of his +Majesty's ship Sirius. In the last division was the vessel, in +which the author of this narrative served. Various causes +prevented the separation from taking place until the 25th, when +several sawyers, carpenters, blacksmiths, and other mechanics, +were shifted from different ships into the 'Supply', in order to +facilitate his Excellency's intention of forwarding the necessary +buildings to be erected at Botany Bay, by the time the rest of +the fleet might be expected to arrive. Lieutenant Governor Ross, +and the Staff of the marine battalion, also removed from the +Sirius into the Scarborough transport, one of the ships of the +first division, in order to afford every assistance which the +public service might receive, by their being early on the spot on +which our future operations were to be conducted.</p> + +<p>From this time a succession of fair winds and pleasant weather +corresponded to our eager desires, and on the 7th of January, +1788, the long wished for shore of Van Diemen gratified our +sight. We made the land at two o'clock in the afternoon, the very +hour we expected to see it from the lunar observations of Captain +Hunter, whose accuracy, as an astronomer, and conduct as an +officer, had inspired us with equal gratitude and admiration.</p> + +<p>After so long a confinement, on a service so peculiarly +disgusting and troublesome, it cannot be matter of surprise that +we were overjoyed at the near prospect of a change of scene. By +sunset we had passed between the rocks, which Captain Furneaux +named the Mewstone and Swilly. The former bears a very close +resemblance to the little island near Plymouth, whence it took +its name: its latitude is 43 deg 48 min south, longitude 146 deg +25 min east of Greenwich.</p> + +<p>In running along shore, we cast many an anxious eye towards +the land, on which so much of our future destiny depended. Our +distance, joined to the haziness of the atmosphere, prevented us, +however, from being able to discover much. With our best glasses +we could see nothing but hills of a moderate height, cloathed +with trees, to which some little patches of white sandstone gave +the appearance of being covered with snow. Many fires were +observed on the hills in the evening.</p> + +<p>As no person in the ship I was on board had been on this coast +before, we consulted a little chart, published by Steele, of the +Minories, London, and found it, in general, very correct; it +would be more so, were not the Mewstone laid down at too great a +distance from the land, and one object made of the Eddystone and +Swilly, when, in fact, they are distinct. Between the two last is +an entire bed of impassable rocks, many of them above water. The +latitude of the Eddystone is 43 deg 53 1/2 min, longitude 147 deg +9 min; that of Swilly 43 deg 54 min south, longitude 147 deg 3 +min east of Greenwich.</p> + +<p>In the night the westerly wind, which had so long befriended +us, died away, and was succeeded by one from the north-east. When +day appeared we had lost sight of the land, and did not regain it +until the 19th, at only the distance of 17 leagues from our +desired port. The wind was now fair, the sky serene, though a +little hazy, and the temperature of the air delightfully +pleasant: joy sparkled in every countenance, and congratulations +issued from every mouth. Ithaca itself was scarcely more longed +for by Ulysses, than Botany Bay by the adventurers who had +traversed so many thousand miles to take possession of it.</p> + +<p>"Heavily in clouds came on the day" which ushered in our +arrival. To us it was "a great, an important day," though I hope +the foundation, not the fall, of an empire will be dated from +it.</p> + +<p>On the morning of the 20th, by ten o'clock, the whole of the +fleet had cast anchor in Botany Bay, where, to our mutual +satisfaction, we found the Governor, and the first division of +transports. On inquiry, we heard, that the 'Supply' had arrived +on the 18th, and the transports only the preceding day.</p> + +<p>Thus, after a passage of exactly thirty-six weeks from +Portsmouth, we happily effected our arduous undertaking, with +such a train of unexampled blessings as hardly ever attended a +fleet in a like predicament. Of two hundred and twelve marines we +lost only one; and of seven hundred and seventy-five convicts, +put on board in England, but twenty-four perished in our route. +To what cause are we to attribute this unhoped for success? I +wish I could answer to the liberal manner in which Government +supplied the expedition. But when the reader is told, that some +of the necessary articles allowed to ships on a common passage to +West Indies, were withheld from us; that portable soup, wheat, +and pickled vegetables were not allowed; and that an inadequate +quantity of essence of malt was the only antiscorbutic supplied, +his surprise will redouble at the result of the voyage. For it +must be remembered, that the people thus sent out were not a +ship's company starting with every advantage of health and good +living, which a state of freedom produces; but the major part a +miserable set of convicts, emaciated from confinement, and in +want of cloaths, and almost every convenience to render so long a +passage tolerable. I beg leave, however, to say, that the +provisions served on board were good, and of a much superior +quality to those usually supplied by contract: they were +furnished by Mr. Richards, junior, of Walworth, Surrey.</p> + +<a name="8"></a> +<hr> +<h3>CHAPTER VIII.</h3> + +<h4>From the Fleet's Arrival at Botany Bay to the Evacuation of +it; and taking Possession of Port Jackson. Interviews with the +Natives; and an Account of the Country about Botany Bay.</h4> + +<p>We had scarcely bid each other welcome on our arrival, when an +expedition up the Bay was undertaken by the Governor and +Lieutenant-Governor, in order to explore the nature of the +country, and fix on a spot to begin our operations upon. None, +however, which could be deemed very eligible, being discovered, +his Excellency proceeded in a boat to examine the opening, to +which Mr. Cook had given the name of Port Jackson, on an idea +that a shelter for shipping within it might be found. The boat +returned on the evening of the 23rd, with such an account of the +harbour and advantages attending the place, that it was +determined the evacuation of Botany Bay should commence the next +morning.</p> + +<p>In consequence of this decision, the few seamen and marines +who had been landed from the squadron, were instantly reimbarked, +and every preparation made to bid adieu to a port which had so +long been the subject of our conversation; which but three days +before we had entered with so many sentiments of satisfaction; +and in which, as we had believed, so many of our future hours +were to be passed. The thoughts of removal banished sleep, so +that I rose at the first dawn of the morning. But judge of my +surprize on hearing from a serjeant, who ran down almost +breathless to the cabin where I was dressing, that a ship was +seen off the harbour's mouth. At first I only laughed, but +knowing the man who spoke to me to be of great veracity, and +hearing him repeat his information, I flew upon deck, on which I +had barely set my foot, when the cry of "another sail" struck on +my astonished ear.</p> + +<p>Confounded by a thousand ideas which arose in my mind in an +instant, I sprang upon the barricado and plainly descried two +ships of considerable size, standing in for the mouth of the Bay. +By this time the alarm had become general, and every one appeared +lost in conjecture. Now they were Dutchmen sent to dispossess us, +and the moment after storeships from England, with supplies for +the settlement. The improbabilities which attended both these +conclusions, were sunk in the agitation of the moment. It was by +Governor Phillip, that this mystery was at length unravelled, and +the cause of the alarm pronounced to be two French ships, which, +it was now recollected, were on a voyage of discovery in the +southern hemisphere. Thus were our doubts cleared up, and our +apprehensions banished; it was, however, judged expedient to +postpone our removal to Port Jackson, until a complete +confirmation of our conjectures could be procured.</p> + +<p>Had the sea breeze set in, the strange ships would have been +at anchor in the Bay by eight o'clock in the morning, but the +wind blowing out, they were driven by a strong lee current to the +southward of the port. On the following day they re-appeared in +their former situation, and a boat was sent to them, with a +lieutenant of the navy in her, to offer assistance, and point out +the necessary marks for entering the harbour. In the course of +the day the officer returned, and brought intelligence that the +ships were the Boussole and Astrolabe, sent out by order of the +King of France, and under the command of Monsieur De Perrouse. +The astonishment of the French at seeing us, had not equalled +that we had experienced, for it appeared, that in the course of +their voyage they had touched at Kamschatka, and by that means +learnt that our expedition was in contemplation. They dropped +anchor the next morning, just as we had got under weigh to work +out of the Bay, so that for the present nothing more than +salutations could pass between us.</p> + +<p>Before I quit Botany Bay, I shall relate the observations we +were enabled to make during our short stay there; as well as +those which our subsequent visits to it from Port Jackson enabled +us to complete.</p> + +<p>The Bay is very open, and greatly exposed to the fury of the +S.E. winds, which, when they blow, cause a heavy and dangerous +swell. It is of prodigious extent, the principal arm, which takes +a S.W. direction, being not less, including its windings, than +twenty four miles from the capes which form the entrance, +according to the report of the French officers, who took uncommon +pains to survey it. At the distance of a league from the +harbour's mouth is a bar, on which at low water, not more than +fifteen feet are to be found. Within this bar, for many miles up +the S.W. arm, is a haven, equal in every respect to any hitherto +known, and in which any number of ships might anchor, secured +from all winds. The country around far exceeds in richness of +soil that about Cape Banks and Point Solander, though +unfortunately they resemble each other in one respect, a scarcity +of fresh water.</p> + +<p>We found the natives tolerably numerous as we advanced up the +river, and even at the harbour's mouth we had reason to conclude +the country more populous than Mr. Cook thought it. For on the +Supply's arrival in the Bay on the 18th of the month, they were +assembled on the beach of the south shore, to the number of not +less than forty persons, shouting and making many uncouth signs +and gestures. This appearance whetted curiosity to its utmost, +but as prudence forbade a few people to venture wantonly among so +great a number, and a party of only six men was observed on the +north shore, the Governor immediately proceeded to land on that +side, in order to take possession of his new territory, and bring +about an intercourse between its old and new masters. The boat in +which his Excellency was, rowed up the harbour, close to the +land, for some distance; the Indians keeping pace with her on the +beach. At last an officer in the boat made signs of a want of +water, which it was judged would indicate his wish of landing. +The natives directly comprehended what he wanted, and pointed to +a spot where water could be procured; on which the boat was +immediately pushed in, and a landing took place. As on the event +of this meeting might depend so much of our future tranquillity, +every delicacy on our side was requisite. The Indians, though +timorous, shewed no signs of resentment at the Governor's going +on shore; an interview commenced, in which the conduct of both +parties pleased each other so much, that the strangers returned +to their ships with a much better opinion of the natives than +they had landed with; and the latter seemed highly entertained +with their new acquaintance, from whom they condescended to +accept of a looking glass, some beads, and other toys.</p> + +<p>Owing to the lateness of our arrival, it was not my good +fortune to go on shore until three days after this had happened, +when I went with a party to the south side of the harbour, and +had scarcely landed five minutes, when we were met by a dozen +Indians, naked as at the moment of their birth, walking along the +beach. Eager to come to a conference, and yet afraid of giving +offence, we advanced with caution towards them, nor would they, +at first approach nearer to us than the distance of some paces. +Both parties were armed; yet an attack seemed as unlikely on +their part, as we knew it to be on our own.</p> + +<p>I had at this time a little boy, of not more than seven years +of age, in my hand. The child seemed to attract their attention +very much, for they frequently pointed to him and spoke to each +other; and as he was not frightened, I advanced with him towards +them, at the same time baring his bosom and, shewing the +whiteness of the skin. On the cloaths being removed, they gave a +loud exclamation, and one of the party, an old man, with a long +beard, hideously ugly, came close to us. I bade my little charge +not to be afraid, and introduced him to the acquaintance of this +uncouth personage. The Indian, with great gentleness, laid his +hand on the child's hat, and afterwards felt his cloaths, +muttering to himself all the while. I found it necessary, +however, by this time to send away the child, as such a close +connection rather alarmed him; and in this, as the conclusion +verified, I gave no offence to the old gentleman. Indeed it was +but putting ourselves on a par with them, as I had observed from +the first, that some youths of their own, though considerably +older than the one with us, were, kept back by the grown +people.</p> + +<p>Several more now came up, to whom, we made various presents, +but our toys seemed not to be regarded as very valuable; nor +would they for a long time make any returns to them, though +before we parted, a large club, with a head almost sufficient to +fell an ox, was obtained in exchange for a looking-glass. These +people seemed at a loss to know (probably from our want of +beards) of what sex we were, which having understood, they burst +into the most immoderate fits of laughter, talking to each other +at the same time with such rapidity and vociferation as I had +never before heard. After nearly an hour's conversation by signs +and gestures, they repeated several times the word whurra, which +signifies, begone, and walked away from us to the head of the +Bay.</p> + +<p>The natives being departed, we set out to observe the country, +which, on inspection, rather disappointed our hopes, being +invariably sandy and unpromising for the purposes of cultivation, +though the trees and grass flourish in great luxuriancy. Close to +us was the spring at which Mr. Cook watered, but we did not think +the water very excellent, nor did it run freely. In the evening +we returned on board, not greatly pleased with the latter part of +our discoveries, as it indicated an increase of those +difficulties, which before seemed sufficiently numerous.</p> + +<p>Between this and our departure we had several more interviews +with the natives, which ended in so friendly a manner, that we +began to entertain strong hopes of bringing about a connection +with them. Our first object was to win their affections, and our +next to convince them of the superiority we possessed: for +without the latter, the former we knew would be of little +importance.</p> + +<p>An officer one day prevailed on one of them to place a target, +made of bark, against a tree, which he fired at with a pistol, at +the distance of some paces. The Indians, though terrified at the +report, did not run away, but their astonishment exceeded their +alarm, on looking at the shield which the ball had perforated. As +this produced a little shyness, the officer, to dissipate their +fears and remove their jealousy, whistled the air of Malbrooke, +which they appeared highly charmed with, and imitated him with +equal pleasure and readiness. I cannot help remarking here, what +I was afterwards told by Monsieur De Perrouse, that the natives +of California, and throughout all the islands of the Pacific +Ocean, and in short wherever he had been, seemed equally touched +and delighted with this little plaintive air.</p> + +<a name="9"></a> +<hr> +<h3>CHAPTER IX.</h3> + +<h4>The taking Possession of Port Jackson, with the +Disembarkation of the Marines and Convicts.</h4> + +<p>Our passage to Port Jackson took up but few hours, and those +were spent far from unpleasantly. The evening was bright, and the +prospect before us such as might justify sanguine expectation. +Having passed between the capes which form its entrance, we found +ourselves in a port superior, in extent and excellency, to all we +had seen before. We continued to run up the harbour about four +miles, in a westerly direction, enjoying the luxuriant prospect +of its shores, covered with trees to the water's edge, among +which many of the Indians were frequently seen, till we arrived +at a small snug cove on the southern side, on whose banks the +plan of our operations was destined to commence.</p> + +<p>The landing of a part of the marines and convicts took place +the next day, and on the following, the remainder was +disembarked. Business now sat on every brow, and the scene, to an +indifferent spectator, at leisure to contemplate it, would have +been highly picturesque and amusing. In one place, a party +cutting down the woods; a second, setting up a blacksmith's +forge; a third, dragging along a load of stones or provisions; +here an officer pitching his marquee, with a detachment of troops +parading on one side of him, and a cook's fire blazing up on the +other. Through the unwearied diligence of those at the head of +the different departments, regularity was, however, soon +introduced, and, as far as the unsettled state of matters would +allow, confusion gave place to system.</p> + +<p>Into the head of the cove, on which our establishment is +fixed, runs a small stream of fresh water, which serves to divide +the adjacent country to a little distance, in the direction of +north and south. On the eastern side of this rivulet the Governor +fixed his place of residence, with a large body of convicts +encamped near him; and on the western side was disposed the +remaining part of these people, near the marine encampment. From +this last two guards, consisting of two subalterns, as many +serjeants, four corporals, two drummers, and forty-two private +men, under the orders of a Captain of the day, to whom all +reports were made, daily mounted for the public security, with +such directions to use force, in case of necessity, as left no +room for those who were the object of the order, but to remain +peaceable, or perish by the bayonet.</p> + +<p>As the straggling of the convicts was not only a desertion +from the public labour, but might be attended with ill +consequences to the settlement, in case of their meeting the +natives, every care was taken to prevent it. The Provost Martial +with his men was ordered to patrole the country around, and the +convicts informed, that the severest punishment would be +inflicted on transgressors. In spite, however, of all our +precautions, they soon found the road to Botany Bay, in visits to +the French, who would gladly have dispensed with their +company.</p> + +<p>But as severity alone was known to be inadequate at once to +chastize and reform, no opportunity was omitted to assure the +convicts, that by their good behaviour and submissive deportment, +every claim to present distinction and future favour was to be +earned. That this caution was not attended with all the good +effects which were hoped from it, I have only to lament; that it +operated in some cases is indisputable; nor will a candid and +humane mind fail to consider and allow for the situation these +unfortunate beings so peculiarly stood in. While they were on +board ship, the two sexes had been kept most rigorously apart; +but, when landed, their separation became impracticable, and +would have been, perhaps, wrong. Licentiousness was the +unavoidable consequence, and their old habits of depravity were +beginning to recur. What was to be attempted? To prevent their +intercourse was impossible; and to palliate its evils only +remained. Marriage was recommended, and such advantages held out +to those who aimed at reformation, as have greatly contributed to +the tranquillity of the settlement.</p> + +<p>On the Sunday after our landing divine service was performed +under a great tree, by the Rev. Mr. Johnson, Chaplain of the +Settlement, in the presence of the troops and convicts, whose +behaviour on the occasion was equally regular and attentive. In +the course of our passage this had been repeated every Sunday, +while the ships were in port; and in addition to it, Mr. Johnson +had furnished them with books, at once tending to promote +instruction and piety.</p> + +<p>The Indians for a little while after our arrival paid us +frequent visits, but in a few days they were observed to be more +shy of our company. From what cause their distaste: arose we +never could trace, as we had made it our study, on these +occasions, to treat them with kindness, and load them with +presents. No quarrel had happened, and we had flattered +ourselves, from Governor Phillip's first reception among them, +that such a connection might be established as would tend to the +interest of both parties. It seems, that on that occasion, they +not only received our people with great cordiality, but so far +acknowledged their authority as to submit, that a boundary, +during their first interview, might be drawn on the sand, which +they attempted not to infringe, and appeared to be satisfied +with.</p> + +<a name="10"></a> +<hr> +<h3>CHAPTER X.</h3> + +<h4>The reading of the Commissions, and taking Possession of the +Settlement, in form. With an Account of the Courts of Law, and +Mode of administering Public Justice in this Country.</h4> + +<p>Owing to the multiplicity of pressing business necessary to be +performed immediately after landing, it was found impossible to +read the public commissions and take possession of the colony in +form, until the 7th of February. On that day all the officers of +guard took post in the marine battalion, which was drawn up, and +marched off the parade with music playing, and colours flying, to +an adjoining ground, which had been cleared for the occasion, +whereon the convicts were assembled to hear His Majesty's +commission read, appointing his Excellency Arthur Phillip, Esq. +Governor and Captain General in and over the territory of New +South Wales, and its dependencies; together with the Act of +Parliament for establishing trials by law within the same; and +the patents under the Great Seal of Great Britain, for holding +the civil and criminal courts of judicature, by which all cases +of life and death, as well as matters of property, were to be +decided. When the Judge Advocate had finished reading, his +Excellency addressed himself to the convicts in a pointed and +judicious speech, informing them of his future intentions, which +were, invariably to cherish and render happy those who shewed a +disposition to amendment; and to let the rigour of the law take +its course against such as might dare to transgress the bounds +prescribed. At the close three vollies were fired in honour of +the occasion, and the battalion marched back to their parade, +where they were reviewed by the Governor, who was received with +all the honours due to his rank. His Excellency was afterwards +pleased to thank them, in public orders, for their behaviour from +the time of their embarkation; and to ask the officers to partake +of a cold collation at which it is scarce necessary to observe, +that many loyal and public toasts were drank in commemoration of +the day.</p> + +<p>In the Governor's commission, the extent of this authority is +defined to reach from the latitude of 43 deg 49 min south, to the +latitude of 10 deg 37 min south, being the northern and southern +extremities of the continent of New Holland. It commences again +at 135th degree of longitude east of Greenwich, and, proceeding +in an easterly direction, includes all islands within the limits +of the above specified latitudes in the Pacific Ocean. By this +partition it may be fairly presumed, that every source of future +litigation between the Dutch and us will be for ever cut off, as +the discoveries of English navigators alone are comprized in this +territory.</p> + +<p>Nor have Government been more backward in arming Mr. Phillip +with plenitude of power, than extent of dominion. No mention is +made of a Council to be appointed, so that he is left to act +entirely from his own judgment. And as no stated time of +assembling the Courts of justice is pointed out, similar to the +assizes and gaol deliveries of England, the duration of +imprisonment is altogether in his hands. The power of summoning +General Courts Martial to meet he is also invested with, but the +insertion in the marine mutiny act, of a smaller number of +officers than thirteen being able to compose such a tribunal, has +been neglected: so that a Military court, should detachments be +made from headquarters, or sickness prevail, may not always be +found practicable to be obtained, unless the number of officers, +at present in the Settlement, shall be increased.</p> + +<p>Should the Governor see cause, he is enabled to grant pardons +to offenders convicted, "in all cases whatever, treason and +wilful murder excepted," and even in these, has authority to stay +the execution of the law, until the King's pleasure shall be +signified. In case of the Governor's death, the Lieutenant +Governor takes his place; and on his demise, the senior officer +on the spot is authorised to assume the reins of power.</p> + +<p>Notwithstanding the promises made on one side, and the +forbearance shewn on the other, joined to the impending rod of +justice, it was with infinite regret that every one saw, in four +clays afterwards, the necessity of assembling a Criminal Court, +which was accordingly convened by warrant from the Governor, and +consisted of the judge Advocate, who presided, three naval, and +three marine officers.</p> + +<p>As the constitution of this court is altogether new in the +British annals, I hope my reader will not think me prolix in the +description I am about to give of it. The number of members, +including the judge Advocate, is limited, by Act of Parliament, +to seven, who are expressly ordered to be officers, either of His +Majesty's sea or land forces. The court being met, completely +arrayed and armed as at a military tribunal, the Judge Advocate +proceeds to administer the usual oaths taken by jurymen in +England to each member; one of whom afterwards swears him in a +like manner. This ceremony being adjusted, the crime laid to the +prisoner's charge is read to him, and the question of Guilty, or +Not guilty, put. No law officer on the side of the crown being +appointed, (for I presume the head of the court ought hardly to +consider himself in that light, notwithstanding the title he +bears) to prosecute the criminal is left entirely to the party, +at whose suit he is tried. All the witnesses are examined on +oath, and the decision is directed to be given according to the +laws of England, "or as nearly as may be, allowing for the +circumstances and situation of the settlement," by a majority of +votes, beginning with the youngest member, and ending with the +president of the court. In cases, however, of a capital nature, +no verdict can be given, unless five, at least, of the seven +members present concur therein. The evidence on both sides being +finished, and the prisoner's defence heard, the court is cleared, +and, on the judgement being settled, is thrown open again, and +sentence pronounced. During the time the court sits, the place in +which it is assembled is directed to be surrounded by a guard +under arms, and admission to every one who may choose to enter +it, granted. Of late, however, our colonists are supposed to be +in such a train of subordination, as to make the presence of so +large a military force unnecessary; and two centinels, in +addition to the Provost Martial, are considered as +sufficient.</p> + +<p>It would be as needless, as impertinent, to anticipate the +reflections which will arise in reading the above account, +wherein a regard to accuracy only has been consulted. By +comparing it with the mode of administering justice in the +English courts of law, it will be found to differ in many points +very essentially. And if we turn our eyes to the usage of +military tribunals, it no less departs from the customs observed +in them. Let not the novelty of it, however, prejudice any one so +far as to dispute its efficacy, and the necessity of the case +which gave it birth.</p> + +<p>The court, whose meeting is already spoken of, proceeded to +the trial of three convicts, one of whom was convicted of having +struck a marine with a cooper's adze, and otherwise behaving in a +very riotous and scandalous manner, for which he was sentenced to +receive one hundred and fifty lashes, being a smaller punishment +than a soldier in a like case would have suffered from the +judgement of a court martial. A second, for having committed a +petty theft, was sent to a small barren island, and kept there on +bread and water only, for a week. And the third was sentenced to +receive fifty lashes, but was recommended by the court to the +Governor, and forgiven.</p> + +<p>Hitherto, however, (February) nothing of a very atrocious +nature had appeared. But the day was at hand, on which the +violation of public security could no longer be restrained, by +the infliction of temporary punishment. A set of desperate and +hardened villains leagued themselves for the purposes of +depredation, and, as it generally happens, had art enough to +persuade some others, less deeply versed in iniquity, to be the +instruments for carrying it on. Fortunately the progress of these +miscreants was not of long duration. They were detected in +stealing a large quantity of provisions at the time of issuing +them. And on being apprehended, one of the tools of the superiors +impeached the rest, and disclosed the scheme. The trial came on +the 28th of the month, and of four who were arraigned for the +offence, three were condemned to die, and the fourth to receive a +very severe corporal punishment. In hopes that his lenity would +not be abused, his Excellency was, however, pleased to order one +only for execution, which took place a little before sun-set the +same day. The name of the unhappy wretch was Thomas Barret, an +old and desperate offender, who died with that hardy spirit, +which too often is found in the worst and most abandoned class of +men. During the execution the battalion of marines was under +arms, and the whole of the convicts obliged to be present. The +two associates of the sufferer were ordered to be kept close +prisoners, until an eligible place to banish them to could be +fixed on; as were also two more, who on the following day were +condemned to die for a similar offence.</p> + +<p>Besides the Criminal court, there is an inferior one composed +of the Judge Advocate, and one or more justices of the peace, for +the trial of small misdemeanours. This court is likewise +empowered to decide all law suits, and its verdict is final, +except where the sum in dispute amounts to more than three +hundred pounds, in which case an appeal to England can be made +from its decree. Should necessity warrant it, an Admiralty court, +of which Lieutenant Governor Ross is judge, can also be summoned, +for the trial of offences committed on the high seas.</p> + +<p>From being unwilling to break the thread of my narrative, I +omitted to note in its proper place the sailing of the 'Supply', +Lieut. Ball, on the 15th of the month, for Norfolk Island, which +the Governor had instructions from the ministry to take +possession of. Lieut. King of the Sirius was sent as +superintendent and commandant of this place, and carried with him +a surgeon, a midshipman, a sawyer, a weaver, two marines, and +sixteen convicts, of whom six were women. He was also supplied +with a certain number of live animals to stock the island, +besides garden seeds, grain, and other requisites.</p> + +<a name="11"></a> +<hr> +<h3>CHAPTER XI</h3> + +<h4>A Description of the Natives of New South Wales, and our +Transactions with them.</h4> + +<p>I doubt not my readers will be as glad as I feel myself, to +conclude the dull detail of the last chapter. If they please, +they may turn from the subtle intricacies of the law, to +contemplate the simple, undisguised workings of nature, in her +most artless colouring.</p> + +<p>I have already said, we had been but very few days at Port +Jackson, when an alteration in the behaviour of the natives was +perceptible; and I wish I could add, that a longer residence in +their neighbourhood had introduced a greater degree of cordiality +and intermixture between the old, and new, lords of the soil, +than at the day on which this publication is dated subsists.</p> + +<p>From their easy reception of us in the beginning, many were +induced to call in question the accounts which Mr. Cook had given +of this people. That celebrated navigator, we were willing +believe, had somehow by his conduct offended them, which +prevented the intercourse that would otherwise have taken place. +The result, however, of our repeated endeavours to induce them to +come among us has been such as to confirm me in an opinion, that +they either fear or despise us too much, to be anxious for a +closer connection. And I beg leave at once, to apprize the +reader, that all I can here, or in any future part of this work, +relate with fidelity of the natives of New South Wales, must be +made up of detached observations, taken at different times, and +not from a regular series of knowledge of the customs and manners +of a people, with whom opportunities of communication are so +scarce, as to have been seldom obtained.</p> + +<p>In their persons, they are far from being a stout race of men, +though nimble, sprightly, and vigorous. The deficiency of one of +the fore teeth of the upper jaw, mentioned by Dampier, we have +seen in almost the whole of the men; but their organs of sight so +far from being defective, as that author mentions those of the +inhabitants of the western side of the continent to be, are +remarkably quick and piercing. Their colour, Mr. Cook is inclined +to think rather a deep chocolate, than an absolute black, though +he confesses, they have the appearance of the latter, which he +attributes to the greasy filth their skins are loaded with. Of +their want of cleanliness we have had sufficient proofs, but I am +of opinion, all the washing in the world would not render them +two degrees less black than an African negro. At some of our +first interviews, we had several droll instances of their +mistaking the Africans we brought with us for their own +countrymen.</p> + +<p>Notwithstanding the disregard they have invariably shewn for +all the finery we could deck them with, they are fond of adorning +themselves with scars, which increase their natural hideousness. +It is hardly possible to see any thing in human shape more ugly, +than one of these savages thus scarified, and farther ornamented +with a fish bone struck through the gristle of the nose. The +custom of daubing themselves with white earth is also frequent +among both sexes: but, unlike the inhabitants of the Islands in +the Pacific Ocean, they reject the beautiful feathers which the +birds of their country afford.</p> + +<p>Exclusive of their weapons of offence, and a few stone +hatchets very rudely fashioned, their ingenuity is confined to +manufacturing small nets, in which they put the fish they catch, +and to fish-hooks made of bone, neither of which are unskilfully +executed. On many of the rocks are also to be found delineations +of the figures of men and birds, very poorly cut.</p> + +<p>Of the use or benefit of cloathing, these people appear to +have no comprehension, though their sufferings from the climate +they live in, strongly point out the necessity of a covering from +the rigour of the seasons. Both sexes, and those of all ages, are +invariably found naked. But it must not be inferred from this, +that custom so inures them to the changes of the elements, as to +make them bear with indifference the extremes of heat and cold; +for we have had visible and repeated proofs, that the latter +affects them severely, when they are seen shivering, and huddling +themselves up in heaps in their huts, or the caverns of the +rocks, until a fire can be kindled.</p> + +<p>Than these huts nothing more rude in construction, or +deficient in conveniency, can be imagined. They consist only of +pieces of bark laid together in the form of an oven, open at one +end, and very low, though long enough for a man to lie at full +length. There is reason, however, to believe, that they depend +less on them for shelter, than on the caverns with which the +rocks abound.</p> + +<p>To cultivation of the ground they are utter strangers, and +wholly depend for food on the few fruits they gather; the roots +they dig up in the swamps; and the fish they pick up along shore, +or contrive to strike from their canoes with spears. Fishing, +indeed, seems to engross nearly the whole of their time, probably +from its forming the chief part of a subsistence, which, +observation has convinced us, nothing short of the most painful +labour, and unwearied assiduity, can procure. When fish are +scarce, which frequently happens, they often watch the moment of +our hauling the seine, and have more than once been known to +plunder its contents, in spite of the opposition of those on the +spot to guard it: and this even after having received a part of +what had been caught. The only resource at these times is to shew +a musquet, and if the bare sight is not sufficient, to fire it +over their heads, which has seldom failed of dispersing them +hitherto, but how long the terror which it excites may continue +is doubtful.</p> + +<p>The canoes in which they fish are as despicable as their huts, +being nothing more than a large piece of bark tied up at both +ends with vines. Their dexterous management of them, added to the +swiftness with which they paddle, and the boldness that leads +them several miles in the open sea, are, nevertheless, highly +deserving of admiration. A canoe is seldom seen without a fire in +it, to dress the fish by, as soon as caught: fire they procure by +attrition.</p> + +<p>From their manner of disposing of those who die, which will be +mentioned hereafter, as well as from every other observation, +there seems no reason to suppose these people cannibals; nor do +they ever eat animal substances in a raw state, unless pressed by +extreme hunger, but indiscriminately broil them, and their +vegetables, on a fire, which renders these last an innocent food, +though in their raw state many of them are of a poisonous +quality: as a poor convict who unguardedly eat of them +experienced, by falling a sacrifice in twenty-four hours +afterwards. If bread be given to the Indians, they chew and spit +it out again, seldom choosing to swallow it. Salt beef and pork +they like rather better, but spirits they never could be brought +to taste a second time.</p> + +<p>The only domestic animal they have is the dog, which in their +language is called Dingo, and a good deal resembles the fox dog +of England. These animals are equally shy of us, and attached to +the natives. One of them is now in the possession of the +Governor, and tolerably well reconciled to his new master. As the +Indians see the dislike of the dogs to us, they are sometimes +mischievous enough to set them on single persons whom they chance +to meet in the woods. A surly fellow was one day out shooting, +when the natives attempted to divert themselves in this manner at +his expense. The man bore the teazing and gnawing of the dog at +his heels for some time, but apprehending at length, that his +patience might embolden them to use still farther liberties, he +turned round and shot poor Dingo dead on the spot: the owners of +him set off with the utmost expedition.</p> + +<p>There is no part of the behaviour of these people, that has +puzzled us more, than that which relates to their women. +Comparatively speaking we have seen but few of them, and those +have been sometimes kept back with every symptom of jealous +sensibility; and sometimes offered with every appearance of +courteous familiarity. Cautious, however, of alarming the +feelings of the men on so tender a point, we have constantly made +a rule of treating the females with that distance and reserve, +which we judged most likely to remove any impression they might +have received of our intending aught, which could give offence on +so delicate a subject. And so successful have our endeavours +been, that a quarrel on this head has in no instance, that I know +of, happened. The tone of voice of the women, which is pleasingly +soft and feminine, forms a striking contrast to the rough +guttural pronunciation of the men. Of the other charms of the +ladies I shall be silent, though justice obliges me to mention, +that, in the opinion of some amongst us, they shew a degree of +timidity and bashfulness, which are, perhaps, inseparable from +the female character in its rudest state. It is not a little +singular, that the custom of cutting off the two lower joints of +the little finger of the left hand, observed in the Society +Islands, is found here among the women, who have for the most +part undergone this amputation. Hitherto we have not been able to +trace out the cause of this usage. At first we supposed it to be +peculiar to the married women, or those who had borne children; +but this conclusion must have been erroneous, as we have no right +to believe that celibacy prevails in any instance, and some of +the oldest of the women are without this distinction; and girls +of a very tender age are marked by it.</p> + +<p>On first setting foot in the country, we were inclined to hold +the spears of the natives very cheap. Fatal experience has, +however, convinced us, that the wound inflicted by this weapon is +not a trivial one; and that the skill of the Indians in throwing +it, is far from despicable. Besides more than a dozen convicts +who have unaccountably disappeared, we know that two, who were +employed as rush cutters up the harbour, were (from what cause we +are yet ignorant) most dreadfully mangled and butchered by the +natives. A spear had passed entirely through the thickest part of +the body of one of them, though a very robust man, and the skull +of the other was beaten in. Their tools were taken away, but some +provisions which they had with them at the time of the murder, +and their cloaths, were left untouched. In addition to this +misfortune, two more convicts, who were peaceably engaged in +picking of greens, on a spot very remote from that where their +comrades suffered, were unawares attacked by a party of Indians, +and before they could effect their escape, one of them was +pierced by a spear in the hip, after which they knocked him down, +and plundered his cloaths. The poor wretch, though dreadfully +wounded, made shift to crawl off, but his companion was carried +away by these barbarians, and his fate doubtful, until a soldier, +a few days afterwards, picked up his jacket and hat in a native's +hut, the latter pierced through by a spear. We have found that +these spears are not made invariably alike, some of them being +barbed like a fish gig, and others simply pointed. In repairing +them they are no less dexterous than in throwing them. A broken +one being given by a gentleman to an Indian, he instantly +snatched up an oyster-shell, and converted it with his teeth into +a tool with which he presently fashioned the spear, and rendered +it fit for use: in performing this operation, the sole of his +foot served him as a work-board. Nor are their weapons of offence +confined to the spear only, for they have besides long wooden +swords, shaped like a sabre, capable of inflicting a mortal +wound, and clubs of an immense size. Small targets, made of the +bark of trees, are likewise now and then to be seen among +them.</p> + +<p>From circumstances which have been observed, we have sometimes +been inclined to believe these people at war with each other. +They have more than once been seen assembled, as if bent on an +expedition. An officer one day met fourteen of them marching +along in a regular Indian file through the woods, each man armed +with a spear in his right hand, and a large stone in his left: at +their head appeared a chief, who was distinguished by being +painted. Though in the proportion of five to one of our people +they passed peaceably on.</p> + +<p>That their skill in throwing the spear sometimes enables them +to kill the kangaroo we have no right to doubt, as a long +splinter of this weapon was taken out of the thigh of one of +these animals, over which the flesh had completely closed; but we +have never discovered that they have any method of ensnaring +them, or that they know any other beasts but the kangaroo and +dog. Whatever animal is shewn them, a dog excepted, they call +kangaroo: a strong presumption that the wild animals of the +country are very few.</p> + +<p>Soon after our arrival at Port Jackson, I was walking out near +a place where I observed a party of Indians, busily employed in +looking at some sheep in an inclosure, and repeatedly crying out, +'kangaroo, kangaroo!' As this seemed to afford them pleasure, I +was willing to increase it by pointing out the horses and cows, +which were at no great distance. But unluckily, at the moment, +some female convicts, employed near the place, made their +appearance, and all my endeavours to divert their attention from +the ladies became fruitless. They attempted not, however, to +offer them the least degree of violence or injury, but stood at +the distance of several paces, expressing very significantly the +manner they were attracted.</p> + +<p>It would be trespassing on the reader's indulgence were I to +impose on him an account of any civil regulations, or ordinances, +which may possibly exist among this people. I declare to him, +that I know not of any, and that excepting a little tributary +respect which the younger part appear to pay those more advanced +in years, I never could observe any degrees of subordination +among them. To their religious rites and opinions I am equally a +stranger. Had an opportunity offered of seeing the ceremonies +observed at disposing of the dead, perhaps, some insight might +have been gained; but all that we at present know with certainty +is, that they burn the corpse, and afterwards heap up the earth +around it, somewhat in the manner of the small tumuli, found in +many counties of England.</p> + +<p>I have already hinted, that the country is more populous than +it was generally believed to be in Europe at the time of our +sailing. But this remark is not meant to be extended to the +interior parts of the continent, which there is every reason to +conclude from our researches, as well as from the manner of +living practised by the natives, to be uninhabited. It appears as +if some of the Indian families confine their society and +connections within their own pale: but that this cannot always be +the case we know; for on the north-west arm of Botany Bay stands +a village, which contains more than a dozen houses, and perhaps +five times that number of people; being the most considerable +establishment that we are acquainted with in the country. As a +striking proof, besides, of the numerousness of the natives, I +beg leave to state, that Governor Phillip, when on an excursion +between the head of this harbour and that of Botany Bay, once +fell in with a party which consisted of more than three hundred +persons, two hundred and twelve of whom were men: this happened +only on the day following the murder of the two convict rush +cutters, before noticed, and his Excellency was at the very time +in search of the murderers, on whom, could they have been found, +he intended to inflict a memorable and exemplary punishment. The +meeting was unexpected to both parties, and considering the +critical situation of affairs, perhaps not very pleasing to our +side, which consisted but of twelve persons, until the peaceable +disposition of the Indians was manifest. After the strictest +search the Governor was obliged to return without having gained +any information. The laudable perseverance of his Excellency to +throw every light on this unhappy and mysterious business did +not, however stop here, for he instituted the most rigorous +inquiry to find out, if possible, whether the convicts had at any +time ill treated or killed any of the natives; and farther, +issued a proclamation, offering the most tempting of all rewards, +a state of freedom, to him who should point out the murderer, in +case such an one existed.</p> + +<p>I have thus impartially stated the situation of matters, as +they stand, while I write, between the natives and us; that +greater progress in attaching them to us has not been made, I +have only to regret; but that all ranks of men have tried to +effect it, by every reasonable effort from which success might +have been expected, I can testify; nor can I omit saying, that in +the higher stations this has been eminently conspicuous. The +public orders of Governor Phillip have invariably tended to +promote such a behaviour on our side, as was most likely to +produce this much wished-for event. To what cause then are we to +attribute the distance which the accomplishment of it appears at? +I answer, to the fickle, jealous, wavering disposition of the +people we have to deal with, who, like all other savages, are +either too indolent, too indifferent, or too fearful to form an +attachment on easy terms, with those who differ in habits and +manners so widely from themselves. Before I close the subject, I +cannot, however, omit to relate the following ludicrous +adventure, which possibly may be of greater use in effecting what +we have so much at heart, than all our endeavours.</p> + +<p>Some young gentlemen belonging to the Sirius one day met a +native, an old man, in the woods; he had a beard of considerable +length, which his new acquaintance gave him to understand, by +signals, they would rid him of, if he pleased; stroaking their +chins, and shewing him the smoothness of them at the same time; +at length the old Indian consented, and one of the youngsters +taking a penknife from his pocket, and making use of the best +substitute for lather he could find, performed the operation with +great success, and, as it proved, much to the liking of the old +man, who in a few days after reposed a confidence in us, of which +we had hitherto known no example, by paddling along-side the +Sirius in his canoe, and pointing to his beard. Various arts were +ineffectually tried to induce him to enter the ship; but as he +continued to decline the invitation, a barber was sent down into +the boat along-side the canoe, from whence, leaning over the +gunnel, he complied with the wish of the old beau, to his +infinite satisfaction. In addition to the consequences which our +sanguine hopes led us to expect from this dawning of cordiality, +it affords proof, that the beard is considered by this people +more as an incumbrance than a mark of dignity.</p> + +<a name="12"></a> +<hr> +<h3>CHAPTER XII.</h3> + +<h4>The Departure of the French from Botany Bay; and the Return +of the 'Supply' from Norfolk Island; with a Discovery made by +Lieutenant Ball on his Passage to it.</h4> + +<p>About the middle of the month our good friends the French +departed from Botany Bay, in prosecution of their voyage. During +their stay in that port, the officers of the two nations had +frequent opportunities of testifying their mutual regard by +visits, and every interchange of friendship and esteem. These +ships sailed from France, by order of the King, on the 1st of +August, 1785, under the command of Monsieur De Perrouse, an +officer whose eminent qualifications, we had reason to think, +entitle him to fill the highest stations. In England, +particularly, he ought long to be remembered with admiration and +gratitude, for the humanity which marked his conduct, when +ordered to destroy our settlement at Hudson's Bay, in the last +war. His second in command was the Chevalier Clonard, an officer +also of distinguished merit.</p> + +<p>In the course of the voyage these ships had been so +unfortunate as to lose a boat, with many men and officers in her, +off the west of California; and afterwards met with an accident +still more to be regretted, at an island in the Pacific Ocean, +discovered by Monsieur Bougainville, in the latitude of 14 deg 19 +min south, longitude 173 deg 3 min 20 sec east of Paris. Here +they had the misfortune to have no less than thirteen of their +crews, among whom was the officer at that time second in command, +cut off by the natives, and many more desperately wounded. To +what cause this cruel event was to be attributed, they knew not, +as they were about to quit the island after having lived with the +Indians in the greatest harmony for several weeks; and exchanged, +during the time, their European commodities for the produce of +the place, which they describe as filled with a race of people +remarkable for beauty and comeliness; and abounding in +refreshments of all kinds.</p> + +<p>It was no less gratifying to an English ear, than honourable +to Monsieur De Perrouse, to witness the feeling manner in which +he always mentioned the name and talents of Captain Cook. That +illustrious circumnavigator had, he said, left nothing to those +who might follow in his track to describe, or fill up. As I +found, in the course of conversation, that the French ships had +touched at the Sandwich Islands, I asked M. De Perrouse what +reception he had met with there. His answer deserves to be known: +"During the whole of our voyage in the South Seas, the people of +the Sandwich Islands were the only Indians who never gave us +cause of complaint. They furnished us liberally with provisions, +and administered cheerfully to all our wants." It may not be +improper to remark, that Owhyee was not one of the islands +visited by this gentleman.</p> + +<p>In the short stay made by these ships at Botany Bay, an Abbe, +one of the naturalists on board, died, and was buried on the +north shore. The French had hardly departed, when the natives +pulled down a small board, which had been placed over the spot +where the corpse was interred, and defaced everything around. On +being informed of it, the Governor sent a party over with orders +to affix a plate of copper on a tree near the place, with the +following inscription on it, which is a copy of what was written +on the board:</p> + +<p>Hic jacet L. RECEVEUR, E.F.F. minnibus Galliae, Sacerdos, +Physicus, in circumnavigatione mundi, Duce De La Perrouse. Obiit +die 17 Februarii, anno 1788.</p> + +<p>This mark of respectful attention was more particularly due, +from M. De Perrouse having, when at Kamschatka, paid a similar +tribute of gratitude to the memory of Captain Clarke, whose tomb +was found in nearly as ruinous a state as that of the Abbe.</p> + +<p>Like ourselves, the French found it necessary, more than once, +to chastise a spirit of rapine and intrusion which prevailed +among the Indians around the Bay. The menace of pointing a +musquet to them was frequently used; and in one or two instances +it was fired off, though without being attended with fatal +consequences. Indeed the French commandant, both from a regard to +the orders of his Court as well as to our quiet and security, +shewed a moderation and forbearance on this head highly +becoming.</p> + +<p>On the 20th of March, the 'Supply' arrived from Norfolk +Island, after having safely landed Lieutenant King and his little +garrison. The pine-trees growing there are described to be of a +growth and height superior, perhaps, to any in the world. But the +difficulty of bringing them away will not be easily surmounted, +from the badness and danger of the landing place. After the most +exact search not a single plant of the New Zealand flax could be +found, though we had been taught to believe it abounded +there.</p> + +<p>Lieutenant Ball, in returning to Port Jackson, touched at a +small island in latitude 31 deg 36 min south, longitude 159 deg 4 +min east of Greenwich, which he had been fortunate enough to +discover on his passage to Norfolk, and to which he gave the name +of Lord Howe's Island. It is entirely without inhabitants, or any +traces of any having ever been there. But it happily abounds in +what will be infinitely more important to the settlers on New +South Wales: green turtle of the finest kind frequent it in the +summer season. Of this Mr. Ball gave us some very handsome and +acceptable specimens on his return. Besides turtle, the island is +well stocked with birds, many of them so tame as to be knocked +down by the seamen with sticks. At the distance of four leagues +from Lord Howe Island, and in latitude 31 deg 30 min south, +longitude 159 deg 8 min east, stands a remarkable rock, of +considerable height, to which Mr. Ball gave the name of Ball's +Pyramid, from the shape it bears.</p> + +<p>While the 'Supply' was absent, Governor Phillip made an +excursion to Broken Bay, a few leagues to the northward of Port +Jackson, in order to explore it. As a harbour it almost equals +the latter, but the adjacent country was found so rocky and bare, +as to preclude all possibility of turning it to account. Some +rivulets of fresh water fall into the head of the Bay, forming a +very picturesque scene. The Indians who live on its banks are +numerous, and behaved attentively in a variety of instances while +our people remained among them.</p> + +<a name="13"></a> +<hr> +<h3>CHAPTER XIII.</h3> + +<h4>Transactions at Port Jackson in the Months of April and +May.</h4> + +<p>As winter was fast approaching, it became necessary to secure +ourselves in quarters, which might shield us from the cold we +were taught to expect in this hemisphere, though in so low a +latitude. The erection of barracks for the soldiers was +projected, and the private men of each company undertook to build +for themselves two wooden houses, of sixty-eight feet in length, +and twenty-three in breadth. To forward the design, several +saw-pits were immediately set to work, and four ship carpenters +attached to the battalion, for the purpose of directing and +completing this necessary undertaking. In prosecuting it, +however, so many difficulties occurred, that we were fain to +circumscribe our original intention; and, instead of eight +houses, content ourselves with four. And even these, from the +badness of the timber, the scarcity of artificers, and other +impediments, are, at the day on which I write, so little +advanced, that it will be well, if at the close of the year 1788, +we shall be established in them. In the meanwhile the married +people, by proceeding on a more contracted scale, were soon under +comfortable shelter. Nor were the convicts forgotten; and as +leisure was frequently afforded them for the purpose, little +edifices quickly multiplied on the ground allotted them to build +upon.</p> + +<p>But as these habitations were intended by Governor Phillip to +answer only the exigency of the moment, the plan of the town was +drawn, and the ground on which it is hereafter to stand surveyed, +and marked out. To proceed on a narrow, confined scale, in a +country of the extensive limits we possess, would be +unpardonable: extent of empire demands grandeur of design. That +this has been our view will be readily believed, when I tell the +reader, that the principal street in our projected city will be, +when completed, agreeable to the plan laid down, two hundred feet +in breadth, and all the rest of a corresponding proportion. How +far this will be accompanied with adequate dispatch, is another +question, as the incredulous among us are sometimes hardy enough +to declare, that ten times our strength would not be able to +finish it in as many years.</p> + +<p>Invariably intent on exploring a country, from which curiosity +promises so many gratifications, his Excellency about this time +undertook an expedition into the interior parts of the continent. +His party consisted of eleven persons, who, after being conveyed +by water to the head of the harbour, proceeded in a westerly +direction, to reach a chain of mountains, which in clear weather +are discernible, though at an immense distance, from some heights +near our encampment. With unwearied industry they continued to +penetrate the country for four days; but at the end of that time, +finding the base of the mountain to be yet at the distance of +more than twenty miles, and provisions growing scarce, it was +judged prudent to return, without having accomplished the end for +which the expedition had been undertaken. To reward their toils, +our adventurers had, however, the pleasure of discovering and +traversing an extensive tract of ground, which they had reason to +believe, from the observations they were enabled to make, capable +of producing every thing, which a happy soil and genial climate +can bring forth. In addition to this flattering appearance, the +face of the country is such, as to promise success whenever it +shall be cultivated, the trees being at a considerable distance +from each other, and the intermediate space filled, not with +underwood, but a thick rich grass, growing in the utmost +luxuriancy. I must not, however, conceal, that in this long +march, our gentlemen found not a single rivulet, but were under a +necessity of supplying themselves with water from standing pools, +which they met with in the vallies, supposed to be formed by the +rains that fall at particular seasons of the year. Nor had they +the good fortune to see any quadrupeds worth notice, except a few +kangaroos. To their great surprize, they observed indisputable +tracks of the natives having been lately there, though in their +whole route none of them were to be seen; nor any means to be +traced, by which they could procure subsistence so far from the +sea shore.</p> + +<p>On the 6th of May the 'Supply' sailed for Lord Howe Island, to +take on board turtle for the settlement; but after waiting there +several days was obliged to return without having seen one, owing +we apprehended to the advanced season of the year. Three of the +transports also, which were engaged by the East India Company to +proceed to China, to take on board a lading of tea, sailed about +this time for Canton.</p> + +<p>The unsuccessful return of the 'Supply' cast a general damp on +our spirits, for by this time fresh provisions were become +scarcer than in a blockaded town. The little live stock, which +with so heavy an expense, and through so many difficulties, we +had brought on shore, prudence forbade us to use; and fish, which +on our arrival, and for a short time after had been tolerable +plenty, were become so scarce, as to be rarely seen at the tables +of the first among us. Had it not been for a stray kangaroo, +which fortune now and then threw in our way, we should have been +utter strangers to the taste of fresh food.</p> + +<p>Thus situated, the scurvy began its usual ravages, and +extended its baneful influence, more or less, through all +descriptions of persons. Unfortunately the esculent vegetable +productions of the country are neither plentiful, nor tend very +effectually to remove this disease. And, the ground we had turned +up and planted with garden seeds, either from the nature of the +soil, or, which is more probable, the lateness of the season, +yielded but a scanty and insufficient supply of what we stood so +greatly in need of.</p> + +<p>During the period I am describing, few enormous offences were +perpetrated by the convicts. A petty theft was now and then heard +of, and a spirit of refractory sullenness broke out at times in +some individuals: one execution only, however, took place. The +sufferer, who was a very young man, was convicted of a burglary, +and met his fate with a hardiness and insensibility, which the +grossest ignorance, and most deplorable want of feeling, alone +could supply.</p> + +<a name="14"></a> +<hr> +<h3>CHAPTER XIV.</h3> + +<h4>From the Beginning of June, to the Departure of the Ships for +Europe.</h4> + +<p>Hours of festivity, which under happier skies pass away +unregarded, and are soon consigned to oblivion, acquire in this +forlorn and distant circle a superior degree of acceptable +importance.</p> + +<p>On the anniversary of the King's birthday all the officers not +on duty, both of the garrison and his Majesty's ships, dined with +the Governor. On so joyful an occasion, the first too ever +celebrated in our new settlement, it were needless to say, that +loyal conviviality dictated every sentiment, and inspired every +guest. Among other public toasts drank, was, Prosperity to Sydney +Cove, in Cumberland county, now named so by authority. At +day-light in the morning the ships of war had fired twenty-one +guns each, which was repeated at noon, and answered by three +vollies from the battalion of marines.</p> + +<p>Nor were the officers alone partakers of the general +relaxation. The four unhappy wretches labouring under sentence of +banishment were freed from their fetters, to rejoin their former +society; and three days given as holidays to every convict in the +colony. Hospitality too, which ever acquires a double relish by +being extended, was not forgotten on the 4th of June, when each +prisoner, male and female, received an allowance of grog; and +every non-commissioned officer and private soldier had the honor +of drinking prosperity to his royal master, in a pint of porter, +served out at the flag staff, in addition to the customary +allowance of spirits. Bonfires concluded the evening, and I am +happy to say, that excepting a single instance which shall be +taken notice of hereafter, no bad consequence, or unpleasant +remembrance, flowed from an indulgence so amply bestowed.</p> + +<p>About this time (June) an accident happened, which I record +with much regret. The whole of our black cattle, consisting of +five cows and a bull, either from not being properly secured, or +from the negligence of those appointed to take care of them, +strayed into the woods, and in spite of all the search we have +been able to make, are not yet found. As a convict of the name of +Corbet, who was accused of a theft, eloped nearly at the same +time, it was at first believed, that he had taken the desperate +measure of driving off the cattle, in order to subsist on them as +long as possible; or perhaps to deliver them to the natives. In +this uncertainty, parties to search were sent out in different +directions; and the fugitive declared an outlaw, in case of not +returning by a fixed day. After much anxiety and fatigue, those +who had undertaken the task returned without finding the cattle. +But on the 21st of the month, Corbet made his appearance near a +farm belonging to the Governor, and entreated a convict, who +happened to be on the spot, to give him some food, as he was +perishing for hunger. The man applied to, under pretence of +fetching what he asked for, went away and immediately gave the +necessary information, in consequence of which a party under arms +was sent out and apprehended him. When the poor wretch was +brought in, he was greatly emaciated and almost famished. But on +proper restoratives being administered, he was so far recovered +by the 24th, as to be able to stand his trial, when he pleaded +Guilty to the robbery with which he stood charged, and received +sentence of death. In the course of repeated examinations it +plainly appeared, he was an utter stranger to the place where the +cattle might be, and was in no shape concerned in having driven +them off.</p> + +<p>Samuel Peyton, convict, for having on the evening of the +King's birth-day broke open an officer's marquee, with an intent +to commit robbery, of which he was fully convicted, had sentence +of death passed on him at the same time as Corbet; and on the +following day they were both executed, confessing the justness of +their fate, and imploring the forgiveness of those whom they had +injured. Peyton, at the time of his suffering, was but twenty +years of age, the greatest part of which had been invariably +passed in the commission of crimes, that at length terminated in +his ignominious end. The following letter, written by a fellow +convict to the sufferer's unhappy mother, I shall make no apology +for presenting to the reader; it affords a melancholy proof, that +not the ignorant and untaught only have provoked the justice of +their country to banish them to this remote region.</p> + +<p>Sydney Cove, Port Jackson, New South Wales, 24th June, +1788.</p> + +<p>"My dear and honoured mother!</p> + +<p>"With a heart oppressed by the keenest sense of anguish, and +too much agitated by the idea of my very melancholy condition, to +express my own sentiments, I have prevailed on the goodness of a +commiserating friend, to do me the last sad office of acquainting +you with the dreadful fate that awaits me.</p> + +<p>"My dear mother! with what agony of soul do I dedicate the few +last moments of my life, to bid you an eternal adieu! my doom +being irrevocably fixed, and ere this hour to-morrow I shall have +quitted this vale of wretchedness, to enter into an unknown and +endless eternity. I will not distress your tender maternal +feelings by any long comment on the cause of my present +misfortune. Let it therefore suffice to say, that impelled by +that strong propensity to evil, which neither the virtuous +precepts nor example of the best of parents could eradicate, I +have at length fallen an unhappy, though just, victim to my own +follies.</p> + +<p>"Too late I regret my inattention to your admonitions, and +feel myself sensibly affected by the remembrance of the many +anxious moments you have passed on my account. For these, and all +my other transgressions, however great, I supplicate the Divine +forgiveness; and encouraged by the promises of that Saviour who +died for us all, I trust to receive that mercy in the world to +come, which my offences have deprived me of all hope, or +expectation of, in this. The affliction which this will cost you, +I hope the Almighty will enable you to bear. Banish from your +memory all my former indiscretions, and let the cheering hope of +a happy meeting hereafter, console you for my loss. Sincerely +penitent for my sins; sensible of the justice of my conviction +and sentence, and firmly relying on the merits of a Blessed +Redeemer, I am at perfect peace with all mankind, and trust I +shall yet experience that peace, which this world cannot give. +Commend my soul to the Divine mercy. I bid you an eternal +farewell.</p> + +<p>"Your unhappy dying Son,</p> + +<p>"SAMUEL PEYTON."</p> + +<p>After this nothing occurred with which I think it necessary to +trouble the reader. The contents of the following chapters could +not, I conceive, be so properly interwoven in the body of the +work; I have, therefore, assigned them a place by themselves, +with a view that the conclusions adopted in them may be more +strongly enforced on the minds of those, to whom they are more +particularly addressed.</p> + +<a name="15"></a> +<hr> +<h3>CHAPTER XV.</h3> + +<h4>The Face of the Country; its Productions, Climate, +&c.</h4> + +<p>To the geographical knowledge of this country, supplied by +Captain Cook, and Captain Furneaux, we are able to add nothing. +The latter explored the coast from Van Diemen's land to the +latitude of 39 deg south; and Cook from Point Hicks, which lies +in 37 deg 58 min, to Endeavour Streights. The intermediate space +between the end of Furneaux's discovery and Point Hicks, is, +therefore, the only part of the south-east coast unknown, and it +so happened on our passage thither, owing to the weather, which +forbade any part of the ships engaging with the shore, that we +are unable to pronounce whether, or not, a streight intersects +the continent hereabouts: though I beg leave to say, that I have +been informed by a naval friend, that when the fleet was off this +part of the coast, a strong set-off shore was plainly felt.</p> + +<p>At the distance of 60 miles inland, a prodigious chain of +lofty mountains runs nearly in a north and south direction, +further than the eye can trace them. Should nothing intervene to +prevent it, the Governor intends, shortly, to explore their +summits: and, I think there can be little doubt, that his +curiosity will not go unrewarded. If large rivers do exist in the +country, which some of us are almost sceptical enough to doubt, +their sources must arise amidst these hills; and the direction +they run in, for a considerable distance, must be either due +north, or due south. For it is strikingly singular that three +such noble harbours as Botany Bay, Port Jackson, and Broken Bay, +alike end in shallows and swamps, filled with mangroves.</p> + +<p>The general face of the country is certainly pleasing, being +diversified with gentle ascents, and little winding vallies, +covered for the most part with large spreading trees, which +afford a succession of leaves in all seasons. In those places +where trees are scarce, a variety of flowering shrubs abound, +most of them entirely new to an European, and surpassing in +beauty, fragrance, and number, all I ever saw in an uncultivated +state: among these, a tall shrub, bearing an elegant white +flower, which smells like English May, is particularly +delightful, and perfumes the air around to a great distance. The +species of trees are few, and, I am concerned to add, the wood +universally of so bad a grain, as almost to preclude a +possibility of using it: the increase of labour occasioned by +this in our buildings has been such, as nearly to exceed belief. +These trees yield a profusion of thick red gum (not unlike the +'sanguis draconis') which is found serviceable in medicine, +particularly in dysenteric complaints, where it has sometimes +succeeded, when all other preparations have failed. To blunt its +acrid qualities, it is usual to combine it with opiates.</p> + +<p>The nature of the soil is various. That immediately round +Sydney Cove is sandy, with here and there a stratum of clay. From +the sand we have yet been able to draw very little; but there +seems no reason to doubt, that many large tracts of land around +us will bring to perfection whatever shall be sown in them. To +give this matter a fair trial, some practical farmers capable of +such an undertaking should be sent out; for the spots we have +chosen for experiments in agriculture, in which we can scarce be +supposed adepts, have hitherto but ill repaid our toil, which may +be imputable to our having chosen such as are unfavourable for +our purpose.</p> + +<p>Except from the size of the trees, the difficulties of +clearing the land are not numerous, underwood being rarely found, +though the country is not absolutely without it. Of the natural +meadows which Mr. Cook mentions near Botany Bay, we can give no +account; none such exist about Port Jackson. Grass, however, +grows in every place but the swamps with the greatest vigour and +luxuriancy, though it is not of the finest quality, and is found +to agree better with horses and cows than sheep. A few wild +fruits are sometimes procured, among which is the small purple +apple mentioned by Cook, and a fruit which has the appearance of +a grape, though in taste more like a green gooseberry, being +excessively sour: probably were it meliorated by cultivation, it +would become more palatable.</p> + +<p>Fresh water, as I have said before, is found but in +inconsiderable quantities. For the common purposes of life there +is generally enough; but we know of no stream in the country +capable of turning a mill: and the remark made by Mr. Anderson, +of the dryness of the country round Adventure Bay, extends +without exception to every part of it which we have +penetrated.</p> + +<p>Previous to leaving England I remember to have frequently +heard it asserted, that the discovery of mines was one of the +secondary objects of the expedition. Perhaps there are mines; but +as no person competent to form a decision is to be found among +us, I wish no one to adopt an idea, that I mean to impress him +with such a belief, when I state, that individuals, whose +judgements are not despicable, are willing to think favourably of +this conjecture, from specimens of ore seen in many of the stones +picked up here. I cannot quit this subject without regretting, +that some one capable of throwing a better light on it, is not in +the colony. Nor can I help being equally concerned, that an +experienced botanist was not sent out, for the purpose of +collecting and describing the rare and beautiful plants with +which the country abounds. Indeed, we flattered ourselves, when +at the Cape of Good Hope, that Mason, the King's botanical +gardener, who was employed there in collecting for the royal +nursery at Kew, would have joined us, but it seems his orders and +engagements prevented him from quitting that beaten track, to +enter on this scene of novelty and variety.</p> + +<p>To the naturalist this country holds out many invitations. +Birds, though not remarkably numerous, are in great variety, and +of the most exquisite beauty of plumage, among which are the +cockatoo, lory, and parroquet; but the bird which principally +claims attention is, a species of ostrich, approaching nearer to +the emu of South America than any other we know of. One of them +was shot, at a considerable distance, with a single ball, by a +convict employed for that purpose by the Governor; its weight, +when complete, was seventy pounds, and its length from the end of +the toe to the tip of the beak, seven feet two inches, though +there was reason to believe it had not attained its full growth. +On dissection many anatomical singularities were observed: the +gall-bladder was remarkably large, the liver not bigger than that +of a barn-door fowl, and after the strictest search no gizzard +could be found; the legs, which were of a vast length, were +covered with thick, strong scales, plainly indicating the animal +to be formed for living amidst deserts; and the foot differed +from an ostrich's by forming a triangle, instead of being +cloven.</p> + +<p>Goldsmith, whose account of the emu is the only one I can +refer to, says, "that it is covered from the back and rump with +long feathers, which fall backward, and cover the anus; these +feathers are grey on the back, and white on the belly." The wings +are so small as hardly to deserve the name, and are unfurnished +with those beautiful ornaments which adorn the wings of the +ostrich: all the feathers are extremely coarse, but the +construction of them deserves notice—they grow in pairs +from a single shaft, a singularity which the author I have quoted +has omitted to remark. It may be presumed, that these birds are +not very scarce, as several have been seen, some of them +immensely large, but they are so wild, as to make shooting them a +matter of great difficulty. Though incapable of flying, they run +with such swiftness, that our fleetest greyhounds are left far +behind in every attempt to catch them. The flesh was eaten, and +tasted like beef.</p> + +<p>Besides the emu, many birds of prodigious size have been seen, +which promise to increase the number of those described by +naturalists, whenever we shall be fortunate enough to obtain +them; but among these the bat of the Endeavour River is not to be +found. In the woods are various little songsters, whose notes are +equally sweet and plaintive.</p> + +<p>Of quadrupeds, except the kangaroo, I have little to say. The +few met with are almost invariably of the opossum tribe, but even +these do not abound. To beasts of prey we are utter strangers, +nor have we yet any cause to believe that they exist in the +country. And happy it is for us that they do not, as their +presence would deprive us of the only fresh meals the settlement +affords, the flesh of the kangaroo. This singular animal is +already known in Europe by the drawing and description of Mr. +Cook. To the drawing nothing can be objected but the position of +the claws of the hinder leg, which are mixed together like those +of a dog, whereas no such indistinctness is to be found in the +animal I am describing. It was the Chevalier De Perrouse who +pointed out this to me, while we were comparing a kangaroo with +the plate, which, as he justly observed, is correct enough to +give the world in general a good idea of the animal, but not +sufficiently accurate for the man of science.</p> + +<p>Of the natural history of the kangaroo we are still very +ignorant. We may, however, venture to pronounce this animal, a +new species of opossum, the female being furnished with a bag, in +which the young is contained; and in which the teats are found. +These last are only two in number, a strong presumptive proof, +had we no other evidence, that the kangaroo brings forth rarely +more than one at a birth. But this is settled beyond a doubt, +from more than a dozen females having been killed, which had +invariably but one formed in the pouch. Notwithstanding this, the +animal may be looked on as prolific, from the early age it begins +to breed at, kangaroos with young having been taken of not more +than thirty pounds weight; and there is room to believe that when +at their utmost growth, they weigh not less than one hundred and +fifty pounds. A male of one hundred and thirty pounds weight has +been killed, whose dimensions were as follows:</p> + +<pre> + Feet. Inches. +Extreme length 7 3 +Ditt of the tail 3 4 1/2 +Ditto of the hinder legs 3 2 +Ditto of the fore paws 1 7 1/2 +Circumference of the tail of the root 1 5 +</pre> + +<p>After this perhaps I shall hardly be credited, when I affirm +that the kangaroo on being brought forth is not larger than an +English mouse. It is, however, in my power to speak positively on +this head, as I have seen more than one instance of it.</p> + +<p>In running, this animal confines himself entirely to his +hinder, legs, which are possessed with an extraordinary muscular +power. Their speed is very great, though not in general quite +equal to that of a greyhound; but when the greyhounds are so +fortunate as to seize them, they are incapable of retaining their +hold, from the amazing struggles of the animal. The bound of the +kangaroo, when not hard pressed, has been measured, and found to +exceed twenty feet.</p> + +<p>At what time of the year they copulate, and in what manner, we +know not: the testicles of the male are placed contrary to the +usual order of nature.</p> + +<p>When young the kangaroo eats tender and well flavoured, +tasting like veal, but the old ones are more tough and stringy +than bullbeef. They are not carnivorous, and subsist altogether +on particular flowers and grass. Their bleat is mournful, and +very different from that of any other animal: it is, however, +seldom heard but in the young ones.</p> + +<p>Fish, which our sanguine hopes led us to expect in great +quantities, do not abound. In summer they are tolerably +plentiful, but for some months past very few have been taken. +Botany Bay in this respect exceeds Port Jackson. The French once +caught near two thousand fish in one day, of a species of +grouper, to which, from the form of a bone in the head resembling +a helmet, we have given the name of light horseman. To this may +be added bass, mullets, skait, soles, leather-jackets, and many +other species, all so good in their kind, as to double our regret +at their not being more numerous. Sharks of an enormous size are +found here. One of these was caught by the people on board the +Sirius, which measured at the shoulders six feet and a half in +circumference. His liver yielded twenty-four gallons of oil; and +in his stomach was found the head of a shark, which had been +thrown overboard from the same ship. The Indians, probably from +having felt the effects of their voracious fury, testify the +utmost horror on seeing these terrible fish.</p> + +<p>Venomous animals and reptiles are rarely seen. Large snakes +beautifully variegated have been killed, but of the effect of +their bites we are happily ignorant. Insects, though numerous, +are by no means, even in summer, so troublesome as I have found +them in America, the West Indies, and other countries.</p> + +<p>The climate is undoubtedly very desirable to live in. In +summer the heats are usually moderated by the sea breeze, which +sets in early; and in winter the degree of cold is so slight as +to occasion no inconvenience; once or twice we have had hoar +frosts and hail, but no appearance of snow. The thermometer has +never risen beyond 84, nor fallen lower than 35, in general it +stood in the beginning of February at between 78 and 74 at noon. +Nor is the temperature of the air less healthy than pleasant. +Those dreadful putrid fevers by which new countries are so often +ravaged, are unknown to us: and excepting a slight diarrhoea, +which prevailed soon after we had landed, and was fatal in very +few instances, we are strangers to epidemic diseases.</p> + +<p>On the whole, (thunder storms in the hot months excepted) I +know not any climate equal to this I write in. Ere we had been a +fortnight on shore we experienced some storms of thunder +accompanied with rain, than which nothing can be conceived more +violent and tremendous, and their repetition for several days, +joined to the damage they did, by killing several of our sheep, +led us to draw presages of an unpleasant nature. Happily, +however, for many months we have escaped any similar +visitations.</p> + +<a name="16"></a> +<hr> +<h3>CHAPTER XVI.</h3> + +<h4>The Progress made in the Settlement; and the Situation of +Affairs at the Time of the Ship, which conveys this Account, +sailing for England.</h4> + +<p>For the purpose of expediting the public work, the male +convicts have been divided into gangs, over each of which a +person, selected from among themselves, is placed. It is to be +regretted that Government did not take this matter into +consideration before we left England, and appoint proper persons +with reasonable salaries to execute the office of overseers; as +the consequence of our present imperfect plan is such, as to +defeat in a great measure the purposes for which the prisoners +were sent out. The female convicts have hitherto lived in a state +of total idleness; except a few who are kept at work in making +pegs for tiles, and picking up shells for burning into lime. For +the last time I repeat, that the behaviour of all classes of +these people since our arrival in the settlement has been better +than could, I think, have been expected from them.</p> + +<p>Temporary wooden storehouses covered with thatch or shingles, +in which the cargoes of all the ships have been lodged, are +completed; and an hospital is erected. Barracks for the military +are considerably advanced; and little huts to serve, until +something more permanent can be finished, have been raised on all +sides. Notwithstanding this the encampments of the marines and +convicts are still kept up; and to secure their owners from the +coldness of the nights, are covered in with bushes, and thatched +over.</p> + +<p>The plan of a town I have already said is marked out. And as +freestone of an excellent quality abounds, one requisite towards +the completion of it is attained. Only two houses of stone are +yet begun, which are intended for the Governor and Lieutenant +Governor. One of the greatest impediments we meet with is a want +of limestone, of which no signs appear. Clay for making bricks is +in plenty, and a considerable quantity of them burned and ready +for use.</p> + +<p>In enumerating the public buildings I find I have been so +remiss as to omit an observatory, which is erected at a small +distance from the encampments. It is nearly completed, and when +fitted up with the telescopes and other astronomical instruments +sent out by the Board of Longitude, will afford a desirable +retreat from the listlessness of a camp evening at Port Jackson. +One of the principal reasons which induced the Board to grant +this apparatus was, for the purpose of enabling Lieutenant Dawes, +of the marines, (to whose care it is intrusted) to make +observations on a comet which is shortly expected to appear in +the southern hemisphere. The latitude of the observatory, from +the result of more than three hundred observations, is fixed at +33 deg 52 min 30 sec south, and the longitude at 151 deg 16 min +30 sec east of Greenwich. The latitude of the south head which +forms the entrance of the harbour, 33 deg 51 min, and that of the +north head opposite to it at 33 deg 49 min 45 sec south.</p> + +<p>Since landing here our military force has suffered a +diminution of only three persons, a serjeant and two privates. Of +the convicts fifty-four have perished, including the executions. +Amidst the causes of this mortality, excessive toil and a +scarcity of food are not to be numbered, as the reader will +easily conceive, when informed, that they have the same allowance +of provisions as every officer and soldier in the garrison; and +are indulged by being exempted from labour every Saturday +afternoon and Sunday. On the latter of those days they are +expected to attend divine service, which is performed either +within one of the storehouses, or under a great tree in the open +air, until a church can be built.</p> + +<p>Amidst our public labours, that no fortified post, or place of +security, is yet begun, may be a matter of surprise. Were an +emergency in the night to happen, it is not easy to say what +might not take place before troops, scattered about in an +extensive encampment, could be formed, so as to act. An event +that happened a few evenings since may, perhaps, be the means of +forwarding this necessary work. In the dead of night the +centinels on the eastern side of the cove were alarmed by the +voices of the Indians, talking near their posts. The soldiers on +this occasion acted with their usual firmness, and without +creating a disturbance, acquainted the officer of the guard with +the circumstance, who immediately took every precaution to +prevent an attack, and at the same time gave orders that no +molestation, while they continued peaceable, should be offered +them. From the darkness of the night, and the distance they kept +at, it was not easy to ascertain their number, but from the sound +of the voices and other circumstances, it was calculated at near +thirty. To their intentions in honouring us with this visit (the +only one we have had from them in the last five months) we are +strangers, though most probably it was either with a view to +pilfer, or to ascertain in what security we slept, and the +precautions we used in the night. When the bells of the ships in +the harbour struck the hour of the night, and the centinels +called out on their posts "All's well," they observed a dead +silence, and continued it for some minutes, though talking with +the greatest earnestness and vociferation but the moment before. +After having remained a considerable time they departed without +interchanging a syllable with our people.</p> + +<a name="17"></a> +<hr> +<h3>CHAPTER XVII.</h3> + +<h4>Some Thoughts on the Advantages which may arise to the Mother +Country from forming the Colony.</h4> + +<p>The author of these sheets would subject himself to the charge +of presumption, were he to aim at developing the intentions of +Government in forming this settlement. But without giving +offence, or incurring reproach, he hopes his opinion on the +probability of advantage to be drawn from hence by Great Britain, +may be fairly made known.</p> + +<p>If only a receptacle for convicts be intended, this place +stands unequalled from the situation, extent, and nature of the +country. When viewed in a commercial light, I fear its +insignificance will appear very striking. The New Zealand hemp, +of which so many sanguine expectations were formed, is not a +native of the soil; and Norfolk Island, where we made sure to +find this article, is also without it. So that the scheme of +being able to assist the East Indies with naval stores, in case +of a war, must fall to the ground, both from this deficiency, and +the quality of the timber growing here. Were it indeed possible +to transport that of Norfolk Island, its value would be found +very great, but the difficulty, from the surf, I am well +informed, is so insuperable as to forbid the attempt. Lord Howe +Island, discovered by Lieut. Ball, though an inestimable +acquisition to our colony, produces little else than the mountain +cabbage tree.</p> + +<p>Should a sufficient military force be sent out to those +employed in cultivating the ground, I see no room to doubt, that +in the course of a few years, the country will be able to yield +grain enough for the support of its new possessors. But to effect +this, our present limits must be greatly extended, which will +require detachments of troops not to be spared from the present +establishment. And admitting the position, the parent country +will still have to supply us for a much longer time with every +other necessary of life. For after what we have seen, the idea of +being soon able to breed cattle sufficient for our consumption, +must appear chimerical and absurd. From all which it is evident, +that should Great Britain neglect to send out regular supplies, +the most fatal consequences will ensue.</p> + +<p>Speculators who may feel inclined to try their fortunes here, +will do well to weigh what I have said. If golden dreams of +commerce and wealth flatter their imaginations, disappointment +will follow: the remoteness of situation, productions of the +country, and want of connection with other parts of the world, +justify me in the assertion. But to men of small property, +unambitious of trade, and wishing for retirement, I think the +continent of New South Wales not without inducements. One of this +description, with letters of recommendation, and a sufficient +capital (after having provided for his passage hither) to furnish +him with an assortment of tools for clearing land, agricultural +and domestic purposes; possessed also of a few household +utensils, a cow, a few sheep and breeding sows, would, I am of +opinion, with proper protection and encouragement, succeed in +obtaining a comfortable livelihood, were he well assured before +he quitted his native country, that a provision for him until he +might be settled, should be secured; and that a grant of land on +his arrival would be allotted him.</p> + +<p>That this adventurer, if of a persevering character and +competent knowledge, might in the course of ten years bring +matters into such a train as to render himself comfortable and +independent, I think highly probable. The superfluities of his +farm would enable him to purchase European commodities from the +masters of ships, which will arrive on Government account, +sufficient to supply his wants. But beyond this he ought not to +reckon, for admitting that he might meet with success in raising +tobacco, rice, indigo, or vineyards (for which last I think the +soil and climate admirably adapted), the distance of a mart to +vend them at, would make the expense of transportation so +excessive, as to cut off all hopes of a reasonable profit; nor +can there be consumers enough here to take them off his hands, +for so great a length of time to come, as I shall not be at the +trouble of computing.</p> + +<p>Should then any one, induced by this account, emigrate hither, +let him, before he quits England, provide all his wearing apparel +for himself, family, and servants; his furniture, tools of every +kind, and implements of husbandry (among which a plough need not +be included, as we make use of the hoe), for he will touch at no +place where they can be purchased to advantage. If his sheep and +hogs are English also, it will be better. For wines, spirits, +tobacco, sugar, coffee, tea, rice, poultry, and many other +articles, he may venture to rely on at Teneriffe or Madeira, the +Brazils and Cape of Good Hope. It will not be his interest to +draw bills on his voyage out, as the exchange of money will be +found invariably against him, and a large discount also deducted. +Drafts on the place he is to touch at, or cash (dollars if +possible) will best answer his end.</p> + +<p>To men of desperate fortune and the lowest classes of the +people, unless they can procure a passage as indented servants, +similar to the custom practised of emigrating to America, this +part of the world offers no temptation: for it can hardly be +supposed, that Government will be fond of maintaining them here +until they can be settled, and without such support they must +starve.</p> + +<p>Of the Governor's instructions and intentions relative to the +disposal of the convicts, when the term of their transportation +shall be expired, I am ignorant. They will then be free men, and +at liberty, I apprehend, either to settle in the country, or to +return to Europe. The former will be attended with some public +expense; and the latter, except in particular cases, will be +difficult to accomplish, from the numberless causes which prevent +a frequent communication between England and this continent.</p> + +<a name="app"></a> +<hr> +<h3>A list of the Civil and Military Establishments in New South +Wales</h3> + +<p>Governor and Commander in Chief, His Excellency Arthur +Phillip, Esq.</p> + +<p>Lieutenant Governor, Robert Ross, Esq.</p> + +<p>Judge of the Admiralty Court, Robert Ross, Esq.</p> + +<p>Chaplain of the Settlement, the Rev. Richard Johnson.</p> + +<p>Judge Advocate of the Settlement, David Collins, Esq.</p> + +<p>Secretary to the Governor, David Collins, Esq.</p> + +<p>Surveyor General, Augustus Alt, Esq.</p> + +<p>Commissary of Stores and Provisions, Andrew Miller, Esq.</p> + +<p>Assistant Commissary, Mr. Zechariah Clarke.</p> + +<p>Provost Martial, who acts as Sheriff of Cumberland County, Mr. +Henry Brewer.</p> + +<p>Peace Officer, Mr. James Smith.</p> + +<p>MILITARY ESTABLISHMENT.</p> + +<p>His Majesty's Ship 'Sirius', John Hunter, Esq. Commander. +Lieutenants, Bradley, King, Maxwell.</p> + +<p>His Majesty's armed Brig, 'Supply', Lieutenant Henry Lidgbird +Ball, Commander.</p> + +<p>FOUR COMPANIES OF MARINES</p> + +<p>Major Robert Ross, Commandant.</p> + +<p>CAPTAINS COMMANDING COMPANIES</p> + +<p>James Campbell, John Shea, Captain Lieutenants, James +Meredith, Watkin Tench.</p> + +<p>FIRST LIEUTENANTS</p> + +<p>George Johnson, John Johnson, John Creswell, James Maitland +Shairp, Robert Nellow, Thomas Davey, James Furzer, Thomas Timins, +John Poulden.</p> + +<p>SECOND LIEUTENANTS</p> + +<p>Ralph Clarke, John Long, William Dawes, William Feddy.</p> + +<p>Adjutant, John Long.</p> + +<p>Quarter Master, James Furzer.</p> + +<p>Aide de Camp to the Governor, George Johnson.</p> + +<p>Officer of Engineers and Artillery, William Dawes.</p> + +<p>HOSPITAL ESTABLISHMENT.</p> + +<p>Surgeon General of the Settlement, John White, Esq.</p> + +<p>First Assistant, Mr. Dennis Considen.</p> + +<p>Second Assistant, Mr. Thomas Arndell.</p> + +<p>Third Assistant, Mr. William Balmain.</p> + +<p><a name="post"></a></p> + +<hr> +<h3>POSTSCRIPT</h3> + +<p>Sydney Cove, Port Jackson, New South Wales.<br> +October 1st, 1788.</p> + +<p>Little material has occurred in this colony since the +departure of the ships for England, on the 14th July last. On the +20th of that month His Majesty's ship Supply, Captain Ball, +sailed for Norfolk Island, and returned on the 26th August. Our +accounts from thence are more favourable than were expected. The +soil proves admirably adapted to produce all kinds of grain, and +European vegetables. But the discovery which constitutes its +value is the New Zealand flax, plants of which are found growing +in every part of the island in the utmost luxuriancy and +abundance. This will, beyond doubt, appear strange to the reader +after what has been related in the former part of my work: and in +future, let the credit of the testimony be as high as it may, I +shall never without diffidence and hesitation presume to +contradict the narrations of Mr. Cook. The truth is, that those +sent to settle and explore the island knew not the form in which +the plant grows, and were unfurnished with every particular which +could lead to a knowledge of it. Unaccountable as this may sound, +it is, nevertheless, incontestably true. Captain Ball brought +away with him several specimens for inspection, and, on trial, by +some flax-dressers among us, the threads produced from them, +though coarse, are pronounced to be stronger, more likely to be +durable, and fitter for every purpose of manufacturing cordage, +than any they ever before dressed.</p> + +<p>Every research has been made by those on the island to find a +landing-place, whence it might be practicable to ship off the +timber growing there, but hitherto none has been discovered. A +plan, however, for making one has been laid before the Governor, +and is at present under consideration, though (in the opinion of +many here) it is not such an one as will be found to answer the +end proposed.</p> + +<p>Lieut. King and his little garrison were well when the +'Supply' left them: but I am sorry to add, that, from casualties, +their number is already five less than it originally was. A ship +from hence is ready to sail with an increase of force, besides +many convicts for the purpose of sawing up timber, and turning +the flax-plant to advantage.</p> + +<p>So much for Norfolk. In Port Jackson all is quiet and stupid +as could be wished. We generally hear the lie of the day as soon +as the beating of the Reveille announces the return of it; find +it contradicted by breakfast time; and pursue a second through +all its varieties, until night, welcome as to a lover, gives us +to sleep and dream ourselves transported to happier climes.</p> + +<p>Let me not, however, neglect telling you the little news which +presents itself. All descriptions of men enjoy the highest state +of health; and the convicts continue to behave extremely well. A +gang of one hundred of them, guarded by a captain, two subalterns +and 20 marines, is about to be sent up to the head of the +harbour, at the distance of 3 leagues, in a westerly direction, +from Sydney Cove, for the purpose of establishing a settlement +there. The convicts are to be employed in putting the land around +into cultivation, as it appears to be of a more promising nature +than that near the encampment. Indeed this last hitherto succeeds +but very indifferently, though I do not yet despair, that when +good seeds can be procured, our toil will be better rewarded. But +as this is an event at a distance, and in itself very precarious, +Governor Phillip has determined on procuring a supply of flour +and other necessaries from the Cape of Good Hope, as our stock on +hand is found to be, on examination, not quite so ample as had +been reckoned upon. To execute this purpose his Excellency has +ordered the Sirius to prepare for the voyage; by which conveyance +the opportunity of writing to you is afforded me. It was at first +intended to dispatch the Sirius to some of the neighbouring +islands (the Friendly or Society) in the Pacific Ocean, to +procure stock there, but the uselessness of the scheme, joined to +the situation of matters here, has, happily for us, prevented its +being put into execution.</p> + +Watkin Tench<br> +Captain of Marines. + +<h3>FINIS</h3> + +<hr> + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A Narrative of the Expedition to +Botany Bay, by Watkin Tench + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EXPEDITION TO BOTANY BAY *** + +***** This file should be named 3535-h.htm or 3535-h.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/3/5/3/3535/ + +Produced by Col Choat and Stuart Kidd + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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