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+The Project Gutenberg E-text of Australian Search Party, by Charles Henry Eden
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Australian Search Party, by Charles Henry Eden
+
+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: Australian Search Party
+
+Author: Charles Henry Eden
+
+Posting Date: July 9, 2009 [EBook #4237]
+Release Date: July, 2003
+First Posted: December 13, 2001
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AUSTRALIAN SEARCH PARTY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Amy E. Zelmer and Sue Asscher. HTML version by Al Haines.
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<H1 ALIGN="center">
+AUSTRALIAN SEARCH PARTY
+</H1>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+BY
+</H3>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+CHARLES HENRY EDEN
+</H2>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4 ALIGN="center">
+FROM
+<BR>
+ILLUSTRATED TRAVELS:
+<BR>
+A RECORD OF
+<BR>
+DISCOVERY, GEOGRAPHY, AND ADVENTURE.
+</H4>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H4 ALIGN="center">
+EDITED BY
+<BR>
+H.W. BATES,
+<BR>
+ASSISTANT-SECRETARY OF THE ROYAL GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY.
+</H4>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+AN AUSTRALIAN SEARCH PARTY&mdash;I.
+</H2>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+BY CHARLES H. EDEN.
+</H3>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+IN a former narrative, published in the preceding volume of the
+ILLUSTRATED TRAVELS, I gave an account of a terrible cyclone which
+visited the north-eastern coast of Queensland in the autumn of 1866,
+nearly destroying the small settlements of Cardwell and Townsville, and
+doing an infinity of damage by uprooting heavy timber, blocking up the
+bush roads, etc. Amongst other calamities attendant on this visitation
+was the loss of a small coasting schooner, named the 'Eva', bound from
+Cleveland to Rockingham Bay, with cargo and passengers. Only those who
+have visited Australia can picture to themselves the full horror of a
+captivity amongst the degraded blacks with whom this unexplored
+district abounds; and a report of white men having been seen amongst
+the wild tribes in the neighbourhood of the Herbert River induced the
+inhabitants of Cardwell to institute a search party to rescue the crew
+of the unhappy schooner, should they still be alive; or to gain some
+certain clue to their fate, should they have perished.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In my former narrative I described our exploration of the Herbert
+River, lying at the south end of Rockingham Channel, with its fruitless
+issue; and I now take up the thread of my story from that point,
+thinking it can hardly fail to be of interest to the reader, not only
+as regards the wild nature of the country traversed, but also as
+showing the anxiety manifested by the inhabitants of these remote
+districts to clear up the fate of their unhappy brethren. I may also
+here mention, for the information of such of my readers as may not have
+read the preceding portions of the narrative, that Cardwell is the name
+of a small township situated on the shores of Rockingham Bay; and that
+Townsville is a settlement some hundred miles further south, known also
+as Cleveland Bay.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3>
+HOW WE EXPLORED GOULD AND GARDEN ISLANDS.
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+We were all much pleased at a piece of intelligence brought up by the
+'Daylight', to the effect that a party of volunteers had been assembled
+at Cleveland Bay, and intended coming up in a small steamer to the
+south end of Hinchinbrook, to assist in the search for the missing
+crew. As it would be of the utmost importance that both parties should
+co-operate, I sent my boat down to the mouth of the channel, with a
+note to the leader of the expedition announcing our intention of
+landing on the north end of the island and working towards the centre;
+and requesting them to scour their end, and then push northward, when
+we should most probably meet in the middle of the island. The boat had
+orders to wait at the bar until the arrival of the steamer, and then to
+return with all speed. In the meanwhile, the 'Daylight' was
+discharging her cargo, and we were making preparations for what we well
+knew would prove a most arduous undertaking; the sequel will show that
+we did not overrate the difficulties before us.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At the risk of being tedious, I must explain to the reader some of the
+peculiarities of Hinchinbrook Island. Its length is a little short of
+forty miles, and its shape a rude triangle, the apex of which is at the
+south, and the north side forming the southern portion of Rockingham
+Bay. Now this north side is by no means straight, but is curved out
+into two or three bays of considerable extent, and in one of them stand
+two islands named Gould and Garden Islands. The latter of these was
+our favourite resort for picnics, for the dense foliage afforded good
+shade, and, when the tide was low, we were enabled to gather most
+delicious oysters from some detached rocks. Gould Island is
+considerably larger; but, rising in a pyramid from the sea, and being
+covered with loose boulders, it was most tedious climbing. From the
+township we could, with our glasses, see canoes constantly passing and
+repassing between these two islands; and as the 'Daylight' had a
+particularly heavy cargo this trip, and would not be clear for the next
+two days, we made up our minds to search the islands, and drive the
+blacks on to Hinchinbrook, so that one of our parties must stumble
+across them when we swept it. This may seem to the reader unnecessary
+trouble, but most of our party were conversant with the habits of the
+blacks and their limited method of reasoning; and we judged it probable
+that the Herbert River gins would have at once acquainted the
+Hinchinbrook blacks with our unceremonious visit, and warned them that
+we should probably soon look them up also. Now on the receipt of this
+unwelcome intelligence, the first thing that would strike the blacks
+would be the facilities for concealment afforded by Gould or Garden
+Islands, more particularly had they any captives; and they would say to
+themselves that we should certainly overlook these two out-of-the-way
+little spots; and when we were busy on Hinchinbrook, they could easily
+paddle themselves and their prisoners to some of the more distant chain
+of islands, where they could lie by until all fear of pursuit was past.
+Such was the opinion both of the troopers and of the experienced
+bushmen; and as we were fully resolved to leave them no loophole for
+escape, we jumped into our boat and pulled gently over to Garden Island.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was about seven o'clock in the morning when we started, six
+strong&mdash;four whites, and Cato, and Ferdinand&mdash;well armed, and with a
+good supply of provisions. The sun was already very hot, and the water
+smooth as glass, save where the prow of the boat broke the still
+surface into a tiny ripple, which continued plainly visible half a mile
+astern. I find it difficult to bring before the reader the thousand
+curious objects that met us on our way. The sullen crocodile basking
+in the sun, sank noiselessly; a splash would be heard, and a four feet
+albicore would fling himself madly into the air, striving vainly to
+elude the ominous black triangle that cut the water like a knife close
+in his rear. Small chance for the poor fugitive, with the ravenous
+shark following silent and inexorable. We lay on our oars and watched
+the result. The hunted fish doubles, springs aloft, and dives down,
+but all in vain; the black fin is not to be thrown off, double as he
+may. Anon the springs become more feeble, the pursuer's tail partly
+appears as he pushes forward with redoubled vigour, a faint splash is
+heard, the waters curl into an eddy, and the monster sinks noiselessly
+to enjoy his breakfast in the cooler depths beneath. And now we come
+to a sand bank running out some miles or so into the bay, and on which
+the water is less than three fathoms. Here the surface is broken by
+huge black objects, coming clumsily to the top, shooting out a jet of
+spray, and again disappearing. We let the boat glide gently along
+until she rests motionless above the bank, and stooping over the side
+with our faces close to the water, and sheltered by our hands, we can
+peer down into the placid depths, and see the huge animals grazing on
+the submarine vegetation with which their favourite feeding-place is
+thickly overgrown. But what animal is he talking about? the reader will
+ask. It is the dugong ('Halicore Australis'), or sea-cow, from whence
+is extracted an oil equal to the cod-liver as regards its medicinal
+qualities, and far superior to it in one great essential, for instead
+of a nauseous disagreeable flavour, it tastes quite pleasantly. It
+frequents the whole of the north-eastern coast of Australia, and when
+the qualities of the oil first became known, it was eagerly sought
+after by invalids who could not overcome their repugnance to the
+cod-liver nastiness. The fishermen, however, spoilt their own market,
+for greed induced them to adulterate the new medicine with shark oil,
+and all kinds of other abominations, so that the faculty were never
+quite certain what they were pouring down the throats of their unhappy
+patients. Thus the oil lost its good name, though I am convinced from
+personal observation that fresh, pure dugong is quite equal, if not
+superior, in nourishing qualities to cod-liver oil, and do not doubt
+that a time will come when it will enter largely into the
+Pharmacopoeia. The animal itself is so peculiar, that a brief
+description of it may not be here amiss. Its favourite haunts are bays
+into which streams empty themselves, and where the water is from two to
+five fathoms in depth, feeding on the 'Algae' of the submerged banks,
+for which purpose the upper lip is very large, thick, and as it turns
+down suddenly at right angles with the head, it much resembles an
+elephant's trunk shorn off at the mouth. Its length averages from
+eight to fourteen feet; there is no dorsal fin, and the tail is
+horizontal; colour blue, and white beneath. Its means of propulsion
+are two paddles, with which it also crawls along the bottom, and
+beneath which are situated the udders, with teats exactly like a cow's.
+Its flesh is far from bad, resembling lean beef in appearance, though
+hardly so good to the taste, and the skin can be manufactured into
+gelatine. I have often wondered that this most useful animal was not
+oftener captured. A fishing establishment with a good boat, a trained
+crew, and proper appliances for extracting the oil, could not fail to
+return a large profit to the proprietors, and every now and then they
+could kill a whale, one or more of which could be frequently seen
+disporting themselves in the waters of the bay.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+[Illustration&mdash;BAY ON HINCHINBROOK ISLAND, WITH NATIVES.]
+</P>
+
+<P>
+By ten o'clock we had reached Garden Island, and beached the boat on a
+long sandy spit that stretched into the sea. Leaving one man as
+boat-keeper, we spread ourselves into line, and regularly beat the
+little island from end to end, but without finding a single black; we
+could, however, see their smoke-signals arising from Gould Island, and
+observed several heavily-laden canoes making the best of their way
+towards Hinchinbrook. Our search having been unsuccessful, we hurried
+down to the boat, with the intention of cutting the fugitives off, but
+found to our disgust that the tide had fallen so low during our absence
+that our united strength was insufficient to move the boat, so we were
+perforce compelled to remain until the return of the water. This did
+not in reality so much signify, indeed, some of the party were rather
+averse to our plan of intercepting the canoes, arguing that if closely
+pressed, the blacks might make an end of their captives. However this
+might be, there was no help for it, we were stuck fast until the
+afternoon, so had to summon such philosophy as we possessed, and while
+away the time as best we could. The boat's sail, spread under the
+shade of a tree, kept the intense heat a little at bay until after
+dinner, and this most essential part of the day's programme have been
+done ample justice to, and the pipes lighted and smoked out, we
+wandered about the long space left bare by the tide, amusing ourselves
+by collecting oysters, cowrie shells, and periwinkles.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The way we captured the two latter was by turning over the rocks, to
+the under sides of which we found them adhering in great numbers,
+sticking on like snails to a garden wall. Some of the cowries were
+very beautiful, particularly those of a deep brown colour approaching
+to black. This kind, however, were rather rare, and the lucky finder
+of a large one excited some envy. These beautiful little shells are of
+all sizes, from half an inch to two inches in length. When the stone
+is first turned over, the fish is almost out of its home, and the
+bright colour of the shell is hidden by a fleshy integument, but a few
+seconds suffice for it to withdraw within doors, and then the mottled
+pattern is seen in its full beauty. The best way to get the shell
+without injury to its gloss, is to keep the fish alive in a bucket of
+salt water, until you reach home, and then to dig a hole a couple of
+feet deep, and bury them. In a month or so, they may be taken up, and
+will be found quite clean, free from smell, and as bright in hue as
+during life. I have tried boiling them, heaping them in the sun, and
+various other methods, but this is undoubtedly the best.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+[Illustration&mdash;SATIN BOWER-BIRDS]
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Should it ever fall to the lot of any of my readers to have to cook
+periwinkles&mdash;and there are many worse things, when you are certain of
+their freshness&mdash;let them remember that they should be boiled in 'salt
+water'. This is to give them toughness; if fresh water is used,
+however expert the operator may be with his pin, he will fail to
+extract more than a moiety of the curly delicacy. These little facts,
+though extraneous to our subject, are always worth knowing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At one end of Garden Island, and distant from it about 200 yards,
+stands a very singular rock, of a whitish hue, and when struck at a
+certain angle by the sun, so much resembling the canvas of a vessel,
+that it was named the "Sail Rock." At low tide this could be reached
+by wading, the water being little more than knee-deep. Its base was
+literally covered with oysters of the finest quality. The mere task of
+getting there was one of considerable difficulty, for the rock was as
+slippery as glass, and whenever you got a fall&mdash;which happened on an
+average every five minutes&mdash;bleeding hands and jagged knees bore
+testimony to a couch of growing bivalves being anything but as soft as
+a feather bed; also the oysters cling so fast that they might be taken
+for component parts of the rock, and only a cold chisel and mallet will
+induce them to relinquish their firm embrace. Three or four of the
+party had ventured out, and we had secured a large sackful, after which
+we all retired to the tent, except one of our number, who, having a
+lady-love in Cardwell with an inordinate affection for shell-fish,
+lingered to fill a haversack for his 'inamorata'. We were comfortably
+smoking our pipes and watching with satisfaction the tide rising higher
+and higher, when a faint "coo-eh" from the direction of the rock
+reached us, followed by another and another and another, each one more
+shrill than the last.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"By Jove, Wordsworth's in some trouble!" exclaimed one of our party,
+and, snatching up our carbines, we hurried to the end of the island at
+which stood the Sail Rock. The tide had now risen considerably, and
+the water between the rock and ourselves was over four feet deep, and
+increasing in depth each moment. We saw poor Wordsworth clinging on to
+the slippery wall, as high up as the smooth mass afforded hand-hold.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Come along, old fellow!" we shouted; "it's not up to your neck yet."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He turned his head over his shoulder&mdash;even at the distance we were,
+its pallor was quite visible&mdash;and slowly and cautiously releasing one
+hand, he pointed to the water between himself and the island.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"By Jove!" cried the pilot, "he's bailed up by a shark, look at his
+sprit-sail!" and following his finger we saw an enormous black fin
+sailing gently to and fro, as regularly and methodically as a veteran
+sentry paces the limits of his post.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Stick tight, old man! we'll bring the boat," and leaving the pilot to
+keep up a fusillade at the monster with the carbines, we darted back.
+I shall never forget the efforts we made to launch the boat, but she
+was immovable, and every moment the tide was rising, the little ripples
+expending themselves in bubbly foam against the thirsty sand. We
+strained, we tugged, we prised with levers, but unavailingly, the boat
+seemed as if she had taken root there and would not budge an inch. A
+happy thought struck me all of a sudden, as a reminiscence of a similar
+case that I had seen in years gone by came back in full vigour.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Give me a tomahawk," I said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One was produced in a minute from under the stern-sheets. Meanwhile I
+had got out a couple of the oars.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Now, Jim, you're the best axeman, off with them here!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Half a dozen strokes to each, and the blades were severed from the
+looms.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Now boys, lay aft and lift her stern."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was done, and one of the oars placed under as a roller.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Now, launch together."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Heave with a will."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She's moving!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Again so. Keep her going."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Hurrah!" and a loud cheer broke forth, as, through the medium of the
+friendly rollers, the heavy boat trundled into the water.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The pull was long, at least it seemed to us long, for we had to round
+the sandy spit before we could head towards the rock, and nearly got on
+shore in trying to make too close a shave. We could hear the crack of
+the pilot's carbine every few minutes, borne down to us by the
+freshening breeze, and the agonising "coo-ehs" of poor Wordsworth,
+whose ankles were already hidden by the advancing waters; added to
+this, we had only two oars, and the wind, now pretty strong, was dead
+in our teeth. I was steering, and Jim was standing up in the bows with
+his carbine for a shot, if the shark offered such an opportunity. As
+we neared the rock we could distinctly see the black fin within six
+feet of the narrow ledge on which the poor fellow was standing, and
+only when we approached to within a couple of boats' lengths, did the
+ferocious brute sail sullenly out to sea, pursued by a harmless bullet
+from Jim's rifle. Poor Wordsworth dropped into the boat fainting from
+terror, exhaustion, and loss of blood, for, although he was unconscious
+of it all the time, in his convulsive grip, the sharp oyster-shells had
+cut his hands to the very bone. A good glass of grog and some hot
+tea&mdash;the bushman's infallible remedy&mdash;soon brought him round, but the
+scars on his hands and knees will accompany him to his grave. He
+afterwards described the glances that the shark threw at him as
+perfectly diabolical, and confessed that he it not been for the cheery
+hails of the pilot, he should most certainly have relinquished his
+hold, and met with a death too horrible to contemplate.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was now about three o'clock in the afternoon, and the boat being
+launched, we resolved to reach Gould Island before dark. The tent was
+soon struck, the provisions stowed away, the priming of the carbines
+looked to afresh, and in a few minutes we were sweeping across the
+small belt of water that separated the two islands. We approached the
+shore with caution, for, as I mentioned before, the sides of Gould
+Island are everywhere very steep, and hostile blacks, by simply
+dislodging some of the loose masses of rock, could easily have smashed
+the boat and its crew to pieces without exposing themselves to the
+slightest danger. Noiselessly, and with every faculty painfully alert,
+we closed the land, sprang on to the rocks, and at once set about the
+tedious task of breasting the hill. Hill climbing, under the vertical
+sun of North Australia, is by no means an enjoyable undertaking, more
+particularly when the loose shale and rock gives way at every stride,
+bringing down an avalanche of rubbish on the heads of the rearmost of
+the party. Encumbered with our carbines, we made but slow progress,
+and it was nearly six o'clock before we attained the summit, from
+whence we saw several canoes making their way with full speed towards
+Hinchinbrook.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So far then, so good," we said; "we have made certain that none of the
+rascals are lurking about the two islands, and we are sure to get them
+now, when we sweep Hinchinbrook."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We had now done everything that was possible until the 'Daylight' had
+finished unloading, and so spread ourselves out about the island to see
+if the blacks had left any of their curious implements behind them. We
+were in no hurry to get back to the township, so purposed having supper
+where we were, and pulling back in the cool of the evening, by the
+light of the moon, which was just then in full glory. We found plenty
+of traces of the blacks, the embers of their fires even still glowing,
+but they had carried off everything with them, and no trophies crowned
+our search of Gould Island; and yet I am wrong, for I got one memento,
+which I have by me still, and which is so curious to lovers of natural
+history that I am tempted to describe it. In rummaging about, I came
+to a place strewed with old bones, shells, parrots' feathers, etc.,
+close to which stood a platform of interwoven sticks. I was terribly
+puzzled at first to account for the presence of this miniature rag and
+bone depot, and my astonishment culminated when Ferdinand informed me
+that&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bird been make it that fellow; plenty d&mdash;d thief that fellow, steal
+like it pipe, like it anything."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It then flashed across me that I had fallen in with the "run" of the
+bower-bird, of which I had so often heard, and had so often sought for
+without success.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The satin bower-bird ('Ptilonorhynchus holosericus') belongs to the
+family of starlings, and though tolerably common in New South Wales, is
+but a rare visitor to the hotter climate of Northern Queensland. The
+plumage of the adult male is of a glossy satin-like purple, appearing
+almost black, whilst the females and the young are all of an
+olive-greenish colour. The peculiarity for which this bird is
+generally known, is its habit of constructing a sort of arbour of dry
+twigs, to act as a playground. These bowers are usually made in some
+secluded place in the bush&mdash;not infrequently under the shady boughs of
+a large tree&mdash;and vary considerably in size, according to the number of
+birds resorting to them, for they seem to be joint-stock affairs, and
+are not limited to one pair. The bower itself is somewhat difficult to
+describe, and a better idea can be formed from the engraving, or by
+visiting the British Museum, where several are shown, than I can ever
+hope to set before the reader in words. A number of sticks, most
+artistically woven together, form the base, from the centre of which
+the walls of the structure arise. These walls are made of lighter
+twigs, and considerable pains must be taken in their selection, for
+they all have an inward curve, which in some "runs" cause the sides
+almost to meet at the top. The degree of forethought that these
+self-taught architects possess is strikingly exemplified in the fact
+that, whilst building the walls, any forks or inequalities are turned
+'outwards', so as to offer no impediment to their free passage when
+skylarking (if it is not an Irishism, using such an expression with
+regard to a starling) and chasing each other through and through the
+bower, to which innocent recreations, according to the testimony of
+Messrs. Cato and Ferdinand, they devote the major part of their time.
+Their love of finery and gaudy colours is also most remarkable.
+Interwoven amongst the twigs of which the bower is composed, and
+scattered about the ground in its vicinity, are found bleached bones,
+broken oyster, snail, and cowrie shells, and not unfrequently, in the
+more civilised districts, pieces of coloured rag, and fragments of
+ribbon pilfered from some neighbouring station, for, in search of
+attractive objects to decorate his playground, the bower-bird entirely
+ignores the eighth commandment, and, I fear, justifies the somewhat
+strong expression of "d&mdash;d thief" which Ferdinand bestowed on him.
+Indeed, so well are his filching propensities known to the natives,
+that they make a practice of searching the runs whenever any small
+article of value is missing, and often succeed in recovering the lost
+object.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I find that I have been using the pronoun 'he' hitherto, whilst
+describing this insatiable love of finery, but on reflection I cannot
+but think that I am utterly wrong, and that when more is known of the
+domestic arrangements of the bower-bird, it will be found that the lady
+alone is responsible for this meretricious taste, and that the poor
+'he', whom I have so unblushingly accused, is in reality gathering
+berries and fruit for the little ones, guiltless of the slightest
+inclination towards picking and stealing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+These birds live and thrive in confinement, and busy themselves
+immensely in the construction of runs, but they never multiply whilst
+captive. Indeed, the place and manner of their breeding is as yet a
+mystery, for, so skilful are they in concealment, that even the
+lynx-eyed blacks have failed to discover their next.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We found the descent to the boat incomparably preferable to the tedious
+climb of two hours previous, and, thanks to the promise of a "nobbler
+of rum each," Cato and Ferdinand transported my precious "run" in
+safety to the stern-sheets; the sun having then sunk in crimson beauty
+behind the coast-range, and the breeze having fallen to the faintest
+whisper, we shoved off, and pulled leisurely over the calm bay to
+Cardwell, arriving about ten o'clock, to hear the welcome news that the
+'Daylight' would be ready for us on the following afternoon.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3>
+HOW WE EXPLORED HINCHINBROOK ISLAND.
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+The sun was just showing above the distant sea-line, and the bay was
+lying motionless as a mirror, with a rosy hue thrown across its placid
+surface, when I awoke on the following morning, stiff from the clamber
+of the preceding day. The short half-hour before the rays of the sun
+have attained an unpleasant fierceness is most enjoyable in Australia,
+particularly in a wild region such as Cardwell, where birds, beasts,
+and fishes pursue their daily avocations, heedless of the presence of
+man. My house was situated at the extreme north end of the township,
+and far apart from the nearest dwelling&mdash;so much so, in fact, that it
+was only by a stretch of the imagination that I could say I was
+included within the village boundary. On the side farthest from the
+settlement lay the virgin bush, whilst outside the garden at the back,
+all was wild and rude as Nature had left it, except a small clearing I
+had made for the growth of maize, sweet potatoes, etc. Now this
+clearing had many enemies, and of many species, ranging from feathered
+and furred to biped. The cockatoos came down in such clouds as almost
+to whiten the ground, and made short work of the maize; the bandicoots
+and the township pigs dug up and devoured the sweet potatoes, just as
+they were becoming large enough for use&mdash;commend me to your
+half-starved pig to find out in a moment where the juiciest and finest
+esculent lies buried&mdash;and the chattering little opossums stripped the
+peach-trees of their wealth, in which labour of love they were eagerly
+assisted by the flying-foxes during the night, whilst any that had
+escaped these nocturnal depredators became the spoil of two or three
+idle boys, who loafed about all day, seeking mischief, and, as always
+happens, succeeding in finding it, even in this sequestered region.
+From this it will be seen that my efforts in the direction of husbandry
+were attended with some difficulty, and, despite a real liking for the
+animal world, I had imbibed a holy hatred of that particular section of
+its society which insisted on devouring my substance under my very
+nose, only retreating to the nearest tree until my back was turned, and
+then resuming operations with unblushing effrontery. By way of a mild
+vengeance, I had got into the habit of coming out every morning
+directly I awoke, with my gun, and easing off both barrels amongst the
+cockatoos, wallabies, or whatever particular class of robbers happened
+to be afield at the moment&mdash;a practice which served as a safety-valve
+for my injured feelings, whilst at the same time it provided me with a
+cockatoo pie, or a good bowl of kangaroo-tail soup.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Once, in my indignation at finding my palings broken down, and some
+sugar-cane, that I had been most carefully rearing, rooted up and
+destroyed, while the author of the mischief, a huge sow, innocent of
+the restraining ring (I would have hung the ring of the 'Devastation's'
+best bower-anchor to her snout, had I been allowed to follow out my
+wishes), stood gloating over the havoc she had caused. Then, in my
+wrath, I had hastily loaded a carbine with a handful of salt, and
+prematurely converted a portion of my enemy's flank into bacon; but
+even this just act of retribution was not to be accomplished without
+further loss to myself, for on receipt of my hint to move on, her
+sowship dashed straight ahead, and brought down a whole panel of my
+fence about her ears, owing to which the village cows, which I had
+often observed throwing longing glances over the paling at my bananas,
+doubtless apprised of their opportunity by the evil-minded and
+malicious sow, took a mean advantage of the weakness of my defences,
+and on the same night devoured everything in the garden that they
+thought worthy of their attention.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Though I had now become hardened to the many injuries thus heaped upon
+me, and had almost discontinued all attempts at cultivation, I still
+retained the habit of stepping out into the verandah every morning with
+my gun, but more with an eye to the pot than for any other reason.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Beautiful as the scene always was, it struck me that day as being of
+unusual splendour. The tall gum-trees, with their naked stems, and
+curious hanging leaves that exasperate the heated traveller by throwing
+the scantiest of shadows, glistened dew-beaded in the rising sun. The
+laughing jackass, perched upon a bare limb, was awaking the forest
+echoes with his insane fits of laughter, alternating from a
+good-humoured chuckle to the frenzied ravings of a despairing maniac.
+Suddenly ceasing, he would dart down upon some hapless lizard, too
+early astir for its own safety, and, with his writhing prey in his
+bill, would fly to some other branch, and after swallowing his captive,
+burst forth into a yell of self-gratulation even-more fiendish than
+before. The delicate little "paddy melon," a small species of
+kangaroo, turned his gracefully-formed little head, beautiful as a
+fawn's, and, startled at the strange figure in the verandah, stood
+hesitatingly for a few seconds, and then, bending forward, bounded into
+the scrub, the noise caused by the flapping of its tail being audible
+long after the little animal itself was lost to sight. The white
+cockatoos, alarmed by the outcry of the sentry&mdash;for, like the English
+rooks, they always tell off some of their number to keep a
+look-out&mdash;who with sulphur-coloured crest, erect and outstretched neck,
+kept up a constant cry of warning, rose from the maize patch, the
+spotless white of their plumage glancing in the sun, and forming a
+beautiful contrast to the pale straw-colour of the under portion of
+their extended pinions. With discordant screams they circle about, as
+if a little undetermined, and then perch upon the topmost branches of
+the tallest trees, where they screech, flap their wings, and engage in
+a series of either imaginary combats, or affectionate caresses, until,
+the coast being clear, they are again enabled to continue their repast.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A curious and indescribable wailing cry is heard in the air, singularly
+depressing in its effect, and a string of some dozen black cockatoos
+flit from tree to tree, the brilliant scarlet band on the tail of the
+male flashing as he alternately expands and contracts it, to keep his
+balance whilst extracting the sweets from the flowers of the
+'Eucalypti'. Few things present so great a contrast as the cries of
+these two birds&mdash;of the same family, and so alike in everything but
+colour&mdash;and yet both are disagreeable: that of the white variety from
+its piercing harshness, and that of the black from an indefinable
+sensation of the approach of coming evil it carries with it&mdash;at least,
+such is the effect it always has upon me. On strolling to the paling
+and looking into the clearing&mdash;for although my gun is in my hand, it is
+loaded with ball cartridge, and I do not fire&mdash;the nimble little
+bandicoot scuttled away towards his hollow log, looking so uncommonly
+like a well-fattened rat, that I mentally wonder how I could ever have
+had the courage to eat one, and a flight of rainbow-hued Blue Mountain
+parrots, who have held their ground to the last, whirr up with a
+prodigious flapping of wings, and, alighting on a gum-tree, can be seen
+hanging about the blossoms, head downwards, sucking out the honey with
+their uncouth beaks and awkward little tongues, which seem but badly
+adapted to such a delicate task. But I find I am digressing terribly,
+and the gloomy winter days of England, which make the recollection of a
+bright tropical morning so agreeable a task to contemplate, must be my
+excuse.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After breakfast, I hurried down to the beach to see if Tom Frewin, the
+skipper of the little cutter, 'Daylight', would be likely to keep his
+promise, and have the vessel ready to start by noon. I found him
+busily engaged with his not over-numerous crew&mdash;for it consisted only
+of a man and a boy, besides himself, though Mrs. Tom, who also lived in
+the tiny craft, ought to be counted as no inconsiderable addition to
+the vessel's complement, for she did the cooking, and on occasions
+could take the tiller and steer as cunningly as the gallant Tom
+himself. I found him hard at work hurrying the cargo over the side,
+assisted by the townspeople, who all showed the greatest anxiety that
+no time should be lost in setting out for the relief of the shipwrecked
+men. Everything thus pointing to the probability of our getting away
+that afternoon, the provision question had to be next considered, for
+the party would be numerous, and the exact time our expedition would
+take could scarcely be correctly estimated. We knew Government would
+refund us for any reasonable outlay, and so determined our search
+should not be cut short by any scarcity of food, and our fears of
+overshooting the mark and laying in more than we could consume, were
+allayed by Mr. McB&mdash;, the store-keeper who generously offered to supply
+us, and to take back, without charge, anything that remained at the
+expiration of the trip. All difficulties being thus disposed of, we
+were left at liberty to make our own private arrangements, until one
+o'clock, by which time the 'Daylight' would have laid in her water,
+etc., and be ready to start.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But I must now say something of the party itself, which we were
+compelled to limit to ten men, inclusive of the native police. These
+consisted of the pilot and his crew of two men, Mr. Dunmore, the
+officer in command of the police, with the two troopers, Ferdinand and
+Cato, three volunteers, and myself. Where all were anxious and willing
+to aid in the good task, it would have been invidious to select, and
+the volunteers drew lots from a bag in which all were blanks but three,
+the gainers of these lucky numbers becoming members of the party.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One other addition we had, and right yeoman's service she did, for it
+was a 'she', reader as the sequel will prove. About eighteen months
+before, the troopers had visited Hinchinbrook Island, to recover stolen
+property, and in one of the native camps had found an exceedingly
+pretty gin of some fourteen summers. The personal charms of this coy
+nymph of the forest had proved too much for the susceptible heart of
+Ferdinand, who, regarding her as his lawful prize, had borne her, irate
+and struggling, to the boat, from whence she was in due course
+transported to the police camp (mounted on the pommel of the saddle in
+front of the adventurous swain), where, in a very short time she became
+perfectly at home, and under the name of Lizzie, made Ferdinand a
+remarkably pleasant wife.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Certainly the blacks are a curious race, the like of which was never
+before seen under the sun. For two days after Lizzie's arrival in
+camp, she refused to speak or eat; for the next two days she ate
+everything she could lay her hands on, but still kept an unbroken
+silence; and for another two days, whenever she was not eating, she
+"yabbered" so much and so fast that the other gins looked on aghast,
+unable to get a word in edgewise, so continuous was the flow of
+Hinchinbrook vituperation. On the seventh day, as if by magic, she
+brought her tirade to a close, went down to the creek with the other
+gins to fetch water, cooked her husband's supper, appeared perfectly
+reconciled to her change of life, and henceforth, from her sharpness,
+the aptitude with which she picked up the broken English in which the
+officers communicate with the troopers, and her great knowledge of the
+surrounding country, she became a most useful acquisition to the camp,
+and Dunmore used frequently to say that Lizzie was worth three extra
+troopers. One of the most extraordinary things about her&mdash;and she was
+not unique, for all the Australian blacks are alike constituted in this
+respect&mdash;was the facility with which she seemed to rupture all the
+natural ties of kinship and affection. Her own tribe&mdash;her father,
+mother, sisters, all were apparently wiped from her mind as completely
+as writing is removed from a slate by a sponge; or, if ever remembered,
+it was never with any mark of regret.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+AN AUSTRALIAN SEARCH PARTY&mdash;II.
+</H2>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+BY CHARLES H. EDEN.
+</H3>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+BETWEEN one and two o'clock, the report of a little swivel gun, with
+which the taffrail of the 'Daylight' was armed, echoed over the bay,
+and announced to the party that all was in readiness. In a very few
+minutes we were all mustered on the beach, looking, I must confess,
+remarkably like brigands, in our slouching and high-crowned Californian
+hats, coatless, and with shirt-sleeves either tucked up or cut off
+above the elbow, which, with the carbine that each man carried in his
+hand, and the revolvers, knives, etc., stuck into the waist-belts, made
+our 'tout ensemble' such, that I am convinced no honest citizen, with a
+plethoric purse, who saw us thus for the first time, would have felt
+quite at his ease in our company. With a ringing cheer from the
+townspeople assembled on the beach, under the shade of the big trees,
+we shoved off, and, manned by willing hands, the cable rattled in, in a
+fashion that must have astonished the old windlass, accustomed to the
+leisurely proceedings that usually obtained on board the 'Daylight'.
+The sail was soon clapped on, the little vessel heeled over to the
+sea-breeze now setting in pretty stiffly, and ten minutes after
+quitting the shore we were down in the hold, the captain and his lady
+occupying the cabin. Making our preparations for the night, which
+consisted, I may mention, mainly of spreading out our blankets, whilst
+the 'Daylight', with the Government whale-boat towing astern, was
+beating up against the adverse wind for the north end of Hinchinbrook,
+where we purposed anchoring for the night, and commencing our search on
+the following morning.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+What with a contrary wind and tide, it was not until past ten o'clock
+that we glided into the little bay, and, shortening sail as noiselessly
+as possible, let down the anchor by hand to avoid the rattling of the
+chain through the hawsehole, which, in the stillness of the night,
+would have certainly reached the keen ears of the blacks, were there
+any in the neighbourhood, and caused them to shift their quarters. The
+little inlet or creek in which we now found ourselves, was entirely new
+to us, and we were indebted to Lizzie for the discovery of such a quiet
+retreat. With straining eyes, our novel pilotess stood at the heel of
+the bowsprit, extending an arm in the direction she wished the vessel
+to go, and, her task completed, she wrapped her blanket round her
+active little body, scarcely shrouded in the striped twill shirt that
+constituted her sole attire, and, sinking down in the waterways under
+the lee of the gunwale, was soon sound asleep&mdash;a sensible proceeding,
+which, as soon as everything was secured, we hastened to imitate.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We had arranged our plans for the morrow in the following manner.
+Before dawn, the whale-boat was to land all the party, including
+Lizzie, with the exception of the pilot and his two men. He was to
+return to the 'Daylight' after having put us ashore, and, getting under
+weigh as soon as the wind was strong enough, was to take her round to a
+small inlet on the island, some distance down Rockingham Channel, and
+there await either our arrival or further instructions. Our expedition
+was to join him there in two or three days at the farthest, perhaps
+sooner; but, whatever happened, he was to remain with the cutter at the
+rendezvous, and on no account, nor under any inducement, was he to quit
+until he either saw or heard from us, however long the time might be.
+During the daytime the whale-boat was to be kept hauled up alongside
+the cutter, with the carbines belonging to the crew loaded and triced
+up under the thwarts, ready for immediate service, and a bright
+look-out was to be kept on the channel, in both directions. If the
+natives attempted the smallest communication with the mainland, the
+whale-boat was to give chase immediately, and either intercept and
+capture the canoes, or compel them to return to Hinchinbrook Island.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Such was the rough plan we sketched out for the guidance of the
+'Daylight'. With regard to ourselves, we could make no standing rule,
+for the country was comparatively unknown to us, and we must,
+Micawber-like, trust to something turning up and, in the pursuit of
+this happy event, must follow whithersoever fortune and Miss Lizzie
+thought fit to lead us.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At least an hour before dawn we were astir, and swallowing the scalding
+tea that the man on watch had prepared: this done, and a snack of
+damper and cold meat eaten, we got quietly into the boat and were
+pulled ashore. Until daylight, we were unable to make our way, for
+paths there were none, and the ground was dangerous from the quantity
+of stones, etc., so we were compelled to sit down quietly and smoke our
+pipes until we could see to pick our way. In the tropics there is but
+little dawn; the sun springs up without heralding his approach by a
+lengthened gradation from darkness to night, as obtains in more
+temperate climes, and but little patience was requisite to enable us to
+commence our search. As many of our readers are doubtless aware that
+in Australia no journey is ever undertaken on foot; that the real
+bushman would think himself sunk to the depths of abject poverty, if he
+had not at least 'one' horse of his own; and that a man will wander
+about for a couple of hours looking for a horse to carry him half a
+mile, when he might have gone to his destination and back half a dozen
+times, in the interval wasted in searching for his steed. Knowing
+this, they will doubtless wonder why we did not bring our mounts with
+us, and perform the journey comfortably, in place of the tedious method
+we now adopted. It must not for a moment be imagined that the great
+assistance horses would have afforded us had not been duly weighted and
+considered, and our reasons for leaving them behind were as
+follows:&mdash;From the little we knew of Hinchinbrook, and from the
+description Lizzie gave of the country, they would have been rather in
+our way than otherwise. The whole island is a mass of lofty volcanic
+mountains; and the passes through the gorges so strewn with huge
+boulders, debris, and shale, that we should have been compelled to lead
+our nags, and thus they would have only proved an encumbrance. This
+was one reason, and apparently a very good one, but I doubt if it would
+have had much effect upon our party, who could hardly contemplate any
+undertaking without the agency of horseflesh, had not a more cogent
+argument been forthcoming, to which they were compelled to give in
+their adherence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The 'Daylight' is quite big enough to carry them all, for such a short
+distance, if they're properly stowed," said Jack Clark, the roughrider,
+who was a zealous advocate for the conveyance of his pet quadrupeds.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Of course she can," said another; "and we shall get the work over as
+quickly again."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How will you land them?" I ventured to suggest; "for the cutter can
+never go near enough to the shore to walk them out."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She can't get within a quarter of a mile," said the pilot; for at this
+time none of us knew of the little inlet, into which Lizzie so deftly
+guided us.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Pitch them overboard, of course," cried Jack; "they'll pretty soon
+make for the land; and I'll send my mare Gossamer first; she'll give
+them a lead, I'll bet. Cunning old devil!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The impetuosity of Jack was fast gaining converts, when Cato pulled
+Dunmore quietly by the sleeve, and said&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Marmy, baal you take 'em yarroman like 'it Hinchinbrook; my word,
+plenty of alligator sit down along of water. He been parter that
+fellow like 'it damper."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"By Jove! Cato's right," said Dunmore; "we forget about the alligators
+and sharks. I won't let the boys take their horses, and shall not take
+my own. I lost one horse from an alligator last year, on the Pioneer
+River, and Government wanted to make me pay for it, and I'll take care
+I don't risk losing 'three'. Bring Gossamer, if you like, Clark, but,
+take my word for it, you'll never see her again."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This unexpected contingency; the prophesied fate of Gossamer, which was
+as the apple of Jack's eye; and the point-blank and sensible refusal of
+Dunmore to hazard the Government horses, completely turned the tables.
+After a little inward grumbling, Jack consoled himself, saying&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, at all events, I can 'think' of riding!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And thus it came to pass that we landed on Hinchinbrook, with no means
+of locomotion beyond those with which nature had endowed us.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And now, headed by Lizzie, and walking in single file and in silence,
+we struck out for the interior of the island. The path&mdash;if path it
+could be called, for it consisted only of a dim track beaten by the
+naked feet of the blacks&mdash;wound in and out among the long grass, which,
+as we approached the foot of the mountain range, became exchanged for
+boulders and loose shale, which rendered walking most tedious, and
+played the very mischief with our boots. Here even this track seemed,
+to our eyes, to die out; but Lizzie led the way confidently, and
+evidently with a thorough knowledge of what she was about. We had now
+been walking for more than three hours, and had apparently only got
+half way up a kind of gorge in the mountains, which seemed to become
+gradually narrower and narrower, and from all appearances afforded
+every prospect of terminating in a 'cul-de-sac'. A watercourse must at
+some period have run down this ravine, for the boulders were rounded;
+but it was now quite dry. As the sides of the mountains drew nearer,
+our path led along this watercourse, and the walking became dreadfully
+fatiguing. The boulders were sometimes so close as to render walking
+between impossible, and then it became necessary to clamber over them,
+which, loaded as we were, was very painful. If, on the other hand, we
+attempted to journey on the 'top' of the boulders, they were not only
+of unequal heights, but sometimes so wide apart, that a good spring was
+requisite to get from one to the other. Lizzie was the only one of the
+party who appeared thoroughly at home; her light figure bounded from
+rock to rock with the greatest ease and rapidity. Even Cato and
+Ferdinand, barefooted as they were, seemed to be a long way from
+enjoying themselves, and for us wretched Europeans, with our thick
+boots, that obtained scarcely any foothold, we slipped about from the
+rounded shoulders of the rocks, in a way that was anything but pleasant.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Thus we scrambled along for another hour, at the expiration of which we
+could only see a blank wall of mountain before us, up which it would
+have been both impossible and useless to climb. Wondering where the
+deuce Lizzie was leading us, we blundered along until we arrived at the
+base of the perpendicular cliff, and saw that by some convulsion of
+nature the ravine now branched off at a right angle to the left, and
+gradually widened out into a beautiful and gently declining stretch of
+country, perfectly shut in by hills, and into which a pretty little bay
+extended, with several canoes on its placid surface. We were distant
+from the beach about three miles, and could see clearly the smoke of
+several fires; while with binocular glasses we could make out the
+figures of the blacks fishing, and of the piccaninnies and gins romping
+in the sand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lizzie was a sight to see, as she pointed triumphantly to the
+unconscious savages, and, trembling with eagerness, tapped the butt of
+Dunmore's carbine, as she whispered&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Those fellow sit down there, brother belonging to me, plenty you shoot
+'em, Marmy."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You take us close up along of those fellow, Lizzie?" said Dunmore.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Your Marmy, plenty close, you been shoot 'em all mine think," replied
+our amiable little guide, who, enjoining the strictest silence, at once
+put herself in motion, bidding us, by a sign, to follow her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For more than an hour and a half we crept cautiously along, sometimes
+crawling on all fours where the country was open, and frequently
+stopping, while Lizzie went noiselessly forward and reconnoitred,
+before beckoning to us to advance again. The direction in which she
+led us lay at the base of the hills, which on one side bounded the
+little plain and its bay, and though we could form but a crude idea of
+where we were going, owing to the thickness of the undergrowth, yet it
+was sufficiently evident that the young lady was one of nature's
+tacticians, and meditated a flank blow at her unfortunate relatives.
+Proceeding, we came at last within a stone's throw of the beach, and
+could hear the mimic waves rolling on the sand, at no great distance,
+on our right hand. Lizzie now pointed to a small belt of vine shrub
+that lay in front of us, and indicated that immediately outside it were
+the 'gunyahs', or huts; and, "plenty you shoot," she added showing her
+white teeth as she grinned with glee at the thoughts of the cheerful
+surprise she had prepared for her old companions. We were not
+thoroughly on the 'qui vive', for we thought this unknown bay would be
+the very spot in which the blacks were likely to seclude any prisoners
+from the 'Eva', and accordingly willingly followed the lithe figure of
+our little guide, as she wound her way through the tangled brake, like
+a black snake, and with a facility that we in vain attempted to
+imitate. The troopers&mdash;who had reduced their clothing to a minimum,
+for their sole vestment consisted of a forage-cap and
+cartridge-belt&mdash;wound along as noiselessly as Lizzie; but we poor
+whites&mdash;with our flannel shirts and other complicated paraphernalia
+that custom would not permit us to dispense with in the matter-of-fact
+way they were laid aside by our sable allies&mdash;were getting into
+continual trouble; now hitched up helplessly by a lawyer vine, whose
+sharp prickles, like inverted fish-hooks, rent the skin; now crawling
+unsuspiciously against a tree-ants' nest, an indiscretion that the
+fierce little insects visited with immediate and most painful
+punishment; or else, becoming aware, by unmistakable symptoms, that we
+were trying to force a passage through a stinging tree-shrub. Whenever
+we thus came to grief, Lizzie would stop, turn round, and wave her arms
+about like a semaphore, indicative of impatience, contempt mingled with
+pity and warning.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Luckily for us, the belt of scrub was not of great extent; Lizzie had
+already reached its edge, and was peering cautiously through, and we
+were struggling along, each after his own fashion, when bang went a
+carbine, the bullet of which we distinctly heard whistle over our
+heads, and turning round we got a glimpse of Jack, the roughrider, hung
+up in a vine, one of whose tendrils had fired off his weapon; and had
+just time to hear him exclaim, "If I'd only been mounted, this wouldn't
+have happened," before we broke cover, and all further concealment
+being now unnecessary, rushed recklessly on to the encampment.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But we were too late to capture any of the men, for I need hardly tell
+the reader that never had we intended to make use of the curt arguments
+that Lizzie had relied upon for cutting off the abrupt exit of her
+quondam friends; it would be quite time enough to commence a system of
+reprisals when it was ascertained that the blacks had actually been
+guilty of any atrocity. At present it was mere surmise on our part,
+and putting altogether on one side the natural reluctance to shed
+blood, an aggressive policy would have been an unwise one, engendering,
+as it infallibly would, a bad feeling against any other luckless
+mariners whom the winds and the waves might in time to come cast upon
+the inhospitable shores of Hinchinbrook Island.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The sudden report of Jack's carbine, which occasioned a momentary halt,
+and the few seconds required to burst through the scrub, afforded
+sufficient time for the male portion of the encampment to make their
+escape at speed, in different directions, some taking to the water,
+where they were picked up by the fishermen in the canoes; others diving
+into the nearest cover, and being lost to sight without hope of
+recovery. The women and children followed the tactics usual on such
+occasions, and flung themselves into a heap, similar in colour and
+contour to that described in a previous chapter, when we searched the
+Herbert River. The same thing took place again exactly; we sat down in
+a circle round them, waiting for the deafening "yabbering" to die away,
+which "yabbering" burst forth in all its pristine discord, whenever one
+of the party made the slightest movement. Time and patience, however,
+had the desired effect, restoring tone to their not over sensitive
+systems, and at the expiration of half an hour, we could distinguish
+sharp, bead-like black eyes peering at us out of the mass, which had
+now sunk into silence, but burst out again louder than ever, when
+Lizzie made her appearance from one of the gunyahs&mdash;perhaps the
+paternal roof, who knows?&mdash;where she had retired, swelling with
+indignation, and as sulky as a whole team of mules. Finding that no
+one took any notice of her, and half an hour's reflection having, I
+suppose, convinced her, that if she wanted to make a display before her
+relations, now was the time, her ladyship came slowly up to the circle,
+and commenced an attack on poor Dunmore, as she knew him best. To
+transcribe her words would be impossible, for she put in a native
+sentence whenever she found herself at a loss for an English one, but
+the burden of her plaint was this:&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Plenty d&mdash;d fooly fellow, white fellow"&mdash;a string of Hinchinbrook
+vernacular&mdash;"Baal you been shoot 'em like 'it dingo"&mdash;more
+Hinchinbrook, but evidently, from the accompanying gestures, indicative
+of intense disgust&mdash;"Baal mine take any more along of black fellow
+camp"&mdash;half sobs&mdash;"Baal mine care suppose you fellow all go like 'it&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And she summarily consigned us to the bottomless pit, as the only place
+at all suited for such stupid idiots who could refrain from shooting
+blacks when so grand an opportunity presented itself. Her eyes flashed
+fire as she delivered herself of her woes, and at the concluding
+sentence she stamped her little foot, and flinging a short waddy she
+held, with remarkable dexterity and no mean force, into the midst of
+the sable mass, she turned round to depart with the dignity of a
+tragedy queen, when Dunmore jumped up, caught her, and holding her
+wrist, walked off a little way from us.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You like 'it one fine fellow red shirt, Lizzie? Mine give you one
+with 'plenty long tail'. Baal any other gin along of camp have shirt
+like 'it you; and when piccaninny sit down" (for there was a prospect
+of her presenting Ferdinand with a little pledge of affection), "mine
+give that fellow two budgeree flour-bag shirts, suppose only you good
+fellow girl Lizzie."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Evidently, Dunmore knew the way to the young lady's heart&mdash;we nicknamed
+him "Faust" afterwards&mdash;for at the mention of the red shirt, with the
+lengthy tails, her eyes lost their fierceness, and the allusion to the
+piccaninny completed his victory, and changing at once from one extreme
+to the other, as only a black or a child can, Miss Lizzie took her seat
+in the circle, lighted her pipe, commenced nodding to, and chatting
+most affably with, her relatives, and looking so kind, that it seemed
+impossible to believe that an intense longing for bloodshed and cruelty
+had so shortly before lurked in the breast of the pretty, smiling
+little savage who was now beside us.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+During the task of pacifying Lizzie, the "heap" had again sunk into
+comparative silence, and only a confused murmur was audible from its
+depths. Allowing no time to be lost, Dunmore said to Lizzie&mdash;who was
+puffing out huge mouthfuls of smoke, greatly to the astonishment of the
+other gins, who looked as if they expected to see her suddenly blaze
+up&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lizzie, you ask, suppose they been see any white fellow on island?
+White fellow in plenty big canoe. That fellow canoe been come like 'it
+shore. You tell them, 'Baal white fellow hurt you, suppose you been
+show, where brother belonging to him sit down.' You tell them that,
+Lizzie."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lizzie proceeded with the greatest gravity, and evidently with an
+overwhelming sense of self-importance, to put the required questions,
+whilst we anxiously awaited her replies.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, what they been say?" exclaimed Dunmore at last, when there was a
+momentary break in the conversation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I should imagine that the vernacular of the Hinchinbrook Islanders was
+not pre-eminently adapted for the noble intricacies of diplomatic
+intrigue. In the first place it contains but few words, and none
+representing any number higher than five, so that even the courtly
+nobleman now presiding over Foreign Affairs, would find the smooth flow
+of his amenities subjected to rude shocks; and as for expressing any
+large number either in words or figures&mdash;say, for instance, the Alabama
+indemnity of three millions&mdash;to do so, would tax to the utmost the
+genius of the late Chancellor of the Exchequer. Lizzie, in her first
+flash of pride, as representing a plenipotentiary armed with
+extraordinary powers, had commenced negotiations with the dignity and
+slowness of speech adapted to so exalted a personage. But the shrill
+chorus which emanated from the audience was decidedly antagonistic to
+grave deliberation, and the anxious curiosity of the woman superseding
+the self imposed role of the diplomatist, our envoy lost the pompous
+tone she had first adopted, and a volley of queries and replies was
+exchanged so rapidly, and with such appalling shrillness, that we
+onlookers ran a great risk of being either deafened, or driven out of
+our senses. At the first slackening of the wordy warfare, Dunmore put
+his questions, and then Lizzie said&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Baal there been any white fellow along of here."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You been sure, Lizzie, ask suppose they been see any big fellow canoe."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Again the same hideous noise now took place, but I will not tire my
+readers with too minute a description of a scene with which they must
+now be pretty conversant, suffice it to say, that what with the real or
+pretended stupidity of the gins, and the imperfect English of our
+interpreter, we were more puzzled at the conclusion of the debate than
+we had been at its commencement.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Had they seen a vessel?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh yes, big fellow, with wings like 'it bird."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How long ago?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Plenty long time ago."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"One moon ago?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, one moon ago."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure it was one moon?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, thought it must be one day ago, and plenty smoke sit down along of
+big canoe."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Altogether the skein was too tangled for us to attempt to unravel it.
+They had seen vessels evidently, both sailing ships and steamers, but
+whether it was yesterday, or ten years back, there were no means of
+ascertaining; but to make certain that we were not being deceived, we
+instituted a strict overhaul of the gunyahs, in hopes of finding
+something that might give us a clue to the fate of the missing men.
+When we broke up our circle for this purpose, the component parts of
+the "heap" assumed an upright posture, and it was remarkable to witness
+the awe with which they regarded Lizzie. At first they seemed afraid
+to approach her, and stood some five yards distant, watching her whilst
+she puffed out the smoke from her relighted pipe, and posed herself in
+an attitude of becoming superiority, for she saw clearly enough that
+the happy moment for making an impression had arrived. Gradually they
+drew closer and closer, and at last, three of the eldest gins going
+down on all fours, crept slowly up until close in front of her, when
+they stopped, and buried their withered old faces in the sand at her
+feet. After enjoying their humiliation for a few seconds, she
+condescended to speak to them, and very shortly they were all
+chattering away on the most amicable terms.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Meanwhile the gunyahs or native huts, and the camp, had been thoroughly
+searched, but without bringing to light anything European, except a few
+bottles, and a pint pot which had been accidentally left behind by one
+of the party on the occasion of Lizzie's abduction. The gunyahs were
+better constructed than usual, and consisted of saplings bent in an
+arch and covered with tea-tree bark, a great improvement on all the
+native dwellings we had hitherto seen, which were generally little
+better than a rude screen against the wind. But our time was precious,
+for we carried but little provision; and we could not afford to loiter
+about, even in so pleasant a spot as this little bay; so, after
+dispatching a hasty dinner, we started off afresh, to the immense
+relief of the gins, and got out of the valley by another pass, which
+Lizzie showed us. I must not forget to mention one ludicrous
+circumstance, which convulsed us with laughter. The gins showed such
+curiosity about Lizzie's pipe, that she handed it round and made them
+each take a puff. Their expressions, when the pungent smoke caused
+them either to sneeze, cough, or choke, were most laughable; and I have
+no doubt that it is still a matter of wonder to them, and a fruitful
+source of debate over the camp-fires, what pleasure the white man can
+find in filling his mouth with smoke, apparently with no better object
+than to puff it out again as soon as possible. Our course now lay due
+south, and the travelling was much the same as in the morning, that is
+to say, as bad and as fatiguing as it well could be. Lizzie said she
+could take us to another bay, where there were sure to be more blacks;
+and so we trudged patiently along under her guidance, with the sun
+blazing down so fiercely that the carbine-barrels became quite heated.
+Our new path was very similar to the last one, seeming to come to an
+abrupt termination, but really shooting off at an angle, and leading
+down to a bay, which opened out to our view about five o'clock, and did
+not present nearly so pretty an appearance as the one we had just left,
+for the ground seemed swampy, and the beach was a nasty muddy
+mangrove-flat. We were also disappointed in not finding any blacks;
+but as there is nothing so bad that it has not some redeeming quality,
+so this dreary-looking swamp had its advantages, for the trees were
+loaded with Torres Straits' pigeons, and sea-crabs were abundant. This
+would enable us to lay in an extra day's provisions, and to extend our
+search, if necessary, before visiting the 'Daylight', from which vessel
+we were now separated by more than twenty miles of unknown country,
+inclusive of a mountainous range. We determined not to shoot any
+pigeons that night, for they would only keep the less time; and having
+lit our fire by the side of a small creek, we had supper, and were soon
+sleeping the sleep of the weary, the watch having instructions to call
+us at an early hour for the purpose of replenishing our larder before
+the birds took their departure for the mainland.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A pint pot of tea swallowed&mdash;what a blessing it is that this glorious
+beverage is so portable that abundance can always be carried&mdash;three of
+us sallied forth with our carbines, from which we had extracted the
+bullets and substituted shot, each taking a different direction, the
+troopers guaranteeing a crab breakfast, and Lizzie cutting and peeling
+wooden skewers to roast the game on; for in this climate nothing will
+keep beyond a few hours, unless partially cooked. I struck away
+towards the left with the intention of making the mangroves as soon as
+possible, where I knew I should find plenty of birds. The walk of the
+day previous had made me a little stiff; but I felt lightly clad,
+without the heavy blanket, which I had left in camp; and, by way of
+getting rid of the stiffness, I started off at a run and soon reached
+my destination, where I sat down until there was sufficient daylight to
+enable me to see the game. As I rested on the root of a tree,
+perfectly motionless, I saw something large moving among the mangroves;
+but the dawn was as yet so uncertain that I could not distinguish
+whether it was a human being or not.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If that is a black fellow," I thought, "he's worth all the pigeons put
+together, and I'll wait quietly to try and capture him," for the object
+I saw was moving in the direction my companions had taken; and if it
+were a native, he would be certain to return by the road he had come,
+when he heard the firing. Sitting still, waiting for anything or
+anybody, when waited on yourself by hungry mosquitoes, may be agreeable
+enough to Mr. Fenimore Cooper's typical Red Indian, but I can safely
+say that it is anything but pleasant work to a thin-skinned Englishman.
+Daylight had now fully come, and I was beginning to hesitate as to
+whether I had not better bag some of the birds that were fluttering
+over my head, and get out of the swamp as fast as I could, when I heard
+the distant report of a gun, and said to myself, "Well, I'll give the
+nondescript five minutes more, and if it doesn't turn up by then, I'll
+blaze away at the pigeons." Half the allotted time had barely elapsed,
+when another report broke the stillness of the morning, and immediately
+afterwards I heard a rustling among the mangrove-leaves, and a slight
+crackling, as though some heavy weight were passing over the arched
+roots. I stayed quiet, almost breathless, as the noise came nearer and
+nearer, and, turning my head, I peered through the bush behind which I
+had taken up my quarters, and saw a fine-looking black gliding
+cautiously from one to another of the interlaced mangroves. He was
+evidently quite unsuspicious of any danger in front, and kept all his
+faculties concentrated on the direction in which he had heard the
+carbine-shots, which now followed each other rapidly, as the two
+gunners fired at the birds as fast as they could load.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Now," thought I, "if I can only cut you off so as to keep you between
+me and them, I am pretty certain to capture you, my friend;" and,
+judging my time, I rushed from behind my bush, and was within ten yards
+of him before he saw me. In his amazement he dropped the long
+fish-spear with which he was armed, stood one moment undetermined, and
+then made his way, with the greatest agility, from tree to tree, not
+back towards my friends, as I had fondly hoped, but straight for the
+bay. I followed as fast as I could, but he went two paces to my one.
+I confess I felt sorely tempted to handicap him with a charge of small
+shot, lodged somewhere about the calves of those lean legs that were
+carrying him over the roots with such provoking rapidity, and have
+often wondered since why I refrained; but I did, and continued to
+scuttle after him, now slipping down and barking my shins, now nearly
+losing my carbine, and often compelled to sprawl on all fours. He was
+now forty or fifty yards ahead of me, and I was nearly giving up the
+useless chase, when an unforeseen accident turned the tables in my
+favour, and caused me to push on with redoubled vigour. As we
+approached the bay, the whole of the roots and lower portions of the
+mangroves became thickly studded with oysters, whose shells, sharp as
+razors, cut the bare feet of the fugitive; while, on the contrary, they
+proved of assistance to me by preventing my thick boots from slipping
+off the treacherous roots. I now gained ground as fast as I had
+previously lost it, and made certain of capturing my prisoner on
+arriving at the end of the mangroves, through which I could already
+catch glimpses of the sea. Animated by the thoughts of bringing a
+captive into camp, from whom we should probably gain valuable
+information, I jumped from tree to tree in hot pursuit, and when the
+bay opened out clearly, I was only a short distance in the rear.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Now I've got you," I muttered, as the black fellow jumped on to the
+last stool of roots, and as I was eagerly following, holding my breath
+for a tussle; when, to my intense mortification, he plunged headlong
+into the sea, leaving me disconsolate and out of wind, to get back as
+best I could. I waited until his head reappeared, which was not until
+he had put a good thirty yards between us, and, pointing my carbine,
+shouted to him to return or I would fire. It was quite useless. He
+went quietly out seaward, and at the last, when I turned unwillingly to
+retrace my steps, I saw his black head bobbing about on the calm
+surface. When, after a series of involuntary feats on the mangrove
+rope, I again stood on 'terra firma', all the pigeons had left; and I
+was compelled to make my way back to camp, empty-handed, muddy, cut
+about the shins, and with my boots almost in tatters. "So much,"
+thought I, "for trying to catch a black fellow single-handed."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+My companions had shot plenty of pigeons, after roasting which we
+started for the interior of the island, and without meeting with
+anything beyond the ordinary routine of bad bush and mountain
+travelling; certainly encountering nothing that would justify me in
+inflicting a prolix description upon the reader&mdash;we arrived late on the
+following evening at the rendezvous, found the 'Daylight' safely at
+anchor, and thus completed one portion of our search, without having
+obtained the faintest clue to an elucidation of the mystery of the
+'Eva'.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The pilot reported that, to the best of his belief, no blacks had
+succeeded in making their escape to the mainland; several canoes had
+attempted to cross, but they had been seen and intercepted, though none
+of their occupants had been captured. One canoe he had taken
+possession of, and now showed us, which was, I think, the most
+primitive piece of naval architecture any of us had seen. Canoe it
+could hardly be called, for it was only a sheet of bark curled up by
+the action of fire; the bow and stern formed by folding the
+extremities, and passing a tree-nail, or, rather, a large skewer,
+through the plaits. When placed in the water, the portion amidships,
+which represented the gunwale, was not four inches above the surface,
+and so frail that no European could have got into it without a capsize,
+though the black fellows are so naturally endued with the laws of
+equilibrium that they can stand upright in these tiny craft, and even
+spear and haul on board large fish.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We slept in the hold of the 'Daylight' that night, after making all
+arrangements for a start at early dawn. We trusted that the Cleveland
+Bay party would have performed their portion of the task, and
+thoroughly overhauled the southern part of the island, and fully
+expected to fall in with them on the following day.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Our road lay through most abominable country&mdash;stony, precipitous, and
+in places covered with dense vegetation. The traces of blacks were
+abundant, and we could travel but a short distance without falling in
+with some of the numerous camping-places. In many of these, the fires
+were still smouldering, but the inhabitants had cleared out, most
+probably warned by those whom the whale-boat had intercepted. Each
+camp was subjected to a rigid scrutiny, but without revealing anything
+European, except fragments of bottles, to which we attached no
+importance, for they were probably flung over-board by some passing
+vessel, and carried ashore by the tide. These are highly valued by the
+blacks, who do not use them for carrying water, but break them, and
+scrape down their spears with the fragments.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+To make a spear must be a work of many weeks' duration, when the
+imperfect implements at the natives' disposal are taken into
+consideration. In the first place, his missile must be perfectly
+straight, and of the hardest wood; and no bough, however large, would
+fulfil these requirements, so it must be cut out bodily from the stem
+of an iron-bark tree, and the nearer the heart he can manage to get,
+the better will be his weapon. His sole tool with which to attack a
+giant iron-bark is a miserable tomahawk, or hatchet, made of stone, but
+little superior to the rude Celtic flint axe-heads, that may be seen in
+any antiquarian's collection. These are of a very hard stone,
+frequently of a greenish hue, and resembling jade; and, having been
+rubbed smooth, are fitted with a handle on the same principle that a
+blacksmith in England twists a hazel wand round a cold chisel. The
+head, and the portion of the handle which embraces it, then receive a
+plentiful coating of bees'-wax, and the weapon is ready for use. Fancy
+having to chop out a solid piece of wood, nine feet long, and of
+considerable depth, from a standing tree, with an instrument such as I
+have described, which can never, by any possibility be brought to take
+an edge! I have frequently examined the trees from which spears have
+been thus excised, and the smallness of the chips testified to the
+length of the tedious operation; indeed, it would be more correct to
+say the segment had been bruised out than excised. Having so far
+achieved his task, there is still a great deal before the black can
+boast of a complete spear, for the bar is several inches in diameter,
+and has to be fitted down to less than one inch. Of the use of wedges
+he knows nothing, so is compelled to work away with the tomahawk, and
+to call in the aid of fire; and when he has managed to reduce the spear
+to something approaching its proper size, he gets a lot of
+oyster-shells, and with them completes the scraping, and puts on the
+finishing touches. It may easily be imagined what a boon glass must be
+to the savage, enabling him to do the latter part of the operation in a
+tithe of the time.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I am afraid that it is often the habit with us Australians to either
+destroy or carry away as curiosities, the weapons and other little
+things that the blacks manufacture, utterly regardless of the loss we
+thus inflict upon them; for without his weapons the wretched native is
+not only defenceless against neighbouring tribes, who would not scruple
+to attack him when unarmed, but he is also literally deprived of the
+means of subsistence. Without his spear, he is unable to transfix the
+kangaroos and wallabies on which he so much depends for his daily food,
+and, robbed of his boomerangs and nullah-nullahs, the wild duck can
+pass him scatheless, and the cockatoo can scream defiance from the
+lofty trees. I know that this practice of returning laden with native
+spoil is more frequently the result of thoughtlessness or curiosity
+than anything else. The implements appear so trumpery, that the
+European thinks they can be of little use to anybody, but the bad blood
+thus engendered between the aborigines and the settlers is greater than
+would be easily credited. Another reason, I would venture to submit,
+in opposition to this custom is, that in the case of the blacks doing
+any mischief, no method of punishing them can possibly be devised equal
+in severity to the destruction of their weapons. A tribe is rendered
+more helpless and more innocuous by this than by shooting down half the
+males, and I am sure that if they once found that only in case of
+mischief was this punishment resorted to, we should hear infinitely
+less of cattle-spearing and shepherd-murdering than at present obtains.
+I mention this, not from any good-will towards the blacks, who have
+been causes of much sorrow to me and mine, but because I am sure that a
+discontinuance of this idle habit would tend to lessen the existing
+causes of friction between the two races.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In one of the camps we found a blanket&mdash;not, O reader, made of the
+finest wool, deftly woven at the looms of Witney, but a blanket of Dame
+Nature's own contrivance, stripped by the aboriginal from the bark of
+the Australian tea-tree ('Melaleuca squarrosa'), no small shrub, but a
+noble fellow standing from 150 to 200 feet high, and generally found in
+the neighbourhood of fresh water, or in the beds of creeks. The bark
+of this tree is of great thickness, and composed of a series of layers,
+each of which can be easily separated from its neighbours, and, in
+fact, much resembling a new book, just issued from the hot-press of the
+binder. From a portion of this&mdash;the inner skins, I imagine&mdash;the blacks
+manage to make a flexible, though not over warm, covering for the
+winter nights, or for the newly-born piccaninnies. The whole of the
+process I am not acquainted with, but from all I could gather from
+Lizzie, the bark is stripped in a large sheet at the end of the rainy
+season, the inner cuticle of several leaves carefully separated from
+the remainder, and placed in fresh water, weighted with heavy stones to
+retain it in its position. After the lapse of a certain time, known
+only to the initiated, it is taken out, hung up to dry, and at a
+peculiar stage, before all the moisture has evaporated, it is laid on a
+flat rock, and cautiously beaten with smooth round stones, which
+operation opens out the web sufficiently to make it quite pliant, after
+which it is allowed to dry thoroughly, and is then ready for use.
+These vegetable blankets are very strong, and must be a great
+protection to the naked savages, but, despite the ease with which they
+can be obtained, and the small time and labour occupied in their
+preparation, but few of the gins have them, and none of the men.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We also found several fish-hooks of a most peculiar shape, and made out
+of a curious material. In shape they were like a circular key-ring,
+with a segment of exactly one-third cut out. One end was ground sharp,
+and to the other was attached the line, cleverly spun from the tea-tree
+bark. Now, of all shapes to drive a Limerick hook-maker to despair,
+none, one would think, could have been invented better than this, for
+the odds are certainly ten to one against its penetrating any portion
+of a fish, even though he should have gorged it. The material of which
+these quaint hooks are made is tortoise or turtle shell, for both
+tortoises and turtles abound on this coast, the former frequenting the
+fresh-water creeks and lagoons, and the latter the sea. Whether they
+were cut out of the solid, or whether a strip was soaked, bent, and
+then dried in the sun until it became firmly set in the required shape,
+I never could ascertain, but most probably the former plan was adopted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The whole island seemed to teem with game, and had we been able to
+fire, we should speedily have made a good bag, but this we dared not
+do, so I made a mental resolve to return at some future time and make
+amends for this enforced restraint. At nearly every step, we put up
+some bird or beast strange to European eyes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I have no doubt it is known to most of my readers that Australia is
+destitute of 'Ferae' proper, and that elephants, lions, tigers, etc.,
+are unknown. They will also know that the kangaroos are marsupial
+animals; that is to say, the females have a peculiar pouch for their
+young, which are born in a far less advanced state than the young of
+other animals. But perhaps it is not so generally known that, with two
+or three exceptions, such as the dingo or native dog, the platypus, and
+several species of bats, the 'whole' of the animals on the continent
+are marsupial. The brains of this species are very small, and they
+sadly lack intelligence, in which respect they exhibit a wonderful
+affinity to the aboriginals who live by their capture.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+[ILLUSTRATION&mdash;GROUP OF KANGAROOS.]
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Of kangaroos there are more than thirty different kinds, but the
+English are now so well acquainted with this curious animal that it
+needs no description. There are two things about it, however, that I
+may with propriety here point out&mdash;viz., the use of the pouch, and the
+various ways in which the kangaroo is serviceable to the settler. The
+average size of the ordinary female kangaroo is about six feet,
+counting from the nose to the tip of the tail; and, marvellous though
+it may appear, the young kangaroo, at its birth, is but little over an
+inch in length, having a vague kind of shape, certainly, but otherwise
+soft, semi-transparent, and completely helpless. Now the pouch comes
+into use. The little creature is conveyed there by the mother's lips,
+and immediately attaches itself to one of the nipples, which are
+retractile, and capable of being drawn out to a considerable length.
+Thus constantly attached to its parent, it waxes bigger daily. From
+two to eight months of age it still continues an inhabitant of its
+curious cradle, but now often protrudes its little head to take an
+observation of the world at large, and to nibble the grass amongst
+which its mother is feeding. Sometimes it has a little run by itself,
+but seeks the maternal bosom at the slightest intimation of danger. It
+quits the pouch for good when it can crop the herbage freely; but even
+now it will often poke its head into its early home and get a little
+refreshment on the sly, even though a new-comer may have succeeded to
+its place.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+AN AUSTRALIAN SEARCH PARTY&mdash;III.
+</H2>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+BY CHARLES H. EDEN.
+</H3>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+A FULL-GROWN "paddy melon," a small and beautiful species of kangaroo,
+bearing the same resemblance to the "boomer" that a Cingalese
+mouse-deer does to an elk, was once given to me as a pet, and we became
+great friends. Whenever I went into the room and opened my shirt or
+coat, the little fellow would bound in and coil himself snugly away for
+hours, if permitted; thus showing, I think that he still retained a
+recollection of the snug abode of his childhood. Like most pets, he
+came to an untimely end&mdash;in fact, met with the fate that ultimately
+befalls all the members of his tribe who are domesticated and allowed
+to run about the bush huts in Australia. The fireplaces are large
+recesses in the wall, and on the same level as the floor. Wood only is
+burnt, and large heaps of glowing ashes accumulate, for the fire never
+really goes out, by night or day. As long as it is blazing, the pet
+kangaroo will keep his distance, but when it has sunk down to living
+coals, his foolish curiosity is sure to impel him, sooner or later, to
+jump right into the thick of it; and then&mdash;and here his want of brains
+is painfully shown&mdash;instead of jumping out again at once, he commences
+fighting and spurring the burning embers with his hind feet, and, as a
+natural sequence, is either found half roasted, or so injured that his
+death is inevitable.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The uses to which the settler puts this animal are many. He has to
+take the place of the stag when any hunting is going on (as the dingo
+has to act for the fox); and most remarkably good sport an "old man" or
+"boomer"&mdash;as the full-grown males are called&mdash;will afford; and most
+kangaroo dogs bear witness, by cruel scars, how keen a gash he can
+inflict with his sharp hind claw when brought to bay. From ten to
+twelve miles is by no means an unusual run, and when thoroughly
+exhausted he makes a stand, either with his back against a tree, or in
+the water. In both of these positions he is no despicable adversary,
+and will do much damage to a pack of hounds, by grasping them in his
+short fore arms and ripping them open, if on land; or by seizing and
+holding them under, if in the water. Instances are on record of a
+despairing kangaroo dashing through the dogs on the approach of a
+dismounted hunter, and severely wounding him. The common practice when
+the animal is brought to bay is to ride up and pistol him. But,
+however he may be killed, his useful qualities have by no means
+departed with his breath. His skin, properly cured, will make good
+door-mats, boots, saddle-cloths, stock-whips, gaiters, and numberless
+other useful articles. His long and heavy tail is much valued for the
+soup it yields; and the hams can be cured, and, thus preserved, find
+many admirers. The hind-quarters of a large "boomer" will run little
+short of seventy pounds; and, with the tail, form the only parts
+commonly eaten by Europeans.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The birds that we encountered were of every form and size; pigeons,
+some coloured like parrots, others diminutive as sparrows, and of the
+same sombre hue: pheasants, quail, every kind of feathered fowl that
+could gladden the heart of the sportsman, were found in abundance, and
+amongst these the scrub turkey and its nest. This latter bird is so
+little known, that I am tempted to give a short account of it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Australian scrub turkey ('Tallegalla Lathami') is common in all the
+thick jungles in the north of Queensland, and, though smaller than the
+domestic bird, is sufficiently like it to be easily recognised, having
+the same wattle, and neck denuded of feathers. The most remarkable
+feature about this turkey is its nest, which is composed of sand,
+leaves, and sticks, piled up into a great mound three feet or so in
+height, and ten or more in diameter. This enormous mass is not the
+unaided work of one pair, but of a whole colony, and the material is
+got together by the bird grasping a quantity in its foot, and throwing
+it behind him; the ground in the immediate vicinity of the mound is
+thus entirely stripped of every blade of grass, or fallen leaf. In
+process of time, the heap partially decomposes, and when the female
+judges that enough heat has been engendered to serve her purpose, she
+proceeds to lay her eggs. These are enormous when compared with the
+size of the bird, and are not simply deposited and covered over, but
+buried at a depth of eighteen or twenty inches, each egg nearly a foot
+from its neighbour, and standing on end, with the larger half
+uppermost. Thus they remain until hatched, though how the bird manages
+to plant them with such dexterity has, I believe, never been
+ascertained; no one yet having been sufficiently lucky to witness the
+proceeding. Directly the little birds chip the shell, they run about
+with the greatest agility, and their capture is exceedingly difficult.
+A nest with freshly-laid eggs is a glorious find, for several dozen are
+frequently extracted, and are most delicious eating.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The evening was fast approaching, when we camped for the night by the
+side of a nice clear water-hole in a sequestered valley, and, after
+bathing and having tea, we tried our luck at fishing, for these holes
+are sometimes full of eels. We prospered, and soon had several fine
+fellows on the bank, from whence they were speedily transferred to the
+hot ashes, and roasted in their integrity; they were thus spared the
+skinning, to which, it is averred, custom has habituated them.
+Ferdinand and Cato were collecting firewood for the night, for, in the
+position we had selected, we were not afraid of making a good blaze,
+and we were sitting and lounging round the fire, conjecturing what had
+become of all the blacks, and how soon we should fall in with the other
+party, when Lizzie&mdash;who had accompanied the troopers&mdash;came rushing
+back, and said:&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"One fellow snake been bit 'em Cato; plenty that fellow go bong (dead)
+by-and-by, mine believe."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We all jumped up, and sure enough, poor Cato came slowly towards us,
+looking the ashy-grey colour to which fear turns the black, and
+followed by Ferdinand, who dragged after him a large black snake, the
+author of the mischief.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+If Australia is exempt from wild beasts, the number of venomous
+reptiles with which it is cursed make it as dangerous to the traveller
+as other tropical countries in which ferocious animals abound. Hardly
+a tree or a shrub can be found that does not contain or conceal some
+stinging abomination. The whole of these are not, of course, deadly,
+but a tarantula bite, or a centipede sting, will cripple a strong man
+for weeks, while a feeble constitution stands a fair chance of
+succumbing. But of all these pests, none can equal the snakes, which
+not only swarm, but seem to have no fear of man, selecting dwellings by
+choice for an abode. These horrible reptiles are of all sizes, from
+the large carpet snake of twenty feet, to the little rock viper of
+scarcely half a dozen inches. The great majority of these are
+venomous, and are of too many different kinds for me to attempt their
+enumeration here. The most common with us were the brown, black, and
+whip snakes, and the death-adder, all poisonous; and the carpet-snake,
+harmless. The brown and black snakes run from two to eight feet in
+length, frequent the long grass, chiefly in the neighbourhood of
+swamps, and from the snug way in which they coil up, and their
+disinclination to move, are highly dangerous. The latter is very
+handsome, the back of a brilliant black, and the under portion of a
+sea-shell pink. Their skin is sometimes used by bushmen as a cover to
+their waistbelts, which are much beautified thereby. The whip-snakes
+are of all sizes and of all colours; in fact, under this name the
+colonists include all the slender climbing snakes, so many of which
+inhabit Australia. In my opinion, these are the worst; for they come
+boldly into your room in search of warmth, and may be found stowed away
+in a boot, or under the pillow, or in any place where they are least
+expected. Last and worst of our venomous snakes comes the death, or
+deaf, adder, for it is called indiscriminately by both names, and amply
+justifies either prefix. The hideous reptile is very thick and stumpy
+in proportion to its length, which rarely exceeds two feet, whilst its
+circumference may be put down at one-fifth of its total measurement.
+The tail is terminated by a small curved spike, which is commonly
+regarded as the sting; but though when touched it doubles up, and
+strikes with this horn, as well as bites, I do not think the tail does
+any material damage, but this opinion one would find it difficult to
+make a bushman credit. I once saw a man take a death-adder up&mdash;quite
+unintentionally, you may be sure&mdash;between two shingles, and it
+immediately struck backwards with both head and tail, the two
+extremities luckily meeting above his hand. From the sluggish habits
+of this reptile, it is popularly accounted deaf, and it seems quite
+unalarmed even by the report of a gun. You may walk over it a dozen
+times, as it lies basking in the sun, usually in the most frequented
+part of the road, and it will take not the slightest notice, but if
+touched, however gently, it bites at once.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When I first went to Cardwell, I was talking about death-adders, and
+the naive remark made by one of the inhabitants amused and at the same
+time rather terrified me, for the perfect knowledge he exhibited of the
+reptiles showed plainly how common they were there.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Nasty things," he said, "but Lord, they won't hurt you. Best not try
+to get one alive into a bottle, though. I tried that little game on,
+with a pickle-jar and a stick, but I couldn't get him in, and he
+doubled up and very nearly bit me; his tail just grazed my hand as it
+was."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I thanked my informant, and assured him from the bottom of my heart,
+that whenever I 'did' try to coax a death-adder into a bottle, I would
+benefit by his experience and use the greatest caution.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The eye of this snake is remarkable for its vivid yellow, crossed by a
+black longitudinal pupil. The colour of the body is a mixture of dull
+hues, and the abdomen pinkish; the head broad, thick, flattened, and
+its 'tout ensemble' hideously repulsive. But I am digressing, and
+leaving poor Cato still uncared for.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The snake, which was a very large one, had been laid hold of by the boy
+in the imperfect light, and had instantly bitten him in the wrist, on
+which the punctures of the fangs were plainly visible. A handkerchief
+was at once tied round the wounded limb, with a small pebble so placed
+as to compress the brachial artery inside the forearm, and with the
+iron ramrod from a carbine as a lever, we screwed this rough tourniquet
+up until the circulation was in great measure cut off. Luckily Dunmore
+had a pocket-knife with him, for the sheath-knives we carried were but
+rude instruments for surgery, and with the small blade he slashed the
+bitten part freely, while Lizzie, applying her lips to the wound, did
+her best to draw out the subtle venom. Some of us carried flasks,
+containing various spirits, and the contents of these were at once
+mixed&mdash;brandy, rum, hollands, all indiscriminately&mdash;in a quart pot, and
+tossed off by the sufferer, without the slightest visible effect. Had
+the spirit taken the smallest hold upon him, we should have felt hope,
+for if a man suffering from snake-bite can be made intoxicated, he is
+safe. But the poison neutralised the potent draught, and poor Cato
+showed no indication of having swallowed anything stronger than water.
+With the superstition inherent in the blacks, he had made up his mind
+to die, and his broken English, as he moaned out, "Plenty soon this
+fellow go bong," was painful in the extreme.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's no use," said Dunmore. "I know these fellows better than any of
+you, and Cato will never recover. I had a boy down on the Mary River,
+who was knocked down with low fever. Half a pennyweight of quinine
+would have put him to rights, but he had made up his mind to die, and
+when once they have done that, all the drugs in a doctor's shop won't
+do them any good."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Everything we could think of was proposed, but speedily rejected as
+useless.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Pour a charge of powder on the wound," said Jack Clarke, "and then
+fire it, that will take the part out clean enough;" but we agreed that
+it would be putting the boy to unnecessary pain, for the poison must be
+already in the system and beyond the reach of local remedy; and the
+patient had become drowsy, and repeatedly begged to be left alone and
+allowed to go to sleep.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We must walk him about," said Dunmore, "it is the only chance, and
+painful as it is, I must have it done. Remember, I'm responsible for
+the boy, and no means must be left untried."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I had withdrawn a little from the group, and as I stood some distance
+off, outside the circle of light thrown by the fire, I could not help
+thinking what a scene for the painter's brush was here presented. The
+dark outline of the lofty gums looked black and forbidding as funeral
+plumes, against the leaden sky. The rugged range starting up in the
+rear, cast a threatening gloom over the little valley in which we were
+encamped, and the distant thunder of a falling torrent could, with
+little effort, be interpreted as a dull voice of warning from the
+mountain. The fitful glare of the fire, now sinking, now rising as a
+fresh brand was added, threw a ruddy glare over the actors in this
+strange scene; showing the hopeless face of the poor patient, the
+undemonstrative countenances of his sable companions, and the anxious
+air apparent in the white men, more particularly in Dunmore, as he
+knelt over his follower, and tried to inspirit a little hope by
+dwelling on the chances of recovery. The fantastic dresses, and the
+wildness of the spot, all combined to add a weird aspect to the group;
+and recalled forcibly to the mind those scenes of Pyrenean robber-life,
+so faithfully portrayed by the magic pencil of Salvator Rosa.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But drowsiness was fast closing the eyes of poor Cato, and, as the last
+chance, we compelled him to walk about, despite his piteous prayers for
+repose. It soon became evident that our labour was thrown away, for he
+dropped heavily down from between the two men who were supporting him,
+and no power could induce him to rise. A heavy stertorous sleep
+overwhelmed him, his breath came gradually slower and slower, and about
+two hours from the time of the accident, poor Cato passed away,
+peacefully and without pain.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Can no antidote be discovered for this virulent poison? Empirics are
+common who profess to cure snake-bites, but I doubt if they ever really
+succeed. It is beyond all question that in the early days of
+Australia, and whilst this beautiful continent was held by Great
+Britain as nothing more than a useful place for the safe custody of her
+criminal classes, a convict named Underwood discovered a remedy for
+snake-bite, and in many cases treated it successfully. The story has
+by no means died out in the colonies, of the good old laws of brutal
+terrorism, under which, when a bitten man was brought to Underwood, the
+latter proceeded to apply his remedy, stimulated by the pleasing threat
+of a severe flogging, should his treatment be of no avail. He appears
+to have been a man of great firmness of purpose, for he never could be
+betrayed into divulging his secret, though many unworthy means were
+resorted to for that end. The utmost that he would acknowledge was
+that the antidote was common, and that Australians trampled it
+under-foot every day of their lives. The way he became acquainted with
+the remedy was by accidentally witnessing a fight between a snake and
+an iguana. The latter was frequently bitten, and in every case ran to
+a certain plant and ate it before renewing the contest, in which it was
+ultimately victorious, leaving the serpent dead upon the plain.
+Underwood demanded his pardon and liberty as the price of his precious
+knowledge, and I believe a mixed commission of military men and
+civilians deliberated on the case at Sydney, and decided not to grant
+the convict's request. In due time he died, and with him perished his
+invaluable secret. It is to be presumed the commission knew what they
+were about, but undoubtedly their adverse decision has been a real
+misfortune to all those whose lives are passed in a country inhabited
+by venomous reptiles. We are much indebted to Doctor Fagren for the
+exhaustive researches he has made into the action of snake-poison and
+its remedy&mdash;the result of which the reader can find in his elaborately
+got-up volume, entitled "The Thanatophidia of India"&mdash;and on looking
+over the concise directions given by him for immediate use in the event
+of such an accident, I do not see that we could possibly have done more
+than we did, considering the limited material we had at our command.
+Perhaps, had it been a white man, with a strong constitution, he would
+have pulled through; for the settled conviction that he was doomed,
+doubtless accelerated the death of the black boy; but the action of the
+poison is so rapid, that most cases terminate fatally. Two instances I
+know of, in which the patient recovered. The first was an Irish
+labourer, who whilst reaping took up a snake, which bit him in the
+finger. He walked at once to the fence, put his hand on a post, and
+severed the wounded member with his sickle. Irishman-like, he forgot
+to move the sound fingers out of the way, and two of them shared the
+fate of their injured companion. Paddy walked into the nearest
+township, had his wounds dressed, and felt no inconvenience from the
+venom. Under the soubriquet of "Three-fingered Tim," this individual
+may frequently be met with at Sydney, and, for a glass of grog, will be
+delighted to recount the whole affair, with the richest of Milesian
+brogues. The second case was that of a woman. She was going from the
+hut to the fireplace, when she trod on a snake, which bit her just
+below the joint of the little toe; for, like Coleridge's Christabel&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="poem">
+ "Her blue-veined feet unsandall'd were."<BR>
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She was in a terrible position; her husband, and the other man for whom
+she acted as hut-keeper, had both gone out with their flocks some hours
+previously, and there was nobody about but a poor half-witted lad, who
+hung about the place doing odd jobs. She was a resolute woman, and
+made up her mind how to act, in far less time than it takes me to set
+it down on paper. Coo-ehing for the lad, she went into the hut, and
+came out again with a sharp tomahawk and an axe.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Take this," she said, handing the latter to the boy, "and strike hard
+on the back of it when I tell you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Thus speaking, she placed her foot on a log of wood, adjusted the keen
+edge of the tomahawk so that when struck it would sever the toe and the
+portion of the foot containing the bite, and, holding the handle of the
+tomahawk steady as a rock, with firm determination gave the words&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Now, Jim, strike!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It needed three blows from the back of the axe to complete the
+operation, for the poor lad grew frightened at the sight of the blood;
+but the undaunted woman encouraged him, nerved him to a fresh trial,
+and guided the tomahawk as coolly as if she were cutting up a piece of
+beef, until the shocking task was completed. With Jim's assistance,
+she then bound up the foot to arrest the bleeding, and, accompanied by
+him, rode ten miles into the township, and, need I say, in due course
+recovered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In these instances the reader will see that the measures taken were
+both prompt, and such as would require more nerve than is possessed by
+the ordinary run of mortals. In the above cases, also, the bitten part
+was capable of being removed; but for a bite on the wrist, had such an
+extreme measure as immediate dismemberment been performed, the cure
+would have been as fatal as the disease.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Poor Dunmore was terribly cut up at the premature death of his
+follower; Lizzie, having smothered her head with fluffy feathers from
+some cockatoos that had been roasted for supper, employed herself in
+chanting a most weird kind of dirge over the body, to which she beat a
+species of accompaniment on the bottom of a pint pot; while Ferdinand,
+by Dunmore's directions, had set to work to strip a sheet of bark off a
+tea-tree, to act as a rude coffin. A great difficulty now presented
+itself, for we had no tools whatever, and how could we dig a grave? In
+such hard ground, knives would make no impression, and the body must be
+buried deeply, or it would be rooted up by the dingoes, whose howl we
+could plainly hear around us, as they bayed at the moon. We spread
+ourselves out in different directions, in the hope of finding some rift
+or recess that would answer the purpose, but in the imperfect light, we
+failed to discover anything, so were compelled to wait for dawn. I do
+not think any of us slept much. One of our little party suddenly
+snatched away in so unforeseen a manner, gave us all food for
+reflection&mdash;for which of us knew that the same fate would not befall
+him to-morrow? When I dropped off into a slumber, it was so light and
+broken, that I seemed to be conscious of Lizzie, continuing her
+melancholy drone, and battering monotonously on the tin pannikin, nor
+was I surprised when in the morning I ascertained that such had really
+been her occupation all night; for the purpose of keeping the body from
+harm, she avowed, but, I am inclined to think, much more from fear of
+sleeping in the neighbourhood of a dead body, for the blacks are
+dreadfully superstitious, and frightened to death of ghosts.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At daylight we were lucky enough to find a tree that had been blown
+down in the late hurricane, leaving a hollow where its roots had been
+torn out of the ground. In this natural grave we laid the poor
+trooper, wrapped in his bark shell, and, having raised a pile of stones
+upon the spot, of such dimensions as to preclude the probability of the
+body being disturbed by dingoes, we went on our way, silent and
+melancholy.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+AN AUSTRALIAN SEARCH PARTY&mdash;IV.
+</H2>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+BY CHARLES H. EDEN.
+</H3>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+OUR next day was a repetition of the last; camps in abundance, but no
+blacks, and we had as yet seen no signs of the Townsville party. At
+night we camped by the side of a large creek, and, after supper, were
+lying down, with the intention of making up for the broken slumbers of
+the previous night, when Ferdinand, who had moved higher up the stream
+to get a private eel for himself and his lady, came back and shook
+Dunmore, saying&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Many big fellow fire sit down up creek."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We were on our feet in a moment, and, stealing quietly through the
+bush, soon saw the glare, and on our nearer approach, could make out
+many recumbent figures round the fire, and one man passing to and fro,
+on guard.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"By Jove! it's the Cleveland Bay mob," said Dunmore; "we must take
+care they don't fire into us. Lie down, or get behind trees, all you
+fellows, and I'll hail them."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Holloa there!" he cried, when we had all "planted" (in Australian
+parlance signifying "concealed") ourselves. "Don't fire, we're
+Cardwellites!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In a moment the sentry's rifle was at his shoulder, pointed in the
+direction whence the voice came; but it was my old friend Abiram Hills,
+ex-mayor of Bowen, a thorough bushman, and possessed of great nerve,
+whose turn it then happened to be to keep watch over his slumbering
+companions. As quickly as it had been raised, his rifle fell into the
+hollow of his arm, and shouting out, "Get up, you fellows, here are the
+Rockingham Bayers!" he rushed forward, and in a moment was shaking
+hands with Dunmore, while the sleepers, uncertain whether it was an
+alarm, stood rubbing their eyes, and handling their carbines so
+ominously as they peered into the darkness, that we deemed it the best
+policy to remain under cover until their faculties had grasped the fact
+that we were not enemies, and as such to be slain incontinently.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It is a startling thing to be hailed suddenly in the silence of the
+bush, and had a less experienced sentry than Abiram been on guard, he
+would most likely have fired. We had also before our eyes the case of
+a party who not long before had gone out to chastise the blacks, and
+having split into two divisions, opened a brisk fire upon each other
+when they drew near again, luckily without effect. Some of these
+warriors we knew to be amongst ourselves, so it behoved us to exercise
+caution.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Our greeting was most cordial, and we were soon all assembled round the
+fire&mdash;now blazing up with fresh fuel&mdash;smoking the pipe of peace, which
+we moistened with a modicum of grog from the well-filled flasks of the
+Cleveland Bayers, and comparing notes, previous to making our plans for
+the morrow. Like ourselves, they had found plenty of camps, but not a
+living creature in them; and they were as perplexed as we were as to
+what had become of their occupants. On their way up from Townsville,
+they had seen smoke-signals thrown up from the mangroves at the mouth
+of the Herbert River, and these were answered both from the range
+behind Cardwell, and from Hinchinbrook, so it was evident there were
+blacks on the island, though most likely concealed in some of the
+hidden valleys, which, from the volcanic nature of the country, were so
+plentiful, and so difficult to find.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lizzie was now brought forward, and subjected to a most rigid
+cross-examination, with which I will not trouble the reader. She said
+that they must have crossed over to the main-land, for every place had
+now been searched. We were in despair, when Abiram Hills said&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Baal bora ground been sit down along of Hinchinbrook, Lizzie?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A "bora ground" is a particular place to which the blacks are in the
+habit of resorting at certain seasons of the year, to hold
+"corroborries" or dances, and also to perform divers mysterious rites
+on the young people of both sexes attaining the marriageable age. What
+these solemnities really are, is but little known, and they seem to
+differ widely in each tribe. In some, the young girls have a couple of
+front teeth knocked out; in others they lose a joint of the little
+finger; and at that time the hideous lumps with which the men embellish
+their bodies must be raised. These curious ornaments are formed by
+cutting gashes in the flesh three-quarters of an inch long, and
+stuffing the wound with mud, which prevents the edges from adhering,
+and when the skin grows over, leaves a lump like an almond. The
+number, proximity, and pattern of these adornments are according to the
+peculiar tastes of the family, and vary considerably, but the breast,
+back, shoulders, and arms are usually pretty thickly sown, giving the
+appearance of a number of fresh graves, placed close together in a
+black soil field.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+[ILLUSTRATION&mdash;"NATIVE AUSTRALIAN."]
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Abiram's question was one of those lucky inspirations that sometimes
+strike one, changing, as by magic, obscurity into distinctness, and
+pouring in a flood of light where no ray could be seen before.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My word!"&mdash;cried Lizzie, her whole face lighting up with eagerness and
+joy&mdash;"my word, close up mine been forget. Mine know one fellow bora
+ground, plenty black fellow sit down there, mine believe. My word,
+plenty d&mdash;d fooly me!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We could see from the girl's face that we were now on the right scent,
+and having ascertained that she could take us to the "bora ground" by
+the following evening, we finished our pipes, and lay down to sleep,
+thankful for what promised a possible solution of the mystery.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Cleveland Bay party consisted of seven white men and two black
+boys, so we now mustered a strong force. Lizzie would hardly allow us
+time to swallow our breakfast, so impatient was she to be under weigh;
+and one wretched man, lingering for a moment later than the rest of us,
+over a slice of beef and damper, found himself the object of general
+attention, when our little guide stamped her foot, and, trembling with
+indignation, said&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Plenty big bingey (belly) that fellow. Baal he been fill 'em like 'it
+sundown!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The travelling was worse than ever now; up and down steep ravines in
+which the tangled scrub grew so thickly that progress was almost
+impossible, and we were compelled to wade along the bed of the creek;
+now tripping over a sharp ledge of rock, now floundering up to the
+waistbelt in a treacherous hole; past the base of a beautiful
+waterfall, where the action of the torrent had worn a hollow basin in
+the rock, in which it sparkled, cool, transparent, and prismatic, in
+the rays of the burning sun, and where the view, so unlike the
+generality of Australian scenery, was perfectly bewitching; on, through
+more scrub, through swamps, and over stiff mountains, wet, draggled,
+moody, and cross, crawling along after the little black figure in
+front, that held steadily on its way, as though hunger and fatigue were
+to it things unknown.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At length, about three o'clock in the afternoon, we found ourselves in
+a sort of natural funnel in the rock, the end of which grew narrower
+and narrower as it wound about in curious curves.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Close up now," said Lizzie, "water sit down along of other side; baal
+black fellow get away."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We halted for a few minutes to get breath, and to steady ourselves, and
+then, keeping close together, stepped out of the gloomy passage into
+the broad daylight. It was a beautiful sight. The "bora ground" had
+been selected in a miniature bay, of about three acres in extent,
+closed in by perpendicular rocks, and attainable only by boat, or by
+the passage through which we had just arrived. In this secluded spot a
+quantity of coca-nut palms were growing, waifs, carried there by the
+ocean from the distant South Sea Islands, fructifying and multiplying
+on the hospitable shore, and shielded from the tomahawk of the native,
+on account of the shelter they afforded his mysterious retreat. Under
+the palms stood several conical huts, or lodges, of considerable
+dimensions, used, I presume, on state occasions for the deliberations
+of the elder warriors. But the thing most pleasing to our eyes, was
+the sight of some two hundred natives, of both sexes, and all ages, who
+now started to their feet, with wild cries of alarm, and motions
+expressive of the utmost terror, at this sudden invasion of their
+retreat by the dreaded white man.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Some of the blacks flew to arms at once, and stood with poised spears
+in a menacing attitude, whilst the gins and piccaninnies cowered
+together on the beach. We had our carbines in hand, cocked, and
+prepared to defend ourselves in the event of hostilities, which we
+earnestly hoped to avoid. Lizzie, who had at last begun to understand
+that slaughter was not our object, and who had been reconciled to our
+tame proceedings by the promise of much finery, now advanced towards
+the threatening natives and made a speech in their own language, to the
+effect that we wished to do them no harm, beyond ascertaining whether
+there were any whites among them, though, if we found murder had been
+committed, we should discover the perpetrators, hold them answerable,
+and punish them. Rewards were offered for any information that would
+lead to a knowledge of the real fate of the shipwrecked crew, and an
+exaggerated estimate of our strength, and the capability of our
+firearms, was given by our interpreter, on her own account, and was
+perfectly intelligible to us from the signs and gesticulations she
+made, and the scorn with which she pointed to the rude weapons of her
+country-men; for the intrepid little girl had marched fearlessly up to
+the group of warriors.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After delivering her speech, Lizzie withdrew to us, and we waited,
+rather anxiously, the turn that affairs would take; for a peaceful
+solution would be far preferable to a fight, in which, though we must
+ultimately be the victors, yet success would only be achieved at
+considerable loss of life, probably on both sides.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Whilst matters rested thus, and the blacks were holding an animated
+discussion, one of the troopers espied a solitary dingo on the rocks
+overlooking the "bora ground," and distant from us about fifty yards.
+Lizzie at once said&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Suppose you shoot 'em that fellow dingo, plenty that frighten black
+fellow."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"By Jove, Lizzie, what a good idea!" we said. "Who's the best shot;
+for it will be fatal to miss?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Let your boy fire," said Abiram, "it will astonish them much more if
+they see it done by a black; and let Lizzie warn them of what is going
+to take place."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You believe you shoot 'em that fellow dingo?" asked Dunmore of
+Ferdinand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Your (yes), marmy, mine believe."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Plenty big glass of rum, suppose you shoot 'em bony (dead)," added
+Abiram.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The trooper's eyes glistened, and he licked his lips as if the spirit
+were already won.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Meanwhile Lizzie had told her countrymen to watch the dog, and they
+would see him killed, and the blacks stood straining their eyes at the
+doomed dingo, who, with pricked ears and drooping tail, stood
+motionless against the sky-line, intently surveying the unusual scene
+beneath, and wondering probably how soon he should get the relics of
+the roasted fish, whose fragrant odour had assailed his nostrils, and
+drawn him into his present position.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was a moment of intense suspense while the trooper raised his
+carbine&mdash;slowly and deliberately; no hurry, not even the quiver of a
+muscle, for his mind was on the rum, and he recked little of the moral
+influence of a successful shot;&mdash;we drew a long breath of relief as the
+weapon flashed forth, and the dog, making a convulsive bound forward,
+fell stone dead at the foot of the rocks, where it was instantly
+surrounded by the awestruck savages, who carefully examined the body,
+and thrust their fingers into the bullet-hole, for the ball had passed
+clean through the animal, just behind the shoulder-blade.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The trooper first loaded his empty barrel, and then twitching Abiram by
+the sleeve, whispered, "You give 'em rum now. Plenty you make him
+strong, mine believe." His task was accomplished, and that the reward
+should immediately follow was with him a natural consequence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Ferdinand's shot and Lizzie's eloquence had, however, rid us of all
+further trouble. The blacks laid down their arms, and expressed
+themselves quite willing to assist us in any way. They vehemently
+denied having seen any white men, but acknowledged that some had been
+heard of on the Macalister River, and thought they were detained by the
+tribes inhabiting its banks. They were cognizant of our expedition up
+the Herbert, and knew that we were searching Hinchinbrook, but never
+thought we should have found them in their present position.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was now evident that further search on Hinchinbrook was useless.
+There was no reason to doubt the truth of what they told us, for Lizzie
+would have gathered information had there been any outrage, or some
+small piece of rag or blanket would have betrayed them. That the
+unfortunate men might be on the Macalister was not improbable, and
+thither we must bend our steps, as the last resource. If we were
+unsuccessful then, we could only conclude that the vessel had foundered
+at sea, and we should have the melancholy satisfaction of knowing that
+we had done everything in our power to rescue the sufferers.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We camped for the night at one extremity of the little bay, while the
+natives occupied the other, in which there was a well sunk, where we
+supplied ourselves with fresh water. We soon became on friendly terms
+with our wild neighbours, but took care never to linger amongst them
+singly, and always had our weapons ready for immediate use.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the evening Lizzie came over from the blacks' camp, where she had
+been holding a great palaver, and asked us if we should like to see a
+"corroborrie," or dance; and much pleased at getting a glimpse of the
+native customs, and glad of anything to break the monotony of our
+lives, we followed her to the group of palms, and there took up our
+positions to watch the proceedings. A tremendous fire was soon flaming
+on the beach, near it the gins and piccaninnies assembled, with bits of
+stick, clubs, and calabashes, on which to beat time. Some thirty of
+the men then stood up, armed with spears, tomahawks, nullah-nullahs
+(war-clubs), and boomerangs, and commenced a series of ludicrous
+antics, to a most melancholy dirge chanted by the women, a kind of rude
+time being observed. Gradually, however, they grew excited, and worked
+themselves up by going through a sort of mock fight; and when at the
+last the women danced round them with torches, all howling and
+shrieking at the top of their voices, and banging the calabashes with
+kangaroo bones or anything that would add to the noise, the whole scene
+reminded one of the infernal regions broken loose. This lasted an
+hour, at the end of which time we withdrew, after expressing ourselves
+highly gratified, and the whole camp was shortly buried in repose. We
+kept double sentries, but we might all have gone to sleep, for there
+was no symptom of treachery. At daylight we had breakfast; gave the
+warriors and gins a few trifling things we could spare, such as knives,
+two or three blankets&mdash;for we hoped to reach the township that
+night&mdash;and, wonder of wonders to the savages, some matches (nearly all
+of which they expended in verifying the fact that they would go off),
+and then took our departure from the "bora ground," guided by a native,
+who showed a very short way, unknown to Lizzie, by which we arrived at
+the 'Daylight' early in the afternoon, to find that the latter had been
+joined by the 'Black Prince', the steamer that had brought up the
+Cleveland Bay party. We quitted in our little craft for Cardwell, and
+the Townsville men went south in their steamer, intending to get some
+shooting at the Palm Islands before going home for good. Eleven
+o'clock that evening saw us at our township, fully determined to carry
+out the work thoroughly by searching the Macalister River, an account
+of which I hope to give in a future chapter.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+AN AUSTRALIAN SEARCH PARTY&mdash;V.
+</H2>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+BY CHAS H. EDEN.
+</H3>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3>
+HOW WE EXPLORED THE MACALISTER RIVER.
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+The reader who has been good enough to follow me so far, will see that
+hitherto our efforts had been unattended with the slightest success,
+and that the fate of the missing schooner and her living freight still
+remained buried in the deepest mystery. To say that we were not
+disheartened by our numerous disappointments would be untrue, for we
+well knew that each closing day rendered our chances of affording
+relief to the survivors more and more difficult; so much so, in fact,
+that at the council assembled to discuss the matter in the large
+dining-room of the hotel, several voices urged the expediency of
+abandoning any further attempts. Much valuable time, they remarked,
+had been already expended by men to whom time represented money, nay
+more&mdash;the means of living. Their own avocations imperiously demanded
+their presence, and although they were the last men in the world to
+desert their fellow-beings in extremity, still, in a country where
+every man lived by the sweat of his own brow, self-interest could not
+be entirely sacrificed.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+[ILLUSTRATION&mdash;AUSTRALIANS IN CAMP.]
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Even we, who were most anxious to organise another expedition, could
+not but acknowledge that the searchers had much justice on their side;
+but when we were discussing matters in rather a despondent tone, a new
+ally came to the front in the person of Jack Clarke, the horse-breaker.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Where do you propose going next?" he asked Dunmore.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We must search the ranges at the back of the township first, and
+another party must go up the Macalister River," was the reply.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Need both parties start at the same time?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The chances of success would, of course, be greater if they did,"
+replied the officer, "but still it is not absolutely necessary."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well," said Jack, "suppose you take the pilot boat, and go up the
+river, which will take much longer to explore than the ranges; and, at
+the end of a week, we shall have got our own affairs pretty straight,
+and will beat all the country at the back, and join you on the
+Macalister. What do you think of that, mates?" he added, turning to
+the company. "Won't that suit us all?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Capitally!" was echoed from every side, and after sundry drinks the
+party broke up; Dunmore and I hastening to make immediate preparations
+for our new trip.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Macalister River was at this time most imperfectly known; for,
+lying to the extreme north of Rockingham Bay, its fertile banks had
+hitherto attracted little or no attention; the great sugar industry
+being then comparatively in its infancy in Queensland. A dangerous bar
+at its mouth, over which heavy rollers were always breaking, made
+pleasure-seekers rather shy of attempting its entry, more particularly
+as the muddy mangrove flats held out small hope of aught save
+mosquitoes and blacks. Since then the sugar-cane has become one of the
+chief sources of wealth to the colony, and, in the search for land
+adapted to its growth, the Macalister was not likely to remain long in
+obscurity. Along its beautiful banks were discovered many thousands of
+acres of magnificent black soil country, without a stick of timber to
+impede the plough, over which a furrow, miles in length, could have
+been turned without an inch of deviation being necessary.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Where the wretched bark 'gunyah' of the native stood, is now found the
+well-finished house of the planter; and where the savage pastimes of
+the 'bora' ground once obtained, and the smoke from cannibal fires
+curled slowly upwards to the blue vault of heaven, is heard the
+cheerful ring of the blacksmith's hammer, the crack of the
+bullock-whip, as the team moves slowly onward beneath the weight of
+seven-feet canes, and the measured throb of machinery from the factory,
+where the crushed plant is yielding up its sweets between the
+inexorable iron crushers. In this, our newest world, improvements when
+once set afoot, proceed with marvellous celerity, and a turn of
+Fortune's wheel may in a single year convert a howling wilderness into
+a flourishing township. But I find myself digressing again, and
+resisting rambling thoughts, must revert to our preparations for the
+morrow.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+[Illustrations KANGAROO. and ORNITHORHYNCHUS PARADOXUS.]
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The meeting at which we had just been present, took place on the
+morning following our return from the search on Hinchinbrook Island;
+and not only was another day indispensable for the arrangements that
+were necessary, but we also felt that one more night of comfortable
+rest would render us better able to encounter the fatigues of the
+coming expedition. Only bushmen and explorers can appreciate the
+intense enjoyment of a night of unbroken rest between the sheets, after
+knocking about for a length of time, catching sleep by snatches, and
+never knowing the luxury of undressing. Turning in like a trooper's
+horse, "all standing," as the nautical phrase is, may be an expeditious
+method of courting the sleepy god, but it certainly is not the best for
+shaking off fatigue. Bound up in the garments you have carried all
+day, the muscles are unable to relax to their full, the circulation of
+the blood is impeded, and your slumber, though deep, is not refreshing;
+more particularly when&mdash;as had happened to us on this last trip&mdash;our
+boots were so soaked that we were afraid to take them off, lest we
+should find it impossible to struggle into them in the morning.
+Dunmore's camp was also some distance from the township, and he had to
+visit it to find out how matters had gone on in his absence, to get
+another trooper in the place of poor Cato, and to replenish his
+exhausted wardrobe and ammunition.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But I will not occupy the reader with all these minor details, nor with
+the numberless little trifles that it devolves upon the leader of such
+an expedition to remember, suffice it to say that by noon on the
+following day, all our preparations were completed, and we shoved off
+from the beach in high spirits, the party consisting this time of nine,
+viz., Dunmore, the pilot, two boatmen, Lizzie, three troopers, and
+myself, about as many as the boat could carry comfortably. A
+rendezvous had been arranged on a known portion of the river; the other
+expedition was to start in seven days; and, according to our programme,
+if all went well, we should meet on the tenth, or on the eleventh day
+at furthest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The sea-breeze was blowing steadily, cresting the tiny waves which
+sparkled in the hot sun as they broke into foam, and under its grateful
+coolness we glided comfortably along, with a flowing sheet. The bar at
+the mouth of the Macalister was eighteen miles distant, and we hoped to
+cross it about sunset, when the breeze would have dropped, and the
+passage through the surf would be readily distinguishable; but our
+plans were completely upset by one of the troopers espying smoke
+issuing from the scrub on a small creek, that entered the bay about
+half-way between the town and the Macalister.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We had better have a look in here," said Dunmore, "there is no knowing
+where we may stumble on some information."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Accordingly, the helm was put up, and we ran into the mouth of the
+inlet, with the wind right aft. Beaching the boat on the soft sand, we
+sprang out, and advanced cautiously in the direction of the smoke, but,
+after several minutes of scrambling, we reached the fire only to find
+it deserted, its original proprietors having seen our sudden alteration
+of course, and sought the safety of the dense bush, where further
+search would have been useless.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Now that we are on shore," said Dunmore, "let us make a billy full of
+tea; it won't take long. Here, you boys, get 'em like 'it waddy to
+make 'em fire."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The troopers and Lizzie dispersed in quest of fuel; Ferdinand walking
+up the bank of the creek, where he was soon lost to sight. A loud
+coo-eh from that direction soon brought us to the spot from whence it
+issued, and we found the boy staring at several pieces of timber
+sticking out of the sand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Big fellow canoe been sit down here," he said, on our approach, and
+examining the protruding stumps, we soon saw enough to convince us that
+the boy was right, and that we were in the presence of a vessel,
+wrecked, or abandoned, Heaven only knows how many years ago. With our
+hands, with pint pots, with a spade we had brought with us&mdash;mindful of
+the difficulty we had experienced in finding a resting-place for poor
+Cato&mdash;with every utensil, in fact, that ingenuity could devise, we set
+to work clearing away the sand that had accumulated round the old ribs.
+Suddenly, the tin rim of one of the pots gave back a ringing sound, as
+if it had struck against metal, and in less than a minute, a much
+rusted cannon-shot was exposed to view, and passed round from hand to
+hand. It was of small size, weighing, perhaps, five pounds, though its
+dimensions were evidently much decreased by the wasting action of damp.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"By Jove!" said Dunmore, "perhaps she was a Spanish galleon, and we
+shall come across her treasure. Won't that be a find, eh, old fellow?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She's more likely a pirate," I answered, as visions of the old
+buccaneers floated through my brain; and Edgar Poe's fanciful story of
+the "Gold Beetle" occurring to me, I sung out, "Whatever you do, keep
+any parchment you stumble across," and abandoned myself to thoughts of
+untold wealth, whilst I wielded a quart pot with the energy born of
+mental excitement.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My word! that been big fellow sit down like 'it here," cried
+Ferdinand, who, lying on one side, had his bare arm buried at full
+length in the sand. "I feel him, Marmy, plenty cold."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We rushed to the boy's assistance, and speedily scraped away the
+shingle, until an old-fashioned gun was exposed to view; it was coated
+and scaly with rust to such an extent, that we were unable to form any
+idea as to its age or nationality. It would most probably have been a
+twelve or eighteen-pounder howitzer, for it was about four feet in
+length, and disproportionately large in girth; but one of the
+trunnions, and the button at the breech, were broken off, the portion
+that had lain undermost had entirely disappeared, and the remainder was
+so honeycombed, that beyond ascertaining that it was a piece of
+ordnance, we could elicit nothing from this curious relic of a bygone
+generation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Further search brought to light several more round-shot, but in the
+same state as the first, and we noticed that in several places the
+timbers were burnt, most probably by the natives, or the crew
+themselves, for the sake of the copper bolts.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+What a number of melancholy recollections are awakened by the discovery
+of a forgotten memorial of the past, such as this nameless wreck; and
+if those old timbers could have spoken, what a strange record of hopes
+unfulfilled, and high adventure unachieved, would have been disinterred
+from the dark storehouse of the past! That the vessel came in her
+present position by accident, could hardly be supposed. More probably,
+having struck on the Barrier Reef, or on some of the hidden coral
+shelves with which this sea abounds, she had been taken into this
+secluded creek for repairs. Cook, the great circumnavigator, careened
+his ship at a spot not far distant from this; but we were unanimously
+of opinion that this vessel must have become embedded long prior to his
+time. Not only was the framework some distance from the present bed of
+the creek, but it was raised considerably above the water level. That
+the eastern coast of Australia is slowly rising from the waves is well
+known, for in the neighbourhood of Brisbane valuable reclamations have
+been made within the memory of living men; but at least two centuries
+must have elapsed to account for the altitude attained by this old
+craft. Our regret was great at getting no more certain information,
+but although we persevered in digging until sundown, no casket of
+jewels, no bags of specie, and no mysterious parchments rewarded us;
+and with the darkness we were compelled to abandon our search, rather
+angry at having wasted several valuable hours to such little purpose.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As it would have been madness attempting to cross the bar before
+daylight, we hauled the boat up on the beach, and made ourselves
+comfortable for the night. About one o'clock, the trooper who was on
+watch, awakened us with the news that there was a light out at sea. We
+thought at first it could only be some blacks in their canoes, spearing
+fish by torchlight, but it gradually drew nearer and nearer, until at
+last we could distinguish the distant sound of voices, and the faint
+rattle of the iron cable as it flew out through the hawse-hole.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Some coasting craft, I suppose," said Dunmore.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Most probably, but we shall find out in the morning;" and we were soon
+again in the land of dreams.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Before daylight we had finished breakfast, and by the time the sun
+rose, were in the whale-boat, pulling towards the new arrival. She was
+a dirty, weather-beaten, nondescript-looking little craft, half fore
+and aft schooner, half dandy-rigged cutter, and the look-out on board
+was evidently not very vigilant, for we had almost arrived alongside,
+before a black head showed over the gunwale, and, frightened at seeing
+a boat-load of armed men in such an unexpected spot, poured out a flood
+of shrieking jargon that would have aroused the Seven Sleepers, and
+which speedily awoke from their slumbers the remainder of the crew.
+There seemed to be only two white men, one of whom introduced himself
+as the captain, and asked us, in French, to come on board. The vessel
+was the 'Gabrielle d'Estonville', of New Caledonia, commanded by
+Captain Jean Labonne, and had put into Rockingham Bay for water, during
+a 'beche-de-mer' expedition. Anything to equal the filth of the fair
+'Gabrielle', I never saw. Her crew consisted of another Frenchman
+besides the captain, and of seven or eight Kanakas, two of whom had
+their wives on board. As perhaps this extraordinary trade is but
+little known to the reader who has not resided in China, I will briefly
+narrate how it is carried out.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From the neighbourhood of Torres Straits to about the Tropic of
+Capricorn, extends, at a distance of fifty to a hundred miles from the
+shore, an enormous bed of coral, named the Barrier Reef. There, untold
+millions of minute insects are still noiselessly pursuing their toil,
+and raising fresh structures from the depths of the ocean. Neither is
+this jagged belt&mdash;though deadly to the rash mariner&mdash;without its uses.
+In the first place, a clear channel is always found between it and the
+mainland, in which no sea of any formidable dimensions can ever rise,
+and now that modern surveys have accurately indicated where danger is
+to be found, this quiet channel is of the greatest use to the vessels
+frequenting that portion of the ocean, for they avoid the whole swell
+of the broad Pacific, which now thunders against and breaks harmlessly
+on the huge coral wall, instead of wasting its fury on the coast
+itself. In the second place on the Barrier Reef is found the
+'Holothuria', from which the 'beche-de-mer' is prepared. It is a kind
+of sea-slug, averaging from one to over two feet in length, and four to
+ten inches in girth. In appearance, these sea-cucumbers are more
+repulsive, looking like flabby black or green sausages, and squirting
+out a stream of salt water when pressed. But despite their disgusting
+appearance, they are a most valuable cargo, from the high price they
+fetch in the Chinese market, where they are a much-esteemed delicacy.
+The vessel that goes in quest of 'beche-de-mer' takes several expert
+divers&mdash;usually Kanakas, or South Sea Islanders&mdash;and having arrived at
+the ground they propose fishing, a sort of head-quarters is established
+on some convenient island, where vegetables are planted, to stave off
+the scurvy that would otherwise soon attack the adventurers. This done
+the little vessel proceeds to the edge of the reef, and begins work in
+earnest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The sea-slug is found buried amidst the triturated sand, worn away by
+the constant play of the waves, and only the experienced and keen-eyed
+Kanakas can detect its whereabouts, by the fitful waving of the long
+feathery tentacles surrounding the mouth of the fish, which immerses
+its body in the sand. The vessel being anchored, her boat is got out,
+and pulled to the smooth water within the reef, the divers keeping a
+keen scrutiny on the milk-white floor for any indication of their prey.
+Suddenly, the man in the bows holds up his hand, as a sign to desist
+from pulling. He drops quietly into the clear water, and the length of
+time that elapses before his black head reappears, is enough to make a
+bystander nervous. Often the diver has to encounter his dread enemy
+the shark, and if cool and collected, generally comes off victorious in
+the contest. The South Sea Islanders have a thorough knowledge of the
+habits of this salt-water pirate, and know that by keeping underneath
+him, they cannot be touched, and they will fearlessly stab the intruder
+with their knives, and avail themselves of his momentary departure to
+regain the boat. I have known one instance of a native jumping into
+the water to distract the attention of a shark that was swimming guard
+over his friend, and both escaped unhurt; but still, despite their
+utmost skill, accidents do often occur. In shallow water the
+'beche-de-mer' is caught with a five-pronged instrument, resembling an
+eel-spear. The animals are split open, boiled, pressed flat, and dried
+in the sun, and after a sufficient number have been taken, they are
+carried to the island rendezvous and there smoked with dry wood, which
+last process converts the slug into genuine 'beche-de-mer', fit for the
+market, and for the palates of Celestial epicures. I tried to cook
+some, but after boiling it for a couple of hours in a quart pot, it
+came out like a dirty piece of indian-rubber, and so tough that no
+teeth could penetrate it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Captain Labonne welcomed us very cordially&mdash;the sight of a strange face
+must have been a godsend&mdash;and most hospitably asked us to share his
+breakfast, but as it consisted only of dried fish, which smelt most
+abominably, we declined, and he was very grateful for a couple of pots
+of sardines which we gave him out of our slender stock. The
+'Gabrielle' was on her way to Cardwell for fresh provisions and water,
+and after the dangers to be avoided had been pointed out by the pilot,
+we bade adieu to Jean Labonne and his queer crew, though not before one
+of our party had succeeded in jotting down the features of a Kanaka
+diver, his wife and child.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+AN AUSTRALIAN SEARCH PARTY&mdash;VI.
+</H2>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+BY CHARLES H. EDEN.
+</H3>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+WE now pulled for the mouth of the Macalister River, and on sighting
+the bar shortly before eight o'clock, were glad to find but little surf
+running. On our way we passed several water-snakes, one of which
+seemed of large size, but we were too distant to form any accurate
+estimate of its length. It was not altogether without misgivings that
+we encountered the ridge of sand that extended completely across the
+entrance of the river. Only one of our party had ever crossed it
+before, and it was known to be very dangerous. The calm water rolled
+itself up in smooth walls, which sailed majestically along until the
+upper portion broke into a line of white, and soon the entire mass
+rushed onward in a sheet of foam.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The great danger in crossing a bar is, that the helmsman either loses
+his head and permits the boat to present her broadside to the surf, or
+that the steering power is not sufficient to keep her head straight.
+Neither of these misfortunes befell us in entering the Macalister, for,
+from the hour we had selected, the sea was at its quietest, and we got
+over without shipping a thimbleful of water. We found a broad expanse
+studded with dense mangrove flats, and it was with difficulty we
+ascertained which was the main channel. We pulled on until about noon,
+by which time the mud swamps had disappeared, and we were fairly in the
+river, which much resembled the Herbert, of which I have already given
+a description, except that it was smaller, and that the vegetation was
+more luxurious. On landing, we lit a fire, and cooked our dinner,
+consisting of ducks and moor-fowl that we had shot on our way up. I
+never remember seeing water-fowl in such profusion as here. The ducks
+and geese were literally in tens of thousands, and the
+beautifully-plumaged moor-fowl quite blackened the mangrove bushes as
+we passed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The scenery was perfectly lovely. Tall palms shot up in every
+direction; wild bananas spread forth their broad leaves, amidst which
+were seen the bunches of fruit; and the larger trees&mdash;fig, Leichhardt
+plum, etc.&mdash;threw their branches across the river, and there
+interlacing, formed a leafy canopy such as we imagined was unknown in
+Australia. Some of the young palms we cut down for the sake of the
+head, which is very pleasant eating. Stripping off the leaves, you
+come to a shoot twenty inches or two feet in length, the interior of
+which consists of a white substance resembling an office ruler in
+thickness, and which tastes something like a chestnut, but is much more
+milky and sweet. The fruit of the wild banana has a most delicious
+flavour, but is so full of small seeds that it is impossible to swallow
+it. The huge fig trees, with which the banks of most of the northern
+rivers abound, have the peculiarity that the fruit is found growing on
+the trunk, and not at the extremity of the smaller boughs. On an
+enormous stem, and at a distance of only a few feet from its base, are
+seen bunches of figs, and these, though of smaller size than the
+European fruit, are very palatable, if they can be selected free from
+insects. Usually, the ants have been first afield, and have taken up
+their abode in the very heart of the fig, forming a most undesirable
+mouthful for the unwary stranger. The wild plums are very good, but to
+attain perfection, should be buried for some days previous to eating.
+I trust these details will not prove tedious to my readers, but I know
+from experience the benefit arising from even a slight knowledge of
+wild fruits and herbs, which have often quenched thirst and assuaged
+hunger when other food was wanting, and rendered endurable what would
+otherwise have been a painful journey.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We camped that night where darkness overtook us, close to a thick scrub
+which lined the bank of the river, and we paid for our stupidity in not
+selecting a more open spot, for myriads of mosquitoes put sleep out of
+the question. The truth was that this belt of scrub had lined the
+river for several miles past, and we hoped at every turn to come to a
+break, but night set in whilst we were still between the leafy walls.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Daylight came at last, and we pushed onward. An hour took us into a
+beautiful black-soil plain of great extent, without a stick of timber,
+and well watered, not only by the Macalister, which meandered through
+its centre, but by several large lagoons, overgrown with the lovely
+white lotus, and crowded with waterfowl. The existence of such a
+planter's paradise was totally unsuspected, and we all gazed
+spell-bound on this splendid tract of country, possessing every
+requisite for successful cultivation, and a water road for the produce.
+Dunmore was a true prophet when he exclaimed&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Before a year is past this will be settled upon."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A fine sugar plantation now stands on "Bellenden Plains," with superb
+cane growing in unwonted luxuriance, and horses and cattle have taken
+the place of the kangaroos, that we on this first visit found grazing
+there in troops. In the distance could be seen the coast range behind
+Cardwell, which seemed to recede inland as it trended towards our
+position, and sweeping round, approached the sea again farther north,
+forming a natural boundary to a vast space of available country. A
+silver line shone out on the mountains, and with our glasses we could
+make out that it must be a waterfall of very large dimensions. We at
+once agreed that it must be the source of the very river we were on,
+the Macalister, but, as the sequel will show, we found so many streams,
+that most probably we were mistaken in our judgment. We resolved to
+make this charming spot our head-quarters for the present, as we had
+everything to be desired&mdash;water, game, etc.&mdash;close at hand, and, from
+the absence of timber, no blacks would be able to steal upon us
+unperceived.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Leaving the pilot and one man in charge of the boat, we trudged along
+through the high grass, which reached to our middles, and was dripping
+with moisture from a shower that had fallen during the night; and,
+after a tedious walk, reached the edge of the scrub. It was thicker
+than anything we had encountered before, the density of the foliage
+totally excluding the sun, and giving rise to a dank humid odour that
+struck a chill to the heart directly you entered. We wound along the
+path, or rather track, that the blacks had made, with the greatest
+difficulty. It was all very well for the troopers, who had stripped,
+but our clothes hitched up on a thorn at every other step. One of our
+most provoking enemies was the lawyer vine, a kind of rattan enclosed
+in a rough husk, covered with thousands of crooked prickles. These,
+with their outer covering, are about an inch and a quarter in diameter,
+and extend to an enormous distance, running up to the tops of lofty
+trees, and from thence either descending or pushing onward, or
+festooning themselves from stem to stem in graceful curves of
+indescribable beauty. From the joints of the parent shoot are thrown
+out little slender tendrils, no thicker than a wire, but of great
+length, and as dangerously armed as their larger relation. These
+miserable little wretches seem always on the watch to claw hold of
+something, and if you are unhappy enough to be caught, and attempt to
+disengage yourself by struggling, fresh tendrils appear always to lurk
+in ambush, ready to assist their companion, who already holds you in
+his grasp. I have measured the length of one of these canes, and found
+it over 250 paces; and this is not the maximum to which they attain,
+for I have been assured by men employed in cutting a telegraph road
+through the scrub that they had found some over 300 yards long. They
+seem to retain the same circumference throughout their whole length,
+and, as the bushman puts everything to some use, the lawyer is divested
+of his husk, and takes the place of wire in fencing, being rove through
+the holes bored in the posts as though they were ropes. It is almost
+needless to add that this cane derives its 'soubriquet' of "lawyer"
+from the difficulty experienced in getting free if once caught in its
+toils.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Another of the torments to which the traveller is subjected in the
+North Australian scrubs, is the stinging-tree ('Urtica gigas'), which
+is very abundant, and ranges in size from a large shrub of thirty feet
+in height to a small plant measuring only a few inches. Its leaf is
+large and peculiar, from being covered with a short silvery hair,
+which, when shaken, emits a fine pungent dust, most irritating to the
+skin and nostrils. If touched, it causes most acute pain, which is
+felt for months afterwards&mdash;a dull gnawing pain, accompanied by a
+burning sensation, particularly in the shoulder, and under the arm,
+where small lumps often arise. Even when the sting has quite died
+away, the unwary bushman is forcibly reminded of his indiscretion each
+time that the affected part is brought into contact with water. The
+fruit is of a pink, fleshy colour, hanging in clusters, and looks so
+inviting that a stranger is irresistibly tempted to pluck it; but
+seldom more than once, for though the raspberry-like berries are
+harmless in themselves, some contact with the leaves is almost
+unavoidable. The blacks are said to eat the fruit; but for this I
+cannot vouch, though I have tasted one or two at odd times, and found
+them very pleasant. The worst of this nettle is the tendency it
+exhibits to shoot up wherever a clearing has been effected. In passing
+through the dray tracks cut through the scrub, great caution was
+necessary to avoid the young plants that cropped up even in a few
+weeks. I have never known a case of its being fatal to human beings;
+but I have seen people subjected by it to great suffering, notably a
+scientific gentleman, who plucked off a branch and carried it some
+distance as a curiosity, wondering the while what was causing the pain
+and numbness in his arm. Horses I have been die in agony from the
+sting, the wounded parts becoming paralysed; but strange to say, it
+does not seem to injure cattle, who dash through scrubs full of it
+without receiving any damage. This curious anomaly is well known to
+all bushmen.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For a couple of hours we followed the tortuous windings of the track,
+without we white men having the faintest conception where we were
+going, though the troopers and Lizzie declared that we were pushing
+straight through. At length a ray of sunlight became visible, and in a
+few minutes we emerged from the sombre depths of the jungle, and found
+ourselves on the banks of a splendid river, the Mackay. Traces of
+blacks were seen in every direction, the white sand being covered with
+their foot-prints. Abandoned gungales were plentiful on the opposite
+bank, which was clear of scrub, and whilst we were eating the damper
+and beef with which each of the party was provided, Lizzie espied a
+thin column of smoke at no great distance.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We approached it as cautiously as possible, taking advantage of every
+shrub that offered a cover, and finally, lying down and worming our way
+through the grass on all fours, a mode of progression that is in itself
+particularly fatiguing and objectionable, but not without excitement,
+for we never knew the moment when we might chance to put our hands on a
+dormant snake, or find ourselves sprawling over a nest of bulldog ants.
+We were successful in completely surprising the camp, which consisted
+entirely of gins and piccaninnies, all the males, as usual, being out
+hunting. The gins spoke quite a different language from that of the
+Hinchinbrook and Herbert River people, and Lizzie was a long time
+before she could make them understand. They seemed to know nothing of
+any white men, nor, I may say, of anything else in particular. They
+were ignorant where the Mackay rose, or where it debouched, and could
+give us no information regarding the waterfall we saw on the distant
+range, what river it supplied, or what kind of country was between us
+and the hills. Altogether they were a most unsatisfactory lot; and
+having rummaged their camp without finding any suspicious articles, and
+threatened them with wholesale destruction if they gave warning of our
+approach to any other tribe, by either smoke signals or messengers, we
+departed, much disgusted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On arriving at the edge of a small copse, at a short distance from the
+camp, we found the arsenal of the male portion of the tribe. Why they
+had stacked their arms so far away from the gungales we never could
+make out; but there they were, consisting of the usual spears and
+shields, and, in addition, several of the enormous swords used by these
+natives, of which we had often heard, but that few of our party, except
+Dunmore, had ever seen. These curious weapons are made of the heaviest
+iron-bark wood, are about five feet in length, by as many inches in
+breadth, and about an inch thick in the centre&mdash;rather more than less,
+and both edges scraped down to as sharp an edge as the material will
+receive. They are slightly curved; but the most wonderful part about
+them is the handle, which is so small that a European can with
+difficulty squeeze three fingers into it. The mystery is, how do they
+use them? for Goliath of Gath could never have wielded an instrument as
+heavy as this with one hand. It is supposed that the warrior raises
+the cumbrous weapon on his shield, and having got within sword's length
+of his enemy, lets it drop on his head. This portion of a black's
+frame is undeniably hard; but such a blow would crush it like an
+egg-shell; and as he may be credited with sufficient sense to know
+this, it seems difficult to understand why he should stand still and
+allow such a disagreeable operation to be performed. Whether or not
+the use of these weapons has been discovered since I left Australia, I
+am unable to say; but certainly up to that time we who lived in their
+neighbourhood were unable to appreciate the varied excellencies they
+doubtless possess.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We pursued our way up the Mackay River in hopes of finding some
+termination to the thick scrub on the opposite bank, so that we might
+return to our boat without having to thread its intricate mazes again;
+and in this we were successful, finding a break in the jungle an hour
+before sunset, which at once admitted us to the plain, through the
+centre of which ran the Macalister, and in due course we reached our
+camp, where, after having a glorious "bogey" (the Australian term for
+bathing) in the river, and overhauling each other well, to see that no
+ticks were adhering to our skins, we had supper, and turned in, having
+done little good, except finding a road to the Mackay less tedious than
+the one we had taken in the morning. The ticks that I mentioned just
+now, are little insects no bigger than a pin's head when they first
+fasten on to you, but soon become swollen with blood until larger than
+a pea. They do no harm to a man besides the unpleasant feeling they
+occasion, but they almost invariably kill a dog. Nearly all our dogs
+fell victims sooner or later to either the alligator or the tick.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3>
+HOW WE EXPLORED THE MACKAY RIVER.
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+We now determined to carry with us enough tea, sugar, and flour to last
+for a week, and to work up towards the unknown country at the head of
+the Mackay, leaving the boat in its present position, under the charge
+of two men. We intended to push towards the range whence both the
+Macalister and the Mackay rivers drew their supply; and as the former
+stream in its windings over the open plain approached within a mile of
+its large neighbour, we resolved to move the boat a little further up
+before starting on our new expedition. By occasionally lightening her,
+and dragging her over the shallows, this was accomplished in a couple
+of hours, and we finally halted at a bend in the river where the bank
+was high enough to shield the boat from all observation, whilst the
+scrub bordering the Mackay, standing at less than a quarter of a mile
+distant, the men left behind could easily see if any considerable body
+of blacks moved between the two streams, and could take the bearings of
+all smoke arising from fires in the direction of the coast, so that we
+might visit them hereafter, if deemed necessary. The fact of two
+rivers, each containing a constant supply of water, being found in such
+close proximity to each other, caused much remark, for none of us had
+ever observed a similar instance in Australia, which is as a rule very
+deficient in permanent rivers.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We now turned our attention to getting sufficient provisions cooked to
+last the exploring party for three days, as we were determined to
+employ the utmost vigilance, and show as little smoke as possible, for
+nothing creates such suspicion amongst the aboriginals as seeing fresh
+fires constantly lighted, unless accompanied by the smoke signals,
+which I have described in a former chapter. As we were utterly
+ignorant of the code they employed, we resolved only to light our fires
+at night, and not even then unless we found some sequestered spot where
+the flame would be unseen. Some of us at once started for a large
+lagoon that we had passed in the morning, and creeping up through the
+long grass, found its surface quite covered with water-fowl of every
+description, from the black swan to the beautiful pigmy goose. A
+volley, fired at a concerted signal, strewed the surface of the lake
+with the dead and wounded, and we were compelled to stand idly on the
+bank until the wind wafted the game ashore, for at the report of the
+guns two or three heavy splashes and as many dusky forms gliding into
+the water betokened that we had disturbed alligators, either having a
+nap, or lying in wait for kangaroos and wallaby coming down to drink.
+More than one house now stands on the margin of this lagoon, but their
+inhabitants are still afraid to bathe in the broad sheet of water
+spread so invitingly before them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Having secured our game, we returned to the boat, and after plucking
+and splitting open the birds, some were roasted over the fire for
+immediate use, but by far the greater number were boiled in a pot,
+which was portion of the boat's furniture when on an expedition. One
+of the troopers had with a tomahawk stripped off a sheet of bark, and
+on this was manufactured a gigantic damper. For the information of
+such of my readers as may be unacquainted with Australia, I must
+explain that damper is unleavened bread, well kneaded and baked in the
+ashes. But simple though such a rough form of loaf may seem from the
+above description, it is in reality a very difficult thing to turn out
+a thoroughly good damper, and only practice will enable the new-comer
+to obtain the sleight of hand necessary for the production of a
+first-rate specimen. In form a damper resembles a flat cheese of two
+or three inches thick, and from one to two feet in diameter. Great care
+and much practice are requisite to form this shape so that no cracks
+shall appear, and when this is done the work is by no means over, for
+the exact heat of the fire must be judged by the cook, otherwise he
+will either burn up his dough, or it will come out a crude, sodden,
+uneatable mass. A good wood fire that has been burning several days,
+and has gained a quantity of ashes, is the best; but wood is plentiful
+enough in the bush, and if you only know the right kind to use, you
+find no difficulty in soon providing yourself with a glorious heap of
+glowing embers. Scraping away a hole in the centre of the fire a
+little larger than the disc, you gently drop it in with your hands,
+strew it over with enough powdery white ash to prevent the embers
+coming into actual contact with the dough, and then cover the whole
+with the glowing coals. Only practice can enable the bushman to judge
+the exact depth of this layer, which, of course, differs in every case,
+according to the size of the damper. It is left in this fiery bed
+until small cracks appear on the covering caused by the steam forcing
+its way out. This is a sign that it is nearly done, confirmation of
+which is sought by introducing a knife-blade through the ashes, and
+sounding the crust. If this gives back a hard sound, the damper may be
+considered cooked, and is then withdrawn, stood carefully 'on its
+edge'&mdash;never forget this&mdash;and is ready to eat when cool.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As there was nothing very particular to do that afternoon, we watched
+the troopers spearing fish, in which they were most skilful. There is
+in some of the Australian rivers a splendid fish, called the
+'Barrimundi', which not only much resembles the salmon in appearance,
+but, like it, requires running water and access to the sea. Many a
+time I have vainly tried to lure them from their watery depths, but no
+bait would tempt them that I could ever hit on, though I have little
+doubt that a fly or artificial minnow would prove killing. We could
+see them in the Macalister, lying with their heads pointed up stream,
+and seemingly motionless but for the slight waving of the tail that
+retained them in their places. Having cut several slender switches,
+not thicker than a tobacco-pipe stem, and sharpened one end with a
+knife, the trooper Ferdinand, who was by far the most expert among his
+brethren, grasped this apparently inoffensive little weapon between the
+thumb and middle finger, whilst the blunt end rested against the ball
+of the forefinger. Stooping down, he approached to within four or five
+yards of the fish, which were only a few inches from the surface, and
+suddenly jerking his switch forward, it entered the water almost
+horizontally, and rarely failed to transfix a 'Barri mundi', which,
+darting forward, was soon hampered by the weapon catching in the weeds,
+and became the prey of its sharp-eyed captor, who had never lost sight
+of it in its endeavour to escape. This fish is excellent eating, and
+averages from eight to thirty pounds in weight.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As Dunmore and I were strolling along a small lagoon overgrown with
+water-lilies, he pointed out to me a pretty graceful little bird, about
+the size of a jack-snipe, but with longer legs, and most extraordinary
+claws. I am ashamed to say I shot this poor little fellow, to examine
+him, and found that each toe measured at least three inches from the
+leg to the extremity of the claw. This is to enable the bird to run
+along safely over the floating leaves of the lotus, on which plant it
+seems to get its living. I had never seen one before; and the simple
+manner in which Nature had adapted it to its peculiar line of life
+struck me as both curious and beautiful. What this little bird's
+scientific name is I never heard, but we colonists call it the "Lotus
+bird."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As there was a remote chance of the party left with the boats coming in
+contact with the blacks, it was deemed advisable to leave them a
+trooper, who would more readily recognise their whereabouts than the
+white men; therefore a boy known by the not euphonious sobriquet of
+"Killjoy," was selected to remain with the pilot and his two boatmen,
+and after dividing the big meat damper in five equal portions, the
+exploring party, consisting of Dunmore, Ferdinand, Larry, Lizzie and
+myself, struck out for the opening in the scrub on the Mackay river.
+We descended into the sandy bed, and crossed to the opposite side,
+which was much more open country, consisting of park-like land, lightly
+timbered, but the soil not nearly so rich as the fertile plain through
+which wound the Macalister. It would be tedious to weary my readers
+with a minute account of our doings each day; enough to say that we
+passed through new country of every description, crossing from side to
+side of the Mackay, to cut off its many bends, and that our progress
+was but slow, the distant ranges seeming hardly nearer on the third day
+than they were at starting. We were disappointed in not meeting with
+any blacks, though their traces were plentiful; and we had commenced to
+fear that the tribe we had surprised five days before had given warning
+of our approach, when Ferdinand reported smoke a couple of miles on our
+right. It was about mid-day when this was seen; and having made a
+hurried meal off the damper, which I may here state answered its
+purpose admirably, we crept towards the fire with the utmost caution.
+Our route took us away from the river, and on arriving at the edge of a
+small belt of scrub, we could make out that the fire was by the side of
+a water-hole, but the two hundred yards between it and ourselves was so
+open, that surprising the camp seemed almost impossible. The hour was
+in our favour, for the blacks were lying about listlessly, resting
+themselves after the fatigues of procuring the food of which they had
+just made a meal. They numbered about twenty of both sexes, and were
+evidently quite unconscious of our proximity. Detaching the two
+troopers to make a detour, and cut them off from the scrub in that
+direction, Dunmore, Lizzie, and I remained perfectly motionless for
+above an hour, and then, judging that the boys must have reached their
+position, we advanced towards the camp swiftly but silently. We got
+over a third of the distance before the blacks saw us, and then ensured
+a general scrimmage. The women and children jumped into the lagoon,
+and the men, snatching up their weapons, threw a volley of spears with
+such force and precision that, had we been twenty yards closer, it
+would have gone hard with both my companions and myself. As it was,
+the missiles nearly all fell short, seeing which the warriors dropped
+their arms and took to their heels, running directly for the spot where
+Ferdinand and Larry lay in ambush. Both Dunmore and myself fired our
+carbines over the heads of the retreating Myalls (wild blacks), which
+completed their panic, and one of them, rushing recklessly forward, was
+captured by the troopers, and brought by them in triumph to the camp,
+amidst the yells and jabbering of the gins and piccaninnies.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After half an hour or so, seeing that no harm was intended to them, the
+women came out of the water, and we were very much pleased to find that
+they readily understood Lizzie. On being addressed by her, the
+warrior, who had hitherto maintained a sullen and defiant attitude,
+became conversational, and readily replied to all the questions put to
+him by Dunmore. Unlike most of the blacks, he appeared to be very
+little frightened at the situation in which he found himself, and
+seemed instinctively to know that all danger was past. On being
+questioned regarding the shipwrecked crew, he denied all knowledge of
+any vessel having been lost, but said at once that a white man had
+lived with this tribe for many moons, though he was dead now. This
+rather astonished us, and we asked if any relics were still in the
+camp, upon which one of the gins produced an old sheath-knife, worn
+down nearly to nothing by constant sharpening; half a dozen horn
+buttons, one of them still sewn to a fragment of moleskin; and an empty
+tin match-box. We asked how long the white man had been dead, and were
+told that he died three moons before, of fever, and that we could see
+his grave if we liked, for it was within a day's journey. There was an
+openness about this tribe, and a frankness in their answers, that made
+us certain that all we heard was the truth, and as they had evidently
+befriended this poor wanderer, we were anxious to repay them in some
+measure, and strengthen the kindly feelings they felt for the white
+men, so we told Lizzie to assure them that our visit was only to search
+for our lost brethren; that we should like to visit the grave, if one
+of them would guide us; and that in return for their services we would
+give them a new knife and a tomahawk.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As they were profoundly ignorant of the use of fire-arms, and we wished
+to impress upon them the irresistible power of the white man, it was
+agreed that we should ask them to guide us to the nearest place
+frequented by kangaroos, and pick off two or three of these animals in
+their presence, if possible. They were very curious to know the
+meaning of our "lightning sticks," and we repaired, escorted by nearly
+the whole tribe, to a neighbouring water-hole, where we could remain
+concealed, and get an easy shot at any game coming down to drink. We
+were not kept long waiting, for within half an hour a couple of
+wallabies came hopping leisurely along, and were very cleverly dropped
+in their tracks, one by Dunmore, the other by Larry. Our hosts were in
+ecstasies, and seemed very grateful that a similar fate had not
+befallen some of their number in the morning; but we made Lizzie
+explain to them clearly that our object was not to hurt our black
+friends, unless they were wicked&mdash;ill-treating white men, or spearing
+cattle. A couple of noble emus now came stalking slowly towards the
+water, and, passing within forty yards of our hiding-place, both fell
+victims to the breechloaders of Dunmore and myself.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This beautiful bird inhabits the open country throughout Australia,
+where at one time it was very common, but is now rarely seen in the
+settled districts. However, in the north emus may be found in plenty;
+and I do not think there is the slightest fear of their becoming
+extinct, as some writers suggest. All my readers must have seen this
+bird at the Zoological Gardens, and remarked its likeness to the
+ostrich, both in form and habits; but the prisoner portrays but poorly
+the free majestic gait of the wild inhabitant of the plains. The
+colour of the adult bird is a greyish brown, the feathers are very
+loose and hairy, whilst the height of a fine male is often nearly seven
+feet. The usual mode of capturing these birds is to ride them down,
+using dogs trained for the purpose to pull them to the ground. The
+dogs should be taught to reserve their attack until the emu is
+thoroughly tired out, and then to spring upon the neck; but an unwary
+puppy will bitterly rue his temerity should he come within reach of the
+powerful legs, which deal kicks fiercely around, and of sufficient
+power to disable any assailant. The ostrich always kicks forward, in
+which he differs from the emu, whose blow is delivered sideways and
+backwards, like a cow. This bird is very good eating, if you know the
+part to select; the legs proving tough and unpalatable, while the back
+is nearly as tender as fowl. But to the bushman the most valuable
+thing about the emu is its oil, which is looked upon as a sovereign
+remedy for bruises or sprains when rubbed into the affected part either
+pure or mixed with turpentine. This useful oil is of a light yellow
+colour, and from its not readily congealing or becoming glutinous, it
+is in much request for cleaning the locks of fire-arms. It chiefly
+resides in the skin, but also collects in great quantities near the
+rump. The usual mode of obtaining it is to pluck out all the feathers,
+cut the skin into small pieces, and boil them in a common pot; but a
+still simpler plan, though less productive, is to hang the skin before
+a fire, and catch the oil as it drips down. A full-sized bird will
+yield from six to seven quarts. The food of the emu consists of grass
+and various fruits. It emits a deep drumming sound from its throat, but
+no other cry, that I ever heard. Its nest is only a shallow hole
+scraped in the ground, and in this hollow the eggs, which vary in
+number, are laid. Dr. Bennett remarks that "There is always an odd
+number, some nests having been discovered with nine, others with
+eleven, and others again with thirteen." When fresh they are of a
+beautiful green colour, and are in much request for mounting in silver
+as drinking cups; but after a little while the colour changes to a
+dirty brownish green. One peculiarity about the next is, that the
+parent bird never goes straight up to it, but walks round and round in
+a narrowing circle, of which the nest is the centre. I once caught
+seven little emus, only just out of the shell; but shutting them up for
+the night in an empty room, I was horrified the next morning to find
+that they had all been killed by rats. The young ones have four broad
+longitudinal stripes down the back, which disappear as they grow up.
+The emu is easily domesticated, and on many cattle and sheep stations
+tame specimens are funning about the paddocks. To my mind they are an
+intolerable nuisance, always doing some mischief&mdash;either frightening
+the horses, or stealing things from the workmen. I saw one cured of
+his thievish propensities for a long time. He always loafed about the
+kitchen when dinner was being served, and if the cook turned his back
+for a moment, his long neck was thrust through the window, and anything
+within reach&mdash;from an onion to a salt-spoon&mdash;disappeared with
+marvellous celerity. But my friend caught a tartar when he bolted two
+scalding potatoes, steaming from the pot. He rushed round and round
+the little paddock, and at last dropped down as if dead, from pain and
+fatigue. Poor wretch, he must have suffered dreadfully; and I am sure
+we all pitied him, except the cook, whose patience he had quite worn
+out.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Out sable allies were gratified beyond measure when we presented them
+with the game, and a great feast took place that evening. We neglected
+no opportunity of gaining information about both the shipwrecked crew
+and the unknown white man, whose grave we were to visit on the
+following morning. Through Lizzie we questioned different individuals
+separately, but they all agreed that such an event as the loss of a
+vessel and the arrival of her crew amongst the blacks, could not
+possibly have happened without their hearing something of it. From
+their imperfect knowledge of time, and their difficulty in expressing
+any number higher than five, we could not form the slightest idea how
+long the white man had lived among them; but they pointed to the ranges
+behind the township of Cardwell as indicating the place where he first
+joined them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We camped at the opposite end of the water-hole, not thinking it
+judicious to remain too close to our allies, and kept a strict watch
+during the night; but we might all have enjoyed a good sleep in perfect
+safety, for the blacks were far too busy stuffing themselves with emu
+meat to think of treachery. Before sunrise we started, guided by our
+late captive and two of his companions. After a tedious walk, we
+arrived at an open plain, on which the grass was trodden down in every
+direction, in some places worn quite away by the feet of the
+natives&mdash;for this was the great "bora ground" of the coast tribes,
+where the mystic ceremonies mentioned in a former chapter took place.
+Traversing the sacred plain, our thoughts busy in conjecturing the
+weird scenes that the posts had witnessed, we came to a little creek
+whose clear stream babbled cheerfully among the rocks, and soon saw a
+giant fig-tree, which our guides indicated as being the spot we sought.
+As we approached we perceived a greyish-looking form on a large limb
+about ten feet from the ground, and a closer inspection revealed to us
+that it was unmistakably the body of a white man, rolled up in tea-tree
+bark, and kept in its position by fastenings of split cane. We could
+not examine the corpse very minutely, for it was too offensive; but
+from the portions of the face that still remained, and the long blonde
+locks and red beard, we satisfied ourselves that the poor wanderer was
+not one of the 'Eva's' crew; indeed, we judged that his death must have
+taken place some time before the loss of that vessel. We were much
+pleased to observe the respect with which the natives had treated the
+remains, and as they think that exposure either on a platform or in a
+tree is the most honourable way in which a corpse can be disposed of,
+we left the body as we found it, and returned to the camp, where we
+passed the night.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Our damper was now at an end, and we had no flour with us, so made up
+our minds to return to the boat. On talking the matter over, it seemed
+quite clear that the shipwrecked men had never been thrown on this part
+of the coast, and that any further exploration would only be lost time.
+On the following morning we presented the tribe with our knives, and
+some matches, and taking a friendly leave of them, started for the
+Macalister, accompanied by two of the warriors. We reached the boat on
+the sixth day, found the pilot and his party well, and having dismissed
+the blacks, with the present of a tomahawk and a blanket, we started at
+once for the place lower down the river, which had been agreed upon
+with Jack Clark as a rendezvous. When we arrived at this spot on the
+following day, the horsemen had not turned up, so we amused ourselves
+as best we could, fishing, shooting, and eating damper thickly
+plastered over with honey, for Larry had found a "sugar bag."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The way the trooper performed this feat was not a little ingenious.
+Having noticed several bees about, he caught one, and with a little
+gum, attached to it a piece of down from a large owl that somebody had
+shot. Releasing the insect, it flew directly towards its nest, the
+unaccustomed burden with which it was laden serving not only to make it
+easily visible, but also impeding its flight sufficiently to admit of
+the boy following it. The next was at the top of a large blue gum
+tree, about three feet in diameter, and sending up a smooth column for
+fifty feet without a branch or twig. Most people would have given up
+all thoughts of a honey feed for the day; not so Mr. Larry, whose
+movements we followed with considerable curiosity. Divesting himself of
+his clothing, he repaired to an adjoining scrub, and with his tomahawk
+cut out a piece of lawyer cane twenty feet in length. Having stripped
+this of its husk, he wove it into a hoop round the tree of just
+sufficient size to admit his body. Slinging his tomahawk and a
+fishing-line round his neck, he got inside the hoop, and allowing it to
+rest against the small of his back, he pressed hard against the tree
+with his knees and feet. This raised him several inches, when with a
+dexterous jerk he moved the portion of the hoop furthest away from him
+a good foot up the stem, and thus&mdash;somewhat on the same principle that
+boys climb a chimney, for the hoop represented the chimney&mdash;he worked
+himself upward, and in much less time than I have taken to describe it,
+was astride on the lowest branch, and chopping vigorously at the hollow
+which contained the golden store. The use of the fishing-line now
+became apparent, for we bent on to its end a small tin billy (round
+can), used for making tea, and by hauling this up and filling it, Larry
+soon supplied us with honey enough to fill our bucket and the boat's
+baler. As perhaps my readers may be tempted to wonder why the bees did
+not attack the naked hide of the robber who was thus rudely despoiling
+them, I must state that the wild Australian bee is stingless. It is a
+harmless little insect, not much larger than the common house-fly, and
+though it produces abundance of honey and wax, it has not been
+subjected to domestication, and from its diminutive proportions and its
+habit of building on very high trees, probably never will be. The
+English bee has been most successfully introduced into Queensland; and
+many of the farms in the neighbourhood of Brisbane make a good thing
+out of their honey and wax.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A meeting was held the next day, at which it was agreed that all
+further search would be useless, and, indeed, I am certain that every
+possible measure had been attempted for the discovery of the missing
+men. There seems every reason to think that the ill-fated 'Eva' was
+sunk in the cyclone. Most likely she went down in deep water, and all
+on board her were drowned. Such was the supposition that received most
+favour at the time, and with it we must rest content until the great
+day when all secrets are revealed.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR><BR>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Australian Search Party, by Charles Henry Eden
+
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